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Experimental transmission of Plasmodium mexicanum by bites of infected Lutzomyia vexator (Diptera: Psychodidae)
Authors:T A Klein  D G Young  S R Telford  R Kimsey
Affiliation:Department of Entomology and Nematology, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611.
Abstract:Lutzomyia vexator is an efficient experimental vector of Plasmodium mexicanum, infecting 69.2% (9/13) of the Sceloporus undulatus lizards with as few as one bite. Sporozoites were present in the salivary glands by day 6.5 postfeed and infective by day 8 postfeed at 27 degrees C. The prepatent period was relatively long, ranging from 23 to 40 days for bite-induced infections and appears to be related to the number of sporozoites injected. The acute phase of the infection is initially exponential and rapid. All lizards (6) that were not sacrificed, died of fulminating infections from 13 to 56 days after parasites were seen in the blood films. Gametocytes from 2 experimentally infected lizards were infective to L. vexator during the course of the acute infection. The majority of P. mexicanum parasites were in erythrocytes of Sc. undulatus. Exoerythrocytic forms were observed in circulating lymphocytes and thrombocytes, lymphocytes of spleen and bone marrow, and endothelial cells of brain capillaries.
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