Article
Trypanosoma cruzi (Kinetoplastida Trypanosomatidae): ecology of the transmission cycle in the wild environment of the Andean valley of Cochabamba, Bolivia
Registro en:
CORTEZ, Mirko Rojas et al. Trypanosoma cruzi (Kinetoplastida Trypanosomatidae): Ecology of the transmission cycle in the wild environment of the Andean valley of Cochabamba, Bolivia. Experimental Parasitology, v. 114, p. 305-313, June 2006.
0014-4894
10.1016/j.exppara.2006.04.010
1090-2449
Autor
Cortez, Mirko Rojas
Pinho, Ana Paula
Cuervo, Patricia
Alfaro, Fernando
Solano, Marco
Xavier, Samanta C. C.
D'Andrea, Paulo Sérgio
Fernandes, Octavio
Torrico, Faustino
Noireau, François
Jansen, Ana Maria
Resumen
An active Trypanosoma cruzi transmission cycle maintained by wild rodents in the Andean valleys of Cochabamba Bolivia is described. Wild and domestic Triatoma infestans with 60% infection with T. cruzi were found and was evidenced in 47.5% (rodents) and 26.7% (marsupial) by parasitological and/or serologycal methods. Phyllotis ocilae and the marsupial species Thylamys elegans, are the most important reservoirs followed by Bolomys lactens and Akodon boliviensis. In spite of both genotypes (TCI and TCII) being prevalent in Bolivia, in our study area only T. cruzi I is being transmitted. Our data suggest that wild T. infestans and wild small mammals play an important role in the maintenance of the transmission cycle of T. cruzi. Furthermore, the finding of high prevalence of T. cruzi infection in wild T. infestans point to the risk of the dispersion of Chagas' disease. 2025-01-01