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2030-01-01
Sustainable Development Goals
03 Saúde e Bem-EstarCollections
- IOC - Artigos de Periódicos [12980]
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CHAGAS DISEASE: 100 YEARS AFTER ITS DISCOVERY. A SYSTEMIC REVIEW
Affilliation
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Laboratório de Doenças Parasitárias. Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Laboratório de Doenças Parasitárias. Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil.
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Laboratório de Doenças Parasitárias. Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Brasil.
Abstract
Although Chagas disease was only discovered in 1909, it began millions of years ago as an enzootic
disease among wild animals. Its transmission to man began accidentally as an anthropozoonosis when
mankind invaded wild ecotopes. Endemic Chagas disease became established as a zoonosis over the last
200–300 years through deforestation for agriculture and livestock rearing and adaptation of triatomines
to dwellings and to humans and domestic animals as food sources. When T. cruzi is transmitted to man,
it invades the bloodstream and lymphatic system and lodges in muscle and heart tissue, the digestive
system and phagocytic cells. Through this, it causes inflammatory lesions and an immune response,
particularly mediated by CD4+, CD8+, IL2 and IL4, with cell and neuron destruction and fibrosis. These
processes lead to blockage of the heart’s conductive system, arrhythmias, heart failure, aperistalsis and
dilatation of hollow viscera, especially the esophagus and colons. Chagas disease is characterized by an
acute phase with or without symptoms, with (or more often without) T. cruzi penetration signs (inoculation
chagoma or Roma˜na’s sign), fever, adenomegaly, hepatosplenomegaly and patent parasitemia; and
a chronic phase: indeterminate (asymptomatic, with normal electrocardiogram and heart, esophagus
and colon X-rays) or cardiac, digestive or cardiac/digestive forms. There is great regional variation in the
morbidity caused by Chagas disease: severe cardiac or digestive forms may occur in 10–50%, and indeterminate
forms in the remaining, asymptomatic cases. The epidemiological and control characteristics
of Chagas disease vary according to each country’s ecological conditions and health policies.
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