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Dive into the research topics where Lisandra Akemi Suzuki is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisandra Akemi Suzuki.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2001

Evaluation of serological markers for the immunodiagnosis of acute acquired toxoplasmosis

Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Rosangela J. Rocha; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi

The detection of specific IgM antibodies has been the most frequently used serological marker for diagnosing recent toxoplasmosis. However, the persistence of specific IgM antibodies in some patients and the use of tests with a low specificity have complicated the interpretation of serological results when toxoplasmosis is suspected. The purpose of the present study was to determine the value of newer serological techniques in the diagnosis of acute acquired toxoplasmosis. Sixty-four sera, 31 from patients with Toxoplasma gondii infection and 33 from patients with latent infection, were tested. Anti-T. gondii IgA was measured by two antibody capture ELISA tests (Platelia Toxo IgA and ETI-TOXOK A) and an automated direct ELISA (IMx Toxo IgA); all three assays detected antibody levels compatible with a recent infection in sera from all 31 patients with acute toxoplasmosis. However, significant levels of IgA were also detected with high frequency by all three assays in sera from patients with latent infection. IgE antibodies detected by IgE immunosorbent agglutination assay (ISAGA) were present in 26 (84%) of 31 patients with acute toxoplasmosis and in sera from two subjects with latent infection taken >1 year after the beginning of the clinical symptoms of infection. Thirty (97%) of 31 patients with a recent T. gondii infection and 15 (45%) of 33 subjects with latent infection had an AC/HS pattern compatible with acute toxoplasmosis. The avidity of T. gondii IgG was evaluated by two methods. One method was based on the titration of each serum sample and calculation of the titres, in the absence and presence of urea, in relation to a defined cut-off value. In the other method, a single serum dilution was used and the absorbances of the reactions in the presence and absence of urea were compared. The titration method was more sensitive for diagnosing recent primary infection; all 31 sera from patients with acute toxoplasmosis had avidity indices compatible with acute toxoplasmosis by the titration method, whereas with the single dilution method, sera from four patients had equivocal results. In the 33 individuals with latent infection, similar results were obtained with the two avidity methods; only one serum sample had a non-compatible avidity value with the titration method. The results obtained in the present study show that the current serological markers used for diagnosing acute acquired toxoplasmosis have significant limitations. The data suggest that determination of the avidity of T. gondii-specific IgG by the titration method in patients with detectable IgM antibodies defines most accurately the stage of infection by T. gondii.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1999

Serological diagnosis of toxoplasmosis: usefulness of IgA detection and IgG avidity determination in a patient with a persistent IgM antibody response to Toxoplasma gondii

Luciana C. Bertozzi; Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi

We report the detection of specific IgA antibodies and the determination of IgG avidity in sequential serum samples from a patient exhibiting significant levels of Toxoplasma-specific IgM antibodies for seven years after the onset of the clinical symptoms of toxoplasmosis. IgM antibodies were detected by an indirect immunofluorescence test and by three commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA). Anti-T. gondii IgA was quantified by the alpha-capture ELISA technique using a commercial kit. As defined by the manufacturer of the IgA ELISA test used, most patients with acute toxoplasmosis have antibody levels > 40 arbitrary units per ml (AU/mL). At this cut-off level, the patient still had a positive ELISA result (45 AU/mL) in a serum sample taken one year after the beginning of clinical manifestations. The IgG avidity-ELISA test was performed with the Falcon assay screening test (F.A.S.T.(R)) - ELISA system. Avidity indices compatible with a recent Toxoplasma infection were found only in serum samples taken during the first 5 months after the onset of the clinical symptoms of toxoplasmosis. These results show that the interpretation of positive IgM results as indicative of recently acquired toxoplasmosis requires additional laboratory confirmation either by other tests or by the demonstration of a significant rise in the antibody titers in sequential serum samples.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2002

A rapid latex agglutination test for the detection of anti-cysticercus antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)

Sérgio M. Rocha; Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Andréa D.T. da Silva; Gisele Cristina Arruda; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi

Simple and rapid latex-based diagnostic tests have been used for detecting specific antigens or antibodies in several diseases. In this article, we present the preliminary results obtained with a latex agglutination test (LAT) for diagnosing neurocysticercosis by detection of antibodies in CSF. A total of 43 CSF samples were assayed by the LAT: 19 CSF samples from patients with neurocysticercosis and 24 CSF samples from patients with other neurologic disorders (neurosyphilis, n = 8; neurotoxoplasmosis, n = 3; viral meningitis, n = 4, chronic headache, n = 9). The LAT exhibited 89.5% sensitivity and 75% specificity. The use of LAT seems to be an additional approach for the screening of neurocysticercosis with advantage of simplicity and rapidity. Further studies could be performed using purified antigens and serum samples.


Prenatal Diagnosis | 2008

Assessment of the value of detecting specific IgA antibodies for the diagnosis of a recently acquired primary Toxoplasma infection

Fernanda Santos Nascimento; Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi

To assess the value of detecting IgA antibodies for the diagnosis of a recently acquired primary Toxoplasma infection.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2007

Evaluation of Taenia solium and Taenia crassiceps cysticercal antigens for immunodiagnosis of neurocysticercosis using ELISA on cerebrospinal fluid samples

Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Gisele Cristina Arruda; Elizabeth Maria Aparecida Barasnevicius Quagliato; Qláudio Lúcio Rossi

The efficacy of whole parasite and vesicular fluid antigen extracts from Taenia solium and Taenia crassiceps cysticerci for immunodiagnosis of neurocysticercosis was evaluated using ELISA on cerebrospinal fluid samples. Anticysticercal IgG antibodies were assayed in cerebrospinal fluid samples from 23 patients with neurocysticercosis and 35 patients with other neurological disorders. The ELISA reaction for the whole Taenia solium cysticercal extract showed 91.3% sensitivity and 94.3% specificity, whereas the sensitivity and specificity of the ELISA for the whole Taenia crassiceps cysticercal extract were 87% and 94.3%, respectively. The ELISA reactions for vesicular fluid from Taenia solium or Taenia crassiceps showed 91.3% sensitivity and 97.1% specificity. Considering the results obtained from the four antigen preparations, vesicular fluid from Taenia solium and Taenia crassiceps cysticerci may be useful as a source of antigens for immunological reactions that are used for detecting specific antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid samples from patients with neurocysticercosis.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2011

Evaluation of two Taenia solium cysticercal antigenic preparations (vesicular fluid and a glycoprotein fraction with affinity for lentil lectin) for the immunodiagnosis of neurocysticercosis by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)

Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the performance of two antigenic preparations (vesicular fluid - VF and a glycoprotein fraction, LLa-Gp fraction, purified from a whole parasite extract by lentil lectin affinity chromatography) from Taenia solium cysticerci for the immunodiagnosis of neurocysticercosis. METHOD Fifty-six cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples (22 from patients with neurocysticercosis and 34 from patients with other neurological disorders) and 57 serum samples (22 from patients with neurocysticercosis, 18 from patients with other infections and 17 from presumably healthy persons) were assayed for anticysticercal IgG antibodies with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). RESULTS The VF ELISA showed 100% sensitivity and specificity in CSF and serum samples, whereas the sensitivity and specificity of the LLa-Gp ELISA were, respectively, 90.9% and 97.1%, with the CSF samples and 95.5% and 100% with serum samples. There was no significant difference in the sensitivity and specificity of the two antigenic preparations used to screen CSF and serum samples. CONCLUSION Considering the complexity and high cost of obtaining the LLa-Gp fraction, VF could be more suitable for screening specific antibodies by ELISA in CSF and serum samples from patients with neurocysticercosis.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2013

Evaluation of cysticercus-specific IgG (total and subclasses) and IgE antibody responses in cerebrospinal fluid samples from patients with neurocysticercosis showing intrathecal production of specific IgG antibodies

Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi

In the present study, an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) standardized with vesicular fluid of Taenia solium cysticerci was used to screen for IgG (total and subclasses) and IgE antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from patients with neurocysticercosis showing intrathecal production of specific IgG antibodies and patients with other neurological disorders. The following results were obtained: IgG-ELISA: 100% sensitivity (median of the ELISA absorbances (MEA)=1.17) and 100% specificity; IgG1-ELISA: 72.7% sensitivity (MEA=0.49) and 100% specificity; IgG2-ELISA: 81.8% sensitivity (MEA=0.46) and 100% specificity; IgG3-ELISA: 63.6% sensitivity (MEA=0.12) and 100% specificity; IgG4-ELISA: 90.9% sensitivity (MEA=0.85) and 100% specificity; IgE-ELISA 93.8% sensitivity (MEA=0.60) and 100% specificity. There were no significant differences between the sensitivities and specificities in the detection of IgG-ELISA and IgE-ELISA, although in CSF samples from patients with neurocysticercosis the MEA of the IgG-ELISA was significantly higher than that of the IgE-ELISA. The sensitivity and MEA values of the IgG4-ELISA were higher than the corresponding values for the other IgG subclasses. Future studies should address the contribution of IgG4 and IgE antibodies to the physiopathology of neurocysticercosis.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2015

Toxoplasma-SPECIFIC IgG SUBCLASS ANTIBODY RESPONSE IN CEREBROSPINAL FLUID SAMPLES FROM PATIENTS WITH CEREBRAL TOXOPLASMOSIS.

Fernanda Santos Nascimento; Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Nilson Branco; Regina Maura Bueno Franco; Paula Durante Andrade; Sandra Cecília Botelho Costa; Marcelo N. Pedro; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi

SUMMARY Cerebral toxoplasmosis can be highly debilitating and occasionally fatal in persons with immune system deficiencies. In this study, we evaluated the Toxoplasma gondii-specific IgG subclass antibody response in 19 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from patients with cerebral toxoplasmosis who had a positive IgG anti-T. gondiiELISA standardized with a cyst antigen preparation. There were no significant differences between the rates of positivity and the antibody concentrations (arithmetic means of the ELISA absorbances, MEA) for IgG1 and IgG2, but the rates of positivity and MEA values for these two IgG subclasses were significantly higher than those for IgG3 and IgG4. The marked IgG2 response in CSF from patients with cerebral toxoplasmosis merits further investigation.


Schizophrenia Research | 2012

Prevalence of antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii in patients with schizophrenia and mood disorders

Fernanda Santos Nascimento; Clarissa de Rosalmeida Dantas; Mário Pincelli Netto; Lucas Francisco Botequio Mella; Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Cláudio E. M. Banzato; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2013

Evaluation of cysticercus-specific IgG (total and subclasses) and IgE antibody responses in cerebrospinal fluid samples from patients with neurocysticercosis showing intrathecal production of specific IgG antibodies Avaliação das respostas de anticorpos anti-cisticercos IgG (total e subclasses) e IgE em amostras de líquido cefalorraquidiano de pacientes com neurocisticercose apresentando produção intratecal de anticorpos específicos IgG

Lisandra Akemi Suzuki; Cláudio Lúcio Rossi

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