MARIA CRISTINA DOMINGUES DA SILVA FINK
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
LIM/52 - Laboratório de Virologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
2 resultados
Resultados de Busca
Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
- Potential measles transmission risk in mass gatherings: Are we safe for the Olympic games-Rio 2016?(2016) NALI, Luiz Henrique da Silva; FUJITA, Dennis Minoru; SALVADOR, Felipe Scassi; FINK, Maria Cristina Domingues da Silva; ANDRADE JR., Heitor Franco de; PANNUTI, Claudio Sergio; LUNA, Expedito Jose de Albuquerque
- Pre-transplant shedding of BK virus in urine is unrelated to post-transplant viruria and viremia in kidney transplant recipients(2016) BICALHO, C. S.; OLIVEIRA, R. R.; PIERROTTI, L. C.; FINK, M. C. D. S.; URBANO, P. R. P.; NALI, L. H. S.; LUNA, E. J. A.; ROMANO, C. M.; DAVID, D. R.; DAVID-NETO, E.; PANNUTI, C. S.BK virus-(BKV) associated nephropathy (BKVN) is a major cause of allograft injury in kidney transplant recipients. In such patients, subclinical reactivation of latent BKV infection can occur in the pre-transplant period. The purpose of this study was to determine whether urinary BKV shedding in the immediate pre-transplant period is associated with a higher incidence of viruria and viremia during the first year after kidney transplantation. We examined urine samples from 34 kidney transplant recipients, using real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction to detect BKV. Urine samples were obtained in the immediate pre-transplant period and during the first year after transplant on a monthly basis. If BKV viruria was detected, blood samples were collected and screened for BKV viremia. In the immediate pre-transplant period, we detected BKV viruria in 11 (32.3%) of the 34 recipients. During the first year after transplantation, we detected BKV viruria in all 34 patients and viremia in eight (23.5%). We found no correlation between pre-transplant viruria and post-transplant viruria or viremia (p = 0.2). Although reactivation of latent BKV infection in the pre-transplant period is fairly common among kidney transplant recipients, it is not a risk factor for post-transplant BKV viruria or viremia.