On the possibility of autochthonous Chagas disease in Roraima, Amazon region, Brazil, 2000-2001

Authors

  • José Francisco Luitgards-Moura Universidade Federal de Roraima; Centro de Ciências Biológicas e da Saúde
  • José Borges-Pereira FIOCRUZ; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz; Departamento de Medicina Tropical
  • Jane Costa FIOCRUZ; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz; Coleção Entomológica
  • Patrícia Lago Zauza FIOCRUZ; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz; Departamento de Medicina Tropical
  • Maria Goreti Rosa-Freitas FIOCRUZ; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz; Departamento de Entomologia; Laboratório de Transmissão de Hematozoários

Keywords:

Chagas disease, Agricultural Settlements, Amazon, Roraima, Brazil

Abstract

Chagas disease has been almost entirely eradicated from the arid zones in Central and Northeastern Brazil where rare or no autochthonous cases have been reported. However, in the last 10 years the disease has increasingly been registered in the Amazon Region. Aiming to investigate the possibility of the occurrence of autochthonous cycle of Chagas disease in Roraima, triatomine collections, vectorial susceptibility studies (this one to be shown elsewhere), parasitological and serological analyses were conducted in three agricultural settlement areas (Rorainópolis, Passarão Project and Ilha Community). Blood-donor candidates were also investigated. This is the first epidemiological survey on Chagas disease conducted in agricultural settlements in Roraima. Triatomine species found were Triatoma maculata, Rhodnius pictipes, Rhodnius robustus and Panstrongylus geniculatus. Trypanosoma cruzi detection analyses included xenodiagnosis, indirect immunofluorescence, indirect hemaglutination, ELISA and kinetoplast PCR amplification. Natural triatomine infection was not found in intestinal contents. Twenty-five adult settlers (1.4% out of 1821, all >; 15 year-old, 20 migrants) presented anti-T. cruzi antibodies. Two migrant settlers (from Minas Gerais and Maranhão) tested positive for more than two serological tests, besides either being positive for xenodiagnosis or PCR. Results show that Chagas disease is not endemic in the areas studied. However, all elements of the transmission cycle are present, demanding for an adequate and continuous vigilance.

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Published

2005-02-01

Issue

Section

Trypanosomiasis

How to Cite

Luitgards-Moura, J. F., Borges-Pereira, J., Costa, J., Zauza, P. L., & Rosa-Freitas, M. G. (2005). On the possibility of autochthonous Chagas disease in Roraima, Amazon region, Brazil, 2000-2001 . Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 47(1), 45-54. https://revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/30883