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Dive into the research topics where Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008

In Vitro Activities of Voriconazole, Itraconazole, and Terbinafine Alone or in Combination against Pythium insidiosum Isolates from Brazil

Juliana Siqueira Argenta; Janio Morais Santurio; Sydney Hartz Alves; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Ayrton Sydnei Cavalheiro; Andréia Spanamberg; Laerte Ferreiro

ABSTRACT We evaluated the in vitro activities of voriconazole, itraconazole, and terbinafine against 30 clinical isolates of Pythium insidiosum using a checkerboard macrodilution method. The combined activity of terbinafine plus itraconazole or plus voriconazole was synergic against 17% of the strains. Antagonism was not observed.


Current Microbiology | 2011

Identification of Pythium insidiosum by nested PCR in cutaneous lesions of Brazilian horses and rabbits.

Sônia de Avila Botton; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Mateus Matiuzzi da Costa; Maria Isabel de Azevedo; Juliana Siqueira Argenta; Francielli P. K. Jesus; Sydney Hartz Alves; Janio Morais Santurio

Pythium insidiosum is a fungus-like organism present in subtropical and tropical areas, such as Brazil, known to infect humans and various animal species. P. insidiosum is the etiological agent of pythiosis, an emerging and granulomatous disease characterized mainly by cutaneous and subcutaneous lesions in horses, the principal species affected. Accurate diagnosis of pythiosis and identification of its causal agent by microbiological and serological tests can be often difficult and inconclusive principally for horses and humans. The aim of this study was to evaluate the application of the previously described P. insidiosum-specific nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to directly detect P. insidiosum DNA in clinical and experimental lesions. Universal fungal primers (ITS1 and ITS4) were used during the first-round of PCR to amplify ITS1, 5.8s, and ITS2. A second-round of PCR was conducted with P. insidiosum-specific primers (PI1 and PI2) to amplify a variable region within this ITS1. In this study, a total of 21 equine clinical samples (kunkers) and 28 specimens from experimentally infected rabbits were analyzed by nested PCR. The first-round of PCR generated 800-base pair products, and the second-round produced 105-base pair amplicons for each P. insidiosum-specific sample; no amplicons were generated in negative control samples. Our results suggest that nested PCR is an important and efficient tool for diagnosis of both endemic (horse samples) and experimental (rabbit samples) pythiosis.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

In Vitro Activity of Terbinafine Combined with Caspofungin and Azoles against Pythium insidiosum

Ayrton Sydnei Cavalheiro; Grazieli Maboni; Maria Isabel de Azevedo; Juliana Siqueira Argenta; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Tatiana Spader; Sydney Hartz Alves; Janio Morais Santurio

ABSTRACT In this text we evaluated the in vitro antifungal activities of terbinafine combined with caspofungin, miconazole, ketoconazole, and fluconazole against 17 Pythium insidiosum strains by using the microdilution checkerboard method. Synergistic interactions were observed with terbinafine combined with caspofungin (41.2% of the strains), fluconazole (41.2%), ketoconazole (29.4%), and miconazole (11.8%). No antagonistic effects were observed. The combination of terbinafine plus caspofungin or terbinafine plus fluconazole may have significant therapeutic potential for treatment of pythiosis.


Veterinary Record | 2008

Granulomatous rhinitis associated with Pythium insidiosum infection in sheep.

Janio Morais Santurio; J. S. Argenta; S. E. Schwendler; Ayrton Sydnei Cavalheiro; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Régis Adriel Zanette; Sydney Hartz Alves; Valéria Dutra; M. C. Silva; L. P. Arruda; Luciano Nakazato; Edson Moleta Colodel

Pythium insidiosum is an aquatic organism classified in the kingdom Stramenopila, class Oomycetes ([De Cock and others 1987][1]). It is the aetiological agent of pythiosis in mammals; the occurrence of this disease is associated with contact between traumatic lesions in animals or human beings and


Veterinary Microbiology | 2012

In vitro and in vivo susceptibility of two-drug and three-drug combinations of terbinafine, itraconazole, caspofungin, ibuprofen and fluvastatin against Pythium insidiosum.

Juliana Siqueira Argenta; Sydney Hartz Alves; Flávio Silveira; Grazieli Maboni; Régis Adriel Zanette; Ayrton Sydnei Cavalheiro; Patrique de Lima Pereira; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Elisa Simone V. Sallis; Luciana Pötter; Janio Morais Santurio; Laerte Ferreiro

The present study investigated the in vitro inhibitory activity of terbinafine, itraconazole, caspofungin, fluvastatin and ibuprofen against 15 isolates of Pythium insidiosum in double and triple combinations and determined in vivo correlations using rabbits with experimental pythiosis. The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) was determined in accordance with the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute M 38-A2 protocol (2008), and the in vitro interactions were evaluated using a checkerboard microdilution method. For the in vivo study, 20 rabbits inoculated with P. insidiosum zoospores were divided into four groups: group 1 was treated with terbinafine and itraconazole; group 2 was treated with terbinafine, itraconazole and fluvastatin; group 3 was treated with terbinafine and caspofungin; and group 4 was the control group. Combinations of terbinafine with caspofungin or ibuprofen were synergistic for 47% of the isolates, and antagonism was not observed in any of the double combinations. The triple combinations were mostly indifferent, but synergism and antagonism were also observed. In the in vivo study, the histological aspect of the lesions was similar among the groups, but group 2 showed the lowest amount of hyphae and differed significantly from the other groups.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2012

Phylogenetic relationships of Brazilian isolates of Pythium insidiosum based on ITS rDNA and cytochrome oxidase II gene sequences

Maria Isabel de Azevedo; Sônia de Avila Botton; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Lizandra J. Robe; Francielli Pantella Kunz de Jesus; Camila D. Mahl; Mateus Matiuzzi da Costa; Sydney Hartz Alves; Jânio Morais Santúrio

Pythium insidiosum is an aquatic oomycete that is the causative agent of pythiosis. Advances in molecular methods have enabled increased accuracy in the diagnosis of pythiosis, and in studies of the phylogenetic relationships of this oomycete. To evaluate the phylogenetic relationships among isolates of P. insidiosum from different regions of Brazil, and also regarding to other American and Thai isolates, in this study a total of thirty isolates of P. insidiosum from different regions of Brazil was used and had their ITS1, 5.8S rRNA and ITS2 rDNA (ITS) region and the partial sequence of cytochrome oxidase II (COX II) gene sequenced and analyzed. The outgroup consisted of six isolates of other Pythium species and one of Lagenidium giganteum. Phylogenetic analyses of ITS and COX II genes were conducted, both individually and in combination, using four different methods: Maximum parsimony (MP); Neighbor-joining (NJ); Maximum likelihood (ML); and Bayesian analysis (BA). Our data supported P. insidiosum as monophyletic in relation to the other Pythium species, and COX II showed that P. insidiosum appears to be subdivided into three major polytomous groups, whose arrangement provides the Thai isolates as paraphyletic in relation to the Brazilian ones. The molecular analyses performed in this study suggest an evolutionary proximity among all American isolates, including the Brazilian and the Central and North America isolates, which were grouped together in a single entirely polytomous clade. The COX II network results presented signals of a recent expansion for the American isolates, probably originated from an Asian invasion source. Here, COX II showed higher levels bias, although it was the source of higher levels of phylogenetic information when compared to ITS. Nevertheless, the two markers chosen for this study proved to be entirely congruent, at least with respect to phylogenetic relationships between different isolates of P. insidiosum.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2008

Surto de pitiose cutânea em bovinos

Adriane Loy Gabriel; Glaucia D. Kommers; Maria Elisa Trost; Claudio S.L. Barros; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Stela Elisangela Schwendler; Janio Morais Santurio

Seventy-six young mixed breed cattle of both sexes, presented multifocal ulcerated nodular cutaneous lesions localized in the medial and lateral aspects of fore and hindlimbs, ventral neck, sternum, and tail. The disease occurred during summer and lesions were observed on areas of the body which were in contact with water of irrigation channels for long periods. Histologically, there were multiple granulomas and pyogranulomas with few negative profiles of hyphae, which were better visualized throughout Grocott methenamine silver stain. Definitive etiologic diagnosis was based on immuno-histochemistry with anti-Pythium insidiosum polyclonal antibody. Additionally, an indirect ELISA test was performed. Bovine cutaneous pythiosis outbreaks are uncommon and, particularly as occurred in the cattle of this report, all affected animals had spontaneous healing within two to three weeks.


Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2012

Epidemiologia da pitiose equina na Região Sul do Rio Grande do Sul

Clairton Marcolongo-Pereira; Eliza S.V. Sallis; Margarida Buss Raffi; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Fabiane L. Hinnah; Ana Carolina Barreto Coelho; Ana Lucia Schild

A survey of cases of equine pythiosis received by the Laboratorio Regional de Diagnostico, Faculdade de Veterinaria, Universidade Federal de Pelotas, from January 1979 to July 2011, was made to determine the epidemiological conditions in which the disease occurs in southern Rio Grande do Sul. Samples from 1888 horses were received; 435 samples were from the integumentary system, of which 63 (14.5%) corresponded to pythiosis. The affected animals were of both sexes and their age ranged from 8 months to 22 years. Crioulo was the most prevalent breed. Most cases of pythiosis were sent to the laboratory between March and June. The evolution of the lesions due to pythiosis ranged from 2 weeks to 1 year. The municipalities with the greatest number of cases were Pelotas (22/63), Santa Vitoria do Palmar (15/63) and Rio Grande (8/63). With respect to the climatic data, in most cases the maximum temperature in the probable month of infection was above or close to 30°C during at least one day. The observation of cases in the colder seasons of the year could be due to the stagnant water temperature higher than the temperature of the air, which allows the development of infective structures of Pythium insidiosum.


Revista Iberoamericana De Micologia | 2013

Fungal ovicidal activity on Toxocara canis eggs

Fernando de Souza Maia Filho; Juliana Nunes Vieira; Maria Elisabeth Aires Berne; Franciele Stoll; Patrícia da Silva Nascente; Luciana Pötter; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira

BACKGROUND Visceral toxocariasis is a parasitic zoonosis caused by Toxocara canis. The prevalence of this parasite in dogs, soil contamination and the resistance of eggs increase human exposure to the disease. Moreover, the difficulties of the control measures justify the need for alternative ones. AIMS The objective of this study was to evaluate the in vitro ovicidal activity of fungi isolated from soils from public places in the city of Pelotas, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, on Toxocara canis. METHODS Samples of soil from ten localities were inoculated onto Petri dishes with 2% water-agar (WA) that contained antibiotics, and incubated at 25°C/21 days. Isolated fungi were tested in vitro for ovicidal activity, with five replicates. One mL of an embryonated Toxocara canis egg suspension (10(3) eggs) was poured over the fungal cultures after 10 days of growth. At intervals of 7, 14 and 21 days, 100 eggs were removed from each plaque and evaluated by optical microscopy. RESULTS Acremonium, Aspergillus, Bipolaris, Fusarium, Gliocladium, Mucor and Trichoderma were isolated from the soil. A significant ovicidal type 3 effect was observed in Trichoderma, Fusarium solani complex and Acremonium. Those isolates from the genus Trichoderma showed their ovicidal effect on the 14th day of fungus-egg interaction. The other fungal genera tested showed a type 2 effect. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that the use of Trichoderma and Fusarium solani complex in biological control of T. canis is promising; however, further studies should be performed.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2006

Comparison among tomato juice agar with other three media for differentiation of Candida dubliniensis from Candida albicans

Sydney Hartz Alves; Érico Silva Loreto; Carlos Eduardo Blanco Linares; Carolina Pereira Silveira; Liliane Alves Scheid; Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira; Janio Morais Santuario

The purpose of the present study is to compare the tomato juice agar, a well known medium employed to observe ascospore formation, with niger seed agar, casein agar and sunflower seed agar, applied to a differentiation between C. dubliniensis and C. albicans. After 48 hours of incubation at 30 degrees C all 26 (100%) C. dubliniensis isolates tested produced chlamydospores on tomato juice agar as well as in the other three media evaluated. However, when we inoculated all media with C. albicans, the absence of chlamydospores became resulting in the following percents: tomato juice agar (92.47%), niger seed agar (96.7%), casein agar (91.39%), and sunflower seed agar (96.7%). These results indicate that tomato juice agar is another medium which can also be used in the first phenotypic differentiation between C. dubliniensis and C. albicans.

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Dive into the Daniela Isabel Brayer Pereira's collaboration.

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Sônia de Avila Botton

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Janio Morais Santurio

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Sydney Hartz Alves

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Maria Isabel de Azevedo

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Carla Weiblen

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Luciana Pötter

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Luís Antônio Sangioni

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Juliana Siqueira Argenta

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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