leishmaniasis
noun
leish·man·i·a·sis
ˌlēsh-mə-ˈnī-ə-səs
plural leishmaniases
ˌlēsh-mə-ˈnī-ə-ˌsēz
: a parasitic disease chiefly of tropical and subtropical regions that is caused by a flagellate protozoan (genus Leishmania) which is transmitted by sand flies (genus Phlebotomus and Lutzomyia) and infects the macrophages of mammalian hosts
Worldwide, the leishmaniases are the third most important vector-borne disease (after malaria and sleeping sickness), accounting for an estimated 1.98 million disability-adjusted life-years and 57,000 deaths annually.—Richard Reithinger et al.
see also cutaneous leishmaniasis, visceral leishmaniasis
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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