Rozo-Lopez Paula, Drolet Barbara S, Londoño-Renteria Berlin
Department of Entomology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506, USA.
United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Arthropod-Borne Animal Diseases Research Unit, Manhattan, KS 66502, USA.
Insects. 2018 Dec 11;9(4):190. doi: 10.3390/insects9040190.
Vesicular stomatitis (VS) is a viral disease of veterinary importance, enzootic in tropical and subtropical regions of the Americas. In the U.S., VS produces devastating economic losses, particularly in the southwestern states where the outbreaks display an occurrence pattern of 10-year intervals. To date, the mechanisms of the geographic spread and maintenance cycles during epizootics remain unclear. This is due, in part, to the fact that VS epidemiology has a complex of variables to consider, including a broad range of vertebrate hosts, multiple routes of transmission, and an extensive diversity of suspected vector species acting as both mechanical and biological vectors. Infection and viral progression within vector species are highly influenced by virus serotype, as well as environmental factors, including temperature and seasonality; however, the mechanisms of viral transmission, including non-conventional pathways, are yet to be fully studied. Here, we review VS epidemiology and transmission mechanisms, with comparisons of transmission evidence for the four most incriminated hematophagous dipteran taxa: mosquitoes, sand flies, black flies, and biting midges.
水疱性口炎(VS)是一种具有兽医重要性的病毒性疾病,在美洲的热带和亚热带地区呈地方流行性。在美国,VS造成了巨大的经济损失,尤其是在西南部各州,那里的疫情呈现出每10年爆发一次的模式。迄今为止,疫情期间地理传播和维持周期的机制仍不清楚。部分原因在于,VS流行病学有一系列变量需要考虑,包括广泛的脊椎动物宿主、多种传播途径以及作为机械传播媒介和生物传播媒介的大量疑似媒介物种。媒介物种内的感染和病毒进展受到病毒血清型以及包括温度和季节性在内的环境因素的高度影响;然而,包括非常规途径在内的病毒传播机制尚未得到充分研究。在此,我们综述了VS的流行病学和传播机制,并比较了四种最受怀疑的吸血双翅目类群(蚊子、白蛉、蚋和蠓)的传播证据。