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Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 97(5): 631-635, July 2002. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-321198

ABSTRACT

A total of 128 ticks of the genus Amblyomma were recovered from 5 marsupials (Didelphis albiventris) - with 4 recaptures - and 17 rodents (16 Bolomys lasiurus and 1 Rattus norvegicus) captured in an urban forest reserve in Campo Grande, State of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. Of the ticks collected, 95 (78.9 percent) were in larval form and 22 (21.1 percent) were nymphs; the only adult (0.8 percent) was identified as A. cajennense. Viewed under dark-field microscopy in the fourth month after seeding, 9 cultures prepared from spleens and livers of the rodents, blood of the marsupials, and macerates of Amblyomma sp. nymphs revealed spiral-shaped, spirochete-like structures resembling those of Borrelia sp. Some of them showed little motility, while others were non-motile. No such structures could be found either in positive Giemsa-stained culture smears or under electron microscopy. No PCR amplification of DNA from those cultures could be obtained by employing Leptospira sp., B. burgdorferi, and Borrelia sp. primers. These aspects suggest that the spirochete-like structures found in this study do not fit into the genera Borrelia or Leptospira, requiring instead to be isolated for proper identification


Subject(s)
Animals , Arachnid Vectors , Borrelia , Disease Reservoirs , Ticks , Brazil , DNA, Bacterial , Marsupialia , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Rodentia , Trees
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