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https://www.arca.fiocruz.br/handle/icict/5957
TICKS, IVERMECTIN, AND EXPERIMENTAL CHAGAS DISEASE
Author
Affilliation
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou. Belo Horizonte, MG, Brasil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Posto Avançado Emmanuel Dias. Bambui, MG, Brasil.
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Pathogen Molecular Biology Unit, London, UK.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou. Belo Horizonte, MG, Brasil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Posto Avançado Emmanuel Dias. Bambui, MG, Brasil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou. Belo Horizonte, MG, Brasil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Posto Avançado Emmanuel Dias. Bambui, MG, Brasil.
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Pathogen Molecular Biology Unit, London, UK.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou. Belo Horizonte, MG, Brasil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Posto Avançado Emmanuel Dias. Bambui, MG, Brasil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Centro de Pesquisas René Rachou. Belo Horizonte, MG, Brasil / Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Posto Avançado Emmanuel Dias. Bambui, MG, Brasil.
Abstract
Following an infestation of dogticks in kennels housing dogs used for long-term studies of the pathogenesis of Chagas disease, we examined the effect of ivermectin treatment on the dogs, ticks, trypanosome parasites, and also on triatomine vectors of Chagas disease. Ivermectin treatment was highly effective in eliminating the ticks, but showed no apparent effect on the dogs nor on their trypanosome infection. Triatominae fed on the dogs soon after ivermectin treatment showed high mortality, but this effect quickly declined for bugs fed at successive intervals after treatment. In conclusion, although ivermectin treatment may have a transient effect on peridomestic populations of Triatominae, it is not the treatment of choice for this situation. The study also showed that although the dogticks could become infected with Trypanosoma cruzi, this only occurred when feeding on dogs in the acute phase of infection, and there was no evidence of subsequent parasite development in the ticks.
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