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1.
Academic monograph. São Paulo: Instituto Butantan; 2024. 45 p.
Thesis in Portuguese | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-IBPROD, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: bud-5326

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Endemic to the Southern Cone of the Americas, moths of the genus Lonomia contain around 60 species, which, during their immature phase, have toxins that are potentially lethal to humans and other mammals. The status quo of Lonomia taxonomic diversity in Brazil, especially the southern and southeastern regions, still needs to be clearly described. Little is known about the sexual dimorphism of wing shape and size in Lonomia, its magnitude among the different species within the genus, and its importance in species diagnosis. Objectives: Therefore, this work aimed to investigate the diversity of size and wing shape of moths, previously described and deposited in collections as L. obliqua, identifying the existence and quantifying the magnitude of wing sexual dimorphism (DSA) in population samples from the South and Southeast of Brazil. Materials and Methods: In this work, the wing geometric morphometry technique was used to quantify the morphological variations of female and male wings within different populations previously described as Lonomia obliqua. To this end, the right anterior and posterior wings of individuals from different federative units in the South and Southeast of Brazil were diaphanized, photographed, and had their anatomical landmarks recorded to perform Procrustes (sP) superimposition, Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Discriminant of Canonical Variables (AVC) in MorphoJ and of Centroid Size in PAST. Results and discussion: In an unprecedented way, this study showed the existence of sexual dimorphism in wing shape and size. The magnitude of wing sexual dimorphism varied between the groups analyzed. Females showed a clear tendency to have larger fore and hind wings compared to males. For further studies, an analysis of interference between populations that did not have clearly segregated sexes is suggested, as well as more in-depth studies on differences in wing shapes and behavioral performance.


Introdução: Endêmicas do Cone Sul das Américas, as mariposas do gênero Lonomia, contém cerca de 60 espécies, as quais durante sua fase imatura possuem toxinas potencialmente letais a seres humanos e outros mamíferos. O status quo da diversidade taxonômica de Lonomia no Brasil e especialmente as regiões sul e sudeste ainda não está claramente descrito. Pouco se sabe acerca do dimorfismo sexual de forma e tamanho alar em Lonomia, sua magnitude entre as diversas espécies dentro do gênero, bem como sua importância na diagnose de espécie. Objetivos: Portanto, o objetivo deste trabalho foi investigar a diversidade de tamanho e forma alar de mariposas, previamente descritas e depositadas nas coleções como L. obliqua, identificando a existência e quantificando a magnitude de dimorfismo sexual alar (DSA) em amostras populacionais do Sul e Sudeste do Brasil. Materiais e Métodos: Neste trabalho a técnica de morfometria geométrica alar, foi utilizada para quantificar as variações morfológica das asas de fêmeas e machos dentro de diferentes populações previamente descritas como Lonomia obliqua. Para tanto, asas anteriores e posteriores direitas de indivíduos provenientes de diferentes unidades federativas do Sul e Sudeste do Brasil, foram diafanizadas, fotografadas e tiveram seus marcos anatômicos registrados para realizar sobreposição de Procrustes (sP), Análises de Componentes Principais (ACP) e de Discriminante de Variáveis Canônicas (AVC) no MorphoJ e de Tamanho de centróide no PAST. Resultados e discussão: De forma inédita este estudo apresentou a existência de dimorfismo sexual de forma e de tamanho alares. A magnitude do dimorfismo sexual alar variou entre os grupos analisados. As fêmeas apresentaram clara tendência a possuírem asas anteriores e posteriores maiores em relação aos machos. Para estudos posteriores uma análise das interferências entre populações que não tiveram os sexos claramente segregados é sugerida, bem como estudos mais aprofundados sobre as diferenças nas formas das asas e performance no comportamento.

2.
Wilderness Environ Med ; 33(3): 329-331, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35577658

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this report is to describe a case of urticarial dermatitis, or erucism, caused by the white flannel moth caterpillar (Norape ovina) in central Virginia. Many caterpillars are known to cause erucism, with the puss caterpillar (Megalopyge opercularis) being the most reported culprit in the United States. White flannel moth caterpillars are expected to cause erucism as they belong to the same family as the puss caterpillar (Megalopygidae) and have similar venom-containing hairs, but no reports of the reaction or clinical course have been documented in the medical literature. A subject was stung by a white flannel moth caterpillar after it fell on his neck while clearing brush with a machete. The subject experienced immediate pain and developed a raised, erythematous rash where the caterpillar had fallen. The rash, referred to as erucism, was painful for 1 d and improved slowly over the course of 2 wk, but a small area of discoloration remained 2.5 mo after contact. Symptoms were managed by the subject at home and no medications were administered. The white flannel moth caterpillar inflicts erucism similar to that caused by the more commonly mentioned puss caterpillar. If only local symptoms are sustained from contact with a white flannel moth caterpillar, it can be safely and effectively managed with over-the-counter medications similar to the management for erucism induced by other caterpillar species. Irrigation and removal of urticating hairs with adhesive tape may help reduce the pain and is recommended, though not performed in this case.


Subject(s)
Exanthema , Insect Bites and Stings , Moths , Animals , Insect Bites and Stings/complications , Larva , Pain/etiology , Virginia
3.
Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg ; 115(1): 9-19, 2021 01 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32945864

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Among the Lepidoptera with medical importance in Brazil, larvae of Lonomia moth (Saturniidae: Hemileucinae) stand out by being the etiological agent of the lonomism, a form of erucism in which the most troubling symptoms include systemic hemorrhage that can lead to death. METHODS: This study provides an epidemiological overview of accident notifications with Lonomia registered by the Brazilian Reportable Disease Information System (SINAN) between 2007 and 2018. The categories of sociodemographic aspects of the victim, accident characteristics, and clinical data (6,636 records) were analysed by the chi-square test for goodness of fit (α=0.05). By the same test, accident frequencies by month, year, and state were also compared. To explore the spatial distribution of notifications and to identify significant space-time and purely spatial clusters, a spatial scan statistic (SaTScan) was used. RESULTS: The epidemiological profile of most of the victims had at least one of the following characteristics: male, >50 y of age, ethnically classified as white, and with a low level of education. Accidents in urban areas were as frequent as in rural areas. A higher frequency of non-work-related accidents was detected. Victims were mostly stung on the upper limbs. Most victims received medical care within the first 3 h after the accident. Most cases were classified as mild, although 12 deaths were reported. The south states of Brazil concentrate the highest frequencies of notifications. Summer was the season with the greatest number of cases, and the majority of the notifications occurred between 2017 and 2018. CONCLUSION: These results provide an overall and current situation assessment of the lonomism in Brazil, and they should enable health authorities to improve the management of this envenomation in states/regions that share the high epidemiological risk of exposure to Lonomia.


Subject(s)
Arthropod Venoms , Moths , Animals , Brazil/epidemiology , Hemorrhage , Larva , Male
4.
Clin Toxicol (Phila) ; 57(5): 338-342, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30449184

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Erucism, envenomation caused by dermal contact with larval forms of moths, may result in intense local pain, mainly after contact with puss caterpillars (family Megalopygidae). OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the response to different treatments for controlling severe pain in a case series of erucism in Campinas, southeastern Brazil. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Prospective cohort study. A Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS 0-10) was used to assess pain intensity in the Emergency Department (ED). Pain was considered as severe upon ED admission (T0) when the NPRS was ≥8. INCLUSION CRITERIA: age ≥8 years old, severe pain at T0, with continuous assessment of pain intensity in all patients using the NPRS during the ED stay (T5, T15, T30, T60 min and at discharge). RESULTS: Fifty-five patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria and were divided into three groups according to the initial treatment at T0: local anesthesia alone with 2% lidocaine (group 1, n = 15), local anesthesia and analgesics (group 2, n = 26) and analgesics without local anesthesia (group 3, n = 14). Most patients were admitted within 2 h after dermal contact with the stinging bristles of caterpillars (median =90 min, IQR: 40-125 min). In 22 cases (40%), the caterpillar was brought for identification (Podalia spp., n = 18; Megalopyge spp., n = 4). There was a significant decrease in pain from T5 onwards with all of the treatments. When the short-term response (T5 and T15) was considered, analgesia was more effective in groups 1 and 2 compared to group 3 (p < .01). Additional analgesia (from T5 until discharge) was frequently required (n = 25/55), mainly in group 1 (n = 11/15). The median length of stay in the ED was 120 min (IQR: 80-173 min). CONCLUSIONS: The association of local anesthesia with analgesics was apparently a good combination for the rapid management of severe pain in the ED.


Subject(s)
Analgesics/administration & dosage , Anesthetics, Local/administration & dosage , Arthropod Venoms/adverse effects , Insect Bites and Stings/drug therapy , Moths/embryology , Pain/drug therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Animals , Child , Drug Therapy, Combination , Female , Humans , Insect Bites and Stings/diagnosis , Insect Bites and Stings/etiology , Larva , Male , Middle Aged , Pain/diagnosis , Pain/etiology , Pain Measurement , Prospective Studies , Severity of Illness Index , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
5.
Wilderness Environ Med ; 28(1): 46-50, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28087323

ABSTRACT

Contact with Lonomia caterpillars can cause a hemorrhagic syndrome. In Brazil, Lonomia obliqua and Lonomia achelous are known to cause this venom-induced disease. In the Brazilian Amazon, descriptions of this kind of envenomation are scarce. Herein, we report a severe hemorrhagic syndrome caused by Lonomia envenomation in the Amazonas state, Western Brazilian Amazon. The patient showed signs of hemorrhage lasting 8 days and required Lonomia antivenom administration, which resulted in resolution of hemorrhagic syndrome. Thus, availability of Lonomia antivenom as well as early antivenom therapy administration should be addressed across remote areas in the Amazon.


Subject(s)
Hemorrhage/drug therapy , Insect Bites and Stings/drug therapy , Insect Bites and Stings/etiology , Moths , Animals , Antivenins/therapeutic use , Brazil , Hemorrhage/chemically induced , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Syndrome
6.
Rev. peru. med. exp. salud publica ; 33(4): 819-823, oct.-dic. 2016. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS, LIPECS | ID: biblio-845757

ABSTRACT

RESUMEN Los accidentes causados por las setas urticantes o venenosas de las orugas de lepidópteros, se conocen como erucismo. Estos accidentes se producen por el contacto accidental, especialmente por los niños, con las cerdas sobre el cuerpo del insecto, conectadas con glándulas venenosas. Los síntomas pueden ser locales o sistémicos, con presentaciones clínicas fatales. El accidente ocasionado por las orugas del género Lonomia spp. puede desencadenar síndromes hemorrágicos, constituyendo estos la forma más grave de erucismo. Se reporta el caso de una niña de 5 años, procedente del poblado de Villarondos, en la Amazonía del Perú, departamento de Huánuco, la cual incidentalmente se hinca con las cerdas de una oruga, cursando luego con anemia hemolítica, plaquetopenia y trastorno de la coagulación. El diagnóstico fue establecido por la anamnesis, cuadro clínico, exámenes de laboratorio y respuesta al suero antilonómico. Se discuten los aspectos clínicos, laboratoriales y terapéuticos de erucismo por Lonomia spp.


ABSTRACT Accidents caused by urticating or poisonous setae from lepidoptera caterpillars are known as erucism. These accidents are produced by accidental contact, especially in children, with bristles on the insect's body surface, connected to venom glands. Symptoms may be local or systemic, with deadly clinical presentations. The accident caused by Lonomia spp. caterpillars can trigger bleeding disorders, which is considered the most severe type of erucism. The case of a 5-year-old girl is reported. She was from the town of Villarondos, in the Peruvian Amazon, department of Huánuco, who accidentally knelt down on caterpillar bristles, and subsequently experienced hemolytic anemia, plateletopenia, and coagulation disorder. The diagnosis was made based on the medical history, clinical manifestation, laboratory examination results, and response to antilonomic serum. The clinical, laboratory, and therapeutic aspects of erucism due to Lonomia spp. are discussed.


Subject(s)
Animals , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Arthropod Venoms/adverse effects , Hemorrhage/etiology , Lepidoptera
7.
Medicina (B Aires) ; 75(5): 328-33, 2015.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26502471

ABSTRACT

Lonomia obliqua (Walker, 1855) is a moth from the family Saturniidae, widely distributed in tropical rainforests of South America. In its larval stage (caterpillar) it is characterized by bristles that cover the animal's body. These structures are hard and branched spiny evaginations of the cuticle, underneath which a complex mixture of toxic molecules is stored. When spicules are brought into contact with the skin of people, toxins enter passively through the injury, causing not only local but also systemic poisoning (primarily hemorrhagic manifestations). When the whole animal is accidentally crushed, the insect's chitinous bristles are broken and the venomous secretions penetrate the human skin, reaching the blood circulation. Due to the numerous registered cases of erucism in Southern Brazil, the Butantan Institute has produced an antivenom able to neutralize the deleterious effects produced by contact with L. obliqua caterpillar bristles. In Argentina, these kinds of accidents are rare and restricted to the province of Misiones. Taking into account that to date there is no report in this country about clinical cases submitted to a specific treatment (antivenom), our aim is to communicate here six cases of Lonomia caterpillar-induced bleeding syndrome that were treated in the Hospital SAMIC of Puerto Iguazú (Misiones, Argentina) during 2014 with the antilonomic serum produced in Brazil. It is worthy to note that all patients evolved favorably within the first few hours, and for this reason, the use of this antivenom is recommended to treat the cases of Lonomia erucism in Argentina.


Subject(s)
Antivenins/therapeutic use , Arthropod Venoms/blood , Bites and Stings/therapy , Immunization, Passive , Moths/chemistry , Moths/classification , Adolescent , Adult , Animals , Argentina , Brazil , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Hematuria , Hemorrhage/chemically induced , Humans , Larva/chemistry , Larva/classification , Male , Middle Aged
8.
Medicina (B.Aires) ; 75(5): 328-333, Oct. 2015. ilus, mapas
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-841523

ABSTRACT

Lonomia obliqua (Walker, 1855) es una mariposa nocturna de la familia Saturniidae, ampliamente distribuida en selvas tropicales de Sudamérica. Su larva (oruga) se caracteriza por poseer espículas ramificadas puntiagudas a lo largo de su cuerpo, que contienen una mezcla compleja de moléculas tóxicas en su interior. Cuando las espículas contactan con la piel de las personas, las toxinas ingresan pasivamente a través de la lesión, generando un envenenamiento caracterizado por manifestaciones no solo locales sino también sistémicas (fundamentalmente manifestaciones hemorrágicas). Debido al elevado número de casos que se produjeron en Brasil en las últimas décadas, el Instituto Butantan ha producido un antiveneno capaz de neutralizar los efectos deletéreos de los accidentes por contacto con L. obliqua. En Argentina, los accidentes por Lonomia son poco frecuentes y se limitan a la provincia de Misiones. Teniendo en cuenta que a la fecha no hay en la literatura descripciones de casos clínicos ocurridos en el país con tratamiento específico (antiveneno), el propósito del presente trabajo es comunicar seis casos de accidentes por contacto con orugas Lonomia que fueron atendidos en el Hospital SAMIC de Puerto Iguazú (Misiones, Argentina) durante el año 2014, y que fueron tratados con el suero antilonómico producido en Brasil. Se destaca la evolución rápida y favorable de todos los pacientes, por lo que se recomienda el uso de este antiveneno para tratar los casos de erucismo por Lonomia en la Argentina.


Lonomia obliqua (Walker, 1855) is a moth from the family Saturniidae, widely distributed in tropical rainforests of South America. In its larval stage (caterpillar) it is characterized by bristles that cover the animal’s body. These structures are hard and branched spiny evaginations of the cuticle, underneath which a complex mixture of toxic molecules is stored. When spicules are brought into contact with the skin of people, toxins enter passively through the injury, causing not only local but also systemic poisoning (primarily hemorrhagic manifestations). When the whole animal is accidentally crushed, the insect’s chitinous bristles are broken and the venomous secretions penetrate the human skin, reaching the blood circulation. Due to the numerous registered cases of erucism in Southern Brazil, the Butantan Institute has produced an antivenom able to neutralize the deleterious effects produced by contact with L. obliqua caterpillar bristles. In Argentina, these kinds of accidents are rare and restricted to the province of Misiones. Taking into account that to date there is no report in this country about clinical cases submitted to a specific treatment (antivenom), our aim is to communicate here six cases of Lonomia caterpillar-induced bleeding syndrome that were treated in the Hospital SAMIC of Puerto Iguazú (Misiones, Argentina) during 2014 with the antilonomic serum produced in Brazil. It is worthy to note that all patients evolved favorably within the first few hours, and for this reason, the use of this antivenom is recommended to treat the cases of Lonomia erucism in Argentina.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Male , Female , Child, Preschool , Child , Adolescent , Adult , Middle Aged , Arthropod Venoms/blood , Bites and Stings/therapy , Antivenins/therapeutic use , Immunization, Passive , Moths/classification , Moths/chemistry , Argentina , Brazil , Hematuria , Hemorrhage/chemically induced , Larva/classification , Larva/chemistry
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