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Institution

Oswaldo Cruz Foundation

FacilityRio de Janeiro, Brazil
About: Oswaldo Cruz Foundation is a facility organization based out in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Trypanosoma cruzi. The organization has 18673 authors who have published 36752 publications receiving 802378 citations. The organization is also known as: Fundação Oswaldo Cruz & FIOCRUZ.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is indicated that IL- 12, not IL-23, plays a dominant role in resistance to toxoplasmosis but, in the absence of IL-12,IL-23 can provide a limited mechanism of resistance to this infection.
Abstract: IL-23 and IL-12 are heterodimeric cytokines which share the p40 subunit, but which have unique second subunits, IL-23p19 and IL-12p35. Since p40 is required for the development of the Th1 type response necessary for resistance to Toxoplasma gondii, studies were performed to assess the role of IL-23 in resistance to this pathogen. Increased levels of IL-23 were detected in mice infected with T. gondii and in vitro stimulation of dendritic cells with this pathogen resulted in increased levels of mRNA for this cytokine. To address the role of IL-23 in resistance to T. gondii, mice lacking the p40 subunit (common to IL-12 and IL-23) and mice that lack IL-12 p35 (specific for IL-12) were infected and their responses were compared. These studies revealed that p40(-/-) mice rapidly succumbed to toxoplasmosis, while p35(-/-) mice displayed enhanced resistance though they eventually succumbed to this infection. In addition, the administration of IL-23 to p40(-/-) mice infected with T. gondii resulted in a decreased parasite burden and enhanced resistance. However, the enhanced resistance of p35(-/-) mice or p40(-/-) mice treated with IL-23 was not associated with increased production of IFN-gamma. When IL-23p19(-/-) mice were infected with T. gondii these mice developed normal T cell responses and controlled parasite replication to the same extent as wild-type mice. Together, these studies indicate that IL-12, not IL-23, plays a dominant role in resistance to toxoplasmosis but, in the absence of IL-12, IL-23 can provide a limited mechanism of resistance to this infection.

160 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the levels of aluminum, zinc, iron, manganese, cobalt, copper, arsenics, selenium, cadmium, barium, lead and bismuth in 11 fish species (Salmo salar, Sardinella brasiliensis, Pomatomus saltatrix, Micropogonias furnieri, Cynoscion leiarchus, Caranx crysos, Priacanthus arenatus, Mugil cephalus, Genypterus, Lopholatilus villarii and

160 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: PCR is the most sensitive technique available for direct detection of T. cruzi in chagasic patients and that it can be a very useful instrument for the follow-up of patients after specific treatment, according to observations.
Abstract: Trypanosoma cruzi specific sequences were amplified by the polymerase chain reaction from total blood of human chagasic patients and normal individuals. A 330 bp fragment originating from kinetoplast DNA was specifically detected in most chagasic individuals. We tested the sensitivity and specificity of this method in normal and affected individuals attending the Evandro Chagas Hospital, Rio de Janeiro. The results of these tests were compared with serological diagnosis performed using standard techniques, and in some cases with xenodiagnosis. We found that none of the serologically negative individuals gave any specific amplification product, whereas 55 out of 61 patients previously serodiagnosed as chagasic were positive using the PCR method (sensitivity: 90%). Xenodiagnosis, which is currently considered to be the most sensitive parasitological technique for Chagas' disease diagnosis, detected only 12 out of 28 serologically positive patients (sensitivity: 43%). The usefulness of the PCR method was further investigated with chagasic patients who had received anti-parasite treatment with benznidazole. It has always been difficult to evaluate the incidence of cure in such cases by serology, since a humoral response against T. cruzi antigens may remain for years even in the absence of the parasite. We observed a positive amplification result in only 9 out of 32 treated patients who remained reactive when tested using classical serology. These observations suggest that PCR is the most sensitive technique available for direct detection of T. cruzi in chagasic patients and that it can be a very useful instrument for the follow-up of patients after specific treatment.

159 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the health care sector runs the epistemological and pratical risk of falling into reductionism when it addresses violence as if it were an epidemic.
Abstract: While the question of violence and health is a complex one, it opens the door for interdisciplinary collaboration and multi professional efforts. Although this article does not intend to provide any definitive responses, it does endeavor to critique viewpoints that attribute an absolute meaning to the term 'violence'. It warns that this health-care sector runs the epistemological and pratical risk of falling into reductionism when it addresses violence as if it were an epidemic. Furthermore, this sector needs to collaborate with other sectors and wth civil societyu. More than offering answers, the article raises questions within the framework of an interdisciplinary approach encompassing the social sciences, epidemology and psychology.

159 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Molecular typing of human parasite isolates from three well-characterised endemic regions of Chagas disease and from Amazonas State, where T. cruzi is enzootic, suggests that in some endemic areas in Brazil there is a preferential linkage between both cycles mediated by lineage-1 stocks.

159 citations


Authors

Showing all 18833 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Douglas T. Golenbock12331761267
Guy A. Zimmerman10932839740
David Brown105125746827
Liam Smeeth10475353433
Ann M. Dvorak9943741073
David C. Spray9540028732
Theodore A. Slotkin8957530070
Fernando Q. Cunha8868231501
Mauro M. Teixeira8671331301
Ricardo T. Gazzinelli8634028233
Peter F. Weller8533122005
João B. Calixto8146023029
Frederic J. Seidler8037219564
João Santana da Silva8039919060
Deborah Carvalho Malta7770661000
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202334
2022250
20212,842
20202,942
20192,404
20182,302