Abstract
Brazil, a country of continental proportions, presents three profiles of malaria transmission. The first and most important numerically, occurs inside the Amazon. The Amazon accounts for approximately 60% of the nation’s territory and approximately 13% of the Brazilian population. This region hosts 99.5% of the nation’s malaria cases, which are predominantly caused by Plasmodium vivax (i.e., 82% of cases in 2013). The second involves imported malaria, which corresponds to malaria cases acquired outside the region where the individuals live or the diagnosis was made. These cases are imported from endemic regions of Brazil (i.e., the Amazon) or from other countries in South and Central America, Africa and Asia. Imported malaria comprised 89% of the cases found outside the area of active transmission in Brazil in 2013. These cases highlight an important question with respect to both therapeutic and epidemiological issues because patients, especially those with falciparum malaria, arriving in a region where the health professionals may not have experience with the clinical manifestations of malaria and its diagnosis could suffer dramatic consequences associated with a potential delay in treatment. Additionally, because the Anopheles vectors exist in most of the country, even a single case of malaria, if not diagnosed and treated immediately, may result in introduced cases, causing outbreaks and even introducing or reintroducing the disease to a non-endemic, receptive region. Cases introduced outside the Amazon usually occur in areas in which malaria was formerly endemic and are transmitted by competent vectors belonging to the subgenus Nyssorhynchus (i.e., Anopheles darlingi, Anopheles aquasalis and species of the Albitarsis complex). The third type of transmission accounts for only 0.05% of all cases and is caused by autochthonous malaria in the Atlantic Forest, located primarily along the southeastern Atlantic Coast. They are caused by parasites that seem to be (or to be very close to) P. vivax and, in a less extent, by Plasmodium malariae and it is transmitted by the bromeliad mosquito Anopheles (Kerteszia) cruzii. This paper deals mainly with the two profiles of malaria found outside the Amazon: the imported and ensuing introduced cases and the autochthonous cases. We also provide an update regarding the situation in Brazil and the Brazilian endemic Amazon.
Highlights
World Health Organization (WHO) malaria eradication campaign was initiated in 1956, the number of cases decreased drastically outside the Brazilian Amazon and the disease reached its lowest level in Brazil, with 36.9 thousand cases in 1960 (Marques & Gutierrez 1994)
The colonisation of the Brazilian Amazon effectively began in the 1940s (DDT was used in the region beginning in 1947) (Tauil et al 1985), it was only in the late 1970s and early 1980s that the intense, rapid and disorganised occupation of the Amazon caused another drastic and important change in the epidemiological situation associated with malaria in Brazil
In addition to preventing deaths and the emergence of severe forms of the disease, decreases the number of cases by reducing the sources of infection and, the transmission. This is true of P. falciparum because gametocytes appear later in the course of this infection. This species accounted for approximately 18% of the cases registered in the country in 2013, while Plasmodium vivax was responsible for approximately 82% of the cases
Summary
1,020 from 807 Amazonian municipalities, 37 reported 80% of the total number of malaria registered in the Amazon in 2013. The 37 Amazonian municipalities with the highest malaria records are located as follows: 21 in the state of Amazonas (56.8%), five in Amapá (13.5%), four in Acre, four in Pará (10.8% each), two in Rondônia (5.4%) and one in Roraima (2.7%). Only approximately 0.5% of the malaria cases registered in Brazil are diagnosed and treated outside the Amazonian endemic region (mean of 1,296 cases/year from 2000-2013) and they present a distinct epidemiological profile. This situation is not comparable in all South American countries that encompass parts of the Amazon Forest in their territories. Colombia has reported the second highest annual number of malaria cases in Latin America (14.2% of all malaria) and most cases (i.e., 90% of malaria cases in the country) are reported outside the Colombian Amazon (Arévalo-Herrera et al 2012)
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