Trypanosoma cruzi

Valeria Fabre, M.D.

MICROBIOLOGY

  • Trypanosoma cruzi, a hemoflagellate protozoan, causes American trypanosomiasis (Chagas disease).
    • Transmission occurs when triatomine feces contaminate the bite site or mucosal surfaces (not via the bite itself).
      • Species Rhodnius or triatomine bug, [Fig 1].
    • Enzootic transmission occurs in the southern U.S., with infected triatomines and mammalian reservoirs (especially dogs and wildlife); autochthonous human cases are rare but increasingly recognized.
      • Texas is seeing the largest number of autochthonous human T. cruzi infections.
      • Risk factors included: rural residence, history of hunting or camping, and agricultural or outdoor work.
      • Canines are an important domestic reservoir and sentinel species; direct contribution to human transmission is inferred but not well quantified[3].
    • See the Life cycle.

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Last updated: May 9, 2026