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1.
Medicina (B.Aires) ; 64(3): 231-234, 2004. ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-389553

ABSTRACT

Los casos de dengue detectados en la Ciudad de Buenos Aires entre 1999 y 2000 confirmaron la posibilidad de brotes epidémicos. Para estudiar el riesgo de transmisión de dengue espacial y temporalmente se midió la actividad de su vector, el mosquito Aedes aegypti. La actividad de ovipostura del vector mostró un patrón de distribución heterogéneo en el tiempo y el espacio. Ocurrió entre octubre y mayo. En las áreas del Norte, Oeste y Sur de la ciudad (periferia) el vector fue detectado entre la primavera y el otoño en tanto que en las áreas del Este (microcentro-río) sólo en el verano. La proporción de sitios infestados varió entre los 3 períodos de estudio, pero las zonas infestadas coincidieron espacialmente. Aunque se observó variación anual y espacial de la infestación, el patrón se repitió durante los 3 años de estudio sugiriendo una dinámica estable. Las áreas de la ciudad no infestadas presentaron las mayores densidades de población y de empleados, mientras que las infestadas durante los 3 períodos presentaron las menores densidades. Esto podría representar una atenuación del riesgo, ya que no coincide la mayor densidad de habitantes con la mayor infestación. El riesgo de transmisión desde el punto de vista del vector se concentraría entre enero y marzo y ocuparía el 50% de la superficie de la ciudad en la periferia.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Aedes/physiology , Disease Reservoirs , Dengue/transmission , Insect Vectors/physiology , Argentina , Population Density , Risk Assessment , Seasons , Urban Population
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 96(4): 459-466, May 2001. ilus, tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-285553

ABSTRACT

Triatoma guasayana is a silvatic triatomine species distributed in Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay. The study was performed in a secondary forest of Santiago del Estero, Argentina. The abundance of T. guasayana was evaluated by census in the following wild biotopes: quimiles (Opuntia quimilo), chaguares (dry bromeliads), logs and underground burrows. Ten biotopes of each type were dismantled in winter (August) and another 40 in summer (January); all fauna was recorded. The biotopes most infested by T. guasayana were quimiles (65 percent), followed by chaguares (55 percent), and logs (25 percent). Quimiles and chaguares were infested in both seasons, whereas logs were positive only in summer and burrows were never infested. Infestation and abundance were higher in summer than in winter. The biotope structure is a key factor for T. guasayana colonization. The larger number of refuges, the constant presence of blood sources and suitable inner microclimatic conditions offered by quimiles may favour the persistence of T. guasayana colonies. The richness of invertebrate fauna per type of biotope was ranked in the same order as that of T. guasayana, suggesting similar microhabitat requirements for all studied arthropods


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Female , Ecology , Insect Vectors , Trees , Triatoma , Argentina , Seasons , Wood
3.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 96(4): 467-471, May 2001. mapas, tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-285554

ABSTRACT

Cemeteries with many water-filled containers, flowers, sources of human blood, and shade are favorable urban habitats for the proliferation of Aedes aegypti, a vector of yellow fever and dengue. A total of 22,956 containers was examined in the five cemeteries of the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina. The vector was found in four cemeteries that showed an average infestation level of 5.5 percent (617 positive out of 11,196 water-filled containers). The four cemeteries positive for Ae. aegypti showed significantly different (p<0.01) infestation levels. Vegetation cover and percentage of infestation were significantly correlated (p<0.01), but neither cemetery area nor number of available containers were significantly related to the proportion of positive vases. Our results suggest that the cemeteries of Buenos Aires represent a gradient of habitat favorableness for this vector species, some of which may act as foci for its proliferation and dispersal


Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Aedes/growth & development , Disease Reservoirs , Environment , Insect Vectors/growth & development , Mortuary Practice , Argentina
4.
Rev. panam. salud pública ; 6(6): 371-7, dic. 1999. ilus, tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-264707

ABSTRACT

Entre los principales reservorios silvestres de Trypanosoma cruzi se encuentran las zarigueyas del género Didelphis, ampliamente distribuidas por el continente americano. En Amamá y Trinidad, Provincia de Santiago del Estero, Argentina, Didelphis albiventris es el marsupial más frecuente. Su población se renueva cada año y normalmente hay dos períodos reproductivos: uno a principios de la primavera y otro a principios del verano. Estas dos camadas son destetadas y abandonan la bolsa marsupial para incorporarse a la población, la primera (G1) a principios del verano y la segunda (G2) a principios del otoño. Entre 1988 y 1991 se estudiaron 409 individuos distintos de D. albiventris y los xenodiagnósticos revelaron que 35 por ciento de ellos estaban infectados por T.cruzi. Se observaron ciclos de renovación anual de la infección con prevalencias que oscilaron entre 22 y 43 por ciento. La adquisición del parásito ocurría a lo largo de todo el año, desde el verano hasta la primavera. La prevalencia de la infección aumentó con la edad. Los individuos G1 tuvieron tendencia a presentar mayores prevalencias que los G2, probablemente debido a un mayor tiempo de exposición a la transmisión. En las dos primeras categorías de edad, los individuos G2 mostraron mayores prevalencias que los G1, lo cual indica un aumento significativo de la intensidad de la transmisión durante el otoño. Las zarigueyas deberían considerarse como una fuente potencial de ingreso de T.cruzi al ciclo doméstico


Subject(s)
Animals , Opossums , Trypanosoma cruzi , Cross-Sectional Studies , Infection Control , Argentina
5.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 90(6): 679-82, Nov.-Dez. 1995. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-158729

ABSTRACT

This paper attempts to prove if a high Trypanosoma cruzi prevalence of opossums might be reached with few potential infective contacts. One non-infected Didelphis albiventris to T. cruzi and 10 infected nymphs of Triatoma infestans were left together during 23 hr in a device that simulated a natural opossum burrow. Twenty-six replicates were perfomed using marsupials and triatomines only once. Potentially infective contacts occurred in all the trials. From the 26 opossums used in trials, 54 por cento did not eat any bug. Of the 260 bugs used, 21 por cento were predated. In the 25 trials involving 205 surving bugs, 36 por cento of them did not feed. In 15/25 cases, maior ou igual a 60 por cento of the triatomines were able to feed. The parasitological follow-up of 24 opossums showed that among 10 that had eaten bugs, 4 turned out infected and among the 14 that had not predate, 3 (21 por cento) became positive. In sum, 7/24 (29 por cento) of the marsupials acquired the infection after the experiment. This infection rate was similar to the prevalences found for the opossum population of Santiago del Estero, Argentina, suggesting that the prevalences observed in the field might be reached if each marsupial would encounter infected bugs just once in its lifetime.


Subject(s)
Animals , Opossums/parasitology , Trypanosoma cruzi
7.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 90(3): 429-431, May-Jun. 1995.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-319879

ABSTRACT

This paper compares the predation pressure that ducks and chickens exert on triatomines. For the tests, these birds were placed in individual boxes together with a known number of Triatoma infestans and left to interact from 6 p.m. till the next morning, involving a long lasting period of complete darkness limited by two short-term periods of semi-darkness. There was a shelter which could prevent the bugs from being predated. The number of live and dead triatomines was recorded, considering missing bugs as predated by the birds. Ducks exhibited a greater predatory activity than chickens, that could be due to a long term active period at night while chickens sleep motionless from sunset to dawn. Surviving triatomines that had fed on chickens outnumbered those fed on ducks suggesting that these were less accessible to the triatomine biting. If ducks are better than chickens to detect and eat bugs and to interfere with their feeding in the field, an increase in duck number might help to diminish triatomine density. Further research is needed to determine the feasibility of application of these experimental results.


Subject(s)
Animals , Chickens , Ducks , Triatoma , Argentina , Chickens , Feeding Behavior , Ducks , Host-Parasite Interactions
8.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 88(1): 27-32, jan.-mar. 1993. tab, ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-117647

ABSTRACT

Flight activity and invasion of houses by Triatoma sordida and T. guasayana were studied in the Province of Santiago del Estero, Argentina. Spontaneous findings of both species in houses were recorded from 1982 to 1989. Light trap collections were performed in 1982, 1983 and 1984, at the woods surrounding the settlements of Amamá (43 houses) and Trinidad (19 houses). Most of the 101 triatomines collected, were unfed and negative for Trypanosoma cruzi. T. guasayana predominated over T. sordida, and both appeared on the lighted screens between 19-31 min (mean 24) after dusk and the catch time was 30-45 min. Although entomological evaluation of 41 houses at Amamá performed in September 1985, just before insecticidal spraying, showed that Triatoma infestans predominated, adults of T. guasayana were collected in sleeping places, in 7 houses (17%). Most triatomines invading houses from then up to 1990 were flying T. guasayana (20/27) and females outnumbered males. Three non infected T. guasayana females were fed on man and two T. guasayana males positive for "T. cruzi like" trypanosomes were unfed. Therefore, visiting hungry adults could transmit T. cruzi to people and introduce wild parasites to the domestic cycle. T. guasayana stands as the main potential substitute of T. infestans in the studied area, and it might play there the same role as T. sordida in Brazil


Subject(s)
Humans , Triatoma/parasitology , Trypanosoma cruzi , Argentina
9.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 87(2): 217-20, abr.-jun. 1992. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-116308

ABSTRACT

To identify wild hosts of Trypanosoma cruzi, surveys were conducted in the subandean valleys of Jujuy Province, Argentina, between June 1986 and March 1987. Seventy two mammals from 13 different species were examined by xenodiagnosis. Fifty two of them were mostly roedents trapped at the localities of Maimará, León and Tilcara, and the remainder had been kept in captivity at the Estación Biológica Experimental, in Jujuy. Trypanosoma cruzi infection was detected only in 2 Octodontomys gliroides (2 pos./8 exam. 25%) from all 72 examined mammals. Isolates were called Octodontomys Argentina 1 and 2 (OA1 and OA2). Both infected animals were caught at the archaelogical ruin of Pucará, at Tilcara. Repeated searches for triatomines in the ruin itself and in neighbour houses rendered negative results. Groups of mice inoculated with either OA1 or OA2 isolates became infected between 7 (OA1) to 12 days (OA2) postinoculation PI. Parasitemia peaks were observed between day 12th - 14th PI. Scarce amastigote nests were found in myocardium and skeletal muscle. Mortality was observed only for mice inoculated with OA1. Isoenzyme patterns of OA1 and OA2 were identical to one found in dogs and slightly different from that of human parasites in Argentina. Bones from Octodontomys sp., were recently found in a cave, dated 10200-8600 BC, in Pumamarca, near Tilcara, Jujuy. There are evidences that O. gliroides cohabited with man in ancient times and was associated to the domestic cycle of T. cruzi transmission, playing a role like that of domestic cavies. in Bolivia


Subject(s)
Rats , Animals , Host-Parasite Interactions , Rodentia/parasitology , Trypanosoma cruzi/isolation & purification , Argentina
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