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Featured researches published by Suely Pires Curti.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2004

Identification of Primary and Secondary Measles Vaccine Failures by Measurement of Immunoglobulin G Avidity in Measles Cases during the 1997 São Paulo Epidemic

Claudio S. Pannuti; Ricardo José Morello; José Cássio de Moraes; Suely Pires Curti; Ana Maria Sardinha Afonso; Maria Claudia Corrêa Camargo; Vanda Akico Ueda Fick de Souza

ABSTRACT Despite almost universal use of measles vaccines in recent decades, epidemics of the disease continue to occur. Understanding the role of primary vaccine failure (failure to seroconvert after vaccination) and secondary vaccine failures (waning immunity after seroconversion) in measles epidemics is important for the evaluation of measles control programs in developing countries. After a measles epidemic in São Paulo, Brazil, 159 cases previously confirmed by detection of specific immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies were tested for IgG avidity, and a secondary immune response, defined by an IgG avidity index of at least 30%, was established in 30 of 159 (18.9%) patients. Among the 159 patients, 107 (67.3%) had not been vaccinated and 52 (32.7%) had received one or more doses of measles vaccine. Of the 107 unvaccinated patients, 104 (97.2%) showed a primary immune response, defined as an IgG avidity index of less than 30%. Among the 52 patients with documented vaccination, 25 (48.1%) showed a primary immune response and 27 (51.9%) showed a secondary immune response, thereby constituting a secondary vaccine failure. Primary vaccine failure was observed in 13 of 13 patients vaccinated prior to 1 year of age and in 43.5 and 12.5%, respectively, of patients receiving one or two doses after their first birthdays. These results provide evidence that measurement of IgG avidity can be used to distinguish between primary and secondary vaccine failures in vaccinated patients with measles; the method can also be a useful tool for the evaluation of measles control programs.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2004

Human vaccinia-like virus outbreaks in São Paulo and Goiás States, Brazil: virus detection, isolation and identification

Teresa Keico Nagasse-Sugahara; Jonas José Kisielius; Marli Ueda-Ito; Suely Pires Curti; Cristina Adelaide Figueiredo; Áurea Silveira Cruz; Maysa Madalena J. Silva; Carmen Helena Ramos; Maria Cláudia Silva; Tiyo Sakurai; Luis F. de Salles-Gomes

Since October 2001, the Adolfo Lutz Institute has been receiving vesicular fluids and scab specimens of patients from Paraíba Valley region in the São Paulo and Minas Gerais States and from São Patricio Valley, in the Goiás State. Epidemiological data suggested that the outbreaks were caused by Cowpox virus or Vaccinia virus. Most of the patients are dairy milkers that had vesiculo-pustular lesions on the hands, arms, forearms, and some of them, on the face. Virus particles with orthopoxvirus morphology were detected by direct electron microscopy (DEM) in samples of 49 (66.21%) patients of a total of 74 analyzed. Viruses were isolated in Vero cell culture and on chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) of embryonated chicken eggs. Among 21 samples submitted to PCR using primers for hemagglutinin (HA) gene, 19 were positive. Restriction digestion with TaqI resulted in four characteristic Vaccinia virus fragments. HA nucleotide sequences showed 99.9% similarity with Cantagalo virus, described as a strain of Vaccinia virus. The only difference observed was the substitution of one nucleotide in the position 616 leading to change in one amino acid of the protein in the position 206. The phylogenetic analysis showed that the isolates clustered together with Cantagalo virus, other Vaccinia strains and Rabbitpox virus.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2002

Genetic Homogeneity of Measles Viruses Associated with a Measles Outbreak, São Paulo, Brazil, 1997

Maria Isabel de Oliveira; Paul A. Rota; Suely Pires Curti; Cristina Adelaide Figueiredo; Ana M. S Afonso; Márcia Theobaldo; Luiza T.M. Souza; Stephanie L. Liffick; William J. Bellini; Jose C. Moraes; Klaus E. Stevien; Edison Luiz Durigon

During a resurgence of measles in São Paulo, Brazil, in 1997, >40,000 cases (peak incidence rate of 246/100,000 inhabitants) and 42 measles-related deaths were reported. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and nucleotide sequencing were used to analyze specimens from patients who had typical clinical measles infection during this outbreak and from six patients who had had measles in 1995 and 1996. Although wild-type measles viruses (genotypes D5 and D6) were present in São Paulo before this resurgence, we detected only D6 viruses. The genotype D6 viruses isolated during this outbreak had identical sequences to genotype D6 viruses isolated in other parts of Brazil and South America in 1997 and 1998, suggesting that a single chain of transmission was responsible. We also identified genotype A viruses in two vaccine-associated cases from 1995 and 1996. Our findings extend the knowledge of the circulation patterns of measles virus in South America, contributing to measles control efforts in the Americas.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2008

Isolation and genotype analysis of rubella virus from a case of Guillain-Barré syndrome

Cristina Adelaide Figueiredo; G.B. Klautau; A.M.S. Afonso; S.B. Castrignano; Maria Isabel de Oliveira; Suely Pires Curti; G.G. Squarcina; K. Narimatsu; Z. Rasslan; C.A.C. Lima; V. Golin; E.F. Tadeo; F.J. Spagunolo; B. Cataldo; Edison Luiz Durigon

Rubella virus (RV) infection has sporadically been linked to Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), but the association with RV has been based only on clinical and/or serological backgrounds. In the present case it was possible to isolate RV (genotype 1a) from cerebrospinal fluid and peripheral blood mononuclear cells of an 18-year-old woman diagnosed with GBS after clinical manifestations of rubella. This report contributes to confirm RV as one of the triggering pathogens of this peripheral nervous system disease.


Revista De Saude Publica | 2002

Rash after measles vaccination: laboratory analysis of cases reported in São Paulo, Brazil

Maria Isabel de Oliveira; Suely Pires Curti; Cristina Adelaide Figueiredo; Ana M. S Afonso; Márcia Theobaldo; Raymundo Soares Azevedo; Edison Luiz Durigon

OBJECTIVE The clinical differential diagnosis of rash due to viral infections is often difficult, and misdiagnosis is not rare, especially after the introduction of measles and rubella vaccination. A study to determine the etiological diagnosis of exanthema was carried out in a group of children after measles vaccination. METHODS Sera collected from children with rash who received measles vaccine were reported in 1999. They were analyzed for IgM antibodies against measles virus, rubella virus, human parvovirus B19 (HPV B19) using ELISA commercial techniques, and human herpes virus 6 (HHV 6) using immunofluorescence commercial technique. Viremia for each of those viruses was tested using a polimerase chain reaction (PCR). RESULTS A total of 17 cases of children with exanthema after measles immunization were reported in 1999. The children, aged 9 to 12 months (median 10 months), had a blood sample taken for laboratory analysis. The time between vaccination and the first rash signs varied from 1 to 60 days. The serological results of those 17 children suspected of measles or rubella infection showed the following etiological diagnosis: 17.6% (3 in 17) HPV B19 infection; 76.5% (13 in 17) HHV 6 infection; 5.9% (1 in 17) rash due to measles vaccine. CONCLUSIONS The study data indicate that infection due to HPV B19 or HHV 6 can be misdiagnosed as exanthema due to measles vaccination. Therefore, it is important to better characterize the etiology of rash in order to avoid attributing it incorrectly to measles vaccine.


Virus Research | 2013

Two novel circo-like viruses detected in human feces: complete genome sequencing and electron microscopy analysis

Silvana Beres Castrignano; Teresa Keico Nagasse-Sugahara; Jonas José Kisielius; Marli Ueda-Ito; Paulo Eduardo Brandão; Suely Pires Curti

The application of viral metagenomic techniques and a series of PCRs in a human fecal sample enabled the detection of two novel circular unisense DNA viral genomes with 92% nucleotide similarity. The viruses were tentatively named circo-like virus-Brazil (CLV-BR) strains hs1 and hs2 and have genome lengths of 2526 and 2533 nucleotides, respectively. Four major open reading frames (ORFs) were identified in each of the genomes, and differences between the two genomes were primarily observed in ORF 2. Only ORF 3 showed significant amino acid similarities to a putative rolling circle replication initiator protein (Rep), although with low identity (36%). Our phylogenetic analysis, based on the Rep protein, demonstrated that the CLV-BRs do not cluster with members of the Circoviridae, Nanoviridae or Geminiviridae families and are more closely related to circo-like genomes previously identified in reclaimed water and feces of a wild rodent and of a bat. The CLV-BRs are members of a putative new family of circular Rep-encoding ssDNA viruses. Electron microscopy revealed icosahedral (~23 nm) structures, likely reflecting the novel viruses, and rod-shaped viral particles (~65-460 × 21 × 10 nm in length, diameter, and axial canal, respectively). Circo-like viruses have been detected in stool samples from humans and other mammals (bats, rodents, chimpanzees and bovines), cerebrospinal fluid and sera from humans, as well as samples from many other sources, e.g., insects, meat and the environment. Further studies are needed to classify all novel circular DNA viruses and elucidate their hosts, pathogenicity and evolutionary history.


Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2015

Antiviral Action of Hydromethanolic Extract of Geopropolis from Scaptotrigona postica against Antiherpes Simplex Virus (HSV-1)

Guilherme Rabelo Coelho; Ronaldo Z. Mendonça; Karina de Senna Vilar; Cristina Adelaide Figueiredo; Juliana Cuoco Badari; Noemi Nosomi Taniwaki; Gisleine Namiyama; Maria Isabel de Oliveira; Suely Pires Curti; Patricia Evelyn Silva; Giuseppina Negri

The studies on chemical composition and biological activity of propolis had focused mainly on species Apis mellifera L. (Hymenoptera: Apidae). There are few studies about the uncommon propolis collected by stingless bees of the Meliponini tribe known as geopropolis. The geopropolis from Scaptotrigona postica was collected in the region of Barra do Corda, Maranhão state, Brazil. The chemical analysis of hydromethanolic extract of this geopropolis (HMG) was carried out through HPLC-DAD-ESI-MS/MS and the main constituents found were pyrrolizidine alkaloids and C-glycosyl flavones. The presence of alkaloids in extracts of propolis is detected for the first time in this sample. The antiviral activity of HMG was evaluated through viral DNA quantification experiments and electron microscopy experiments. Quantification of viral DNA from herpes virus showed reduction of about 98% in all conditions and concentration tested of the HMG extract. The results obtained were corroborated by transmission electron microscopy, in which the images did not show particle or viral replication complex. The antiviral activity of C-glycosyl flavones was reported for a variety of viruses, being observed at different points in the viral replication. This work is the first report about the antiviral activity of geopropolis from Scaptotrigona postica, in vitro, against antiherpes simplex virus (HSV).


Infection | 2011

Rubella encephalitis in a young adult male: isolation and genotype analysis

Cristina Adelaide Figueiredo; Maria Isabel de Oliveira; Ana Maria Sardinha Afonso; Suely Pires Curti; E. L. Durigon

Rubella virus (RV) is the etiologic agent of a mild exanthematous disease associated with low-grade fever, lymphadenopathy, and a short-lived morbilliform rash [1, 2]. The complications of rubella are arthritis, thrombocytopenia, thyroiditis, and encephalitis, with the latter occurring in approximately 1 in 6,000 cases [3]. The severity is encephalitis as a complication of rubella is highly variable, and there is an overall mortality rate of 20%. Viral encephalitis refers to an acute inflammatory process of the brain parenchyma due to direct viral infection. The clinical presentation of viral encephalitis is non-specific and includes fever, varying degrees of alteration in sensorium with or without focal neurological deficits and/or seizures, all of which may be due as well to a variety of other infective and noninfective causes. A diagnosis of viral encephalitis can be achieved either by demonstrating the presence of viral nucleic acid or antibody in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or by isolating the virus from CSF or brain tissue. However, even under optimal conditions, 30–60% of patients with clinically suspected viral encephalitis remain undiagnosed. We report here a case of encephalitis in a young man from whom it was possible to isolate RV from the CSF and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). Case presentation


Revista De Saude Publica | 2000

RC-IAL cell line: sensitivity of rubella virus grow

Cristina Adelaide Figueiredo; Maria Isabel de Oliveira; Suely Pires Curti; Áurea Silveira Cruz; Eliane Moreira; Ana M. S Afonso; Luis F. de Salles-Gomes

OBJECTIVE The rapid growth of the rubella virus in RC-IAL2 with development of cytopathic effect, in response to rubella virus infection, is described. For purposes of comparison, the rubella virus RA-27/3 strain was titered simultaneously in the RC-IAL, Vero, SIRC and RK13 cell lines. METHODS Rubella virus RA-27/3 strain are inoculated in the RC-IAL cell line (rabbit Kidney, Institute Adolfo Lutz). Plates containing 1.5x10(5) cells/ml of RC-IAL line were inoculated with 0.1ml s RA-27/3 strain virus containing 1x 10(4)TCID50/0.1ml. A 25% cytopathic effect was observed after 48 hours and 100% after 96 hours. The results obtained were compared to those observed with the SIRC, Vero and RK13 cell lines. Rubella virus was detected by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS With the results, it was possible to conclude that the RC-IAL cell line is a very good substrate for culturing rubella virus. The cells inoculated with rubella virus were examined by phase contrast microscopy and showed the characteristic rounded, bipolar and multipolar cells. The CPE in RC-IAL was observed in the first 48 hours and the curve of the increased infectivity was practically the same as observed in other cell lines. CONCLUSIONS These findings are important since this is one the few cell lines described in the literature with a cytopathic effect. So it can be used for antigen preparation and serological testing for the diagnosis of specific rubella antibodies.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2012

Phylogenetic analysis of rubella virus strains during an outbreak in São Paulo, 2007–2008

Cristina Adelaide Figueiredo; Maria Isabel de Oliveira; Suely Pires Curti; A.M.S. Afonso; A.L. Frugi Yu; F. Gualberto; Edison Luiz Durigon

Rubella virus (RV) is an important human pathogen that causes rubella, an acute contagious disease. It also causes severe birth defects collectively known as congenital rubella syndrome when infection occurs during the first trimester of pregnancy. Here, we present the phylogenetic analysis of RV that circulated in São Paulo during the 2007–2008 outbreak. Samples collected from patients diagnosed with rubella were isolated in cell culture and sequenced. RV RNA was obtained from samples or RV‐infected cell cultures and amplified by reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction. Sequences were assigned to genotypes by phylogenetic analysis using RV reference sequences. Seventeen sequences were analyzed, and three genotypes were identified: 1a, 1G, and 2B. Genotypes 1a and 1G, which were isolated in 2007, were responsible for sporadic rubella cases in São Paulo. Thereafter, in late 2007, the epidemiological conditions changed, resulting in a large RV outbreak with the clear dominance of genotype 2B. The results of this study provide new approaches for monitoring the progress of elimination of rubella from São Paulo, Brazil. J. Med. Virol. 84:1666–1671, 2012.

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