search
for
 About Bioline  All Journals  Testimonials  Membership  News


Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz
ISSN: 1678-8060 EISSN: 1678-8060
Vol. 91, Num. 5, 1996, pp. 561-562
Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Vol. 91(5), 561-562, Sep/Oct 1996,

Research note

Outbreak of Trypanosomiasis Due to Trypanosoma vivax (Ziemann, 1905) in Bovines of the Pantanal, Brazil

Roberto Aguilar Machado Santos Silva/^+, Joaquim Augusto da Silva*, Rui Carlos Schneider**, Jo o de Freitas**, Donizete Mesquita***, Terezinha Mesquita****, Laura Ramirez, Alberto Martin Rivera Davila, Maria Eleticia Barbosa Pereira

Laboratorio de Ecopatologia, EMBRAPA, Centro de Pesquisa Agropecuaria do Pantanal, Rua 21 de Setembro 1880, 79720-900 Corumba, MS, Brasil
* Associac o Brasileira de Criadores de Cavalo Pantaneiro, Av. Joaquim Murtinho s/n, 78175-000 Pocone, MT, Brasil
**Instituto de Defesa Agropecuaria do Estado de Mato Grosso, Av. B- Edificio Ceres 2^o and., Cuiaba, MT, Brasil
***Delegacia Federal de Agricultura, Abasteci-mento e Reforma Agraria do Mato Grosso, Sec o Sanidade Animal, Alameda Anibal Molina s/n, 78115-901 Varzea Grande, MT, Brasil
****Laboratorio Ultracenter, Rua General Vale 350, 78000-000 Cuiaba, MT, Brasil
^+Corresponding author. Fax: 55-67-231.1011, E-mail: ramss@sede.embrapa.br

Received 18 December 1995
Accepted 13 May 1996


Code Number: OC96103
Size of Files:
    Text: 8.7K
    Graphics: line drawings (gif) - 8.6K

[TABLES AND FIGURES AT END OF TEXT]

Key words: Trypanosoma vivax - abortion - cattle - Pantanal - Brazil

In this paper we report the first recorded occurrence of Trypanosoma vivax in the Pantanal, Brazil. The Pantanal is a seasonal floodplain of about 140,000 km^2, located in the centre of South America, between 16 and 21 S and 55 and 58 W (Fig.). It is divided into ten subregions differing in terms of water courses, soil types and historical occupation (EMBRAPA/CENARGEN 1987 Documentos, 82, Brasilia, DF, Brasil, 339 pp.). Extensive cattle ranches varying from 10,000 to 200,000 ha occupy most of this wetland. The Pantanal is one of the most important livestock regions of Brazil. Trypanosomosis is one of the world s most important diseases of livestock and man, and makes it practically impossible to raise livestock in many parts of the tropics which would otherwise be ideal. T. vivax infects a wide range of wild and domestic ungulates, is transmissible both cyclically by tsetse flies and mechanically by other blood suckling flies, and is recognized as an important cause of cattle losses in many areas (BA Allsopp & SD Newton 1985 Int J Parasitol 15: 265-270). In the acute form of infection the animal has a high temperature, lethargy, weakness, anemia and slight loss of condition and dies within five weeks. Abortion may occur, but foetal blood and amniotic fluid have not been found to be infected. Weight loss may be substantial in a relatively short time. It has been observed that pure zebu cattle develop high parasitemia and disease terminating in death (GJ Losos & BO Ikede 1972 Rev Pathol Dis Dom and Lab An Caused by T. congolense, T. vivax, T. brucei, T. rhodesiense and T. gambiense, S Karger Basel 71pp). T. vivax is found throughout the tsetse belt in Africa, and has spread to others parts of Africa, Central America and South America, the West Indies and Mauritius. T.vivax was reported in the New World for the first time in French Guyana (M Leger & M Vierne 1919 Bul Soc Pathol Exotique 12: 258-266) and later in others parts of South America, Central America, and some Caribbean islands (RD Melendez et al. 1995 Trypnews 2: 4). In Brazil, T. vivax was reported for the first time in water buffalo (Bubalis bubalis) from the vicinity of the city of Belem, State of Para (JJ Shaw & R Lainson 1972 Ann Trop Med Parasitol 66: 25-32).

In the beginning of 1995, outbreaks of ophtalmitis, abortion, dysentery, and death occurred in ranches located in the Pocone subregion of the Pantanal Information that a drug (dimenazene diaceturate) was being used, with success, to cure sick animals of one ranch let us to investigate the possibility that trypanosome infection was responsible. The sick bovines were bled from their jugular vein using a vacuum system, and blood samples were obtained from ranches R1 till R9 (Fig.). The sampled animals, all zebu purebred and crossbred (Bos taurus taurus x Bos taurus indicus), were from 1 to 9 years old (mean 7 years old). Diagnosis was made using the microhemat-ocrit centrifuge test (MHCT), and blood from each sample and the concentrated parasites in the buffy coat of micro hematocrit tubes were used to prepare thin smears. The trypanosomes were identified as T. vivax on morphological and biometrical data (Table). The clinical signs observed were fever, lethargy, loss of apppetite, weakness, lacrimation, dysyntery, abortion and loss of condition. Some animals had substantial loss of weight in a relatively short time. Other animals had a more chronic form of disease for four or six months, with emaciation and severe cachexia. Ten of 29 (34.48%) observed bovines were infected by T. vivax.

Morphologic studies mentioned in CA Hoare (1972 The Trypanosomes of Mammals. A Zoological Monograph, Blackwell Scientific Publication, Oxford, 749pp.) state that the range of lengths of T. vivax were from 18um to 31um (including free flagellum 3-6um long), with means from 21um to 25.4um, while over 90% of the measurements were between 20um to 26um. The dimensions of T.vivax firstly reported in Brazil were 22.77um (ranging from 19.2um to 25.0um). We found shorter forms of T. vivax in the Pantanal. H Fairbairn (1953 Ann trop Med Parasit 47: 394-405) showed that short forms were characteristic of the strains causing acute disease in cattle of West Africa, while long forms are associated chiefly with strains causing chronic infection in East Africa.

In Kenya a temporal association has been noted between the rainy season when biting flies, particularly Tabanidae, are abundant, and an increased prevalence of T. vivax infections in cattle (PR Gardiner 1989 Adv Parasitol 28: 229-317). In the Pantanal, our studies showed that the season tabanid occurs in the first half of the rainy season, from September/October to December/January although these insects still remain in high numbers until the end of the rainy season. This period thus represents the period of major risk of trypanosome transmission by tabanids, especially by species of high vector potential such as Tabanus importunus (ATM Barros, unpublished data, 1994). The recorded outbreak occurred during a prolonged rainy season (September 1994 to May 1995) which in the Pantanal, coincides with the tabanid season. In Africa T. vivax also infects various species of antilope for which the parasite is non- pathogenic. In the Pantanal the fauna of ungulates is very rich and coexists with domestic animals and these animals could serve as important reservoir of infection.

The occurrence of T. vivax clearly represent an important bovine disease in the Pantanal. More studies will be necessary however to determine the epizootiology of T. vivax in this region and the impact of the disease in its economy.

    Figure LEGEND: Location of trypanosomiasis outbreaks due to Trypanosoma vivax in the Pocone subregion of the Pantanal of Brazil. R1 to R9: Ranch 1 to Ranch 9.

--------------------------------------------------------------
TABLE  Measurements of Trypanosoma vivax of bovines
from Pantanal, Brazil, means +/- SE (um) (n=100)
--------------------------------------------------------------
          P-K    K-N    P-N    N-A     F     L   PK/KN  PN/NA
-------------------------------------------------------------- 
Minimum    0    4.05    4.86   2.43   2.43  11.34   0     0
Maximum   3.24  8.10    8.91   7.29   9.72  21.87  0.6   0.6
Mean      1.02  6.10    7.18   5.40   6.15  18.73  0.19  1.50
SE        1.16  1.29    1.18   1.63   2.38   3.80  0.23  0.72

P-K: distance from posterior end to kinetoplast. K-N: from
kinetoplast to middle of nucleus. P-N: from posterior end to
middle of nucleus. N-A: from nucleus to anterior extremity. F:
free flagellum length. L: total length, including free
flagelum.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 1996 Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz


The following images related to this document are available:

Line drawing images

[oc96103a.gif]
Home Faq Resources Email Bioline
© Bioline International, 1989 - 2024, Site last up-dated on 01-Sep-2022.
Site created and maintained by the Reference Center on Environmental Information, CRIA, Brazil
System hosted by the Google Cloud Platform, GCP, Brazil