Kilimanjaro Christian Medical College, Tumaini University, Moshi, Tanzania.
PLoS One. 2012;7(3):e31481. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0031481. Epub 2012 Mar 16.
High coverage of conventional and long-lasting insecticide treated nets (ITNs and LLINs) in parts of E Africa are associated with reductions in local malaria burdens. Shifts in malaria vector species ratio have coincided with the scale-up suggesting that some species are being controlled by ITNs/LLINs better than others.
Between 2005-2006 six experimental hut trials of ITNs and LLINs were conducted in parallel at two field stations in northeastern Tanzania; the first station was in Lower Moshi Rice Irrigation Zone, an area where An. arabiensis predominates, and the second was in coastal Muheza, where An. gambiae and An. funestus predominate. Five pyrethroids and one carbamate insecticide were evaluated on nets in terms of insecticide-induced mortality, blood-feeding inhibition and exiting rates.
In the experimental hut trials mortality of An. arabiensis was consistently lower than that of An. gambiae and An. funestus. The mortality rates in trials with pyrethroid-treated nets ranged from 25-52% for An. arabiensis, 63-88% for An. gambiae s.s. and 53-78% for An. funestus. All pyrethroid-treated nets provided considerable protection for the occupants, despite being deliberately holed, with blood-feeding inhibition (percentage reduction in biting rates) being consistent between species. Veranda exiting rates did not differ between species. Percentage mortality of mosquitoes tested in cone bioassays on netting was similar for An. gambiae and An. arabiensis.
LLINs and ITNs treated with pyrethroids were more effective at killing An. gambiae and An. funestus than An. arabiensis. This could be a major contributing factor to the species shifts observed in East Africa following scale up of LLINs. With continued expansion of LLIN coverage in Africa An. arabiensis is likely to remain responsible for residual malaria transmission, and species shifts might be reported over larger areas. Supplementary control measures to LLINs may be necessary to control this vector species.
东非部分地区常规长效杀虫剂处理蚊帐(ITN 和 LLIN)的高覆盖率与当地疟疾负担的减少有关。疟疾媒介物种比例的变化与规模扩大相吻合,表明某些物种比其他物种更容易受到 ITN/LLIN 的控制。
2005-2006 年,在坦桑尼亚东北部的两个野外站同时进行了六项 ITN 和 LLIN 的实验性吊舱试验;第一个站位于Lower Moshi 水稻灌溉区,那里主要是 An. arabiensis,第二个站位于沿海的 Muheza,那里主要是 An. gambiae 和 An. funestus。评估了五种拟除虫菊酯和一种氨基甲酸酯杀虫剂在蚊帐上的杀虫效果、抑制吸血和驱出率。
在实验性吊舱试验中,An. arabiensis 的死亡率始终低于 An. gambiae 和 An. funestus。在使用拟除虫菊酯处理的蚊帐进行的试验中,An. arabiensis 的死亡率范围为 25-52%,An. gambiae s.s.的死亡率为 63-88%,An. funestus 的死亡率为 53-78%。尽管故意在蚊帐上穿孔,但所有拟除虫菊酯处理的蚊帐都为居住者提供了相当大的保护,对吸血率的抑制(叮咬率的降低百分比)在物种间是一致的。露台出口率在物种间没有差异。在网罩上进行的锥虫生物测定中,测试的蚊子的死亡率与 An. gambiae 和 An. arabiensis 相似。
用拟除虫菊酯处理的 LLIN 和 ITN 对杀死 An. gambiae 和 An. funestus 比 An. arabiensis 更有效。这可能是东非大规模推广 LLIN 后观察到物种变化的一个主要因素。随着非洲 LLIN 覆盖率的持续扩大,An. arabiensis 可能仍然是残留疟疾传播的原因,并且可能在更大的区域报告物种变化。可能需要补充控制措施来控制这种媒介物种。