Abstract

The unprecedented emergence of important public health and veterinary zoonoses is usually a result of exponential population growth and globalization of human activities. I characterized Chagas’ disease as an emergent zoonosis in the Caracas Valley (Venezuela) due to the following findings: the presence of reservoirs (Didelphis marsupialis, Rattus rattus) and vectors (Panstrongylus geniculatus, Panstrongylus rufotuberculatus) infected with Trypanosoma cruzi in urbanized or marginalized areas; the elevated contact between P. geniculatus and human beings detected by parasitological and molecular examinations of triatomine feces demonstrated the possibility of transmission risks; a study of outbreaks of urban Chagas’ disease reported the first proven case of oral transmission of T. cruzi to human beings; the risk of transmission of glandular metacyclic stages from marsupials by experimental ocular and oral instillation; mice genitalia infected with T. cruzi contaminated blood resulted in the formation of amastigotes very close to the lumen suggesting that there may be a possibility of infection via their release into the urine and thence to the exterior; the ubiquitous histotropism and histopathology of T. cruzi was demonstrated using a mouse model; the presence of experimental T. cruzi pseudocysts in adipose, bone-cartilage, and eye tissue indicated a potential risk for transplants. Socio-sanitary programs that include improvements in housing, vector control, and access to medical treatment, as well as strategies aimed at combating social inequalities, poverty, and underdevelopment should be undertaken in those areas where zoonoses are most prevalent. Disciplines, such as Ecology, Epidemiology, Medical Entomology, Human and Veterinary Medicine, Environmental Studies, Public Health, Social and Political Studies, Immunology, Microbiology, and Pharmacology could all provide important contributions that aim to reduce the occurrence of factors governing the spread of emergent diseases.

Highlights

  • American trypanosomiasis (Chagas’ disease), a metaxenic zoonosis caused by Trypanosoma (Schizotrypanum) cruzi Chagas, 1909, is endemic to Neotropical and Nearctic regions (Salt Lake City, 41° N in USA/56° S in the argentine Patagonia and northern Chile as well as the Caribbean Islands)

  • The most ancient reservoirs in this cycle are the Eutherian (Cingulata, Dasypodidae: armadillo); Rodentia (Echimyidae); and Metatherian (Didelphimorphia, Didelphidae: opossum) [3, 4]. These synanthropic mammals have migrated from their natural ecosystems to human communities, while at the same time, human beings have encroached onto their habitats

  • In Venezuela, T. cruzi circulates between 39 species in the Marsupiala, Edentata = Xenartra, Chiroptera, Carnivora, Rodentia, Primates, and Lagomorpha and is transmitted by 22 insect vectors

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Summary

PUBLIC HEALTH

Chagas’ disease: an emergent urban zoonosis.The Caracas Valley (Venezuela) as an epidemiological model. Socio-sanitary programs that include improvements in housing, vector control, and access to medical treatment, as well as strategies aimed at combating social inequalities, poverty, and underdevelopment should be undertaken in those areas where zoonoses are most prevalent. Disciplines, such as Ecology, Epidemiology, Medical Entomology, Human and Veterinary Medicine, Environmental Studies, Public Health, Social and Political Studies, Immunology, Microbiology, and Pharmacology could all provide important contributions that aim to reduce the occurrence of factors governing the spread of emergent diseases

INTRODUCTION
Skeletal muscle
Findings
Scanty amastigotes in fixed macrophages
Full Text
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