Publications by authors named "Orlando Marcos Farias de Sousa"

Background: Neglected tropical diseases are a growing threat to global health, and endemic Chagas disease has emerged as one of the most important health problems in America. The main strategy to prevent Trypanosoma cruzi transmission is chemical control of vectors. This study presents a descriptive analysis of synanthropic triatomines before and after the implementation of a vector-control program in Bahia, Brazil.

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Background: The identification of Trypanosoma cruzi and blood-meal sources in synanthropic triatomines is important to assess the potential risk of Chagas disease transmission. We identified T. cruzi infection and blood-meal sources of triatomines caught in and around houses in the state of Bahia, northeastern Brazil, and mapped the occurrence of infected triatomines that fed on humans and domestic animals.

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Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a zoonosis caused by the protozoan Leishmania infantum and in Brazil is transmitted mainly by the bite of Lutzomuyia longipalpis sand flies. Data about the presence, distribution, natural infection rate, seasonal and monthly dynamics of the vector population are important for optimizing the measures to control VL in endemic areas. This study aimed to identify sand fly fauna in an endemic area for VL to detect the prevalence of L.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how the parasite load in naturally infected dogs correlates with their ability to infect Lutzomyia longipalpis sand flies, which transmit visceral leishmaniasis.
  • No significant differences in parasite load were found based on the clinical manifestations of the dogs, yet nearly half of the infected dogs were still able to infect the sand flies.
  • Higher parasite loads in the blood and skin of dogs were positively correlated with the infectiousness to the sand fly vector and the subsequent parasitic load found in the sand flies after feeding.
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