Abstract

This study aims to analyze factors related to the occurrence of American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis in the Purus Region, based on the reporting of cases between 2001 and 2013, correlating them with livelihoods and subsistence farming in the region, and analyzing them in regards to sex, age, clinical form, occupation, diagnostic methods and seasonality. The analysis parameter which was used included all cases of American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis in each sub-region by municipality. The Purus Region, between the states of Amazonas and Acre, consists of three sub-regions: Upper, Middle, and Lower Purus. We observed that socio-environmental impacts influenced the livelihoods of the human population and that the interaction with extractive activities, especially latex and Brazil nut collecting, where the labor regime implies a long stay in the jungle, leads to socio-environmental conditions that are favorable to the contraction of American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis. During the referred period, there were 13,971 cases of American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis distributed among the sub-regions: High (12611 cases = 90.27%), Middle (1225 cases = 8.77%) and Lower (135 cases = 0.96%). Among the 22 municipalities that were studied, Rio Branco stands out with 31.6% of cases, followed by Xapuri with 12.6% and Sena Madureira with 12.5%. In the results, we highlight the high percentage (20.8%) of mucous forms; the age group from 11 to 50 (70.2%), however, 20.2% were in the age group of 1 month to 10 years of age; cases in males were 69.8%, and, in the reports examined, 43.7%. cited their occupation as extractivism. A statistically significant negative association was demonstrated between cutaneous leishmaniasis and rainfall between Purus municipalities. However, in regards to the association of cutaneous leishmaniasis for both, temperature and Municipal Human Development Index—MHDI, no significant associations were found in Purus. We concluded that American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis occurring in the Purus Region is related to two distinct aspects: the development of enterprises that extend the agricultural frontier, and a change in lifestyle, namely the extraction of wood as an occupation, which has, as a consequence, an environmental impact and creates difficulties in accessing treatment.

Highlights

  • American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis (ATL) is a zoonotic, vector-borne disease, caused by several species of Leishmania (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae) parasites, in the same geographical area

  • The opening of roads, the implantation of agricultural areas, military training and the installation of housing nuclei in forest areas are important factors related to the epidemiological profile of ATL in the Brazilian Amazon [3,7,8,9], since its transmission cycle occurs between vectors and wild animals

  • Since we have little information about leishmaniasis in the Purus region (PR) [9], the aim of this study is to analyze factors related to the occurrence of ATL in the aforementioned region, based on the distribution of cases reported by its municipalities, considering a period of 13 years: 2001 to 2013

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Summary

Introduction

American Tegumentary Leishmaniasis (ATL) is a zoonotic, vector-borne disease, caused by several species of Leishmania (Kinetoplastida: Trypanosomatidae) parasites, in the same geographical area. The opening of roads, the implantation of agricultural areas, military training and the installation of housing nuclei in forest areas are important factors related to the epidemiological profile of ATL in the Brazilian Amazon [3,7,8,9], since its transmission cycle occurs between vectors (phlebotomines) and wild animals (rodents). In this context, most of the time, people become infected when they either alter the natural environment, interpose the wildlife cycle and/or enter this other ecosystem [10,11]

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