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Featured researches published by Bodo Wanke.


Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2002

Paracoccidioidomycosis mortality in Brazil (1980-1995)

Ziadir Francisco Coutinho; Delson da Silva; Márcia dos Santos Lazéra; Valéria Petri; Rosely Magalhães de Oliveira; Paulo Chagastelles Sabroza; Bodo Wanke

This study analyzes 3,181 deaths from paracoccidioidomycosis in Brazil, based on 16 years of sequential data (from 1980 to 1995). During this period paracoccidioidomycosis showed considerable magnitude and low visibility, representing the eighth most common cause of death from predominantly chronic or recurrent types of infectious and parasitic diseases. It also had the highest mortality rate among the systemic mycoses. The mean annual mortality rate was 1.45 per million inhabitants, indicating a downward long-term trend (reduction of 31.28%), while spatial distribution among the different regions and States of Brazil was non-homogenous. The South (with the highest regional rate) and the Southeast showed a downward trend, while the Central West had the second highest rate in the country. At least one-fifth of Brazilian municipalities (or 22.71% of the countrys total area) reported deaths from paracoccidioidomycosis. Overall nationwide mortality per area was 3.73/10,000km2. The disease was endemic in non-metropolitan areas. The majority of deaths occurred in males (84.75%), and there was a sex ratio of 562 men/100 women. The 30-59-year and over-60-year age groups were the most affected. The study showed that the mortality rate justifies classifying this disease as a major health problem in Brazil.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2004

Cat-Transmitted Sporotrichosis Epidemic in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Description of a Series of Cases

Mônica Bastos de Lima Barros; Armando de Oliveira Schubach; Antonio Carlos Francesconi do Valle; Maria Clara Gutierrez Galhardo; Fátima Conceição-Silva; Tânia Maria Pacheco Schubach; Rosani Santos Reis; Bodo Wanke; Keyla Belizia Feldman Marzochi; Maria José Conceição

Sporotrichosis is the most common subcutaneous mycosis in South America. Classic infection is associated with traumatic inoculation of soil, vegetables, and organic matter contaminated with Sporothrix schenckii. Zoonotic transmission has been described in isolated cases or in small outbreaks. Since 1998, we have been observing an increasing number of cases of sporotrichosis in persons from the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and surroundings. From 1998 to 2001, 178 cases of culture-proven sporotrichosis had been diagnosed. Female patients predominated, and the median age was 39 years. The most frequent clinical presentation was lymphocutaneous disease. Of the 178 patients, 156 reported domiciliary or professional contact with cats with sporotrichosis, and 97 of these patients had a history of receipt of cat scratch or bite. The patients received itraconazole as first-line treatment. This study suggests that feline transmission of sporotrichosis was associated with a large and long-lasting outbreak of the disease in Rio de Janeiro.


Medical Mycology | 1996

Natural habitat of Cryptococcus neoformans var. neoformans in decaying wood forming hollows in living trees

Márcia dos Santos Lazéra; F.D.A. Pires; L. Camillo-Coura; Marília Martins Nishikawa; C.C.F. Bezerra; Luciana Trilles; Bodo Wanke

Cryptococcus neoformans var. neoformans was repeatedly isolated from decaying wood forming hollows in living trees growing in urban areas of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. A new natural habitat for C. neoformans var. neoformans has been found that is not associated with specific trees.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2003

Paracoccidioidomicose: estudo clínico e epidemiológico de 422 casos observados no Estado de Mato Grosso do Sul

Anamaria Mello Miranda Paniago; José Ivan Aguiar; Eliana Setti Albuquerque Aguiar; Rivaldo Venâncio da Cunha; Gracy Regina de Oliveira Leite Pereira; Alberto Thomaz Londero; Bodo Wanke

Clinical and epidemiological features of 422 cases of paracoccidioidomycosis attended at University Hospital of Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul (Campo Grande, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil) from January 1980 to August 1999, were analysed. The mean age was 43.4 years old and the male: female ratio was 10:1. Nearly half (45.5%) of the patients were agricultural workers at the moment of diagnosis. In the acute/subacute form (juvenile type) the phagocytic-monocytic system was very much impaired and mainly marked by lymphadenopathy (95.4%), hepatomegaly (40%), splenomegaly (23.1%). The chronic form (adult type) presents more lesions in oropharynx (66.4%), dysphonia (31.4%) and cough (50.7%). Mycological diagnosis was obtained by direct microscopy of wet mounts in 185/365 (50.7%) patients and by histopathological examination of biopsies in 294/302 (97.3%) patients. The treatment of choice was Sulfamethoxazole/ trimethoprim (Co-trimoxazole), used in 90.3% patients. Sequelae occurred in 30.3% and death in 7.6% of the cases.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2003

Serotyping of 467 Cryptococcus neoformans Isolates from Clinical and Environmental Sources in Brazil: Analysis of Host and Regional Patterns

Marília Martins Nishikawa; Maricia S. Lazera; Gláucia Gonçalves Barbosa; Luciana Trilles; Beatriz R. Balassiano; Regina Célia Lima Macedo; Cláudia de Carvalho Falci Bezerra; Maurício Perez; Paola Cardarelli; Bodo Wanke

ABSTRACT Cryptococcus neoformans is an important zoopathogen, and it is one of the most prevalent lethal mycotic agents. Its polysaccharide capsule, synthesized in vivo and in vitro, is a virulence factor, contains predominantly glucuronoxylomannan, and is responsible for the antigenic differentiation of serotypes A, B, C, D, and AD. A total of 467 isolates of C. neoformans obtained from clinical and environmental sources from Brazilian regions were studied serologically by using the Crypto Check Iatron RM 304-K kit. Serotyping of the clinical isolates showed the following prevalences of the serotypes: A (77.95%), followed by B (18.2%), AD (1.3%), D (0.4%), C (0.2%), and untypeable (1.93%). The epidemiology of serotype A in the Brazilian southern and southeastern regions reproduces the picture observed worldwide. In contrast, serotype B was the most frequent agent of cryptococcosis in the northeastern region, occurring nearly equally in male and female healthy hosts. Among the isolates from environmental sources, serotypes A and B were found to occur in the hollows of tropical trees of the genera Cassia, Ficus, and Moquillea. The few isolates from Eucalyptus camaldulensis debris were serotypes A and B and untypeable. Overall, no association with a specific host tree was identified for these serotypes, denoting a distinct ecoepidemiological regional pattern. The one serotype C isolate was recovered from a human immunodeficiency virus-negative host. Serotype AD predominated over serotype D among both clinical and environmental isolates.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2008

Regional pattern of the molecular types of Cryptococcus neoformans and Cryptococcus gattii in Brazil

Luciana Trilles; Márcia dos Santos Lazéra; Bodo Wanke; Raquel V. C. Oliveira; Gláucia Gonçalves Barbosa; Marília Martins Nishikawa; Bernardina Penarrieta Morales; Wieland Meyer

The molecular types of 443 Brazilian isolates of Cryptococcus neoformans and Cryptococcus gattii were analyzed to determine their geographic distribution within Brazil and their underlying host conditions. The following data, imported from previous epidemiological studies as well as two culture collections, were analyzed for: place of isolation, source (clinical or environmental), host risk factors, species, serotype, mating type, and molecular type. Molecular typing by PCR-fingerprinting using primers for the minisatellite-specific core sequence of the wild-type phage M13 or microsatellites [(GACA)4, (GTG)5], restriction fragment length polymorphism of URA5 gene analysis, and/or amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) identified eight major genotypes: VNI/AFLP1, VNII/AFLP1A, VNIII/AFLP2, and VNIV/AFLP3 for C. neoformans, and VGI/AFLP4, VGII/AFLP6, VGIII/AFLP5, and VGIV/AFLP7 for C. gattii. The most common molecular type found in Brazil was VNI (64%), followed by VGII (21%), VNII (5%), VGIII (4%), VGI and VNIV (3% each), and VNIII (< 1%). Primary cryptococcosis caused by the molecular type VGII (serotype B, MAT alpha) prevails in immunocompetent hosts in the North and Northeast regions, disclosing an endemic regional pattern for this specific molecular type in the Northern Brazil.


Medical Mycology | 1993

Isolation of both varieties of Cryptococcus neoformans from saprophytic sources in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Márcia dos Santos Lazéra; Bodo Wanke; Marília Martins Nishikawa

Using the method of intraperitoneal inoculation into mice, 11 (13·2%) out of 83 different samples from urban environments in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, were positive for Cryptococcus neoformans. Isolation of C. neoformans var. neoformans from wood and plant debris within a tree hollow of Syzygium jambolana (jambolana, Java plum) and the finding of C. neoformans var. gattii in bat guano collected in an old house are discussed with reference to our current knowledge on the ecology of C. neoformans.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2004

In Vitro Antifungal Susceptibility of Cryptococcus gattii

Luciana Trilles; Belkys Fernández-Torres; Márcia dos Santos Lazéra; Bodo Wanke; Josep Guarro

ABSTRACT We have determined the in vitro susceptibilities of 57 strains of Cryptococcus gattii to nine antifungal agents and have compared the MICs for these strains with those for C. neoformans. MICs were determined by a microdilution reference method. Albaconazole and ravuconazole (MICs of 0.04 and 0.05 μg/ml, respectively) showed the best activities. Micafungin showed no activity (MIC of >128 μg/ml). In general, C. gattii was less susceptible than C. neoformans to all drugs tested, with the exception of amphotericin B and flucytosine.


Mycoses | 2001

First isolation of Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii from a native jungle tree in the Brazilian Amazon rainforest

Silvana T. Fortes; Maria S. Lazéra; M. M. Nishikawa; R. C. L. Macedo; Bodo Wanke

Summary. Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii was isolated for the first time from decaying wood in a hollow of a native jungle tree Guettarda acreana, in a wild area of an Amazon rainforest island, in Brazil. The presence of this variety in a virgin environment without either anthropic action or introduced vegetation is discussed with regard to the common knowledge of Cr. neoformans ecology.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2001

Sporotrichosis: an emergent zoonosis in Rio de Janeiro

Mônica Bastos de Lima Barros; Tânia Maria Pacheco Schubach; Maria Clara Gutierrez Galhardo; Armando de Oliveira Schubach; Paulo Cezar Fialho Monteiro; Rosani Santos Reis; Rosely Maria Zancopé-Oliveira; Márcia dos Santos Lazéra; Tullia Cuzzi-Maya; Tânia Cristina Moita Blanco; Keyla Belizia Feldman Marzochi; Bodo Wanke; Antonio Carlos Francesconi do Valle

During the period from 1987 to 1998, 13 cases of human sporotrichosis were recorded at the Research Center Evandro Chagas Hospital (CPqHEC) in Rio de Janeiro. Two of these patients related scratch by a sick cat. During the subsequent period from July 1998 to July 2000, 66 human, 117 cats and 7 dogs with sporotrichosis were diagnosed at the CPqHEC. Fifty-two humans (78.8%) reported contact with cats with sporotrichosis, and 31 (47%) of them reporting a history of a scratch or bite. This epidemic, unprecedented in the literature, involving cats, dogs and human beings may have started insidiously before 1998.

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Alberto Thomaz Londero

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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