Claborn David, Masuoka Penny, Morrow Meredith, Keep Lisa
Department of Nursing, Missouri State University, 901 South National Avenue, Missouri State University, Springfield, MO 65897, USA.
Int J Health Geogr. 2008 Dec 18;7:65. doi: 10.1186/1476-072X-7-65.
Nearly 1300 cases of leishmaniasis have been identified in American military personnel deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. The symptoms of this disease can range from a mild, self-limiting cutaneous infection to a deadly visceral infection and are not prevented by chemoprophylaxis or immunization. Effective treatments, however, are available. The disease-causing parasite is spread through the bite of the female sand fly. Although the disease occurs in both the Old World and the New World, the parasite species differ between the hemispheres. The large number of cases in military veterans has caused some concern that Old World, temperate-adapted parasite species could be introduced into the native sand fly populations of American military facilities where veterans of the current conflicts return following their deployments. This paper reports part of a larger study to analyze the risk of such an accidental importation. Four potential habitats on two large Army facilities in the Southeast United States were surveyed to determine relative sand fly density. The National Land Cover Map was used to provide sand fly density prediction maps by habitat.
Sand fly density was significantly higher in deciduous forest and even higher at the interface between forest and open grassland. The evergreen forest and agricultural fields supported very low densities. On Fort Campbell, KY, the percentage of land covered by suitable habitat was very high. A sand fly density prediction map identified large tracts of land where infected individuals would be at higher risk of exposure to sand fly bites, resulting in an increased risk of introducing the parasite to a native insect population. On Fort Bragg, NC, however, commercial farming of long leaf pine reduced the percentage of the land covered in vegetation suitable for the support of sand flies. The risk of introducing an exotic Leishmania spp. on Fort Bragg, therefore, is considered to be much lower than on Fort Campbell.
A readily available land cover product can be used at the regional level to identify areas of sand fly habitat where human populations may be at higher risk of exposure. The sand fly density prediction maps can be used to direct further surveillance, insect control, or additional patient monitoring of potentially infected soldiers.
在部署到伊拉克和阿富汗的美国军事人员中,已确诊近1300例利什曼病病例。这种疾病的症状从轻度、自限性皮肤感染到致命的内脏感染不等,化学预防或免疫接种无法预防。不过,有有效的治疗方法。致病寄生虫通过雌性白蛉叮咬传播。虽然这种疾病在东半球和西半球均有发生,但两个半球的寄生虫种类不同。退伍军人中出现的大量病例引发了一些担忧,即适应温带气候的东半球寄生虫种类可能会被引入美国军事设施的本地白蛉种群中,这些军事设施的退伍军人在部署后返回此地。本文报告了一项更大规模研究的部分内容,以分析这种意外引入的风险。对美国东南部两个大型陆军基地的四个潜在栖息地进行了调查,以确定白蛉的相对密度。利用国家土地覆盖图提供按栖息地划分的白蛉密度预测图。
落叶林中白蛉密度显著更高,在森林与开阔草地的交界处甚至更高。常绿森林和农田中的白蛉密度非常低。在肯塔基州的坎贝尔堡,适宜栖息地覆盖的土地百分比非常高。一张白蛉密度预测图确定了大片土地,在这些土地上受感染个体被白蛉叮咬的风险更高,从而增加了将寄生虫引入本地昆虫种群的风险。然而,在北卡罗来纳州的布拉格堡,长叶松的商业化种植减少了适合白蛉生存的植被覆盖土地的百分比。因此,布拉格堡引入外来利什曼原虫属物种的风险被认为远低于坎贝尔堡。
一种易于获取的土地覆盖产品可在区域层面用于识别白蛉栖息地中人类接触风险可能更高的区域。白蛉密度预测图可用于指导进一步的监测、虫害控制或对潜在感染士兵的额外患者监测。