Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo (Jun 2015)

CHICKEN COOPS, Triatoma dimidiata INFESTATION AND ITS INFECTION WITH Trypanosoma cruzi IN A RURAL VILLAGE OF YUCATAN, MEXICO

  • Edgar KOYOC-CARDEÑA,
  • Anuar MEDINA-BARREIRO,
  • Francisco Javier ESCOBEDO-ORTEGÓN,
  • Jorge Carlos RODRÍGUEZ-BUENFIL,
  • Mario BARRERA-PÉREZ,
  • Enrique REYES-NOVELO,
  • Juan CHABLÉ-SANTOS,
  • Celia SELEM-SALAS,
  • Gonzalo VAZQUEZ-PROKOPEC,
  • Pablo MANRIQUE-SAIDE

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0036-46652015000300015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57, no. 3
pp. 269 – 272

Abstract

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This study longitudinally investigated the association between Triatoma dimidiata infestation, triatomine infection with Trypanosoma cruzi and household/backyard environmental characteristics in 101 homesteads in Molas and Yucatan, Mexico, between November 2009 (rainy season) and May 2010 (dry season). Logistic regression models tested the associations between insect infestation/infection and potential household-level risk factors. A total of 200 T. dimidiata were collected from 35.6% of the homesteads, mostly (73%) from the peridomicile. Of all the insects collected, 48% were infected with T. cruzi. Infected insects were collected in 31.6% of the homesteads (54.1% and 45.9% intra- and peridomiciliary, respectively). Approximately 30% of all triatomines collected were found in chicken coops. The presence of a chicken coop in the backyard of a homestead was significantly associated with both the odds of finding T. dimidiata (OR = 4.10, CI 95% = 1.61-10.43, p = 0.003) and the presence of triatomines infected with T. cruzi (OR = 3.37, CI 95% = 1.36-8.33, p = 0.006). The results of this study emphasize the relevance of chicken coops as a putative source of T. dimidiata populations and a potential risk for T. cruzi transmission.

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