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62 results on '"Triatoma parasitology"'

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1. Behavioral and biological parameters of six populations of Triatoma pallidipennis (Heteroptera: Reduviidae) from areas with high and low prevalence rates of Trypanosoma cruzi human infection.

2. Heterorhabditis indica (Nematoda: Rhabditida) a possible new biological control agent against the vector of Chagas disease.

3. Triatomine (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) populations and Trypanosoma cruzi genotyping in peridomestic and sylvatic environments in the semiarid region of Sergipe, Northeastern, Brazil.

4. Spatial distribution of Triatoma dimidiata peridomestic colonies modulated by distance between susceptible microhabitat patches.

5. Merging socioecological variables to predict risk of Chagas disease.

6. From molecules to ecosystems: Insights into a network of interactions for a Chagas disease outbreak using Triatoma brasiliensis as natural samplers.

7. Risk of a vector-borne endemic zoonosis for wildlife: Hosts, large-scale geography, and diversity of vector-host interactions for Trypanosoma cruzi.

8. Abundant triatomines in Texas dog kennel environments: Triatomine collections, infection with Trypanosoma cruzi, and blood feeding hosts.

9. Can infection with Trypanosoma cruzi modify the toxicological response of Triatoma infestans susceptible and resistant to deltamethrin?

10. Phenology and environmental predictors of Triatoma sanguisuga dispersal in east-central Texas, United States.

11. Resisting an invasion: A review of the triatomine vector (Kissing bug) defense strategies against a Trypanosoma sp infection.

12. Genotypic Trypanosoma cruzi distribution and parasite load differ ecotypically and according to parasite genotypes in Triatoma brasiliensis from endemic and outbreak areas in Northeastern Brazil.

13. Rethinking the old hypothesis that new housing construction has an impact on the vector control of Triatoma infestans: A metapopulation analysis.

14. Eco-epidemiological study reveals the importance of Triatoma dimidiata in the Trypanosoma cruzi transmission, in a municipality certified without transmission by Rhodnius prolixus in Colombia.

15. Morphological variability and ecological characterization of the Chagas disease vector Triatoma dimidiata (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) in El Salvador.

16. Reinfestation with Triatoma infestans despite vigilance efforts in the municipality of Saipina, Santa Cruz, Bolivia: Situational description two months after fumigation.

17. Molecular eco-epidemiology on the sympatric Chagas disease vectors Triatoma brasiliensis and Triatoma petrocchiae: Ecotopes, genetic variation, natural infection prevalence by trypanosomatids and parasite genotyping.

18. Trypanosoma cruzi circulating among dogs and triatomines in the endemic countryside of the State of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil.

19. Chronic Chagas disease: Quantification of Trypanosoma cruzi in peripheral blood and dejections of Triatoma infestans fed by xenodiagnosis in patients with and without cardiopathy.

20. Zombie bugs? Manipulation of kissing bug behavior by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi.

21. The reservoir system for Trypanosoma (Kinetoplastida, Trypanosomatidae) species in large neotropical wetland.

22. Comparing vector competence of Mepraia gajardoi and Triatoma infestans by genotyping Trypanosoma cruzi discrete typing units present in naturally infected Octodon degus.

23. Parasitic interactions among Trypanosoma cruzi, triatomine vectors, domestic animals, and wildlife in Big Bend National Park along the Texas-Mexico border.

24. What makes an effective Chagas disease vector? Factors underlying Trypanosoma cruzi-triatomine interactions.

25. On palms, bugs, and Chagas disease in the Americas.

26. An ecological overview on the factors that drives to Trypanosoma cruzi oral transmission.

27. Landscape ecology of Trypanosoma cruzi in the southern Yucatan Peninsula.

28. Epidemiological status of kissing-bugs in South East Asia: A preliminary assessment.

29. Reservoir host competence and the role of domestic and commensal hosts in the transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi.

30. Agent-based mathematical modeling as a tool for estimating Trypanosoma cruzi vector-host contact rates.

31. The Chagas disease domestic transmission cycle in Guatemala: Parasite-vector switches and lack of mitochondrial co-diversification between Triatoma dimidiata and Trypanosoma cruzi subpopulations suggest non-vectorial parasite dispersal across the Motagua valley.

32. Incidence of Trypanosoma cruzi infection in triatomines collected at Indio Mountains Research Station.

33. Life cycle and vectorial competence of Triatoma williami (Galvão, Souza e Lima, 1965) under the influence of different blood meal sources.

34. Insecticide resistance in vector Chagas disease: evolution, mechanisms and management.

35. Trypanosoma cruzi infection in Triatoma sordida before and after community-wide residual insecticide spraying in the Argentinean Chaco.

36. Geographic variation of Trypanosoma cruzi discrete typing units from Triatoma infestans at different spatial scales.

37. Biological cycle and preliminary data on vectorial competence of Triatoma boliviana in laboratory conditions.

38. Assessing the vulnerability of Brazilian municipalities to the vectorial transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi using multi-criteria decision analysis.

39. Genetic analyses of Trypanosoma cruzi isolates from naturally infected triatomines and humans in northeastern Brazil.

40. Feeding behavior of triatomines from the southwestern United States: an update on potential risk for transmission of Chagas disease.

41. Predominance of Trypanosoma cruzi genotypes in two reservoirs infected by sylvatic Triatoma infestans of an endemic area of Chile.

42. Differential distribution of Trypanosoma cruzi clones in human chronic chagasic cardiopathic and non-cardiopathic individuals.

43. Biological characterization of Trypanosoma cruzi stocks from domestic and sylvatic vectors in Sierra Nevada of Santa Marta, Colombia.

44. Development of a Trypanosoma cruzi (TcI) isolate in the digestive tract of an unfamiliar vector, Triatoma brasiliensis (Hemiptera, Reduviidae).

45. Impact of community-based vector control on house infestation and Trypanosoma cruzi infection in Triatoma infestans, dogs and cats in the Argentine Chaco.

46. Sylvatic Triatoma infestans (Reduviidae, Triatominae) in the Andean valleys of Bolivia.

47. Growth behaviour of two Trypanosoma cruzi strains in single and mixed infections: In vitro and in the intestinal tract of the blood-sucking bug, Triatoma brasiliensis.

48. Flight dispersal of the Chagas disease vectors Triatoma brasiliensis and Triatoma pseudomaculata in northeastern Brazil.

49. Differential detection of Blastocrithidia triatomae and Trypanosoma cruzi by amplification of 24salpha ribosomal RNA genes in faeces of sylvatic triatomine species from rural northwestern Argentina.

50. Comparison of Trypanosoma cruzi detection by PCR in blood and dejections of Triatoma infestans fed on patients with chronic Chagas disease.

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