Again, Bruce and his colleagues on the Royal Society Commission investigating sleeping sickness in Nyasaland, have stated (April, 1913) that “evidence is accumulating that T. rhodesiense and T. brucei (Plimmer and Bradford) are identical.” The exact identity of trypanosomes showing posterior nuclei is, then, far from settled, although Laveran by cross immunity tests has declared that T. brucei is distinct from T. rhodesiense. No one has yet seen posterior nuclei in T. gambiense.

Trypanosoma cruzi, Chagas, 1909.

Syn.: Schizotrypanum cruzi, Chagas, 1909.

The trypanosome was discovered by Chagas[87] in the intestine of the bug, Triatoma (Conorhinus) megista, in Brazil, and then in the blood of a small monkey bitten by the bug. A little later it was found in the blood of a child, aged two years, suffering from irregular fever, extreme anæmia and enlarged glands in the State of Minas Geraes, Brazil. Chagas found that he was able to infect many of the usual laboratory animals with the trypanosome, by allowing the bug to bite them. He was also able to culture the parasite on blood agar.

Chagas found the Reduviid bug, Triatoma megista, in the houses of the poorer inhabitants of the Brazilian mining State, and that it attacked the people, more especially the children, at night, biting the face. On this account the insect is called “barbeiro” by the inhabitants. The bite is somewhat painful. The disease has since been found in other parts of Brazil, e.g., Matta de São João in Bahia province, Goyaz, Matto Grosso and São Paulo provinces, as well as in Minas Geraes.

Morphology.—The trypanosome has a large blepharoplast or kinetic nucleus. It is stated to occur both free and in the red blood corpuscles in the peripheral blood. It is about 20 µ long, on an average.

Two forms of the parasite (fig. 33, 6, 7) are described in the human blood. In one free form there is a large egg-shaped blepharoplast and the posterior (aflagellar) end of the parasite is drawn out. The blepharoplast (kinetic nucleus) may have a chromatin appendage. The nucleus is oval or band-like, containing a karyosome. The flagellum, starting close to the blepharoplast or its appendage, has a free portion of variable length. The other free form in the blood has a more or less round, terminal blepharoplast, smaller than in the first form, without a chromatin appendage as a rule. The body of this second form is decidedly broader than that of the first mentioned.

Fig. 33.—Trypanosoma cruzi. Schizogony. 1, merozoite in red blood corpuscle; 2, parasite totally enclosed in red cell, no flagellum or undulating membrane; 3-5, parasites partially enclosed in red cell; 6, 7, parasites in human blood; 8-11, parasites in lungs of the monkey, Callithrix; 12, 13, initial forms of schizogony; 14, 15, schizogony in the lungs of Callithrix. (After Chagas.)