Brasil
| Article
Frequency of infection of Lutzomyia phlebotomines with Leishmania braziliensis in a Brazilian endemic area as assessed by pinpoint capture and polymerase chain reaction.
Registro en:
MIRANDA, J.C. et al. Frequency of infection of Lutzomyia phlebotomines with Leishmania braziliensis in a Brazilian endemic area as assessed by pinpoint capture and polymerase chain reaction. Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, v. 97, n. 2, p. 185-8, mar. 2002.
Autor
Miranda, José Carlos
Reis, Eliana Almeida Gomes
Schriefer, Albert
Gonçalves, Marilda de Souza
Reis, Mitermayer Galvão dos
Carvalho, Lucas Pedreira de
Fernandes, Octavio
Barral Netto, Manoel
Barral, Aldina Maria Prado
Resumen
Leishmania infected of Lutzomyia spp. are rare in endemic areas. We tested the hypothesis that there is clustering
of infected vectors by combining pinpoint capture with sensitive L. braziliensis kDNA minicircle specific PCR/dot
blot in an endemic area in the State of Bahia. Thirty out of 335 samples (10 to 20 sand flies/sample; total of 4,027
female sand flies) were positive by PCR analysis and dot blot leading to a underestimated overall rate of 0.4%
positive phlebotomines. However, 83.3% of the positive samples were contributed by a single sector out of four
sectors of the whole studied area. This resulted in a rate of 1.5% Leishmania positive phlebotomines for this sector,
far above rates of other sectors. Incidence of American cutaneous leishmaniasis cases for this sector was about twice
that for other sectors. Our results show that there is a non-homogeneous distribution of Leishmania-infected vectors.
Such a clustering may have implications in control strategies against leishmaniasis, and reinforces the necessity of
understanding the ecological and geographical factors involved in leishmanial transmission.