Trypanosoma cruzi is the causative agent of Chagas disease. Nowadays, the transmission in Brazil occurs mainly by oral ingestion of contaminated food that has been associated with more severe clinical manifestations. We report a case of Acute Chagas disease caused by oral transmission in a child from Northern Brazil. In the hospital admission, physical examination showed tachycardia, hepatomegaly, bipalpebral edema and anasarca. Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes were found in microscopy during blood cell count. Twenty-three days before hospitalization, the child had ingested the “bacaba palm fruit's wine”. Even with the appropriate diagnosis and starting of treatment, she did not survive. Quantitative analysis of Trypanosoma cruzi DNA in a blood sample resulted in 54,053.42 parasite equivalents/mL and the DTU TcIV was identified. The outcome may have been determined by several factors, including the delay to seek a medical service beyond the high parasitemia, detected by qPCR. DTU TcIV could also have influenced the natural history of the disease.
This study describes the laboratory investigation of two acute Chagas disease outbreaks that occurred in the riverside communities of Marimarituba and Cachoeira do Arua, in the Santarem municipality, Para State, located in the Northern region of Brazil, and occurred in March 2016 and August 2017, respectively. The generation of data regarding the diversity of Trypanosoma cruzi parasites circulating in the Amazon region is key for understanding the emergence and expansion of Chagas disease. This study aimed to identify T. cruzi Discrete Typing Units (DTUs) involved in two outbreaks of acute Chagas disease (ACD) directly from the patient’s biological sample. Nested and multiplex PCR targeting the 24Sα (rRNA) and mini-exon genes, respectively, were used to identify T. cruzi DTU in blood samples from patients diagnosed with ACD. The samples with positive cPCR were submitted for analysis for T. cruzi DTUs, which included 13 samples from the patients with ACD by oral transmission and two samples collected from two newborns of two women with ACD, from Marimarituba and Cachoeira do Arua. The samples were classified as T. cruzi TcIV, from Marimarituba’s outbreak, and T. cruzi TcI, from Cachoeira do Arua’s outbreak. The molecular identification of T. cruzi may increase understanding of the role of this parasite in Chagas disease’s emergence within the Amazon region, contributing to the improvement of the management of this important, but also neglected, disease.
Aims: knowledge of the patient’s profile, for the evaluation and suggested behaviors, promotes a favorable outcome. Thus, the objective of the study is to analyze the socioeconomic, clinical, and immunological characteristics of patients infected by the human immunodeficiency virus in the western region of the state of Pará.Methods: were analyzed 1966 medical records of patients whose first visit to a reference center, in the municipality of Santarém-PA, was between 1998 and 2018. Socioeconomic, clinical, and immunological information was collected from patient medical records. Data were analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics, adopting p <0.05.Results: there was a predominance of males (62.5%), aged 20-39 years (69.1%), elementary school (58.6%), single (57.3%), and employed (66.4%). Immunosuppression was present in 22% of patients and a viral load was detectable in 66%. Tuberculosis (37%) and toxoplasmosis (23%) predominated as opportunistic infections, and syphilis (62.6%) and human papillomavirus (HPV; 14%) as other infections.Conclusions: it is concluded that both opportunistic infections and other infections were present in 25-22% of the patients and that the presence of opportunistic infections favors the installation of another infection, or vice versa. Toxoplasmosis, HPV, and syphilis are positively associated with men, and toxoplasmosis and tuberculosis with age >35 years. Immunosuppression was shown to be positively associated with men and age >35 years, as well as favoring the onset of tuberculosis, toxoplasmosis, and detectable viral load.
Introdução: Alterações hematológicas, bioquímicas e imunológicas podem estar presentes no paciente infectado pelo HIV, no momento do diagnóstico, antes ou depois de iniciar com os antirretrovirais. Objetivo: Analisar o perfil bioquímico, hematológico e imunológico de pacientes com diagnóstico recente para HIV. Método: O estudo avaliou 321 prontuários de pacientes recém diagnosticados com a infecção pelo HIV. A coleta de dados envolveu informações sociodemográficas (data de nascimento, idade, sexo, escolaridade, estado civil, vínculo empregatício e procedência), clínicas (data do diagnóstico para a infecção pelo HIV, situação de imunodeficiência e tipo de exposição), bioquímicas (glicose, triglicerídeos, colesterol total e frações), hematológicas (hemoglobina e plaqueta) e imunológicas (linfócitos T CD4+ e carga viral). Os dados foram analisados por estatística descritiva e inferencial, adotando-se p<0,05. Resultados: Notou-se predominância do sexo masculino (67%), faixa etária de 18-27 anos (39,9%), solteiros (58,6%) e com 32% dos pacientes apresentando Aids. Das variáveis analisadas, o sexo masculino apresentou, em relação às mulheres, maior quantidade de hemoglobina e menores valores para contagem de linfócitos T CD4+, glicose e colesterol total (p<0,05). Além disso, ressalta-se que 69% da amostra apresentou alguma alteração lipídica, 96% tinha carga viral detectável e 29% apresentou linfócitos T CD4+ <200 cel/mm3. Conclusão: Pessoas vivendo com o HIV, no momento do diagnóstico, podem apresentar alterações imunológicas, hematológicas e bioquímicas, tornando imprescindível a avaliação, acompanhamento e orientação multiprofissional, tanto antes como posterior introdução dos antirretrovirais, a fim de evitar futuros agravos a saúde.
This study describes difficulties in the monitoring of a child born during an oral outbreak of Chagas disease, in which there are several indications that the transmission occurred through the congenital route: 1. the mother was in the third trimester of pregnancy when she was infected; 2. She presented high parasitemia at the time of delivery; 3. In both, the mother and her daughter, T. cruzi was classified as DTU TcIV. The parasites were not found in the blood at birth and the infection was detected only three months later in an asymptomatic infant. As the mother and her child live in a highly endemic area, vector transmission could not be excluded during this period.
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