Epidemiological aspects of schistosomiasis in area at the southwest of Minas Gerais, Brazil

  • Raquel Lopes Martins Souza Universidade Federal de Alfenas, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Departamento de Patologia e Parasitologia, Alfenas, MG
  • Cybele Gargioni Instituto Adolfo Lutz Central, Centro de Parasitologia e Micologia, Núcleo de Enteroparasitas, São Paulo, SP
  • Rosângela Vieira Siqueira Universidade Federal de Alfenas, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Departamento de Patologia e Parasitologia, Alfenas, MG
  • Rita Maria da Silva Instituto Adolfo Lutz, Centro de Laboratório Regional de Rio Claro, Rio Claro, SP
  • Pedro Luiz Silva Pinto Instituto Adolfo Lutz Central, Centro de Parasitologia e Micologia, Núcleo de Enteroparasitas, São Paulo, SP
  • Herminia Yohko Kanamura Universidade Federal de Alfenas, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Departamento de Patologia e Parasitologia, Alfenas, MG
Keywords: schistosomiasis, epidemiological surveillance, migrants

Abstract

This study was developed aiming at contributing to the schistosomiasis surveillance, within the scope of the Regional Health Superintendence of Alfenas, MG, in the South/Southwest mesoregion of the state, considered not endemic for schistosomiasis, unlike North and Northeast areas of the state. During the year of 2015, schoolchildren and migrants from two municipalities of this region, Arceburgo and Guaranésia, underwent parasitological and serological surveys. In the parasitological survey, no case of schistosomiasis was detected in Arceburgo. In Guaranésia, S. mansoni eggs were detected among the migrants, with a positivity rate of 13.6% (9/66), and in only one schoolchild. Seven members of his family, who were classified as residents of Guaranésia, but were determined as coming from Timbaúba, PE, when investigated by the epidemiological surveillance, they were also positive for S. mansoni. In the serological survey, the positivity for schistosomiasis was 18.5% among migrants from Guaranésia. Concerning the other intestinal parasites, the positivity rates ranged from 12.5% to 32.3%. The results suggest differences in the risk of exposure to S. mansoni and the importance of epidemiological surveillance, even in non-endemic areas, with a focus on migrants when they come from endemic regions for schistosomiasis.
Published
2017-01-01
How to Cite
Souza, R. L. M., Gargioni, C., Siqueira, R. V., Silva, R. M. da, Pinto, P. L. S., & Kanamura, H. Y. (2017). Epidemiological aspects of schistosomiasis in area at the southwest of Minas Gerais, Brazil. Revista Do Instituto Adolfo Lutz, 76, 1-10. Retrieved from https://periodicoshomolog.saude.sp.gov.br/index.php/RIAL/article/view/33543
Section
ORIGINAL ARTICLE