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Featured researches published by Carlos Graeff-Teixeira.


Clinical Microbiology Reviews | 2009

Update on Eosinophilic Meningoencephalitis and Its Clinical Relevance

Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Ana Cristina Arámburu da Silva; Kentaro Yoshimura

SUMMARY Eosinophilic meningoencephalitis is caused by a variety of helminthic infections. These worm-specific infections are named after the causative worm genera, the most common being angiostrongyliasis, gnathostomiasis, toxocariasis, cysticercosis, schistosomiasis, baylisascariasis, and paragonimiasis. Worm parasites enter an organism through ingestion of contaminated water or an intermediate host and can eventually affect the central nervous system (CNS). These infections are potentially serious events leading to sequelae or death, and diagnosis depends on currently limited molecular methods. Identification of parasites in fluids and tissues is rarely possible, while images and clinical examinations do not lead to a definitive diagnosis. Treatment usually requires the concomitant administration of corticoids and anthelminthic drugs, yet new compounds and their extensive and detailed clinical evaluation are much needed. Eosinophilia in fluids may be detected in other infectious and noninfectious conditions, such as neoplastic disease, drug use, and prosthesis reactions. Thus, distinctive identification of eosinophils in fluids is a necessary component in the etiologic diagnosis of CNS infections.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2007

First record of molluscs naturally infected with Angiostrongylus cantonensis (Chen, 1935) (Nematoda: Metastrongylidae) in Brazil

Roberta Lima Caldeira; Cristiane Lafetá Furtado Mendonça; Christiane Oliveira Goveia; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Walter dos Santos Lima; Ester Maria Mota; Iracy Lea Pecora; Aline Maria Zigiotto de Medeiros; Omar dos Santos Carvalho

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.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2003

Molecular Differentiation of Angiostrongylus costaricensis, A. cantonensis, and A. vasorum by Polymerase Chain Reaction- Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism

Roberta Lima Caldeira; Omar dos Santos Carvalho; Cristiane Lafetá Furtado Gomes de Mendonça; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Márcia Cristina Fernandes da Silva; Renata Ben; Rafael Lucyk Maurer; Walter dos Santos Lima; Henrique Leonel Lenzi

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.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Improved molecular detection of Angiostrongylus cantonensis in mollusks and other environmental samples with a species-specific internal transcribed spacer 1-based TaqMan assay.

Yvonne Qvarnstrom; Ana Cristina Arámburu da Silva; John Teem; Robert G. Hollingsworth; Henry S. Bishop; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Alexandre J. da Silva

ABSTRACT Angiostrongylus cantonensis is the most common cause of human eosinophilic meningitis. Humans become infected by ingesting food items contaminated with third-stage larvae that develop in mollusks. We report the development of a real-time PCR assay for the species-specific identification of A. cantonensis in mollusk tissue.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2014

Eosinophilic meningitis caused by Angiostrongylus cantonensis: an emergent disease in Brazil.

Alessandra L. Morassutti; Silvana Carvalho Thiengo; Monica Ammon Fernandez; Kittisak Sawanyawisuth; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira

Eosinophilic meningitis (EoM) is an acute disease that affects the central nervous system. It is primarily caused by infection with the nematode Angiostrongylus cantonensis. This infection was previously restricted to certain Asian countries and the Pacific Islands, but it was first reported in Brazil in 2007. Since then, intermediate and definitive hosts infected with A. cantonensis have been identified within the urban areas of many states in Brazil, including those in the northern, northeastern, southeastern and southern regions. The goals of this review are to draw the attention of the medical community and health centres to the emergence of EoM in Brazil, to compile information about several aspects of the human infection and mode of transmission and to provide a short protocol of procedures for the diagnosis of this disease.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1990

Identificação de roedores silvestres como hospedeiros do Angiostrongylus costaricensis no sul do Brasil

Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Fernando D. de Ávila-Pires; Rita de Cássia C. Machado; L. Camillo-Coura; Henrique Leonel Lenzi

Os autores sao gratos ao apoio da comunidade de Arvorezinha, em especial ao Dr. Carlos Moi, Dr. Pedro Marafon, Dr. Ernesto Doege, irmas e funcionarios (Hospital Beneficente Sao Joao), ex-prefeito Darcy Pompermayer e prefeito Sr. Leonir Fornari. Dra. Carmen Tagliari, Prof. Aventino Agostini e a Universidade de Passo Fundo (RS) contribuiram decisivamente para o exito das expedicoes. A equipe de auxilio ao usuario do IBGE, Rio de Janeiro colaborou com os dados referenciais a localizacao geografica.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2007

Detection of Schistosoma mansoni eggs in feces through their interaction with paramagnetic beads in a magnetic field.

Candida Fagundes Teixeira; Erli Neuhauss; Renata Ben; Juliano Romanzini; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira

Background Diagnosis of intestinal schistosomiasis in low endemic areas is a problem because often control measures have reduced egg burdens in feces to below the detection limits of classical coproparasitological methods. Evaluation of molecular methods is hindered by the absence of an established standard with maximum sensitivity and specificity. One strategy to optimize method performance, where eggs are rare events, is to examine large amounts of feces. A novel diagnostic method for isolation of Schistosoma mansoni eggs in feces, and an initial evaluation of its performance is reported here. Methodology/Principal Findings Known amounts of S. mansoni eggs were seeded into 30 g of normal human feces and subjected to a sequence of spontaneous sedimentation, sieving, Ritchie method, incubation and isolation through interaction with paramagnetic beads. Preliminary tests demonstrated the efficacy of lectins as ligands, but they also indicated that the paramagnetic beads alone were sufficient to isolate the eggs under a magnetic field through an unknown mechanism. Eggs were identified by microscopic inspection, with a sensitivity of 100% at 1.3 eggs per gram of feces (epg). Sensitivity gradually decreased to 25% at a concentration of 0.1 epg. In a preliminary application of the new method to the investigation of a recently established focus in southern Brazil, approximately 3 times more eggs were detected than with the thick-smear Kato-Katz method. Conclusions/Significance The novel S. mansoni detection method may significantly improve diagnosis of infections with low burdens in areas of recent introduction of the parasite, areas under successful control of transmission, or in infected travelers. It may also improve the evaluation of new treatments and vaccines.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1997

Abdominal Angiostrongylosis in Southern Brazil - Prevalence and Parasitic Burden in Mollusc Intermediate Hosts from Eighteen Endemic Foci

Paulo R Rambo; Aventino Alfredo Agostini; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira

Angiostrongylus costaricensis is a parasitic nematode of rodents and molluscs are the intermediate hosts. Nocturnal collection of molluscs and search for infective third stage larvae of A. costaricensis was carried out in 18 endemic foci identified by the notification of a confirmed diagnosis in human biopsies or surgical specimens. Molluscs were digested in acidic solution and isolation of larvae eventually present was done in a Baermann funnel. Larvae identified by the presence of a delicate groove in the tail were counted to assess the individual parasitic burden. Four species were found infected, with ranges of prevalence in parenthesis: Phyllocaulis variegatus (7% to 33.3%); Bradybaena similaris (11.7% to 24.1%); Belocaulus angustipes (8.3%) and Phyllocaulis soleiformis (3.3% to 14.2%). Parasitic burden varied from 1 to 75 with P. variegatus, 1 to 98 with B. similaris. 1 to 13 with B. angustipes and 1 larvae in each of two specimens of P. solciformis. P. variegatus was present in all sites and was found infected with the highest prevalence figures and the highest individual parasitic burdens. These data stress the importance of veronicellid slugs as intermediate hosts for A. costaricensis in the endemic areas in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 1997

Seroepidemiology of abdominal angiostrongyliasis: the standardization of an immunoenzymatic assay and prevalence of antibodies in two localities in Southern Brazil

Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Aventino Alfredo Agostini; L. Camillo-Coura; M. F. Ferreira-da-Cruz

Abdominal angiostrongyliasis is a nematode disease produced by Angiostrongylus costaricensis, a metastrongylid parasite of wild rodents. Accidental human infection occurs through ingestion of food or water contaminated with third‐stage larvae present in the mucous secretion of terrestrial molluscs. An ELISA test was standardized for detection of IgG antibodies recognizing a surface antigen prepared from female worms. Competitive absorption of sera with Ascaris suum crude antigen resulted in a test with 86% sensitivity and 83% specificity. The disease is endemic in Southern Brazil and a number of cases are diagnosed every year through anatomo‐pathological examination of biopsies or surgical specimens, since no other diagnostic method is available. According to seroepidemiological studies, prevalences in two transmission foci are 29.8 and 66%, attesting to the widespread occurrence of the infection in those endemic areas.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2003

Diagnosis of abdominal angiostrongyliasis by PCR from sera of patients

Ana Cristina Arámburu da Silva; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Arnaldo Zaha

Abdominal angiostrongyliasis is a zoonotic infection caused by an intra-vascular nematode parasitic of wild rodents, Angiostrongylus costaricensis. No parasitological diagnosis is currently available and immunodiagnosis presents several drawbacks. Primers constructed based on a congeneric species, A. cantonensis, were able to amplify a 232 bp fragment from serum samples of 3 patients with histopathological diagnosis. Extraction was better performed with DNAzol and the specificity of the primers was confirmed by Southern blot. This disease has been diagnosed with frequency in south of Brazil, thus, this method appears like the important and unpublished alternative to improve diagnostic of disease.

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Alessandra L. Morassutti

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Rafael Lucyk Maurer

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Ana Cristina Arámburu da Silva

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Timothy G. St. Pierre

University of Western Australia

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Cinara Tentardini Garrido

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Rubens Rodriguez

Universidade de Passo Fundo

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Alexandre J. da Silva

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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