In March 2005, a resident of the municipality of Monte Alegre de Minas, State of Minas Gerais, without any history of traveling to endemic areas for malaria, was diagnosed with Plasmodium vivax infection and local mosquito-borne transmission was suspected. The epidemiological investigation identified another 10 cases with local transmission and all of them were related to the imported malaria case that was detected in this region. The potential exposure site was the banks of the river Tejuco, an area frequented by mineral prospectors. Some of these prospectors were known to have come from states with malaria transmission. In the autochthonous cases, Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum were diagnosed. Entomological investigation identified Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) darlingi, Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) albitarsis, Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) triannulatus and Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) parvus. After the first outbreak, another three autochthonous cases were notified in municipality of Monte Alegre de Minas, in the same year. The occurrence of these outbreaks highlights the importance of surveillance systems in areas that are nonendemic for malaria.
A análise epidemiológica da malária em Minas Gerais mostra a necessidade de divulgação permanente da situação da transmissão da doença, de forma a contribuir para a suspeita clínica em casos febris e para o diagnóstico precoce. A divulgação das informações técnicas sobre a malária visa ao melhor desempenho dos serviços de saúde locais, a fim de controlar os casos detectados e diminuir as taxas de morbi-mortalidade. Considera-se ser importante a manutenção de sistema organizado e ativo de vigilância epidemiológica de malária, mesmo em áreas endêmicas.
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