CHAGAS' DISEASE
- 1 September 1941
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Ophthalmology (1950)
- Vol. 26 (3) , 341-346
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archopht.1941.00870150015001
Abstract
American trypanosomiasis, called Chagas' disease in honor of its discoverer, is a tropical disease frequently encountered in certain parts of the American continents, especially Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Peru, Venezuela, Paraguay, Bolivia, Guatemala and Panama. The organism which causes the disease is a flagellate protozoon. Carlos Chagas named the organism Schizotrypanum cruzi in honor of Oswaldo Cruz, a Brazilian scientist. Schizotrypanum cruzi is a habitual inhabitant of the Chiroptera. It is transmitted to man and animals by several Hemiptera of the Lamus genus, the best known of which are Lamus infestans and Lamus magistus, blood-sucking insects abundant in many sections of South America. From articles recently published on the subject, it is evident that of the seventy species of blood-sucking insects of the Reduviidae family existing in America, twenty-six species are naturally infected with Schizotrypanum cruzi and four more species can be experimentally infected. The species of Lamus which infest variousKeywords
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: