Chagas' disease in the Brazilian Amazon: I - a short review

At least eighteen species of triatominae have been found in the Brazilian Amazon, nine of them naturally infected with Trypanosoma cruzi or "cruzi-like" trypanosomes and associated with numerous wild reservoirs. Despite the small number of human cases of Chagas' disease described to date in the Brazilian Amazon the risk that the disease will become endemic in this area is increasing for the following reasons: a) uncontrolled deforestation and colonization altering the ecological balance between reservoir hosts and wild vectors; b) the adaptation of reservoir hosts of T.cruzi and wild vectors to peripheral and intradomiciliary areas, as the sole feeding alternative; c) migration of infected human population from endemic areas, accompanied by domestic reservoir hosts (dogs and cats) or accidentally carrying in their baggage vectors already adapted to the domestic habitat. In short, risks that Chagas' disease will become endemic to the Amazon appear to be linked to the transposition of the wild cycle to the domestic cycle in that area or to transfer of the domestic cycle from endemic areas to the Amazon.

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Autores principales: Coura,José Rodrigues, Junqueira,Angela Cristina Verissimo, Giordano,Cristina Maria, Funatsu,Ilra Renata Komoda
Formato: Digital revista
Idioma:English
Publicado: Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo 1994
Acceso en línea:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46651994000400009
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