Fighting a hidden enemy
Mario Grijalva takes on Chagas Disease

By Nick Piotrowicz and Anita Martin
Mario Grijalva, Ph.D.,
has made a career of exposing and stalking a
silent killer. The culprit is Chagas disease.
Even though up to 10 million people are infected
and 100 million people are at risk, little had
been done in Grijalva’s native Ecuador to
address—or even acknowledge—the problem. That
is, until he and his colleagues at Ohio
University (OHIO) took up the fight.
Grijalva, associate professor of biomedical
sciences,
runs
OU-HCOM’s Tropical Disease Institute
(TDI),
which runs multiple programs in Ecuador. The institute,
founded in 1987 by Edwin Rowland, Ph.D.,
associate professor of microbiology at the Ohio
University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine
(OU-HCOM), and William Romoser, Ph.D.,
OU-HCOM early-retired
professor of medical entomology,
was
the first Ecuadorian institution to focus on Chagas Disease. The TDI now works with
international researchers and student volunteers
from OHIO and around the world.
Despite its prevalence in Latin America,
Grijalva had never heard of Chagas Disease until
he came to OHIO to earn his Ph.D. under Rowland
in 1992.
“I learned about Chagas right here in Irvine
Hall,” says Grijalva. “Later I went to Ecuador’s
Ministry of Health to ask about it. They said,
‘we don’t have that here.’”
They did have Chagas Disease, Grijalva would
soon learn and document, and to an alarming
degree. What they didn’t have was information.
From snakes to bugs
While rare in the United States, Chagas disease runs rampant through parts of
South and Central America. One contracts Chagas
disease from contact with the feces of
triatomine insects, known as “the kissing bug.”
Chronic Chagas disease decreases life expectancy
by an average of nearly ten years.
The carrier insects thrive in poor housing,
Grijalva says, which makes Chagas a disease of
poverty. The insects thrive in Ecuador, where 38
percent of the population lives below the
poverty line.
Grijalva knew little about infectious disease
when he first met Rowland in Ecuador in the late
80s. At the time, Grijalva was studying snake
venoms for his bachelor’s degree in biochemistry
at the Pontifical Catholic University in Ecuador
(PUCE), when he was recruited to join the TDI by
Rowland’s colleagues, Romoser and Malcolm
Powell, Ph.D., retired OHIO biologist.
The work of Ohio University’s researchers at the
TDI inspired Grijalva to earn his Ph.D. in
immunoparasitology and molecular biology at
OHIO.
Blood banks and healthy housing
In 1999, after a brief postdoctoral stint at the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
in Atlanta, Ga., Grijalva returned to join
OU-HCOM’s biomedical sciences faculty. One year
later, he established and directed the Center
for Infectious Disease Research at PUCE, created
in partnership with Ohio University.
Grijalva was named director of the TDI in 2006.
“TDI recognizes the importance of science as a
tool to help the people,” Grijalva says. “I have
grown with the institute, and once I was able
to, I took it further.”
Among other things, the institute now focuses on
cleaning up the Ecuadorian blood supply. Because
people with Chagas can go decades before they
notice symptoms, many blood donors have the
disease without knowing it, he explains.
“We found that the blood screening for Chagas
was not adequate,” Grijalva says. “Then we dug
deeper and found that there were major
difficulties with blood screenings for all
diseases.”
In response, the TDI established the
External Performance Evaluation Program for the
Blood Banks of Ecuador, which periodically tests
the ability of the blood banks to screen the
blood supply and offers a certificate training
program to blood bank workers. The certificate
is now required for all Ecuadorian blood bank
technicians.
However, part of the problem is that many small,
dispersed blood banks cannot afford to maintain
the necessary quality control. Grijalva has been
promoting the centralization of all blood-bank
screening to one major facility in Ecuador. That
facility has been built, and testing is
gradually being transferred there from all over
the country.
Although documenting the problem and cleaning up
the blood supply are major victories, the fight
against Chagas doesn’t end there.
“It’s clear to me that unless something is done
about housing conditions, we will never be able
to prevent Chagas disease on a large scale.”
Grijalva says.
The TDI’s latest project, provisionally termed
Homes for Health, will investigate and implement
strategies in improving housing. Grijalva is
working in partnership with OHIO’s Center for
International Studies and PUCE to launch the
effort in summer 2010, but the scope is
long-term; Grijalva estimates that this is at
least a 10- to 12-year project. The first step,
he says, is to better understand the housing
situation from a socio-cultural perspective, in
order to find solutions that are effective,
sustainable and accepted by the population. He
and a team of students are beginning to assess
available resources and examine what other
institutions have done to improve housing.
Student collaboration
In addition to Ohio University, the TDI has
hosted students from more than 20 universities
across the U.S., Europe, Australia and New
Zealand as volunteer research assistants.
One Ohio University participant, Cara Norvell
OMS II, will never forget the first time she
saw the poverty in Ecuador up close. Driving
down a dirt road on a muggy June night, she
could see the Ecuadorians in their home settings
because, she says, their houses have multiple
large gaps in the wood exterior.
“The houses were not even up to American
standards of poverty,” Norvell says. “Insects
could come in and out of the house without
restriction.”

Grijalva and his TDI team of students and
scientists do everything from gathering field
data to searching homes for nests of kissing
bugs and killing them with insecticide. Lately,
Grijalva has been collaborating with faculty and
students from OHIO’s School of Media Arts
Studies and its
School of Visual Communications to create
multimedia projects documenting and promoting
their efforts.
“He takes students from every level—graduate,
undergraduate and medical—and gets great reviews
in every category,” says Deborah Meyer,
Ph.D., R.N.,
administrator of the OU-HCOM Department of
Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology. “And what
strikes me was how high the (program) ratings
are, across the board.”
For Grijalva, seeing how students respond to
conditions among underserved populations makes
the process more rewarding. “It’s really
inspirational to see the dedication of the
students, the passion they show and their
eagerness to serve people who need it most,” he
says.
Forward march
Now in its 22nd year, the TDI is as
successful as ever. In addition to the support
it receives from OHIO, the TDI received nearly
$265,000 in external grants during the last
fiscal year, including more than $200,000 from
the National Institutes of Health. The TDI’s
documentation of Chagas disease through records,
both written and multimedia, has encouraged the
Ecuadorian government to support their efforts
to stop Chagas.
Meanwhile, Grijalva has taken his expertise to
an international forum. In 2007, he joined the
Global Chagas Initiative within the United
Nations’ World Health Organization. He serves as
a co-coordinator of the Surveillance and
Information Systems Group.
As Grijalva and the TDI keep churning along,
solving the problem no longer seems impossible.
“I have a clear vision of what we need to have
in place to advance these efforts, so I have
been working for many years to make that vision
a reality. And, I’m pleased to say, significant
progress has been made,” Grijalva says. “One
step at a time, but every day we are closer to
our long-term goals.”