“…According to consensus among specialists, the main T. cruzi genetic types were correlated to those six DTUs, and they were renamed Trypanosoma cruzi I-VI (TcI-TcVI) 7,14,15 . Subsequently, a new genotype closely related to TcI was described in Brazilian bats 16 and named Tcbat or TcVII, although without consensus regarding its DTU assignment 8,17,18 . In Brazil, TcI (formerly Z1) is widely distributed among mammalian hosts within the wild cycle, mainly the common opossum, Didelphis marsupialis, but it can also be found in human acute infections and more rarely in chronic patients 6,7,[19][20][21][22][23] .…”