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Título : Environmental factors associated with American cutaneous leishmaniasis in a new Andean focus in Colombia
Autor : Cadena Peña, Horacio
Ocampo, Clara B.
Ferro de Carrasquilla, María Cristina
Gongora, R.
Pérez, M.
Valderrama Ardila, Carlos Humberto
Quinnel, R. J.
Alexander, Neal
metadata.dc.subject.*: Leishmaniasis
Factores de riesgo
Risk Factors
Leishmaniasis Cutánea
Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous
Psychodidae
Ecología
Ecology
Reservorios de Enfermedades
Disease Reservoirs
Fecha de publicación : 2012
Editorial : Blackwell Scientific Publications
Citación : Ocampo CB, Ferro MC, Cadena H, Gongora R, Pérez M, Valderrama-Ardila CH, Quinnell RJ, Alexander N. Environmental factors associated with American cutaneous leishmaniasis in a new Andean focus in Colombia. Trop Med Int Health. 2012 Oct;17(10):1309-17. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2012.03065.x.
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Objective: To evaluate the environmental and ecological factors associated with Leishmania transmission and vector abundance in Chaparral, Tolima-Colombia.Methods: First, we compared the ecological characteristics, abundance of phlebotomies and potential reservoir hosts in the peridomestic environment (100 m radius) of randomly selected houses, between two townships with high and low cutaneous leishmaniasis incidence. Second, we examined peridomesticcorrelates of phlebotomine abundance in all 43 houses in the higher risk township.Results: The high transmission township had higher coverage of forest (23% vs. 8.4%) and shade coffee(30.7% vs. 11%), and less coffee monoculture (16.8% vs. 26.2%) and pasture (6.3% vs. 12.3%),compared to the low transmission township.Lutzomyia were more abundant in the high transmission township 2.5 vs. 0.2/trap/night.Lutzomyia longiflocosa was the most common species in both town-ships: 1021/1450 (70%) and 39/80 (49%). Numbers of potential wild mammal reservoirs were small,although four species were found to be infected with Leishmania(Viannia) spp. In the high transmission township, the overall peridomiciliary capture rate ofL. longiflocosa was 1.5/trap/night, and the abundance was higher in houses located nearer to forest (p= 0.30, P= 0.05).Conclusion: The findings are consistent with a domestic transmission cycle with the phlebotomies dependent on dense vegetation near the house.
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: 1365-3156
ISSN : 1360-2276
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3156.2012.03065.x
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos de Revista en Ciencias Médicas

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