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Dive into the research topics where Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo is active.

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Featured researches published by Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2009

Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome, Central Plateau, Southeastern, and Southern Brazil

Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo; Marcos Lázaro Moreli; Ricardo Luiz Moro de Sousa; Alessandra Abel Borges; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Alex Martins Machado; Ivani Bisordi; Teresa Keico Nagasse-Sugahara; Akemi Suzuki; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Renato Pereira de Souza; Luiza Terezinha Madia de Souza; Carla Torres Braconi; Charlotte Marianna Hársi; Paolo Marinho de Andrade Zanotto

This syndrome is an increasing health problem because of human encroachment into habitats of rodent reservoirs.


Microbes and Infection | 2008

Role of mixed Th1 and Th2 serum cytokines on pathogenesis and prognosis of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome

Alessandra Abel Borges; Gelse Mazzoni Campos; Marcos Lázaro Moreli; Ricardo Luiz Moro de Souza; Fabiano Pinto Saggioro; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Márcia Cristina Livonesi; Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo

The hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) is an emerging syndrome in the Americas. The disease results from intense immune activation and changes in vascular permeability. The aim of this study was to determine the profile of serum cytokines in HPS patients looking for correlation with the clinical parameters, severity and outcome of illness. Studying 21 HPS patients, we found that IL-6 may have an important role in the pathogenesis of HPS, being associated with fatal outcome. Our results also support a mixed Th1/Th2 immune response during the course of HPS and that the magnitude of Th1 response effector cytokines is correlated to HPS severity. The decreased levels of TGF-beta observed in HPS patients suggest that immunoregulatory activity could be damaged in these patients.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2008

Expression of a hantavirus N protein and its efficacy as antigen in immune assays

Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo; Marcos Lázaro Moreli; Alessandra Abel Borges; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Ricardo Luiz Moro de Souza; Victor Hugo Aquino

Hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome (HCPS) has been recognized as an important public heath problem. Five hantaviruses associated with HCPS are currently known in Brazil: Juquitiba, Araraquara, Laguna Negra-like, Castelo dos Sonhos, and Anajatuba viruses. The laboratory diagnosis of HCPS is routinely carried out by the detection of anti-hantavirus IgM and/or IgG antibodies. The present study describes the expression of the N protein of a hantavirus detected in the blood sample of an HCPS patient. The entire S segment of the virus was amplified and found to be 1858 nucleotides long, with an open reading frame of 1287 nucleotides that encodes a protein of 429 amino acids. The nucleotide sequence described here showed a high identity with the N protein gene of Araraquara virus. The entire N protein was expressed using the vector pET200D and the Escherichia coli BL21 strain. The expression of the recombinant protein was confirmed by the detection of a 52-kDa protein by Western blot using a pool of human sera obtained from HCPS patients, and by specific IgG detection in five serum samples of HCPS patients tested by ELISA. These results suggest that the recombinant N protein could be used as an antigen for the serological screening of hantavirus infection.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2009

Síndrome pulmonar e cardiovascular por hantavírus: aspectos clínicos de uma doença emergente no sudeste brasileiro

Gelse Mazzoni Campos; Alessandra Abel Borges; Soraya Jabur Badra; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Ricardo Luiz Moro de Souza; Marcos Lázaro Moreli; Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo

Pulmonary and cardiovascular syndrome due to hantavirus is a disease caused by inhalation of aerosols from the excreta of wild rodents contaminated by viruses of the Bunyaviridae family. We studied the clinical and laboratory manifestations of 70 cases that occurred in the region of Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil, between 1998 and 2007. The frequency of symptoms was as follows: dyspnea (87%), fever (81%), coughing (44%), headache (34%), tachycardia (81%), low arterial blood pressure (56%), metabolic acidosis (57%), lymphocytopenia (51%), hematocrit > 45% (70%), leukocytosis with left deviation (67%), creatinine (51%) and urea (42%). Mortality (54.3%) occurred mainly on the fourth day. Respiratory insufficiency, low arterial blood pressure and shock occurred after 24 to 48 hours. High hematocrit and decreased platelet levels were signs strongly suggestive of the disease. The diagnostic hypothesis of atypical pneumonia was associated with a good prognosis (p = 0.0136). Fluid infusion greater than 2,000 ml and arterial hypotension were associated with a poor prognosis (p = 0.0286 and p = 0.0453).


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2010

Diagnosis of hantavirus infection in humans and rodents in Ribeirão Preto, State of São Paulo, Brazil

Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Alessandra Abel Borges; Gelse Mazzoni Campos; Alex Martins Machado; Fabiano Pinto Saggioro; Gilberto dos Santos Sabino Júnior; Soraya Jabur Badra; Alberto Anastacio Amarilla Ortiz; Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo

INTRODUCTION Hantavirus pulmonary and cardiovascular syndrome (HPCS) is an emerging serious disease in the Americas. Hantaviruses (Bunyaviridae) are the causative agents of this syndrome and are mainly transmitted through inhalation of aerosols containing the excreta of wild rodents. In the Ribeirão Preto region (state of São Paulo, Brazil), HPCS has been reported since 1998, caused by the Araraquara virus (ARAV), for which Necromys lasiurus is the rodent reservoir. This study aimed to show diagnostic results relating to infection in humans and rodents, obtained at the Virology Research Center of the Ribeirão Preto School of Medicine, University of São Paulo, between 2005 and 2008. METHODS HPCS was diagnosed by means of ELISA and/or RT-PCR in 11 (21.2%) out of 52 suspected cases, and 54.4% of these were fatal. Furthermore, 595 wild rodents (Necromys lasiurus, Akodon sp, Calomys tener and Oligoryzomys sp) were caught between 2005 and 2008. RESULTS Fifteen (2.5%) of these rodents presented antibodies for hantavirus, as follows: Necromys lasiurus (4%), Calomys tener (1.9%) and Akodon sp (1.5%). Nucleotide sequences obtained through RT-PCR from one HPCS patient and one Calomys tener rodent were compared with hantavirus sequences from GenBank, which showed that both were homologous with ARAV. CONCLUSIONS This work corroborates previous studies showing that ARAV is the hantavirus causing HPCS in the Ribeirão Preto region. It also shows that rodents infected with hantavirus represent a constant risk of transmission of this virus to man.


Archives of Virology | 2010

Association of −308G/A polymorphism in the tumor necrosis factor-α gene promoter with susceptibility to development of hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome in the Ribeirão Preto region, Brazil

Alessandra Abel Borges; Eduardo A. Donadi; Gelse Mazzoni Campos; Marcos Lázaro Moreli; Ricardo Luiz Moro de Sousa; Fabiano Pinto Saggioro; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Soraya Jabur Badra; Neifi Hassan Saloum Deghaide; Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo

Activation of the immune response in hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome (HCPS) leads to a high TNF production, probably contributing to the disease. The polymorphic TNF2 allele (TNF −308G/A) has been associated with increased cytokine production. We investigated the association of the TNF2 allele with the outcome of hantavirus infection in Brazilian patients. A total of 122 hantavirus-exposed individuals (26 presenting HCPS and 96 only hantavirus seroconversion) were studied. The TNF2 allele was more frequently found in HCPS patients than in individuals with positive serology for hantavirus but without a history of HCPS illness, suggesting that the TNF2 allele could represent a risk factor for developing HCPS.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2012

A retrospective serologic survey of hantavirus infections in the county of Cássia dos Coqueiros, State of São Paulo, Brazil

Soraya Jabur Badra; Felipe Gonçalves Mota Maia; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Gilberto Sabino dos Santos Junior; Gelse Mazzoni Campos; Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo; Afonso Dinis Costa Passos

INTRODUCTION In recent years, hantavirus infections producing severe diseases have obtained an increased attention from public health authorities from the countries of Eurasia to the Americas. Brazil has reported 1,300 cases of hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome (HCPS) from 1993 to 2010, with about 80 of them occurring in the northeast of the State of São Paulo, with 48% fatality rate. Araraquara virus was the causative agent of HCPS in the region. Considering that hantaviruses causing human disease in the Americas were unknown until 1993, we have looked for hantavirus infections in the population of Cássia dos Coqueiros county, northeast of the State of São Paulo, Brazil, before this time. This county has about 2,800 inhabitants and an economy based on agriculture, including cultivation of Brachiaria decumbens grass. The grass seeds are an important rodent attraction, facilitating transmission of hantavirus to man. Four HCPS cases were reported so far in the county. METHODS In this study, 1,876 sera collected from 1987 to 1990 were tested for IgG to hantavirus by IgG-ELISA, using the N recombinant protein of Araraquara virus as antigen. RESULTS Positive results were observed in 89 (4.7%) samples, which were all collected in 1987. The positivity among urban inhabitants was 5.3%, compared with 4.3% among those living in rural areas. CONCLUSIONS Our results showed that hantavirus infections occurred in Cássia dos Coqueiros, completely unrecognized, even before hantaviruses were described in the Americas.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2012

Prevalence of serum antibodies to hantavirus in a rural population from the southern state of Santa Catarina, Brazil

Gregório Wrublevski Pereira; André Martins Teixeira; Mirela Silva de Souza; Alixandre Dias Braga; Gilberto Sabino dos Santos Junior; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo; Alessandra Abel Borges

INTRODUCTION Rodent-borne hantaviruses cause severe human diseases. We completed a serological survey of hantavirus infection in rural inhabitants of Turvo County, in the southern State of Santa Catarina, Brazil, in which seropositivity for hantavirus was correlated to previous disease in the participants. METHODS The levels of IgG antibodies to hantavirus Araraquara in the sera of 257 individuals were determined using an immunoenzymatic assay. RESULTS IgG antibodies to hantavirus were found in 2.3% of the participants. All seropositive participants reported previous disease with symptoms suggestive of hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome. CONCLUSIONS Human infections causing unreported cardiopulmonary syndrome probably occur in the southern State of Santa Catarina.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2013

Serologic survey of hantavirus in a rural population from the northern State of Mato Grosso, Brazil

Ioni Oliveira Santos; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo; Maria Regina Andrade de Azevedo; Neil Ferreira Novo; Celidéia Aparecida Coppi Vaz

INTRODUCTION Hantavirus is a genus of ribonucleic acid (RNA) viruses included in the family Bunyaviridae. Hantaviruses are rodent-borne zoonoses that, in the last 18 years, became an emergent public health problem in the Americas, causing a severe cardiopulmonary syndrome. This disease has no specific treatment and has a high case fatality. The transmission of hantavirus to man occurs by inhaling aerosols of rodent excreta. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of antibodies to hantavirus in the population of the rural settlement of Tupã in the county of Marcelândia, state of Mato Grosso, Brazil. METHODS The participants of the serologic survey were visited at their homes and selected randomly among the settlement population. Blood samples of the participants were collected by venopuncture. The serum samples were tested by an IgG-ELISA using an N recombinant protein of Araraquara hantavirus as antigen, using the protocol previously established by Figueiredo et al. RESULTS IgG antibodies to hantavirus were detected in 7 (13%) of the 54 participants. The positivity was higher among men. It was observed that there was an association of seropositivity to hantavirus within the participants born in the south of Brazil. CONCLUSIONS The results suggest that, in this rural area, everyone is exposed to the same risk of becoming infected with hantavirus, and, therefore, there is a need to intensify surveillance activities and education of the local people to prevent this viral infection.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2010

Standardization of an ELISA test using a recombinant nucleoprotein from the Junin virus as the antigen and serological screening for arenavirus among the population of Nova Xavantina, State of Mato Grosso

Alex Martins Machado; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Gelse Maria Campos; Mario Enrique Lozano; Aline Rafaela da Silva Rodrigues Machado; Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo

INTRODUCTION Arenavirus hemorrhagic fever is a severe emerging disease. METHODS Considering that the levels of antibodies against arenavirus in the Brazilian population are completely unknown, we have standardized an ELISA test for detecting IgG antibodies using a recombinant nucleoprotein from the Junin virus as the antigen. This protein was obtained by inserting the gene of the Junin virus nucleoprotein into the genome of Autographa californica nucleopolyhedrovirus, using the Bac-to-Bac baculovirus expression system. This recombinant baculovirus was used to infect S. frugiperda cells (SF9). RESULTS The infection resulted in synthesis of high concentrations of recombinant protein. This protein was detected on 12.5% polyacrylamide gel and by means of Western blot. Using the standardized ELISA test, 343 samples from the population of Nova Xavantina were analyzed. We observed that 1.4% of the serum samples (five samples) presented antibody titers against arenavirus. CONCLUSIONS These results show the population studied may present exposure to arenavirus infection.

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