EDUARDO MILTON RAMOS SANCHEZ

(Fonte: Lattes)
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LIM/38 - Laboratório de Epidemiologia e Imunobiologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

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  • article 13 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Asymptomatic infections in blood donors harbouring Plasmodium: an invisible risk detected by molecular and serological tools
    (2018) LIMA, Giselle F. M. C.; SANCHEZ, Maria C. Arroyo; LEVI, Jose E.; FUJIMORI, Mahyumi; CARAMELO, Luiza da Cruz; SANCHEZ, Arianni Rondelli; RAMOS-SANCHEZ, Eduardo M.; INOUE, Juliana; COSTA-NASCIMENTO, Maria de Jesus; MENDRONE JUNIOR, Alfredo; SANTI, Silvia M. Di
    Background. Transfusion-transmitted malaria due to asymptomatic Plasmodium infections is a challenge for blood banks. There is a lack of data on the prevalence of asymptomatic infected blood donors and the incidence of transfusion-transmitted malaria in low endemicity areas worldwide. We estimated the frequency of blood donors harbouring Plasmodium in an area in which asymptomatic infections have been reported. Material and methods. To estimate the frequency of blood donors harbouring Plasmodium we used microscopy and molecular tools. Serological tests were applied to measure the exposure of candidates to Plasmodium antigens. Venous blood was collected from 91 candidates attending the ""Pro-Sangue"" Blood Centre Foundation in Sao Paulo, who lived in the municipality of Juquitiba, Sao Paulo, Brazil, where sporadic autochthonous cases of malaria have been described. Blood samples were used for parasitological, molecular and serological studies. Results. Among the 91 samples examined, rare Plasmodium forms were observed in two donors. Genus real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis demonstrated Plasmodium amplification in three candidates and species-specific nested polymerase chain reaction identified P. malariae in two. ELISA-IgG was reactive in 42.9% of samples for P. vivax (Pv-MSP1 19) and in 6.6% for P. falciparum (Pf-Zw). ELISA-IgM was reactive in 2.2% of samples for P. vivax and in 4.4% for P. falciparum. An indirect immunofluorescence assay was reactive for P. malariae in 15.4% of cases. Discussion. Reservoirs of Plasmodium represent a challenge for blood banks, since studies have shown that high levels of submicroscopic infections can occur in low transmission areas. The risk of transfusion-transmitted malaria presented here points to the need to conduct molecular investigations of candidate donors with any positive malarial antibody test.
  • article 25 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Recombinant Leishmania infantum Heat Shock Protein 83 for the Serodiagnosis of Cutaneous, Mucosal, and Visceral Leishmaniases
    (2014) CELESTE, Beatriz Julieta; SANCHEZ, Maria Carmen Arroyo; RAMOS-SANCHEZ, Eduardo Milton; CASTRO, Luiz Guilherme M.; COSTA, Francisco Assis Lima; GOTO, Hiro
    Routine serological diagnoses for leishmaniases, except in visceral cases, are performed using whole-parasite antigens. We used enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to evaluate the performance of Leishmania infantum rHsp83 compared with L. major-like total promastigote antigen in the diagnosis of cutaneous (CL), mucosal (ML), and visceral leishmaniases (VL). ELISA-rHsp83 was significantly more sensitive than ELISA-L. major-like when considering either CL/ML (P = 0.041) or all leishmaniasis patients (P = 0.013). When samples from other infectious disease patients were evaluated for cross-reactivity, ELISA-rHsp83 was more specific than ELISA-L. major-like, specifically for Chagas disease samples (P < 0.001). We also evaluated the anti-rHsp83 antibody titers months after treatment and observed no significant difference in ML (P = 0.607) or CL (P = 0.205). We recommend ELISA-L. infantum-rHsp83 as a routine confirmatory serological assay for the diagnosis of Leishmania infection because of the high sensitivity, the specificity, and the insignificant cross-reactivity with other infectious diseases.
  • article 33 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    TRANSFUSION-TRANSMITTED MALARIA: CASE REPORT OF ASYMPTOMATIC DONOR HARBORING Plasmodium malariae
    (2011) SCURACCHIO, Patricia; VIEIRA, Sergio Domingos; DOURADO, Denise Albuquerque; BUENO, Luciana Moro; COLELLA, Rafael; RAMOS-SANCHEZ, Eduardo Milton; LIMA, Giselle F. M. Castro; INOUE, Juliana; SANCHEZ, Maria Carmen Arroyo; SANTI, Silvia Maria Di
    Malaria in Brazil is endemic in the Amazon region, but autochthonous cases with low parasitaemia occur in the Atlantic Forest area of the country. According to Brazilian legislation no test is mandatory for blood donors from non-endemic areas. However if they have traveled to malaria transmission regions they are deferred for six months before they can donate. This report describes a transfusion-transmitted malaria case in Sao Paulo, Brazil, where one recipient received infected blood and developed the disease. He lived in Sao Paulo and had no previous transfusion or trips to endemic areas, including those of low endemicity, such as Atlantic Forest. Thick blood smears confirmed Plasmodium malariae. All donors lived in Sao Paulo and one of them (Donor 045-0) showed positive hemoscopy and PCR. This asymptomatic donor had traveled to Juquia, in the Atlantic Forest area of Sao Paulo State, where sporadic cases of autochthonous malaria are described. DNA assay revealed P. malariae in the donor's (Donor 045-0) blood. Serum archives of the recipient and of all blood donors were analyzed by ELISA using both P. vivax and P. falciparum antigens, and IFAT with P. malariae. Donor 045-0's serum was P. malariae IFAT positive and the P. vivax ELISA was reactive. In addition, two out of 44 donors' archive sera were also P. vivax ELISA reactive. All sera were P. falciparum ELISA negative. This case suggests the need of reviewing donor selection criteria and deferral strategies to prevent possible cases of transfusion-transmitted malaria.
  • conferenceObject
    ANTIBODIES TO PLASMODIUM VIVAX MSP1-19 RECOMBINANT ANTIGEN IN BLOOD DONORS FROM SAO PAULO BLOOD BANK
    (2017) SANCHEZ, Maria Carmen; ROCHA, Mussya Cisotto; MONTENEGRO, Catarina; FUJIMORI, Mahyumi; SANTI, Silvia Maria Di; SANCHEZ, Arianni Rondelli; RAMOS-SANCHEZ, Eduardo Milton; MENDRONE JUNIOR, Alfredo; LEVI, Jose Eduardo
  • article 18 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Malaria in pregnant women living in areas of low transmission on the southeast Brazilian Coast: molecular diagnosis and humoural immunity profile
    (2014) HRISTOV, Angelica Domingues; SANCHEZ, Maria Carmen Arroyo; FERREIRA, Jose Jarbas Bittencourt; LIMA, Giselle Fernandes Maciel de Castro; INOUE, Juliana; COSTA-NASCIMENTO, Maria de Jesus; SANCHEZ, Arianni Rondelli; RAMOS-SANCHEZ, Eduardo Milton; SANTI, Silvia Maria Di
    Studies on autochthonous malaria in low-transmission areas in Brazil have acquired epidemiological relevance because they suggest continued transmission in what remains of the Atlantic Forest. In the southeastern portion of the state of Sao Paulo, outbreaks in the municipality of Juquitiba have been the focus of studies on the prevalence of Plasmodium, including asymptomatic cases. Data on the occurrence of the disease or the presence of antiplasmodial antibodies in pregnant women from this region have not previously been described. Although Plasmodium falciparum in pregnant women has been widely addressed in the literature, the interaction of Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium malariae with this cohort has been poorly explored to date. We monitored the circulation of Plasmodium in pregnant women in health facilities located in Juquitiba using thick blood film and molecular protocols, as well as immunological assays, to evaluate humoural immune parameters. Through real-time and nested polymerase chain reaction, P. vivax and P. malariae were detected for the first time in pregnant women, with a positivity of 5.6%. Immunoassays revealed the presence of IgG antibodies: 44% for ELISA-Pv, 38.4% for SD-Bioline-Pv and 18.4% for indirect immunofluorescence assay-Pm. The high prevalence of antibodies showed significant exposure of this population to Plasmodium. In regions with similar profiles, testing for a malaria diagnosis might be indicated in prenatal care.