Plymouth County Mosquito Control Project


| by Wayne J. Crans, Associate Research Professor in Entomology Rutgers Cooperative Extension Fact Sheet # FS736 |
There are three theoretical mechanisms which
would allow blood-sucking insects such as mosquitoes to transmit HIV.
1. In the first mechanism, a mosquito would initiate the cycle by feeding on an
HIV positive carrier and ingest virus particles with the blood meal. For the
virus to be passed on, it would have to survive inside the mosquito, preferably
increase in numbers, and then migrate to the mosquito's salivary glands. The
infected mosquito would then seek its second blood meal from an uninfected host
and transfer the HIV from its salivary glands during the course of the bite.
This is the mechanism used by most mosquito-borne parasites, including malaria,
yellow fever, dengue, and the encephalitis viruses.
2. In the second mechanism, a mosquito would initiate the cycle by beginning to
feed on an HIV carrier and be interrupted after it had successfully drawn blood.
Instead of resuming the partial blood meal on its original host, the mosquito
would select an AIDS-free person to complete the meal. As it penetrated the skin
of the new host, the mosquito would transfer virus particles that were adhering
to the mouthparts from the previous meal. This mechanism is not common in
mosquito-borne infections, but equine infectious anemia is transmitted to horses
by biting flies in this manner.
3. The third theoretical mechanism also involves a mosquito that is interrupted
while feeding on an HIV carrier and resumes the partial blood meal on a
different individual. In this scenario, however, the AIDS-free host squashes the
mosquito as it attempts to feed and smears HIV contaminated blood into the
wound. In theory, any of the mosquito-borne viruses could be transmitted in this
manner providing the host circulated sufficient virus particles to initiate
re-infection by contamination.
Each of these mechanisms has been investigated
with a variety of blood sucking insects and the results clearly show that
mosquitoes cannot transmit AIDS. News reports on the findings, however, have
been confusing, and media interpretation of the results has not been clear. The
average person is still not convinced that mosquitoes are not involved in the
transmission of a disease that appears in the blood, is passed from person to
person and can be contracted by persons that share hypodermic needles. Here are
just some of the reasons why the studies showed that mosquitoes cannot transmit
AIDS:
Mosquitoes Digest the Virus that Causes AIDS
When a mosquito transmits a disease agent from one person to
another, the infectious agent must remain alive inside the mosquito until
transfer is completed. If the mosquito digests the parasite, the transmission
cycle is terminated and the parasite cannot be passed on to the next host.
Successful mosquito-borne parasites have a number of interesting ways to avoid
being treated as food. Some are refractory to the digestive enzymes inside the
mosquito's stomach; most bore their way out of the stomach as quickly as
possible to avoid the powerful digestive enzymes that would quickly eliminate
their existence. Malaria parasites survive inside mosquitoes for 9-12 days and
actually go through a series of necessary life stages during that period.
Encephalitis virus particles survive for 10-25 days inside a mosquito and
replicate enormously during the incubation period. Studies with HIV clearly show
that the virus responsible for the AIDS infection is regarded as food to the
mosquito and is digested along with the blood meal. As a result, mosquitoes that
ingest HIV-infected blood digest that blood within 1-2 days and completely
destroy any virus particles that could potentially produce a new infection.
Since the virus does not survive to reproduce and invade the salivary glands,
the mechanism that most mosquito-borne parasites use to get from one host to the
next is not possible with HIV.
Mosquitoes Do Not Ingest Enough HIV Particles to Transmit AIDS by
Contamination
Insect-borne disease agents that have the ability to be transferred from one individual to the next via contaminated mouthparts must circulate at very high levels in the bloodstream of their host. Transfer by mouthpart contamination requires sufficient infectious particles to initiate a new infection. The exact number of infectious particles varies from one disease to the next. HIV circulates at very low levels in the blood--well below the levels of any of the known mosquito-borne diseases. Infected individuals rarely circulate more that 10 units of HIV, and 70 to 80% of HIV-infected persons have undetectable levels of virus particles in their blood. Calculations with mosquitoes and HIV show that a mosquito that is interrupted while feeding on an HIV carrier circulating 1000 units of HIV has a 1:10 million probability of injecting a single unit of HIV to an AIDS-free recipient. In laymen's terms, an AIDS-free individual would have to be bitten by 10 million mosquitoes that had begun feeding on an AIDS carrier to receive a single unit of HIV from contaminated mosquito mouthparts. Using the same calculations, crushing a fully engorged mosquito containing AIDS positive blood would still not begin to approach the levels needed to initiate infection. In short, mechanical transmission of AIDS by HIV-contaminated mosquitoes appears to be well beyond the limits of probability. Therefore, none of the theoretical mechanisms cited earlier appear to be possible for mosquito transmission of HIV.
Mosquitoes Are Not Flying Hypodermic Needles
Many people think of mosquitoes as tiny, flying hypodermic syringes, and if
hypodermic needles can successfully transmit HIV from one individual to another
then mosquitoes ought to be able to do the same. We have already seen that
HIV-infected individuals do not circulate enough virus particles to result in
infection by contamination. However, even if HIV-positive individuals did
circulate high levels of virus, mosquitoes could not transmit the virus by the
methods that are employed in used syringes. Most people have heard that
mosquitoes regurgitate saliva before they feed, but are unaware that the food
canal and salivary canal are separate passageways in the mosquito. The
mosquito's feeding apparatus is an extremely complicated structure that is
totally unlike the crude single-bore syringe. Unlike a syringe, the mosquito
delivers salivary fluid through one passage and draws blood up another. As a
result, the food canal is not flushed out like a used needle, and blood flow is
always unidirectional. The mechanics involved in mosquito feeding are totally
unlike the mechanisms employed by the drug user's needles. In short, mosquitoes
are not flying hypodermic needles and a mosquito that disgorges saliva into your
body is not flushing out the remnants of its last blood meal.
For more in depth information on this topic see
Staff Paper #I, Do Insects Transmit AIDS?, OTA series on AIDS-Related Issues,
Health Program, Office of Technology Assessment, United States Congress,
Washington, D.C. 20510-8025.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thanks are due to the New Jersey Mosquito Control Association, Inc., who
contributed funds to defray the cost of this fact sheet.
New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station Publication No. H-40101-01-93
supported by State funds
Rutgers Cooperative Extension
N.J. Agricultural Experiment Station
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey , New Brunswick
Distributed in cooperation with U.S. Department of Agriculture in furtherance of
the Acts of Congress of May 8 and June 30, 1914. Cooperative Extension works in
agriculture, family and consumer sciences, and 4-H. Zane R. Helsel, director of
Extension. Rutgers Cooperative Extension provides information and educational
services to all people without regard to sex, race. color, national origin.
disability or handicap, or age. Rutgers Cooperative Extension is an Equal
Opportunity Employer.
This article has been reproduced by Plymouth County Mosquito Control Project
with permission of the author: Dr. Wayne Crans a professor at Rutgers The State
University of New Jersey.
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