Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo.


Science | 2016

Zika virus in the Americas: Early epidemiological and genetic findings

Nuno Rodrigues Faria; Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Moritz U. G. Kraemer; Renato Souza; Mariana Sequetin Cunha; Sarah C. Hill; Julien Thézé; Michael B. Bonsall; Thomas A. Bowden; Ilona Rissanen; Iray Maria Rocco; Juliana Silva Nogueira; Adriana Yurika Maeda; Fernanda Giseli da Silva Vasami; Fernando Luiz de Lima Macedo; Akemi Suzuki; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Ana Cecília Ribeiro Cruz; Bruno Tardeli Nunes; Daniele Barbosa de Almeida Medeiros; Daniela Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Alice Louize Nunes Queiroz; Eliana Vieira Pinto da Silva; Daniele Freitas Henriques; Elisabeth Salbe Travassos da Rosa; Consuelo Silva de Oliveira; Lívia Carício Martins; Helena Baldez Vasconcelos; L. M. N. Casseb; Darlene de Brito Simith

Zika virus genomes from Brazil The Zika virus outbreak is a major cause for concern in Brazil, where it has been linked with increased reports of otherwise rare birth defects and neuropathology. In a phylogenetic analysis, Faria et al. infer a single introduction of Zika to the Americas and estimated the introduction date to be about May to December 2013—some 12 months earlier than the virus was reported. This timing correlates with major events in the Brazilian cultural calendar associated with increased traveler numbers from areas where Zika virus has been circulating. A correlation was also observed between incidences of microcephaly and week 17 of pregnancy. Science, this issue p. 345 Virus sequencing indicates that Zika arrived in Brazil during the middle of 2013, coincident with a surge in air travelers. Brazil has experienced an unprecedented epidemic of Zika virus (ZIKV), with ~30,000 cases reported to date. ZIKV was first detected in Brazil in May 2015, and cases of microcephaly potentially associated with ZIKV infection were identified in November 2015. We performed next-generation sequencing to generate seven Brazilian ZIKV genomes sampled from four self-limited cases, one blood donor, one fatal adult case, and one newborn with microcephaly and congenital malformations. Results of phylogenetic and molecular clock analyses show a single introduction of ZIKV into the Americas, which we estimated to have occurred between May and December 2013, more than 12 months before the detection of ZIKV in Brazil. The estimated date of origin coincides with an increase in air passengers to Brazil from ZIKV-endemic areas, as well as with reported outbreaks in the Pacific Islands. ZIKV genomes from Brazil are phylogenetically interspersed with those from other South American and Caribbean countries. Mapping mutations onto existing structural models revealed the context of viral amino acid changes present in the outbreak lineage; however, no shared amino acid changes were found among the three currently available virus genomes from microcephaly cases. Municipality-level incidence data indicate that reports of suspected microcephaly in Brazil best correlate with ZIKV incidence around week 17 of pregnancy, although this correlation does not demonstrate causation. Our genetic description and analysis of ZIKV isolates in Brazil provide a baseline for future studies of the evolution and molecular epidemiology of this emerging virus in the Americas.


BMC Medicine | 2015

Emergence and potential for spread of Chikungunya virus in Brazil

Márcio R. T. Nunes; Nuno Rodrigues Faria; Janaina Mota de Vasconcelos; Nick Golding; Moritz U. G. Kraemer; Layanna Freitas de Oliveira; Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Daisy Elaine Andrade da Silva; Eliana Vieira Pinto da Silva; Sandro Patroca da Silva; Valéria L. Carvalho; Giovanini Evelim Coelho; Ana Cecília Ribeiro Cruz; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; João Vianez; Bruno T.D. Nunes; Jedson Ferreira Cardoso; Robert B. Tesh; Simon I. Hay; Oliver G. Pybus; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

BackgroundIn December 2013, an outbreak of Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) caused by the Asian genotype was notified in the Caribbean. The outbreak has since spread to 38 regions in the Americas. By September 2014, the first autochthonous CHIKV infections were confirmed in Oiapoque, North Brazil, and in Feira de Santana, Northeast Brazil.MethodsWe compiled epidemiological and clinical data on suspected CHIKV cases in Brazil and polymerase-chain-reaction-based diagnostic was conducted on 68 serum samples from patients with symptom onset between April and September 2014. Two imported and four autochthonous cases were selected for virus propagation, RNA isolation, full-length genome sequencing, and phylogenetic analysis. We then followed CDC/PAHO guidelines to estimate the risk of establishment of CHIKV in Brazilian municipalities.ResultsWe detected 41 CHIKV importations and 27 autochthonous cases in Brazil. Epidemiological and phylogenetic analyses indicated local transmission of the Asian CHIKV genotype in Oiapoque. Unexpectedly, we also discovered that the ECSA genotype is circulating in Feira de Santana. The presumed index case of the ECSA genotype was an individual who had recently returned from Angola and developed symptoms in Feira de Santana. We estimate that, if CHIKV becomes established in Brazil, transmission could occur in 94% of municipalities in the country and provide maps of the risk of importation of each strain of CHIKV in Brazil.ConclusionsThe etiological strains associated with the early-phase CHIKV outbreaks in Brazil belong to the Asian and ECSA genotypes. Continued surveillance and vector mitigation strategies are needed to reduce the future public health impact of CHIKV in the Americas.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2009

Mayaro Fever Virus, Brazilian Amazon

Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Eliana Vieira Pinto da Silva; Valéria L. Carvalho; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Joaquim Pinto Nunes Neto; Hamilton Antonio de Oliveira Monteiro; Victor S. Peixoto; Jannifer Oliveira Chiang; Márcio Roberto Teixeira Nunes; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

In February 2008, a Mayaro fever virus (MAYV) outbreak occurred in a settlement in Santa Barbara municipality, northern Brazil. Patients had rash, fever, and severe arthralgia lasting up to 7 days. Immunoglobulin M against MAYV was detected by ELISA in 36 persons; 3 MAYV isolates sequenced were characterized as genotype D.


Scientific Reports | 2018

In situ immune response and mechanisms of cell damage in central nervous system of fatal cases microcephaly by Zika virus

Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Jorge Rodrigues de Sousa; Marialva Tereza Araujo; Arnaldo J. Martins Filho; Bianca Nascimento de Alcantara; Fernanda Montenegro de Carvalho Araújo; Maria G. L. Queiroz; Ana Cecília Ribeiro Cruz; Beatriz H. Baldez Vasconcelos; Jannifer Oliveira Chiang; Lívia Carício Martins; Livia Medeiros Neves Casseb; Eliana V. da Silva; Valéria L. Carvalho; Barbara Cristina Baldez Vasconcelos; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Consuelo Silva de Oliveira; Juarez Antonio Simões Quaresma; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

Zika virus (ZIKV) has recently caused a pandemic disease, and many cases of ZIKV infection in pregnant women resulted in abortion, stillbirth, deaths and congenital defects including microcephaly, which now has been proposed as ZIKV congenital syndrome. This study aimed to investigate the in situ immune response profile and mechanisms of neuronal cell damage in fatal Zika microcephaly cases. Brain tissue samples were collected from 15 cases, including 10 microcephalic ZIKV-positive neonates with fatal outcome and five neonatal control flavivirus-negative neonates that died due to other causes, but with preserved central nervous system (CNS) architecture. In microcephaly cases, the histopathological features of the tissue samples were characterized in three CNS areas (meninges, perivascular space, and parenchyma). The changes found were mainly calcification, necrosis, neuronophagy, gliosis, microglial nodules, and inflammatory infiltration of mononuclear cells. The in situ immune response against ZIKV in the CNS of newborns is complex. Despite the predominant expression of Th2 cytokines, other cytokines such as Th1, Th17, Treg, Th9, and Th22 are involved to a lesser extent, but are still likely to participate in the immunopathogenic mechanisms of neural disease in fatal cases of microcephaly caused by ZIKV.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2005

Oropouche Virus Isolation, Southeast Brazil

Márcio Roberto Teixeira Nunes; Lívia Carício Martins; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Jannifer Oliveira Chiang; Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Amelia Travassos da Rosa; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

An Oropouche virus strain was isolated from a novel host (Callithrix sp.) in Arinos, Minas Gerais State, southeastern Brazil. The virus was identified by complement fixation test and confirmed by reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction. Phylogenetic analysis identified this strain as a genotype III isolate previously recognized only in Panama.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2009

Oropouche fever epidemic in Northern Brazil: epidemiology and molecular characterization of isolates.

Helena Baldez Vasconcelos; Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Samir Mansour Moraes Casseb; Joaquim P. Nunes-Neto; Jannifer Oliveira Chiang; Patrick C. Cantuária; Maria de Nazaré de Oliveira Segura; Lívia Carício Martins; Hamilton Antonio de Oliveira Monteiro; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Márcio Roberto Teixeira Nunes; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

BACKGROUND Oropouche fever virus is an important arbovirus associated with febrile disease that re-emerged in 2006 in several municipalities of Pará State, Bragantina region, Amazon, Brazil, 26 years after the last epidemic. OBJECTIVE To investigate an Oropouche fever outbreak in this region. STUDY DESIGN A serologic survey and prospective study of acute febrile cases were performed in Magalhães Barata (urban and rural areas) and Maracanã (rural area) municipalities. Serology (IgM-ELISA and hemagglutination-inhibition [HI]), virus isolation, RT-PCR and real-time-PCR were used to confirm Oropouche virus (OROV) as responsible for the febrile outbreaks. RESULTS Real-time-PCR showed high titers of OROV in acute-phase serum samples from febrile patients. From 113 of 119 acutely febrile patients with paired serum samples, OROV infections was confirmed by serologic conversion (n=76) or high titers (n=37) for both HI and IgM-ELISA. Patients had a febrile disease characterized by headache, chills, dizziness, photophobia, myalgia, nausea, and vomiting. Females and children under 15 years of age were most affected. Nucleotide sequencing of six OROV isolates identified that genotype II was associated with the human disease epidemic. CONCLUSIONS Oropouche fever, which has re-emerged in the Bragantina region in eastern Amazon 26 years after the last epidemic, is caused by genotype II, a lineage previously found only in Peru and western Brazil.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2016

Zika virus epidemic in Brazil. I. Fatal disease in adults: Clinical and laboratorial aspects

Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Marialva Tereza Araujo; Arnaldo J. Martins Filho; Consuelo Silva de Oliveira; Bruno T.D. Nunes; Ana Cecília Ribeiro Cruz; Ana Gisélia Cortês Nascimento; Rita Medeiros; Cezar Augusto Muniz Caldas; Fernando Costa Araújo; Juarez Antonio Simões Quaresma; Barbara Cristina Baldez Vasconcelos; Maria G. L. Queiroz; Elizabeth Salbé Travassos da Rosa; Daniele Freitas Henriques; Eliana Vieira Pinto da Silva; Jannifer Oliveira Chiang; Lívia Carício Martins; Daniele Barbosa de Almeida Medeiros; Juliana Abreu Lima; Márcio Roberto Teixeira Nunes; Jedson Ferreira Cardoso; Sandro Patroca da Silva; Pei Yong Shi; Robert B. Tesh; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

BACKGROUND Zika virus (ZIKV) was first detected in Brazil in May 2015 and the country experienced an explosive epidemic. However, recent studies indicate that the introduction of ZIKV occurred in late 2013. Cases of microcephaly and deaths associated with ZIKV infection were identified in Brazil in November, 2015. OBJECTIVES To determine the etiology of three fatal adult cases. STUDY DESIGN Here we report three fatal adult cases of ZIKV disease. ZIKV infection in these patients was confirmed by cells culture and/or real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) and by antigen detection using immunohistochemical assay. Samples of brain and other selected organs taken at autopsy from three patients were also analyzed by histopathological and immunohistological examination. RESULTS The first patient, a 36-year-old man with lupus and receiving prednisone therapy, developed a fulminant ZIKV infection. At autopsy, RT-qPCR of blood and tissues was positive for ZIKV RNA, and the virus was cultured from an organ homogenate. The second patient, a previously healthy female, 16 years of age, presented classic symptoms of Zika fever, but later developed severe thrombocytopenia, anemia and hemorrhagic manifestations and died. A blood sample taken on the seventh day of her illness was positive RT-PCR for ZIKV RNA and research in the serum was positive for antinuclear factor fine speckled (1/640), suggesting Evans syndrome (hemolytic anemia an autoimmune disorder with immune thrombocytopenic purpura) secondary to ZIKV infection. The third patient was a 20-year-old woman hospitalized with fever, pneumonia and hemorrhages, who died on 13days after admission. Histopathological changes were observed in all viscera examined. ZIKV antigens were detected by immunohistochemistry in viscera specimens of patients 1 and 3. These three cases demonstrate other potential complications of ZIKV infection, in addition to microcephaly and Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS), and they suggest that individuals with immune suppression and/or autoimmune disorders may be at higher risk of developing severe disease, if infected with ZIKV.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2007

Reemergence of Oropouche fever, northern Brazil.

Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Márcio Roberto Teixeira Nunes; Jannifer Oliveira Chiang; Gilberta Bensabath; Helena Baldez Vasconcelos; Ana Yecê das Neves Pinto; Lívia Carício Martins; Hamilton Antonio de Oliveira Monteiro; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

Oropouche fever has reemerged in Parauapebas and Porto de Moz municipalities, Pará State, Brazil. Serologic analysis (immunoglobulin M–ELISA) and virus isolation confirmed Oropouche virus (OROV) in both municipalities. Nucleotide sequencing of 2 OROV isolates from each location indicated genotypes I (Parauapebas) and II (Porto de Moz) in Brazil.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2012

Clinical and virological study of dengue cases and the members of their households: the multinational DENFRAME Project.

Philippe Dussart; Laurence Baril; Laure Petit; Lydie Béniguel; Luong Chan Quang; Sowath Ly; Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Jean-Baptiste Meynard; Sirenda Vong; Loïc Chartier; Aba Diop; Ong Sivuth; Veasna Duong; Cao Minh Thang; Michael Jacobs; Anavaj Sakuntabhai; Márcio Roberto Teixeira Nunes; Vu Ti Que Huong; Philippe Buchy; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

Background Dengue has emerged as the most important vector-borne viral disease in tropical areas. Evaluations of the burden and severity of dengue disease have been hindered by the frequent lack of laboratory confirmation and strong selection bias toward more severe cases. Methodology A multinational, prospective clinical study was carried out in South-East Asia (SEA) and Latin America (LA), to ascertain the proportion of inapparent dengue infections in households of febrile dengue cases, and to compare clinical data and biological markers from subjects with various dengue disease patterns. Dengue infection was laboratory-confirmed during the acute phase, by virus isolation and detection of the genome. The four participating reference laboratories used standardized methods. Principal Findings Among 215 febrile dengue subjects—114 in SEA and 101 in LA—28 (13.0%) were diagnosed with severe dengue (from SEA only) using the WHO definition. Household investigations were carried out for 177 febrile subjects. Among household members at the time of the first home visit, 39 acute dengue infections were detected of which 29 were inapparent. A further 62 dengue cases were classified at early convalescent phase. Therefore, 101 dengue infections were found among the 408 household members. Adding these together with the 177 Dengue Index Cases, the overall proportion of dengue infections among the study participants was estimated at 47.5% (278/585; 95% CI 43.5–51.6). Lymphocyte counts and detection of the NS1 antigen differed significantly between inapparent and symptomatic dengue subjects; among inapparent cases lymphocyte counts were normal and only 20% were positive for NS1 antigen. Primary dengue infection and a specific dengue virus serotype were not associated with symptomatic dengue infection. Conclusion Household investigation demonstrated a high proportion of household members positive for dengue infection, including a number of inapparent cases, the frequency of which was higher in SEA than in LA.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2015

West Nile Virus Encephalitis: The First Human Case Recorded in Brazil

Marcelo Adriano da Cunha e Silva Vieira; Alessandro P. M. Romano; Amaríles de Souza Borba; Eliana Vieira Pinto da Silva; Jannifer Oliveira Chiang; Kelsen Dantas Eulálio; Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo; Sueli Guerreiro Rodrigues; Walfrido S. Almeida-Neto; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos

A Brazilian ranch worker with encephalitis and flaccid paralysis was evaluated in the regional Acute Encephalitis Syndromic Surveillance Program. This was the first Brazilian patient who met the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirmation criteria for West Nile virus disease. Owing to the overlapping of neurological manifestations attributable to several viral infections of the central nervous system, this report exemplifies the importance of human acute encephalitis surveillance. The syndromic approach to human encephalitis cases may enable early detection of the introduction of unusual virus or endemic occurrence of potentially alarming diseases within a region.

Collaboration


Dive into the Raimunda do Socorro da Silva Azevedo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge