Organophosphate insecticide susceptible test and transovarial transmission detection of dengue virus on Aedes aegypti in Kendari
Autor: | Tri Baskoro Tunggul Satoto, Muhaimin Saranani, Sitti Rahmah Umniyati |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Larva
Veterinary medicine lcsh:R5-920 animal structures Transovarial transmission Organophosphate fungi lcsh:R Endemic area lcsh:Medicine Aedes aegypti Biology Dengue virus medicine.disease biology.organism_classification medicine.disease_cause Virology Virus Dengue fever chemistry.chemical_compound chemistry medicine Ae. aegypti - resistance status - organophosphat - dengue virus - transovarial transmission lcsh:Medicine (General) |
Zdroj: | Journal of the Medical Sciences, Vol 45, Iss 04 (2014) Journal of the Medical Sciences (Berkala ilmu Kedokteran); Vol 45, No 04 (2013) Journal of the Medical Sciences (Berkala Ilmu Kedokteran); Vol 45, No 04 (2013) |
ISSN: | 2356-3931 0126-1312 |
Popis: | Dengue Fever (DF) is a disease caused by the dengue virus that transmitted by Aedes aegypti (Ae. Aegypti) and Ae. albopictus. Dengue fever is now one of the most important public health problems in Indonesia. Vector control using insecticides is the most important strategy to control the DF. Massal fogging and selective abatisation have implementedd intensively to control Ae. aegypti. However after its a long time implementation, mosquitoes resistance and transovarial transmission have been reported. The aim of the study was to evaluate the susceptibility status of Ae. aegypti to organophosphate and its ability to transovarial transmit degue virus in Kendari City, South East Sulawesi. This was a observational study using cross-sectional design conducted in high endemic areas (Kadia Village) and low endemic areas (Kambu Village). Susceptibility status of Ae. aegypti larvae from F1’s egg generation was evaluated by biochemic assay, whereas the transovarial transmission of dengue virus of adult female Ae. aegypti was evaluated by immunohistochemistry method using head squash preparation. The results showed that the Ae. aegypti larvae resistant was higher in high endemic areas (Kadia Village) (83.33%) than in low endemica areas (Kambu Village) (60.00%). In addition, transovarial transmission index (TTI) of Ae. aegypti dengue virus in the high endemic areas (26%) was significantly higher than in the low endemic areas (12%) (p |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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