| Literature DB >> 27093890 |
Gerry F Killeen1,2, Nicodem J Govella3, Dickson W Lwetoijera3, Fredros O Okumu3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anopheles arabiensis is stereotypical of diverse vectors that mediate residual malaria transmission globally, because it can feed outdoors upon humans or cattle, or enter but then rapidly exit houses without fatal exposure to insecticidal nets or sprays.Entities:
Keywords: Anopheles; Malaria; Mosquito; Plasmodium; Residual transmission; Vector control
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27093890 PMCID: PMC4837512 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1280-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1A schematic summary of how specific behaviours enable mosquito populations generally, or Anopheles arabiensis in southern Tanzania specifically [16–19], to survive and mediate residual malaria transmission, despite high usage rates of long-lasting insecticidal nets
Model parameter symbols and definitions
| Symbol | Definition |
|---|---|
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| Mean number of encounters required for a mosquito to feed each at the end of each host-seeking interval, in a scenario with high usage of bed nets (Ω = |
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| Proportion of mosquitoes that have been inside house but failed to feed because the occupants were protected by LLINs on at least one occasion by the time they had completed their |
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| Number of individual cattle ( |
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| Number of individual humans ( |
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| Relative availability of blood from an individual head of cattle to vector mosquitoes, compared to an individual human |
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| Vector control intervention scenario with either high usage of bed nets ( |
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| Proportional protective efficacy of using a bed net against biting vectors at times when the bed net is actually used |
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| Proportion of vector biting exposure that occurs indoors ( |
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| Proportion of vector biting exposure that occurs indoors ( |
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| Average proportion of vector biting exposure that occurs indoors ( |
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| Average proportion of vector biting exposure that occurs outdoors ( |
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| Proportion of vector blood meals obtained from humans in a scenario with high usage of bed nets (Ω = |
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| Proportion of vector blood meals obtained from humans while indoors in a scenario with high usage of bed nets (Ω = |
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| Proportion of vector blood meals obtained from humans while outdoors in a scenario with high usage of bed nets (Ω = |
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| Proportion of vector blood meals obtained from cattle in a scenario with high human usage of bed nets (Ω = |
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| Availability of all indoor human blood sources to vectors, expressed as the mean rate at which mosquitoes find, attack and successfully feed upon all humans ( |
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| Availability of all human blood sources to vectors, expressed as the mean rate at which mosquitoes find, attack and successfully feed upon all humans (h) at any time, in a scenario with high usage of bed nets (Ω = |
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| Availability of all cattle blood sources to vectors, expressed as the mean rate at which mosquitoes find, attack and successfully feed upon all cattle (c) at any time, in a scenario with high usage of bed nets (Ω = |
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| Cattle |
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| Humans |
| 0 | No net use by a human individual or population |
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| Bed net use by an individual human |
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| Scenario ( |
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| Number of feeding cycles completed by a mosquito or age cohort in a mosquito population |
Fig. 2Dependence of the population-wide mean proportion of human exposure occurring outdoors with (Ω = N) and without (Ω = 0) 80 % bed net usage upon the proportion occurring indoors in the absence of any nets, for a vector population with the same ability as Anopheles arabiensis to avoid fatal contact with LLINs or IRS after entering houses [16–19], so that the insecticide treatment status of the net is irrelevant
Fig. 3The influence of varying levels of cattle availability and baseline distribution of human biting exposure indoors and outdoors upon the predicted proportions of all human blood meals that are obtained indoors (a), all blood meals obtained from humans (b), and all blood meals obtained from humans indoors (c). The predictions presented are based on simulations assuming a setting with high bed net usage (Ω = N) and vector mosquitoes have the same ability as Anopheles arabiensis to avoid fatal contact with LLINs or IRS after entering houses [16–19], so that the insecticide treatment status of the net is irrelevant
Fig. 4The influence of varying levels of cattle availability and baseline distribution of human biting exposure indoors and outdoors upon the predicted proportions of all mosquitoes successfully obtaining a blood meal which had previously entered but then left a house unfed in a single feeding cycle (a) or the minimum number of feeding cycles required to acquire and transmit Plasmodium falciparum malaria (b). The predictions presented are based on simulations assuming a setting with high bed net usage (Ω = N) and vector mosquitoes have the same ability as Anopheles arabiensis to avoid fatal contact with LLINs or IRS after entering houses [16–19], so that the insecticide treatment status of the net is irrelevant