Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari
University of São Paulo
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari.
Molecular Ecology | 2003
Takao Kasuga; Thomas J. White; Gina L. Koenig; Juan G. McEwen; Angela Restrepo; Elizabetha Castañeda; Carlos D. A. Silva Lacaz; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Roseli Santos de Freitas; Rosely Maria Zancopé-Oliveira; Zhenyu Qin; Ricardo Negroni; Dee Carter; Yuzuru Mikami; Miki Tamura; Maria Lucia Taylor; Georgina F. Miller; Natteewan Poonwan; John W. Taylor
Until recently, Histoplasma capsulatum was believed to harbour three varieties, var. capsulatum (chiefly a New World human pathogen), var. duboisii (an African human pathogen) and var. farciminosum (an Old World horse pathogen), which varied in clinical manifestations and geographical distribution. We analysed the phylogenetic relationships of 137 individuals representing the three varieties from six continents using DNA sequence variation in four independent protein‐coding genes. At least eight clades were idengified: (i) North American class 1 clade; (ii) North American class 2 clade; (iii) Latin American group A clade; (iv) Latin American group B clade; (v) Australian clade; (vi) Netherlands (Indonesian?) clade; (vii) Eurasian clade and (viii) African clade. Seven of eight clades represented genetically isolated groups that may be recognized as phylogenetic species. The sole exception was the Eurasian clade which originated from within the Latin American group A clade. The phylogenetic relationships among the clades made a star phylogeny. Histoplasma capsulatum var. capsulatum individuals were found in all eight clades. The African clade included all of the H. capsulatum var. duboisii individuals as well as individuals of the other two varieties. The 13 individuals of var. farciminosum were distributed among three phylogenetic species. These findings suggest that the three varieties of Histoplasma are phylogenetically meaningless. Instead we have to recognize the existence of genetically distinct geographical populations or phylogenetic species. Combining DNA substitution rates of protein‐coding genes with the phylogeny suggests that the radiation of Histoplasma started between 3 and 13 million years ago in Latin America.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001
Luiz Guilherme Martins Castro; Carlos D. A. Silva Lacaz; Josep Guarro; Josepa Gené; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Roseli Santos De Freitas Leite; Giovana Letícia Hernández Arriagada; Marcia Maria Ozaki Reguera; Eunice Miki Ito; Neusa Yuriko Sakai Valente; Ricardo Spina Nunes
ABSTRACT A case of phaeohyphomycosis is reported in a male renal transplant recipient with a nodular lesion in the right leg who was treated with immunosuppressing drugs. The lesion consisted of a purulent cyst with thick walls. The cyst was excised surgically, and the patient did not receive any antifungal therapy. One year later he remains well. Histological study of the lesion showed a granulomatous reaction of epithelioid and multinucleate giant cells, with a central area of necrosis and pus. Fontana-Masson staining demonstrated the presence of pigmented hyphal elements. The fungus Colletotrichum crassipes was grown in different cultures from the cyst. The in vitro inhibitory activities of eight antifungal drugs against the isolate were tested. Clotrimazole and UR-9825 were the most active drugs. This case represents the first known reported infection caused by this rare species.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2002
Carlos da Silva Lacaz; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Giovanna Letícia Hernandez-Arriagada; Eduardo Lacaz Martins; Célia A.L. Prearo; Simone Miwa Corim; Marilena dos Anjos Martins
The authors report a male patient, a seller with no detected immunosuppression, with an extensive ulcerated skin lesion localized on the left forearm, caused by Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii serotype B. Oral treatment with fluconazole was successful. A review of the literature showed the rarity of this localization in HIV-negative patients. In contrast, skin lesions frequently occurs in HIV-positive patients, with Cryptococcus neoformans var. neoformans serotype A predominating as the etiological agent. In this paper, the pathogenicity of C. neoformans to skin lesions in patients immunocompromised or not, is discussed, showing the efficacy of fluconazole for the treatment of these processes.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2002
Misako Ohkusu; Naomi Tangonan; Kanji Takeo; Eriko Kishida; Masami Ohkubo; Shigeji Aoki; Kenjiro Nakamura; Takaaki Fujii; Isadora C. de Siqueira; Elves A.P. Maciel; Sumire Sakabe; Gisele Madeira Duboc de Almeida; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Carlos da Silva Lacaz
Serotype, mating type and ploidy of 84 strains of Cryptococcus neoformans isolated from 61 AIDS and 23 non-AIDS patients admitted in a tertiary teaching hospital in São Paulo, Brazil were examined. Among 61 strains isolated from AIDS patients, 60 strains were var. grubii (serotype A). Only one strain was var. gattii (serotype B). No var. neoformans (serotype D) was found. Among 23 strains isolated from non-AIDS patients, 15 were var. grubii (serotype A) and the remaining 8 were var. gattii, all of which were serotype B. Seventy-three of the 75 serotype A strains were the heterothallic alpha type (MATalpha) and the remaining 2 were untypable (asexual). Most of the MATalpha strains (69/73) were haploid and the remaining 4 strains were diploid. Similarly, both of the 2 asexual strains among the 75 serotype A strains were haploid. There were no alpha-mating type (MATalpha) strains among the 84 isolates. All of the 8 var. gattii strains were serotype B and haploid. Among a total of 84 strains tested, neither serotype AD nor serotype D were found. Neither triploid nor tetraploid were found. These results suggest that the serological, sexual and ploidy characteristics in C. neoformans strains isolated from AIDS patients in São Paulo were rather simple, whereas strains isolated from non-AIDS patients presented serotype A and B with predominance of serotype A.
International Journal of Dermatology | 2006
Clarisse Zaitz; Andrea Miranda Godoy; Fabiana Márcia Colucci; Valéria Maria De Sousa; Ligia Rangel B. Ruiz; Andréa S. Masada; Márcia Valéria Nobre; Helena Muller; Laura Hitomi Muramatu; Giovanna Letícia Hernandez Arrigada; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; José Eduardo Costa Martins
The present report describes a case of cutaneous protothecosis caused by Prototheca wickerhamii in a nonimmunocompromised Brazilian female. Dermatological examination revealed a 15‐cm diffusely infiltrated eczema‐like plaque recovered with many pustule‐like lesions on the right forearm. We emphasize the mycological and pathological aspects of this infection that can lead to misdiagnosis. The patient was successfully treated with itraconazole.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1997
Clarisse Zaitz; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Roseli Santos de Freitas; Giovana Letícia Hernández Arriagada; Ligia Rangel B. Ruiz; Silvia A.S. Totoli; Ana Cristina Marques; Gisele G. Rezze; Helena Muller; N.Y.S. Valente; Carlos da Silva Lacaz
We report a case of subcutaneous phaeohyphomycosis observed in a male patient presenting pulmonary sarcoidosis and submitted to corticosteroid treatment. He presented nodular erythematous-violaceous skin lesions in the dorsum of the right hand. Histopathological examination of the biopsied lesion revealed dematiaceous hyphae and yeast-like cells, with a granulomatous tissual reaction. The isolated fungus was identified as Phoma cava. A review of the literature on fungal infection caused by different Phoma species, is presented. The patient healed after therapy with amphotericin B. followed by itraconazole.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1992
Luiz Gonzaga de Castro e Souza Filho; Marcello Menta Simonsen Nico; Alberto Salebian; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Luiz Guilherme Martins Castro; Mirian Nacagami Sotto; Carlos da Silva Lacaz; José Eduardo Costa Martins; Suzana Lu Chen Wu; Luiz Carlos Cucé
A case of rhinofacial entomophthoromycosis caused by Conidiobolus coronatus is reported in a 30 years old male from Sao Paulo, Brazil. The patient was successfully treated with oral fluconazole in a prolonged regimen. The diagnosis was confirmed by histopathological and mycological data.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2001
Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Clarisse Martins Machado; Rosaura Saboya; Roberto L. Silva; Frederico Luiz Dulley; Carlos da Silva Lacaz; Roseli Santos De Freitas Leite; Giovana Letícia Hernández Arriagada
We report a case of cutaneous infection caused by Phialemonium curvatum GAMS et COOKE, 1983, after bone marrow transplantation. The genus Phialemonium was created by GAMS & MCGINNIS in 1983 including three new species: Ph. obovatum, Ph. curvatum and Ph. dimorphosporum, and represents an intermediate genus between Acremonium and Phialophora. Nowadays, the genus Phialemonium is considered to be a pheoid fungus which may cause the eventual lesions observed in pheo- and hyalohyphomycosis. Species of this genus have been described as opportunistic agents in humans and animals, mainly as a result of immunosuppression. In the present case, the patient had multiple myeloma and received an allogenic bone marrow transplant from his HLA-compatible brother. Two months after transplantation, he developed purplish and painful nodular lesions on the right ankle. Some of these lesions drained spontaneously and apparently hyaline mycelial filaments were observed, whose culture was initially identified as Acremonium sp. Subsequent studies showed that the fungus was Phialemonium curvatum. The infection was treated with amphotericin B, followed by ketoconazole. The patient was submitted to surgical debridement followed by two skin grafts to repair the bloody area. The duration of the treatment was 4 months and secondary prophylaxis with ketoconazole alone was maintained for one additional month. No recurrence was observed after discontinuation of treatment. The authors comment on the pathogenicity of the genus Phialemonium.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1992
Luís Antonio de Paula Machado; Maria Cecília da Matta Rivitti; Luis Carlos Cucé; Alberto Salebian; Carlos da Silva Lacaz; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Walter Belda; Natalina Takahashi de Melo
Two cases of black grains eumycotic mycetoma, occurring on a foot, are reported. Both proceeded from the State of Bahia (Brazil), and in both the etiologic agent was Madurella grisea Mackinnon et al., 1949. The grains structure as well as the micromorphologic characteristics of the fungus in saprophytic life were studied. It is the Authors belief that these observations correspond to the 7th and 8th cases reported in the Brazilian medical literature. The Authors do consider the following Madurella species as nomen dubium or nomina confusa: M. ramiroi, M. oswaldoi, M. bovoi, M. tozeuri, M. mansonii, M. brumpti, M. reynieri, M. americana, M. lackawanna e M. ikedae and the same for Rubromadurella mycetomi. The only valid species must be Madurella mycetomatis McGinnis, 1980 (=Madurella mycetomi Brumpt, 1905) and Madurella grisea Mackinnon et al., 1949. Treatment with itraconazole in both reported cases, for a 3 month duration, did not produce any regression of the lesions, the clinical improvement being meager.Os Autores registram dois casos de eumicetoma de graos pretos, com localizacao podal, procedentes da Bahia, provocados por Madurella grisea Mackinnon et al., 1949. Sao estudadas a estrutura dos graos, bem como as caracteristicas micromorfologicas do fungo em vida saprofitica. Acreditam os Autores que estas observacoes correspondem ao setimo e oitavo casos registrados na literatura do pais, provocadas por este fungo. Os Autores consideram nomen dubium ou nomina confusa as seguintes especies de Madurella: M. ramiroi, M. oswaldoi, M. bovoi, M. tozeuri, M. mansonii, M. brumpti, M. reynieri, M. americana, M. lackawanna e M. ikedae, o mesmo ocorrendo com a chamada Rubromadurella mycetomi. As unicas especies validas sao Madurella mycetomatis McGinnis, 1980 (=Madurella mycetomi Brumpt, 1905) e Madurella grisea Mackinnon et al., 1949. Nos dois casos registrados o tratamento com itraconazol, por um periodo de 3 meses nao fez regredir as lesoes, havendo ligeira melhora clinica.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1996
Carlos da Silva Lacaz; Elisabeth Maria Heins-Vaccari; Natalina Takashi de Melo; Giovanna Letícia Hernandez-Arriagada
The basidiomycosis, fungal infections provoked by basidiomycetes or agaric fungi have been recorded at growing frequencies in the medical literature, especially after the advent of AIDS in 1991. The basidiospores of these fungi, scattered in the atmosphere and transported by winds or air currents, reach the maxillary sinuses through the nasal route, most of the times causing signs and symptoms of chronic sinusitis. Basidiomycetes have also been isolated from sputum, especially Schizophyllum commune. Lesions of the buccal mucosa, brain abscesses, onychomycosis and endocarditis have been described, with a growing interest in this type of deep mycosis on the part of mycologists and infectologists. The present paper reports descriptions of mycetism as well as infectious processes caused by basidiomycetes, such as Schizophyllum commune, Ustilago maydis (= Ustilago zeae) and Coprinus cinereus.