[
Parasitol Today,
2000]
Lymphatic filariasis caused by Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia malayi is endemic throughout most of the southern half of the Philippine archipelago. Economic and manpower shortages prior to 1996 made it difficult to acquire new prevalence data and vector control data concurrently from all provinces. Nevertheless, analysis of cumulative prevalence data on filariasis indicates the persistence of filariasis in each of the three major island groups - Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao - including 45 out of 77 provinces. Here, Michael Kron and colleagues summarize the prevalence data, and review host, parasite and vector characteristics relevant to the design and implementation of disease control initiatives in the Philippines planned for the year 2000.
[
Trends Genet,
1997]
Focused studies on model organisms with favorable features have been important for advancing many areas of biology. Nematodes have been a successful model for analyzing development. Can they also be used to study evolution? Paul Sternberg and his present and former colleagues are attempting to answer this question by studying variation of that well-described little structure, the nematode vulva. Their efforts have been well rewarded. Two recent publications extend a series of papers showing a surprising degree of evolutionary variability in vulval development among species. Could it be that comparison of nematode species will prove to be as powerful for penetrating the intimate mechanisms of evolutionary change as analysis of mutant nematodes has been to understanding mechanisms of development?