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Featured researches published by Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira.


Comparative Immunology Microbiology and Infectious Diseases | 2016

Serological and molecular detection of Theileria equi in sport horses of northeastern Brazil

Edlainne P. Ferreira; Odilon Vidotto; Jonatas Campos de Almeida; Luana P.S. Ribeiro; Marcos V. Borges; Walter H.C. Pequeno; Danilo Tancler Stipp; Celso José Bruno de Oliveira; Alexander Welker Biondo; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira

Theileriosis is a worldwide protozoal tick-borne disease caused by Theileria equi, which may produce a variety of clinical signs and turn infected horses into lifetime carriers. This study has aimed to perform a serological and molecular detection of T. equi and associated factors in sports horses from six areas of northeastern Brazil. In overall, 59.6% horses were positive by indirect immunofluorescence assay and 50.4% by polymerase chain reaction. No significant association was found when presence of ticks, age, gender, anemia or total plasma proteins was analyzed with seropositivity and molecular techniques. Although a significant association of infection was found in two cities. Thus, local risk factors other than presence of ticks, horse age, gender, anemia and total plasmatic proteins may dictate prevalence of T. equi infection in sports horses, even in highly endemic areas with no control of infection prior to horse competitions.


Comparative Immunology Microbiology and Infectious Diseases | 2017

Mycoplasma ovis infection in goat farms from northeastern Brazil

Carolina A.L. Machado; Odilon Vidotto; Francisco de Oliveira Conrado; Nelson Jessé Rodrigues dos Santos; Jessica Damiana Marinho Valente; Iago C. Barbosa; Patrícia W.S. Trindade; João Luis Garcia; Alexander Welker Biondo; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira

Although Mycoplasma ovis (formerly Eperythrozoon ovis) has been described in small ruminants worldwide, data on M. ovis in goats remain scarce. Accordingly, the aims of the present study were to i) determine the prevalence of hemoplasmas in goats, ii) identify the tick species parasitizing the animals, and iii) determine factors associated with infection in five dairy and three beef goat farms from the Paraíba State, northeastern Brazil. Blood samples were obtained from 402 goats. Samples were screened for hemoplasmas using a pan-hemoplasma PCR. The positive samples were confirmed by sequencing. An epidemiological questionnaire was given to each farm owner addressing age, gender, and presence of ticks. A total of 158/402 (39.3%) goats were positive for M. ovis by PCR. Sequencing of PCR positive samples has shown ≥99% identity with multiple M. ovis 16S rDNA sequences deposited in GenBank, including M. ovis isolates from humans. Dairy (OR=2.15; 95% CI: 1.40-3.32%; P=0.0004) and anemic goats (OR=2.33; 95% CI: 1.51-3.71%; P=0.0001) were more likely to be infected than beef and non-anemic animals, respectively. Amblyomma parvum (49/52, 94.23%) and Rhipicephalus microplus (3/52, 5.77%) were the tick species found parasitizing the animals, with no significant association between the presence of ticks and infection by M. ovis (P=0.1164). This is the first reportedly molecular detection of M. ovis infection in goats from South America. In conclusion, M. ovis is highly prevalent in goats from northeastern Brazil, mainly in dairy animals.


Comparative Immunology Microbiology and Infectious Diseases | 2016

Ehrlichia sp. infection in carthorses of low-income owners, Southern Brazil

Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira; Felipe da Silva Krawczak; Herbert Sousa Soares; Ana M. S. Guimaraes; Ivan Roque Barros-Filho; Mary Marcondes; Marcelo B. Labruna; Alexander Welker Biondo; Odilon Vidotto

Although well established in dogs, Ehrlichia sp. infection has been scarcely reported in horses. The aim was to perform a comprehensive serological and molecular survey for the detection of Ehrlichia spp. in carthorses from Southern Brazil. Blood samples from 190 carthorses from Paraná State were sampled. Horses were also tested for Borrelia burgdorferi and Anaplasma phagocytophilum. Anti-Ehrlichia sp. antibodies were detected by a commercial rapid ELISA, and immunofluorescence antibody assays (IFA) with E. chaffeensis and E. canis as crude antigens. The molecular and phylogenetic analysis of Ehrlichia sp. was based on 16S rRNA and dsb genes. A total of 52 (27.4%), 4 (2.1%), and 3 (1.6%) horses were positive for Ehrlichia spp., Anaplasma spp. and Borrelia burgdorferi, respectively, by the commercial rapid ELISA. Thirty-eight (20.0%) and 37 (19.5%) horses showed anti-E. chaffeensis and anti-E. canis antibodies by IFA, respectively. One blood sample that also showed anti-E. chaffeensis antibodies was PCR positive for the 16S rRNA and dsb genes of Ehrlichia spp., showing an identity of>98.0% to the uncultured Ehrlichia sp. previously detected in Brazilian jaguars (Panthera onca). Anti-Ehrlichia sp. antibodies and Ehrlichia DNA were detected in carthorses from Southern Brazil, which may post public health concerns due to intimate contact with low-income owners. This is the first report of a natural infection of this bacteria in horses from South America. Clinical signs and the tick vector remain unknown.


PLOS ONE | 2018

First report of Anaplasma marginale infection in goats, Brazil

Nayara Bezerra Silva; Naomi S. Taus; Wendell C. Johnson; Anabela Mira; Leonhard Schnittger; Jessica Damiana Marinho Valente; Odilon Vidotto; Hayley E. Masterson; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Massaro W. Ueti; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira

Anaplasma marginale, the causative agent of bovine anaplasmosis, is a tick-borne bacterium that causes significant economic losses for cattle industries and is increasingly being detected in other animal species. Rhipicephalus microplus is the main vector of this bacterium and may be found parasitizing small ruminants. In northeastern Brazil, multispecies grazing is a common family subsistence practice on smallholder farms possibly facilitating interspecies transmission of pathogens. Considering that A. marginale infection has been previously molecularly described in sheep, this study has aimed to estimate the prevalence of A. marginale and factors associated with the infection in goats from northeastern Brazil. A total of 403 goat blood samples were included in the study. An epidemiological questionnaire was applied to each farm owner addressing age, gender, presence of ticks and multispecies grazing. All samples were screened for A. marginale- and A. ovis-infection using primers targeting the Anaplasma spp. msp4 gene. The identity of A. marginale in the blood was confirmed by PCR amplification of msp5 followed by sequencing. Anaplasma spp. were differentiated by sequencing of the repeat region of the msp1α gene. For the statistical analysis the Chi-square or the Fisher’s exact test was used to verify association of the individual factors (age, gender, presence of ticks, and multispecies grazing) with Anaplasma spp. infection. We report the first molecular detection of A. marginale in goats from northeastern Brazil, based on msp1α, msp4 and msp5 gene sequencing analysis. Sequencing of the detected A. marginale msp1α gene revealed the F repeat. Amblyomma parvum and R. microplus were found feeding on animals.


Revista Brasileira De Parasitologia Veterinaria | 2016

Serosurvey for Leishmania spp., Toxoplasma gondii, Trypanosoma cruzi and Neospora caninum in neighborhood dogs in Curitiba-Paraná, Brazil

Caroline Constantino; Maysa Pellizzaro; Edson Ferraz Evaristo de Paula; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Ana Pérola Drulla Brandão; Fernando Ferreira; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira; Helio Langoni; Alexander Welker Biondo


Comparative Immunology Microbiology and Infectious Diseases | 2018

Hemotropic mycoplasmas infection in water buffaloes ( Bubalus bubalis ) from northeastern Brazil

Nelson Jessé Rodrigues dos Santos; Danilo Rodrigues Barros Brito; Hugo L. Abate; Sonália F. Paixão; Eduardo Del Sarto Soares; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; João Luis Garcia; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira; Odilon Vidotto


Parasites & Vectors | 2018

Infection by Mycoplasma spp., feline immunodeficiency virus and feline leukemia virus in cats from an area endemic for visceral leishmaniasis

Mary Marcondes; Karina Y. Hirata; Juliana Peloi Vides; Ludmila Silva Vicente Sobrinho; Jaqueline S. Azevedo; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira


Arquivo Brasileiro De Medicina Veterinaria E Zootecnia | 2018

Seroepidemiology of Neospora caninum among goats (Capra hircus) in the state of Paraíba, northeastern Brazil

B.M.A. Braz; Jessica Damiana Marinho Valente; Eliana Monteforte Cassaro Villalobos; Maria do Carmo Custódio de Souza Hunold Lara; C.A.L. Machado; I.C. Barbosa; V.S.P. Melo; D.T. Stipp; I.R. Barros-Filho; Alexander Welker Biondo; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira


Comparative Immunology Microbiology and Infectious Diseases | 2017

Mycoplasma sp. infection in captive Marcgrave's capuchin monkeys (Sapajus flavius)

Ayodhya Cardoso Ramalho; Ricardo Romão Guerra; Anna C.B. Mongruel; Odilon Vidotto; Ricardo Barbosa Lucena; Monalisa Valesca Soares de Farias Guerra; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira


Archives of Veterinary Science | 2017

MOLECULAR DETECTION OF RANGELIA VITALII IN A DOG FROM THE CURITIBA METROPOLITAN REGION, PARANA STATE, SOUTHERN BRAZIL

Anna C.B. Mongruel; Simone Tostes de Oileira Stedile; Marlos Gonçalves Sousa; Jessica Dm Valente; Iago C Barbosa; Viviane C Spanhol; Amanda Sezyshta; Luis F.S. Weber; Thállitha S.W.J. Vieira; Rafael Felipe da Costa Vieira

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Odilon Vidotto

Universidade Estadual de Londrina

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Anna C.B. Mongruel

Federal University of Paraná

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João Luis Garcia

Universidade Estadual de Londrina

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Amanda Sezyshta

Federal University of Paraná

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