Literature DB >> 11220769

New insights on the emergence of cholera in Latin America during 1991: the Peruvian experience.

C Seas1, J Miranda, A I Gil, R Leon-Barua, J Patz, A Huq, R R Colwell, R B Sack.   

Abstract

After a century of absence, in late January 1991, Vibrio cholerae invaded the Western Hemisphere by way of Peru. Although a number of theories have been proposed, it is still not understood how that invasion took place. We reviewed the clinical records of persons attending hospital emergency departments in the major coastal cities of Peru from September through January of 1989/1990 and 1990/1991. We identified seven adults suffering from severe, watery diarrhea compatible with a clinical diagnosis of cholera during the four months preceding the cholera outbreak, but none during the previous year. The patients were scattered among five coastal cities along a 1,000 km coastline. We postulate that cholera vibrios, autochthonous to the aquatic environment, were present in multiple coastal locations, and resulted from environmental conditions that existed during an El Nino phenomenon. Once introduced into the coastal communities in concentrations large enough for human infection to occur, cholera spread by the well-known means of contaminated water and food.

Entities:  

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11220769     DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.2000.62.513

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg        ISSN: 0002-9637            Impact factor:   2.345


  23 in total

1.  Effects of the 1997-1998 El Niño episode on community rates of diarrhea.

Authors:  Adam Bennett; Leonardo D Epstein; Robert H Gilman; Vitaliano Cama; Caryn Bern; Lilia Cabrera; Andres G Lescano; Jonathan Patz; Cesar Carcamo; Charles R Sterling; William Checkley
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2012-05-17       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Learning from low income countries: what are the lessons? Community oral rehydration units can contain cholera epidemics.

Authors:  Walter H Curioso; J Jaime Miranda; Ann Marie Kimball
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2004-11-13

3.  Is El Niño a long-distance corridor for waterborne disease?

Authors:  Jaime Martinez-Urtaza; Joaquin Trinanes; Narjol Gonzalez-Escalona; Craig Baker-Austin
Journal:  Nat Microbiol       Date:  2016-02-24       Impact factor: 17.745

4.  New developments in the understanding of cholera.

Authors:  T Butler
Journal:  Curr Gastroenterol Rep       Date:  2001-08

5.  [Environmental pollution, climate variability and climate change: a review of health impacts on the Peruvian population].

Authors:  Gustavo F Gonzales; Alisson Zevallos; Cynthia Gonzales-Castañeda; Denisse Nuñez; Carmen Gastañaga; César Cabezas; Luke Naeher; Karen Levy; Kyle Steenland
Journal:  Rev Peru Med Exp Salud Publica       Date:  2014 Jul-Sep

6.  Cholera between 1991 and 1997 in Mexico was associated with infection by classical, El Tor, and El Tor variants of Vibrio cholerae.

Authors:  Munirul Alam; Suraia Nusrin; Atiqul Islam; Nurul A Bhuiyan; Niaz Rahim; Gabriela Delgado; Rosario Morales; Jose Luis Mendez; Armando Navarro; Ana I Gil; Haruo Watanabe; Masatomo Morita; G Balakrish Nair; Alejandro Cravioto
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2010-07-28       Impact factor: 5.948

7.  Direct detection of Vibrio cholerae and ctxA in Peruvian coastal water and plankton by PCR.

Authors:  Erin K Lipp; Irma N G Rivera; Ana I Gil; Eric M Espeland; Nipa Choopun; Valérie R Louis; Estelle Russek-Cohen; Anwar Huq; Rita R Colwell
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 4.792

Review 8.  Effects of global climate on infectious disease: the cholera model.

Authors:  Erin K Lipp; Anwar Huq; Rita R Colwell
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 26.132

9.  Re-emergence of Cholera in the Americas: Risks, Susceptibility, and Ecology.

Authors:  Mathieu Jp Poirier; Ricardo Izurieta; Sharad S Malavade; Michael D McDonald
Journal:  J Glob Infect Dis       Date:  2012-07

10.  Frequency of diarrhoea as a predictor of elevated blood pressure in children.

Authors:  Juan Jaime Miranda; Alisha R Davies; George Davey Smith; Liam Smeeth; Lilia Cabrera; Robert H Gilman; Héctor H García; Ynes R Ortega; Vitaliano A Cama
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 4.844

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