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Dive into the research topics where Susana Zevallos Lescano is active.

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Featured researches published by Susana Zevallos Lescano.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1998

Soil contamination and human infection by Toxocara sp. in the urban area of Lima, Peru.

Susana Zevallos Lescano; Pedro Paulo Chieffi; Benedito Anselmo Peres; Elisabete Ourique de Mello; César Náquira Velarde; Adan Apaza Salinas; Carmen Estácio Rojas

Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo, Av. Dr.Eneas de Carvalho Aguiar 470, 05403-000 Sao Paulo,SP, Brasil *Instituto de Medicina Tropical Daniel A.Carrion, Av. Colonial, Casilla 10138, Lima 1, Peru***Banco de Sangre del Instituto del Nino, Av. Brasil1680, Lima 11, Peru ****Banco de Sangre delHospital Maria Auxiliadora, Av. Pachacutec, Cdra 25,Lima 32, PeruKey words: visceral larva migrans - toxocariasis -Toxocara canis - Lima - Peru


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2009

Human toxocariasis: contribution by Brazilian researchers

Pedro Paulo Chieffi; Sergio Vieira dos Santos; Maisa Leite de Queiroz; Susana Zevallos Lescano

In the present paper the main aspects of the natural history of human infection by Toxocara larvae that occasionally result in the occurrence of visceral and/or ocular larva migrans syndrome were reviewed. The contribution by Brazilian researchers was emphasized, especially the staff of the Tropical Medicine Institute of São Paulo (IMT).


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2006

Survival of Trypanosoma cruzi in sugar cane used to prepare juice

Adriana V.N. Cardoso; Susana Zevallos Lescano; Vicente Amato Neto; Erika Gakiya; Sergio Vieira dos Santos

Chagas disease can be transmitted to man by many different means, including contact with infected triatomine feces, blood transfusion, laboratory accidents, organ transplants, and congenital or oral routes. The latter mode has received considerable attention recently. In this assay, we evaluate the survival of Trypanosoma cruzi contaminating sugar cane used to prepare juice, as well as the viability and capacity for infection by the parasite after recovery. Thirty triatomines were contaminated with T. cruzi Y strain and 45 days later pieces of sugar cane were contaminated with the intestinal contents of the insects. The pieces were ground at different intervals after contamination (time=0, 1, 4, 6, 12 and 24 hours) and the juice extracted and analyzed. Different methods were used to show T. cruzi in the juice: direct analysis, hematocrit tube centrifugation and QBC, and experimental inoculation in 47 female BALB/c mice (five control mice and seven mice for each interval examined (five inoculated orally and two intraperitoneally). Positive results were found using the direct analysis and QBC methods for juice prepared up to 12 hours after initial contamination. However, by the centrifugation technique, positivity was found only up to four hours after contamination of the sugar cane. Inoculated animals showed parasitemia during a 14 day observation period, demonstrating the high survival rate of T. cruzi in sugar cane.


Revista De Saude Publica | 2004

Atividade antiparasitária do artemether na esquistossomose mansônica experimental

Susana Zevallos Lescano; Pedro Paulo Chieffi; Rosa Regina Canhassi; Marcos Boulos; Vicente Amato Neto

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the effect of intramuscular injection of artemether in mice experimentally infected with Schistosoma mansoni, at the time of infection, during schistosomula maturation and after the beginning of egg-laying. METHODS Eighty adult females Balb/c mice were divided into 8 groups with 10 animals each. Seven groups were infected with S. mansoni using 60 cercariae for each animal, inoculated subcutaneously, and the remaining group was maintained without infection. Among the seven infected groups, six were treated with artemether, according to the following schedule: three groups received doses of 100 mg/kg on days 0, 20 or 60 after inoculation of the cercariae; the other three received 50 mg/kg of artemether, also on days 0, 20 or 60. At the end of the 9th, 10th and 11th weeks after infection all the mice infected with S. mansoni were submitted to fecal examination using the Kato-Katz technique. On the 80th day of the experiment, the surviving animals were sacrificed and submitted to perfusion of the portal system in order to recover the worms. Body, liver and spleen weights of each animal were determined at that time. RESULTS A reduction in egg-laying and the number of worms recovered was observed in mice treated with artemether (50 or 100 mg/kg) on the 20th day after infection. The decrease in the number of worms was more notable among S. mansoni females. A significant decrease in liver and spleen weights was also seen on the 20th day among animals treated with 50 or 100 mg/kg of artemether and also among those that received the drug at a dose of 50 mg/kg 60 days after infection. CONCLUSIONS Evidence of the antischistosomal activity of artemether was shown, even at a dose of 50 mg/kg, when the drug was administered during the schistosomula maturation period in the portal system of the vertebrate host.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2004

Larval recovery of Toxocara canis in organs and tissues of experimentally infected Rattus norvegicus

Susana Zevallos Lescano; Maisa Leite de Queiroz; Pedro Paulo Chieffi

The aim of this note was to record for the first time the recovery of Toxocara canis larvae from tissues and organs of Rattus norvegicus (Berkenhout, 1769), Wistar strain, until the 60th day after experimental infection. Rats were orally infected with embryonated T. canis eggs, killed on days 3, 5, 8, 10, 15, 30, and 60 after inoculation and larvae were recovered from liver, lungs, kidneys, brain, and carcass after acid digestion, showing a pattern of migration similar of that previously observed in mice.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2009

Larval recovery of Toxocara cati in experimentally infected Rattus norvegicus and analysis of the rat as potential reservoir for this ascarid

Sergio Vieira dos Santos; Susana Zevallos Lescano; João Manoel Castro; Pedro Paulo Chieffi

Toxocara cati is a common feline parasite transmitted by the ingestion of embryonated eggs, by the transmammary route or by predation of paratenic hosts harbouring third-stage larvae in their bodies. In the present study, the larval distribution of T. cati in tissues and organs of Rattus norvegicus experimentally infected with 300 embryonated eggs was analysed. Third-stage larvae were recovered from livers, lungs, kidneys, eyes, brains and carcasses of infected rats, following tissue digestion with HCl 0.5% for 24 h at 37 degrees C. Some differences from the known larval distribution of Toxocara canisin the same rodent species were found.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2012

IgG Antibody responses in mice coinfected with Toxocara canis and other helminths or protozoan parasites

Susana Zevallos Lescano; Maria Cristina Nakhle; Manoel Carlos S.A. Ribeiro; Pedro Paulo Chieffi

The immune response expressed by IgG antibodies in BALB/c mice experimentally infected with Toxocara canis, was studied with the aim of verifying the possible in vivo cross-reactivity between antigens of T. canis and other parasites (Ascaris suum, Taenia crassiceps, Schistosoma mansoni, Strongyloides venezuelensis and Toxoplasma gondii). Experiments included three groups of mice: one infected only by T. canis, another with one of the other species of parasites and a third concomitantly infected with T. canis and the other species in question. Animals were bled by orbital plexus at 23, 38 and 70 days post infection (p.i.). Sera were analyzed for anti-Toxocara antibodies by ELISA and Immunoblotting, using excretion-secretion antigens (ES), obtained from culture of third-stage larvae of T. canis. For all experiments a control group comprised by ten non-infected mice was used. Only in the case of A. suum infection, in these experimental conditions, the occurrence of cross-reactivity with T. canis was observed. However, in the case of co-infection of T. canis - S. mansoni, T. canis - S. venezuelensis and T. canis - T. crassiceps the production of anti-Toxocara antibodies was found at levels significantly lower than those found in mice infected with T. canis only. Co-infection with S. mansoni or S. venezuelensis showed lower mortality rates compared to what occurred in the animals with single infections. Results obtained in mice infected with T. canis and T. gondii showed significant differences between the mean levels of the optical densities of animals infected with T. canis and concomitantly infected with the protozoan only in the 23rd day p.i.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2012

In vitro action of antiparasitic drugs, especially artesunate, against Toxoplasma gondii

Thaís Cobellis Gomes; Heitor Franco de Andrade Junior; Susana Zevallos Lescano; Vicente Amato-Neto

INTRODUCTION Toxoplasmosis is usually a benign infection, except in the event of ocular, central nervous system (CNS), or congenital disease and particularly when the patient is immunocompromised. Treatment consists of drugs that frequently cause adverse effects; thus, newer, more effective drugs are needed. In this study, the possible activity of artesunate, a drug successfully being used for the treatment of malaria, on Toxoplasma gondii growth in cell culture is evaluated and compared with the action of drugs that are already being used against this parasite. METHODS LLC-MK2 cells were cultivated in RPMI medium, kept in disposable plastic bottles, and incubated at 36ºC with 5% CO2. Tachyzoites of the RH strain were used. The following drugs were tested: artesunate, cotrimoxazole, pentamidine, pyrimethamine, quinine, and trimethoprim. The effects of these drugs on tachyzoites and LLC-MK2 cells were analyzed using nonlinear regression analysis with Prism 3.0 software. RESULTS Artesunate showed a mean tachyzoite inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 0.075µM and an LLC MK2 toxicity of 2.003µM. Pyrimethamine was effective at an IC50 of 0.482µM and a toxicity of 11.178µM. Trimethoprim alone was effective against the in vitro parasite. Cotrimoxazole also was effective against the parasite but at higher concentrations than those observed for artesunate and pyrimethamine. Pentamidine and quinine had no inhibitory effect over tachyzoites. CONCLUSIONS Artesunate is proven in vitro to be a useful alternative for the treatment of toxoplasmosis, implying a subsequent in vivo effect and suggesting the mechanism of this drug against the parasite.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2013

Behavioral changes in Rattus norvegicus coinfected by Toxocara canis and Toxoplasma gondii

Maisa Leite de Queiroz; Tânia Araujo Viel; Cássio Henrique Gomide Papa; Susana Zevallos Lescano; Pedro Paulo Chieffi

Using an elevated plus maze apparatus and an activity cage, behavioral changes in Rattus norvegicus concomitantly infected by Toxocara canis and Toxoplasma gondii were studied, during a period of 120 days. Rats infected by Toxocara canis or Toxoplasma gondii showed significant behavioral changes; however, in the group coinfected by both parasites a behavioral pattern similar to that found in the group not infected was observed thirty days after infection, suggesting the occurrence of modulation in the behavioral response.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2008

Avaliação da resposta imune humoral frente a antígenos de Strongyloides venezuelensis

Carla Rodrigues Rigo; Susana Zevallos Lescano; Cláudia Regina De Marchi; Vicente Amato Neto

Strongyloidiasis affects 30 million people in 70 countries. This enteral parasitosis is usually diagnosed using parasitological tests based on hydrotropism or thermotropism of larvae eliminated in feces, but these tests have been shown to have low sensitivity. In this study, antigenic extracts were tested by means of ELISA, immunoblotting and IFI, using filariform larvae of Strongyloides venezuelensis, a parasite of rodents that shows cross-reactions with Strongyloides stercoralis epitopes. Sensitivity of 89, 85 and 57% for the ELISA reaction and 100, 100 and 96% for immunoblotting with the SAL, ZWIP and ZW antigens, and specificity of 90, 60 and 81% for ELISA and 96, 92 and 91% for immunoblotting with the same antigens, were found in these assays.

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Pedro Paulo Chieffi

Universidade Estadual de Londrina

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Marcos Boulos

University of São Paulo

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Erika Gakiya

University of São Paulo

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