Congenital ZIKV syndrome does not appear to be associated with maternal disease severity, ZIKV-RNA load at time of infection or existence of prior dengue antibodies.
A positive reaction to the leishmanin skin test (LST) indicates previous contact with Leishmania antigens and is a useful criterion for the diagnosis of cutaneous leishmaniasis. In leishmaniasis vaccine trials, selection of volunteers has always been based on skin testing. During 1999 we performed a randomized controlled study in order to evaluate the immunogenicity of the LST. Fifty-nine (29 male and 30 female) healthy volunteer undergraduate students from the Medical School of Volta Redonda, Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil, with no evidence of previous infection with Leishmania, were randomly assigned into 2 groups: 29 subjects received LST and 30 received a placebo (merthiolate-phosphate-buffered saline). All volunteers received LST 41 d after the first injection of LST or placebo. Blood samples were taken immediately before the applications of LST or placebo for the assessment of Leishmania antigen-induced proliferation and cytokine production in peripheral blood mononuclear cell cultures. A significant increase in proliferative responses to L. braziliensis (P < 0.005) and L. amazonensis (P = 0.01) antigens as well as in L. braziliensis antigen-induced interferon-gamma production (P < 0.01) followed the application of LST but not the administration of the placebo. A single LST application is therefore able to induce Leishmania-specific cell-mediated immune responses. This observation should be considered in human trials of candidate vaccines against leishmaniasis.
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