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Institution

Federal University of São Paulo

EducationSão Paulo, Brazil
About: Federal University of São Paulo is a education organization based out in São Paulo, Brazil. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 27971 authors who have published 49365 publications receiving 935536 citations. The organization is also known as: Universidade Federal de São Paulo & Universidade Federal de Sao Paulo.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Tackling sporotrichosis requires the engagement of animal and human health policies to reduce the transmission chain of Sporothrix.
Abstract: Most of the 51 species embedded in the genus Sporothrix are nonpathogenic environmental fungi that are closely related to decaying wood, plants, and soil. However, members of the Sporothrix schenckii complex are highly successful mammal pathogens, including S. brasiliensis, S. schenckii sensu stricto (s. str.), S. globosa, and S. luriei, the causative agents of human and animal sporotrichosis [1]. Their key to success during mammal infection lies at least in part with their ability to change from a mycelial saprophytic lifestyle at 25°C in the environment to a parasitic yeast cell at an elevated temperature (35°C–37°C), such as those developed by warm-blooded hosts [2]. Typically, infection develops after traumatic inoculation of contaminated soil, plants, and organic matter into skin or mucosa. Alternatively, infection may occur during the animal transmission (cat–cat or cat–dog) and zoonotic transmission (cat–human), which has been mostly associated with scratches or bites from infected cats [2]. In Brazil, S. brasiliensis is repeatedly associated with feline infection and has consistently shown higher virulence during epizootics, as well as in murine models of sporotrichosis. A hallmark of S. brasiliensis infection is its tendency to escalate to outbreaks or epidemics among cats with high potential for zoonotic transmission. Sporotrichosis is an emergent disease and, over the past two decades, the incidence of zoonotic sporotrichosis has been on the rise, particularly in Brazil. Judging from the epizootic and zoonotic epidemics taking place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, tackling sporotrichosis requires the engagement of animal and human health policies to reduce the transmission chain of Sporothrix.

182 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that heparin sulfate may be an important binding site for cathepsin B at cell surface, reporting a novel physiological role for heparan sulfate proteoglycans.

182 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: La EPOC se asocia a inflamacion cronica con remodelacion that afecta a las vias aereas, parenquima y arterias pulmonares, representa la cuarta causa of muerte en Espana y en el mundo.
Abstract: Puntos clave: – La enfermedad pulmonar obstructiva cronica (EPOC) se caracteriza por la presencia de obstruccion cronica y poco reversible al flujo aereo, que se asocia a una reaccion inflamatoria anomala, principalmente frente al humo del tabaco – La obstruccion al flujo aereo se define por la espirometria cuando el cociente volumen espiratorio forzado en el primer segundo/capacidad vital forzada (FEV1/FVC) tras broncodilatacion es menor de 0,7 (o por debajo del limite inferior de la normalidad en personas mayores de 60 anos) – La EPOC se asocia a inflamacion cronica con remodelacion que afecta a las vias aereas, parenquima y arterias pulmonares – La gravedad de la EPOC se clasifica por el valor del FEV1 posbroncodilatador, estando tambien relacionada con la existencia de sintomas, atrapamiento aereo, insuficiencia respiratoria, afectacion sistemica y comorbilidad asociada – La prevalencia de la EPOC en la poblacion adulta es del 9% en Espana y oscila entre el 8 y el 20% en Latinoamerica La EPOC representa la cuarta causa de muerte en Espana y en el mundo

182 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The prevalence of respiratory symptoms indicative of asthma in children from Latin America has been largely ignored and data from 52,549 written questionnaires in children aged 13–14 years and in 6–7 year olds are described here.
Abstract: The prevalence of respiratory symptoms indicative of asthma in children from Latin America has been largely ignored. As part of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC), 17 centers in 9 different Latin American countries participated in the study, and data from 52,549 written questionnaires (WQ) in children aged 13-14 years and from 36,264 WQ in 6-7 year olds are described here. In children aged 13-14 years, the prevalence of asthma ever ranged from 5.5-28%, and the prevalence of wheezing in the last 12 months from 6.6-27%. In children aged 6-7 years, the prevalence of asthma ever ranged from 4.1-26.9%, and the prevalence of wheezing in the last 12 months ranged from 8.6-32.1%. The lower prevalence in centers with higher levels of atmospheric pollution suggests that chronic inhalation of polluted air in children does not contribute to asthma. Furthermore, the high figures for asthma in a region with a high level of gastrointestinal parasite infestation, and a high burden of acute respiratory infections occurring early in life, suggest that these factors, considered as protective in other regions, do not have the same effect in this region. The present study indicates that the prevalence of asthma and related symptoms in Latin America is as high and variable as described in industrialized or developed regions of the world.

181 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study presents a comparison between aerosol properties observed at a preserved forest site in Central Amazonia and at a heavily biomass burning impacted site in south-western Amazonia, finding that sulphate at the impacted site decreases, on average, from 12% of PM2.5 mass during the wet season to 5% in the dry season.
Abstract: In the wet season, a large portion of the Amazon region constitutes one of the most pristine continental areas, with very low concentrations of atmospheric trace gases and aerosol particles. However, land use change modifies the biosphere–atmosphere interactions in such a way that key processes that maintain the functioning of Amazonia are substantially altered. This study presents a comparison between aerosol properties observed at a preserved forest site in Central Amazonia (TT34 North of Manaus) and at a heavily biomass burning impacted site in south-western Amazonia (PVH, close to Porto Velho). Amazonian aerosols were characterized in detail, including aerosol size distributions, aerosol light absorption and scattering, optical depth and aerosol inorganic and organic composition, among other properties. The central Amazonia site (TT34) showed low aerosol concentrations (PM2.5 of 1.3 ± 0.7 μg m−3 and 3.4 ± 2.0 μg m−3 in the wet and dry seasons, respectively), with a median particle number concentration of 220 cm−3 in the wet season and 2200 cm−3 in the dry season. At the impacted site (PVH), aerosol loadings were one order of magnitude higher (PM2.5 of 10.2 ± 9.0 μg m−3 and 33.0 ± 36.0 μg m−3 in the wet and dry seasons, respectively). The aerosol number concentration at the impacted site ranged from 680 cm−3 in the wet season up to 20 000 cm−3 in the dry season. An aerosol chemical speciation monitor (ACSM) was deployed in 2013 at both sites, and it shows that organic aerosol account to 81% to the non-refractory PM1 aerosol loading at TT34, while biomass burning aerosols at PVH shows a 93% content of organic particles. Three years of filter-based elemental composition measurements shows that sulphate at the impacted site decreases, on average, from 12% of PM2.5 mass during the wet season to 5% in the dry season. This result corroborates the ACSM finding that the biomass burning contributed overwhelmingly to the organic fine mode aerosol during the dry season in this region. Aerosol light scattering and absorption coefficients at the TT34 site were low during the wet season, increasing by a factor of 5, approximately, in the dry season due to long range transport of biomass burning aerosols reaching the forest site in the dry season. Aerosol single scattering albedo (SSA) ranged from 0.84 in the wet season up to 0.91 in the dry. At the PVH site, aerosol scattering coefficients were 3–5 times higher in comparison to the TT34 site, an indication of strong regional background pollution, even in the wet season. Aerosol absorption coefficients at PVH were about 1.4 times higher than at the forest site. Ground-based SSA at PVH was around 0.92 year round, showing the dominance of scattering aerosol particles over absorption, even for biomass burning aerosols. Remote sensing observations from six AERONET sites and from MODIS since 1999, provide a regional and temporal overview. Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) at 550 nm of less than 0.1 is characteristic of natural conditions over Amazonia. At the perturbed PVH site, AOD550 values greater than 4 were frequently observed in the dry season. Combined analysis of MODIS and CERES showed that the mean direct radiative forcing of aerosols at the top of the atmosphere (TOA) during the biomass burning season was −5.6 ± 1.7 W m−2, averaged over whole Amazon Basin. For high AOD (larger than 1) the maximum daily direct aerosol radiative forcing at the TOA was as high as −20 W m−2 locally. This change in the radiation balance caused increases in the diffuse radiation flux, with an increase of Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE) of 18–29% for high AOD. From this analysis, it is clear that land use change in Amazonia shows alterations of many atmospheric properties, and these changes are affecting the functioning of the Amazonian ecosystem in significant ways.

181 citations


Authors

Showing all 28240 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Majid Ezzati133443137171
Christian Guilleminault13389768844
Jean Rivier13376973919
Myron M. Levine12378960865
Werner Seeger114111357464
Katherine L. Tucker10668339404
Michael Bader10373537525
Paulo A. Lotufo89622100527
Fernando Q. Cunha8868231501
Paul R. Sanberg8763529745
Harold A. Chapman8719126617
Ricardo T. Gazzinelli8634028233
Carlito B. Lebrilla8649525415
Roger S. McIntyre8580732040
Sergio Tufik85142435174
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202372
2022409
20213,982
20203,843
20193,234
20182,898