Common vampire bat attacks on humans in a village of the Amazon region of Brazil

Author:

Schneider Maria Cristina1,Aron Joan2,Santos-Burgoa Carlos3,Uieda Wilson4,Ruiz-Velazco Sílvia5

Affiliation:

1. Pan American Health Organization, U.S.A.

2. Science Communication Studies, U.S.A.

3. Instituto de Salud Ambiente y Trabajo, México

4. Universidade Estadual Paulista, Brasil

5. Universidad Nacional Autonóma de México, México

Abstract

Many people in Amazonian communities have reported bat bites in the last decade. Bites by vampire bats can potentially transmit rabies to humans. The objective of this study was to analyze factors associated with bat biting in one of these communities. A cross-sectional survey was conducted in a village of gold miners in the Amazonian region of Brazil (160 inhabitants). Bats were captured near people's houses and sent to a lab. Of 129 people interviewed, 41% had been attacked by a bat at least once, with 92% of the bites located on the lower limbs. A logistic regression found that adults were bitten around four times more often than children (OR = 3.75, CI 95%: 1.46-9.62, p = 0.036). Males were bitten more frequently than females (OR = 2.08, CI 95%: 0.90-4.76, p = 0.067). Nine Desmodus rotundus and three frugivorous bats were captured and tested negative for rabies. The study suggests that, in an area of gold miners, common vampire bats are more likely to attack adults and males. The control strategy for human rabies developed in this region should therefore place special emphasis on adult males. There should also be more research on how the search for gold in the Amazonian region places people and the environment at risk.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference20 articles.

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2. Rabia transmitida por vampiros: Distribución, frecuencia e importancia;ALVAREZ E.;Técnica Pecuaria en México,1997

3. Historia Natural de la Rabia;BAER G. M.,1982

4. An outbreak of vampire bat bites in a Brazilian village;COSTA M. B.;Tropical Medicine and Parasitology,1993

5. Natural History of Vampire Bats;CONSTANTINE D. G.,1988

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