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1.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 99(6): 657-662, Oct. 2004. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-387919

ABSTRACT

Insecticide effects of deltamethrin 2.5% SC (flowable solution) on different substrates and triatomine infestation rates in two indigenous villages (Estancia Salzar and Nueva Promesa) of the Paraguayan Chaco are reported. This field study was carried out to determine the extent to which variability in spray penetration may affect residual action of the insecticide. A total of 117 houses in the two villages were sprayed. Filter papers discs were placed on aluminium foil pinned to walls and roofs in selected houses and the applied insecticide concentration was determined by high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). The target dose rate was 25 mg a.i./m2. The mean actual applied dose in Estancia Salazar was 11.2 ± 3.1 mg a.i./m2 in walls and 11.9 ± 5.6 mg a.i./m2 in roofs while in Nueva Promesa, where duplicates were carried out, the mean values were 19.9 ± 6.9 mg a.i./m2 and 34.7 ± 10.4 mg a.i./m2 in walls and 28.8 ± 19.2 mg a.i./m2 and 24.9 ± 21.8 mg a.i./m2 in roofs. This shows the unevenness and variability of applied doses during spraying campaigns, and also the reduced coverage over roof surfaces. However, wall bioassays with Triatoma infestans nymphs in a 72 h exposure test showed that deposits of deltamethrin persisted in quantities sufficient to kill triatomines until three months post spraying. Knockdown by deltamethrin on both types of surfaces resulted in 100% final mortality. A lower insecticidal effect was observed on mud walls. However, three months after treatment, sprayed lime-coated mud surfaces displayed a twofold greater capacity (57.5%) to kill triatomines than mud sprayed surfaces (25%). Re-infestation was detected by manual capture only in one locality, six months after spraying.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Chagas Disease , Insect Control , Insect Vectors , Insecticides , Triatoma , Drug Evaluation , Endemic Diseases , Housing , Paraguay
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 98(7): 975-980, Oct. 2003. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-352404

ABSTRACT

We investigated the residual efficacy of four insecticide formulations used in Chagas disease vector control campaigns: cyfluthrin 12.5 percent suspension concentrace (SC), lambda-cyhalothrin 10 percent wettable powder (WP), deltamethrin 2.5 percent SC, and 2.5 percent WP on four types of circular blocks of wood, straw with mud, straw with mud painted with lime, and mud containing 5 percent of cement. Three concentrations of these insecticides were tested: the LC90 (previously determined on filter paper), the double of the LC90, and the recommended operational dose. For each bioassay test, 15 third-stage nymphs of Triatoma infestans (Klug) (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) were exposed for 120 h to each treatment at 24 h, 30, 60, 90, and 180 days post-spraying. Mortality rates, moulting history and behaviour were recorded at 24, 48, 72, and 120 h of exposure. Mortality rates were highest during the first 30 days post-spraying. Highest mortality rates (above 50 percent) were observed for deltamethrin 2.5 percent SC and lambda-cyhalothrin 10 percent WP on wood blocks up to three months post-spraying. Mud was the substrate on which treatments showed lowest persistence, with the other two substrates showing intermediate residual efficacy of all treatments. During the first 30 days WP formulations were not as effective as SC flowable formulations but, overall in the longer term, WP gave grater mortality rates of T. infestans nymphs exposed at up to six months post-spraying. Porous surfaces, especially mud, showed most variability presumably due to absorption of the insecticide. In contrast the less porous surfaces (i.e. wood and lime-coated mud) kept mortality rates high for longer post-treatment, irrespective of the insecticide concentration used.


Subject(s)
Animals , Insect Vectors , Insecticides , Pesticide Residues , Pyrethrins , Triatoma , Evaluation Study , Time Factors
3.
Salud pública Méx ; 45(2): 123-128, mar.-abr. 2003. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-333556

ABSTRACT

Most Latin American countries are making dramatic progress in controlling Chagas disease, through a series of national and international initiatives focusing on elimination of domestic populations of Triatominae, improved screening of blood donors, and clinical support and treatment of persons infected with Trypanosoma cruzi. Some countries, particularly Uruguay, Chile and Brazil, are sufficiently advanced in their programmes to initiate detailed planning of the subsequent phases of Chagas disease control, while others such as Peru, Ecuador, and Mexico, are currently applying only the initial phases of the control campaigns. In this review, we seek to provide a brief history of the campaigns as a basis for discussion of future interventions. Our aim is to relate operational needs to the underlying biological aspects that have made Chagas disease so serious in Latin America but have also revealed the epidemiological vulnerability of this disease


Subject(s)
Animals , Humans , Chagas Disease/prevention & control , Insect Control/methods , Insect Vectors , Central America , Chagas Disease/transmission , Insect Control/standards , Insecticides/therapeutic use , South America , Triatominae/parasitology , Trypanosoma cruzi/pathogenicity
4.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 97(5): 603-612, July 2002. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-321217

ABSTRACT

Discovered in 1909, Chagas disease was progressively shown to be widespread throughout Latin America, affecting millions of rural people with a high impact on morbidity and mortality. With no vaccine or specific treatment available for large-scale public health interventions, the main control strategy relies on prevention of transmission, principally by eliminating the domestic insect vectors and control of transmission by blood transfusion. Vector control activities began in the 1940s, initially by means of housing improvement and then through insecticide spraying following successful field trials in Brazil (Bambui Research Centre), with similar results soon reproduced in Säo Paulo, Argentina, Venezuela and Chile. But national control programmes only began to be implemented after the 1970s, when technical questions were overcome and the scientific demonstration of the high social impact of Chagas disease was used to encourage political determination in favour of national campaigns (mainly in Brazil). Similarly, large-scale screening of infected blood donors in Latin America only began in the 1980s following the emergence of AIDS. By the end of the last century it became clear that continuous control in contiguous endemic areas could lead to the elimination of the most highly domestic vector populations - especially Triatoma infestans and Rhodnius prolixus - as well as substantial reductions of other widespread species such as T. brasiliensis, T. sordida, and T. dimidiata, leading in turn to interruption of disease transmission to rural people. The social impact of Chagas disease control can now be readily demonstrated by the disappearance of acute cases and of new infections in younger age groups, as well as progressive reductions of mortality and morbidity rates in controlled areas. In economic terms, the cost-benefit relationship between intervention (insecticide spraying, serology in blood banks) and the reduction of Chagas disease (in terms of medical and social care and improved productivity) is highly positive. Effective control of Chagas disease is now seen as an attainable goal that depends primarily on maintaining political will, so that the major constraints involve problems associated with the decentralisation of public health services and the progressive political disinterest in Chagas disease. Counterbalancing this are the political and technical cooperation strategies such as the "Southern Cone Initiative" launched in 1991...


Subject(s)
Animals , Humans , Chagas Disease , Insect Control , Insect Vectors , Trypanosoma cruzi , Chagas Disease , Latin America
5.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 95(6): 867-71, Nov.-Dec. 2000. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-273443

ABSTRACT

The effectiveness of three operational strategies for the control of Triatoma dimidiata was compared by a field trial in the Department of Madriz, Nicaragua. One strategy involved full pretrial evaluation, followed by spraying of all houses irrespective of whether or not they had been found to be infested. The second strategy minimised the pretrial evaluation by considering the locality infested as soon as one house was found to be positive, followed by spraying all houses. The third strategy involved full pretrial evaluation, followed by spraying only those houses found to be positive. Evaluation after twelve months indicated that all three strategies were similarly effective, since all sprayed houses remained free of infestation. However, comparative estimates of the unit intervention costs indicated that strategies 1 and 2 were substantially less efficient than the third strategy of spraying only positive houses


Subject(s)
Animals , Chagas Disease/prevention & control , Insect Control/methods , Insect Vectors/drug effects , Triatoma/drug effects , Costs and Cost Analysis , Housing , Insecticides/pharmacology , Nicaragua
6.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 95(4): 567-73, July-Aug. 2000.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-264234

ABSTRACT

The evolutionary history and times of divergence of triatomine bug lineages are estimated from molecular clocks inferred from nucleotide sequences of the small subunit SSU (18S) and the second internal transcribed spacer (ITS-2) of the nuclear ribosomal DNA of these reduviids. The 18S rDNA molecular clock rate in Triatominae, and Prosorrhynchan Hemiptera in general, appears to be of 1.8 per cent per 100 million years (my). The ITS-2 molecular clock rate in Triatominae is estimated to be around 0.4-1 per cent per 1 my, indicating that ITS-2 evolves 23-55 times faster than 18S rDNA. Inferred chronological data about the evolution of Triatominae fit well with current hypotheses on their evolutionary histories, but suggest reconsideration of the current taxonomy of North American species complexes.


Subject(s)
Animals , Biological Clocks , Chagas Disease/transmission , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Triatominae/genetics , Base Sequence , Cell Lineage , Insect Vectors/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction , RNA, Ribosomal, 18S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Triatominae/classification
8.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 94(suppl.1): 223-8, Sept. 1999. ilus, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-245626

ABSTRACT

The use of biochemical and genetic characters to explore species or population relationships has been applied to taxonomic questions since the 60s. In responding to the central question of the evolutionary history of Triatominae, i.e. their monophyletic or polyphyletic origin, two important questions arise (i) to what extent is the morphologically-based classification valid for assessing phylogenetic relationships? and (ii) what are the main mechanisms underlying speciation in Triatominae? Phenetic and genetic studies so far developed suggest that speciation in Triatominae may be a rapid process mainly driven by ecological factors.


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Female , Environment , Triatominae/physiology , Rhodnius/genetics , Rhodnius/physiology , Triatoma/genetics , Triatoma/physiology , Triatominae/genetics
9.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 94(suppl.1): 375-8, Sept. 1999. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-245663
10.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 94(4): 565-9, July-Aug. 1999.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-241573

ABSTRACT

A shift from large to small average sizes was observed in Triatoma infestans and Rhodnius domesticus between field and domestic (or laboratory) conditions of life. It was more pronounced in the female specimens, leading to a subsequent reduction of sexual size dimorphism. This feature is discussed in terms of genetic and populational changes occurring from natural to artificial habitats, in particular those related to population densities. Sexual size dimorphism is then recommended as a new character to be used in the study of species of Triatominae adapting to domestic ecotopes


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Animals , Insect Vectors/genetics , Sex Characteristics , Triatominae/anatomy & histology , Multivariate Analysis , Statistics, Nonparametric
11.
México, D.F; México. Secretaría de Salud; 1999. 131 p. graf.
Monography in Spanish, English | LILACS | ID: lil-266637

ABSTRACT

Los triatominos están ampliamente distribuidos en las Américas, varios tienen importancia como vectores de la enfermedad de chagas, especialmente Triatoma infestans en los países del Cono Sur, T. dimidata en las partes de la costa pacífica, y especies de RHODNIUS en América Central y los países del Pacto Andino. Precisamente los objetivos del "Taller" fueron la discusión y la conceptualización de la biosistemática y tendencias evolutivas en torno a triatominae; determinación de prioridades de investigación para la identificación biológica de las poblaciones expuestas a la enfermedad de chagas y definición de estrategias de investigación para el desarrollo de programas de control y vigilancia contra especies de triatominos. Contenido: Antecedente y objetivos. Introducción y repaso histórico. Situación actual en: Cono Sur, región del Amazonas, Pacto Andino y América Central. Tendencias adaptativas de las triatominae. Estudios de caso. Anexo


Subject(s)
Americas , Chagas Disease , Zoonoses
12.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 92(1): 1-8, Jan.-Feb. 1997. mapas, tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-182845

ABSTRACT

Heavy domestic and peridomestic infestations of Triatoma infestans were controlled in two villages in southern Bolivia by the application of deltramethrin SC25 (2,5 per cent suspension concentrate) at a target dose of 25 mg a.i.m². Actual applied dose was monitored by HPLC analysis of filter papers placed at various heights on the house walls, and was shown to range from 0 to 59.6 about a mean of 28.5 mg a.i./m². Wall bioassays showed high mortality of T.infestans during the first month after the application of deltamethrin. Mortality declined to zero as summer temperatures increased, but reappeared with the onset of the following winter. In contrast, knockdown was apparent throughtout the trial, showing no discernible temperature dependence. House infestation rates, measured by manual sampling and use of paper sheets to collect bug faeces, declined from 79 per cent at the beginning of the trial to zero at the 6 month evalution. All but one of the houses were still free of T.infestans at the final evaluation 12 months after spraying, although a small number of bugs were found at this time in 5 of 355 peridomestic dependencies. Comparative cist studies endorse the recommendation of large-scale application of deltamethrin or pyrethroid of similar cost-effectiveness, as a means to eliminate domestic T.infestans populations in order to interrupt transmission of Chagas disease.


Subject(s)
Animals , Chrysanthemum cinerariifolium/chemistry , Chagas Disease/transmission , Triatoma/drug effects , Pest Control, Biological/methods , Insect Control , Insect Vectors/drug effects , Insecticides
13.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 88(3): 379-85, July-Sept. 1993. ilus, tab, mapas
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-148793

ABSTRACT

Because of the relative epidemiological significance of Triatoma sordida, T. guasayana and T. patagonica, and the need to resolve doubts about their taxonomic validity, we report here a detailed taxonomic comparison of the three species using multivariate analysis of morphometric measures combined with comparisons of their genitalia and antennal structures. From the 17 metric variables studied, the length of the second segment of the rostrum and the anteocular length provided a discrimination function able to separate without error T. sordida from T. guasayana and T. patagonica. The multivariate discriminant functions classified T. guasayana and T. patagonica with an error of 2.44 per cent . Comparison of the male genitalia of T. guasayana and T. sordida showed that there are minor differences in the articulatory apparatus, the median process of the pygophore, the phallosome support and the vesica, with bigger differences in the endosomal process and the phallosome. However, the already described male genitalia of T. patagonica is very similar to that of T. sordida. Analysis of antennal structure by scanning electron microscope showed that sensilla distribution around the pedicel is slightly different in the three species and sensilla density is highest in T. sordida and lowest in T. patagonica. The study showed that the three species form a closely related group. The results confirm the earlier classification of sordida and guasayana as separate species, but they raise some doubts about the taxonomic status of T. patagonica


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Triatoma/classification , Disease Vectors/classification
14.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 86(3): 285-95, jul.-set. 1991. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-109171

ABSTRACT

Chagas disease transmission can be effetively interrupted by insecticidal control of its triatomine bug vectors. We present here a simple model comparing the costs and benefits of such a programme, designed to eliminate domestic populations of Triatoma infestans throughout its known area of distribution over the seven southernmost countries of Latin America. The model has been simplified to require only four financial estimates relating to the unit cost of housing spraying and benefits due to avoidance of premature death in the acute phase of the disease, avoidance of supportive treatment and care in the chronic phase of the disease, and avoidance of corrective digestive and cardiac surgery. Exceptfor these direct medical costs, al other potential benefits have been ignored. Nevertheless, the model shows that the direct financial benefits of such a programme would far outweigh the costs, and the project would support a remarkably high internal rate of return under the least optimistic estimates


Subject(s)
Humans , Chagas Disease/prevention & control , Insect Control/economics , Insecticides , Triatominae , Cost-Benefit Analysis , South America
15.
Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop ; 19(1): 5-8, jan.-mar. 1986. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-35725

ABSTRACT

Determinar as populaçöes de barbeiros residuais nas casas depois de borrifaçäo com inseticidas é um componente importante na vigilânica e evoluçäo do controle dos vetores da doença de Chagas. Recentemente, mostramos que folhas de papel, afixadas na parede das casas infestadas, podem ser manchadas com fezes dos triatomíneos, assim revelando a infestaçäo. Apresenta-se uma chave simples para diferenciar as fezes dos triatomíneos de outros artropodos, como baratas, carrapatos e percevejos de cama


Subject(s)
Humans , Insect Control , Triatominae/growth & development
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