Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura
Federal University of Pará
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Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2012
Carina Guilhon Sequeira; Bruna Pedroso Tamegão-Lopes; Eduardo José Melo dos Santos; Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Maria Isabel de Moraes-Pinto; Regina Célia de Menezes Succi
INTRODUCTION In Brazil, studies have shown that HTLV seroprevalence among pregnant women varies from 0 to 1.8%. However, this seroprevalence was unknown in the State of Pará, Brazil. The present study describes, for the first time, the HTLV seroprevalence among pregnant women from the State of Pará, Northern Brazil. METHODS 13,382 pregnant women were submitted to HTLV screening during prenatal care, and those with non-seronegative results to anti-HTLV were submitted to Western blot (WB) test to confirm and separate HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 carriers. RESULTS HTLV seroprevalence in the population of pregnant women was 0.3%, and HTLV-1 was identified in 95.3% of patients. The demographic profile of HTLV carriers was as follows: women with age between 20 and 40 years old (78.4%); residing in the metropolitan region of Belém, Pará (67.6%); and with educational level of high school (56.8%). Other variables related to infection were as follows: beginning of sexual intercourse between the age of 12 and 18 years old (64.9%) and have being breastfed for more than 6 months (51.4%). Most of the women studied had at least two previous pregnancies (35.1%) and no abortion (70.3%). Coinfections (syphilis and HIV) were found in 10.8% (4/37) of these pregnant women. CONCLUSIONS Seroprevalence of HTLV infection in pregnant women assisted in basic health units from the State of Pará, Northern Brazil, was 0.3% similar to those described in other Brazilian studies. The variables related to infection were important indicators in identifying pregnant women with a higher tendency to HTLV seropositivity, being a strategy for disease control and prevention, avoiding vertical transmission.
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2015
Thais Hetierre Abreu Monteiro; Tânia do Socorro Souza Chaves; Haroldo José de Matos; Nelson Fernando de Lisboa Sofffiatti; Ricardo José de Paula Souza e Guimarães; Luis Henrique Rocha Guimarães; Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Ricardo Luiz Dantas Machado
INTRODUCTION This study aimed to evaluate basic sanitation and socioeconomic indicators, reported cases of malaria, and risk of contracting malaria in the Ananindeua municipality, State of Pará. METHODS Data on basic sanitation and socioeconomic dimensions were taken from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics [ Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE)] 2010 census. Epidemiological malaria information was taken from the Epidemiological Malaria Surveillance Information System [ Sistema de Informação de Vigilância Epidemiológica de Malária (SIVEP/Malaria)], between 2003 and 2013 of the Ministry of Health and from the SIVEP/Malaria forms of the municipalitys Endemic Diseases Unit for 2,013 cases. RESULTS Our data do not confirm the correlation among indicators of basic sanitation, socioeconomic conditions, and water supply with malaria cases. Of the 1,557 cases evaluated, most were caused by Plasmodium vivax , with rare cases of Plasmodium falciparum and mixed infections. There were 756 notifications in 2003. The number of reported cases was sharply reduced between 2006 and 2012, but a 142-case outbreak occurred in 2013. Ananindeua municipalitys Annual Parasite Index indicated low risk in 2003 and no risk in other years, and the 2,013 cases were predominantly male individuals aged ≥40 years. CONCLUSIONS Our data confirm the non-endemicity of malaria in the Ananindeua municipality, as the Annual Parasite Indices described for the years 2004-2013 classify it as a risk-free area. However, the 2013 outbreak indicates the need to strengthen prevention, surveillance, and control activities to reduce the risk of new outbreaks and consequent economic and social impacts on the population.
Acta Tropica | 2018
Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Andrea Aparecida Moraes Fernandes; Graziela Maria Zanini; Lilian Rose Pratt-Riccio; Carina Guilhon Sequeira; Carlos Rodrigo Souza do Monte; Arnaldo Jorge Martins-Filho; Ricardo Machado; Rosana Maria Feio Libonati; José Maria de Souza; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro
Children and adolescents are at great risk for developing iron deficiency anaemia worldwide. In the tropical areas, malaria and intestinal parasites may also play an important role in anaemia pathogenesis. This study aimed at evaluating clinical and immunological aspects of anaemia in children and adolescents with Plasmodium vivax malaria, in the Pará State, Brazil. A longitudinal study was performed in two Reference Centers for malaria diagnosis in the Brazilian Amazon in children and adolescents with malaria (n = 81), as compared to a control group (n = 40). Patients had blood drawn three times [before treatment (D0), after treatment (D7) and at the first cure control (D30)] and hemogram, autoantibody analysis (anticardiolipin, antibodies against normal RBC membrane components) and cytokine studies (TNF and IL-10) were performed. Stool samples were collected for a parasitological examination. Malaria patients had a 2.7-fold greater chance of anaemia than the control group. At D0, 66.1% of the patients had mild anaemia, 30.5% had moderate and 3.5% had severe anaemia. Positivity to intestinal helminths and/or protozoa at stool examinations had no influence on anaemia. Patients had significantly lower levels of plasmatic TNF than control individuals at D0. Low TNF levels were more prevalent among patients with moderate/severe anaemia than in those with mild anaemia and among anaemic patients than in anaemic controls. TNF levels were positively correlated with the haemoglobin rates and negatively correlated with the interval time elapsed between the onset of symptoms and diagnosis. Both plasma TNF levels and haemoglobin rates increased during the follow-up period. The IL-10 levels were lower in patients than in the controls at day 0 and decreased thereafter up to the end of treatment. Only the anti-anticardiolipin autoantibodies were associated with moderate/severe anaemia and, possibly by reacting with the parasite glycosylphosphatidylinositol (a powerful stimulator of TNF production), may have indirectly contributed to decrease the TNF levels, which could be involved in the malarial vivax anaemia of these children and adolescents. More studies addressing this issue are necessary to confirm these findings and to add more information on the multifactorial pathogenesis of the malarial anaemia.
Microbial Pathogenesis | 2016
Letícia Nobre Lopes; Felipe Augusto Folha Santos; Louize Caroline Marques Oliveira; Marialva Tereza Ferreira Araujo; Carina Guilhon Sequeira; Rosana Maria Feio Libonati; Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura
Sex steroids can determine several responses in the clinical evolution of malaria. Seventy Balb-c mice were randomly distributed into 7 groups (10 mice per group): G1 to G6 corresponding to castrated females, castrated females that received estradiol cypionate, uncastrated females, castrated males, castrated males that received intramuscular testosterone decanoate and uncastrated males infected with Plasmodium berghei, and G7, the control group. The mice were evaluated with regard to survival, parasitemia, temperature, body weight, hemoglobin level (anemia) and splenic index. Castrated infected females had lower rates of survival. In the castrated male, the administration of testosterone had a negative influence on survival. There was a progressive increase in parasitemia without repercussions for survival. Castration had a significant influence on weight gain in females. Weight loss was observed in all mice, except those in groups G2 and G5, although this bore no direct relation to parasitemia. A significant and progressive decline in temperature and hemoglobin levels occurred in mice over the course of their infection, which differed from the G7 group. The weight of the spleen in relation to total body weight did not differ among the groups of infected mice, but was significantly higher than it was for the control group.
Pharmacogenomics | 2017
Vinicius de Albuquerque Sortica; Juliana Dal-Ri Lindenau; Maristela G. Cunha; Maria Deise de Oliveira Ohnishi; Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Ândrea Kc Ribeiro-dos-Santos; Sidney Eb Santos; Luciano Sp Guimarães; Mara H. Hutz
Aim: The association of transporters gene polymorphisms with chloroquine/primaquine malaria treatment response was investigated in a Brazilian population. Patients & methods: Totally, 164 Plasmodium vivax malaria infected patients were included. Generalized estimating equations were performed to determine gene influences on parasitemia and/or gametocytemia clearance over treatment time. Results: Significant interaction between SLCO2B1 genotypes and treatment over time for parasitemia clearance rate on day 2 were observed (p FDR = 0.002). SLCO1A2 and SLCO1B1 gene treatment over time interactions were associated with gametocytemia clearance rate (p FDR = 0.018 and p FDR = 0.024). ABCB1, ABCC4 and SLCO1B3 were not associated with treatment response. Conclusion: The present work presents the first pharmacogenetic report of an association between chloroquine/primaquine responses with OATP transporters.
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2014
Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Tânia do Socorro Souza Chaves; Julius Caesar Mendes Monteiro; Carina Guilhon Sequeira; Maria Deise de Oliveira Ohnishi; Rosana Maria Feio Libonati; Rita Catarina Medeiros Sousa; José Maria de Souza
Malaria remains a major public health problem in Brazil where Plasmodium vivax is the predominant species, responsible for 82% of registered cases in 2013. Though benign, P. vivax infection may sometimes evolve with complications and a fatal outcome. Here, we report a severe case of P. vivax malaria in a 35-year-old Brazilian man from a malaria endemic area, who presented with reversible myocarditis.
Toxicology Letters | 2010
E. Silbergel; Renee M. Gardner; J.M. De Souza; Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Jennifer F. Nyland
Advances in Bioscience and Biotechnology | 2016
Pedro Melillo de Magalhães; Glyn Mara Figueira; José Maria de Souza; Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Maria Deise de Oliveira Ohnishi; Darci Rodrigues da Silva; Luiz Alberto Gonçalves Lobo; Fabrício Bezerra Eleres; Rosana Maria Feio Libonati; Merlin Willcox; Eloisa Cavassani Pimentel
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2012
Carina Guilhon Sequeira; Bruna Pedroso Tamegão-Lopes; Eduardo José dos Santos; Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Maria Isabel de Moraes-Pinto; Regina Célia de Menezes Succi
Rev. para. med | 2012
Ana Maria Revoredo da Silva Ventura; Rosana Maria Feio Libonati; Carina Guilhon Sequeira; Maria Deise de Oliveira Ohnishi; José Maria de Souza; Fernanda Guedes de Carvalho