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1.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 98(5): 623-627, July 2003. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-344280

ABSTRACT

Some unfavourable effects of malnutrition of the host on Schistosoma mansoni worm biology and structure have been reported based upon brigthfield microscopy. This paper aims to study by morphometric techniques, some morphological parameters in male and female adult worms recovered from undernourished albino mice in comparison with parasites recovered from well-fed infected mice. Undernourished animals were fed a multideficient and essentially low protein diet (RBD diet) and compared to well-fed control mice fed with the commercial diet NUVILAB. Seventy-five days post-infection with 80 cercarie (BL strain) animals were sacrificed. All adult worms were fixed in 10 percent formalin and stained with carmine chloride. One hundred male and 60 female specimens from each group (undernourished and control) were examined using an image system analysis Leica Quantimet 500C and the Sigma Scan Measurement System. The following morphometrical parameters were studied: body length and width, oral and ventral suckers, number and area of testicular lobes, length and width of ovary and uterine egg. For statistical analysis, the Student's t test for unpaired samples was applied. Significant differences (p < 0.05) were detected in body length and width, in parameters of suckers, uterine egg width, ovary length and area of testicular lobes, with lower values for specimens from undernourished mice. The nutritional status of the host has negative influence on S. mansoni adult worms, probably through unavailability of essential nutrients to the parasites


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Female , Mice , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Host-Parasite Interactions , Protein-Energy Malnutrition , Schistosoma mansoni
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 97(7): 1019-1025, Oct. 2002. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-325919

ABSTRACT

Severe destruction of intrinsic cardiac nerves has been reported in experimental acute Chagas myocarditis, followed by extensive regeneration during the chronic phase of the infection. To further study this subject, the sympathetic and para-sympathetic intracardiac nerves of mice infected with a virulent Trypanosoma cruzi strain were analyzed, during acute and chronic infection, by means of histological, histochemical, morphometric and electron microscopic techniques. No evidences of destructive changes were apparent. Histochemical demonstration for acetylcholinesterase and catecholamines did not reveal differences in the amount and distribution of intracardiac nerves, in mice with acute and chronic Chagas myocarditis or in non-infected controls. Mild, probably reversible ultrastructural neural changes were occasionally present, especially during acute myocarditis. Intrinsic nerves appeared as the least involved cardiac structure during the course of experimental Chagas disease in mice


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Female , Mice , Chagas Cardiomyopathy , Heart , Nerve Fibers , Acute Disease , Chronic Disease , Disease Models, Animal , Statistics, Nonparametric
3.
J. bras. patol. med. lab ; 38(4): 325-332, 2002. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-330632

ABSTRACT

The rate and morphology of collagen degradation were comparatively analyzed in rats with "early" and "late" carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatic fibrosis, during three different periods after discontinuation of the drug. Treatment with CCl4 lasted for eight weeks for the group of early fibrosis and 12 weeks for the late fibrosis group. Fibrosis gradually disappeared, but when quantitative methods were applied, the amount of collagen degradation and removal in early and late fibrosis did not reach statistical significance. The light microscope and ultrastructural changes were also qualitatively similar in both cases. Probably some long-lasting effects to the liver, induced by the drug, prevented early hepatic fibrosis from undergoing the characteristic ultrastructural changes seen during "acute" collagen degradation, as compared to other experimental models of hepatic fibrosis, after the causal agent is totally removed. Present findings suggest that not only the age of fibrosis but also the overall damage inflicted to the organ are limiting factors in the process of collagen degradation and removal

4.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 96(3): 343-348, Apr. 2001. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-282842

ABSTRACT

Interferon-alpha is used in antiviral therapy in humans, mainly for viral hepatitis B and C. An anti-fibrotic effect of interferon has been postulated even in the absence of anti-viral response, which suggests that interferon directly inhibits fibrogenesis. Rats infected with the helminth Capillaria hepatica regularly develop diffuse septal fibrosis of the liver, which terminates in cirrhosis 40 days after inoculation. The aim of this study was to test the anti-fibrotic effect of interferon in this experimental model. Evaluation of fibrosis was made by three separate methods: semi-quantitative histology, computerized morphometry and hydroxyproline measurements. Treatment with interferon-alpha proved to inhibit the development of fibrosis in this model, especially when doses of 500,000 and 800,000 IU were used for 60 days. Besides confirming the anti-fibrotic potential of interferon-alpha on a non-viral new experimental model of hepatic fibrosis, a clear-cut dose-dependent effect was observed


Subject(s)
Animals , Rats , Male , Female , Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use , Interferon-alpha/therapeutic use , Liver Cirrhosis, Experimental/drug therapy , Capillaria , Case-Control Studies , Disease Models, Animal , Hydroxyproline/analysis , Liver Cirrhosis, Experimental/pathology , Liver/chemistry , Models, Animal , Rats, Wistar
5.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 94(6): 815-22, Nov.-Dec. 1999.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-251345

ABSTRACT

Histological, ultrastructural, morphometric and immunohistochemical data obtained from the study of spleens removed by splenectomy from 34 patients with advanced hepatosplenic schistosomiasis revealed that the main alterations were congestive dilatation of the venous sinuses and diffuse thickening of the splenic cords. Splenic cord thickening was due to an increase of its matrix components, especially type IV collagen and laminin, with the conspicuous absence of interstitial collagens, either of type I or type III. Deposition of interstitial collagens (types I and III) occurred in scattered, small focal areas of the red pulp, but in the outside of the walls of the venous sinuses, in lymph follicles, marginal zone, in the vicinity of fibrous trabeculae and in sidero-sclerotic nodules. However, fibrosis was not a prominent change in schistosomal splenomegaly and thus the designation "fibro-congestive splenomegaly" seems inadequate. Lymph follicles exhibited variable degrees of atrophy, hyperplasia and fibrous replacement, sometimes all of them seen in different follicles of the same spleen and even in the same examined section. Changes in white pulp did not seem to greatly contribute to increasing spleen size and weight, when compared to the much more significant red pulp enlargement


Subject(s)
Animals , Humans , Extracellular Matrix/metabolism , Liver Diseases, Parasitic/pathology , Schistosomiasis/pathology , Splenic Diseases/pathology , Extracellular Matrix/parasitology , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Microscopy, Electron , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Schistosomiasis/immunology , Schistosomiasis/parasitology , Schistosomiasis/surgery , Spleen/immunology , Spleen/parasitology , Spleen/ultrastructure , Splenectomy , Splenic Diseases/immunology , Splenic Diseases/parasitology
6.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 91(2): 217-24, Mar.-Apr. 1996. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-174383

ABSTRACT

Lesions involving the sympathetic (para-vertebral ganglia) and para-sympathetic ganglia of intestins (Auerbach plexus) and heart (right atrial ganglia) were comparatively analyzed in mice infected with either of three different strain types of Trypanosoma cruzi, during acute and chronic infection, in an attempt to understand the influence of parasite strain in causing autonomic nervous system pathology. Ganglionar involvement with neuronal destruction appeared to inflammation, which most of the times extended from neighboring adipose and cardiac, smooth and striated muscular tissues. Intraganglionic parasitism was exceptional. Inflammation involving peripheral nervous tissue exhibited a focal character and its variability in the several groups examined appeared unpredictable. Althought lesions were generally more severe with the Y strain, comparative qualitative study did not allow the conclusion, under the present experimental conditions, that one strain was more pathogenic to the autonomic nervous system than others. No special tropism of the parasites from any strain toward autonomic ganglia was disclosed.


Subject(s)
Animals , Mice , Nervous System/pathology , Nervous System/physiopathology , Trypanosoma cruzi/parasitology , Parasympathetic Nervous System/physiopathology , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiopathology
7.
Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop ; 27(2): 69-73, abr.-jun. 1994. tab, mapas
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-148925

ABSTRACT

As a part of a routine yellow fever surveillance program going on in the south of Bahia State, Brazil, liver fragments were obtained through postmortem viscerotomy from 702 individuals who died after presenting acute febrile illness from 1981 up till 1991. Instead of being only screened for the presence of yellow fever, the liver tissue was thoroughly evaluated by histopathology. More than a third of the cases exhibited marked and diffuse steatosis occurring in malnourished infants and young children. Hepatic fibrosis, granulomatous disease compatible with disseminated tuberculosis, advanced schistosomiasis, chronic alcoholic injury, chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis were also frequently observed. A miscellaneous group of hepatic pathological processes were also recognized, which included such diverse entities as Hodgkin's disease, glycogenosis, sickle-cell disease, hepatocarcinoma, etc. Only 124 (17.7 per cent ) cases showed normal hepatic histology. The wide possibility of histological diagnoses strongly indicates that the material obtained by viscerotomy can be further explored by an interested pathologist, to help in the understanding of nosology and epidemiology, concerning remote geographic areas where viscerotomy is being routinely performed


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Infant , Child, Preschool , Child , Adolescent , Adult , Middle Aged , Liver/pathology , Aged, 80 and over , Biopsy, Needle , Brazil/epidemiology , Liver/metabolism , Liver Diseases/epidemiology , Liver Diseases/pathology , Periodic Acid-Schiff Reaction , Staining and Labeling
8.
Rev. Inst. Med. Trop. Säo Paulo ; 35(5): 423-429, Set.-Out. 1993.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-320240

ABSTRACT

Numerous pulmonary schistosome egg granulomas were present in mice submitted to partial portal vein ligation (Warren's model). The granulomas were characterized by cellular aggregations formed within alveolar tissue. Main cellular types were macrophages (epithelioid cells), eosinophils, plasma cells and lymphocytes. These cells were supported by scanty fibrous stroma and exhibited close membrane contact points amongst themselves, but without forming specialized adhesion apparatus. When granulomas involved arterial structures, proliferation of endothelial and smooth muscle cells occurred and fibrosis associated with angiogenesis became more evident. Granulomas formed around mature eggs in the pulmonary alveolar tissue presented approximately the same size and morphology regardless of the time of infection, the latter being 10, 18 and 25 weeks after cercarial exposure. This persistence of morphological appearance suggests that pulmonary granulomas do not undergo immunological modulation, as is the case with the granulomas in the liver and, to a lesser extent, in the intestines. Probably, besides general immunological factors, local (stromal) factors play an important role in schistosomal granuloma modulation.


Subject(s)
Animals , Male , Mice , Granuloma , Lung Diseases, Parasitic/pathology , Schistosomiasis , Granuloma , Ovum/parasitology , Portal Vein , Lung/parasitology , Lung/ultrastructure , Time Factors
9.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 87(1): 25-31, jan.-mar. 1992. tab, ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-116278

ABSTRACT

A histological, morphometric and immunocytochemical study of schistosomal periovular granulomas in the liver and intestines of mice revealed that intestinal granulomas are smaller and contain less collagen than those in the liver. After curative treatment intestinal granulomas undergo a relatively more rapid resorption, although the general pattern of collagen degradation apparently does not differ from that observed in the liver. Tendency to form scattered, usually isolated granulomas that are only mildly fibrogenic, coupled with a well-balanced process of resorption appear as the explanation why intestinal fibrosis is not an outstanding feature of schistosomiasis as it is in the liver


Subject(s)
Mice , Fibrosis/pathology , Granuloma/pathology , Intestines/pathology , Schistosomiasis mansoni/physiopathology
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