This article reports the effects of a pour-on formulation of cypermethrin (6% active ingredient) applied to chickens exposed to Triatoma infestans, the main vector of Chagas disease in rural houses of the Gran Chaco Region of South America. This study was designed as a completely random experiment with three experimental groups and five replicates. Third instar nymphs were fed on chickens treated with 0, 1 and 2 cc of the formulation. Nymphs were allowed to feed on the chickens at different time intervals after the insecticide application. Third-instar nymphs fed on treated chickens showed a higher mortality, took less blood during feeding and had a lower moulting rate. The mortality rate was highest seven days after the insecticide solution application and blood intake was affected until 30 days after the application of the solution.Key words: Triatoma infestans -vector control -Chagas disease -Gran Chaco -cypermethrin -pour-on formulationThe interruption of the vectorial transmission of Chagas disease in most of the Southern Cone countries of South America is a good example of a successful vector control programme at a sub-continental scale (Schofield et al. 2006). This is widely recognised and it is now clear that the last frontier for complete success is represented by the control of vector populations in rural houses in the Gran Chaco Region of Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay. Besides economic and political circumstances that affected the vector control programmes in the area, the continued infestation of houses in the region is associated with the closeness of the dispersion centre of Triatoma infestans, which appears to be located in the intermediate Andean valleys of Bolivia and somewhere in the Chaco Region between Argentina and Bolivia (Schofield 1988, Panzera et al. 2004, Bargues et al. 2006). This biogeographical feature is a likely cause of the resilience of the T. infestans populations in the area. Vector control programmes using the traditional pyrethroid spraying of intra and peridomestic structures of rural houses are not as successful as programmes outside the Chaco Region. Traditional spraying is highly effective inside domiciles, but it frequently leaves a number of residual peridomestic vector populations, as reported in the southern part of the Chaco Region by Porcasi et al. (2006Porcasi et al. ( , 2007. These residual populations eventually recolonise the domestic rooms and re-establish the domestic transmission cycle of Trypanosoma cruzi, as shown by Gurtler et al. (2007) in the central area of the Argentinean Chaco. A number of different approaches and techniques for controlling or eliminating peridomestic populations of T. infestans have been considered as alternatives to the traditional application of pyrethroid insecticides. Among other methods, habitat management (Gorla et al. 2005) and insecticide paints (Pinto Dias & Jemmio 2008) are presently being studied. An early attempt, based on changing the structure of a goat corral, was carried out by Ronderos and Schnack (1987) after the...