Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

FACTORS INFLUENCING THE TRANSMISSION OF SCHISTOSOMA JAPONICUM IN THE MOUNTAINS OF SICHUAN PROVINCE OF CHINA

2004; American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene; Volume: 70; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.4269/ajtmh.2004.70.48

ISSN

1476-1645

Autores

Robert C. Spear, GEORGE M. DAVIS, Xueguang Gu, FASHEN XU, Edmund Seto, BO ZHONG, Changhong Yang, Dongchuan Qiu, MERRILL BIRKNER, Alan Hubbard, SONG LIANG,

Tópico(s)

Animal Nutrition and Physiology

Resumo

Twenty villages in the Anning River Valley of southwestern Sichuan China were surveyed for Schistosoma japonicum infections in humans and domestic animals. Also surveyed were human water contact patterns, snail populations, cercarial risk in irrigation systems, and agricultural land use. Few animals were infected, while village prevalence of infection in humans ranged from 3% to 68% and average village eggs per gram of stool ranged from 0 to 110. Except for occupation and education, individual characteristics were not strong determinants of infection intensity within a village. Differences in human infection intensity between these villages are strongly associated with crop type, with low-intensity villages principally growing rice, in contrast to villages devoting more land to vegetables and tobacco. Cercarial risk in village irrigation systems is associated with snail density and human infection intensity through the use of manure-based fertilizer. Some of the agricultural and environmental factors associated with infection risk can be quantified using remote sensing technology.

Referência(s)