A.A.M. Rosa e Silva
University of São Paulo
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by A.A.M. Rosa e Silva.
Andrologia | 2000
Severina Alves Almeida; S. O. Petenusci; J.A. Anselmo Franci; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva; T. L. Lamano Carvalho
Summary. We investigated whether chronic stress, applied from prepuberty to early puberty, interferes with the spermatogenic and androgenic testicular functions. Male pubertal rats (40 days old) were immobilized 6 h per day for 15 days. Plasma concentrations of corticosterone, prolactin and testosterone were significantly augmented following immobilization, whereas plasma luteinizing hormone decreased and follicle‐stimulating hormone was not altered. Acute immobilization (5 min) increased prolactin and testosterone levels in control rats but caused a significantly higher increase in these hormones when superimposed on chronic stress. A lower extent of testicular maturation was observed in pubertal rats immobilized from prepuberty.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2006
Anna Lima; Marcos Dias de Moura; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva
Endometriosis is a progressive estrogen-dependent disease affecting women during their reproductive years. The objective of the present study was to investigate whether endometriosis is associated with stress parameters. We determined cortisol and prolactin levels in serum, peritoneal and follicular fluid from infertile women with endometriosis and fertile women without the disease. The extent of the disease was staged according to the revised American Fertility Society classification (1997). Serum and peritoneal fluid were collected from 49 women aged 19 to 39 years undergoing laparoscopy. Eighteen women had stage I-II endometriosis and 10 had stage III-IV. Controls were 21 women undergoing laparoscopy for tubal sterilization. Follicular fluid was obtained from 39 women aged 25-39 years undergoing in vitro fertilization (21 infertile women with endometriosis and 18 infertile women without endometriosis). Serum prolactin levels were significantly higher in infertile women with stage III-IV endometriosis (28.9 +/- 2.1 ng/mL) than in healthy controls (13.2 +/- 2.1 ng/mL). Serum cortisol levels were significantly higher in infertile women with stage III-IV endometriosis (20.1 +/- 1.3 ng/mL) than in controls (10.5 +/- 1.4 ng/mL). Cortisol and prolactin levels in follicular fluid and peritoneal fluid did not differ significantly between groups. The high levels of cortisol and prolactin in the serum from women with endometriosis might contribute to the subfertility frequently associated with the disease. Moreover, since higher levels of cortisol and prolactin are often associated with stress, it is probable that stress might contribute to the development of endometriosis and its progression to advanced stages of the disease.
Andrologia | 2009
T. L. Lamano Carvalho; Miguel Guimarães; Wilma De Grava Kempinas; S. O. Petenusci; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva
Summary. Selective chemical sympathectomy of the internal genital organs of prepubertal to mature male Wistar rats was performed by chronic treatment with low doses of guanethidine. Sympathetic denervation caused an increase in intratesticular progesterone levels in prepubertal and early pubertal rats in addition to a decrease in androstenedione and testosterone levels in prepubertal animals, thus indicating a decrease in the conversion of progesterone into androgen, probably by blocking the steroidogenic enzymatic pathway at the 17 α‐hydroxylase/17,20 desmolase level. A lower degree of testicular maturation, probably related to reduced androgen activity, was observed in prepubertal and early pubertal sympathectomized rats. Concentration of spermatozoa, on the other hand, was increased in the enlarged cauda epididymidis of late pubertal and mature denervated animals. This result is discussed in terms of the impairment of epididymal mechanisms of seminal emission, fluid resorption and spermatozoal disposal.
Andrologia | 2009
Wilma De Grava Kempinas; S. O. Petenusci; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva; A. L. V. Favaretto; T. L. Lamano Carvalho
Summary Selective chemical sympathectomy of the internal sex organs of prepubertal to mature male Wistar rats was performed by chronic treatment with low doses of guanethidine. Plasma testosterone and luteinizing hormone and the intratesticular level of testosterone were determined. The weight and fructose content of seminal vesicle and ventral prostate were also investigated. The results showed that sympathetic innervation is related to the control of the hypophyseal‐testicular axis as well as to the growth and potential secretory activity of the male sex accessory glands.
Theriogenology | 1996
A. Gradela; C.R. Esper; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva
Progesterone (P(4)), 17beta- estradiol (E(2)) and androstenedione (A(4)) plasma concentrations were correlated with palpated corpora lutea (CL), recovered embryos and viable embryos in 13 Nelore cows induced to superovulate with FSH, starting on Day 10 of the estrous cycle. Administration of FSH increased the number of ovulations and recovered embryos. Plasma P(4), E(2) and A(4) levels on Day 0 and of P(4) on Days 10 and 11 of the cycle were not correlated with the superovulatory response. Determination of CL by palpation per rectum was used to estimate the number of recovered embryos. Plasma P(4) levels higher than 1 ng/ml on the induced estrus day (Day 14) had an adverse effect on the embryo viability rate. Plasma E(2) concentrations on Day 14 were positively correlated with the number of viable embryos collected, a correlation that has not been previously reported. The present data indicate that plasma P(4) and E(2) concentrations in FSH-PGF2alpha-treated Nelore cows are useful for the identification of 2 different populations of Nelore donors and are correlated with superovulatory response and, particularly, with the number of viable embryos.
Theriogenology | 1994
Maria Clara S Caldas; F.R.A. Perdigão de Oliveira; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva
This study was conducted on 32 mares during the first 30 d of the postpartum period to characterize the first estrous cycle, assessing ovarian cyclicity by determining plasma progesterone concentration and by transrectal palpation. The total pregnancy rate of the breeding season was 81.25%. The present results show that the incidence of estrus occurring at the beginning of the breeding season were early, long and anovulatory. The mares that did not become pregnant ovulated on average 14.5 d post partum, and those that became pregnant ovulated at 19.6 d post partum (P<0.05). On the basis of clinical and hormonal data, we divided the animals into 4 groups, all presenting signs of estrus: Group 1, animals that did not ovulate (n=7) and that presented basal P(4) levels (0.01-2.34 ng/ml) during the first 30 postpartum days; Group 2, animals that ovulated and did not become pregnant (n=13); Group 3, animals that ovulated and became pregnant (n=8). Maximal P(4) levels ranged from 4.40 to 13.50 ng/ml (Group 2) and from 3.70 to 20.50 ng/ml (Group 3). Group 4 were animals that presented high plasma P(4) levels before any clinical sign of ovulation (n=3). The absence of pregnancy could not be attributed to a failure of the corpus luteum, since the groups of mares that became pregnant exhibited similar plasma P(4) levels as the group of nonpregnant mares. Our findings demonstrated that mares exhibited differences in the timing of the first postpartum estrus, the duration of the first postpartum estrus and the timing of the first postpartum ovulation according to the month of the breeding season in which foaling occurs under tropical conditions. Furthermore, our results indicate that the foal heat may be used since its utilization did not affect the total pregnancy rate of the breeding season.
Animal Reproduction Science | 2015
L. H. Montrezor; Carla A. Piccinato; C.V.A. Collares; A.A. Vireque; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva
The role of local factors in the modulation of granulosa cell (GC) proliferation and differentiation is well described in the literature. The present work used a long-term bovine GC culture, in chemically defined medium without gonadotropins, to study the effects of angiotensin II (Ang II), atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and endothelin-1 (EDN1) on the steroidogenesis and cellular proliferation. Small follicles (3-5mm in diameter) from ovaries obtained in the slaughterhouse were selected according to their vascularization and follicular fluid color in order to isolate GC. Granulosa cells were plated at a density of 5×10(4)cells/well in supplemented alpha-MEM containing 3 levels (0, 10(-8)M and 10(-7)M) of Ang II, ANP, and EDN1 for up to 96h. Proliferation was evaluated by tritiated thymidine incorporation. The results showed that Ang II, ANP, and EDN1 modulate the steroidogenic output and proliferation index of GCs depending on the dose and time of culture. The selected vasoactive peptides increased androstenedione (A4) consumption in parallel with increased estradiol (E2). Although the peptides also promoted a significant increase in pregnenolone (P5) and progesterone (P4) production, the E2:P4 ratio was maintained at a high at most of the tested doses. Taken together, our in vitro data suggest that these vasoactive factors may have a direct effect on physiological follicular deviation, favoring dominance of the selected follicle.
Theriogenology | 1997
Rafael Herrera Alvarez; João Batista Pereira de Carvalho; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva; Cibele Nunes Perone; M.T.C.P. Ribela; E.B.Oliveira Fiflio
n spite of the considerable progress in embryo splitting and in vitro fertilization techniques, superovulation with gonadotrophins is still the most feasible and widely used process for both research and applied embryo transfer programs in cattle13. The major disadvantage of gonadotrophin treatment is the great variability of ovarian response between and within animals3,5,12. For instance, data analysis from 960 cows treated for superovulation during a 10-year period (in the Embryo Transfer Unit of the Instituto de Zootecnia, Nova Odessa, SP, Brazil) showed an average of 6.1 recovered embryos but the standard deviation was 5.1. The two most important factors affecting variability in ovarian response are: a) gonadotrophin treatment per se3,19 and b) ovarian status at the time of gonadotrophin treatment17,18. There have been many attempts to improve the superovulatory response. Using different gonadotrophin preparations or increasing the number of follicles available for stimulation by pretreatment with FSH or GH have been somewhat successful in increasing the ovulation rate and the number of transferable embryos. However, these methods did not reduce the variability of ovarian response. Initiating superovulation in the absence of a functionally dominant follicle is an efficient way of increasing the number of recovered embryos and reducing the variability. The disadvantage of such a method is that it requires either an ultrasonic monitoring or a surgical electrocautery. The dominance of growing follicles can be suppressed using immunological techniques as shown in non-superovulated cattle passively immunized against inhibin or charcoal-treated bovine follicular fluid. The use of inhibin for immunization is somewhat limited by cost and availability. In contrast, bovine follicular fluid can be readily aspirated from abattoir-derived ovaries. In the studies above, the ovulation rate was moderately increased by immunization. Therefore, it is possible that such a method can also contribute to render the animals more sensitive to exogenous gonadotrophins. Endocrine profiles and ovulation rate of cow superovulated with FSH following passive immunization against steroid free-bovine follicular fluid*
Microscopy Research and Technique | 2002
Hernán E. Lara; M. Dorfman; M. Venegas; S.M. Luza; S.L. Luna; Artur Mayerhofer; Miguel Guimarães; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva; V.D. Ramírez
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 1990
W. I. C. Albuquerque Araujo; A.A.M. Rosa e Silva; J. A. A Franci; A. L. V. Favaretto; J. Antunes Rodrigues