Lucimara Aparecida Alves
Universidade Estadual de Londrina
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Featured researches published by Lucimara Aparecida Alves.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2006
Daniela Dib Gonçalves; Paulo Sérgio Teles; Célia Rosimarie dos Reis; Fabiana Maria Ruiz Lopes; Roberta Lemos Freire; Italmar Teodorico Navarro; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Ernest Eckehardt Muller; Julio Cesar de Freitas
Leptospirosis, brucellosis and toxoplasmosis are widely-distributed zoonosis, being the man an accidental participant of their epidemiological chains. The aim of this paper was to make a seroepidemiological report and identify occupational and environmental variables related to these illnesses in 150 workers in a slaughterhouse in the Northern region of Paraná. For the diagnosis of leptospirosis a microscopical seroagglutination test was applied; for brucellosis, the tamponated acidified antigen test and the 2-mercaptoetanol tests were used, and for toxoplasmosis the indirect immunofluorescence reaction test. For each employee an epidemiological survey was filled, which investigated occupational and environmental variables which could be associated with these infections. Positive results for leptospirosis were found in 4.00% of the samples, for brucellosis in 0.66% of samples and toxoplasmosis in 70.00%. From the three diseases researched, only the results for leptospirosis suggest occupational infection.
Ciencia Rural | 2004
Julio Cesar de Freitas; Francielle Gibson da Silva; Rosângela Claret de Oliveira; Ádina Cléia Botazzo Delbem; Ernst Eckehardt Müller; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Paulo Sérgio Teles
Leptospira isolation allows definitive diagnosis of the infection. Contamination by microorganisms is one of the inconveniences of the culture. The objective of this study was to describe the isolation of Leptospira from dogs, bovine and swine naturally infected. Urine samples from 14 dogs and three bovines, and kidney, liver, ovary, and uterus body samples from 36 slaughtered sows with unknown health history, were used. The urine and organ samples were cultured in culture medium. Modified Ellinghausen-McCullough-Johnson-Harris medium (EMJH) culture medium was used with addition of 5-fluorouracil, chloramphenicol, vancomycin, nalidixic acid and neomycin. Incubation was performed at 28oC for 24 hours, followed by subculture in modified EMJH without antibiotics. The cultures were assessed weekly for up to eight weeks for the dog and swine samples and for up to 16 weeks for the bovine samples. With this methodology, Leptospira spp could be isolated from 11 dogs, two bovines and liver fragments from two sows.
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2007
Vanessa Yumi Hashimoto; Daniela Dib Gonçalves; Francielle Gibson da Silva; Rosângela Claret de Oliveira; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Peter Reichmann; Ernest Eckehardt Muller; Julio Cesar de Freitas
A total of 320 horses were studied in this paper, both male and female, between two and 17 years of age, which were used for traction of wagons in the urban area of the municipality of Londrina (PR). These animals were kept, after their daily work, in abandoned areas or plots, in the outskirts of the urban area of the city. When these animals were attended by the veterinarians, between 1996 and 2005, none of them presented symptoms suggesting leptospirosis. The most frequent reasons for the visit were loss of weight, unwillingness for work, parasitism, laminess, and wounds. Microscopic Seroagglutination Test (SAM), with 22 Leptospira serovars, was performed in sera sample from all these animals. The aim of this study was to investigate the occurrence of antibodies against Leptospira spp. in horses from the urban area of Londrina (PR). From the samples tested, 214 (66.88%) were considered positive, with titers between 100 and 3200, being that 49 (22.90%) presented antibodies against a single serovar of Leptospira, and 165 (77.10%) samples presented antibodies against two or more serovars simultaneously, where in 88 (53.33%) it was possible to characterize the most likely probable serovar. Antibodies against the serovar Icterohaemorrhagiae were detected in 32 (23.36%) animals.
Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2013
Daniela Dib Gonçalves; Aline do Nascimento Benitez; Fabiana Maria Ruiz Lopes-Mori; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Roberta Lemos Freire; Italmar Teodorico Navarro; Maria Aparecida Zanella Santana; Luís Roberto Alves dos Santos; Teresa Carreira; Maria Luísa Vieira; Julio Cesar de Freitas
The aim of this study was to conduct a serological survey for Lyme diseases, brucellosis, leptospirosis and toxoplasmosis and identify the risk variables related to these zoonoses in humans living in the rural area of Jataizinho, state of Parana, Brazil. A total of 63 rural properties were surveyed. Additionally, 207 serum samples collected from these rural area inhabitants were tested for indirect immunofluorescence (IFI) and western blots (WB) were performed to detect Borrelia burgdorferi (sensu lato); a tamponated acidified antigen test (AAT) and 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME) were used to detect antibodies of Brucella abortus; the microscopic agglutination test (MAT) was carried out to detect antibodies anti-Leptospira spp. and IFI was used to find antibodies of Toxoplasma gondii. Two of the samples (0.96%) were reactive for Lyme borreliosis, three (1.4%) for brucellosis, 25 (12.1%) for leptospirosis and 143 (69.1%) for toxoplasmosis. Although the town of Jataizinho has a human development index (IDH) that was considered to be average (0.733) in the state of Parana, the low social, economic and cultural conditions of the population from small rural properties have resulted in lack of basic information on animal health and direct or indirect contact with the various species of domestic animals, wildlife and ticks have probably contributed to the prevalence levels found. These results show the need for additional regional studies in order to determine the epidemiological characteristics of these diseases as well as their respective vectors and reservoirs so that effective prophylaxis can be administered in the human population.
Semina-ciencias Agrarias | 2010
Aline do Nascimento Benitez; Giovana Giuffrida Rodrigues; Daniela Dib Gonçalves; Julieta Catarina Burke; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Ernest Eckehardt Muller; Julio Cesar de Freitas
Semina-ciencias Agrarias | 2008
Vanessa Yumi Hashimoto; Eleine Kuroki Anzai; Bruna Azevedo de Carvalho Lima; Francielle Gibson da Silva; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Roberta Lemos Freire; Paulo Sérgio Teles; João Luis Garcia; Ernst Eckehardt Müller; Julio Cesar de Freitas
Archive | 2005
Rosângela C. Oliveira; J. C. de Freitas; Francielle Gibson da Silva; E. M. Souza; C. B. Delbem; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Ernest Eckehardt Muller; M. S. Balarim; Antônio Carlos Faria dos Reis; T. N. Batista; Silvio Arruda Vasconcellos
Revista de Ciência Veterinária e Saúde Pública | 2016
Raffaella Menegheti Mainardi; Beatriz Queiroz dos Santos; Gabriel Augustho dos Santos Ferreira; Roberta Torres Chideroli; Ulisses de Pádua Pereira; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Hamilton Oliveira
Archive | 2010
Aline do Nascimento Benitez; Giovana Giuffrida Rodrigues; Daniela Dib Gonçalves; Julieta Catarina Burke; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; Ernst Eckehardt Müller; Julio Cesar de Freitas
Arquivos do Instituto Biológico (São Paulo) | 2010
Vanessa Yumi Hashimoto; João Luis Garcia; Kledir Anderson Hofstaetter Spohr; F. G. da Silva; Lucimara Aparecida Alves; J. C. de Freitas