A new challenge for malaria control in Brazil: asymptomatic Plasmodium infection - A Review
The evolution of malaria in Brazil, its morbidity, the malaria control programs, and the new challenges for these programs in the light of the emergence of asymptomatic infection in the Amazon region of Brazil were reviewed. At least six Brazilian research groups have demonstrated that asymptomatic...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz 2006-05, Vol.101 (3), p.229-237 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The evolution of malaria in Brazil, its morbidity, the malaria control
programs, and the new challenges for these programs in the light of the
emergence of asymptomatic infection in the Amazon region of Brazil were
reviewed. At least six Brazilian research groups have demonstrated that
asymptomatic infection by Plasmodium is an important impediment to
malaria control, among mineral prospectors in Mato Grosso and riverside
communities in Rondônia and, in our group, in the middle and upper
reaches of the Negro river, in the state of Amazonas. Likewise, other
researchers have studied the problem among indigenous communities in
the Colombian, Peruvian, and Venezuelan parts of the Amazon basin,
adjacent to Brazil. The frequency of positive results from the
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) among asymptomatic individuals has
ranged from 20.4 to 49.5%, and the presence of Plasmodium in the thick
blood smears, from 4.2 to 38.5%. Infection with Anopheles darlingi has
also been demonstrated by xenodiagnosis among asymptomatic patients
with positive PCR results. If a mean of 25% is taken for the
asymptomatic infection caused by Plasmodium sp. in the Amazon region of
Brazil, malaria control will be difficult to achieve in that region
with the measures currently utilized for such control. |
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ISSN: | 1678-8060 0074-0276 0074-0276 1678-8060 |
DOI: | 10.1590/S0074-02762006000300001 |