Article
Leprosy survey among rural communities and wild armadillos from Amazonas state, Northern Brazil
Registro en:
STEFANI, Mariane Martins Araújo et al. Leprosy survey among rural communities and wild armadillos from Amazonas state, Northern Brazil. Plos One, [San Francisco], v. 14, n. 1, p. 1-13, Jan. 2018.
1932-6203
10.1371/journal.pone.0209491
Autor
Stefani, Mariane Martins Araújo
Rosa, Patricia Sammarco
Costa, Mauricio Barcelos
Schetinni, Antônio Pedro Mendes
Manhães, Igor
Pontes, Maria Araci de Andrade
Costa, Patricia
Fachin, Luciana Raquel Vincenzi
Baptista, Ida Maria Foschiani Dias
Virmond, Marcos da Cunha Lopes
Pereira, Emília
Penna, Maria Lucia Fernandes
Penna, Gerson Oliveira
Resumen
Gerson Oliveira Penna - Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Fiocruz Brasília. Brasília, DF, Brasil. Documento produzido em parceria ou por autor vinculado à Fiocruz, mas não consta à informação no documento. MS/DECIT/CNPq There is evidence that in southern US, leprosy is a zoonosis infecting wild Dasypus novemcinctus armadillos but the extent of this finding is unknown. This ecological study investigated leprosy in rural communities and in wild armadillos from the Brazilian Amazon. The study area was the Mamiá Lake of Coari municipality, Amazonas State, Northern region, a hyper endemic leprosy area where residents live on subsistence farming, fishing and armadillo hunting and its meat intake are frequent. The leprosy survey was conducted in sixteen communities by a visiting team of specialists. Local partakers provided wild armadillos to investigate M. leprae infection. Volunteers had complete dermato-neurological examination by a dermatologist with expertise in leprosy diagnosis, suspect skin lesions were biopsied for histopathology (Hematoxylin-eosin/HE, Fite-Faraco/FF staining); slit skin smears were collected. Armadillos' tissue fragments (skins, spleens, livers, lymph nodes, adrenal glands, others) were prepared for histopathology (HE/FF) and for M. leprae repetitive element-RLEP-qPCR. Among 176 volunteers, six new indeterminate leprosy cases were identified (incidence = 3.4%). Suspect skin sections and slit skin smears were negative for bacilli. Twelve wild D. novemcinctus were investigated (48 specimens/96 slides) and histopathological features of M. leprae infection were not found, except for one skin presenting unspecific inflammatory infiltrate suggestive of indeterminate leprosy. Possible traumatic neuroma, granuloma with epithelioid and Langhans cells, foreign-body granuloma were also identified. Granulomatous/non-granulomatous dermatitides were periodic-acid-Schiff/PAS negative for fungus. M. leprae-RLEP-qPCR was negative in all armadillos' tissues; no bacillus was found in histopathology. Our survey in rural communities confirmed the high endemicity for leprosy while one armadillo was compatible with paucibacillary M. leprae infection. At least in the highly endemic rural area of Coari, in the Brazilian Amazon region where infectious sources from untreated multibacillary leprosy are abundant, M. leprae infected armadillos may not represent a major source of infection nor a significant public health concern.
Materias
Ítems relacionados
Mostrando ítems relacionados por Título, autor o materia.
-
Towards leprosy elimination by 2020: Forecasts of epidemiological indicators of leprosy in corrientes, a province of northeastern Argentina that is a pioneer in leprosy elimination
Petri de Odriozola, Elisa; Quintana, Ana María; González, Victor; Pasetto, Roque Antonio; Utgés, María Eugenia; Bruzzone, Octavio Augusto; Arnaiz, Maria Rosa (Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 2017-04)BACKGROUND: Corrientes, a province of northeastern Argentina with endemic leprosy, has improved its epidemiological indicators, however, a study of the dynamics over time is lacking. OBJECTIVES We analysed data of 1308 ... -
Spatial distribution of leprosy in municipalities of the state of Goiás in the year 2020
Barros Milhomem, Antoninho; de Lima Borges, Diana; Medeiros Melo, Leila; Libânio de Morais Neto, Otaliba