Study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Venezuela: the role of domestic animals

During an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in a locality (Las Rosas, Cojedes State, venezuela) previously non-endemic, 12.9% of humans, 7% of dogs and 21.4% of donkeys (Equus asinus) had lesions with paraites. The agent in the three hosts was identified as Leishmania braziliensis, subspecies braziliensis at least in man and donkey. The probable vector was Lutzomyia panamensis. No infection was found in a small sample of wild mammals examined. The outbreak was apparently linked with the importation of donkeys with ulcers, from endemic areas. The Authors call attention to the fact that not only in the foci of "uta", but also in areas of the other forms of American cutaneous leishmaniasis, dogs are frequently found infected. They emphasize the necessity of searching for the infection in donkeys and of performing hemocultures and xenodiagnosis with sandflies in human, canine and equine cases, to verify their possible role as sources of infection, and not merely as dead ends in the epidemiological chain of the disease.

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Main Authors: Aguilar,Cruz Manuel, Fernandez,Elio, Fernandez,Reina de, Deane,Leonidas M.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde 1984
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0074-02761984000200005
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spelling oai:scielo:S0074-027619840002000052009-07-02Study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Venezuela: the role of domestic animalsAguilar,Cruz ManuelFernandez,ElioFernandez,Reina deDeane,Leonidas M.During an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in a locality (Las Rosas, Cojedes State, venezuela) previously non-endemic, 12.9% of humans, 7% of dogs and 21.4% of donkeys (Equus asinus) had lesions with paraites. The agent in the three hosts was identified as Leishmania braziliensis, subspecies braziliensis at least in man and donkey. The probable vector was Lutzomyia panamensis. No infection was found in a small sample of wild mammals examined. The outbreak was apparently linked with the importation of donkeys with ulcers, from endemic areas. The Authors call attention to the fact that not only in the foci of "uta", but also in areas of the other forms of American cutaneous leishmaniasis, dogs are frequently found infected. They emphasize the necessity of searching for the infection in donkeys and of performing hemocultures and xenodiagnosis with sandflies in human, canine and equine cases, to verify their possible role as sources of infection, and not merely as dead ends in the epidemiological chain of the disease.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da SaúdeMemórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz v.79 n.2 19841984-06-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0074-02761984000200005en10.1590/S0074-02761984000200005
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
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databasecode rev-scielo-br
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Aguilar,Cruz Manuel
Fernandez,Elio
Fernandez,Reina de
Deane,Leonidas M.
spellingShingle Aguilar,Cruz Manuel
Fernandez,Elio
Fernandez,Reina de
Deane,Leonidas M.
Study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Venezuela: the role of domestic animals
author_facet Aguilar,Cruz Manuel
Fernandez,Elio
Fernandez,Reina de
Deane,Leonidas M.
author_sort Aguilar,Cruz Manuel
title Study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Venezuela: the role of domestic animals
title_short Study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Venezuela: the role of domestic animals
title_full Study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Venezuela: the role of domestic animals
title_fullStr Study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Venezuela: the role of domestic animals
title_full_unstemmed Study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Venezuela: the role of domestic animals
title_sort study of an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in venezuela: the role of domestic animals
description During an outbreak of cutaneous leishmaniasis in a locality (Las Rosas, Cojedes State, venezuela) previously non-endemic, 12.9% of humans, 7% of dogs and 21.4% of donkeys (Equus asinus) had lesions with paraites. The agent in the three hosts was identified as Leishmania braziliensis, subspecies braziliensis at least in man and donkey. The probable vector was Lutzomyia panamensis. No infection was found in a small sample of wild mammals examined. The outbreak was apparently linked with the importation of donkeys with ulcers, from endemic areas. The Authors call attention to the fact that not only in the foci of "uta", but also in areas of the other forms of American cutaneous leishmaniasis, dogs are frequently found infected. They emphasize the necessity of searching for the infection in donkeys and of performing hemocultures and xenodiagnosis with sandflies in human, canine and equine cases, to verify their possible role as sources of infection, and not merely as dead ends in the epidemiological chain of the disease.
publisher Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde
publishDate 1984
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0074-02761984000200005
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