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Journal ArticleDOI

Leishmaniasis: current situation and new perspectives.

TLDR
Research for leishmaniasis has been more and more focusing on the development of new tools such as diagnostic tests, drugs and vaccines, and the newly available control tools should allow a scaling up of control activities in priority areas.
Abstract
Leishmaniasis represents a complex of diseases with an important clinical and epidemiological diversity. Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is of higher priority than cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) as it is a fatal disease in the absence of treatment. Anthroponotic VL foci are of special concern as they are at the origin of frequent and deathly epidemics (e.g. Sudan). Leishmaniasis burden remains important: 88 countries, 350 million people at risk, 500,000 new cases of VL per year, 1-1.5 million for CL and DALYs: 2.4 millions. Most of the burden is concentrated on few countries which allows clear geographic priorities. Leishmaniasis is still an important public health problem due to not only environmental risk factors such as massive migrations, urbanisation, deforestation, new irrigation schemes, but also to individual risk factors: HIV, malnutrition, genetic, etc em leader Leishmaniasis is part of those diseases which still requires improved control tools. Consequently WHO/TDR research for leishmaniasis has been more and more focusing on the development of new tools such as diagnostic tests, drugs and vaccines. The ongoing effort has already produced significant results. The newly available control tools should allow a scaling up of control activities in priority areas. In anthroponotic foci, the feasibility of getting a strong impact on mortality, morbidity and transmission, is high.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Injectable paromomycin for Visceral leishmaniasis in India.

TL;DR: A randomized, controlled, phase 3 open-label study comparing paromomycin, an aminoglycoside, with amphotericin B, the present standard of care for the treatment of visceral leishmaniasis in Bihar, India, showed parmomycin was shown to be noninferior to amphoteric in B.
Journal ArticleDOI

Current diagnosis and treatment of cutaneous and mucocutaneous leishmaniasis

TL;DR: A critical review of the diagnostic methods, their contribution and the necessity for their improvement/development are presented, particularly in molecular diagnosis aimed at detection and species identification, as well as serodiagnosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leishmaniasis emergence in Europe.

TL;DR: Leishmaniasis emergence in Europe is reviewed, based on a search of literature up to and including 2009, and topics covered are the disease, its relevance, transmission and epidemiology, diagnostic methods, treatment, prevention, current geographical distribution, potential factors triggering changes in distribution, and risk prediction.
Journal ArticleDOI

The epidemic threshold of vector-borne diseases with seasonality: the case of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Chichaoua, Morocco.

TL;DR: A mathematical model is developed which takes into account the seasonality of the vector population and the distribution of the latent period from infection to symptoms in humans and suggests that the epidemic could be stopped if the vectors population were reduced by a factor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leishmaniasis: current status of available drugs and new potential drug targets

TL;DR: This review will initially describe current drug regimens and later will provide an overview on few important biochemical and enzymatic machineries that could be utilized as putative drug targets for generation of true antileishmanial drugs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The increase in risk factors for leishmaniasis worldwide.

TL;DR: Increasing risk factors are making leishmaniasis a growing public health concern for many countries around the world, and some are related to a specific eco-epidemiological entity, others affect all forms of leish maniasis.
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Drug resistance in Indian visceral leishmaniasis.

TL;DR: Despite several disadvantages, amphotericin B is the only drug available for use in these areas and should be used as first‐line drug instead of Sbv, and the new oral antileishmanial drug miltefosine is likely to be the first-line drug in future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid accurate field diagnosis of Indian visceral leishmaniasis

TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective study was conducted to assess the diagnostic usefulness of non-invasive testing for antibody to the leishmanial antigen K39 by means of antigen-impregnated nitrocellulose paper strips adapted for use under field conditions.
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Effect of insecticide-impregnated dog collars on incidence of zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis in Iranian children: a matched-cluster randomised trial.

TL;DR: Community-wide application of deltamethrin-impregnated dog collars not only protects domestic dogs from L infantum infections, but might also reduce the risk of L infantu infection in children.
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