1. Clinical, biochemical, and electrocardiographic aspects of Trypanosoma cruzi infection in free-ranging golden lion tamarins (Leontopithecus rosalia).
- Author
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Monteiro RV, Baldez J, Dietz J, Baker A, Lisboa CV, and Jansen AM
- Subjects
- Aging, Animals, Chagas Disease blood, Chagas Disease diagnosis, Chagas Disease parasitology, Monkey Diseases blood, Monkey Diseases diagnosis, Chagas Disease veterinary, Electrocardiography veterinary, Leontopithecus parasitology, Monkey Diseases parasitology
- Abstract
Background: Wild golden lion tamarins from the Biological Reserve of Poço das Antas, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, have high prevalence of Trypanosoma cruzi infection leading us to clinically assess the disease in this endangered species., Methods: 34 tamarins were sampled for the presence of T. cruzi infection (through serology) and clinical evaluation (electrocardiography, blood counts and biochemical analysis)., Results: 32% of the sampled tamarins were T. cruzi positive, 45% of these displayed cardiac abnormalities. Main cardiac abnormality in infected tamarins was T wave low voltage; R wave low voltage and V3S wave high voltage were also found. The tamarins displaying T wave low voltage had high proportion of seric cardiac creatine kinase. Seric mean total protein was significantly higher in infected tamarins., Conclusions: Sampled tamarins displayed typical signs of T. cruzi infection, similar to experimentally infected primates and human natural infection. Potential risk of T. cruzi infection to this endangered species is discussed.
- Published
- 2006
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