In cultures the various species of Leishmania all grow into herpetomonad, uniflagellate organisms (fig. 50, 10), about 12 µ to 20 µ in body length. On this account Rogers[125] and Patton place the Leishman-Donovan body within the genus Herpetomonas. The method of culture may be used in diagnosing leishmaniases.
Kala-azar is very probably an insect-borne disease. Patton[126] suspects the bed-bug to be the transmitter and finds (fig. 50, 4-6) that the Leishman-Donovan body can develop into the flagellate stage in the digestive tract of the bed-bug. Feeding experiments are unsatisfactory, since there are very few cases in which the parasites occur in sufficient numbers in the peripheral blood to make the infection of the insect possible, or at any rate easy. In examining the alimentary tracts of insects for possible flagellate stages of Leishmania, it must be remembered that in many insects natural flagellate parasites, belonging to the genus Herpetomonas, may occur therein; such natural insect flagellates may be harmless, and have no connection with the life-cycle of L. donovani. Natural herpetomonads are known to occur in the alimentary tracts of flies, mosquitoes, sand-flies, fleas and lice, but not in bed-bugs. Further, if such flagellates are able to be inoculated into and live within vertebrate hosts, producing symptoms like those of leishmaniasis, the origin of kala-azar is indicated (see pp. [104], [112]).
Leishmania tropica, Wright, 1903.
Syn.: Helcosoma tropicum, Wright, 1903; L. wrighti, Nicolle, 1908; Ovoplasma orientale, Marzinowsky and Bogrow.
It is believed by some that the parasite was first described by Cunningham in 1885, and studied by Firth in 1891, being called by him Sporozoon furunculosum. If these earlier studies were of the parasite, then its correct name is L. furunculosa, Firth, 1891.
The benign disease produced by this parasite has received many names, among the best known being Oriental sore, Tropical sore, Delhi boil and Aleppo button. These names, however, are not happy ones, as cutaneous leishmaniasis (e.g., on the ear) is now known to occur in the New World, for example in Mexico, Venezuela, Brazil and neighbouring States. However, it may be necessary to subdivide cutaneous leishmaniases later.
In the Old World the disease occurs in India, Persia, Arabia and Transcaucasia. It is also known in Algeria, Northern Nigeria, Egypt, Sudan, Crete, Calabria, Sicily and Greece.
The boils often occur on the face, and before ulceration the parasites may be found in the cells at the margin and floor of the “button.” In searching for parasites the scab should be removed and scrapings made from the floor and edges. Where lesions occur atrophy of the epidermis takes place, and infiltration of mononuclear cells (e.g., plasma cells, lymphoid and endothelial cells) follows. The parasites are intracellular, being found inside mononuclear cells. In non-ulcerating sores, Cardamitis found some free parasites. Non-ulcerating forms are said to occur in the Sudan. In the Old World the sores are often limited to exposed surfaces of the body. Infection of mucous membranes (such as the lip, palate, buccal and nasal membranes) may occur, especially in South America, and are often known there as “Espundia.” Christopherson (1914) has recorded a case in Khartoum.
Leishmania tropica is equally well cultivated on Novy-MacNeal-Nicolle medium or on citrated blood. The usual temperature for cultivation is 22° to 28° C., though Marzinowski claims to have cultivated the parasite at 37° C. L. tropica can be inoculated into monkeys and dogs, with the production of local lesions. Material from a human sore or flagellates from a culture may be thus successfully inoculated. Also infected material may be rubbed directly into a scarified surface. The incubation period is long, extending over several months. The duration of the disease may be from twelve to eighteen months. Recovery from one attack of tropical sore confers immunity, and the Jews in Bagdad inoculate their children with the disease on a part of the body which will be covered, and so secure immunity in adult life.