Animal reservoirs for visceral leishmaniasis in densely populated urban areas.

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Abstract

Leishmaniasis is a zoonotic disease of major public health and veterinary importance, affecting 88 countries with up to 2 million cases per year. This review emphasizes the animal reservoirs and spreading of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) in urban areas, particularly in two Brazilian metropolitan areas, namely São Luis and Belo Horizonte, where the disease has become endemic in the past few years. Urbanization of visceral leishmaniasis in Brazil during the last decades has created favorable epidemiological conditions for maintenance of the disease, with dense human populations sharing a tropical environment with abundant populations of the mammalian reservoir and the invertebrate vector, facilitating transmission of the disease.

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Diniz, S. A., Silva, F. L., Carvalho Neta, A. C., Bueno, R., Guerra, R. M. S. N. C., Abreu-Silva, A. L., & Santos, R. L. (2008). Animal reservoirs for visceral leishmaniasis in densely populated urban areas. Journal of Infection in Developing Countries, 2(1), 24–33. https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.318

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