Chagas' disease in pre‐Columbian South America
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Physical Anthropology
- Vol. 68 (4) , 495-498
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330680405
Abstract
The quest for the origin and dispersion of Chagas' disease, the second most important vector‐borne disease in Latin America, has epidemiological, immunological, and genetical implications. Conjectures based on accounts of chroniclers, reviews of the archaeological literature and the present distribution of triatomine bugs, the vectors of the disease, held that the origin of the adaptation of Triatoma infestans (aspecies of the subfamily Triatominae) to human dwellings occurred in prehistoric times. The autopsy of 35 mummies exhumed in the Chilean desert, dated between 470 B.C. and 600 A.D., revealed the presence of clinical manifestations of Chagas' disease and put earlier speculations on a factual basis.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Preceramic Animal Utilization in the Central Peruvian AndesScience, 1976
- Chagas' Disease and Chagas' Syndromes: The Pathology of American TrypanosomiasisAdvances in Parasitology, 1968