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Dive into the research topics where Hector Davila is active.

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Featured researches published by Hector Davila.


Microbiology and Immunology | 1995

Acute and Chronic Experimental Trypanosoma cruzi Infection in the Rat. Response to Systemic Treatment with Recombinant Rat Interferon-Gamma

Silvia Revelli; Hector Davila; Maria E. Ferro; Marta Romero-Piffiguer; Orlando Musso; Jose Valenti; Jorge Bernabo; Ernesto Falcoff; Jeanne Wietzerbin; Oscar Bottasso

We examined the effects of recombinant rat inteferon‐gamma (IFN‐γ) injections on the parasitologic, serologic, immunologic and histopathologic features of acute and chronic experimental Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi) infections in “l” rats. Upon infection at weaning, two rat groups were allocated to receive a 20‐day cycle of IFN‐γ injections, 20,000 IU/rat each, which started at 1, and 7 days post‐infection (pi). Treatment with IFN‐γ, initiated at either 1 or 7 days pi, resulted in comparatively lower peak parasitemias (P<0.02) but in similar levels of anti‐T. cruzi circulating antibodies and serum IFN‐γ activities. The latter appeared significantly increased during acute infection whereas biologically active tumor necrosis factor was virtually undetectable in serum from infected rats regardless of whether they had been given IFN‐γ or not. The prevalence of chronic focal myocarditis in IFN‐γ‐treated infected rats showed no differences with respect to the one recorded in control‐infected counterparts. The inverse CD4/CD8 ratio of spleen and lymph node T cells that usually accompanies chronic infection was reversed by IFN‐γ. Mononuclear cells carrying class III‐A and I‐E molecules, that were found to have increased at both compartments, appeared also modified upon IFN‐γ treatment with an overincrease of I‐A‐positive cells, and a normalization of I‐E‐bearing cells.


Immunology Letters | 1993

Enhanced myocardial lesions in chronically Trypanosoma cruzi-infected rats subjected to adult thymectomy

Oscar Bottasso; Silvia Revelli; Hector Davila; JoséL. Valenti; Orlando C. Musso; Maria Elena Ferro; Marta Romero-Piffiguer; J. C Morini

Control animals and rats infected 90 days earlier, by inoculation of 1 x 10(6) trypomastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi at weaning, were subjected to adult thymectomy (ATx) or sham operation (S-ATx) and assessed 3 months later for the presence of myocardial lesions and levels of lymph node and spleen T-cell populations. Chronic focal myocarditis (CFM) developed in 78% and 84% of S-ATx or ATx infected rats, respectively. While the two groups of infected rats did not differ as to the occurrence of myocardial lesions, large foci of CFM were more prevalent in ATx infected rats. Chronic T. cruzi (Tc) infection resulted in decreased CD4+ and increased CD8+ lymph node and spleen cell, with CD8+ lymphocytes being lowered to normal values in the spleen of the ATx infected group. It is suggested that ATx might act by interfering with a down-regulating immunoregulatory mechanism, leading to an exacerbation of autoimmune reactions believed to be involved in the generation of myocardial damage.


Immunotherapy | 2011

Successful immunotherapy of canine flea allergy with injected Actinomycetales preparations

Alicia Marro; Mónica Pirles; Laura Schiaffino; Liliana Bin; Hector Davila; Oscar Bottasso; Graham Mcintyre; Paul R Ripley; Cynthia Stanford; John Stanford

AIMS Can heat-killed, borate-buffered suspensions of Gordonia bronchialis, Rhodococcus coprophilus or Tsukamurella inchonensis be used to treat canine flea allergy? MATERIALS & METHODS Organisms cultured on Sautons medium into stationary phase were autoclaved in borate-buffered saline and stored at 10 mg wet weight/ml. Intradermal injections of 0.1 ml containing 1 mg of bacilli were administered on the first and 20th days of the study. G. bronchialis and R. coprophilus were most effective in a pilot study of a small number of dogs with flea allergy. A larger number of affected dogs were then randomized to receive placebo or either of the two selected reagents. The extent and severity of allergic signs and symptoms were scored and blood samples were collected just before the first injection and 28 days after the second. RESULTS Both selected reagents reduced the extent and severity of lesions (p < 0.001) and reduced scratching. Eosinophil numbers were reduced (p < 0.0001) between the first and second assessment. CONCLUSIONS Injections of G. bronchialis or R. coprophilus effectively reduce the signs and symptoms of flea allergy in dogs.


International Journal of Immunopharmacology | 2000

Protected Trypanosoma cruzi infection in rats born to mothers receiving interferon-gamma during gestation is associated with a decreased intramacrophage parasite growth and preferential synthesis of specific IgG2b antibodies

Griselda Didoli; Hector Davila; Sara Feldman; Ricardo José Di Masso; Silvia Revelli; Oscar Bottasso

We demonstrated that administration of interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) to pregnant rats conferred partial resistance in their offspring to further challenge with Trypanosoma cruzi. Because of the effects of IFN-gamma on macrophage activation and immunoglobulin isotype selection, offspring were now studied to ascertain whether this intervention modifies the in vitro replication of T. cruzi and nitric oxide (NO) production by peritoneal macrophages (PE), together with the anti-T. cruzi IgG isotypes. To evaluate the possibility of a detrimental effect of IFN-gamma, serum levels of anti-sulphatide autoantibodies were also investigated. Offspring were born to mothers undergoing one of the following procedures during gestation: treatment with recombinant rat IFN-gamma, 50,000 IU/rat, five times/week for 3 weeks, which was started on the day of mating; infection with 10(6) trypomastigotes of T. cruzi at 7, 14, and 21 days after mating plus IFN-gamma treatment as given to the former group; the same protocol except that physiological saline was injected instead of IFN-gamma; injection of physiological saline only. Offspring were challenged at weaning with a similar dose of T. cruzi, to constitute four groups of infected young, plus an additional group of age-matched uninfected rats born to control mothers. PE were harvested at day 7 postinfection (pi), exposed to parasites and further investigated for the replication of T. cruzi and NO production, whereas ELISA studies for measuring serum anti-T. cruzi IgG subclasses and anti-sulphatide autoantibodies were performed at day 30 pi. The number of intracellular parasites in PE was markedly decreased in young born to IFN-gamma-treated mothers, this not being accompanied by higher nitrite levels in culture supernatants. Offspring delivered by IFN-gamma-treated mothers showed no higher serum concentrations of anti-sulphatide autoantibodies, but exhibited a preferential synthesis of anti-T. cruzi IgG2b antibodies. This rat isotype is known to fix complement and constitutes the rat counterpart of IgG2a mouse immunoglobulins whose synthesis is favoured by IFN-gamma.


Immunotherapy | 2011

Maternal immunization with actinomycetales immunomodulators reduces parasitemias in offspring challenged with Trypanosoma cruzi

Hector Davila; Griselda Didoli; Oscar Bottasso; John Stanford

This article describes the first use of heat-killed, borate-buffered preparations of aerobic actinomycetales to immunize pregnant animals in order to determine the effect on their pregnancy and fertility and the survival coefficients of their offspring. Pregnant rats received three injections of Gordonia bronchialis, Rhodococcus coprophylus or physiological saline and a proportion of their offspring were challenged with live Trypanosoma cruzi at the time of weaning. Levels of parasitemia and, in some animals, of the cytokines IFN-γ and IL-10 were measured. The progress of pregnancy, fertility and survival of offspring were unaffected by the maternal immunizations. The offspring of rats immunized with G. bronchialis displayed significantly reduced parasitemias, with increased levels of IFN-γ and reduced levels of IL-10, 4 days after challenge. The offspring of rats immunized with R. coprophylus displayed greater parasitemias than did those of the control group. These unexpected results are discussed and their causation considered.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1994

Electrocardiographic alteration among first degree relatives with serologic evidence of Trypanosoma cruzi infection: a sibship study

Julio Morini; Héctor Berra; Hector Davila; Juan F. Pividori; Oscar A. Botasso

To analyze whether electrocardiographic alterations (ECGA) in patients with antibodies to Trypanosoma cruzi showed a pattern of familial aggregation, a sample of 379 young adults (166 men and 213 women) distributed in sibships, were assessed for the presence of anti-T. cruzi antibodies, and subjected to a complete clinical examination and a standard resting electrocardiogram (ECG). Positive T. cruzi serology was detected in 165 individuals, 48 of them showing an abnormal ECG (overall prevalence 29%). One hundred and eleven seropositive individuals were distributed in 45 sibships, each of them constituted by more than one seropositive sib, with ECGA being present in 34 out of these patients. Seropositive subjects with ECGA were detected in 27 sibships. Since the index case within each sibship is counted exactly once, affected individuals selected at random as propositi were extracted to calculate the prevalence of ECGA among first degree relatives of probands. Abnormal ECGs were recorded in 7 out of 45 sibs yielding a prevalence that did not differ from estimations registered in the general population or seropositive sibs. Data from the present sample show no familial aggregation for the occurrence of ECGA in patients with T. cruzi. infection.


International Journal of Immunopharmacology | 1996

Chronic Trypanosoma cruzi infection in the rat: Cyclophosphamide-induced recovery of adjuvant arthritis correlates with changes in the levels of lymph node T-lymphocytes and class II+ cells

Griselda Didoli; Silvia Revelli; Hector Davila; Maria Elena Ferro; Marta Romero-Piffiguer; Oscar Bottasso

We have previously reported that treatment with cyclophosphamide (Cy) reversed the partial resistance of chronically Trypanosoma cruzi-infected rats to adjuvant-induced arthritis (AA) and caused a slight enhancement of arthritis in controls, when given 48 h before induction. To ascertain whether this Cy effect could be associated with regional changes of immunocompetent cells, popliteal lymph nodes were studied for their T-cell subsets and cells carrying class II major histocompatibility (MHC) antigens (1-A and 1-E molecules). Analysis at the time of arthritis induction revealed that infected rats receiving Cy 48 h earlier appeared to have recovered from the inverse balance of major T-cell subsets and showed 1-E+ cells lowered to normal, whereas values from control rats remained unchanged by Cy treatment. Establishment of AA was associated with substantial changes in the phenotype of lymph node cells that drained the affected limb. Changes were equally recorded in control and infected arthritic rats, and consisted of a significant raise of CD4+ and I-A+ cells along with lowered numbers of CD8+ and I-E+ cells. Treatment with Cy lowered even further the levels of CD8+ cells, while causing no affectation in the number of CD4+ cells that remained increased as in the arthritic counterparts receiving no Cy. Comparative analysis of class II MHC+ cells in Cy-treated rats revealed an additional decrease of I-E+ cells in draining lymph nodes from infected and control rats, which coincided with a simultaneous increase in I-A+ cells in the uninfected group. It is suggested that a deletion of a regulatory T-cell subset as well as an improved presentation of arthritogenic peptides may at least underlie the Cy-induced enhancement of the arthritic response.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1996

Protection of young rats from acute trypanosoma cruzi infection by interferon-gamma given to their mothers during pregnancy

Hector Davila; Silvia Revelli; Griselda Didoli; Jorge Bernabo; Jeanne Wietzerbin; Ernesto Falcoff; Oscar Bottasso


Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 1997

Depressed autoantibody synthesis in Trypanosoma cruzi-infected rats born to mothers undergoing this infection during pregnancy

Sara Feldman; Silvia Revelli; Hector Davila; Alberto Marcipar; Miguel Rojas; Jose L Avila; Oscar Bottasso


Immunopharmacology | 1997

Attenuated Trypanosoma cruzi infection in young rats nursed on infected mothers undergoing interferon-gamma treatment during pregnancy

Hector Davila; Silvia Revelli; Carina Uasuf; Griselda Didoli; Hilda Moreno; Ernesto Falcoff; Oscar Bottasso

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Oscar Bottasso

Facultad de Ciencias Médicas

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Silvia Revelli

Facultad de Ciencias Médicas

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Griselda Didoli

Facultad de Ciencias Médicas

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Maria Elena Ferro

National University of Cordoba

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Sara Feldman

Facultad de Ciencias Médicas

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John Stanford

University College London

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Carina Uasuf

Facultad de Ciencias Médicas

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