Scinachi Claudia A, Takeda Gabriela A C G, Mucci Luís Filipe, Pinter Adriano
Faculdade de Saúde Pública - Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil; Superintendência de Controle de Endemias, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Superintendência de Controle de Endemias, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Acta Trop. 2017 Feb;166:225-233. doi: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2016.11.025. Epub 2016 Nov 21.
Brazilian Spotted Fever (BSF) is a zoonotic disease caused by the bacterium Rickettsia rickettsii. In the São Paulo Metropolitan Region (SPMR) it is transmitted by Amblyomma aureolatum ticks. In this region, annual lethality of the disease can reach 80% and spatial occurrence depends on environmental factors and more particularly on the presence and interaction of domestic and wild carnivores as well as the presence and characteristics of the remnant Atlantic Rain Forest patches. This study analyzed the association between forest fragmentation and its influence on the risk of occurrence of the disease in the human population. Domestic dogs tested for R. rickettsii antibodies in nine different areas under the influence of different patterns of Rain Forest fragmented landscapes and human occupancy. Landscape metrics were obtained by analyzing satellite images and high-resolution orthophotos. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to determine among the different landscape variables the one that could best explain the data variance, and the results were tested against canine seroprevalence in order to address disease occurrence risk levels. From 270 canine samples, the seroprevalence ranged from 0 to 37%. PCA showed an inverse correlation between functionally connected large forest patches and the canine seroprevalence for R. rickettsii (p=0.030; Spearman's R=-0.683), while there was a positive correlation between forest border effect and canine seroprevalence (p=0.037; Spearman's R=- 0.909). The further attributed disease occurrence risk level supported the real spatial prevalence of the disease reported for the last eight years (p=0.023; Spearman's R=0.63). The results suggest an important relation of deforestation and fragmentation with the occurrence of BSF in the SPMR.
巴西斑疹热(BSF)是一种由立氏立克次体细菌引起的人畜共患病。在圣保罗大都市区(SPMR),它由金黄硬蜱传播。在该地区,这种疾病的年致死率可达80%,其空间分布取决于环境因素,更具体地说,取决于家养和野生食肉动物的存在及相互作用,以及残余大西洋雨林斑块的存在和特征。本研究分析了森林破碎化及其对人群中疾病发生风险的影响之间的关联。在受不同雨林破碎化景观模式和人类居住影响的九个不同区域,对家犬进行了立氏立克次体抗体检测。通过分析卫星图像和高分辨率正射影像获得景观指标。主成分分析(PCA)用于在不同景观变量中确定最能解释数据方差的变量,并将结果与犬类血清阳性率进行对比,以评估疾病发生风险水平。在270份犬类样本中,血清阳性率在0%至37%之间。主成分分析显示,功能相连的大型森林斑块与犬类立氏立克次体血清阳性率呈负相关(p = 0.030;斯皮尔曼相关系数R = -0.683),而森林边缘效应与犬类血清阳性率呈正相关(p = 0.037;斯皮尔曼相关系数R = -0.909)。进一步归因的疾病发生风险水平支持了过去八年报告的该疾病实际空间流行情况(p = 0.023;斯皮尔曼相关系数R = 0.63)。结果表明,森林砍伐和破碎化与圣保罗大都市区巴西斑疹热的发生存在重要关联。