Justificativa e Objetivos: A doença de Chagas (DC), causada pelo Trypanosma cruzi, protozoário flagelado, descoberto a mais de 100 anos, sendo ela difundida nas américas, principalmente na américa do Sul, acometendo milhões de pessoas pelo mundo. É cada vez mais crescente o número de indivíduos acometidos com a DC na região da Amazônia Ocidental e estão relacionados a diversos fatores, porém o consumo de bebida contaminada é a principal parcela de contribuição para a elevação nos registros da doença na região. Este estudo tem como objetivo descrever e analisar o panorama epidemiológico da doença de Chagas no estado do Amazonas de 2004 a 2014. Métodos: Trata-se de um estudo ecológico, onde foram utilizados somente dados secundários obtidos do Sinan referentes aos casos notificados de infecção por T. cruzi em todo o estado do Amazonas. Resultados: Constatou-se que no período de 2004 a 2014 que no estado do Amazonas ocorreram um total de 100 casos de DC, tendo maior ocorrência nos anos de 2007 e 2010, durante os meses de abril e dezembro, com maior frequência da faixa etária de 20-39 e no gênero feminino. Conclusão: Constatou-se a necessidade de implementar um serviço de controle epidemiológico eficaz para monitoramento da via de transmissão DC e de seus vetores, pois trata-se de um problema de saúde pública que pode estar ligada a determinantes sociais e culturais, sendo indicado a promoção de atividades educativas para a conscientização da comunidade a respeito desta enfermidade. Descritores: Epidemiologia. Tripanossomíase Americana. Amazônia
Introduction: Chagas disease (CD), also known as American Trypanosomiasis, is an infectious parasitic disease caused by the etiologic agent Trypanosoma cruzi. It is considered endemic in the low-income population and is classified by the WHO as a neglected tropical disease. In the state of Acre, there is almost no scientific data regarding the epidemiology of CD, even though the first autochthonous case was registered in the 1980s.
Objective: To analyze the epidemiological panorama of the transmission of Chagas disease in the State of Acre, Brazil, from 2009 to 2016.
Methods: A survey of the occurrence of Chagas disease in the State of Acre was performed using public domain secondary data from the Brazil’s Notifiable Diseases Information System of SUS (publicly funded health care system), and from the SUS Database of the Health Surveillance Foundation of the State of Acre. Data were collected from the following variables: gender, age group, form of contagion, distribution by region and municipality, perimeter and seasonality.
Result: Forty-two cases of CD were confirmed, with an increase of more than 300% from 2015 to 2016 and a frequency coefficient of 3.06 cases per 100,000 people, and in the Tarauacá/Envira region, the probability of a person contracting CD was 600% higher than the state mean.
Conclusion: We found that in the state of Acre, in the period from 2009 to 2016, most cases of CD occurred in 2016, in the Tarauacá/Envira region, mainly in the municipality of Feijó, in the rural zone, from July to October, in the age group of 0 to 30 years, being the oral form the main route of transmission and presenting no statistical difference between men and women.
Introduction: Triatomines are hematophagous insects of epidemiological importance because they are vectors of Chagas disease. We present here the first report of Rhodnius montenegrensis in Amazonas, Brazil. Methods: Triatomines were collected from Attalea butyracea palm trees in the municipality of Guajará. Results: Two adult female R. montenegrensis specimens were identified. Conclusions: The present study confirms that the number of triatomine species within the Amazon has increased from 10 to 11, and the number of Brazilian states with R. montenegrensis has increased from two to three.
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