The Acre Project: the epidemiology of malaria and arthropod-borne virus infections in a rural Amazonian population

Author:

Silva-Nunes Mônica da1,Malafronte Rosely dos Santos2,Luz Bruna de Almeida3,Souza Estéfano Alves de3,Martins Lívia Carício4,Rodrigues Sueli Guerreiro4,Chiang Jannifer Oliveira4,Vasconcelos Pedro Fernando da Costa4,Muniz Pascoal Torres5,Ferreira Marcelo Urbano1

Affiliation:

1. Universidade de São Paulo, Brasil; Centro de Saúde de Acrelândia, Brasil

2. Centro de Saúde de Acrelândia, Brasil; Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo, Brasil

3. Universidade de São Paulo, Brasil

4. Instituto Evandro Chagas, Brasil

5. Centro de Saúde de Acrelândia, Brasil; Universidade Federal do Acre, Brasil

Abstract

The authors describe the baseline malaria prevalence and arbovirus seroprevalence among 467 subjects in an ongoing cohort study in rural Amazonia. Most subjects (72.2%) reported one or more previous episodes of malaria, and 15.6% had been hospitalized for malaria, but only 3.6% of individuals five years or older had malaria parasites detected by microscopy (10 with Plasmodium vivax and 4 with P. falciparum). Antibodies to Alphavirus, Orthobunyavirus, and/or Flavivirus were detected by hemagglutination inhibition (HI) in 42.6% of subjects aged five years or older, with a higher seropositivity rate among males (49.2%) than females (36.2%). Since 98.9% of subjects had been immunized for yellow fever, the presence of cross-reactive antibodies to dengue and other Flaviviruses cannot be ruled out, but at least 12 subjects (3.3%) with IgM antibodies to dengue virus detected by ELISA had a putative recent exposure to this virus.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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