Gratz N G
Annu Rev Entomol. 1999;44:51-75. doi: 10.1146/annurev.ento.44.1.51.
Over the last four decades, a number of arthropod-borne infections have been recognized for the first time. Some have become of considerable public health importance, such as dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF), and others are spreading geographically and their incidence is increasing. There has been an important recrudescence of several long-known vector-borne diseases. Malaria, leishmaniasis, dengue, and plague have resurged in numerous foci, in some cases where they were thought to be under effective control. In most instances, the appearance of new diseases and syndromes and the resurgence of old can be associated with ecological changes that have favored increased vector densities. Dam construction, irrigation and other development projects, urbanization, and deforestation have all resulted in changes in vector population densities that appear to have enabled the emergence of new diseases and the resurgence of old diseases. Greatly increased human travel has spread infectious agents, introducing them into areas in which they had been hitherto absent. It is essential to understand the factors that caused increased vector densities and hence the transmission of disease to prevent the emergence and resurgence of more diseases, as well as to serve as a basis for effective control.
在过去的四十年里,一些节肢动物传播的感染病首次被发现。其中一些已对公共卫生具有相当重要的意义,如登革出血热(DHF),而其他一些则在地理上不断蔓延且发病率不断上升。几种长期已知的媒介传播疾病出现了重要的复发情况。疟疾、利什曼病、登革热和鼠疫在许多疫源地死灰复燃,在某些情况下,这些疾病曾被认为已得到有效控制。在大多数情况下,新疾病和综合征的出现以及旧疾病的复发可能与有利于病媒密度增加的生态变化有关。大坝建设、灌溉和其他开发项目、城市化和森林砍伐都导致了病媒种群密度的变化,这些变化似乎促成了新疾病的出现和旧疾病的复发。人类旅行的大幅增加传播了传染原,将它们引入了以前未曾出现过的地区。了解导致病媒密度增加从而导致疾病传播的因素对于预防更多疾病的出现和复发至关重要,同时也为有效控制提供依据。