Artigo

Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil

In Brazil, schistosomiasis occurrence is related to the presence of the etiological agent Schistosoma mansoni. The presence of mollusks for Biomphalaria genus is a necessary condition for development of the parasite cycle. In Par? state, the species B. schrammi, B. kuhniana, B. straminea and B. gl...

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Autor principal: Goveia, Christiane de Oliveira
Outros Autores: Guimar?es, Ricardo Jos? de Paula Souza e, Nunes, M?rcio Roberto Teixeira, Dias, Isabelle Helena Lima, Enk, Martin Johannes
Grau: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Publicado em: David Publishing 2019
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha: http://patua.iec.gov.br//handle/iec/3634
id ir-iec-3634
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spelling ir-iec-36342019-04-10T19:43:53Z Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil Goveia, Christiane de Oliveira Guimar?es, Ricardo Jos? de Paula Souza e Nunes, M?rcio Roberto Teixeira Dias, Isabelle Helena Lima Enk, Martin Johannes Esquistossomose mansoni / parasitologia Esquistossomose mansoni / transmiss?o Biomphalaria Caramujos Distribui??o Espacial da Popula??o Sistemas de Informa??o Geogr?fica In Brazil, schistosomiasis occurrence is related to the presence of the etiological agent Schistosoma mansoni. The presence of mollusks for Biomphalaria genus is a necessary condition for development of the parasite cycle. In Par? state, the species B. schrammi, B. kuhniana, B. straminea and B. glabrata have already been identified, with reports of the last two occurring in Bel?m. The aim of this study was to determine the spatial distribution of Biomphalaria species in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil, identifying risk areas for schistosomiasis transmission. Biannual malacological surveys were carried out between September 2013 and October 2017 in 35 neighborhoods of Bel?m. The collection points were georeferenced using a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver and the Kernel Density Estimation (KDE) was used to the spatial analysis. The mollusks, after measurement, were exposed to light to verify the presence of S. mansoni cercariae. Subsequently, mollusks were sacrificed and fixed for dissection and morphological identification of species. The surveys resulted in a total of 10,803 mollusks collected, of which 9,367 (86.70%) specimens were examined. Among the analyzed mollusks, 5,820 (62.14%) were identified as B. glabrata and 3,547 (37.86%) as B. straminea. The presence of the parasite was observed in 208 (2.22%) specimens, all B. glabrata. Positive mollusks were found in six neighborhoods: Guam? (51 mollusks/24.5%), Sacramenta (47 mollusks/22.6%), Tel?grafo (47 mollusks/22.6%), Terra Firme (36 mollusks/17.3%), Condor (20 mollusks/9.6%) and Barreiro (7 mollusks/3.4%). This study confirms that B. glabrata species actively participates as intermediate host in the disease maintenance in Bel?m. The KDE allowed to analyze the spatial distribution of collection sites and consequently to determine possible risk areas of schistosomiasis transmission in Bel?m. The development of maps identifying sites with schistosomiasis positive snails may support efforts of this municipality by directing activities related to endemic disease control. This work was supported by Instituto Evandro Chagas?IEC/SVS/MS, Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel?CAPES/CNPQ. 2019-04-10T19:26:30Z 2019-04-10T19:26:30Z 2019 Artigo GOVEIA, Christiane de Oliveira et al. Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil. Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, v. 7, p. 51-60, 2019. 2328-2150 http://patua.iec.gov.br//handle/iec/3634 10.17265/2328-2150/2019.02.002 eng Acesso Aberto application/pdf David Publishing
institution Instituto Evandro Chagas (IEC)
collection PATUA
language eng
topic Esquistossomose mansoni / parasitologia
Esquistossomose mansoni / transmiss?o
Biomphalaria
Caramujos
Distribui??o Espacial da Popula??o
Sistemas de Informa??o Geogr?fica
spellingShingle Esquistossomose mansoni / parasitologia
Esquistossomose mansoni / transmiss?o
Biomphalaria
Caramujos
Distribui??o Espacial da Popula??o
Sistemas de Informa??o Geogr?fica
Goveia, Christiane de Oliveira
Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil
topic_facet Esquistossomose mansoni / parasitologia
Esquistossomose mansoni / transmiss?o
Biomphalaria
Caramujos
Distribui??o Espacial da Popula??o
Sistemas de Informa??o Geogr?fica
description In Brazil, schistosomiasis occurrence is related to the presence of the etiological agent Schistosoma mansoni. The presence of mollusks for Biomphalaria genus is a necessary condition for development of the parasite cycle. In Par? state, the species B. schrammi, B. kuhniana, B. straminea and B. glabrata have already been identified, with reports of the last two occurring in Bel?m. The aim of this study was to determine the spatial distribution of Biomphalaria species in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil, identifying risk areas for schistosomiasis transmission. Biannual malacological surveys were carried out between September 2013 and October 2017 in 35 neighborhoods of Bel?m. The collection points were georeferenced using a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver and the Kernel Density Estimation (KDE) was used to the spatial analysis. The mollusks, after measurement, were exposed to light to verify the presence of S. mansoni cercariae. Subsequently, mollusks were sacrificed and fixed for dissection and morphological identification of species. The surveys resulted in a total of 10,803 mollusks collected, of which 9,367 (86.70%) specimens were examined. Among the analyzed mollusks, 5,820 (62.14%) were identified as B. glabrata and 3,547 (37.86%) as B. straminea. The presence of the parasite was observed in 208 (2.22%) specimens, all B. glabrata. Positive mollusks were found in six neighborhoods: Guam? (51 mollusks/24.5%), Sacramenta (47 mollusks/22.6%), Tel?grafo (47 mollusks/22.6%), Terra Firme (36 mollusks/17.3%), Condor (20 mollusks/9.6%) and Barreiro (7 mollusks/3.4%). This study confirms that B. glabrata species actively participates as intermediate host in the disease maintenance in Bel?m. The KDE allowed to analyze the spatial distribution of collection sites and consequently to determine possible risk areas of schistosomiasis transmission in Bel?m. The development of maps identifying sites with schistosomiasis positive snails may support efforts of this municipality by directing activities related to endemic disease control.
format Artigo
author Goveia, Christiane de Oliveira
author2 Guimar?es, Ricardo Jos? de Paula Souza e
Nunes, M?rcio Roberto Teixeira
Dias, Isabelle Helena Lima
Enk, Martin Johannes
author2Str Guimar?es, Ricardo Jos? de Paula Souza e
Nunes, M?rcio Roberto Teixeira
Dias, Isabelle Helena Lima
Enk, Martin Johannes
title Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil
title_short Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil
title_full Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil
title_fullStr Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Schistosomiasis Mansoni in the Amazon Region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in Bel?m, Par?, Brazil
title_sort schistosomiasis mansoni in the amazon region: malacological surveys of intermediate hosts for the identification of disease transmission areas in bel?m, par?, brazil
publisher David Publishing
publishDate 2019
url http://patua.iec.gov.br//handle/iec/3634
_version_ 1717584375869079552
score 11.755432