Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2011
C.N. Soares; Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; José Mauro Peralta; Marcos R.G. de Freitas; Mariano Gustavo Zalis; Marzia Puccioni-Sohler
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the etiology of viral meningitis and encephalitis in adults and adolescents living in areas affected by dengue. METHODS Over two years, adults and adolescents with diagnoses of viral encephalitis or meningitis were selected for study in Brazil. PCRs for dengue, enterovirus, HSV1 and 2 and cytomegalovirus were performed in CSF samples. Serum and CSF samples were tested for the presence of anti-dengue IgM antibodies. RESULTS The etiologies of encephalitis and meningitis were determined in 70% of cases (30/47). Dengue was the leading cause of encephalitis (47%) with normal CSF cellularity in 75% of these patients. HSV1 was found in 17.6% of the cases, two of which had mild encephalitis. Enterovirus was the most common cause of meningitis (50%), followed by HSV1 (15%), cytomegalovirus and dengue (10%, each). CONCLUSIONS We identified the viral agents causing encephalitis and meningitis in a higher proportion of cases than has been reported in other studies. Dengue was the most frequent cause of encephalitis, which surpassed HSV. In endemic areas, dengue should be investigated as an important cause of encephalitis. Normal CSF cellularity should not exclude dengue encephalitis. Enterovirus is known to be the leading cause of meningitis in children, but here we found it was also the main cause of the disease in adults. HSV1 should be investigated in patients with mild forms of encephalitis and meningitis.
International Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2010
C.N. Soares; Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; José Mauro Peralta; Marcos R.G. de Freitas; Marzia Puccioni-Sohler
Dengue infection is a mosquito-borne disease caused by a flavivirus, and is recognized in over 100 countries with 2.5 billion people living in areas of risk. Neurological manifestations such as encephalitis, myelitis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, cranial nerve palsies, neuromyelitis optica, and encephalomyelitis have been recognized as clinical consequences of dengue infection. Meningitis is a rare complication. We report the case of a 24-year-old woman who presented with fever, headache, and nuchal rigidity without the typical symptoms of dengue infection. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis showed lymphocytic pleocytosis with a normal glucose value and negative bacterial and fungal cultures. The etiology of meningitis was confirmed by positive dengue PCR in the serum. This case report highlights dengue infection as a potential cause of meningitis in endemic areas. Also, meningitis can be the first manifestation of the infection. Dengue should be investigated even in the absence of a typical picture of the infection.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2008
C.N. Soares; Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; Celina Oliveira; Luis Claudio Faria; José Mauro Peralta; Marcos R.G. de Freitas; Marzia Puccioni-Sohler
BACKGROUND Dengue infection may cause neurological manifestations such as encephalitis, myelitis, mononeuropathies, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, and Guillain Barré syndrome (GBS). In endemic regions, the infection course can be oligosymptomatic making difficult the diagnosis of the neurological picture associated with dengue infection. OBJECTIVE To report dengue infection and GBS association, even in oligosymptomatic cases of this infection. METHOD During the dengue epidemic in Rio de Janeiro city we looked for GBS cases, testing IgM antibodies for dengue and dengue polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum. RESULTS We report seven cases (46.6%), presenting dengue positive IgM in serum but with poor or without clinical symptoms of the previous infection. Two of them had also positive IgM antibodies in CSF. CONCLUSION These data show that search for dengue infection should be a routine in GBS cases living in endemic areas.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2013
Marzia Puccioni-Sohler; Carolina Rosadas; Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro
Dengue is an important global public health problem. The World Health Organization estimates that 2/5 of entire world population are in risk of dengue infection. Almost 50 millions cases occur annually, with at least 20 thousand deaths. The etiological agent of this acute febrile disease is a single-strand positive-sense RNA virus of Flavivirus genus. It is an arboviral disease transmitted by Aedes sp. mosquitoes (Aedes aegypti and A. albopictus). Most infected individuals present asymptomatic infection, but some may develop clinical signs. Therefore, a wide spectrum of illness can be observed, ranging from unapparent, mild disease, called dengue fever, to a severe and occasionally fatal dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome. Currently, neurological manifestations related to dengue infections are increasingly been observed and appears as a challenge for medical practice. In this study the neurological complications of dengue infection will be reviewed, focusing a better understanding of the disease for the clinical practice.
Journal of Clinical Virology | 2016
Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; Marta G. Cavalcanti; Regina Helena Saramago Peralta; José Mauro Peralta
BACKGROUND Arboviruses are important emerging viruses worldwide. The signs and symptoms of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection are similar to those presented by infections with dengue virus (DENV) and chikungunya virus (CHIKV). Furthermore, diagnosis of ZIKV infection is particularly challenging in dengue endemic regions and with co-circulation of DENV, CHIKV, and ZIKV, making diagnosis based solely on clinical and epidemiological data unreliable. As these three viral infections share similar clinical manifestations, differential diagnosis is crucial. OBJECTIVES In this study, diagnoses of ZIKV, CHIKV and DENV infections were investigated in 30 patients with suspected dengue fever residing in the area of co-circulation of these three arboviruses. STUDY DESIGN The study included whole blood and/or serum samples obtained from 30 patients with suspected dengue fever. All patients were tested for DENV infection as well as for CHIKV and ZIKV infections. Assays for detecting anti-DENV IgM and DENV RNA by semi-nested RT-PCR and ZIKV and CHIKV RNA by real-time RT-PCR were performed. RESULTS DENV RNA was not detectable in any of the clinical samples, whereas ZIKV RNA was detectable in 17 samples (56.7%). Co-infection by ZIKV and CHIKV was documented in one case. Of the 17 ZIKV-positive individuals, 8 showed reactivity for anti-DENV IgM, which suggested recent DENV infection, cross-reactivity or co-infection. CONCLUSION Our findings confirm that accurate laboratory testing is of paramount importance for differential diagnosis in areas of simultaneous transmission of different arboviruses with similar clinical presentations.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2012
Marzia Puccioni-Sohler; Emerson Leandro Gasparetto; Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; Carla Slatter; Cecilia M. Vidal; Romeu Domingues Cortes; Bruce R. Rosen; Caterina Mainero
OBJECTIVE To investigate the association between clinical data, white matter lesions and inflammatory cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) findings in HTLV-1 associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP). METHOD We studied brain and cervical spinal cord on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and CSF examinations of 28 Brazilian HAM/TSP patients. RESULTS The majority of patients had severe neurological incapacity with EDSS median of 6.5 (3-8). The brain MRI showed white matter lesions (75%) and atrophy (14%). The preferential brain location was periventricular. Cervical demyelination lesions occurred in 11% of the cases, and cervical atrophy in 3.5%. One patient had enhancement lesions on T1 cervical spinal cord MRI. Cases with spinal cord lesions had signs of acute CSF inflammation. The brain white matter lesions predominated in the patients with higher age. CONCLUSION Our data suggest that an active inflammatory process is associated with the cervical spinal cord lesions in HAM/TSP. The brain abnormalities are not related to the clinical picture of HAM/TSP.
International Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2017
Marta G. Cavalcanti; Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; Jorge Luiz S. Gonçalves; Larissa Santana; Eduardo Scarlatelli Pimenta; José Mauro Peralta
Zika virus (ZIKV) transmission through non-mosquito-dependent routes has become increasingly important since reports of sexual transmission. Breastfeeding is a potential means of ZIKV transmission, but data on this remain limited. The cases of four mothers with laboratory-proven infections are reported. No disease evolved in three of the breastfed babies despite detectable maternal viremia and viruria, the presence of viral RNA shedding, and the isolation of infective particles in one milk sample. Fever and rash in one infant of a ZIKV-infected mother proved to be related to chikungunya virus infection. The results suggest that the presence of infective particles in breast milk may not be sufficient for the efficient perinatal transmission of ZIKV.
Journal of Virological Methods | 2013
Carolina Rosadas; Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; Ana Carolina Paulo Vicente; José Mauro Peralta; Marzia Puccioni-Sohler
The objective of this study was to validate a TaqMan real-time PCR assay for HTLV-1 proviral load detection in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. TARL-2 cells were used to generate a standard curve. Peripheral blood mononuclear cell gDNA from 27 seropositive and 23 seronegative samples was analyzed. The sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, precision, dynamic range of the standard curve and qPCR efficiency were evaluated. All of the positive samples amplified the target gene. All of the negative samples amplified only the control gene (β-actin). The assay presented 100% specificity and sensibility. The intra- and inter-assay variability was 2.4% and 2.2%, respectively. The qPCR efficiency, slope and correlation coefficients (r2) were all acceptable. The limit of detection was 1 copy/rxn. This assay can reliably quantify HTLV-1 proviral load.
Journal of Virological Methods | 2016
Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; Regina Helena Saramago Peralta; Marta G. Cavalcanti; Marzia Puccioni-Sohler; Valéria L. Carvalho; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos; José Mauro Peralta
Dengue is a mosquito-borne viral infection that can evolve from subclinical to severe forms of disease. Early recognition during initial primary and secondary infections correlates with a reduced case-fatality rate in susceptible groups. The aim of this study was to standardize a DNA hybridization assay based on the Luminex technology for detecting and serotyping dengue virus (DENV). Reference DENVs representing the four different serotypes were used as controls to standardize the test. For validation, 16 DENV isolates obtained from a reference laboratory were analyzed in a double-blind manner to validate the test. Sixty blood samples from patients suspected of having dengue fever were used to evaluate the methodology after the validation step, and the results were compared with the reference semi-nested RT-PCR. Additionally, five human samples of each Zika and Chikungunya confirmed patients were used for specificity analysis. The Luminex-based assay correctly identified all 16 DENV isolates. In the evaluation step, the results of the RT-PCR/Luminex assay showed a concordance of 86.7% with those of the semi-nested RT-PCR. None of other virus infection samples was amplified. This is the first description of a hybridization assay that can discriminate the four DENV serotypes using probes against a single DENV sequence. The results indicated that the RT-PCR/Luminex DENV assay designed and evaluated in this study is a valuable additional tool for the early and rapid detection and serotyping of DENV, which could, in the future, be applied to new targets such as the Zika and Chikungunya viruses.
Journal of NeuroVirology | 2017
Marzia Puccioni-Sohler; Alice Maria de Magalhães Ornelas; Andrea Silveira de Souza; Mauro Jorge Cabral-Castro; Jessyca T.M.A. Ramos; Carolina Rosadas; Maria Cecília da Fonseca Salgado; Alexandre A. Castiglione; Fernando Raphael de Almeida Ferry; José Mauro Peralta; Carolina M. Voloch; Amilcar Tanuri; Fernanda Tovar-Moll; Renato S. Aguiar
Dengue virus (DENV) causes immune-mediated diseases. Neurological involvement represents a severe condition that is rarely observed in DENV-1 infection. Neuromyelitis optica (NMO)/NMO spectrum disorders (NMOSD) are idiopathic immune-mediated demyelinating syndromes of the central nervous system. We report a 17-year-old female with oligosymptomatic DENV-1 viremia, diagnosed as NMOSD. Magnetic resonance imaging showed spinal cord and brainstem lesions. Antibody for aquaporin 4 was negative. DENV-1 RNA infection was detected by serial RT-PCR and confirmed by phylogenetic analysis in serum. Although there are some reports of NMO post-dengue infection, there are not any published accounts of NMOSD with coexistent and persistent DENV-1 infection.