0 likes, 0 comments - drhowardsmithreports on September 18, 2025: "Kissing Bugs Could Kiss Off Your Life The kissing bug is the popular name for the triatomine bug, a blood sucking insect that tends to attach to the faces of sleeping victims. This insect carries the parasite Trypanososma cruzi which causes Chagas’ disease. Normally found predominately in Central and South American as well as Mexico, now this bug and its potentially deadly baggage is spreading across the United States. As of this date, cases of Chagas’ disease have occurred in 8 states: Texas, California, Arizona, Tennessee, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi and Arkansas. The bad news is that these kissing bugs have been seen in 32 states. If the bug bites you on the face and you rub the bite, you are likely to rub some of the bug debris containing the Trypanosoma parasite into your skin. As the parasite sets up shop, you will develop Chagas disease, acute phase, with fever, eyelid swelling, fatigue, body aches, rashes, swollen glands, appetite loss, diarrhea, and vomiting. This acute phase and demands immediate diagnosis and treatment with antibiotics. Should you fail to recognize the signs and symptoms and the parasite persists untreated, , the Chageas disease moves into the chronic phase. It invades your heart and esophageal tissues. Years later, you develop heart failure, arrhythmias, cardiac arrest, difficulty swallowing, and severe constipation. At this point, the parasite cannot be eliminated and only the symptoms can be treated. As usual, the best treatment is prevention. Since there is no vaccine for Chagas’ disease, you must take precautions to avoid the kissing bugs. That includes use of insect repellent, wearing clothes that cover, staying in bug-free rooms with screening and/or air conditioning, and avoiding of possibly contaminated raw fruits and vegetables. https://www.infectiousdiseaseadvisor.com/news/kissing-bug-disease-spreading-in-us-cdc-report-says/ https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/chagas-disease/symptoms-causes/syc-20356212 #kissingbugs #chagas #parasite #trypanosomiasis #triatomine".
World Health Organization
[Yes, THAT World Health Organization]
Guinea eliminates human African trypanosomiasis as a public health problem
L’espoir d’éliminer la trypanosomiase humaine africaine grandit. Un antiparasitaire, l’acoziborole, permettrait de traiter en une seule prise cette maladie mortelle transmise par la mouche tsé-tsé. Retour sur près d’un siècle de combat.
Impressive results from small trial: Among the participants with late-stage sleeping sickness, acoziborole had a 95 per cent success rate, defined as no parasite being found in various bodily fluids at 18 months post-treatment. This rose to 100 per cent among those with an early to intermediate infection.