Publications by authors named "A Poinsignon"

Background: Wetlands and irrigated agricultural crops create potential breeding sites for Anopheles mosquitoes, leading to a heterogeneity in malaria transmission. In agricultural areas, heterogeneity of malaria transmission is often associated with the presence of hotspots consisting of localized clusters of higher transmission intensity. This study aims to identify micro-geographic hotspots of malaria transmission in an agricultural setting using a multidisciplinary approach.

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Background: The human host elicits specific immune responses after exposure to various life stages of the malaria parasite as well as components of mosquito saliva injected into the host during a mosquito bite. This study describes differences in IgG responses against antigens derived from the sporozoite (PfCSP), asexual stage parasite (PfEBA175) and the gametocyte (Pfs230), in addition to an Anopheles gambiae salivary gland antigen (gSG6-P1), in two communities in Ghana with similar blood stage malaria parasite prevalence.

Methods: This study used archived plasma samples collected from an earlier cross-sectional study that enrolled volunteers aged from 6 months to 70 years from Simiw, peri-urban community (N = 347) and Obom, rural community (N = 291).

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After intensive control efforts, human African trypanosomiasis (HAT) was declared eliminated in Côte d'Ivoire as a public health problem in December 2020 and the current objective is to achieve the interruption of the transmission (zero cases). Reaching this objective could be hindered by the existence of an animal reservoir of Trypanosoma (T.) brucei (b.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the role of antibody responses to mosquito salivary proteins, specifically al34k2 from Aedes albopictus, in assessing human exposure to mosquito bites, especially in tropical areas with arboviral diseases.
  • Researchers measured IgG responses using ELISA in different populations: those exposed to Ae. albopictus in Réunion Island, those exposed to Ae. aegypti in Bolivia, and an unexposed group in France.
  • Results indicated higher al34k2 IgG levels in Réunion Island participants, affirming its potential for monitoring exposure to Ae. albopictus, while showing limited effectiveness for Aedes aegypti exposure in Bolivia.*
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Background: Culex mosquitoes are vectors for a variety of pathogens of public health concern. New indicators of exposure to Culex bites are needed to evaluate the risk of transmission of associated pathogens and to assess the efficacy of vector control strategies. An alternative to entomological indices is the serological measure of antibodies specific to mosquito salivary antigens.

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