Authors
Waleed S Al-Salem, David M Pigott, Krishanthi Subramaniam, Lee Rafuse Haines, Louise Kelly-Hope, David H Molyneux, Simon I Hay, Alvaro Acosta-Serrano
Publication date
2016/5
Journal
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Volume
22
Issue
5
Pages
931
Publisher
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Description
To the Editor: War, infection, and disease have always made intimate bedfellows, with disease recrudescence characterizing most conflict zones (1). Recently, increasing violence from civil war and terrorist activity in the Middle East has caused the largest human displacement in decades. A neglected consequence of this tragedy has been the reemergence of a cutaneous leishmaniasis epidemic. Old World cutaneous leishmaniasis is one of the most prevalent insectborne diseases within the World Health Organization’s Eastern Mediterranean Region (2). Zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis is caused by the protozoan parasite Leishmania major, which is transmitted through the infectious bite of the female Phlebotomus papatasi sand fly; the animal reservoirs are the rodent genera Rhombomys, Psammomys, and Meriones. Anthroponotic cutaneous leishmaniasis is caused by L. tropica and transmitted between …
Total citations
201620172018201920202021202220232024613162218181087
Scholar articles
WS Al-Salem, DM Pigott, K Subramaniam, LR Haines… - Emerging infectious diseases, 2016