“…Nevertheless it may furnish significant insights for the infection chemotherapy, as β-lapachone was reported to produce similar alterations in T. cruzi epimastigotes, amastigotes and trypomastigotes (Docampo et al., 1978), the developmental forms that multiply within mammalian host cells and spread via blood, respectively. In addition, different antiparasitic compounds may display similar effects upon epimastigotes and trypomastigotes and/or amastigotes, the developmental forms (Urbina et al., 1988, Urbina et al., 1993; Moreira et al., 2013a; Costa et al., 2011, Azeredo et al., 2014, Díaz et al., 2014; Jimenez et al., 2014; Veiga-Santos et al., 2014, Britta et al., 2015, Meira et al., 2015, Volpato et al., 2015, Beer et al., 2016) and the epimastigotes may therefore comprise and/or take part in experimental models (Kessler et al., 2013, Benítez et al., 2014, Sangenito et al., 2014, Wong-Baeza et al., 2015, Khare et al., 2015, Pessoa et al., 2016, Valera Vera et al., 2016). Thus, numerous studies perform screening experiments with epimastigotes and/or trypomastigotes further approach the selected active compounds in intracellular amastigotes (e.g.…”