(Press-News.org) In the spring of 1835, Charles Darwin was bitten in Argentina by a "great wingless black bug," he wrote in his diary.
"It is most disgusting to feel soft wingless insects, about an inch long, crawling over one's body," Darwin wrote, "before sucking they are quite thin, but afterwards round & bloated with blood."
In all likelihood, Darwin's nighttime visitor was a member of Reduviid family of insects — the so-called kissing bugs because of their habit of biting people around the mouth while they sleep.
From this attack, some infectious disease experts have speculated, the famed naturalist might have contracted Chagas disease, a parasite-borne illness carried by kissing bugs, that today afflicts millions of people in Central and South America. Darwin's bite may have led, ultimately, to his death from heart problems.
This hypothesis has been contested for decades, but if Darwin had experienced this bug attack in the United States, no one would have made such a speculation, since Chagas disease is almost unheard of in the U.S.
That could change, new research shows.
Lori Stevens, a biologist at the University of Vermont, and her colleagues, found that 38 percent of the kissing bugs they collected in Arizona and California contained human blood.
This upends the previous understanding of insect experts and doctors that the eleven species of kissing bugs that occur in the US don't regularly feed on people.
"This finding was totally unexpected," says Dr. Stephen Klotz, head of the infectious diseases department at the University of Arizona medical school and a co-author on the study.
And more than 50 percent of the bugs the research team collected also carried Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasite that causes Chagas disease.
Their study is reported in the March 14 online edition of the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.
"The basic message is that the bug is out there, and it's feeding on humans, and carries the parasite," says Stevens, "so there may be greater potential for humans to have the disease in the United States than previously thought."
So far, little of that potential has been realized. Only seven cases of Chagas disease transmitted by kissing bugs have been documented in the United States.
"We think the actual transmission is higher than the seven cases we have identified," says Patricia Dorn, an expert on Chagas disease at Loyola University and co-author on the new study, "but, even with these findings, we think the transmission of Chagas — of the T. cruzi parasite — is still very low in the US."
But with a warming climate that rate might rise.
Dorn and Klotz both emphasize that risk of severe allergic reactions to the bug's saliva is currently a greater problem than contracting Chagas disease. The team hopes their new work will "raise awareness among physicians and health care workers," Dorn says, about the risks of both allergic reactions and Chagas disease from kissing bugs.
"Chagas is a cryptic disease. It doesn't announce itself," say's UVM's Lori Stevens. The parasite can trigger an acute phase of the disease that may have no symptoms or may include fever, swelling of one eye, swelling around the bite and general ill feelings. In other words, it can look like many other minor illnesses.
Then the disease often goes into remission, only to appear years later as much more serious illness, including life-threatening digestive and heart problems. Some eight to ten million people in Mexico, Central America and South America have Chagas disease — making it the "most infectious parasitical disease in the Americas," Stevens says. But it is one of world's most neglected tropical diseases, mostly affecting the rural poor, and little studied compared to other major diseases.
It's not fully clear why Chagas disease hasn't established itself in the United States. "There are two leading theories," Klotz says. One is that housing stock in Central America is different than in the United States. There, thatched roofs, stick and mud construction and dirt floors provide good habitat for local kissing bug species. In contrast, U.S. houses tend to have concrete basements, screened doors and windows, and tighter construction.
The other reason may have to with the bathroom behavior of different species of kissing bugs. "We like to joke the bugs have better manners in the U.S.," says Dorn. The primary method of transmitting the disease is through the insect's feces. The species that have made Chagas endemic to Central and South America tend to defecate while they are having their blood meal.
This fecal matter can then enter the bite wound or mucus membranes easily, transmitting T. cruzi parasite to the blood stream. In contrast, North American species "tend to feed, leave the host, and then defecate later," says Dorn, lowering the risk of transmission.
But could those more-dangerous kissing bug species move north as the climate warms?
"Absolutely," says Dorn.
"We know the bugs are already across the bottom two-thirds of the U.S., so the bugs are here, the parasites are here. Very likely with climate change they will shift further north and the range of some species will extend," she says.
This problem may be compounded by increasing numbers of houses in the U.S. being built in remote areas — such as the mountainous areas around southwest cities like Tucson and San Diego — "places inhabited by packrats, for example, that are the natural hosts of these bugs," says Klotz.
"The bugs are attracted by the lights at night," Klotz says. "They'll crawl under a door and once they are there, they are such incredible parasitical bugs — they'll come find you or your pets."
But prevention is fairly easy, Stevens says. "If you're camping, make sure you close in spaces at night," she says. "In Vermont, it's not such a big deal, but in Arizona, if you sleep with the windows open, you need to put screens in. If you take precautions to keep the bugs out, you can prevent getting the infection quite easily," she says.
Stevens and her team were able to make these findings with a novel technique for identifying DNA from any vertebrate animal, including human, — that they found in the bugs' abdomens.
First Klotz and others collected the bugs. Then Dorn, and her students at Loyola, chopped off the distal end of their abdomens and extracted all the types of DNA, she says. Then they amplified "the parasite DNA out of the whole mess of DNA -- including the bug's, what they've been feeding on and the parasite's," Dorn says.
This allowed the team to know which of the insects were carrying the parasite.
Then this total-DNA package was shipped to Vermont, where Stevens, a professor in the biology department, and her students, developed a new technique to amplify and clone the DNA of the insect's blood meals.
"If the bug fed on humans three months ago, the DNA is pretty degraded by the time you try to detect it," says Dorn. But with a novel application of certain primers, the UVM team was able to detect any vertebrate DNA present in the bug's abdomen -- even short strands of human DNA, including one case where they were able to show that one of the bugs had fed on two different humans.
The method is expensive and labor intensive, which is why the new study only presents results from thirteen insects, but the method "may be especially useful for detecting unpredicted blood meal sources and multiple blood meals," the researchers write.
Now the team would like to look at a larger sample of kissing bugs from more areas of the United States.
"Chagas isn't going to spread fast," says Stevens, "but it could spread. Finding out how prevalent it is now would be a good idea."
INFORMATION:
With climate change, US could face risk from Chagas disease
2012-03-19
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Low-income mothers risk obesity to feed children
2012-03-19
Mothers who financially struggle to provide food for their families tend to put themselves at risk for obesity while trying to feed their children, according to Penn State sociologists.
Mothers who do not have enough money to provide adequate food for their families -- food-insecure -- are more likely to be obese or overweight than fathers who face food shortages, as well as food-insecure, childless women and men, said Molly Martin, assistant professor of sociology and demography. Over time, these food-insecure mothers also gain more weight compared to all food-insecure ...
Disabling cancer cells' defenses against radiation
2012-03-19
Researchers at Winship Cancer Institute are developing a technique to remove cancer cells' defenses against radiation.
Radiation primarily kills cells by inducing DNA damage, so the aim of the technique is to sensitize cells to radiation by disabling their ability to repair DNA. The technique sneaks RNA molecules into cells that shut down genes needed for DNA repair.
The still-experimental method could potentially allow oncologists to enhance the tumor-killing effects of radiation, while using lower doses and reducing damage to healthy tissues.
In the laboratory, ...
Dr. Rowan Chlebowski: Effects of estrogen alone vs. estrogen plus progestin on breast cancer risk
2012-03-19
LOS ANGELES (March 15, 2012) - In the past decade, results from large prospective cohort studies and the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) randomized placebo-controlled hormone therapy trials have substantially changed thoughts about how estrogen alone and estrogen plus progestin influence the risk of breast cancer, according to a review published TK in the Journal of The National Cancer Institute.
Although hormone therapy is currently used by millions of women for menopausal symptoms, there is still concern about hormone therapy–induced breast cancer risk. In addition, ...
Fraser Yachts: Superyachts for Sale This Summer 2012
2012-03-19
Fraser Yachts has a fantastic portfolio of luxury yachts for sale, four of which can be viewed at this year's Antibes Yacht Show (April 12-15th). Fraser Yachts brokers will, of course, be in attendance with M/Y LIVIA, M/Y BEYOND, M/Y VOYAGER and S/Y ALIA 82.
Built in 2009 by the respected Moonen shipyard, the motor yacht LIVIA is a 30m yacht for sale exclusively through Fraser Yachts. Exquisitely appointed throughout she can accommodate up to eight guests and four crew in modern, spacious living quarters. Sail round the Mediterranean this summer at a comfortable 12 ...
Wild orangutans stressed by eco-tourists, but not for long, IU study out of north Borneo finds
2012-03-19
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Wild orangutans that have come into contact with eco-tourists over a period of years show an immediate stress response but no signs of chronic stress, unlike other species in which permanent alterations in stress responses have been documented, new research from an Indiana University anthropologist has found.
IU anthropologist Michael P. Muehlenbein can't say yet what makes the wild orangutans of Borneo deal with stress differently than other species in other locations, but an analysis of orangutan stress hormone levels recorded before, during and ...
Researchers develop graphene supercapacitor holding promise for portable electronics
2012-03-19
Electrochemical capacitors (ECs), also known as supercapacitors or ultracapacitors, differ from regular capacitors that you would find in your TV or computer in that they store substantially higher amounts of charges. They have garnered attention as energy storage devices as they charge and discharge faster than batteries, yet they are still limited by low energy densities, only a fraction of the energy density of batteries. An EC that combines the power performance of capacitors with the high energy density of batteries would represent a significant advance in energy storage ...
A wandering mind reveals mental processes and priorities
2012-03-19
MADISON – Odds are, you're not going to make it all the way through this article without thinking about something else.
In fact, studies have found that our minds are wandering half the time, drifting off to thoughts unrelated to what we're doing – did I remember to turn off the light? What should I have for dinner?
A new study investigating the mental processes underlying a wandering mind reports a role for working memory, a sort of a mental workspace that allows you to juggle multiple thoughts simultaneously.
Imagine you see your neighbor upon arriving home one ...
Process makes polymers truly plastic
2012-03-19
DURHAM, N.C. -- Just as a chameleon changes its color to blend in with its environment, Duke University engineers have demonstrated for the first time that they can alter the texture of plastics on demand, for example, switching back and forth between a rough surface and a smooth one.
By applying specific voltages, the team has also shown that it can achieve this control over large and curved surface areas.
"By changing the voltage applied to the polymer, we can alter the surface from bumpy to smooth and back again," said Xuanhe Zhao, assistant professor of mechanical ...
Combination treatment in mice shows promise for fatal neurological disorder in kids
2012-03-19
Infants with Batten disease, a rare but fatal neurological disorder, appear healthy at birth. But within a few short years, the illness takes a heavy toll, leaving children blind, speechless and paralyzed. Most die by age 5.
There are no effective treatments for the disease, which can also strike older children. And several therapeutic approaches, evaluated in mouse models and in young children, have produced disappointing results.
But now, working in mice with the infantile form of Batten disease, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis ...
Fraser Yachts: Global Charter Options 2012
2012-03-19
Motor yacht IONIAN PRINCESS is a luxury yacht for charter based in Athens and can be chartered in Greece or anywhere on the Mediterranean this summer. Able to accommodate 12 guests in elegant yet comfortable quarters the motor yacht IONIAN PRINCESS is an exceptional vessel to sail upon.
Charter guests can choose to dine in one of three designated areas. One option is the sundeck, complete with barbeque; alternatively the aft deck of the sky lounge offers fantastic views or, for more formal dining there is the main salon. Appointed with only the finest of materials throughout ...