Authors
Gregory E Glass, Terry L Yates, Joshua B Fine, Timothy M Shields, John B Kendall, Andrew G Hope, Cheryl A Parmenter, CJ Peters, Thomas G Ksiazek, Chung-Sheng Li, Jonathan A Patz, James N Mills
Publication date
2002/12/24
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
99
Issue
26
Pages
16817-16822
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The relationship between the risk of hantaviral pulmonary syndrome (HPS), as estimated from satellite imagery, and local rodent populations was examined. HPS risk, predicted before rodent sampling, was highly associated with the abundance of Peromyscus maniculatus, the reservoir of Sin Nombre virus (SNV). P. maniculatus were common in high-risk sites, and populations in high-risk areas were skewed toward adult males, the subclass most frequently infected with SNV. In the year after an El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO), captures of P. maniculatus increased only in high-risk areas. During 1998, few sites had infected mice, but by 1999, 18/20 of the high-risk sites contained infected mice and the crude prevalence was 30.8%. Only 1/18 of the low-risk sites contained infected rodents, and the prevalence of infection was lower (8.3%). Satellite imagery identified environmental features associated with SNV …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
GE Glass, TL Yates, JB Fine, TM Shields, JB Kendall… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2002