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1.
Bull Soc Pathol Exot ; 108(5): 360-8, 2015 Dec.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26419486

ABSTRACT

An entomological survey was carried out from August to November 2013, in order to determine the vector system of a building site for social housing in a coastal periurban district of Douala (Cameroon). Mosquito larvae were collected and adult endophilic mosquitoes captured on volunteers, for a total sample of 4897 mosquitoes. Morpho-taxonomic techniques alongside molecular techniques enabled the identification of 4 species, all aggressive to humans: Cx. pipiens (22.3%), Ae. albopictus (0.3%), An. coluzzii and An. gambiae (77.4%). The overall average biting rate recorded was 41.73 bites/person/night (b/p/n). An. gambiae s.l. represents 90.82% of this aggressive fauna, followed by Cx. pipiens (8.58%) and Ae. albopictus (0.6%). The detection of CSP showed that An. gambiae was responsible for 100% of P. falciparum transmission. The overall mean Entomological Inoculation Rate (EIR) was 3.94 ib/p/n. Female An. gambiae mortality rates were 14.47%, 82.5% and 100% respectively with DDT, permethrin and deltamethrin. The proliferation of An. gambiae in this area during raining season, at the detriment of An. coluzzii Coetze & Wilkerson and An. melas Theobald known to be major malaria vectors in island and coastal areas of Africa, may owe to the forest that still colonises this coastal peri-urban locality. Residents should therefore make use of deltamethrin based protective measures.


Subject(s)
Anopheles/physiology , Insect Vectors/physiology , Malaria, Falciparum/transmission , Animals , Anopheles/growth & development , Anopheles/parasitology , Cameroon/epidemiology , Cities , Culicidae/parasitology , Culicidae/physiology , DDT , Female , Humans , Insect Bites and Stings/epidemiology , Insecticide Resistance , Insecticides , Larva , Malaria, Falciparum/epidemiology , Nitriles , Permethrin , Plasmodium falciparum/isolation & purification , Pyrethrins , Seasons , Species Specificity , Surveys and Questionnaires
2.
Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis ; 4(3): 230-8, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15631068

ABSTRACT

Vector control is an effective and cost-efficient way to disrupt the transmission of human African trypanosomosis (HAT); it has nonetheless been little used to date in the disease's foci. With the aim to target trapping more precisely and to develop an optimized vector control system, a transmission risk index was used in the HAT focus of Bipindi, in the forest zone of southern Cameroon. The authors used a simplified version of the index originally developed by Laveissière et al. in 1994. The calculation of this new index only requires knowledge of the proportion of teneral flies and the proportion of flies with human blood meals in samples caught in different biotopes. This makes it possible to identify the biotopes displaying permanent risk, such as riverbanks, as well as biotopes displaying seasonal risk, such as marshy hollows and encampmemts. In the villages, the domestic pig, with 49% of the identified blood meals, is the favorite host of the tsetse flies during the short rainy season. The proportion of blood meals taken on human beings does not significantly increase when domestic pigs are absent. Game animals, contributing to 46% and 64% of the blood meals during the short rainy season and the long dry season, respectively, are also favored as feeding hosts in this particular HAT focus.


Subject(s)
Insect Control/methods , Insect Vectors/parasitology , Trypanosoma brucei gambiense/growth & development , Trypanosomiasis, African/transmission , Tsetse Flies/parasitology , Animals , Animals, Wild , Cameroon/epidemiology , Disease Vectors , Female , Humans , Insect Vectors/physiology , Male , Population Surveillance , Risk Factors , Seasons , Swine , Trypanosomiasis, African/epidemiology , Tsetse Flies/physiology
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