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Dive into the research topics where Maristela Marques Salgado is active.

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Featured researches published by Maristela Marques Salgado.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Incorporation of Real-Time PCR into Routine Public Health Surveillance of Culture Negative Bacterial Meningitis in São Paulo, Brazil

Claudio Tavares Sacchi; Lucila Okuyama Fukasawa; Maria Gisele Gonçalves; Maristela Marques Salgado; Kathleen A. Shutt; Telma Regina Marques Pinto Carvalhanas; Ana Freitas Ribeiro; Brigina Kemp; Maria Cecília Outeiro Gorla; Ricardo K. M. Albernaz; Eneida G. Lemes Marques; Angela Cruciano; Eliseu Alves Waldman; M. Cristina C Brandileone; Lee H. Harrison

Real-time (RT)-PCR increases diagnostic yield for bacterial meningitis and is ideal for incorporation into routine surveillance in a developing country. We validated a multiplex RT-PCR assay for Streptococcus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis, and Haemophilus influenzae in Brazil. Risk factors for being culture-negative, RT-PCR positive were determined. The sensitivity of RT-PCR in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was 100% (95% confidence limits, 96.0%–100%) for N. meningitidis, 97.8% (85.5%–99.9%) for S. pneumoniae, and 66.7% (9.4%–99.2%) for H. influenzae. Specificity ranged from 98.9% to 100%. Addition of RT-PCR to routine microbiologic methods increased the yield for detection of S. pneumoniae, N. meningitidis, and H. influenzae cases by 52%, 85%, and 20%, respectively. The main risk factor for being culture negative and RT-PCR positive was presence of antibiotic in CSF (odds ratio 12.2, 95% CI 5.9-25.0). RT-PCR using CSF was highly sensitive and specific and substantially added to measures of meningitis disease burden when incorporated into routine public health surveillance in Brazil.


Nutrition | 1997

Effect of total parenteral nutrition with different lipid emulsions on human monocyte and neutrophil functions

Dan Linetzky Waitzberg; Raquel Bellinati-Pires; Maristela Marques Salgado; Iara P. Hypolito; Gloria M.D.D. Colleto; Osmar Kenji Yagi; Elisa M. Yamamuro; Joaquim Gama-Rodrigues; Henrique Walter Pinotti

Parenteral nutrition (TPN) with lipid emulsions is claimed to be associated with impaired monocyte (M) and neutrophil (N) functions. Long-chain triglycerides (LCT) and a mixture containing 50% medium-chain triglycerides (MCT) and 50% LCT, currently used in nutritional therapy with TPN, were evaluated for their ex vivo effects on human N and M chemotaxis, phagocytosis, bacterial killing, and oxidative metabolism by nitroblue tetrazolium reduction test. Cell functions were examined in a randomized, crossover, blind trial in 10 malnourished patients with gastric cancer. Prior to the operation (2 wk), central TPN (40 kcal/kg) with 25% of caloric energy provided as LCT or MCT/LCT emulsion was infused over 48 h. After the crossover period fat-free TPN was given over 48 h. Function tests were done for N and M before and after each lipid emulsion infusion. Every cell function test performed for each patient was controlled by another test done in healthy adult volunteers and the results were compared with the normal range of values previously established for a healthy adult population. All the patients completed the studies without complications. Crossover validity was statistically established. Bacterial killing was the only function reduced in neutrophils after LCT emulsion (% killed bacteria = 79.0 +/- 8.5 versus 67.4 +/- 19.2; P < 0.05), although this function remained within the normal range values in 80% of the patients. In conclusion, the lipid emulsions did not affect any monocyte functions and only moderately decreased neutrophil bacterial killing.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2014

Carriage Rate and Effects of Vaccination after Outbreaks of Serogroup C Meningococcal Disease, Brazil, 2010

Marco Aurélio Palazzi Sáfadi; Telma Regina Marques Pinto Carvalhanas; Ana Paula de Lemos; Maria Cecília Outeiro Gorla; Maristela Marques Salgado; Lucila Okuyama Fukasawa; Maria Gisele Gonçalves; Fabio Takenori Higa; Maria Cristina de Cunto Brandileone; Claudio Tavares Sacchi; Ana Freitas Ribeiro; Helena Keico Sato; Lucia Ferro Bricks; José Cássio de Moraes

Polysaccharide vaccine did not affect carriage nor interrupt transmission of an epidemic strain.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2013

Use of sodC versus ctrA for real-time polymerase chain reaction-based detection of Neisseria meningitidis in sterile body fluids

Fabio Takenori Higa; Lucila Okuyama Fukasawa; Maria Gisele Gonçalves; Maristela Marques Salgado; Ana Paula Silva de Lemos; Lee H. Harrison; Priscilla Lima de Oliveira; Carla Naufal da Silva; Claudio Tavares Sacchi

We evaluated the use of a newly described sodC-based real-time-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay for detecting Neisseria meningitidis in normally sterile sites, such as cerebrospinal fluid and serum. The sodC-based RT-PCR assay has an advantage over ctrA for detecting nongroupable N. meningitidis isolates, which are commonly present in asymptomatic pharyngeal carriage. However, in our study, sodC-based RT-PCR was 7.5% less sensitive than ctrA. Given the public health impact of possible false-negative results due to the use of the sodC target gene alone, sodC-based RT-PCR for the diagnosis of meningococcal meningitis should be used with caution.


Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2015

Parainfluenza virus as a cause of acute respiratory infection in hospitalized children.

Rogério Pecchini; Eitan Naaman Berezin; Maria Cândida Souza; Lourdes de Andrade Vaz-de-Lima; Neuza Satomi Sato; Maristela Marques Salgado; Mirthes Ueda; Saulo Duarte Passos; Raphael Rangel; Ana Catebelota

BACKGROUND Human parainfluenza viruses account for a significant proportion of lower respiratory tract infections in children. OBJECTIVE To assess the prevalence of Human parainfluenza viruses as a cause of acute respiratory infection and to compare clinical data for this infection against those of the human respiratory syncytial virus. METHODS A prospective study in children younger than five years with acute respiratory infection was conducted. Detection of respiratory viruses in nasopharyngeal aspirate samples was performed using the indirect immunofluorescence reaction. Length of hospital stay, age, clinical history and physical exam, clinical diagnoses, and evolution (admission to Intensive Care Unit or general ward, discharge or death) were assessed. Past personal (premature birth and cardiopathy) as well as family (smoking and atopy) medical factors were also assessed. RESULTS A total of 585 patients were included with a median age of 7.9 months and median hospital stay of six days. No difference between the HRSV+ and HPIV+ groups was found in terms of age, gender or length of hospital stay. The HRSV+ group had more fever and cough. Need for admission to the Intensive Care Unit was similar for both groups but more deaths were recorded in the HPIV+ group. The occurrence of parainfluenza peaked during the autumn in the first two years of the study. CONCLUSION Parainfluenza was responsible for significant morbidity, proving to be the second-most prevalent viral agent in this population after respiratory syncytial virus. No difference in clinical presentation was found between the two groups, but mortality was higher in the HPIV+ group.


Revista Brasileira De Ciencias Farmaceuticas | 2002

Efeito da suplementação com L-alanil-L-glutamina sobre a resposta de hipersensibilidade do tipo tardio em ratos submetidos ao treinamento intenso

Marcelo Macedo Rogero; Julio Tirapegui; Rogerio Graça Pedrosa; Inar Alves de Castro; Ivanir Santana de Oliveira Pires; Antonio Altair M. Oliveira; Maristela Marques Salgado; Aguinaldo Roberto Pinto; Mirthes Ueda

Intense training and exhaustive exercise may cause immunesupression in athletes by reducing plasma glutamine concentration. Initially, this study verified the effect of L-glutamine and L-alanyl-L-glutamine supplementation on the response to delayed-type hypersensitivity test (DTH) in rats submitted to intense swimming training for six weeks. Later on, we assessed the effect of these nutritional interventions on total and differential white blood cell counts and on concentration of anti-bovine serum albumin IgG antibodies, in animals submitted to exhaustion test and a three-hour recovery period. There was no effect of training and supplementation on the response to DTH. Supplemented animals presented greatest plasma glutamine concentration (p<0.05), though this increase in glutaminemia did not interfere on the serum IgG antibody concentration. The recovery period after intense exercise resulted in decreased glutaminemia as compared with the values obtained immediately after exhaustion test (p<0.05). Increase in corticosterone levels induced by strenuous exercises led to leukocytosis, neutrophilia and lymphopenia in post-exercise period (p<0.05). The present study does not confirm the hypothesis that changes in plasma glutamine concentration induced by both supplementation and exercises influence on the response to DTH or for serum IgG antibody concentration in rats submitted to training.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1992

Delayed phagocytosis and bacterial killing in Chediak-Higashi syndrome neutrophils detected by a fluorochrome assay: ultrastructural aspects

Raquel Bellinati-Pires; Maristela Marques Salgado; Paulo P. Joazeiro; Magda Carneiro-Sampaio

The few studies already published about phagocyte functions in Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS) has stated that neutrophils present slow rate of bacterial killing but normally ingest microorganisms. In the present study, both phagocytosis and killing of Staphylococcus aureus were verified to be delayed in neutrophils from two patients with CHS when these functions were simultaneously evaluated by a fluorochrome phagocytosis assay. Electron microscopic examination showed morphologic differences among neutrophils from CHS patients and normal neutrophils regarding the cytoplasmic structures and the aspects of the phagolysosomes. It was noteworthy the presence of giant phagolysosomes enclosing bacteria in active proliferation commonly observed in CHS neutrophils after 45 min of phagocytosis, which corresponded with the impaired bactericidal activity of these leukocytes. The present results suggest that phagocytosis may also be defective in CHS, and point out to the sensitivity of the fluorochrome phagocytosis assay and its application in clinical laboratories.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2008

Performance of indirect immunofluorescence assay, immunochromatography assay and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction for detecting human respiratory syncytial virus in nasopharyngeal aspirate samples

L. R. A. Vaz-De-Lima; M. C. O. Souza; T. K. Matsumoto; M. A. Hong; Maristela Marques Salgado; M. L. Barbosa; N. S. Sato; H. I. Requejo; C. A. F. Oliveira; R. Pecchini; E. Berezin; S. D. Passos; C. Schvartsman; A. Pasmanick; Edison Luiz Durigon; Mirthes Ueda

Comparison of the use of indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA), immunochromatography assay (ICA-BD) and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for detecting human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) in 306 nasopharyngeal aspirates samples (NPA) was performed in order to assess their analytical performance. By comparing the results obtained using ICA-BD with those using IFA, we found relative indices of 85.0% for sensitivity and 91.2% for specificity, and the positive (PPV) and negative (NPV) predictive values were 85.0% and 91.2%, respectively. The relative indices for sensitivity and specificity as well as the PPV and NPV for RT-PCR were 98.0%, 89.0%, 84.0% and 99.0%, respectively, when compared to the results of IFA. In addition, comparison of the results of ICA-BD and those of RT-PCR yielded relative indices of 79.5% for sensitivity and 95.4% for specificity, as well as PPV and NPV of 92.9% and 86.0%, respectively. Although RT-PCR has shown the best performance, the substantial agreement between the ICA-BD and IFA results suggests that ICA-BD, also in addition to being a rapid and facile assay, could be suitable as an alternative diagnostic screening for HRSV infection in children.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2012

Fast test for assessing the susceptibility of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to isoniazid and rifampin by real-time PCR

Maria Gisele Gonçalves; Lucila Okuyama Fukasawa; Rosangela Siqueira de Oliveira; Maristela Marques Salgado; Lee H. Harrison; Kathleen A. Shutt; Claudio Tavares Sacchi

Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the bacterium that causes tuberculosis (TB), a leading cause of death from infectious disease worldwide. Rapid diagnosis of resistant strains is important for the control of TB. Real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assays may detect all of the mutations that occur in the M. tuberculosis 81-bp core region of the rpoB gene, which is responsible for resistance to rifampin (RIF) and codon 315 of the katG gene and the inhA ribosomal binding site, which are responsible for isoniazid (INH). The goal of this study was to assess the performance of RT-PCR compared to traditional culture-based methods for determining the drug susceptibility of M. tuberculosis. BACTEC TM MGIT TM 960 was used as the gold standard method for phenotypic drug susceptibility testing. Susceptibilities to INH and RIF were also determined by genotyping of katG, inhA and rpoB genes. RT-PCR based on molecular beacons probes was used to detect specific point mutations associated with resistance. The sensitivities of RT-PCR in detecting INH resistance using katG and inhA targets individually were 55% and 25%, respectively and 73% when combined. The sensitivity of the RT-PCR assay in detecting RIF resistance was 99%. The median time to complete the RT-PCR assay was three-four hours. The specificities for tests were both 100%. Our results confirm that RT-PCR can detect INH and RIF resistance in less than four hours with high sensitivity.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2013

Evolution of bacterial meningitis diagnosis in Sao Paulo State-Brazil and future challenges

Maristela Marques Salgado; Maria Gisele Gonçalves; Lucila Okuyama Fukasawa; Fabio Takenori Higa; Juliana Thalita Paulino; Claudio Tavares Sacchi

Bacterial meningitis (BM) is a severe disease and still represents a serious public health problem with high rates of morbidity and mortality. The most common cases of BM around the world, mainly in Brazil, have been caused by Neisseria meningitidis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Haemophilus influenzae type b. Bacterial culture is the gold-standard technique for BM confirmation, but approximately 50% of suspected cases are not culture-confirmed, due to problems related to improper transportation and seeding or previous antibiotic treatment. Immunological methods present low sensitivity and have possibility of cross-reactions. Real time PCR (qPCR) is a molecular technique and has been successful used for BM diagnosis at Instituto Adolfo Lutz in São Paulo State, Brazil, since 2007. The incorporation of qPCR in the Public Health surveillance routine in our state resulted in diminishing 50% of undetermined BM cases. Our efforts are focused on qPCR implementation in the BM diagnostic routine throughout Brazil.

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Fábio Takenori Higa

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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