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Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1987

Pulmonary involvement in Schistosomiasis mansoni

Dirceu Bartolomeu Greco; Enio Roberto Pietra Pedroso; José Roberto Lambertucci; Manoel Otávio da Costa Rocha; Paulo Marcos Zech Coelho; Pedro Raso; Cid Sérgio Ferreira

The post-treatment pulmonary alterations were evaluated in patients (Study 1) and in mice (Study 2) infected with Schistosoma mansoni. Study 1: the patients were examined pre and post-treatment (with ora oxamniquine) and the following exams were performed: sputum for eosinophils and chest x-ray. Study 2: four groups of mice (total = 64) were studied; Group I (infected and treated with oxamniquine); II (infected and not treated); III (not infected and treated) and IV (not infected and not treated). All were x-rayed to check for pulmonary abnormalities pre and post-treatment and lung specimens were studied by optical microscopy and immunofluorescence. We have found abnormalities in the parameters checked in both studies and the results suggest an immunological reaction, probably due to deposition of immune complexes in the lungs, with subsequent activation of the complement system. The experimental study showed that the alterations are not dependent of the presence of eggs and/or worms of S. mansoni in the lungs, thus corroborating the hypothesis of deposition of circulating material.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2003

Chronic interstitial pneumonitis in dogs naturally infected with Leishmania (Leishmania) chagasi: a histopathological and morphometric study

Ricardo Gonçalves; Washington Luiz Tafuri; Maria Norma Melo; Pedro Raso; Wagner Luiz Tafuri

Eighteen mongrel dogs of unknown age and naturally infected with Leishmania (Leishmania) chagasi, were obtained from the City Hall of Belo Horizonte, Brazil. Four dogs were used as control. Lung samples were obtained and immediately fixed in formalin. The histopathological picture of all lung tissue sections was a chronic and diffuse interstitial pneumonitis. The thickened inter-alveolar septa were characterized by the cellular exudate (mostly macrophages, lymphocytes and plasmocytes) associated with collagen deposition. Morphometric analysis showed greater septal thickness in the infected animals than in controls. In fact, the morphometric study of collagen stained with ammoniac silver confirmed a larger deposition of collagen in the infected animals. The parasitologic method was carried out during the study of the lesions on the slides. However, we did not observe any correlation between the histopathologic and morphometric data and the clinical status of the animals. We conclude that the pulmonary lesions observed in all naturally infected dogs were correlated with the disease and that the morphometric method used was satisfactory for the analysis of septal thickness and of increased collagen deposition, confirming the presence of fibrosis.


PLOS ONE | 2013

American tegumentary leishmaniasis: effectiveness of an immunohistochemical protocol for the detection of Leishmania in skin.

Cibele Fontes Alves; Cíntia F. Alves; Maria Marta Figueiredo; Carolina Carvalho de Souza; George Luiz Lins Machado-Coelho; Maria Norma Melo; Washington Luiz Tafuri; Pedro Raso; Rodrigo P. Soares; Wagner Luiz Tafuri

Background American tegumentary leishmaniasis (ATL) is endemic in Latin America, where Brazil has over 27 thousand cases per year. The aim of the present study was to develop an immunohistochemical method (IHC) for ATL diagnosis. For this purpose, we used serum from a dog naturally infected with Leishmania (L) infantum (canine hyperimmune serum) as the primary antibody, followed by a detection system with a secondary biotinylated antibody. Methodology Skin samples were obtained from 73 patients in an endemic area of Caratinga, Minas Gerais (MG) State, Brazil all testing positive for ATL with the Montenegro skin test, microscopy, and PCR. Canine hyperimmune serum of a dog naturally infected with Leishmania (L.) infantum was employed as a primary antibody in an immunohistochemical diagnostic method using streptavidin-biotin peroxidase. To assess the specificity of this reaction, IHC assays employing two monoclonal antibodies were carried out. As the polymer-based technology is less time-consuming and labor intensive than the IHC labeled streptavidin-biotin peroxidase method, we compared the two methods for all samples. Results The IHC method detected ATL in 67 of the 73 cases (91.8%). Immunolabeled parasites were primarily detected inside macrophages either in the superficial or the deep dermis. Detection was facilitated by the high contrast staining of amastigotes (dark brown) against the light blue background. A lower detection rate (71.2%) was observed with the both of the monoclonal Leishmania antibodies compared to the canine hyperimmune serum. This may have been due to a non-specific background staining observed in all histological samples rendering positive detection more difficult. The higher efficacy of the canine hyperimmune serum in the IHC method was confirmed by the method using streptavidin-biotin peroxidase as well as that with the polymer-based technology (biotin-avidin-free system). Conclusions The data are encouraging with regard to validating IHC as a standard alternative method for ATL diagnosis.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1989

Histological observations on Montenegro's reaction in man

Wilson Mayrink; Antonio Pedro M. Schettini; Paul Williams; Pedro Raso; P.A. Magalhães; Antonio de Oliveira Lima; Maria Norma Melo; Carlos Alberto da Costa; Odair Genaro; Magno Dias; Marilene Suzan Marques Michalick

The Montenegro skin test is widely used as a diagnostic method for American cutaneous leishmaniasis (ACL) but little is known about the histological changes that occur in the skin after administration of the antigen. This report is based on histological studies of biopsied material obtained, from inoculation sites, 48 hours after individuals had been given intradermal injections with a standardized Montenegro antigen. The material examined was obtained from four distinctly different test groups: naturally infected patients with parasitologically proved ACL and with positive Montenegros reaction; individuals without previous history of ACL and not previously tested with Montenegro antigen; participants in anti-ACL vaccine trials who developed positive reactions to Montenegro antigen after vaccination; other participants in vaccine trials who had negative Montenegro responses after vaccination or had served as controls in the trials. The histological pictures of each group are described and discussed. Histologically, the reactions of vaccinated individuals were indistinguishable from those with naturally acquired infections.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2006

Forma tumoral da esquistossomose mansoni cerebelar: relato de caso e medida dos granulomas

Pedro Raso; Alexandre Tafuri; Ney da Fonseca Lopes; Eduardo Rossi Monteiro; Wagner Luiz Tafuri

An unusual case of the tumoral form of cerebellar Schistosomiasis mansoni, in a 15 year-old male diagnosed by biopsy, with neurological signs and symptoms 60 days prior to surgery. Computerized tomography show a hyperdense expanding lesion located in cerebellum, suggesting glioma. Histopathological examination showed numerous S. mansoni ova involved by granulomatous inflammation in necrotic-exudative phase, located mainly in the internal, granular layer of the cerebellum, creating a pseudotumor in the cerebellar vermis and a recent hemorrhage in the trunk. The areas of granulomas were measured.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1993

Ischaemic colitis (necrotizing colitis, pseudomembranous colitis) in acute schistosomiasis mansoni: report of two cases

Jayme Neves; Pedro Raso; Denise de Matos Pinto; Sebastiao P. da Silva; Roberto Junqueira de Alvarenga

Two cases of ischaemic necrosis of the sigmoid colon (necrotizing colitis) are reported in 2 brothers aged 7 and 4 years, diagnosed within a 10 d interval. The children had bathed in streams suspected to be contaminated by Schistosoma mansoni about 50-60 d before the onset of acute disease. Both patients had been previously exposed to schistosome-infected streams without showing signs or symptoms of infection. Before admission, S. mansoni eggs had not been found in the stool. Both patients presented with an apparently identical, relatively symptomatic clinical course with rapid evolution to an acute abdomen. Laparotomy disclosed, in both patients, extensive necrosis (ischaemic necrotizing colitis of schistosomal aetiology) of about 20 cm in the first child and 8 cm in the second, extending from part of the descending colon to the sigmoid. The patients were successfully operated upon (hemicolectomy plus colostomy). The histopathological findings were similar in both patients. Ischaemic necrosis with complete destruction of the mucosa and part of the submucosa was detected in the first case; in the necrotic areas a few eggs of S. mansoni were seen, with no granulomatous reaction, but surrounded by cell shadows, pycnotic nuclei and amorphous material. Necrosis extended to the muscular layer and serosa, in which schistosome granulomas in the necrotic-exudative phase were seen, as well as diffuse granulocytic exudate and fibrin. Sections of tissue from both patients contained numerous eggs and granulomas all in the same exudative phase in regional lymph nodes and near the thrombotic vessels. After surgery, the 2 patients progressed similarly. About 10 d after hospital discharge, the patients received anti-schistosomal treatment with oxamniquine. No further sign of infection was detected at subsequent recall visits.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1978

As dimensões do granuloma causado pelos ovos do Schistosoma mansoni no fígado humano

Pedro Raso; Rodrigo de Castro Bernardes; Washington Luiz Tafuri; Luigi Bogliolo; Jayme Neves

The authors have determinated the medium-size diameter of the Schistosomas granuloma during its many forms of evolution (necrotic - exsudative, produtive and recovery by scarring) in 332 cases of human hepatic schistosomiasis. Within those studied cases three were 167 in the acute, toxemic form and 167 the cronic form (hepato-splenic and disseminated). The 286 measured granulomas were studied from needle-biopsy material in the acute form and 165 from surgi cal and needle-biopsy in the latter.


Case Reports in Dermatology | 2010

Ectopic Cutaneous Schistosomiasis mansoni in the Sacral Region.

Pedro Raso; Cibele Fontes Alves; Alexandre Tafuri; Wagner Luiz Tafuri

The authors report one case of late cutaneous Schistosomiasis mansoni in a biopsy of a skin lesion in the sacral region in a 51-year-old female living in Contagem, Minas Gerais. The patient was treated successfully with oxamniquine (Mansil®).


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1993

Estudo histopatológico comparativo do teste cutâneo em cães de área endêmica de leishmaniose tegumentar, utilizando dois antígenos: Leishvacin r e o P10.000g

Wagner Luiz Tafuri; Pedro Raso; Marco Victor Hermeto; Daniel Vieira-Dias; Wilson Mayrink

The Montenegro skin test is widely used as a diagnostic method for American cutaneous leishmaniasis (ACL). However, there is little information about the histological changes that occur after administration of the antigen, especially in dogs. Two intradermal reactions were used in mongrel dogs during a clinical and epidemiological study as a diagnostic method for canine cutaneous leishmaniasis at Virginopolis, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Leishvacin and P10,000G were used as antigens. The inflammatory reaction was more intense and diffuse in dogs tested with P10,000G than Leishvacin.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1989

Dimensões do granuloma hepático produzido por ovos de duas linhagens geográficas do Schistosoma mansoni, no camundongo

Paulo Marcos Zech Coelho; Pedro Raso; Rômulo Teixeira de Mello; Nivaldo Hartung Toppa

The authors have determined the mean diameter of granulomas in the liver of mice infected with cercariae from two different and well definite geographic strains of Schistosoma mansoni (LE, Belo Horizonte, MG, and SJ, São José dos Campos, SP). A total of 1,170 granulomas has been measured. Granulomas measured on the 60th day after infection showed larger size than the other ones measured on the 90th day. Modulation of the immunopathologic response was significantly more efficient for the LE strain, whereas the granulomas (with 60 and 90 days) related to SJ strain were significantly larger. Data suggested a higher pathogenicity for the SJ strain. It is speculated whether these findings could explain, in part, the occurrence of regional variations of the anatomo-clinical forms of schistosomiasis.The authors have determined the mean diameter of granulomas in the liver of mice infected with cercariae from two different and well definite geographic strains of Schistosoma mansoni (LE, Belo Horizonte, MG, and SJ, Sao Jose dos Campos, SP). A total of 1,170 granulomas has been measured. Granulomas measured on the 60th day after infection showed larger size than the other ones measured on the 90th day. Modulation of the immunopathologic response was significantly more efficient for the LE strain, whereas the granulomas ( with 60 and 90 days) related to SJ strain were significantly larger. Data suggested a higher pathogenicity for the SJ strain. It is speculated whether these findings could explain, in part, the occurence of regional variations of the anatomo-clinical forms of schistosomiasis.

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Washington Luiz Tafuri

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Jayme Neves

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Wagner Luiz Tafuri

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Enio Roberto Pietra Pedroso

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Dirceu Bartolomeu Greco

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Manoel Otávio da Costa Rocha

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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José Roberto Lambertucci

Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Nivaldo Hartung Toppa

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Wilson Mayrink

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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