02217nas a2200349 4500000000100000008004100001260001300042653002700055653001200082653001500094653002000109653000800129653001900137653001100156653001200167653001900179653002000198653002500218653004600243653003400289653001300323100001500336700001200351700001600363700001400379700001200393245007400405300001100479490000700490520135600497022001401853 2008 d c2008 Jun10aAnimal Experimentation10aAnimals10aArmadillos10aCercocebus atys10aHIV10aHIV Infections10aHumans10aleprosy10aMacaca mulatta10aMonkey Diseases10aMycobacterium leprae10aSimian Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome10aSimian immunodeficiency virus10aZoonoses1 aHamilton H1 aLevis W1 aMartiniuk F1 aCabrera A1 aWolf JE00aThe role of the armadillo and sooty mangabey monkey in human leprosy. a545-500 v473 a

BACKGROUND: The armadillo was the first animal model of leprosy. Its role in the transmission of leprosy remains controversial. The sooty mangabey model of leprosy led to the discovery that rhesus monkeys were more susceptible to leprosy when coinfected with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), but that leprosy may play a protective role against acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) mortality. Recently, molecular methods have been developed for leprosy and may help resolve the role of zoonoses in leprosy.

OBSERVATIONS: The recent identification of a case of leprosy in a native-born American on the east coast of the USA and the identification of leprosy as an immunologic reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (IRIS) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive cases raise the question of what role zoonoses may play in leprosy.

CONCLUSIONS: Leprosy in armadillos and sooty mangabeys has been manipulated by human experimentation. In the case of the armadillo, further study, including molecular techniques, is required to elucidate the role of the armadillo as a zoonosis in human leprosy. Experimentation with the sooty mangabey led to the discovery of an interaction between SIV and leprosy in rhesus monkeys, and prompted the continued investigation of the relationship between HIV and leprosy.

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