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Dive into the research topics where Eridan M. Coutinho is active.

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Featured researches published by Eridan M. Coutinho.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999

Cytokine Production in Acute versus Chronic Human Schistosomiasis Mansoni: The Cross-Regulatory Role of Interferon-γ and Interleukin-10 in the Responses of Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells and Splenocytes to Parasite Antigens

Silvia Maria Lucena Montenegro; Paulo Miranda; Siddhartha Mahanty; Frederico Guilherme Coutinho Abath; Kirte M. Teixeira; Eridan M. Coutinho; Joeli Brinkman; Itay Gonçalves; Luiz Antônio W. Domingues; Ana Lúcia Coutinho Domingues; Alan Sher; Thomas A. Wynn

The contribution of interleukin (IL)-10 and interferon (IFN)-gamma to the regulation of type 1 and type 2 cytokine responses was investigated in Brazilians with different clinical forms of schistosomiasis mansoni. Cells from members of a family with acute intestinal schistosomiasis responded to schistosomal soluble egg antigen (SEA) or soluble adult worm antigen preparation (SWAP) with greater amounts of IFN-gamma than did cells from several patients with chronic intestinal schistosomiasis; IL-10 levels were similar. Neutralization of IL-10 had no effect on the SEA-specific IFN-gamma response in patients with acute infection, whereas SWAP-induced IFN-gamma was increased in both groups. Anti-IL-10 also up-regulated SEA-specific IFN-gamma protein and mRNA responses in most splenocyte cultures from hepatosplenic schistosomiasis patients but had no effect on antigen-specific IL-4 or IL-5 production. Neutralization of IFN-gamma resulted in a comparable increase in SWAP-specific IL-10 and IL-5, while IL-4 was not affected. These studies demonstrate that early disease in schistosomiasis is associated with a significant IFN-gamma response and that IL-10 contributes to the suppression of that response during both early and chronic infection.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2002

Evaluation of PCR for Diagnosis of American Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in an Area of Endemicity in Northeastern Brazil

Eduardo Henrique Gomes Rodrigues; Maria Edileuza Felinto de Brito; Mitzi G. Mendonça; Roberto P. Werkhäuser; Eridan M. Coutinho; Wayner Vieira de Souza; Maria de Fátima Pessoa Militão de Albuquerque; Márcio Lobo Jardim; Frederico Guilherme Coutinho Abath

ABSTRACT PCR-based approaches targeting kinetoplast DNA were evaluated for the diagnosis of American cutaneous leishmaniasis (ACL) in regions of endemicity in northeastern Brazil. A total of 119 cutaneous biopsy specimens from patients with ACL and nonleishmaniasis cutaneous lesions were studied. Two PCR-based systems were used; one was specific for the subgenus Viannia, and the other was specific for the genus Leishmania. The PCR specific for the subgenus Viannia had a sensitivity of 95.4%, whereas the genus-specific PCR detected the target DNA in 88.2% of the samples tested. The specificities of the assays, determined with samples from a group with nonleishmaniasis cutaneous lesions, was 100%. The results of the conventional tests indicate that the sensitivities of the PCR-based methods were significantly higher than those of smear examination, histological staining, and isolation by culture (P < 0.05). Antibodies specific for Leishmania braziliensis were detected by indirect immunofluorescence in 82.9% of the patients tested. Parasites were isolated from 40 of 86 patients (46.5%). Sixty-seven percent of dermal scrapings and 66.2% of stained tissue sections were positive by microscopy. Amplified products from the subgenus-specific PCR hybridized with the Leishmania panamensis minicircle, confirming infection consistent with L. braziliensis. The evidence available at present incriminates L. braziliensis as the only causative agent of ACL in the state of Pernambuco in Brazil.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1997

Factors involved in Schistosoma mansoni infection, in rural areas of northeast Brazil

Eridan M. Coutinho; Frederico Guilherme Coutinho Abath; Constança Simões Barbosa; Ana Lúcia Coutinho Domingues; Marcelo C. V. Melo; Silvia Maria Lucena Montenegro; Maria Anunciada F Lucena; Sylvia A.M Romani; Wayner Vieira de Souza; Amaury Coutinho

Two contiguous villages in Tracunhaém county (State of Pernambuco), endemic for schistosomiasis, were studied: Itapinassu (138 inhabitants) and São Joaquim (91 inhabitants). Agriculture predominates in the former region while ceramics is the main activity in the latter. Although no statistical difference was found regarding prevalence, severe infection (> 400 epg) predominated in Itapinassu, probably related to the kind of occupation. No association was found between parasite burden and severity of disease, in spite of the high infection rates for Schistosoma mansoni in both communities (approx. 60%). Typical epidemiological features of schistosomiasis such as age-related prevalences and intensities of infection (high in children, low in adults) were also mutual characteristics. Nutritional status determined through anthropometric evaluation was carried out by measuring specific anthropometric indicators. A deficit of energy intake, as well as vitamin A and riboflavin deficiencies were detected. The prevalence of moderate or severe undernutrition in patients under 18 years old was 21.9% in Itapinassu and 24.1% in São Joaquim. In this group an association was found between prevalence of schistosomiasis and chronic undernutrition. Similarly, for patients over 18 year old the prevalence of undernutrition was higher than 20%. However, in this case no association between nutritional status and either prevalence of schistosomiasis or parasite burden could be detected. The two communities had not been treated for eight years.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2001

Morphological aspects of Schistosoma mansoni adult worms isolated from nourished and undernourished mice: a comparative analysis by confocal laser scanning microscopy

Renata Heisler Neves; José Roberto Machado-Silva; Marcelo Pelajo-Machado; Sheila Andrade Oliveira; Eridan M. Coutinho; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Delir Corrêa Gomes

Malnutrition hampers the course of schistosomiasis mansoni infection just as normal growth of adult worms. A comparative morphometric study on adult specimens (male and female) recovered from undernourished (fed with a low protein diet - regional basic diet) and nourished (rodent commercial laboratory food, NUVILAB) white mice was performed. Tomographic images and morphometric analysis of the oral and ventral suckers, reproductive system and tegument were obtained by means of confocal laser scanning microscopy. Undernourished male specimens presented smaller morphometric values (length and width) of the reproductive system (first, third and last testicular lobes) and thickness of the tegument than controls. Besides that, it was demonstrated that the dorsal surface of the male worms bears large tubercles unevenly distributed, but kept grouped and flat. At the subtegumental region, vacuolated areas were detected. It was concluded that the inadequate nutritional status of the vertebrate host has a negative influence mainly in the reproductive system and topographical somatic development of male adult Schistosoma mansoni, inducing some alterations on the structure of the parasite.


International Journal of Experimental Pathology | 2003

Pathogenesis of schistosomal ‘pipestem’ fibrosis: a low-protein diet inhibits the development of ‘pipestem’ fibrosis in mice

Eridan M. Coutinho; M.M. de Souza; Luciana M. Silva; Claudia L. Cavalcanti; R. E. De Araujo; Aryon Barbosa; Allen W. Cheever; Zilton A. Andrade

Mice maintained on a low protein diet for 30 days and then infected with Schistosoma mansoni for 16 weeks completely failed to develop ‘pipestem fibrosis’ of the liver, whereas 50% of well nourished controls did. Usually mice with relatively mild and prolonged S. mansoni infection develop two different pathological pictures: one consisting of disseminated portal fibrosis caused by periovular granulomas concentrated at the portal spaces (pipestem fibrosis), the other represented by scattered hepatic granulomas. The reason for this dual response is poorly understood. Combined results from parasitological, histopathological, biochemical and morphometric data revealed that peri‐ovular granulomas of undernourished mice were smaller, inflammation was less intense and there was minimal fibrosis in comparison with those of controls, which suggest that a vigorous host response is necessary for the pathogenesis of schistosomal portal fibrosis.


Parasitology Research | 2005

Humoral and cellular immune responses in BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice immunized with cytoplasmic (CRA) and flagellar (FRA) recombinant repetitive antigens, in acute experimental Trypanosoma cruzi infection

Valéria Rêgo Alves Pereira; Virginia Maria Barros de Lorena; Mineo Nakazawa; Carlos Feitosa Luna; Edimilson Domingos da Silva; Antonio G. P. Ferreira; Marco A. Krieger; Samuel Goldenberg; Milena Botelho Pereira Soares; Eridan M. Coutinho; Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira; Yara de Miranda Gomes

In previous studies, cytoplasmic repetitive antigen (CRA) and flagellar repetitive antigen (FRA) proteins induced specific humoral and cellular immune responses in susceptible and resistant mice in the absence of Trypanosoma cruzi infection with a significant induction of the Interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) production in those animals. In this follow-up paper, the immunostimulatory and protective effects of these proteins were evaluated by immunizing with CRA or FRA antigens, BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice and challenging with a T. cruzi (Y strain). Both proteins induced humoral response with high levels of IgG isotypes as well as cellular immunity with high levels of IFN-γ when compared to controls. However, the lymphocyte proliferative response was minimal. The survival rate at 30 days post-infection was significant in CRA (60%) or FRA (50%) - immunized BALB/c mice and CRA (83.3%) - immunized C57BL/6 mice. Taken as a whole these findings indicate that CRA and FRA are immunogenic and potentially important for protective immunity.


Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology | 1999

Should nutrition be considered as a supplementary measure in schistosomiasis control

Haroldo da Silva Ferreira; Eridan M. Coutinho

The most important data on the relationships between nutritional status and schistosomiasis mansoni are reviewed. The probable impact of such findings on the traditional strategies for control of the disease are discussed. In endemic areas, malnutrition and schistosomiasis seem to be associated. Malnutrition impairs the biological development of the parasite. However, like the parasite, it also depresses the hosts immune system, and malnutrition and infection can be mutually aggravating. Recent schistosomiasis-control activities, although apparently well designed, have frequently seemed ineffective because of the multiplicity of factors involved, and have not offered a realistic promise of sustainable and definitive control. However, these actions must be continued and even encouraged because they do lead to reductions in the prevalence of infection and, of particular importance, to reductions in the incidence of the more severe forms of the disease. Improvement of the nutritional status of those who inhabit endemic areas, particularly those on low incomes (who are at relatively high risk of malnutrition and of schistosomiasis), is recommended as a supplementary measure.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1992

The influence of the regional basic diet from northeast Brazil on health and nutritional conditions of mice infected with Schistosoma mansoni

Eridan M. Coutinho; Lucila P.C.G. de Freitas; Frederico Guilherme Coutinho Abath

Protein nutritional status indicators were studied in weanling albino Swiss mice infected with S. mansoni and fed the Regional Basic Diet (RBD) from Northeast Brazil, a multideficient diet of low-protein content. Each mouse was infected percutaneously with 80 cercariae. The experiment lasted 63 days. The growth curve, food consumption, protein intake, weight gain, Protein Efficiency Ratio (PER) and Net Protein Ratio (NPR) were the parameters investigated. RBD-fed mice showed a marked weight loss, a lower food and protein intake, a slower body weight gain and lower rates of food protein utilization when compared to casein-fed animals. Differences between infected and non-infected mice were not consistent. The present results suggest that the effects of RBD-induced malnutrition on health and nutritional conditions of the mice are more severe than those of Mansons schistosomiasis, in the initial phase of the disease.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1988

The use of non-specific immunopotentiators in experimental Trypanosoma cruzi infection

Frederico Guilherme Coutinho Abath; Eridan M. Coutinho; Silvia Maria Lucena Montenegro; Yara de Miranda Gomes; Alexandre B. de Carvalho

The effects of levamisole, isoprinosine and Corynebacterium parvum on Trypanosoma cruzi (Y strain) experimental infection of mice were studied. In prophylactic treatment these drugs reduced the peak of parasitaemia, and had no apparent effect on mortality rate or on histopathological and electrocardiographic findings. Levamisole and isoprinosine had no effect when used after infection. Electrocardiograms were obtained from all chronic chagasic mice. The most frequent changes were left atrial overload and first degree atrio-ventricular block. These findings became more frequent the longer the animals survived. The net effect of the non-specific immunopotentiators seems to depend on several factors: host immune state, severity of infection, dose and timing of drug administration. This probably explains the variable published results and the paradoxical findings of different laboratories.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2004

The effect of Zymomonas mobilis culture on experimental Schistosoma mansoni infection

Juliana de Fátima Macedo Santos; Joelma Vasconcelos; Joelma Rodrigues de Souza; Eridan M. Coutinho; Silvia Maria Lucena Montenegro; Eulália Azevedo-Ximenes

C57Bl/10 male mice infected with Schistosoma mansoni were distributed into mixed, prophylactic and curative groups. A culture of Zymomonas mobilis was orally administered to mice. A 61% protection from the infection was observed in the curative group (p <0.05). Histopathological study of the livers and intestines showed similar results.

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Frederico Guilherme Coutinho Abath

National Institute for Medical Research

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Siddhartha Mahanty

National Institutes of Health

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Thomas A. Wynn

National Institutes of Health

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