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Role of the domestic chicken (Gallus gallus) in the epidemiology of urban visceral Leishmaniasis in Brazil. (Perspective).


Zoonotic Zoonotic
A disease which can be spread from animals to humans.

Mentioned in: Zoonosis
 visceral leishmaniasis visceral leishmaniasis
n.
A chronic, often fatal disease occurring chiefly in Asia, caused by a protozoan parasite (Leishmania donovani) and characterized by irregular fever, enlargement of the spleen and liver, and emaciation.
 (ZVL ZVL Zero Velocity Line
ZVL Zuctovacia a Vyplatna Listina (Czech) 
) is a serious public health problem in several Brazilian cities. Although the proximity of chicken houses is often cited as a risk factor in studies of urban ZVL, the role chickens play in the epidemiology of the disease has not been defined. Chickens attract both male and female sand flies (Lutzomyia longipalpis) but are unable to sustain Leishmania Leishmania /Leish·ma·nia/ (lesh-ma´ne-ah) a genus of parasitic protozoa, including several species pathogenic for humans. In some classifications, organisms are placed in four complexes comprising species and subspecies: L.  infections, and their presence may exert a zeoprophylactic effect. We discuss environmental, physiologic, socioeconomic, and cultural factors related to chicken raising that could influence Le. infantum transmission in Brazilian cities and evaluate whether this practice significantly affects the risk of acquiring ZVL.

**********

During the last 20 years, zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis (ZVL) due to Leishmania (Leishmania) infantum has become a serious public health problem in several Brazilian cities (1). The pathogen is transmitted by the bite of the phlebotomine sand fly Lutzomyia longipalpis (Lutz & Neiva 1912), and although humans can be infected, they are believed to be "dead-end" hosts; domestic dogs are the main reservoirs for the parasite. The spread and increasing prevalence of ZVL in urban areas are linked to human migrations, involving the transportation of infected dogs from ZVL-endemic regions to impoverished urban areas where Lu. longipalpis already exists. Although generally located on the margins of large Brazilian cities, these shanty towns (favelas) in Belo Horizonte (population 2.3 million) are dispersed throughout the urban zone, often adjacent to wealthy neighborhoods. Many of the inhabitants
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 raise chickens, pigs, and other livestock in their yards, and because of the general climate of insecurity, keep dogs, which act as amplification hosts for Lu. infantum (2). Thus all the factors for parasite transmission may be concentrated within a relatively small area.

The proximity of hen houses is acknowledged as a possible environmental risk factor in studies of urban ZVL (3,4), but the role chickens play in Le. infantum transmission has not been completely explained. A study in the Brazilian state of Bahia found that dwellings of persons with ZVL were 4.21 times as likely to have chicken houses in the yard as those whose occupants were unaffected (5), but other studies have failed to demonstrate a significant correlation. Although the attraction of chickens for Lu. longipalpis is indisputable, chickens, like other birds, are unable to sustain infections with Leishmania, and the nature of the relationship between chicken raising and ZVL is complex. In this article, we consider factors related to raising chickens that might affect transmission of Le. infantum in Brazilian cities and discuss whether raising chickens in urban areas could affect the risk of human acquisition of ZVL.

Importance of Sand Fly Attraction to Chickens in Le. infantum Transmission

Widely differing observations regarding the degree to which Lu. longipalpis bites humans in different habitats, as well as the fact that female sand flies from nonanthropophilic populations can be induced to feed on humans in the laboratory indicate that this species has no strong innate host preference. Although sand flies in Brazil are known by a number of common names, including canagalinha, mosquito de palha, and asa branca, the absence of such a term to distinguish Lu. longipalpis from other biting flies in urban ZVL foci suggests that this fly does not constitute a substantial biting nuisance for the inhabitants.

Sand fly reproduction depends on the availability of blood meal sources such as domestic animals and synanthropic species that raid chicken houses and are potential reservoirs of Le. infantum, such as the fox (Cerdocyon thous), opossum opossum (əpŏs`əm, pŏs`–), name for several marsupials, or pouched mammals, of the family Didelphidae, native to Central and South America, with one species extending N to the United States.  (Didelphis albiventris), and black rat black rat

see black rat.
 (Rattus rattus) (2,6). Although involved in sylvatic sylvatic /syl·vat·ic/ (sil-vat´ik) sylvan; pertaining to, located in, or living in the woods.

sylvatic

found in the woods; occurring in animals of the forest.
 transmission of Leishmania, the fox is less likely to be found in urban areas than the other two species. Host loyalty involving subpopulations of vectors would have a marked effect on Leishmania transmission (7). The relative attractiveness of chickens compared with other hosts at a particular site can be calculated from "forage ratios" (8), in which the percentage of sand flies feeding on the birds is divided by their relative numerical importance: values significantly >1.0 indicating selective preferences. A study in rural Colombia (9) demonstrated that Lu. longipalpis clearly preferred pigs and cows over chickens (values were [less than or equal to] 0.75). However, results of such studies may not be reproducible in other situations, where wind direction and the relative proximity of different hosts to host-seeking sand flies affect attraction. Comparisons of the attractiveness of different host species should also take into account differences in biomass, heat loss (a function of the surface area/volume ratio), and C[O.sub.2] production (10). Chickens produce 19-26 [m.sup.3]/kg body weight of C[[O.sub.2] per minute (11); comparable figures can be estimated as 13-17 for dogs and 8-11 for humans, when specific metabolic rate scales (in homeotherms) are used as [mass.sup.-0.25] (12). Field experiments on Marajo Island, Brazil, showed that one boy attracted significantly more female Lu. longipalpis than one dog or one chicken and slightly fewer sand flies than six chickens (13). Assuming that the children participating in this study each weighed about 40 kg and chickens 2 kg, then the amounts of C[O.sub.2] produced by one boy would be approximately 400 [m.sup.3]/ min, equivalent to that of about eight chickens. However, host odor is probably the most important stimulus for orientation of blood-feeding insects in open (i.e., nonforest) situations (14).

Flights of several hundred meters have been recorded for Lu. longipalpis, and infected sand flies attracted to an area by chicken houses may be diverted en route or displaced to other hosts. This diversion would explain the presence of (usually canine) ZVL in wealthy districts adjacent to poorer neighborhoods, a pattern seen in many Brazilian cities. Male sand flies marked with fluorescent powders traveled distances of up to 430 m between chicken houses in Montes Claros, Brazil (Kirby M. American visceral leishmaniasis--the importance of the domestic chicken Gallus Gallus (Caius Vibius Trebonianus Gallus) (găl`əs), d. 253 or 254, Roman emperor after 251. He fought in the eastern campaign that proved fatal to Decius.  gallus to the urban distribution of the sandfly sandfly /sand·fly/ (sand´fli) any of various two-winged flies, especially of the genus Phlebotomus.

sandfly

Phlebotomus spp. Culicoides, Simulium and Austrosimulium spp.
 vector Lutzomyia longipalpis [Diptera: Psychodidae] [M.Sc. thesis]. London: London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine tropical medicine, study, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of certain diseases prevalent in the tropics. The warmth and humidity of the tropics and the often unsanitary conditions under which so many people in those areas live contribute to the development and ; 2000), so such flights are clearly not limited to females in search of blood meals.

Zooprophylaxis and Factors Precluding Chickens as Hosts of Leishmania

Chickens have several physiologic characteristics that preclude them from sustaining Leishmania infections, including their body temperature of 41.0[degrees]C (15). Enzymatic processes in the sand fly function differently when triggered by different types of blood meal, and blood from certain sources may be lethal to Leishmania (16). Turkey blood meals significantly reduced Le. tropica infections in the Old World sand fly Phlebotomus papatasi, even when insects were infected after digestion of the blood meal, perhaps due to DNAase activity triggered by the presence of nucleated nucleated /nu·cle·at·ed/ (noo´kle-at?id) having a nucleus or nuclei.

nu·cle·at·ed
adj.
Having a nucleus or nuclei.



nucleated

having a nucleus or nuclei.
 erythrocytes Erythrocytes
Red blood cells.

Mentioned in: Bartonellosis

erythrocytes (ē·rithˑ·rō·sīts),
n.pl red blood cells.
. A few drops of turkey blood rapidly killed Le. tropica promastigotes in culture, although this in vitro in vitro /in vi·tro/ (in ve´tro) [L.] within a glass; observable in a test tube; in an artificial environment.

in vi·tro
adj.
In an artificial environment outside a living organism.
 effect could not be the same as that in the sand fly gut and may be complement-related (17,18). Thus, not only is Leishmania infection unable to develop in birds, but also existing infections might be eliminated in sand flies taking a second blood meal from chickens.

For a single host species, the basic reproductive rate [R.sub.0] of a vector-transmitted pathogen is given by the following equation (19),

[R.sub.0] = m[a.sup.2]b[p.sup.n] / -r ln p

where m is the number of vectors per host, a is the daily biting rate of each individual vector on the host species, b is the fraction of infected vectors that actually generate infection when biting a susceptible host, p is the daily survival rate of the vectors, n is the latent period latent period
n.
1. The period elapsing between the application of a stimulus and the obvious response, such as the contraction of a muscle.

2.
 of infection in the vectors, and r is the daily recovery rate of the hosts. When host species are numerous, [R.sub.0] can be derived in general from the dominant eigenvalue eigenvalue

In mathematical analysis, one of a set of discrete values of a parameter, k, in an equation of the form Lx = kx. Such characteristic equations are particularly useful in solving differential equations, integral equations, and systems of
 of a modified "who acquires infection from whom" matrix (20). In the special case when one host (such as a chicken) is a dead end, its presence does not influence the mathematical form of eigenvalue: rather, the question is what influence this host has on a and m. The proximity of chickens to humans may potentially increase m by attracting more sand flies into the local area, or even by maintaining a higher sand fly population, through provision of additional resources. Other dead-end hosts will decrease a on humans (a zooprophylactic effect) because a given sand fly will be able to obtain its nutrition from an alternative source. Which effect dominates depends on the relative strength of these competing effects; note that a enters into [R.sub.0] as a square, compared with m, which has a linear effect. A further complication is that, if the presence of chicken houses in some areas has the effect of aggregating an existing sand fly population, an overall increase in [R.sub.0] will result (21)

Chickens as Blood Meal Sources for Maintenance of Sand Fly Populations

Although chickens cannot act as Le. infantum reservoirs, they may be important in maintaining vector populations and attracting mammalian reservoirs to the vicinity. Feeding success of sand flies can be measured by using the equation [G.sub.i] = [Q.sub.i]/[N.sup.m.sup.j] (22), where [G.sub.i] is the mean gain in resources (e.g., blood meal size) on host i, Q is an estimate of patch quality (in this case, number of chickens) and [N.sup.m.sup.i], the biting rate. Nutritional quality of blood (about 90% protein by dry weight) varies between host species and [G.sub.i] may also be revealed by reduced rates of development, longevity, and digestion, as u/ell as skewed skewed

curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean.

skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data
 by sex ratios (14). Laboratory studies of fecundity fecundity /fe·cun·di·ty/ (fe-kun´dit-e)
1. in demography, the physiological ability to reproduce, as opposed to fertility.

2. ability to produce offspring rapidly and in large numbers.
 of insects fed on blood from different hosts often fail to take into account natural factors such as host defense mechanisms (both behavioral and physiologic), activity patterns, and intra- or interspecific competition at feeding sites. Although no comparative studies of fecundity involving sand flies fed on birds exist, the mosquito Culex Culex /Cu·lex/ (ku´leks) a genus of mosquitoes found throughout the world, many species of which are vectors of disease-producing organisms.

Cu·lex
n.
 pipiens produced twice as many eggs per mg of blood when fed on canaries as when fed on humans (23). The results of this study notwithstanding, avian blood should be less nutritious than that of mammals for several reasons. Chicken erythrocytes are nucleate nu·cle·ate
adj.
Nucleated.

v.
1. To form into a nucleus.

2. To serve or act as a nucleus for.

3. To provide a nucleus for.

n.
A salt of a nucleic acid.
 and have a DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 content 31 times that found in humans. They also have a lower hemoglobin content than mammalian red cells and a hematocrit Hematocrit Definition

The hematocrit measures how much space in the blood is occupied by red blood cells. It is useful when evaluating a person for anemia.
Purpose

Blood is made up of red and white blood cells, and plasma.
 value half that of mammals. These values mean that sand flies feeding on chickens would have to ingest in·gest  
tr.v. in·gest·ed, in·gest·ing, in·gests
1. To take into the body by the mouth for digestion or absorption. See Synonyms at eat.

2.
 twice as much blood as those on mammals to obtain a meal containing the same quantity of erythrocytes. Unlike mosquitoes, sand flies do not expel any of the blood meal while feeding and cannot continue to engorge en·gorge
v.
To fill to excess, as with blood or other fluid.



en·gorgement n.
 when replete (24). Even if plasma rather than erythrocytes were the essential component for ovarian development (25), total plasma protein total plasma protein

includes plasma prealbumin, albumin and globulin, fibrinogen.
 levels in chickens are considerably lower than in dogs and pigs. In addition, catabolism catabolism (kətăb`əlĭz'əm), subdivision of metabolism involving all degradative chemical reactions in the living cell.  of nucleic acids Nucleic acids
The cellular molecules DNA and RNA that act as coded instructions for the production of proteins and are copied for transmission of inherited traits.
 from chicken erythrocytes would presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 involve greater bio-energetic costs due to increased production and active transport of uric acid uric acid (yr`ĭk), white, odorless, tasteless crystalline substance formed as a result of purine degradation in man, other primates, dalmatians, birds, snakes, and lizards. , the end product of nitrogen metabolism in insects (26).

Factors Favoring or Limiting the Feeding of Lu. longipalpis on Chicken Blood

Unlike most mammal species, chickens are inactive at night and present large areas of exposed skin on which sand flies can feed. The comb and wattles are richly supplied with capillaries but the epidermis is much thinner (~0.02 mm) on feathered areas of the body (27) and could thus be pierced more easily by the proboscis proboscis

elongated, flexible feeding apparatus, formed of the fused mouthparts, in some insects.
 of a sand fly. Sand fly mouthparts are too short to probe deeper than the superficial loops of the host's capillaries, and the insects ingest blood from pools that form after laceration laceration /lac·er·a·tion/ (las?er-a´shun)
1. the act of tearing.

2. a torn, ragged, mangled wound.


lac·er·a·tion
n.
1. A jagged wound or cut.

2.
 of the ends of the vessels (28). This mode of feeding exposes the female sand fly to a battery of hemostatic hemostatic /he·mo·stat·ic/ (he?mo-stat´ik)
1. causing hemostasis, or an agent that so acts.

2. due to or characterized by stasis of the blood.


he·mo·stat·ic
adj.
 and inflammatory reactions, and saliva of Lu. longipalpis contains substances able to counteract these, including anticoagulants Anticoagulants
Drugs that suppress, delay, or prevent blood clots. Anticoagulants are used to treat embolisms.

Mentioned in: Embolism, Heart Valve Replacement
, apyrase ap·y·rase
n.
Any of various enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of ATP, causing the release of phosphate and energy.
 to inhibit platelet aggregation Platelet aggregation
The clumping together of blood cells, possibly forming a clot.

Mentioned in: Herbalism, Traditional Chinese
 and a potent vasodilator vasodilator /vaso·di·la·tor/ (-di-la´ter)
1. causing dilatation of blood vessels.

2. a nerve or agent that does this.


va·so·di·la·tor
n.
 (29,30). The erythrocytes are relatively soft and easily ruptured, while the thrombocytes thrombocytes (throm´bosīts),
n.pl See platelets.
, which are analogous to platelets in mammals, are less efficient in reducing blood loss in birds (31). These characteristics could facilitate blood feeding by sand flies, as has been observed in triatomines (32). Reductions in blood flow rate due to colonization of the pharynx pharynx (fâr`ĭngks), area of the gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts which lies between the mouth and the esophagus. In humans, the pharynx is a cone-shaped tube about 4 1-2 in. (11.43 cm) long.  and cibarium by Leishmania (33) could also make feeding on chickens preferable for infected sand flies, further favoring zooprophylaxis of ZVL.

Chicken Houses as Foci of Reproductive Behavior for Lu. longipalpis

Male blood-sucking flies that are irregularly or widely dispersed in a habitat may gain a mating advantage by staying with the host and waiting for females to arrive (34). Male Lu. longipalpis encountered on a host at a particular moment usually far outnumber females, and courtship behavior involves mating aggregations or "leks" where males compete by producing sex pheromones pheromones, any of a variety of substances, secreted by many animal species, that alter the behavior of individuals of the same species. Sex attractant pheromones, secreted by a male or female to attract the opposite sex, are widespread among insects. . The effective range of the compounds involved (35) is a function of their volatility; less volatile molecules are active over shorter distances but produce a more coherent message (J.G.C. Hamilton, pers. comm.).

Preliminary trials of a pheromone-baited trap for Lu. longipalpis obtained better results when extracts were heated (36), and host temperature might be important in disseminating these compounds. Chickens' higher body temperature could thus favor them over mammals as lekking sites for male Lu. longipalpis. In view of the short effective range of male pheromones (~2 m), pheromones are unlikely to be involved in attracting sand flies to chicken houses rather than host-produced stimuli such as odor and C[O.sub.2] that extend for further distances.

Newly emerged Lu. longipalpis adults and larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
 of several Old World species have been collected in animal shelters (37). However, attempts to recover larvae from chicken houses have been unsuccessful (38), perhaps because the nitrogenrich feces of chickens are unpalatable to them. Lu. longipalpis adults may rest in chicken houses after taking blood but breed in nearby, less accessible microhabitats such as rodent burrows, where temperature, relative humidity relative humidity
n.
The ratio of the amount of water vapor in the air at a specific temperature to the maximum amount that the air could hold at that temperature, expressed as a percentage.
, and light levels are more constant. Oviposition oviposition

the act of laying or depositing eggs.
 of laboratory-raised Lu. longipalpis involves a thigmotropic response (39), suggesting that in the wild females lay eggs in confined spaces such as crevices rather than on exposed surfaces. No evidence is available on predatory behavior by chickens toward sand flies or their natural enemies (which are largely unknown).

Interventions Focused on Chicken Houses

Chicken houses are sprayed with residual insecticides as part of the current ZVL control strategy in Brazil (40), but this spraying is constrained by costs of materials and availability of trained personnel. An alternative would be to modify the environmental factors favoring contact between vectors, reservoirs, and susceptible humans, such as proximity to chicken houses. A similar approach has been suggested for controlling dengue dengue
 or breakbone fever or dandy fever

Infectious, disabling mosquito-borne fever. Other symptoms include extreme joint pain and stiffness, intense pain behind the eyes, a return of fever after brief pause, and a characteristic rash.
 (41), which currently afflicts the same segment of the Brazilian population as ZVL.

With regard to conventional control programs, the relative merits of insecticidal spraying of human dwellings, chicken houses, or both, need to be considered. DDT DDT or 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1,-trichloroethane, chlorinated hydrocarbon compound used as an insecticide. First introduced during the 1940s, it killed insects that spread disease and feed on crops.  spraying of houses in the Brazilian Amazon region failed to reduce the incidence of cutaneous leishmaniasis cutaneous leishmaniasis
n.
An endemic disease in northern Africa and western and central Asia, caused by infection with promastigotes of Leishmania tropica and transmitted by the bite of a sandfly of the genus Phlebotomus.
, perhaps because most of the vectors (Lu. intermedia Intermedia - A hypertext system developed by a research group at IRIS (Brown University). ) rested in chicken coops, which were left untreated (42). Presumably, the numbers of sand flies that did not feed on chickens were sufficiently large to balance any zooprophylactic effect, and chicken coops may only have been used as resting sites. Spraying houses alone would be an effective strategy only if all female sand flies in the vicinity could be diverted to feeding on chickens. However, spraying chicken houses alone would probably be ineffective because the odor and C[O.sub.2] produced by the birds would still attract sand flies to the vicinity, and the sand flies risk encountering infected or susceptible mammals (including humans) en route and when they rest afterwards in untreated microhabitats.

Socioeconomic Importance of Chicken Rearing

Alexander et al. (unpubl. data) found that up to 27.0% of residents of poor neighborhoods in the city of Montes Claros kept chickens for the following reasons: to produce eggs (50.0%) or meat (34.5%) for occasional personal consumption; as a hobby (23.6%); for cock-fighting (3.6%); to keep yards free of trash (9.1%); or to control scorpions (Tityus serrulatus) (7.3%). Nevertheless, 84.6% of the people interviewed said they would stop raising chickens if it was proved that keeping chickens increased the risk of acquiring ZVL.

No information is available on the contribution of poultry products to children's nutrition in urban foci of Le. infantum transmission. In any case, ZVL is more likely to develop in children with moderate or severe malnutrition than in healthy children (43), and infant malnutrition is Common in Brazilian cities (values of 25.9% and 19.7% are recorded for the state capitals of Sao Paulo and Curitiba, respectively) (44). If families derive a large proportion of their daily protein intake from chickens or eggs, prohibition of raising chickens might therefore affect the prevalence of clinical manifestations of ZVL in infected children. Current legislation that bans livestock within the limits of Brazilian cities often does not specifically prohibit poultry raising.

Conclusions

Lane (42) discussed a number of the points mentioned in this article, noting that the relationship between chicken houses and sand flies also extended to the Old World Leishmania vectors Phlebotomus argentipes, P. langeroni, P. ariasi, and P. papatasi. In Brazil several other Lutzomyia species also feed on chickens or at least rest in chicken houses, including the Le. braziliensis vectors Lu. intermedia and Lu. whitmani, so that the shelters clearly offer important man-made refuges for sand flies in urban environments. Nonetheless, the results of epidemiologic studies that attempt to incriminate To charge with a crime; to expose to an accusation or a charge of crime; to involve oneself or another in a criminal prosecution or the danger thereof; as in the rule that a witness is not bound to give testimony that would tend to incriminate him or her.  chickens as a risk factor for urban ZVL are conflicting. Since the disease is potentially fatal, as is Chagas disease Cha·gas disease or Cha·gas-Cruz disease
n.
See South American trypanosomiasis.
, zooprophylaxis as a means of control cannot be tested experimentally for ethical reasons.

The relationship between chicken raising and Le. infantum transmission by sand flies is summarized in the Table. Modeling the risk of Leishmania transmission by sand flies associated with chickens would require collecting field or laboratory data on all the factors discussed above, but current knowledge can be summarized as follows. Chicken houses attract both bloodseeking females and males seeking mates, but do not appear to act as breeding sites. They also attract potential reservoirs of Leishmania and are protected by dogs, themselves amplification hosts of the parasite. Nevertheless, chickens are refractory to Leishmania infection and, in certain situations, act as zooprophylactic agents. Although chicken blood may be less nutritious than that of mammals, influencing egg productivity and thus population levels of sand flies, this disadvantage would be compensated to some extent by the greater facility with which Lu. longipalpis is able to feed on birds. Prohibiting chicken rearing in Brazilian cities would remove a potential source of food and income for the inhabitants of low-income neighborhoods. In fact, some health authorities currently advise householders to keep only two chickens to control scorpions, although no published data support this recommendation. A recent study modeled Trypanosoma cruzi Trypanosoma cru·zi
n.
A protozoan that is the causative agent of South American trypanosomiasis.
 transmission among populations of humans, dogs, and chickens in three Argentinian villages (45), a situation that may be considered analogous to that of urban ZVL foci in Brazil. Prevalence of infection decreased slowly as the fraction of triatomine bugs feeding from chickens increased, indicating a slight zooprophylactic effect. In addition, as the relative density of the bugs increased, the proportion that fed on humans rather than chickens decreased.

Urban ZVL is an increasingly grave public health problem in Brazil that imposes an additional strain on local health authorities and is unlikely to be resolved by current strategies. Chickens are the most common type of livestock raised in low-income neighborhoods. Understanding the role of chicken raising in the Le. infantum transmission cycle could lead to inexpensive and sustainable preventive measures, perhaps involving the acquiescence of local people in the removal or focal treatment of chicken houses. The role played by chickens in the epidemiology of urban ZVL clearly involves some type of balance between zooprophylaxis, maintenance of sand fly populations, and attraction of reservoir hosts of Le. infantum. This balance may vary in different situations but could be further clarified by the following activities: 1) field observations to determine the relative importance of chickens and other hosts as blood meal sources and lekking sites; 2) laboratory studies of comparative egg productivity of sand flies fed on chickens and other hosts; and 3) socioeconomic surveys on the importance of chickens to communities affected by ZVL in terms of income and nutrition, as well as communities' willingness to participate in preventative measures e.g., removal of chicken houses.
Table. Positive and negative factors associated with chicken raising
that may affect the transmission of Leishmania infantum by Lutzomyia
longipalpis in urban foci of zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis, Brazil

                                                   Factors affecting
                                                  maintenance of sand
Factors affecting         Factors affecting       fly populations (+/-)
risk of transmission     risk of infection of
of Le. infantum to        Lu. longipalpis by      Facilitation of blood
humans (all+)             Le. infantum (all-)          feeding (+)

Chicken rearing seen     Complement levels in     Chicken RBCs soft and
by local people as       blood fatal to           easily ruptured
providing several        Leishmania?
benefits not directly                             Chickens easier to
related to Leishmania    Temperature of chic-     feed on by sand flies
transmission, e.g.,      ken blood too high       that have pharynx
scorpion control,        (41[degrees]C) to        partially blocked by
source of food and       permit growth of         Leishmania?
income and keeping       Leishmania
yards free of trash                               Chicken skin thinner
                         Greater facility with    than that of mammals
Odor and C[O.sub.2]      which sand flies can     (0.02 mm), esp. on
emitted by chickens      feed on chickens         feathered areas of
attract infected sand    would favor biting by    body
flies to the vicinity    infected sand flies
of human dwellings       whose capacity to        Thrombocytes less
                         ingest blood is com-     efficient than mam-
Presence of chickens     promised by blockage     malian platelets in
attracts potential       of the pharynx?          preventing blood loss
reservoirs of Le.
infantum to the vici-    Nucleated erythro-
nity of human dwel-      cytes in blood meal
lings where sand         stimulate DNAase
flies also present       activity fatal to
                         Leishmania within
Dogs kept to guard       sand fly gut?
chicken houses from
thieves and predators
are themselves poten-
tial reservoirs of
Le. Infantum

Chicken houses may
act as resting sites
for engorged sand
flies

No evidence that
chicken houses act as
sand fly breeding
sites although asso-
ciated rodent burrows
might be exploited

                           Factors affecting maintenance of sand fly
Factors affecting                      populations (+/-)
risk of transmission
of Le. infantum to                                   Bringing sexes
humans (all+)                Nutrition (-)            together (+)

Chicken rearing seen     Protein content of       C[O.sub.2] and odor
by local people as       chicken plasma con-      attractive to both
providing several        siderably lower than     males and females
benefits not directly    that of mammals
related to Leishmania                             High chicken body
transmission, e.g.,      Nucleated blood cells    temperature might
scorpion control,        have 31 times DNA        favor dissemination
source of food and       content of human         of pheromone
income and keeping       erythrocytes; elimi-
yards free of trash      nation associated w/     Passivity of roosting
                         problems of water        chickens lets male
Odor and C[O.sub.2]      balance?                 sand flies display
emitted by chickens                               relatively undis-
attract infected sand    Hematocrit value of      turbed
flies to the vicinity    chicken blood about
of human dwellings       50% that of mam-
                         mals; sand flies can-
Presence of chickens     not concentrate blood
attracts potential       meal during engorge-
reservoirs of Le.        ment
infantum to the vici-
nity of human dwel-
lings where sand
flies also present

Dogs kept to guard
chicken houses from
thieves and predators
are themselves poten-
tial reservoirs of
Le. Infantum

Chicken houses may
act as resting sites
for engorged sand
flies

No evidence that
chicken houses act as
sand fly breeding
sites although asso-
ciated rodent burrows
might be exploited

(a) RBCs, red blood cells; esp., especially.


Acknowledgments

We thank Marilia Rocha and Matthew Kirby for assistance with data collection and Mike Lehane for revising an earlier version of the manuscript.

References

(1.) Pennacci M, Renda P. Leishmaniose: cada vez mais na cidade. Caes & Cia 1999;248:42-7.

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Used as a disparaging term for a person of Japanese birth or descent.

Noun 1. Jap - (offensive slang) offensive term for a person of Japanese descent
Nip
, Metz JAJ JAJ Just A Joke
JAJ J. A. Jones Construction Services Company
JAJ Judge Advocate, Joint
JAJ Jay A Jongkind
JAJ Just Ask Junior
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See alimentary canal.



alimentary tract

see alimentary canal, digestive system.


alimentary tract abnormal motility
includes hypermotility, hypermotility, stasis.
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adj.
1. Of, relating to, or producing saliva.

2. Of or relating to a salivary gland.



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pertaining to the saliva.
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JMC Jefferson Medical College
JMC Jax Money Crew (computer gaming)
JMC Joint Munitions Command (US Army; Rock Island Arsenal, Rock Island IL)
JMC James Madison College
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the stoppage of bleeding or cessation of the circulation of the blood; stagnation of the blood in a part of the body. Also hemostasia, haemostasia.
See also: Blood and Blood Vessels

Noun 1.
 in vertebrates. New York New York, state, United States
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(41.) Marzochi KBF KBF King Baudouin Foundation
KBF Knott's Berry Farm
KBF Katholischen Bibelföderation
KBF Kobe Bible Fellowship (Japan)
KBF Key Buying Factors
KBF Klim en Bergsport Federatie
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(45.) Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
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a disease of humans caused by Trypanosoma cruzi in which many animal species can act as carriers. The disease in dogs includes anemia, debility and splenomegaly; in cats there are posterior paralysis and convulsions.
. Science 2001;93:694-8.

Bruce Alexander, * Renata Lopes de Carvalho, ([dagger]) Hamish McCallum, ([double dagger]) and Marcos Horacio Pereira ([section])

* Centro de Pesquisas Rene Rachou, Belo Horizonte, Brazil; ([dagger]) Pontificia Universidade Catolica de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil; ([double dagger]) University of Queensland The University of Queensland (UQ) is the longest-established university in the state of Queensland, Australia, a member of Australia's Group of Eight, and the Sandstone Universities. It is also a founding member of the international Universitas 21 organisation. , Brisbane, Australia; and ([section]) Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais UFMG is one of Brazil's five largest universities. It offers 48 different undergraduate courses, including an extremely sought-after Medicine course, traditional options such as Law and Economics, plus a handful of Engineering options and a wide array of Science and Art courses. , Belo Horizonte, Brazil

Bruce Alexander was supported by grants from the Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais (FAPEMIG) and Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq).

Dr. Alexander is currently at the Veterinary Laboratories Agency The Veterinary Laboratories Agency (VLA) is an executive agency of the UK government department, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs(Defra). It carries out animal disease surveillance, diagnostic services and veterinary scientific research for government and  in Penicuik, Scotland. He was a visiting researcher at the Centro de Pesquisas Rene Rachou (FIOCRUZ) in Belo Horizonte from 1998-2001. His main research interests involve the relationships between man-made environmental changes and transmission of Leishmania by phlebotomine sand flies.

Address for correspondence: Bruce Alexander, Veterinary Laboratories Agency, Pentlands Science Park, Bush Loan, Penicuik, Midlothian EH26 9RE Scotland, UK; fax: (44) 0131-445-6166; e-mail: b.Alexander@vla.defra.gsi.gov.uk
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Author:Pereira, Marcos Horacio
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