Rothhammer F, Allison M J, Núñez L, Standen V, Arriaza B
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1985 Dec;68(4):495-8. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330680405.
The quest for the origin and dispersion of Chagas' disease, the second most important vector-borne disease in Latin America, has epidemiological, immunological, and genetical implications. Conjectures based on accounts of chroniclers, reviews of the archaeological literature and the present distribution of triatomine bugs, the vectors of the disease, held that the origin of the adaptation of Triatoma infestans (a species of the subfamily Triatominae) to human dwellings occurred in prehistoric times. The autopsy of 35 mummies exhumed in the Chilean desert, dated between 470 B.C. and 600 A.D., revealed the presence of clinical manifestations of Chagas' disease and put earlier speculations on a factual basis.
对拉丁美洲第二重要的媒介传播疾病——恰加斯病的起源和传播的探索,具有流行病学、免疫学和遗传学意义。基于编年史家的记载、考古文献综述以及该病媒介——锥蝽的当前分布情况所做的推测认为,侵扰锥猎蝽(锥蝽亚科的一种)对人类住所的适应性起源于史前时期。对在智利沙漠出土的35具木乃伊进行的尸检(这些木乃伊的年代在公元前470年至公元600年之间),揭示了恰加斯病的临床表现,从而将早期的推测建立在了事实基础之上。