Abstract. Zygomycosis is an important granulomatous disease that affects humans and animals, particularly sheep in tropical regions. Rhinofacial and nasopharyngeal zygomycosis were described in sheep in association with Conidiobolus spp. The present study characterized 5 samples of Conidiobolus isolated from 3 herds with clinical disease in Mato Grosso State, Brazil. The clinical and pathological findings were similar to nasopharyngeal zygomycosis. Based on morphological features, isolates were classified as Conidiobolus spp., and molecular phylogenetic analyses based on 18S ribosomal DNA grouped all isolates in a Conidiobolus lamprauges cluster. The current report describes the molecular characterization of ovine nasopharyngeal zygomycosis associated with C. lamprauges.
The dengue virus (DENV), which is frequently involved in large epidemics, and the
yellow fever virus (YFV), which is responsible for sporadic sylvatic outbreaks, are
considered the most important flaviviruses circulating in Brazil. Because of that,
laboratorial diagnosis of acute undifferentiated febrile illness during epidemic
periods is frequently directed towards these viruses, which may eventually hinder the
detection of other circulating flaviviruses, including the Saint Louis encephalitis
virus (SLEV), which is widely dispersed across the Americas. The aim of this study
was to conduct a molecular investigation of 11 flaviviruses using 604 serum samples
obtained from patients during a large dengue fever outbreak in the state of Mato
Grosso (MT) between 2011 and 2012. Simultaneously, 3,433 female
Culex spp. collected with Nasci aspirators in the city of Cuiabá,
MT, in 2013, and allocated to 409 pools containing 1-10 mosquitoes, were also tested
by multiplex semi-nested reverse transcription PCR for the same flaviviruses. SLEV
was detected in three patients co-infected with DENV-4 from the cities of Cuiabá and
Várzea Grande. One of them was a triple co-infection with DENV-1. None of them
mentioned recent travel or access to sylvatic/rural regions, indicating that
transmission might have occurred within the metropolitan area. Regarding mosquito
samples, one pool containing one Culex quinquefasciatus female was
positive for SLEV, with a minimum infection rate (MIR) of 0.29 per 1000 specimens of
this species. Phylogenetic analysis indicates both human and mosquito SLEV cluster,
with isolates from genotype V-A obtained from animals in the Amazon region, in the
state of Pará. This is the first report of SLEV molecular identification in MT.
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