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First Evidence for Two Independent and Different Leishmaniasis Transmission Foci in Sri Lanka: Recent Introduction or Long-Term Existence?

Cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by a genetic variant of L. donovani is being reported from Sri Lanka since year 2001. Patients presented from different geographical locations (600 patients from North or South and a minority of cases from other foci, 2001-2013) were studied. Analysis revealed two diff...

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Autores principales: Siriwardana, Yamuna, Deepachandi, Bhagya, Weliange, Shreenika de S., Udagedara, Chandanie, Wickremarathne, Chandanie, Warnasuriya, Wipula, Ranawaka, Ranthilaka R., Kahawita, Indira, Chandrawansa, P. H., Karunaweera, Nadira D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6683790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31428163
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6475939
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author Siriwardana, Yamuna
Deepachandi, Bhagya
Weliange, Shreenika de S.
Udagedara, Chandanie
Wickremarathne, Chandanie
Warnasuriya, Wipula
Ranawaka, Ranthilaka R.
Kahawita, Indira
Chandrawansa, P. H.
Karunaweera, Nadira D.
author_facet Siriwardana, Yamuna
Deepachandi, Bhagya
Weliange, Shreenika de S.
Udagedara, Chandanie
Wickremarathne, Chandanie
Warnasuriya, Wipula
Ranawaka, Ranthilaka R.
Kahawita, Indira
Chandrawansa, P. H.
Karunaweera, Nadira D.
author_sort Siriwardana, Yamuna
collection PubMed
description Cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by a genetic variant of L. donovani is being reported from Sri Lanka since year 2001. Patients presented from different geographical locations (600 patients from North or South and a minority of cases from other foci, 2001-2013) were studied. Analysis revealed two different sociodemographic and clinical profiles of leishmaniasis in Northern and Southern Sri Lanka. Also, the same different profiles were present in these foci since the onset of the recent outbreak and had independently propagated within each focus over the time. A profile of 14 parameters identified in the Northern focus was further examined with regard to other locations. Northwestern (10/14) and Central parts (9/14) of the island were more similar to Northern focus (14/14). Infection would have originated in one focus and spread to other 2 in Northern Sri Lanka. Southern focus was different from and appeared older than all others (2/14). Western focus that accommodates a large transient population had a mixed picture of North and South features (4/14). Lesions in North showed a slow progression and a nonulcerative nature (128/185, 69.2%), while those in South showed a rapid progression and less nonulcerative lesions (193/415, 46.5%). Clinical analysis favoured a parasite aetiology (considerable strain differences) rather than a host aetiology (age, gender, or genetics). Both foci demonstrated a biannual seasonal variation since the onset of the epidemic. Two peaks were observed during the early and latter parts of the year. Furthermore, long-term existence and recent spatiotemporal expansion and detection of leishmaniasis in this country rather than a recent introduction and establishment were indicated by these findings. Vigorous antimalarial activities that existed in Sri Lanka until few decades ago, lack of professional awareness, and more recent military activities that brought human population in close contact with a sylvatic cycle would have played a role in silent propagation of Leishmania parasites and subsequent increment in human cases, respectively, in this country.
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spelling pubmed-66837902019-08-19 First Evidence for Two Independent and Different Leishmaniasis Transmission Foci in Sri Lanka: Recent Introduction or Long-Term Existence? Siriwardana, Yamuna Deepachandi, Bhagya Weliange, Shreenika de S. Udagedara, Chandanie Wickremarathne, Chandanie Warnasuriya, Wipula Ranawaka, Ranthilaka R. Kahawita, Indira Chandrawansa, P. H. Karunaweera, Nadira D. J Trop Med Research Article Cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by a genetic variant of L. donovani is being reported from Sri Lanka since year 2001. Patients presented from different geographical locations (600 patients from North or South and a minority of cases from other foci, 2001-2013) were studied. Analysis revealed two different sociodemographic and clinical profiles of leishmaniasis in Northern and Southern Sri Lanka. Also, the same different profiles were present in these foci since the onset of the recent outbreak and had independently propagated within each focus over the time. A profile of 14 parameters identified in the Northern focus was further examined with regard to other locations. Northwestern (10/14) and Central parts (9/14) of the island were more similar to Northern focus (14/14). Infection would have originated in one focus and spread to other 2 in Northern Sri Lanka. Southern focus was different from and appeared older than all others (2/14). Western focus that accommodates a large transient population had a mixed picture of North and South features (4/14). Lesions in North showed a slow progression and a nonulcerative nature (128/185, 69.2%), while those in South showed a rapid progression and less nonulcerative lesions (193/415, 46.5%). Clinical analysis favoured a parasite aetiology (considerable strain differences) rather than a host aetiology (age, gender, or genetics). Both foci demonstrated a biannual seasonal variation since the onset of the epidemic. Two peaks were observed during the early and latter parts of the year. Furthermore, long-term existence and recent spatiotemporal expansion and detection of leishmaniasis in this country rather than a recent introduction and establishment were indicated by these findings. Vigorous antimalarial activities that existed in Sri Lanka until few decades ago, lack of professional awareness, and more recent military activities that brought human population in close contact with a sylvatic cycle would have played a role in silent propagation of Leishmania parasites and subsequent increment in human cases, respectively, in this country. Hindawi 2019-07-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6683790/ /pubmed/31428163 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6475939 Text en Copyright © 2019 Yamuna Siriwardana et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Siriwardana, Yamuna
Deepachandi, Bhagya
Weliange, Shreenika de S.
Udagedara, Chandanie
Wickremarathne, Chandanie
Warnasuriya, Wipula
Ranawaka, Ranthilaka R.
Kahawita, Indira
Chandrawansa, P. H.
Karunaweera, Nadira D.
First Evidence for Two Independent and Different Leishmaniasis Transmission Foci in Sri Lanka: Recent Introduction or Long-Term Existence?
title First Evidence for Two Independent and Different Leishmaniasis Transmission Foci in Sri Lanka: Recent Introduction or Long-Term Existence?
title_full First Evidence for Two Independent and Different Leishmaniasis Transmission Foci in Sri Lanka: Recent Introduction or Long-Term Existence?
title_fullStr First Evidence for Two Independent and Different Leishmaniasis Transmission Foci in Sri Lanka: Recent Introduction or Long-Term Existence?
title_full_unstemmed First Evidence for Two Independent and Different Leishmaniasis Transmission Foci in Sri Lanka: Recent Introduction or Long-Term Existence?
title_short First Evidence for Two Independent and Different Leishmaniasis Transmission Foci in Sri Lanka: Recent Introduction or Long-Term Existence?
title_sort first evidence for two independent and different leishmaniasis transmission foci in sri lanka: recent introduction or long-term existence?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6683790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31428163
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6475939
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