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1.
West Indian med. j ; 51(1): 10-3, Mar. 2002.
Artigo em Inglês | MedCarib | ID: med-105

RESUMO

Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease, maintained by chronic infection of the kidneys of reservoir animals, usually small mammals. Infection in humans is acquired from direct or indirect exposure to the urine of infected animals. Leptospirosis has a high incidence in tropical regions, and has been studied extensively in several Caribbean countries. We studied the carriage of Leptospira serovars by two small mammals which are potential maintenance host of the disease in Barbados. A total of 136 mongooses (Herpestes auropunctatus) and 97 mice (Mus musculus) were caught in live traps. Leptospiral antibodies were detected by microscopic aggutination test (MAT) using antigens representing 12 serogrouops, and kidney tissues were inoculated into polysorbate medium for isolation of leptospires. The seroprevalence (at a titre of o 100) in mice was 28.2 percent (24/85, 95 percent CI 19.0, 39.1) and in mongooses 40.7 percent (48/118, 95 percent CI 20.1, 39.0) and from 4 mongooses ( 2.9 percent, 95 percent, CI 0.8, 7.4). Mouse isolates were identified as serovars arborea (17) and bim (7). As in other parts of the world, common house mice (Mus musculus) represent a significant reservoir of leptospirosis. Although carriage of the Ballum serovar, arborea, was not unexpected, this represents the first time that an animal reservoir of serovar bim has been identified. This is significant because bim causes about 63 percent of human leptospirosis in Barbados, and control efforts and education for prevention can now be targeted at a specific reservoir. (AU)


Assuntos
Camundongos , 21003 , Leptospira/isolamento & purificação , Leptospirose/sangue , Camundongos/sangue , Herpestidae/sangue , Barbados , Estudos Soroepidemiológicos , Muscidae , Spiranthes autumnalis/sangue , Leptospirose/prevenção & controle , Herpestidae/sangue
2.
Mosquito News ; 43(1): 21-3, Mar. 1983.
Artigo em Inglês | MedCarib | ID: med-9394

RESUMO

Insects were collected and identified from local and foreign aircraft entering Piarico International Airport, Trinidad, West Indies. Nine hundred and sixty seven specimens were collected from 592 aircraft. The specimens collected represented eight taxonomic orders and 25 families. Aedes aegypti, an important vector of dengue and urban yellow fever, and Anopheles albimanus, a non-indigenous malaria vector were among those collected. Musca domestica, the house fly, was by far the most abundant insect in the collection, accounting for over 83 percent of the total catch. The need to maintain entomological surveillance at airports and seaports was encouraged. (AU)


Assuntos
21003 , Artrópodes , Demografia , Aeronaves , Trinidad e Tobago , Moscas Domésticas , Culicidae , Baratas , Muscidae
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