Publication | Open Access
House Construction, Triatomine Distribution, and Household Distribution of Seroreactivity to Trypanosoma Cruzi in a Rural Community in Northeast Brazil
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1978
Year
Trypanosoma CruziParasitic DiseaseTriatomine DistributionEngineeringAfrican TrypanosomiasisParasitic ProtozoaEntomologyPest ManagementRural CommunityHyperparasiteSymbiosisHouse ConstructionPublic HealthMud-brick HousesEpidemiologyHousehold DistributionParasitologyHost-parasite Relationship
Household distribution of seroreactivity to Trypanosoma cruzi in inhabitants was analyzed in relation to house construction and the distribution of Panstrongylus megistus, the principal domestic vector of Chagas' disease in a rural area in northeast Brazil. No children residing in mud-brick houses were seroreactive to T. cruzi. The highest rates of seroreactivity occurred in residents of unplastered mud-stick houses, and were twice as high as those found in persons living in mud-brick houses or plastered mud-stick houses. Two-thirds of seroreactive children in this area resided in unplastered mud-stick houses. Over 90% of the P. megistus infestations were found in mud-stick houses. Mud-brick houses had the lowest infestation rates of P. megistus and the lowest household rates of seroreactivity to T. cruzi.