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Dive into the research topics where Maria Conceição Martins is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Conceição Martins.


BMC Microbiology | 2008

Reliable identification of mycobacterial species by PCR-restriction enzyme analysis (PRA)-hsp65 in a reference laboratory and elaboration of a sequence-based extended algorithm of PRA-hsp65 patterns.

Erica Chimara; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Suely Yoko Misuka Ueky; Maria Conceição Martins; Alan Mitchel Durham; Robert D. Arbeit; Sylvia Cardoso Leão

BackgroundIdentification of nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) based on phenotypic tests is time-consuming, labor-intensive, expensive and often provides erroneous or inconclusive results. In the molecular method referred to as PRA-hsp65, a fragment of the hsp65 gene is amplified by PCR and then analyzed by restriction digest; this rapid approach offers the promise of accurate, cost-effective species identification. The aim of this study was to determine whether species identification of NTM using PRA-hsp65 is sufficiently reliable to serve as the routine methodology in a reference laboratory.ResultsA total of 434 NTM isolates were obtained from 5019 cultures submitted to the Institute Adolpho Lutz, Sao Paulo Brazil, between January 2000 and January 2001. Species identification was performed for all isolates using conventional phenotypic methods and PRA-hsp65. For isolates for which these methods gave discordant results, definitive species identification was obtained by sequencing a 441 bp fragment of hsp65. Phenotypic evaluation and PRA-hsp65 were concordant for 321 (74%) isolates. These assignments were presumed to be correct. For the remaining 113 discordant isolates, definitive identification was based on sequencing a 441 bp fragment of hsp65. PRA-hsp65 identified 30 isolates with hsp65 alleles representing 13 previously unreported PRA-hsp65 patterns. Overall, species identification by PRA-hsp65 was significantly more accurate than by phenotype methods (392 (90.3%) vs. 338 (77.9%), respectively; p < .0001, Fishers test). Among the 333 isolates representing the most common pathogenic species, PRA-hsp65 provided an incorrect result for only 1.2%.ConclusionPRA-hsp65 is a rapid and highly reliable method and deserves consideration by any clinical microbiology laboratory charged with performing species identification of NTM.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2004

Molecular characterization of Mycobacterium kansasii isolates in the State of São Paulo between 1995-1998

Erica Chimara; Carmen Maria Saraiva Giampaglia; Maria Conceição Martins; Maria Alice da Silva Telles; Suely Yoko Mizuka Ueki; Lucilaine Ferrazoli

Mycobacterium kansasii is the most common cause of pulmonary nontuberculous mycobacteria infection and classical identification of this pathogen needs a time consuming phenotypic tests. Polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis (PRA) of the gene enconding for the 65 kDa heat shock (hsp65) protein offers an easy, rapid, and inexpensive procedure to identify and subtype M. kansasii isolates. In the present study, we performed a retrospective analysis of patients who had mycobacteria identified on the basis of phenotypic tests by means of a review of database at Mycobacteria Laboratory of the Instituto Adolfo Lutz in the period 1995-1998. A total of 9381 clinical isolates were analyzed of which 7777 (82.9%) were identified as M. tuberculosis complex and 1604 (17.1%) as nontuberculous mycobacteria. Of the 296 M. kansasii isolates, 189 (63.8%) isolates obtained from 119 patients were viable and were analyzed by PRA-hsp65. Hundred eight two (98.9%) were classified as M. kansasii type I. Two isolates were classified as type II and III and five isolates were characterized as other Mycobacterium species. Clinical isolates of M. kansasii in the state of Sao Paulo was almost exclusively subtype I regardless of HIV status.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2004

Mycobacteraemia among HIV-1-infected patients in São Paulo, Brazil: 1995 to 1998.

D. J. Hadad; M. Palaci; A. C. C. Pignatari; D. S. Lewi; M. A. S. Machado; Maria Alice da Silva Telles; Maria Conceição Martins; Suely Yoko Mizuka Ueki; G. M. Vasconcelos; M. C. A. Palhares

From July 1995 to August 1998, mycobacterial blood cultures were obtained from 1032 HIV-infected patients seen at the Centro de Referência e Treinamento de AIDS (CRTA), Hospital São Paulo (HSP), and Centro de Referência de AIDS de Santos (CRAS). Overall, 179 episodes of mycobacteraemia were detected: 111 (62.0%) at CRTA, 50 (27.9%) at HSP, and 18 (10.1%) at CRAS. The frequency of positive cultures declined sharply from 22.6% in 1995 to 6.9% in 1998, consistent with the decrease in opportunistic infections following the publicly funded distribution of highly active antiretroviral therapy. In 1995, mycobacteraemia was more frequently due to Mycobacterium avium complex (59.2%) than Mycobacterium tuberculosis (28.6%), whereas in 1998 the relative frequencies were reversed (28.6 vs. 64.3% respectively), probably justified by the increased virulence of M. tuberculosis and the greater risk of invasive infection in less-immunocompromised patients, including patients unaware they are infected with HIV.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2009

Rapid detection of resistant tuberculosis by nitrate reductase assay performed in three settings in Brazil

Maria de Lourdes M. Shikama; Regina Ruivo Ferro e Silva; Maria Conceição Martins; Carmen Maria Saraiva Giampaglia; Rosângela Siqueira Oliveira; Rosmari F. A. M. Silva; Paula Ferro E. Silva; Maria Alice da Silva Telles; Anandi Martin; Juan Carlos Palomino

OBJECTIVES To evaluate nitrate reductase assay (NRA) efficacy for streptomycin, isoniazid, rifampicin and ethambutol susceptibility testing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains. METHODS Results were generated by three laboratories: the Instituto Adolfo Lutz (IAL) Mycobacteria Reference Laboratory and two IAL Regional Laboratories in Santo André and Sorocaba, São Paulo State, Brazil. One hundred and twenty M. tuberculosis strains were simultaneously tested using NRA and the proportion method (PM), while 117 strains were tested using both NRA and BACTEC MGIT 960 (M960). RESULTS Repeatability analysis of NRA results showed rates of 100% for isoniazid and ethambutol and 97% for streptomycin and rifampicin susceptibility detection, representing substantial agreement. McNemar testing of the data also indicates that NRA and PM, as well as NRA and M960, do not differ significantly. On average, NRA results were available after 10 days. CONCLUSIONS The data demonstrate that NRA is reliable for susceptibility testing of isoniazid and rifampicin, the two most important drugs for the treatment of tuberculosis. In addition, the reduction in the time necessary to obtain susceptibility results is of fundamental importance.


Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2013

Population structure and circulating genotypes of drug-sensitive and drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis clinical isolates in São Paulo state, Brazil

Maria Conceição Martins; Carmen Maria Saraiva Giampaglia; Rosângela Siqueira Oliveira; Vera Simonsen; Fábio Oliveira Latrilha; Letícia Lisboa Moniz; David Couvin; Nalin Rastogi; Lucilaine Ferrazoli

São Paulo is the most populous Brazilian state and reports the largest number of tuberculosis cases in the country annually (over 18,500). This study included 193 isolates obtained during the 2nd Nationwide Survey on Mycobacterium tuberculosis Drug Resistance that was conducted in São Paulo state and 547 isolates from a laboratory based study of drug resistance that were analyzed by the Mycobacteria Reference Laboratory at the Institute Adolfo Lutz. Both studies were conducted from 2006 to 2008 and sought to determine the genetic diversity and pattern of drug resistance of M. tuberculosis isolates (MTC) circulating in São Paulo. The patterns obtained from the spoligotyping analysis demonstrated that 51/740 (6.9%) of the isolates corresponded to orphan patterns and that 689 (93.1%) of the isolates distributed into 144 shared types, including 119 that matched a preexisting shared type in the SITVIT2 database and 25 that were new isolates. A total of 77/144 patterns corresponded to unique isolates, while the remaining 67 corresponded to clustered patterns (n=612 isolates clustered into groups of 2-84 isolates each). The evolutionarily ancient PGG1 lineages (Beijing, CAS1-DEL, EAI3-IND, and PINI2) were rarely detected in São Paulo and comprised only 13/740, or 1.76%, of the total isolates; all of the remaining 727/740, or 98.24%, of the MTC isolates from São Paulo state were from the recent PGG2/3 evolutionary isolates belonging to the LAM, T, S, X, and Haarlem lineages, i.e., the Euro-American group. This study provides the first overview of circulating genotypes of M. tuberculosis in São Paulo state and demonstrates that the clustered shared types containing seven or more M. tuberculosis isolates that are spread in São Paulo state included both resistant and susceptible isolates.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1995

Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) isolated from AIDS patients and the criteria required for its implication in disease

David Jamil Hadad; Maria Cecília de Almeida Palhares; Anna Luiza Nunes Placco; Carmem Silvia Bruniera Domingues; Adauto Castelo Filho; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Sueli Yoko Mizuka Ueki; Maria Alice da Silva Telles; Maria Conceição Martins; Moises Palaci

Before the AIDS pandemia, the Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) was responsible in most cases for the pneumopathies that attack patients with basic chronic pulmonary diseases such as emphysema and chronic bronchitis. In 1981, with the advent of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), MAC started to represent one of the most frequent bacterial diseases among AIDS patients, with the disseminated form of the disease being the major clinical manifestation of the infection. Between January 1989 and February 1991, the Section of Mycobacteria of the Adolfo Lutz Institute, São Paulo, isolated MAC from 103 patients by culturing different sterile and no-sterile processed specimens collected from 2304 patients seen at the AIDS Reference and Training Center and/or Emilio Ribas Infectology Institute. Disseminated disease was diagnosed in 29 of those patients on the basis of MAC isolation from blood and/or bone marrow aspirate. The other 74 patients were divided into categories highly (5), moderately (26) and little suggestive of disease (43) according to the criteria of DAVIDSON (1989). The various criteria for MAC isolation from sterile and non-sterile specimens are discussed.


Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2017

Modified protocol for drug susceptibility testing of MGIT cultures of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by the MGIT 960

Aline Gois Adami; Juliana Failde Gallo; Juliana Maira Watanabe Pinhata; Maria Conceição Martins; Carmen Maria Saraiva Giampaglia; Rosangela Siqueira de Oliveira

A rapid detection of resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is crucial for management and control of tuberculosis. This study evaluated a more rapid and cost-effective drug susceptibility testing (DST) protocol using primary isolates of M. tuberculosis in mycobacteria growth indicator tube (MGIT). Ninety-four M. tuberculosis isolates in MGIT were subjected to DST by the manufacturers method, i.e., primary isolates were subcultured and DST was performed from positive cultures for a maximum of 5days; and by our modified method, i.e., DST was performed directly from primary MGIT cultures positive for more than 5days. Results were concordant for 76 (81%) isolates. Agreement between both methods was 92.0%, 98.9%, 97.7%, and 95.5% for streptomycin, isoniazid, rifampicin, and ethambutol, respectively. Six isolates failed to grow on the recommended method, including 3 resistant isolates. Not performing subculture of primary M. tuberculosis isolates yields reliable results, decreasing the turnaround time and the cost of the test.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1994

Bacterial agents isolated from cerebrospinal fluid of patients with Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) and neurological complications

Ilka Maria Landgraf; Moisés Palaci; Maria de Fátima Paiva Vieira; Sueli Yoko Mizuka Ueki; Maria Conceição Martins; Daisy Nakamura Sato; Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Maria Alice da Silva Telles; Maria Cecília Outeiro Gorla; Tania Mara Ibelli Vaz; Rosemarie Lorenço; L. R. M. Marques

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from 2083 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and neurological complications were bacteriologically examined during a period of 7 years (1984-1990). The percentage of patients who had at least one bacterial agent cultured from the CSF was 6.2%. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was the most frequently isolated agent (4.3%), followed by Mycobacterium avium complex or MAC (0.7%), Pseudomonas spp (0.5%), Enterobacter spp (0.4%), and Staphylococcus aureus (0.3%). Among 130 culture positive patients, 89 (68.5%) had M. tuberculosis and 15 (11.6%) had MAC. The frequency of bacterial isolations increased from 1988 (5.2%) to 1990 (7.2%), partly due to the increase in MAC isolations. Bacterial agents were more frequently isolated from patients in the age group 21-30 years and from women (p < 0.05).


Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2013

Viability of stressed Mycobacterium tuberculosis and association with multidrug resistance.

Maria Conceição Martins; Carmen Maria Saraiva Giampaglia; Erica Chimara; Rosângela Siqueira Oliveira; Danielle Vedovello; Sidnei Miyoshi Sakamoto; Lucilaine Ferrazoli

This study investigated biological characteristics of recovered stressed M. tuberculosis isolates that failed to grow in differential culture media for phenotypic identification and in culture media containing anti-tuberculosis drugs for drug-susceptibility testing, despite of having grown in primary culture. It represents an improvement in the diagnosis of MDR tuberculosis and tuberculosis control.


International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease | 2000

Transmission of tuberculosis in an endemic urban setting in Brazil.

Lucilaine Ferrazoli; Moisés Palaci; L. R. M. Marques; Leda Fátima Jamal; Jorge Barros Afiune; Erica Chimara; Maria Conceição Martins; M. A. Da Silva Telles; C. A. F. Oliveira; Maria Cecília de Almeida Palhares; D. T. A. Spada; Lee W. Riley

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Moises Palaci

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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David Jamil Hadad

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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