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1.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 103(1): 112-114, Feb. 2008. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-478866

ABSTRACT

It is still imperative to develop a parasitological technique highly sensitive for diagnosing schistosomiasis in epidemiological and individual surveys. A simple and cheap hatching device with a collecting container was manufactured and tested under experimental conditions. Twelve Kato-Katz slides were performed as golden standard for comparison. Quantitative results can be carried out by counting miracidia in a plate and parasite load can be calculated (miracidia/gram of feces). Statistically significant values were higher in the hatching test. More sensitive results, with statistical significance, were achieved using 1.5 g of feces (which corresponds to 36 Kato-Katz slides) than by using the Kato-Katz method. Advantages of this technique and its limitations are presented.


Subject(s)
Animals , Cricetinae , Feces/parasitology , Parasite Egg Count/instrumentation , Schistosoma mansoni/isolation & purification , Schistosomiasis mansoni/diagnosis , Parasite Egg Count/methods , Sensitivity and Specificity
2.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 102(7): 887-889, Nov. 2007. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-470356

ABSTRACT

Seeking the identification of Angiostrongylus cantonensis as a potential etiological agent of three clinical cases of eosinophilic meningitis, mollusc specimens were collected in the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil. The snails were identified as Sarasinula marginata (45 specimens), Subulina octona (157), Achatina fulica (45) and Bradybaena similaris (23). Larvae obtained were submitted to polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism diagnosis. Their genetic profile were corresponded to A. cantonensis. Rattus norvegicus experimentally infected with third-stage larvae, developed menigoencephalitis, and parasites became sexually mature in the lungs. Additionally, larvae obtained from A. fulica snails, from São Vicente, state of São Paulo, also showed genetic profiles of this nematode. This is the first record of Brazilian molluscs infected with this nematode species.


Subject(s)
Adult , Animals , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Rats , Angiostrongylus cantonensis/isolation & purification , Disease Vectors , Meningoencephalitis/parasitology , Snails/parasitology , Angiostrongylus cantonensis/genetics , Brazil , Meningoencephalitis/diagnosis , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length
3.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 101(8): 899-903, Dec. 2006. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-440579

ABSTRACT

In a recent outbreak of human ocular injuries that occurred in the town of Araguatins, at the right bank of Araguaia river, state of Tocantins, Brazil, along the low water period of 2005, two patients (8 and 12-year-old boys) presented inferior adherent leukoma in the left eye (OS), and peripherical uveites, with snowbanking in the inferior pars plana. The third one (13-year-old girl) showed posterior uveites in OS, also with snowbanking. Histopathological analysis of lensectomy material from the three patients and vitrectomy from the last one revealed several silicious spicules (gemmoscleres) of the freshwater sponges Drulia uruguayensis and D. ctenosclera. This work brings material evidences, for the first time in the literature, that freshwater sponge spicules may be a surprising new etiological agent of ocular pathology.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Male , Female , Child , Adolescent , Cataract/parasitology , Porifera , Visual Acuity , Vision, Low/parasitology , Cataract Extraction , Cataract/diagnosis , Fundus Oculi , Lenses, Intraocular , Rivers , Vitrectomy , Vision, Low/diagnosis , Vision, Low/surgery
4.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 101(5): 523-528, Aug. 2006. ilus, graf, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-437036

ABSTRACT

Immune responses to malaria infections are characterized by strong T and B cell activation, which, in addition of potentially causing immunopathology, are of poor efficacy against the infection. It is possible that the thymus is involved in the origin of immunopathological reactions and a target during malaria infections. This work was developed in an attempt to further clarify these points. We studied the sequential changes in the thymus of CBA mice infected with Plasmodium berghei ANKA, a model in which 60-90 percent of the infected animals develop cerebral malaria. During the acute phase of infection, different degrees of thymocyte apoptosis were recorded: (1) starry-sky pattern of diffuse apoptosis with maintenance of cortical-medullary structure; (2) intense apoptosis with cortical atrophy, with absence of large cells; (3) severe cortical thymocyte depletion, resulting in cortical-medullary inversion. In the latter, only residual clusters of small thymocytes were observed within the framework of epithelial cells. The intensity of thymus alterations could not be associated with the degree of parasitemia, the expression of clinical signs of cerebral malaria or intensity of brain lesions. The implications of these events for malaria immunity and pathology are discussed.


Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Mice , Apoptosis/immunology , Malaria, Cerebral/immunology , Malaria, Cerebral/parasitology , Plasmodium berghei/physiology , Thymus Gland/immunology , Disease Models, Animal , Lymphocyte Depletion , Mice, Inbred CBA , Malaria, Cerebral/pathology , Parasitemia , Severity of Illness Index , Time Factors , Thymus Gland/pathology
5.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 98(8): 1039-1043, Dec. 2003. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-355736

ABSTRACT

Angiostrongylus cantonensis, A. costaricensis, and A. vasorum are etiologic agents of human parasitic diseases. Their identification, at present, is only possible by examining the adult worm after a 40-day period following infection of vertebrate hosts with the third-stage larvae. In order to obtain a diagnostic tool to differentiate larvae and adult worm from the three referred species, polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism was carried out. The rDNA second internal transcribed spacer (ITS2) and mtDNA cytochrome oxidase I regions were amplified, followed by digestion of fragments with the restriction enzymes RsaI, HapII, AluI, HaeIII, DdeI and ClaI. The enzymes RsaI and ClaI exhibited the most discriminating profiles for the differentiation of the regions COI of mtDNA and ITS2 of rDNA respectively. The methodology using such regions proved to be efficient for the specific differentiation of the three species of Angiostrongylus under study.


Subject(s)
Animals , Angiostrongylus , DNA Restriction Enzymes , DNA, Mitochondrial , Genetic Markers , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , RNA, Ribosomal , Species Specificity
6.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 97(suppl.1): 117-127, Oct. 2002. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-325008

ABSTRACT

Human schistosomiasis develops extensive and dense fibrosis in portal space, together with congested new blood vessels. This study demonstrates that Calomys callosus infected with Schistosoma mansoni also develops fibrovascular lesions, which are found in intestinal subserosa. Animals were percutaneously infected with 70 cercariae and necropsied at 42, 45, 55, 80, 90 and 160 days after infection. Intestinal sections were stained for brightfield, polarization microscopy, confocal laser scanning, transmission and scanning electron microscopies. Immunohistological analysis was also performed and some nodules were aseptically collected for cell culture. Numerous intestinal nodules, appearing from 55 up to 160 days after infection, were localized at the interface between external muscular layer and intestinal serosa, consisting of fibrovascular tissue forming a shell about central granuloma(s). Intranodular new vessels were derived from the vasculature of the external vascular layer and were positive for laminin, chondroitin-sulfate, smooth muscle alpha-actin and FVIII-RA. Fibroblastic cells and extracellular matrix components (collagens I, III and VI, fibronectin and tenascin) comprised the stroma. Intermixed with the fibroblasts and vessels there were variable number of eosinophils, macrophages and haemorrhagic foci. In conclusion, the nodules constitute an excellent and accessible model to study fibrogenesis and angiogenesis, dependent on S. mansoni eggs. The fibrogenic activity is fibroblastic and not myofibroblastic-dependent. The angiogenesis is so prominent that causes haemorrhagic ascites


Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Mice , Arvicolinae , Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic , Intestines , Schistosomiasis mansoni , Disease Models, Animal , Fibrosis , Granuloma , Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic , Intestines , Neovascularization, Pathologic , Schistosomiasis mansoni
7.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 97(7): 917-940, Oct. 2002. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-325928

ABSTRACT

Experimental models of Schistosoma mansoni infections in mammals have contributed greatly to our understanding of the pathology and pathogenesis of infection. We consider here hepatic and extrahepatic disease in models of acute and chronic infection. Experimental schistosome infections have also contributed more broadly to our understanding of granulomatous inflammation and our understanding of Th1 versus Th2 related inflammation and particularly to Th2-mediated fibrosis of the liver


Subject(s)
Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Granuloma , Schistosoma mansoni , Schistosomiasis mansoni , Acute Disease , Chronic Disease , Granuloma , Liver , Mammals , Schistosomiasis mansoni , Th1 Cells , Th2 Cells
9.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 94(4): 549-56, July-Aug. 1999.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-241572

ABSTRACT

The intermediate hosts of Angiostrongylus costaricensis are terrestrian molluscs, mostly of the family Veronicellidae. The present work aimed at clarifying more accurately the sites of penetration and the migratory routes of A. costaricensis in the tissue slugs and at verifying the pattern of the perilarval reaction at different times of infection. Slugs were individually infected with 5,000 L1, and killed from 30 min to 30 days after infection. From 30 min up to 2 hr after infection, L1 were found within the lumen of different segments of the digestive tube having their number diminished in more advanced times after exposition until complete disappearance. After 30 min of exposition, percutaneous infection occurred, simultaneously to oral infection. Perilarval reaction was observed from 2 hr of infection around larvae in fibromuscular layer, appearing later (after 6 hr) around larvae located in the viscera. A pre-granulomatous reaction was characterized by gradative concentration of amebocytes around larvae, evolving two well-organized granulomas. In this work we confirmed the simultaneous occurrence of oral and percutaneous infections. Perilarval reaction, when very well developed, defined typical granulomatous structure, including epithelioid cell transformation. The infection also caused a systemic mobilization of amebocytes and provoked amebocyte-endothelium interactions


Subject(s)
Animals , Angiostrongylus/physiology , Cell Movement , Host-Parasite Interactions , Strongylida Infections/parasitology , Angiostrongylus/chemistry , Mollusca/parasitology
10.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 92(supl.2): 19-32, Dec. 1997. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-202011

ABSTRACT

Schistosomes, ancestors and recent species, have pervaded many hosts and several phylogenetic levels of immunity, causing an evolutionary pressure to eosinophil lineage expression and response. Schistosoma mansoni adult worms have capitalized on the apparent adversity of living within the mesenteric veins, using the dispersion of eggs and antigens to other tissues besides intestines to set a systemic activation of several haematopoietic lineages, specilly eosinophils and monocytes/macrophages. This activation occurs in bone marrow, spleen, liver, lymph nodes, omental and mesenteric milky spots (activation of the old or primordial and recent or new lymphomyeloid tissue), increasing and making easy the migration of eosinophils, monocytes and other cells to the intestinal periovular granulomas. The exudative perigranulomatous stage of the periovular reaction, which present hystolitic characteristics, is then exploited by the parasites, to release the eggs into the intestinal lumen. The authors hypothesize here that eosinophils, which have a long phylogenic story, could participate in the parasite-host co-evolution, specially with S. mansoni, operating together with monocytes/macrophages, upon parasite transmission.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Eosinophils/parasitology , Schistosoma mansoni/immunology , Phylogeny , Host-Parasite Interactions/immunology
11.
Rev. AMRIGS ; 35(2): 91-8, abr.-jun. 1991. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-99865

ABSTRACT

Nos ultimos anos, varios casos de angiostrongiliase abdominal foram diagnosticados no sul do Brasil. Trata-se de uma doenca causada pelo Angiostrongylus costaricensis, parasita intra-arterial de roedores. Determina no homem lesoes intestinais pseudoneoplasicas ou isquemico-congestivas segmentares na regiao ileocecal, que se manifestam por dor abdominal, febre e eosinofilia. Nao ha eliminacao de ovos nem vermes nas fezes humanas e o diagnostico definitivo depende da identificacao do parasita, nos cortes histologicos, que constuma ser acompanhada de tres achados fundamentais:1) eosinofilia, 2) reacao granulomatosa perivascular e 3) vasculite eosinofilica. No Rio Grande odo Sul, a doenca costuma surgir entre o final da primavera e o inicio do inverno, acometendo tanto adultos quanto criancas, em sua maioria provenientes da regiao serrana. Nao ha tratamento especifico e o uso de anti-helminticos e contraindicado. Esta revisao pretende disseminar o conhecimento sobre a parasitose e alertar para sua importancia no sul do pais


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Angiostrongylus/pathogenicity , Anthelmintics/adverse effects , Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic/diagnosis , Helminthiasis/prevention & control , Nematode Infections/epidemiology , Rats/parasitology , Snails/parasitology , Brazil , Diagnosis, Differential , Drug Utilization
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