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Leishmaniases and the Cyprus Paradox
Authors:Apostolos Mazeris  Ketty Soteriadou  Jean Pierre Dedet  Christos Haralambous  Andreas Tsatsaris  Joanna Moschandreas  Ippokratis Messaritakis  Vasiliki Christodoulou  Byron Papadopoulos  Vladimir Ivovi?  Francine Pratlong  Fedias Loucaides  Maria Antoniou
Abstract:In Cyprus, leishmaniasis has been considered exclusively a veterinary problem. It was prevalent before 1945, and until its recent reemergence, it was nearly eradicated by 1996 as a consequence of the destruction of reservoir hosts and vectors. A survey carried out to provide an unbiased estimate of current transmission rates in dogs and humans showed a 9-fold increase in dog seroprevalence (reaching 14.9%) compared with 10 years ago. However, no human cases caused by Leishmania infantum were detected, although L. donovani cases were reported recently. The 62 strains isolated from dogs were typed as L. infantum MON-1 (98.4%), which is the predominating zymodeme in the Mediterranean region, and MON-98 (1.6%). The Phlebotomus species P. tobbi (vector of L. infantum in Cyprus), P. galilaeus, and P. papatasi were the predominant species captured. Two transmission cycles seem to run in parallel in Cyprus: in dogs with L. infantum and in humans with L. donovani.
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