Laboratory and experimental hut evaluation of a long-lasting insecticide treated blanket for protection against mosquitoes
Autor: | Angela Kaye, Evelyn Isaacs, Richard M. Oxborough, Harparkash Kaur, Franklin W. Mosha, James G. Logan, Johnson Matowo, Stephen M. Magesa, Jovin Kitau, Mark Rowland, Vanessa Chen-Hussey |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Long lasting
Insecticides Mosquito Control Time Factors Anopheles gambiae Tanzania Toxicology Insecticide Resistance chemistry.chemical_compound Anopheles Pyrethrins parasitic diseases medicine Insecticide treated blankets Pyrethroids Animals Humans Insecticide-Treated Bednets Pyrethroid biology Research Significant difference Bedding and Linens biology.organism_classification Culex quinquefasciatus Vector control 3. Good health Mosquito control Anopheles arabiensis Culex Infectious Diseases chemistry Parasitology Experimental hut Permethrin medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Parasites & Vectors |
ISSN: | 1756-3305 |
Popis: | BACKGROUND: Long-lasting insecticide treated blankets (LLIBs) may provide additional protection against malaria where use of long lasting insecticidal nets (LLIN) is low or impractical such as in disaster or emergency situations. METHODS: Initial efficacy testing of a new candidate LLIB was carried out at LSHTM and KCMUCo, before and after washing, in cone and ball bioassays and arm-in-cage tests against pyrethroid susceptible Anopheles gambiae. A small scale field trial was conducted using veranda-trap experimental huts in northern Tanzania against wild An. arabiensis and Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes. Treatments included unwashed and 5 times washed permethrin treated LLIB and blankets hand-treated with permethrin (ITB), untreated blankets, and a holed unwashed Olyset net. RESULTS: Cone test mortality was 75% for LLIB when unwashed, but decreased to 32% after 5 washes and 0.05). Percentage mortality of An. arabiensis in huts with LLIB unwashed (26%) was not statistically different to Olyset net (31%, p = 0.5). The 5 times washed LLIB reduced blood-feeding by 49% which was equivalent to Olyset net (p > 0.086). There was no significant difference in percentage blood-feeding between LLIB and ITB unwashed or 5 times washed (p = 0.147 and p = 0.346 respectively). The 5 times washed LLIB reduced blood-feeding of Culex quinquefasciatus by 40%, although the Olyset provided the greatest protection with 85% inhibition. ELISA analysis of a sub-sample of blood fed mosquitoes showed that not all had fed on humans in the huts, therefore blood-feeding inhibition may have been underestimated. CONCLUSIONS: This trial demonstrated the potential of LLIBs to provide substantial personal protection even against pyrethroid resistant mosquitoes. LLIBs may prove particularly useful where LLINs are unsuitable or net usage is low. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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