12 research outputs found

    Paracoccidioidomicose enzoótica em tatus (Dasypus novemcinctus) no estado do Pará

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    Paracoccidioides brasiliensis foi encontrado, por inoculação de triturado de fígado e baço em hamsters, em 4 de 20 tatus (Dasypus novemcinctus) examinados na região de Tucuruí, Pará. Hamsters inoculados por via intradérmica e peritoneal com o parasito desenvolveram infecções generalizadas e morreram em 1½ a 13 meses. A diagnose do fungo foi confirmada por histopatologia e cultura. Não se observaram sinais macroscópios de doenças nos tatus. A distribuição geográfica de D. novemcinctus abrange a área endêmica de paracoccidioidomicose humana, sugerindo-se que o tatu tenha algum papel na ecologia do fungo.In spite of an extensive literature on paracoccidioidomycosis, hardly anything is known about the ecology of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis in nature. During 1983, 152 wild animals of 21 species "were examined in a survey designed to detect sylvatic hosts of Leishmania near Tucuruí, a region of tropical rainforest with acid soils, in the State of Pará, northern Brazil. Hamsters inoculated with saline suspensions of liver and spleen from 4 out of 20 Dasypus novemcinctus developed generalized systemic infections after 4 to 13 months, with abundant spherical parasitic structures up to 30 mm indiameter, visible in unstained tissue smears. Inoculation of this material into fresh hamsters, produced lethal infections in within 1½ to 5 months, with gross pathological changes in the viscera and abundant parasites characteristic of P. brasiliensis in stained histological sections. Material from infected tissue grew slowly in Sabouraud Dextrose Agar, forming light-coloured cerebriform colonies approximately 1,5 cm in diameter after 2 months at 22-26ºC. Culture material was inoculated intradermally, intraperitoneally and intratesticularly into hamsters, laboratory mice and guinea pigs. Generalized infections were detected after approximately 5 months in female hamsters that had been inoculated intradermally. The fungus was re-isolated in culture from the infected hamsters. Parasites were detected in histological sections of the liver and spleen of the original armadillos, but no gross signs of disease. were noted in these animals. D. novemcinctus is widely distributed in the Neotropical Region but is absent from certain regions, such as Chile and Patagonia, where paracoccidioidomycosis is unknown. The fossorial habits of this armadillo may be relevant in the light of previous suggestions that the saprophytic phase of P. brasiliensis inhabits a subterranean environment. It is suggested that D. novemcinctus may play a part in the ecology of P. brasiliensis in nature

    Paracoccidioidomicose enzoótica em tatus (Dasypus novemcinctus) no estado do Pará

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    Paracoccidioides brasiliensis foi encontrado, por inoculação de triturado de fígado e baço em hamsters, em 4 de 20 tatus (Dasypus novemcinctus) examinados na região de Tucuruí, Pará. Hamsters inoculados por via intradérmica e peritoneal com o parasito desenvolveram infecções generalizadas e morreram em 1½ a 13 meses. A diagnose do fungo foi confirmada por histopatologia e cultura. Não se observaram sinais macroscópios de doenças nos tatus. A distribuição geográfica de D. novemcinctus abrange a área endêmica de paracoccidioidomicose humana, sugerindo-se que o tatu tenha algum papel na ecologia do fungo

    Vetores selváticos de doença de Chagas na área urbana de Manaus (AM): atividade de vôo nas estações secas e chuvosas Chagas' disease wild vectors in the urban area of Manaus, State of Amazonas, Brazil: flight activities in dry and rainy seasons

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    Adultos de Rhodnius prolixus, R. pictipes e Panstrongylus geniculatus encontrados em casas em Manaus apresentam altas taxas de infecção por Trypanosoma cruzi. Rhodnius spp não apresentavam sazonalidade acentuada, porém os encontros de machos de P. geniculatus eram muito mais freqüentes na estação seca.<br>Adults of Rhodnius prolixus, R. pictipes and Panstrongylus geniculatus found in houses in Manaus have high rates of Trypanosoma cruzi infection. Rhodnius spp. were found throughout the year, but males of P. geniculatus were significantly more frequent in the dry season

    Epidemiological and nosological aspects of Leishmania naiffi Lainson & Shaw, 1989.

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    Leishmania naiffi was isolated from 10 out of 64 armadillos (Dasypus novemcinctus) examined in Amazonas, Pará and Rondônia States in the Brazilian Amazon Region. The isolates were obtained in culture from samples of liver (3), spleen (3), lymph nodes (2), skin (1) and blood (1) from the infected animals. Heavy infections with the same parasite were detected for the first time in Psychodopygus squamiventris, a common man-biting phlebotomine, in Amazonas and Pará. A new case of cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by L. naiffi is described from the Manaus area, making a total of three known cases of human infection by this parasite
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