Epidemiological and immunological aspects of human visceral leishmaniasis on Margarita Island, Venezuela

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Abstract

Sixty-five patients were diagnosed with visceral leishmaniasis (VL) on Margarita Island in the decade from 1990 to 1999; 86.2% were ≤ 3 years old. All were leishmanin-negative at diagnosis. Evaluation of 23 cured patients in 1999 revealed that 22/23 had converted to leishmanin-positive; five had persisting antibodies to rK39 antigen, with no clinical evidence of disease. Leishmanin tests were positive in 20.2% of 1,643 healthy individuals from 417 households in endemic areas. Of the positive reactors, 39.8% were identified in 35 (8.4%) of the households, 15 of which had an antecedent case of VL, a serologically positive dog or both. Weak serological activity to rK39 antigen was detected in 3 of 488 human sera from the endemic areas. The presence of micro-foci of intense peri-urban transmission and the apparent absence of other Trypanosomatidae causing human disease offer a unique opportunity for the study of reservoirs, alternative vectors and evaluation of control measures on the Island.

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Zerpa, O., Ulrich, M., Benitez, M., Ávila, C., Rodríguez, V., Centeno, M., … Convit, J. (2002). Epidemiological and immunological aspects of human visceral leishmaniasis on Margarita Island, Venezuela. Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, 97(8), 1079–1083. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0074-02762002000800002

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