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1.
Epidemiol Infect ; 143(11): 2330-42, 2015 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25496520

RESUMEN

Presence of Vibrio cholerae serogroups O1 and O139 in the waters of the rural area of Matlab, Bangladesh, was investigated with quantitative measurements performed with a portable flow cytometer. The relevance of this work relates to the testing of a field-adapted measurement protocol that might prove useful for cholera epidemic surveillance and for validation of mathematical models. Water samples were collected from different water bodies that constitute the hydrological system of the region, a well-known endemic area for cholera. Water was retrieved from ponds, river waters, and irrigation canals during an inter-epidemic time period. Each sample was filtered and analysed with a flow cytometer for a fast determination of V. cholerae cells contained in those environments. More specifically, samples were treated with O1- and O139-specific antibodies, which allowed precise flow-cytometry-based concentration measurements. Both serogroups were present in the environmental waters with a consistent dominance of V. cholerae O1. These results extend earlier studies where V. cholerae O1 and O139 were mostly detected during times of cholera epidemics using standard culturing techniques. Furthermore, our results confirm that an important fraction of the ponds' host populations of V. cholerae are able to self-sustain even when cholera cases are scarce. Those contaminated ponds may constitute a natural reservoir for cholera endemicity in the Matlab region. Correlations of V. cholerae concentrations with environmental factors and the spatial distribution of V. cholerae populations are also discussed.


Asunto(s)
Cólera/epidemiología , Epidemias , Estanques/microbiología , Ríos/microbiología , Vibrio cholerae O139/aislamiento & purificación , Vibrio cholerae O1/aislamiento & purificación , Anticuerpos Antibacterianos/inmunología , Bangladesh/epidemiología , Cólera/microbiología , Reservorios de Enfermedades , Citometría de Flujo , Humanos , Vibrio cholerae O1/inmunología , Vibrio cholerae O139/inmunología , Microbiología del Agua
2.
Epidemics ; 4(1): 33-42, 2012 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22325012

RESUMEN

We propose and analyze an important extension of standard cholera epidemiological models, explicitly accounting for fluctuations of water availability to the human community under study. The seasonality of water input in the reservoir drives the variation of concentration of Vibrio cholerae. Two compartments are added to the Susceptible-Infected-Bacteria model. First, the recovered individuals, which, over many seasons, lose their immunity to the disease and replenish the Susceptible group. Second, the water volume of the reservoir, which determines bacterial dilution and, consequently, the probability of contracting cholera by ingesting contaminated water. By forcing the model with a seasonally varying hydrologic input, we obtain simulations that can be compared to available data for various regions of the World characterized by different hydrological and epidemiological regimes. The model is shown to satisfactorily reproduce important characteristics of disease insurgence and long-term persistence. Using bifurcation analysis of nonlinear systems, we also explore how different degrees of seasonality and values of the basic reproductive number can change the expected long-term epidemiological time series. We find that there exist parametric conditions where the model shows chaotic patterns - i.e. high unpredictability especially in the amplitude of prevalence peaks - which very much resemble actual data on long-term cholera insurgence.


Asunto(s)
Cólera/epidemiología , Abastecimiento de Agua , Cólera/microbiología , Humanos , Modelos Estadísticos , Estaciones del Año , Vibrio cholerae/aislamiento & purificación , Microbiología del Agua
3.
J R Soc Interface ; 9(67): 376-88, 2012 Feb 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21752809

RESUMEN

We investigate the role of human mobility as a driver for long-range spreading of cholera infections, which primarily propagate through hydrologically controlled ecological corridors. Our aim is to build a spatially explicit model of a disease epidemic, which is relevant to both social and scientific issues. We present a two-layer network model that accounts for the interplay between epidemiological dynamics, hydrological transport and long-distance dissemination of the pathogen Vibrio cholerae owing to host movement, described here by means of a gravity-model approach. We test our model against epidemiological data recorded during the extensive cholera outbreak occurred in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa during 2000-2001. We show that long-range human movement is fundamental in quantifying otherwise unexplained inter-catchment transport of V. cholerae, thus playing a key role in the formation of regional patterns of cholera epidemics. We also show quantitatively how heterogeneously distributed drinking water supplies and sanitation conditions may affect large-scale cholera transmission, and analyse the effects of different sanitation policies.


Asunto(s)
Cólera/epidemiología , Epidemias , Modelos Teóricos , Saneamiento , Cólera/transmisión , Humanos , Dinámica Poblacional , Sudáfrica/epidemiología , Vibrio cholerae , Microbiología del Agua
4.
J R Soc Interface ; 7(43): 321-33, 2010 Feb 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19605400

RESUMEN

We generalize a recently proposed model for cholera epidemics that accounts for local communities of susceptibles and infectives in a spatially explicit arrangement of nodes linked by networks having different topologies. The vehicle of infection (Vibrio cholerae) is transported through the network links that are thought of as hydrological connections among susceptible communities. The mathematical tools used are borrowed from general schemes of reactive transport on river networks acting as the environmental matrix for the circulation and mixing of waterborne pathogens. Using the diffusion approximation, we analytically derive the speed of propagation for travelling fronts of epidemics on regular lattices (either one-dimensional or two-dimensional) endowed with uniform population density. Power laws are found that relate the propagation speed to the diffusion coefficient and the basic reproduction number. We numerically obtain the related, slower speed of epidemic spreading for more complex, yet realistic river structures such as Peano networks and optimal channel networks. The analysis of the limit case of uniformly distributed population sizes proves instrumental in establishing the overall conditions for the relevance of spatially explicit models. To that extent, the ratio between spreading and disease outbreak time scales proves the crucial parameter. The relevance of our results lies in the major differences potentially arising between the predictions of spatially explicit models and traditional compartmental models of the susceptible-infected-recovered (SIR)-like type. Our results suggest that in many cases of real-life epidemiological interest, time scales of disease dynamics may trigger outbreaks that significantly depart from the predictions of compartmental models.


Asunto(s)
Cólera/epidemiología , Cólera/transmisión , Demografía , Brotes de Enfermedades/estadística & datos numéricos , Modelos Biológicos , Humanos , Densidad de Población
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 98(20): 11376-81, 2001 Sep 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11535803

RESUMEN

Biodiversity plays a vital role for ecosystem functioning in a changing environment. Yet theoretical approaches that incorporate diversity into classical ecosystem theory do not provide a general dynamic theory based on mechanistic principles. In this paper, we suggest that approaches developed for quantitative genetics can be extended to ecosystem functioning by modeling the means and variances of phenotypes within a group of species. We present a framework that suggests that phenotypic variance within functional groups is linearly related to their ability to respond to environmental changes. As a result, the long-term productivity for a group of species with high phenotypic variance may be higher than for the best single species, even though high phenotypic variance decreases productivity in the short term, because suboptimal species are present. In addition, we find that in the case of accelerating environmental change, species succession in a changing environment may become discontinuous. Our work suggests that this phenomenon is related to diversity as well as to the environmental disturbance regime, both of which are affected by anthropogenic activities. By introducing new techniques for modeling the aggregate behavior of groups of species, the present approach may provide a new avenue for ecosystem analysis.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Modelos Biológicos , Fenotipo , Biomasa , Ambiente , Matemática
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