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1.
Braz. j. infect. dis ; 21(5): 554-556, Sept.-Oct. 2017. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1039203

ABSTRACT

Abstract In the first nine weeks of implementation of a Zika Virus Preparedness Plan in a Mexican Public Hospital, we cared for 221 pregnant women with any signal or symptom suggesting Zika virus infection and 99 (44.8%) patients were found to be positive for Zika virus.The median age of patients was 25.3 years (range 13-49). Symptoms in PCR-positive patients were rash (91.4%) followed by headache (53.1%), myalgia (46.9%), arthralgia (45.7%), pruritus (35.8%), retroocular pain (29.6%), conjunctivitis (21%), and fever (21%). The women's epidemiologic exposure history indicates local transmission and a community outbreak.


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Pregnancy , Adolescent , Adult , Middle Aged , Young Adult , Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/epidemiology , Disease Outbreaks , Zika Virus Infection/epidemiology , Mexico/epidemiology
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 105(1): 99-102, Feb. 2010. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-539302

ABSTRACT

A cohort initiated with 121 eggs, yielding 105 first instar nymphs (eclosion rate: 86.78 percent), allowed us to observe the entire life cycle of Triatoma ryckmani under laboratory conditions (24ºC and 62 percent relative humidity), by feeding them on anesthetized hamsters. It was possible to obtain 62 adults and the cycle from egg to adult took a mean of 359.69 days with a range of 176-529 days (mortality rate of nymphs: 40.95 percent). Mean life span of adults was of 81 days for females and 148 days for males. The developmental periods of 4th and 5th nymphs were longer than those of the other instars. This suggests that young siblings have a better chance of taking a hemolymph meal from older ones, in order to survive during fasting periods during prolonged absences of vertebrate hosts from natural ecotopes. The stomach contents of 37 insects showed blood from rodents (15 cases), lizards (7 cases), birds (6 cases) and insect hemolymph (7 cases). Out of 10 insects fed by xenodiagnosis on a Trypanosoma cruzi infected mouse, all but one became infected with the parasite.


Subject(s)
Animals , Cricetinae , Female , Male , Mice , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Life Cycle Stages/physiology , Trypanosoma cruzi , Triatoma/growth & development , Laboratories , Triatoma/parasitology , Triatoma/physiology
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