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CROSS-SECTIONAL AND EVOLUTIVE STUDIES OF SCHISTOSOMIASIS MANSONI IN UNTREATED AND MASS TREATED ENDEMIC AREAS IN THE SOUTHEAST AND NORTHEAST OF BRAZIL
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Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. Departamento de Medicina Tropical. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Universidade Federal da Paraíba. Paraíba, PB, Brasil.
Universidade Federal do Maranhão. Maranhão, MA, Brasil.
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil.
Universidade Federal da Paraíba. Paraíba, PB, Brasil.
Universidade Federal do Maranhão. Maranhão, MA, Brasil.
Abstract
Cross-sectional and evolutive studies on schistosomiasis mansoni were carried out before and after mass treatment in the endemic areas of Capitao Andrade and Padre Paraíso, state of Minas Gerais, Riachuelo, state of Sergipe, Alhandra, state of Paraíba, and Aliança, Alegre and Coroatá, lowland of the state of Maranhao, Brazil, in the last eighteen years. The studies included clinical and fecal examination by the Kato-Katz quantitative technique, skin testfor Schistosoma mansoni infection, evaluation of man-water contact and other epidemiological investigations such as infection rate and dynamic of the snail population. Results showed: (1) Higher prevalence of S. mansoni infection, greater egg load elimination and higher and earlier morbidity of the chronic froms of the disease in the southeast areas of Capitao Andrade and Padre Paraíso; (2) The incidence of hepatosplenic form is higher in some family clusters, in whites and mullattos in all the endemic areas but develop earlier in the southeast; (3) The prevalence and morbidity of schistosomiasis are decreasing both in the mass treated northeast and in the untreated southeast areas; (4) The mass treatment reduces rapidily the prevalence of the infection and the morbidity of the disease but can not control it because of the frequent reinfections due to the intensity of man-water contact.
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