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Featured researches published by Zunilda Sánchez.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2015

Analytical Validation of Quantitative Real-Time PCR Methods for Quantification of Trypanosoma cruzi DNA in Blood Samples from Chagas Disease Patients

Juan Carlos Ramírez; Carolina Cura; Otacilio C. Moreira; Eliane Lages-Silva; Natalia Juiz; Elsa F. Velazquez; Juan David Ramírez; Anahí Alberti; Paula Pavía; María Flores-Chávez; Arturo Muñoz-Calderón; Deyanira Pérez-Morales; José Santalla; Paulo Marcos da Matta Guedes; Julie Péneau; Paula L. Marcet; Carlos Padilla; David Cruz-Robles; Edward Valencia; Gladys Crisante; Gonzalo Greif; Inés Zulantay; Jaime A. Costales; Miriam Alvarez-Martínez; Norma Edith Martínez; Rodrigo Villarroel; Sandro Villarroel; Zunilda Sánchez; Margarita Bisio; Rudy Parrado

An international study was performed by 26 experienced PCR laboratories from 14 countries to assess the performance of duplex quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) strategies on the basis of TaqMan probes for detection and quantification of parasitic loads in peripheral blood samples from Chagas disease patients. Two methods were studied: Satellite DNA (SatDNA) qPCR and kinetoplastid DNA (kDNA) qPCR. Both methods included an internal amplification control. Reportable range, analytical sensitivity, limits of detection and quantification, and precision were estimated according to international guidelines. In addition, inclusivity and exclusivity were estimated with DNA from stocks representing the different Trypanosoma cruzi discrete typing units and Trypanosoma rangeli and Leishmania spp. Both methods were challenged against 156 blood samples provided by the participant laboratories, including samples from acute and chronic patients with varied clinical findings, infected by oral route or vectorial transmission. kDNA qPCR showed better analytical sensitivity than SatDNA qPCR with limits of detection of 0.23 and 0.70 parasite equivalents/mL, respectively. Analyses of clinical samples revealed a high concordance in terms of sensitivity and parasitic loads determined by both SatDNA and kDNA qPCRs. This effort is a major step toward international validation of qPCR methods for the quantification of T. cruzi DNA in human blood samples, aiming to provide an accurate surrogate biomarker for diagnosis and treatment monitoring for patients with Chagas disease.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2010

Trypanosoma cruzi Lineages Detected in Congenitally Infected Infants and Triatoma infestans from the Same Disease-Endemic Region under Entomologic Surveillance in Paraguay

Florencia del Puerto; Zunilda Sánchez; Eva Nara; Graciela Meza; Berta Paredes; Elizabeth Ferreira; Graciela Russomando

Trypanosoma cruzi II is associated with Chagas disease in the southern part of South America. We analyzed T. cruzi variants in field-collected triatomines and congenitally infected infants living in the same disease-endemic region in Paraguay. Results of polymerase chain reactions for T. cruzi kinetoplast DNA and satellite DNA were positive in 83 triatomine feces samples and 58 infant blood samples. However, lineages were detected in 33 and 38 samples, respectively. Trypanosoma cruzi genotypes were determined in 56 (97%) blood samples after hybridization by using specific probes. The Tc I genotype was not detected. The prevalent sublineage was Tc IId in triatomines (27 of 33) and infant blood (36 of 58) as assessed by amplification of the 24Salpha ribosomal RNA and the mini-exon region genes. The Tc IIc genotype was detected in 20 infant blood samples and in 1 triatomine. This study shows T. cruzi II is the predominant lineage circulating in triatomines and humans in endemic areas of eastern region of Paraguay.


Expert Review of Molecular Diagnostics | 2010

Shed acute-phase antigen protein in an ELISA system for unequivocal diagnosis of congenital Chagas disease.

Zunilda Sánchez

, is the most common cause of heart disease in Latin America, and approximately 13,000–45,000 cha-gasic patients die each year. Owing to the increasing control of the transmis-sion routes mediated by the vector, blood transfusion and organ transplant, vertical transmission has become more relevant in terms of public health


Acta Tropica | 2015

Diagnosis of congenital Trypanosoma cruzi infection: A serologic test using Shed Acute Phase Antigen (SAPA) in mother-child binomial samples

Bibiana J. Volta; Graciela Russomando; Patricia L. Bustos; Karenina Scollo; Zunilda Sánchez; Rita L. Cardoni; Jacqueline Búa

Chagas congenital infection is an important health problem in endemic and non-endemic areas in which Trypanosoma cruzi-infected women can transmit the parasite to their offspring. In this study, we evaluated the antibody levels against the T. cruzi Shed Acute Phase Antigen (SAPA) in 91 binomial samples of seropositive pregnant women and their infected and non-infected children by ELISA. In 70 children without congenital T. cruzi transmission, the titers of anti-SAPA antibodies were lower than those of their seropositive mothers. In contrast, 90.5% of 21 congenitally infected children, at around 1 month of age, showed higher anti-SAPA antibody levels than their mothers. Subtracting the SAPA-ELISA mother OD value to the SAPA-ELISA child OD allowed efficient detection of most T. cruzi congenitally infected children immediately after birth, when total anti-parasite antibodies transferred during pregnancy are still present in all children born to seropositive women. A positive correlation was observed between parasitemia levels in mothers and infants evaluated by quantitative DNA amplification and anti-SAPA antibody titers by ELISA. As SAPA serology has proved to be very efficient to detect T. cruzi infection in mother-child binomial samples, it could be of extreme help for early diagnosis of newborns, in maternities and hospitals where DNA amplification is not available. This prompt diagnosis may prevent drop out of the long-term follow-up for future diagnosis and may ensure early trypanocidal treatment, which has proved to be efficient to cure infants with congenital Chagas disease.


SpringerPlus | 2013

DNA methylation-mediated silencing of PU.1 in leukemia cells resistant to cell differentiation

María José Fernández-Nestosa; Estefanía Monturus; Zunilda Sánchez; Francisco S. Torres; Agustín F. Fernández; Mario F. Fraga; Pablo Hernandez; Jorge Bernardo Schvartzman; Dora B. Krimer

In mice, the proviral integration of the Friend Spleen Focus Forming Virus (SFFV) within the PU.1 locus of erythroid precursors results in the development of erythroleukemia. SFFV integrates several kilobases upstream of the PU.1 transcription initiation start site leading to the constitutive activation of the gene which in turn results in a block of erythroid differentiation. In this study we have mapped and sequenced the exact location of the retroviral integration site. We have shown that SFFV integrates downstream of a previously described upstream regulatory element (URE), precisely 2,976 bp downstream of the URE-distal element. We have also found that SFFV persists integrated within the same location in resistant cell lines that have lost their differentiation capacity and in which case PU.1 remains silent. We have examined the methylation status of PU.1 and found that in resistant cells the nearby CpG islands remained methylated in contrast to a non-methylated status of the parental cell lines. Treatment with 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine caused resistant cells to differentiate yet only when combined with HMBA. Altogether these results strongly suggest that methylation plays a crucial role with regard to PU.1 silencing. However, although demethylation is required, it is not sufficient to overcome the differentiation impasse. We have also showed that activation blockage of the Epo/Epo-R pathway remains despite of the absence of PU.1.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2017

Chagas disease: national survey of seroprevalence in children under five years of age conducted in 2008

Graciela Russomando; Blanca Cousiño; Zunilda Sánchez; Laura Franco; Eva Nara; Lilian Chena; Magaly Martínez; Me Galeano; Lucio Benitez

BACKGROUND Since the early 1990s, programs to control Chagas disease in South America have focused on eradicating domiciliary Triatoma infestans, the main vector. Seroprevalence studies of the chagasic infection are included as part of the vector control programs; they are essential to assess the impact of vector control measures and to monitor the prevention of vector transmission. OBJECTIVE To assess the interruption of domiciliary vector transmission of Chagas disease by T. infestans in Paraguay by evaluating the current state of transmission in rural areas. METHODS A survey of seroprevalence of Chagas disease was carried out in a representative sample group of Paraguayans aged one to five years living in rural areas of Paraguay in 2008. Blood samples collected on filter paper from 12,776 children were tested using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Children whose serology was positive or undetermined (n = 41) were recalled to donate a whole blood sample for retesting. Their homes were inspected for current triatomine infestation. Blood samples from their respective mothers were also collected and tested to check possible transmission of the disease by a congenital route. FINDINGS A seroprevalence rate of 0.24% for Trypanosoma cruzi infection was detected in children under five years of age among the country’s rural population. Our findings indicate that T. cruzi was transmitted to these children vertically. The total number of infected children, aged one to five years living in these departments, was estimated at 1,691 cases with an annual incidence of congenital transmission of 338 cases per year. MAIN CONCLUSION We determined the impact of vector control in the transmission of T. cruzi, following uninterrupted vector control measures employed since 1999 in contiguous T. infestans-endemic areas of Paraguay, and this allowed us to estimate the degree of risk of congenital transmission in the country.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2010

Early Diagnosis of Congenital Trypanosoma cruzi Infection, Using Shed Acute Phase Antigen, in Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina

María Cristina Mallimaci; Sergio Sosa-Estani; Graciela Russomando; Zunilda Sánchez; Carina Sijvarger; Isabel Marcela Alvarez; Lola Barrionuevo; Carlos Lopez; Elsa L. Segura


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2005

Implementation and evaluation of a locally sustainable system of prenatal diagnosis to detect cases of congenital Chagas disease in endemic areas of Paraguay

Graciela Russomando; María Almirón; Norma Candia; Laura Franco; Zunilda Sánchez; de Guillen I


Memorias del Instituto de Investigaciones en Ciencias de la Salud | 2016

Triatoma sordida: indicators of adaptive capacity and Trypanosoma cruzi in tradomicile transmission in the Paraguayan Chaco

Zunilda Sánchez; Graciela Russomando; Lilian Chena; Eva Nara; Edgar Cardozo; Berta Paredes; Elizabeth Ferreira


Memorias del Instituto de Investigaciones en Ciencias de la Salud | 2018

Fuente de alimentación de ejemplares de Triatoma sordida en un área con alto riesgo de domiciliación en el Chaco Paraguayo

Zunilda Sánchez; Graciela Russomando; Daysi Pineda; Laura Guillén; Berta Paredes; Cesia Villalba de Feltes

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Graciela Russomando

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Eva Nara

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Lilian Chena

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Emilio E. Espínola

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Laura Franco

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Daysi Pineda

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Edgar Cardozo

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Florencia del Puerto

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Francisco S. Torres

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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Laura Guillén

Universidad Nacional de Asunción

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