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Featured researches published by Naftale Katz.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2000

Critical analysis of the estimated number of schistosomiasis mansoni carriers in Brazil

Naftale Katz; Sérgio Viana Peixoto

The number of carriers of Schistosoma mansoni infection in Brazil was estimated based on the results of parasitological examinations of feces carried out by the Fundação Nacional de Saúde (FNS - National Health Foundation) in 1996 and 1997, as well as population data from 18 states collected by the Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE - Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics). This information allowed the number of carriers of schistosomiasis mansoni to be estimated at 7.1 million in 1996 and 6. 3 million in 1997. These figures may not reflect the true situation since the population sample used was not originally selected for this purpose. The absence of precise data indicates the need for an adequate national survey of the prevalence of schistosomiasis, which continues to be an important endemic parasitic disease, justifying greater efforts for its control in Brazil.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1973

Estudo de uma cepa humana de Schistosoma mansoni resistente a agentes esquistossomicidas

Naftale Katz; Emmanuel Dias; Neusa Araújo; C. P. Souza

There has been isolated a Schistosoma mansoni strain from two patients submitted to two courses of treatment with hycanthone (2,5mg/kg, i.m.), in January and April, 1970, and to one course with niridazole (25mg/kg/day x 5, per os), in April, 1971. Before treatment, the number of eggs in the faeces of those patients was, per gram, 2,675 and 1,025, respectively; after completion of treatment, such number had come down to around 100 eggs/gram. Miracidia hatched from the patients faeces could infect Biomphalaria glabrata snails, which elimmated cercariae (WW strain) that were used for experimental infection of albino mice. The infected animais were, afterwards, treated with hycanthone, niridazole and oxamniquine under various schedules. Comparative studies of WW and LE strains (the latter being routinely kept in our laboratories) revealed marked differences in their sensitivity to the schistosomicides employed. Actually, after treatment with hycanthone, at the dosage of 80 mg/kg, i.m., a 100% oogram changes were observed in the intestinal wall of mice inoculated with LE strain, whereas no alterations could be detected in the mice infected with WW strain. As regards oxamniquine and niridazole the changes were smaller although still quite sufficient to indicate greater resistance of WW strain to these schistosomicides. It is worth while remembering that, in the pertaining literature, it is the first time that resistance in S. mansoni strains from treated patients has been demonstrated.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1993

Epidemiological aspects of American Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in a periurban area of the metropolitan region of Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil

Valéria M. A. Passos; Alda Lima Falcão; M. C. A. Marzochi; Célia Maria Ferreira Gontijo; Edelberto Santos Dias; Elizabeth Gloria Oliveira Barbosa-Santos; H. L. Guerra; Naftale Katz

In order to characterize the epidemiology of American Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (ACL) in a periurban area of the municipality of Sabará in the metropolitan region of Belo Horizonte (MRBH), an area until then considered free of the disease, a cross sectional survey was undertaken in 1990. The survey of the population consisted of 1119 interviews and 881 clinical examinations using Montenegros skin test (MST). A low prevalence (3.7%) of positive MST was encountered. The disease had been occurring in the area for about 20 years in the form of sporadic cases. The predominant species of sandfly both in domestic areas and nearby areas of secondary vegetation was Lutzomyia whitmani. A canine survey of delayed hypersensitivity to the antigen P10,000 identified only one dog with a positive reaction out of 113 examined. The transmission of ACL in MRBH was confirmed. The occurrence of the disease in women, children and individuals with no contact with forest areas as well as the presence of potential vector species in the domiciliar environment, suggests the transmission of the disease in this environment.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1998

Schistosomiasis control in Brazil

Naftale Katz

In 1975 the Special Programme for Schistosomiasis Control was introduced in Brazil with the objective of controlling this parasitic disease in six northeastern states. The methodology applied varied largely from state to state, but was based mainly on chemotherapy, This Programme was modified about ten years after it beginning with the main goals including control of morbidity and the blockage of establishment of new foci in non-endemic areas. In two states, Bahia and Minas Gerais, the schistosomiasis control programme started in 1979 and 1983, respectively. The recently made evaluation of those two programmes is the main focus of this paper. It must also be pointed out, that the great majority of the studies performed by different researchers in Brazil, at different endemic areas, consistently found significant decrease on prevalence and incidence, when control measures are repeatedly used for several years. Significant decrease of hepatosplenic forms in the studied areas is well documented in Brazil. After more than 20 years of schistosomiasis control programmes in our country, chemotherapy has shown to be a very important tool for the control of morbidity and to decrease prevalence and incidence in endemic areas. Nevertheless, in medium and long terms, sanitation, water supply, sewage draining and health education seem to be the real tools when the aim is persistent and definitive schistosomiasis control.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1992

Analysis of anti-keyhole limpet haemocyanin antibody in Brazilians supports its use for the diagnosis of acute schistosomiasis mansoni

C.F. Alves-Brito; Andrew J.G. Simpson; L.M.G. Bahia-Oliveira; Ana Rabello; Roberto Sena Rocha; José Roberto Lambertucci; Giovanni Gazzinelli; Naftale Katz; Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira

Antibody (immunoglobulin (Ig) G) to the haemocyanin of the keyhole limpet (KLH) (Megathura crenulata), which shares a well defined carbohydrate epitope with the surface of schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni, was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in the sera of Brazilians with acute schistosomiasis. Of 53 such individuals tested, 51 had a level of KLH reactivity in excess of the mean +2 standard deviations of that exhibited by chronically infected individuals. This difference in reactivity allowed the acute cases to be readily identified by visual inspection of ELISA plates. The levels of IgG in patients with hepatointestinal and hepatosplenic schistosomiasis, as well as in non-infected, seropositive residents of endemic areas and infected children from endemic areas, were not statistically different from those of intestinal patients. Significant levels of anti-KLH IgG were not detected in patients with leishmaniasis, Chagas disease, ancylostomiasis or ascariasis. The results support the use of KLH as a means of rapidly and easily identifying individuals with acute schistosomiasis.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1989

The human immune response to defined immunogens of Schistosoma mansoni: elevated antibody levels to paramyosin in stool-negative individuals from two endemic areas in Brazil

Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira; Edward J. Pearce; Guilherme Oliveira; Denise B. Golgher; Naftale Katz; L.G. Bahia; Omar dos Santos Carvalho; Giovanni Gazzinelli; Alan Sher

Sera from individuals living in 2 areas endemic for Schistosoma mansoni in Minas Gerais, Brazil were assayed for the presence of antibodies against paramyosin and glutathione-S-transferase (GST), molecules previously implicated as vaccine immunogens from studies in laboratory hosts. A group was identified consisting of subjects who were stool-negative and had no record of previous infection but who were seropositive by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay against crude adult worm antigen (SWAP). These individuals had anti-paramyosin antibody levels which were dramatically elevated with respect to those measured in infected (stool-positive) individuals living in the same endemic area. In contrast, the same 2 groups of stool-positive and stool-negative subjects could not be distinguished on the basis of their seroreactivity to either GST or SWAP. After chemotherapy, anti-paramyosin antibodies rose above pre-treatment levels and remained elevated in those individuals who became stool-negative. In contrast, anti-paramyosin antibodies decreased to pretreatment values in drug-treated individuals who failed to show complete parasitological cure. These results suggest that the immune response of humans to paramyosin may play a role in natural resistance to schistosome infection, and that an elevated antibody level against this antigen may be a useful correlate of drug-induced cure.


International Journal for Parasitology | 1986

Schistosoma mansoni: Vaccination with adult worm antigens

Miriam Tendler; R.Magalhães Pinto; A. Oliveira Lima; Gisèle Gebara; Naftale Katz

Abstract Under relatively mild conditions it has been possible to release from 5. mansoni, large amounts of antigens. Immunization experiments performed in rabbits with this phosphate buffered saline extract of adult worms (Saline Extract, SE) in either Complete Freunds Adjuvant or Corynebacterium parvum have resulted in very high levels of protection (76–99%) upon challenge infection of the immunized rabbits. Furthermore, fractionation of SE by gel chromatography, permitted the isolation of a purified fraction (FI) that also induced protection against challenge infection. FI appeared to contain most of the protective antigens of SE. The present data report the evaluation of different parameters related to the immunization, purification and biochemical analysis of SE.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2011

Schistosoma mansoni: a method for inducing resistance to praziquantel using infected Biomphalaria glabrata snails

Flavia Fernanda Bubula Couto; Paulo Marcos Zech Coelho; Neusa Araújo; J. R. Kusel; Naftale Katz; Liana K. Jannotti-Passos; Ana Carolina Alves de Mattos

To elucidate the mechanisms of antischistosoma resistance, drug-resistant Schistosoma mansoni laboratory isolates are essential. We developed a new method for inducing resistance to praziquantel (PZQ) using successive drug treatments of Biomphalaria glabrata snails infected with S. mansoni. Infected B. glabrata were treated three times with 100 mg/kg PZQ for five consecutive days with a one-week interval between them. After the treatment, the cercariae (LE-PZQ) produced from these snails and the LE strains (susceptible) were used to infect mice. Forty-five days after infection, mice were treated with 200, 400 or 800 mg/kg PZQ. Thirty days post-treatment, we observed that the mean number of worms recovered by perfusion was significantly higher in the group of mice infected with the LE-PZQ isolate treated with 200 and 400 mg/kg in comparison to the LE strain with the same treatment. Moreover, there was a significant difference between the ED50 (effective dose required to kill 50% of the worms) of the LE-PZQ isolate (362 mg/kg) and the LE strain (68 mg/kg). In the in vitro assays, the worms of the LE-PZQ isolate were also less susceptible to PZQ. Thus, the use of infected snails as an experimental model for development of resistance to S. mansoni is effective, fast, simple and cheap.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1987

Tolerance of Kenyan Schistosoma mansoni to oxamniquine

G. C. Coles; W.T. Mutahi; G.K. Kinoti; John I. Bruce; Naftale Katz

Although 30 mg/kg oxamniquine produced high levels (85.5 to 99.5%) of egg reduction in Kenyan children infected with Schistosoma mansoni after a single oral treatment, cure rates from children at Mwea in Kirinyaga district were lower than those from Machakos (58% v. 74%). Redosing uncured children confirmed this lower cure rate (36% v. 83%). Isolates from infected children were passaged into mice and dosed with oxamniquine. Lower than expected reductions in worm numbers were obtained, suggesting that oxaminiquine tolerant S. mansoni are present in the normal worm population in Kenya. It is concluded that mass use of oxamniquine at 30 mg/kg may produce problems of drug resistance.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1991

A multivariate analysis of socio-demographic factors, water contact patterns and Schistosoma mansoni infection in an endemic area in Brazil

Maria Fernanda Furtado de Lima e Costa; Roberto Sena Rocha; Maria Léa Correa Leite; Rogério G. Carneiro; Daniel G. Colley; Giovanni Gazzinelli; Naftale Katz

Associations between socio-demographic factors, water contact patterns and Schistosoma mansoni infection were investigated in 506 individuals (87% of inhabitants over 1 year of age) in an endemic area in Brazil (Divino), aiming at determining priorities for public health measures to prevent the infection. Those who eliminated S. mansoni eggs (n = 198) were compared to those without eggs in the stools (n = 308). The following explanatory variables were considered: age, sex, color, previous treatment with schistosomicide, place of birth, quality of the houses, water supply for the household, distance from houses to stream, and frequency and reasons for water contact. Factors found to be independently associated with the infection were age (10-19 and > or = 20 yrs old), and water contact for agricultural activities, fishing, and swimming or bathing (Adjusted relative odds = 5.0, 2.4, 3.2, 2.1 and 2.0, respectively). This suggests the need for public health measures to prevent the infection, emphasizing water contact for leisure and agricultural activities in this endemic area.

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Ana Rabello

Oswaldo Cruz Foundation

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Daniel G. Colley

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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