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Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1980

Epidemiological aspects of three Trypanosoma cruzi zymodemes in Bahia State, Brazil

Toby V. Barrett; Rodney Hoff; Kenneth E. Mott; Michael A. Miles; D.G. Godfrey; R. Teixeira; J.A.Almeida de Souza; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

Culture forms of 104 stocks of Trypanosoma cruzi isolated in different regions of the State of Bahia were compared by electrophoresis of six enzymes. The three distinct combinations of isoenzyme patterns seen were designated ZI, Z2 and Z3. In an area of endemic Chagass disease in eastern Bahia, T. cruzi Z1 was associated with sylvatic mammals and sylvatic triatomines, whereas T. cruzi Z2 was associated with a separate domestic cycleof transmission. T. cruzi Z1 was also found in sylvatic triatomines from other parts of the State. In contrast, in an area of the São Francisco Valley region of western Bahia, both T. cruzi Z1 and Z2 were isolated from man, domestic animals, and peridomestic rats. T. cruzi Z3 was isolated from an armadillo and from Panstrongylus geniculatus, a triatomine commonly found in armadillo burrows. Both T. cruzi Z1 and Z2 appeared to be pathogenic in man: T. cruzi Z1 was isolated from patients with acute Chagass disease and from a single patient with chronic cardiac manifestations. T. cruzi Z2 was isolated from some asymptomatic individuals but was also associated with acute disease and chronic cardiac and digestive syndromes.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1979

An outbreak of acute Chagas's disease in the São Francisco Valley region of Bahia, Brazil: triatomine vectors and animal reservoirs of Trypanosoma cruzi

Toby V. Barrett; Rodney Hoff; Kenneth E. Mott; F. Guedes; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

Following reports of an unusually high incidence of acute Chagass disease and the appearance of large numbers of Triatoma infestans in the southwestern region of the State of Bahia, triatomine bugs (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) and domestic animals in one of the affected communities were surveyed and examined for infection with Trypanosoma cruzi. Triatoma infestans was prevalent in houses and was also found in peridomestic habitats. T. sordida and T. pseudomaculata occupied peridomestic and sylvatic habitats and T. brasiliensis was found only among rocks far from houses. Panstrongylus megistus, formerly present in the region, was not found. Trypanosoma cruzi was detected in 19.5% of Triatoma infestans, 11.5% of T. sordida, 19% of dogs, 29% of cats and 100% of rats examined. A disproportionate number of early instar bugs were infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, suggesting that a rapid increase in the rate of transmission had recently occurred. The history of the domestic triatomine fauna of the region since 1912 is reviewed, and it is proposed that the relatively recent arrival of Triatoma infestans initiated a domestic cycle linked to peridomestic and sylvatic cycles of Trypanosoma cruzi transmission. Increased human mobility, the use of DDT for malaria control, and drought conditions are considered as factors which might have contributed to the outbreak of human infection.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1982

Comparison of filtration staining (Bell) and thick smear (Kato) for the detection and quantitation of Schistosoma mansoni eggs in faeces

Adrian C. Sleigh; Rodney Hoff; Kenneth E. Mott; Mauricio Lima Barreto; Tereza Maisk de Paiva; Jose de Souza Pedrosa; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

We compare results of one Bell and one Kato-Katz examination performed on each of 315 stool specimens from residents in an area in north-eastern Brazil endemic for schistosomiasis mansoni. The prevalence of Schistosome infection detected by the Bell technique was 76% and by the Kato-Katz technique was 63%. 81% (44/54) of the infections missed by a Kato-Katz smear were light infections (one of 50 epg range by Bell examination). Over, all, 55% (44/80) of stools in this egg count range by the Bell technique were negative on a single Kato-Katz smear. This implies that five Kato-Katz smears per stool would ensure a 95% probability (0.55(5) X 100) of detecting such light infections. However, a single Kato-Katz smear detected eggs in 97% (124/128) of stools with a Bell count greater than 100 epg. For stools positive by both methods the egg counts per gram of stool were higher (p less than 0.001) by Kato-Katz examination. Geometric mean egg counts for the infected population were 199 epg by the Kato-Katz and 92 epg by the Bell methods. 64% (59 v. 36) more persons were classified as heavily infected (greater than 400 epg) by the Kato-Katz method than by the Bell method. The differing measurements of schistosome infection obtained with the Bell and Kato-Katz methods must be considered when comparing data on morbidity-infection relationships.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1978

Stability of faecal egg excretion in Schistosoma mansoni infection.

Mauricio Lima Barreto; Jose Teixeira Franca Silva; Kenneth E. Mott; J.Stauffer Lehman

Stability of Schistosoma mansoni egg excretion was studied in 23 residents of a rural endemic area in North-east Brazil where the over-all prevalence rate was 87% and the peak geometric mean egg excretion was 308 eggs/ml (Bell method) in the 10 to 14-year-old age group. Stool examinations by the Kato method were performed for three to four consecutive days each month for three consecutive months. Both raw and transformed data showed significant stability of S. mansoni egg excretion from day to day and month to month in this population. A single Kato examination detected 68% of individuals who were excreting more than 400 eggs per gramme. Although S. mansoni egg excretion is stable over time, identifying individuals with high egg excretion in endemic populations requires sensitive quantitative methods.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1981

A three year follow-up of chemotherapy with oxamniquine in a Brazilian community with endemic schistosomiasis mansoni

Adrian C. Sleigh; Kenneth E. Mott; J.T.França Silva; T.M. Muniz; Mota E; Mauricio Lima Barreto; Rodney Hoff; James H. Maguire; J.S. Lehman; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

Oral oxamniquine was tested as a control strategy for endemic schistosomiasis in a rural area of Bahia, Brazil. Adults were treated with a single dose (12.5 to 15 mg per kg) and children (less than 12 years old) with a total of 20 mg per kg in two doses. The 191 (infected) persons treated represented 69% of the infected population in the study area. Follow-up stool examinations (Kato-Katz method) at one, 3, 6, 13, 25 and 33 months showed the cure rate declining from 80% at three months to 46% at 33 months. Over one half of those not cured showed a decrease in egg counts throughout the follow-up which, after 33 months, remained 66% below the pre-treatment levels. Stool examinations conducted on all study area residents during three years before chemotherapy showed the prevalence and intensity of Schistosoma mansoni infection to be high and stable. 33 months after the chemotherapy the prevalence was 41% and for infected individuals the geometric mean egg count was 121 epg, a decline of respectively 35% and 40% from pre-treatment levels for each index. Chemotherapy of infected persons with oxamniquine protected the community as a whole from high worm burdens for almost three years, although at this point the prevalence began to rise towards pretreatment levels.


The Lancet | 1985

THREE-YEAR PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF THE EVOLUTION OF MANSON'S SCHISTOSOMIASIS IN NORTH-EAST BRAZIL

Adrian C. Sleigh; Rodney Hoff; Mota E; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock; Kenneth E. Mott; Mauricio Lima Barreto; James H. Maguire; Weller Th

A cross-sectional study of morbidity associated with Schistosoma mansoni infection in an area in North-East Brazil where the disease is endemic was carried out in 1974. The survey was repeated in 1977, before mass treatment with oxamniquine, providing a cohort of 210 individuals who had both examinations. The high prevalence of hepatomegaly (over 80%) and of splenomegaly (over 15%) contrasted with rates of 10% and 1%, respectively, in a non-endemic area. Over the 3-year period hepatomegaly spontaneously regressed in 13% of patients, and splenomegaly regressed in 56%, a phenomenon most common in older individuals with light infections. Those with heavy infections--ie, 500 or more eggs per g faeces, had an excess risk of splenomegaly of 19.6% and, of its persistence, of 61.5%. Thus, intensity of infection was a critical factor in liver and spleen involvement, and programmes of chemotherapy that reduce infection should mitigate the risk of schistosomal morbidity.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1983

Morbidity in schistosomiasis japonica in relation to intensity of infection. A study of two rural brigades in Anhui Province, China

Kenneth S. Warren; Su De-long; Xu Zhao-yue; Yuan Hong-chang; Pierre Peters; Joseph A. Cook; Kenneth E. Mott; Harold B. Houser

Schistosomiasis japonica remains endemic in several provinces south of the Yangtze River in China because of relatively sparse populations of human beings and dense populations of snails. We studied two brigades in a rural commune in Gui-chi County, Anhui Province, to determine the prevalence, intensity, and morbidity associated with this infection before concerted control efforts were instituted. Quantitative fecal examinations, histories, and physical examinations relevant to schistosomiasis japonica were performed in 96 per cent of the available population 2 to 65 years of age. The prevalence was 26.3 per cent in Brigade A (778 persons) and 14.4 per cent in Brigade B (1532 persons). Clinical symptoms and signs were compared among uninfected persons and persons at three levels of infection as determined by fecal egg output. Some increased weakness was seen only at the heaviest levels of infection; abdominal pain was not an important symptom. Hepatomegaly was somewhat more frequent in moderate and heavy infections, but splenomegaly was rare and unrelated to intensity of infection. Neither stool consistency nor occult blood was related to the presence or intensity of infection. Approximately 50 per cent of the population had been treated for schistosomiasis japonica, 25 per cent repeatedly.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1978

Congenital Chagas’s disease in an urban population: investigation of infected twins

Rodney Hoff; Kenneth E. Mott; Maria Lucila Milanesi; Achiléa L. Bittencourt; Helenemarie S. Barbosa

In the Nordeste de Amaralina suburb of Salvador Bahia, Brazil, 47 of 285 pregnant women surveyed had complement fixing antibodies to Trypanosoma cruzi. At delivery T. cruzi was detected in one of 17 placentas from the sero-positive women. The offspring of this case were premature twins and T. cruzi was detected in the peripheral blood of each before death. At autopsy the gastro-intestinal tract and urinary bladder of both were severely affected. Immunofluorescence tests on cord sera, including the single case with T. cruzi in the placenta, were negative for IgM antibodies to T. cruzi. The mother of the infected twins and three of her living children, who were born and have resided in the city, were also infected with T. cruzi. Although the children had visited an area endemic for Chagass disease for short periods, the mode of transmission in this family may have been transplacental. The value of the immunofluorescence test in the diagnosis of congenital Chagass disease is discussed.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1980

Cutaneous allergic reactions to Triatoma infestans after xenodiagnosis

Kenneth E. Mott; José Teixeira França; Toby V. Barrett; Rodney Hoff; Tomé Silva de Oliveira; Ítalo Rodrigues de Araújo Sherlock

We determined the frequency of cutaneous allergic reactions to bites of Triatoma infestans during xenodiagnosis in a rural community where Panstrongylus megistrus is the only domestic vector of Trypanosoma cruzi. Localized urticaria or more intense cutaneous allergic reactions at 48 and 72 hours were observed in 86.7% and 82.1% respectively of the individuals in our study. Urticaria was more severe in children and older adults and in women than in men. The high frequency of reactions suggests either cutaneous reactivity to T. infestans without prior sensitization or cross reactivity between P. megistus and T. infestans. A single application of topical corticosteroid or antihistamine medication did not reduce the cutaneous reactions.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1975

A technique for isolating and concentrating microfilariae from peripheral blood by gradient centrifugation.

Thomas C. Jones; Kenneth E. Mott; Luzia Cavalcante Pedrosa

A method for isolating microfilariae from blood cells by Ficoll-Hypaque centrifugation, followed by concentration by conventional centrifugation, is described. A 30 fold concentration and quantitative recovery of parasites was achieved. This technique should be of value for documenting low levels of parasitaemia, and for obtaining relatively pure suspensions of microfilariae for metabolic studies and antigen analysis.

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James H. Maguire

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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