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Tropical Medicine & International Health | 1998

Yellow fever vaccination during pregnancy and spontaneous abortion: a case-control study

Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; F. R. F. Nunes‐Ara£jo; Waldely P. Pires; Flávia Andrea Nery Silva; Hégena L. Costa

objective    To assess a possible association between Yellow fever (YF) vaccine (inadvertently) administered during early pregnancy and spontaneous abortion.method  A hospital‐based case‐control study conducted in a Brazilian town after a YF vaccine campaign that followed an epidemic of dengue. The study included 39 women who attended a university hospital with spontaneous abortion (cases) and 74 pregnant women attending the antenatal clinic of that hospital (controls).results  The crude odds ratio (relative risk estimate) of this association was 2.49, which dropped to 2.29 (95% CI 0.65–8.03) when adjusted for several confounders by multiple logistic regression. Dengue and exposure to organophosphate insecticide fogging during pregnancy were not associated with spontaneous abortion.conclusion  This study, although small and with low power, provides some evidence that women vaccinated with YF vaccine during early pregnancy have an increased risk of having spontaneous abortion. Based on these findings a sensible recommendation should be to avoid YF vaccination of pregnant women unless their risk of acquiring YF outweighs the risk of vaccine‐related abortion.


Toxicon | 1990

Wolf spider bites in São Paulo, Brazil: a clinical and epidemiological study of 515 cases.

Lindioneza Adriano Ribeiro; Miguel Tanús Jorge; Roberto Vaz Piesco; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka

Data obtained from 515 victims of bites of wolf spiders (family Lycosidae) who were attended in Vital Brazil Hospital, São Paulo City, Brazil, in a 5-year period (1979-1983) were analysed. Bites were more frequent in males (56%). All age groups were involved. Foot and hand were the preferential sites of bite (79%), and pain, generally mild, was the predominant symptom (83%). No local necrosis, a severe complication described in the previous literature, was detected, suggesting that those old cases were due to misdiagnosed Loxosceles spider bites. Specific antivenom was employed in only three cases which is evidence that physicians do not consider wolf spider bites to be severe.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1997

Histoplasmose em pacientes imunodeprimidos: estudo de 18 casos observados em Uberlândia, MG

Aércio Sebastião Borges; Marcelo Simão Ferreira; Marco Túlio Alvarenga Silvestre; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Ademir Rocha

The authors describe eighteen cases of histoplasmosis in immunodepressed patients, 17 with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and one patient with hepatic cirrhosis. The diagnosis of histoplasmosis was made by isolation of Histoplasma capsulatum from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), blood and bone marrow or by histopathologic (biopsy or post mortem) examination. The mean age of the patients was 35.8 years; 13 patients were male (72.2%). The disease was disseminated, with the following distribution:skin (38.8%), bone marrow (27.7%), nasopharyngeal mucosa (22.2%), lungs (22.2%), colon (11.1%), central nervous system (5.5%) and esophagus (5.5%). Adenomegaly (50%), hepatomegaly (77.7%) and splenomegaly (61.1%) were frequently seen. The most common hematologic abnormality was pancytopenia (33.3%) of the patients. Eleven patients were treated, 9 with amphotericin B and 2 with itraconazole. Eight had good clinical improvement and all of them were given amphotericin B or a triazolic as maintenance therapy. This study emphasize the importance of this mycosis in imunodepressed patients, specially AIDS patients, in whom the infection tends to invade the macrophagic-lymphoid system and preferentially the cutaneous tegument.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1994

Philodryas patagoniensis bite and local envenoming

Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Paulo Vitor Portella Silveira

A 5-year-old boy bitten by a specimen of Philodryas patagoniensis, a colubrid snake currently classified as nonvenomous, developed signs of local envenoming characterized by swelling and warmth on the bitten limb. This is the first time that local envenoming following Philodryas patagoniensis bite is recognized. Based on the clinical findings and misidentification of the snake, the patient was treated as a victim of Bothrops bite, having received unnecessarily the specific antivenom. Educational efforts to make doctors and health workers capable to identify correctly venomous snakes are necessary, to avoid inappropriate indication of antivenom and decrease the risk of its potentially harmful untoward effects. Examination of the bite site can be useful to the differential diagnosis between pit viper and colubrid bites.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1992

Non-venomous snake bite and snake bite without envenoming in a brazilian teaching hospital: analysis of 91 cases

Paulo Vitor Portella Silveira; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka

A retrospective survey of 473 cases of snake bite admitted to a Brazilian teaching hospital from 1984 to 1990 revealed 91 cases of bite without envenoming and/or caused by non-venomous snakes. In 17 of these cases the snake was identified, and one patient was bitten by a snake-like reptile (Amphisbaena mertensii). In 43 cases diagnosis was made on clinical grounds (fang marks in the absence of signs of envenoming). The other 30 cases were of patients who complained of being bitten but who did not show any sign of envenoming or fang mark. Most cases occurred in men (66;73%), in the 10-19 years age group (26;29%), in the lower limbs (51/74;69%), between 6 A. M. and 2 P.M. (49;61%) and in the month of April (16;18%). One patient bitten by Philodryas olfersii developed severe local pain, swelling and redness at the site of the bite, with normal clotting time. The patient bitten by Drymarcon corais was misdiagnosed as being bitten by a snake of the genus Bothrops, was given the specific antivenom, and developed anaphylaxis. One patient bitten by Sibynomorphus mikanii presented prolonged clotting time, and was also given antivenom as a case of Bothrops bite. Correct identification of venomous snakes by physicians is necessary to provide correct treatment to victims of snake bite, avoiding unnecessary distress to the patient, and overprescription of antivenom, which may eventually cause severe untoward effects.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1997

Agreement between premortem and postmortem diagnoses in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome observed at a brazilian teaching hospital

Aércio Sebastião Borges; Marcelo Simão Ferreira; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Marco Túlio Alvarenga Silvestre; Arnaldo Moreira da Silva; Ademir Rocha

Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is one of the main causes of death in adults worldwide. More commonly than in the general population, in patients with AIDS there is substantial disagreement between causes of death which are clinically suspected and those established by postmortem examination. The findings of 52 postmortem examinations were compared to the premortem (clinical) diagnoses, and there was 46% agreement between them. Fifty two percent of the patients had more than one postmortem diagnosis, and 48% had at least one AIDS-related disease not suspected clinically. Cytomegalovirus infection was the commonest (30.7%) autopsy finding, but not a single case had been suspected premortem. Bacterial infection, tuberculosis, and histoplasmosis were also common, sometimes not previously suspected, postmortem findings. This study shows that multiple infections occur simultaneously in AIDS patients, and that many among them are never suspected before the postmortem examination. These findings suggest that an aggressive investigation of infections and cancers should be done in patients with AIDS, particularly in those who do not respond to therapy of an already recognized condition.


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

South American rattlesnake bite in a Brazilian teaching hospital. Clinical and epidemiological study of 87 cases, with analysis of factors predictive of renal failure

Paulo Vitor Portella Silveira; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka

Records of 87 victims of rattlesnake bite who were admitted to a teaching in south-eastern Brazil from 1984 to 1990 were retrospectively examined. The patients came from 27 municipalities in 3 states. Most of the bites (47%) occurred between 10.00 h and 18.00 h and in April (13%). Identification of the snake was possible in only 17% of the cases, diagnosis being made on clinical grounds in the others. The lower limbs were the most common site of bite (85%). The median time interval between bite and receiving medical help was 3 h. Fang marks were observed in 47% of the cases, neurotoxic facies in 61%, and myalgia in 29%. Dark urine was reported in 40% of the cases. Clotting time was above 15 min in 53% of the tested cases. Use of a tourniquet before admission to hospital was reported 11 times. The mean dose of specific antivenom was 190 +/- 95.69 mg. The case fatality rate was 1%; 13 cases (18%) developed renal failure, 10 of whom needed dialysis. The chi 2 test for trend showed that both increased age and increased time interval between bite and medical help significantly increased the risk of renal failure (P < 0.02). Myalgia and neurotoxic facies were predictive of renal failure in patients older than 40 years (Fishers exact test, P < 0.002 and P < 0.02, respectively). There was no significant association between dark urine or prolonged clotting time and renal failure.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2000

Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in Brazil: clinical aspects of three new cases

Marcelo Simão Ferreira; Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Thogo L. Santos; Rubens P. Santos; Paulo S. Santos; Ademir Rocha

Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) has been recognized recently in Brazil, where 28 cases have been reported as of September 1999. We report here the clinical and laboratory findings of three cases whose diagnoses were confirmed serologically. All the patients were adults who presented a febrile illness with respiratory symptoms that progressed to respiratory failure that required artificial ventilation in two of them. Laboratory findings were most of the time consistent with those reported in the United States in patients infected with the Sin Nombre virus, and included elevated hematocrit and thrombocytopenia; presence of atypical lymphocytes was observed in one patient. The chest radiological findings observed in all the patients were bilateral, diffuse, reticulonodular infiltrates. Two patients died. Histopathological examination of the lungs of these patients revealed interstitial and alveolar edema, alveolar hemorrhage, and mild interstitial pneumonia characterized by infiltrate of immunoblasts and mononuclear cells. In the epidemiologic investigation of one of the cases, serologic (ELISA) tests were positive in 3 (25%) out of 12 individuals who shared the same environmental exposure. HPS should be included in the differential diagnosis of interstitial pneumonia progressing to acute respiratory failure.


Sao Paulo Medical Journal | 1994

Parenteral injection of organophosphate insecticide: apropos of two cases

Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka

Two cases of parenteral injection of organophosphate insecticide are reported. A 20-year-old man injected himself malathion intramuscularly. The developed necrosis in the injection set and abscess formation, and developed a severe poisoning reaction of late onset that was fully manifested 60 hours after the injection. A 22-year-old girl injected herself subcutaneously a small amount of fenitrothion and had severe swelling of the affected limb and a sterile abscess. In cases of parenteral injection of organophosphates, attention must be paid to the possibility of late onset of the clinical manifestations of the poisoning, and to the fact that usual measures to reduce exposure to the organophosphate, such as induction of vomiting, gastric lavage and use of activated charcoal are probably ineffective. Local complications at the site of the injection, like necrosis and abscesses are also expected findings.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2000

Occupational injuries with captive lance-headed vipers (Bothrops moojeni): experience from a snake farm in Brazil.

Sérgio de Andrade Nishioka; Paulo Vitor Portella Silveira; Fernando M. Peixoto-Filho; Miguel Tanús Jorge; Adelheid Sandoz

Summary We studied occupational injuries with captive lance‐headed vipers (Bothrops moojeni) that occurred in a snake farm in south‐eastern Brazil from February 1981 to May 1999. The risk of injury, taking into account 13 cases of snake‐associated injuries (12 of them snake bites) was 2.73 per 10000 person‐days of work, and 3.51 per 100000 venom extractions. Thirteen cases of injury occurred in seven workers, whereas 18 workers were never injured, suggesting that some individuals have a higher risk of injury than others perhaps due to lack of concentration or overconfidence. Eight episodes of occupational injuries occurring in four technicians, including a case of eye injury due to splashed venom during extraction, are reported. Assessment of whether envenoming occurred was facilitated by knowledge of the snake species and size, history of recent venom extraction and snake feeding, and examination of snake venom glands. Hypersensitivity reactions (anaphylaxis and serum sickness) to antivenom are a risk particularly to those workers who were bitten more than once and medicated previously. Antivenom therefore should not be administered to these individuals unless there is clear evidence that envenoming occurred or is likely to have occurred. Hypersensitivity to the venom is also a health concern for workers from snake farms.

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Ademir Rocha

Federal University of Uberlandia

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Marcelo Simão Ferreira

Federal University of Uberlandia

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Arnaldo Moreira da Silva

Federal University of Uberlandia

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Miguel Tanús Jorge

Federal University of Uberlandia

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Aércio Sebastião Borges

Federal University of Uberlandia

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Lindioneza Adriano Ribeiro

Federal University of Uberlandia

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Marcius K. N. Burgarelli

Federal University of Uberlandia

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Rosuita Fratari Bonito

Federal University of Uberlandia

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