Guest guest Posted September 3, 2006 Report Share Posted September 3, 2006 http://www.hno.harvard.edu/gazette/1996/07.03/SpyingonFliesfr.html Lyme disease is now a serious threat in the eastern U.S.; hantavirus has spread from the Southwest into many states, and the skin-ulcerating form of leishmaniasis has invaded south Texas. Harvard University Gazette Spying on Flies from the Skies By William J. Cromie Gazette Staff Harvard scientists have launched a space war against bloodsucking sand flies that carry a parasite which sickens and kills millions of people each year. With the help of satellites, they are predicting the most likely places for outbreaks of leishmaniasis, a disease that infects an estimated 12 million people worldwide. The same technology also has been used to track the carriers of malaria, Lyme disease, cholera, and other maladies. A School of Public Health (SPH) team uses the method in Brazil to blunt the " scourge of the tropics, " a virulent variety of leishmaniasis that destroys internal organs. Flies transfer the parasite to people, and the disease is fatal if left untreated. " We're making encouraging progress in predicting where new outbreaks of visceral leishmaniasis might occur, " says James Maguire, associate professor of tropical public health. The SPH effort concentrates in northeast Brazil, a " hot area " for the disease. A major effort is ongoing in and near the city of Teresina, which has a population of about 700,000 people and more than 57,000 dogs. Dogs loom important in the cycle because they unwittingly act as a storehouse, or reservoir, for the parasite. When an infected fly bites a dog, it releases parasites into the canine at the same time that it feeds on its blood. Uninfected flies that bite infected dogs can take up the parasite and transfer it to humans. Control measures include spraying pesticides and killing infected dogs. As one might expect, the latter is highly unpopular. Many infected dogs show no outward signs of infection, and officials have trouble getting people to surrender their pets. " These measures have been successful in keeping the overall number of cases down, " Maguire notes. " But they don't eradicate the disease, nor do they stop new outbreaks. One reason for this, we suspect, is the existence of other reservoirs, specifically humans. If that's true, it would make control programs much, much more difficult. " Satellite Seeing Even so, control is no picnic. The potentially deadly bites probably occur inside or near houses. " We don't have the resources to examine every house in a city of 700,000 people, " Maguire points out. " And we don't know where sand flies breed, or their range of travel. " To overcome those disadvantages, Maguire and his crew map the city and its surroundings using images taken by U.S., Russian, and French satellites. Neighborhood maps then are combined with information on the type of vegetation, number of infections found, the quality of houses, and socioeconomic conditions. Once areas at highest risk for new outbreaks have been identified, protection efforts can be concentrated there. Satellite images turn out to be easier and cheaper to get than aerial photos. " We can map a 13,700-square-mile area for less than $3,000, " Maguire explains. " At present, the LANDSAT 5 satellite flies over Teresina every 16 days. " Seven sensors onboard LANDSAT give visual images as well as information on heat and other ground radiation which can be used to distinguish different types of vegetation. Images from Soviet spy satellites make it possible to identify objects as small as a truck or bus. Newer radar-equipped satellites, soon to be launched, will provide photos even on overcast days and at night. " So far, we've found an association between risk of infection, closeness to vegetation, and density and quality of housing, " Maguire says. " Squatter communities of closely packed, poorly constructed houses, located near a forested corridor or an area of dense trees and shrubs, offer an extremely high risk of leishmaniasis. A similar density of better-built houses, where vegetation is cut back and maintained, substantially decreases the risk. Leaf litter is the most likely breeding place for the sand flies. " SPH researchers are giving such information to authorities in northeastern Brazil charged with fighting leishmaniasis. It will guide their spraying and dog control measures to locations where they will do the most good. " Within the next six months, we expect to provide them with the kind of data that will result in reduction of new outbreaks of the disease, " Maguire says. Treatments and Tests Standard treatment for visceral leishmaniasis requires daily injections of a compound containing the metal antimony, a treatment with unpleasant side-effects including nausea, pain, and heart irregularities. Each injection costs only $1, but in rural parts of developing countries, the 20-day minimum treatment becomes prohibitively expensive. And sometimes, the drug needs to be given for 40 or even 60 days. John David, chair of the SPH Department of Tropical Public Health, leads an effort to find better treatments, including a vaccine for dogs. With more than 57,000 dogs in Teresina, vaccination would be a monumental task without good data about where infections would most likely occur. David, the Richard Pearson Strong Professor of Tropical Public Health, also has developed a field test to quickly screen dogs for leishmania parasites. " We can tell very quickly when a dog is infected, and removing infected dogs seems to reduce cases of human leishmaniasis, " David notes. " But we're still left with the problem of people hiding their dogs because they don't want them killed. " Experiments have also been done with humans. Carlos Costa, who recently earned a doctor of science degree from the SPH, put 20 uninfected sand flies on the skin of leishmaniasis patients. More than a third of them infected the flies, who could then, of course, infect other humans. Studies in India reveal that humans are the sole reservoir in that country. " The question of whether dogs or humans are the main reservoir in Brazil remains unanswered, " David admits. Infected dogs get lethal injections; a solution impossible with humans. If people serve as reservoirs but show no symptoms of the disease, present control programs will never eradicate the disease. For that, a more sensitive human test and a vaccine will be needed. David and his colleagues also are evaluating a treatment for the variety of leishmaniasis that attacks the skin. " Under anesthesia, a probe applies 122 degrees of heat to a skin lesion for 30 seconds, " he explains. " If it works, this would be a rapid way to treat the disease, but we have yet to complete evaluation of this method in Brazil. " The skin variety of leishmaniasis, which causes ugly sores on the face, mouth, arms, and legs, occurs throughout Brazil's Amazon region. The visceral leishmaniasis that attacks internal organs also occurs in southern Europe, tropical Asia, and Africa. In Sudan, it's called " the killing disease. " An estimated 400,000 people suffer from visceral leishmaniasis worldwide, and it causes some 40,000 deaths each year. Pinpointing the reservoirs and finding a better treatment, therefore, could alleviate considerable suffering in the world. While a vaccine would be specific to leishmaniasis, technology combining satellite imagery and investigations on the ground could be applied anywhere in the world to help control other infectious diseases. It already is being used in various ways against Lyme disease, malaria, cholera, hantavirus, and schistosomiasis, a tropical disease that affects more than 200 million people worldwide. Lyme disease is now a serious threat in the eastern U.S.; hantavirus has spread from the Southwest into many states, and the skin-ulcerating form of leishmaniasis has invaded south Texas. " These health applications are just in the beginning phase, " Maguire says. " Much more needs to be done. But we're very excited about developing this technology to its full potential. 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