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Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1997

Epidemiological aspects of the Brazilian spotted fever: seasonal activity of ticks collected in an endemic area in São Paulo, Brazil

Elba Regina Sampaio de Lemos; Raimundo Diogo Machado; José Rodrigues Coura; Maria Angélica A. M. Guimarães; Nicolau Maués Serra Freire; Marinete Amorim; Gilberto Salles Gazêta

Ticks were collected from vegetation and animals at monthly intervals during one year (1993-1994) in an endemic area of Brazilian spotted fever in the Country of Pedreira, State of São Paulo. Six species of ticks were identified Amblyomma cajennense, Amblyomma cooperi, Amblyomma triste, Anocentor nitens, Rhipicephalus sanguineus and Boophilus microplus. Only the first species was sufficiently numerous to permit a quantitative study with seasonal activity, although the distribution and source of capture of other species were observed and are reported. This information is correlated with the epidemiology of tick-borne rickettsiosis.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2003

Ecological analysis of Acari recovered from coprolites from archaeological site of Northeast Brazil

Rita de Maria Seabra Nogueira de Candanedo Guerra; Gilberto Salles Gazêta; Marinete Amorim; Antonio Nascimento Duarte; Nicolau Maués Serra-Freire

Coprolite samples of human and animal origin from the excavations performed at the archaeological site of Furna do Estrago, at Brejo da Madre de Deus in the state of Pernambuco, Brazil and sent to the Paleoparasitology Laboratory at Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública-Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, were analyzed for mites. After rehydratation and sedimentation of the coprolites, the alimentary contents and the sediments were examined and the mites collected and prepared in definitive whole mounts, using Hoyers medium. Mites of the following suborders and orders were recovered: suborder Acaridia; order Gamasida; order Ixodida with the familiy Ixodidae (Ixodes sp. and Amblyomma sp. larvae, scutum, idiosoma, gnathosoma); order Oribatida (Aphelacarus sp., Apolohmannia sp., Eophypochthonius sp., Cosmochthonius sp., Pterobates sp., Poronoticae with pteromorphae not auriculate); order Astigmata with the families Atopomelidae (Chirodiscoides caviae), Anoetidae hypopus, Acaridae (Suidasia pontifica), Glycyphagidae (Blomia tropicalis), Pyroglyphidae (Hirstia passericola); order Actinedida with the family Tarsonemidae (Iponemus radiatae). The present work discusses the possibility of the preservation of the mite groups found up to the present day. We also discuss their relationship with the environment and their importance to present populations.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2014

Rickettsia and Vector Biodiversity of Spotted Fever Focus, Atlantic Rain Forest Biome, Brazil

Nicole O. Moura-Martiniano; Erik Machado-Ferreira; Karen M. Cardoso; Flávia de Sousa Gehrke; Marinete Amorim; Andréa C. Fogaça; Carlos A. G. Soares; Gilberto Salles Gazêta; Teresinha Tizu Sato Schumaker

Rickettsia rickettsii, R. felis, and R. parkeri, strain Atlantic rainforest, have been characterized after being found in areas to which Brazilian spotted fever (BSF) is endemic (1,2), which indicates the complexity of their epidemic and enzootic cycles. The Atlantic rain forest is one of the largest and richest biomes of Brazil, and antropic action has intensely influenced its transformation. Most BSF cases and all BSF-related deaths are recorded in this biome area. Many BSF cases were recorded in Paraiba do Sul river basin, one of the most urbanized and industrialized areas of Brazil. To better understand arthropod and Rickettsia diversity in this area,, we analyzed 2,076 arthropods from Rio de Janeiro state, Atlantic rain forest biome....(AU)


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 2015

Bacteria associated with Amblyomma cajennense tick eggs

Erik Machado-Ferreira; Vinicius F. Vizzoni; Joseph Piesman; Gilberto Salles Gazêta; Carlos A. G. Soares

Abstract Ticks represent a large group of pathogen vectors that blood feed on a diversity of hosts. In the Americas, the Ixodidae ticks Amblyomma cajennense are responsible for severe impact on livestock and public health. In the present work, we present the isolation and molecular identification of a group of culturable bacteria associated with A. cajennense eggs from females sampled in distinct geographical sites in southeastern Brazil. Additional comparative analysis of the culturable bacteria from Anocentor nitens, Rhipicephalus sanguineus and Ixodes scapularis tick eggs were also performed. 16S rRNA gene sequence analyses identified 17 different bacterial types identified as Serratia marcescens, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia, Pseudomonas fluorescens, Enterobacter spp., Micrococcus luteus, Ochrobactrum anthropi, Bacillus cereus and Staphylococcus spp., distributed in 12 phylogroups. Staphylococcus spp., especially S. sciuri, was the most prevalent bacteria associated with A. cajennense eggs, occurring in 65% of the samples and also frequently observed infecting A. nitens eggs. S. maltophilia, S. marcescens and B. cereus occurred infecting eggs derived from specific sampling sites, but in all cases rising almost as pure cultures from infected A. cajennense eggs. The potential role of these bacterial associations is discussed and they possibly represent new targets for biological control strategies of ticks and tick borne diseases.


Anais Brasileiros De Dermatologia | 2003

Manifestações dermatológicas desencadeadas por ácaros da família Cheyletidae: relato de caso

Oscarina da Silva Ezequiel; Gilberto Salles Gazêta; Nicolau Maués Serra Freire

Cheyletidae mites are of great importance in the veterinary sciences, as they are associated with parasitism in birds and mammals. Yet they are barely studied as etiological factors to human dermatitis in spite of being referred to since the beginning of the 20th century. The authors propose to analyze a clinical case of dermatitis caused by mites of the Cheyletidae family in a six-month old patient. The discovery of three species of that family in the patients domiciliary ecosystem, associated to the cutaneous manifestations correlated with its definitive cure after this environment was sanitized, leads the authors to believe in the need to consider this diagnostic hypothesis for human dermatitis


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2001

Seasonal analysis of the number of aeropiles in Anocentor nitens (Neumann, 1897) (Acari: Ixodidae) from the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Gilberto Salles Gazêta; Luciana Guerim; Marinete Amorim; Nicolau Maués Serra-Freire

Variation between aeropile numbers of the right and left peritrematic plate in male and female Anocentor nitens (Neumann, 1897) is reported from a site in Brazil. From January to December 1998, 146 males and 247 females of A. nitens were recovered from Equus caballus L. in Silva Jardim District, State of Rio de Janeiro. Asymmetry of numbers of aeropiles between right and left plates occurred in 83.6% of the males and 82.2% of the females. Differences in the number of aeropiles between the sexes were not significant. Quantitative variation of aeropiles was correlated to the period of recovery, with significant asymmetry detected in August-September and November-December, mainly in males. Results suggest an adaptation, especially in the male ticks, that expresses itself as greater variation in the number of aeropiles in some periods of the year.


Edentata | 2010

Presence of Amblyomma cajennense in Wild Giant Armadillos (Priodontes maximus) of the Pantanal Matogrossense, Brazil

Flávia Regina Miranda; Rodrigo Hidalgo Friciello Teixeira; Gilberto Salles Gazêta; Nicolau Maués Serra-Freire; Marinete Amorim; Zoológico Municipal" Quinzinho de Barros". Sorocaba, Sp, Brasil.

Abstract The giant armadillo (Priodontes maximus) is the largest extant representative of the order Cingulata. Information on the parasites and diseases affecting this species is scarce. Four female and one male ticks were collected from two wild-caught, adult giant armadillos from the northern Pantanal, Mato Grosso, Brazil. All of them were identified as Amblyomma cajennense. This is the first report of A. cajennense in giant armadillos. Considering the low host specificity of this ixodid tick that may act as vector of pathogens, and the sustained encroachment of domestic animals into wildlife habitat, the risk of disease transmission from cattle to this threatened armadillo should be evaluated.


Vector Biology Journal | 2017

Climate, Ticks and Tick-Borne Diseases: Mini Review

Stefan Vilges de Oliveira; Gilberto Salles Gazêta; Rodrigo Gurgel-Gonçalves

Vector disease transmission cycles are multi-faceted phenomena characterized by their biological complexity and represented by interactions between sets of vector species, pathogens, and the environment. This review will discuss climate as a predictive variable for the presence of ticks and tick-borne diseases.


Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 2017

Rickettsia sp. Strain NOD Infecting Ticks (Amblyomma nodosum) in an Endemic Area of Spotted Fever in Brazil

Leonardo Moerbeck; Vinicius F. Vizzoni; Stefan Vilges de Oliveira; Robson da Costa Cavalcante; Gerlene Castelo Branco Coelho; Naylê F. H. Duarte; Marinete Amorim; Gilberto Salles Gazêta

Abstract:  Amblyomma nodosum ticks were collected from one collared anteater (Tamandua tetradactyla) in the Caatinga biome, Brazil. From one sample, we isolated a Rickettsia sp. that was phylogenetically close to Rickettsia sp. strain NOD, with 99.9, 100.0, and 99.8% identity for gltA, htrA, and ompA genes, respectively.


Revista Brasileira de Ciência Veterinária | 1996

lxodofauna de cervídeos no Brasil

Nicolau Maués Serra-Freire; Marinete Amorim; Gilberto Salles Gazêta; Luciana Guerim; Marta H. G Desiderio

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Marinete Amorim

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Nicolau Maués Serra Freire

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Oscarina da Silva Ezequiel

Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora

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Antônio José Mayhé Nunes

Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro

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Carlos A. G. Soares

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Helcileia Dias Santos

Federal University of Tocantins

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Valmir Gomes

Oswaldo Cruz Foundation

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