Peter V. Perkins
Kenya Medical Research Institute
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Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1987
Yemane B. Mebrahtu; Charles N. Oster; Alwi M. Shatry; Larry D. Hendricks; John I. Githure; P.H. Rees; Peter V. Perkins; Johannis Leeuwenburg
Cutaneous leishmaniasis is endemic in Algeria, but clinical and parasitological data from this area are scarce. In order to document the transmission of this disease in a peri-urban setting, cutaneous lesions from patients living in Constantine City and surrounding areas were spotted on filter paper for diagnosis and species identification using real-time PCR. Surprisingly, Leishmania tropica was detected in 6/69 patients, and confirmation was obtained by sequencing. This observation suggests a modification of the epidemiology of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Algeria and should alert physicians and policy-makers to the risk of antimony treatment failure with this species.9 leishmanial strains, isolated from cutaneous papulonodular lesions on 3 patients, were characterized by cellulose acetate electrophoresis using 7 enzymes. The patterns obtained were indistinguishable from those of a Leishmania tropica reference strain and these 9 strains were similar to L. tropica in failing to infect mice. Although these 3 patients were Americans, their only potential exposure to sandflies was in Kenya, and thus they are believed to be the first cases of cutaneous leishmaniasis due to L. tropica in Kenya.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1988
Peter V. Perkins; John I. Githure; Yemane B. Mebrahtu; Gabriel Kiilu; C. Anjili; P.S. Ngumbi; J. Nzovu; C.N. Oster; R.E. Whitmire; Johannis Leeuwenburg; L.D. Hendricks; Davy K. Koech
An 18-month sandfly survey was conducted at 4 locations in Baringo District, Rift Valley Province, Kenya. 3 collection techniques were used: aspiration, sticky paper trap, and light trap in sites selected because of their proximity to homes of visceral leishmaniasis patients diagnosed and treated within 6 months before the survey. Over 2000 female Phlebotomus martini were collected of which 6 females were found to have flagellate protozoan infections. 3 of these infections were cultured successfully and cryopreserved. 2 isolates were identified as Leishmania donovani by cellulose acetate electrophoresis. The zymogram of the third isolate was different from all Old World Leishmania reference strains examined, and it is still unidentified. The finding of 2 P. martini naturally infected with L. donovani strongly supports the hypothesis that this species is a vector of visceral leishmaniasis in this area.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1987
Richard Muigai; John I. Githure; G. Gachihi; J.B.O. Were; Johannis Leeuwenburg; Peter V. Perkins
Leishmania major was isolated from lesions of a patient suffering from cutaneous leishmaniasis in Baringo District of Kenya. Isoenzyme mobilities of this strain were compared with those of L. major, L. donovani, L. aethiopica and L. tropica reference strains and also L. major from a sand fly, Phlebotomus duboscqi, and a rodent, Arvicanthis niloticus, trapped in the same region. The patients isolate had similar banding patterns to the L. major reference strain and also the rodent and the sand fly strains with the 9 enzymes examined. This is the first report in Kenya of an indigenous case with naturally acquired zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis.
Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1988
Alwi M. Shatry; Charles N. Oster; Yemane B. Mebrahtu; Peter V. Perkins; Larry D. Hendricks
Portions of splenic or subcutaneous saline aspirates from suspected visceral or cutaneous leishmaniasis patients were inoculated into NNN media with an overlay of Schneiders medium or Schneiders medium alone for routine parasitological diagnosis. The remaining portions of the aspirates were used for preparing Giemsa-stained smears and for subcutaneous inoculation into hind foot-pads of Balb/c mice. Saline aspirates obtained from the foot-pads 2-14 d after inoculation were inoculated into Schneiders medium and examined for promastigotes. Parasite isolation was achieved from 90% of confirmed leishmaniasis patients by either culture method alone. Mouse foot-pad aspiration demonstrated parasites in 95% of all patients, and in over 80% of the confirmed cases of leishmaniasis. Combined culturing and aspirate smear examination was more efficient than foot-pad inoculation alone for the demonstration of leishmanial infection. Foot-pad aspiration does not entail killing animals and was sensitive for parasite isolation; it may be a useful short-term adjunct to existing parasite isolation methods, especially under field conditions where the risks of culture contamination may be high.
Archive | 1989
P. Lawyer; John I. Githure; Yemane B. Mebrahtu; Peter V. Perkins; R. Muigai; Johannis Leeuwenburg
Clinically speaking, there are 2 types of leishmaniasis in Kenya, visceral leishmaniasis, or kala-azar, caused by Leishmania donovani and cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by L. aethiopica, L. major, L. tropica (a recent discovery), and L. donovani (post kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis). These will each be discussed from a historical perspective, then from a perspective of current research on Leishmania parasite-vector-host associations.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 1988
John C. Beier; Peter V. Perkins; Robert A. Wirtz; Joseph K. Koros; Diana Diggs; Thomas P. Gargan; Davy K. Koech
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1985
David L. Sacks; Peter V. Perkins
Journal of Medical Entomology | 1990
John C. Beier; Peter V. Perkins; Fred K. Onyango; Thomas P. Gargan; Charles N. Oster; Richard E. Whitmire; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1987
John C. Beier; Peter V. Perkins; Robert A. Wirtz; Richard E. Whitmire; Mutuma Mugambi; Wayne T. Hockmeyer
Journal of Medical Entomology | 1990
John C. Beier; Peter V. Perkins; Joseph K. Koros; Fred K. Onyango; Thomas P. Gargan; Robert A. Wirtz; Davy K. Koech; Clifford R. Roberts