Heavy domestic and peridomestic infestations ofTriatoma infestans were controlled in two villages in southern Bolivia by the application of deltamethrin SC25 (2.5% suspension concentrate) at a target dose of 25 mg a.i./m2. Actual applied dose was monitored by HPLC analysis of filter papers placed at various heights on the house walls, and was shown to range from 0 to 59.6 about a mean of 28.5 mg a.i./ m2. Wall bioassays showed high mortality ofT. infestans during the first month after the application of deltamethrin. Mortality declined to zero as summer temperatures increased, but reappeared with the onset of the following winter. In contrast, knockdown was apparent throughout the trial, showing no discernible temperature dependence. House infestation rates, measured by manual sampling and use of paper sheets to collect bug faeces, declined from 79% at the beginning of the trial to zero at the 6 month evaluation. All but one of the houses were still free ofT. infestans at the final evaluation 12 months after spraying, although a small number of bugs were found at this time in 5 of 355 peridomestic dependencies. Comparative cost studies endorse the recommendation of large-scale application of deltamethrin, or pyrethroid of similar costeffectiveness, as a means to eliminate domestic T. infestans populations in order to interrupt transmission of Chagas disease.
CITATION STYLE
Guillen, G., Diaz, R., Jemio, A., Alfred Cassab, J., Teixeira Pinto, C., & Schofield, C. J. (1997). Chagas Disease Vector Control in Tupiza, Southern Bolivia. Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 92(1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0074-02761997000100001
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