[Entomologic study of loaiasis transmission in the Lekie area (Cameroon)]

Bull Soc Pathol Exot. 2001 Nov;94(4):347-52.
[Article in French]

Abstract

A number of cases of Loa encephalopathy have been recorded after ivermectin treatment in the Lekie Division, an area of degraded forest located in central Cameroon. An entomological study was carried out in a village of this region between May 1999 and April 2000 to determine whether the high microfilarial loads of Loa found in the population, which can exceed 10,000 microfilariae per ml of blood, were related to high densities of vector populations. The Chrysops collected at 10 catching stations, using hand nets, by persons standing by a wood fire, were dissected to evaluate their level of infection with Loa. The vectorial densities were three-fold higher in the forest stations than in those located near the habitations (2307 and 725 bites per man per year, respectively). These values are lower than those reported from similar studies in Cameroon, Congo and Gabon. Measurement of Chrysops densities does not seem to be an appropriate tool to evaluate the level of endemicity of loiasis, and to delineate the areas where there is a risk of post-ivermectin Loa encephalopathies.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cameroon / epidemiology
  • Diptera
  • Endemic Diseases
  • Humans
  • Insect Vectors*
  • Loa
  • Loiasis / epidemiology
  • Loiasis / transmission*
  • Microfilariae
  • Parasitemia
  • Population Density
  • Trees