NATALLI ZANETE PEREIRA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
11
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
LIM/56 - Laboratório de Investigação em Dermatologia e Imunodeficiências, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 8 de 8
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Generation of Cytotoxic T Cells and Dysfunctional CD8 T Cells in Severe COVID-19 Patients
    (2022) GOZZI-SILVA, Sarah Cristina; OLIVEIRA, Luana de Mendonca; ALBERCA, Ricardo Wesley; PEREIRA, Natalli Zanete; YOSHIKAWA, Fabio Seiti; PIETROBON, Anna Julia; YENDO, Tatiana Mina; ANDRADE, Milena Mary de Souza; RAMOS, Yasmim Alefe Leuzzi; BRITO, Cyro Alves; OLIVEIRA, Emily Araujo; BESERRA, Danielle Rosa; ORFALI, Raquel Leao; AOKI, Valeria; DUARTE, Alberto Jose da Silva; SATO, Maria Notomi
    COVID-19, the infectious disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, has spread on a pandemic scale. The viral infection can evolve asymptomatically or can generate severe symptoms, influenced by the presence of comorbidities. Lymphopenia based on the severity of symptoms in patients affected with COVID-19 is frequent. However, the profiles of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells regarding cytotoxicity and antiviral factor expression have not yet been completely elucidated in acute SARS-CoV-2 infections. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the phenotypic and functional profile of T lymphocytes in patients with moderate and severe/critical COVID-19. During the pandemic period, we analyzed a cohort of 62 confirmed patients with SARS-CoV-2 (22 moderate cases and 40 severe/critical cases). Notwithstanding lymphopenia, we observed an increase in the expression of CD28, a co-stimulator molecule, and activation markers (CD38 and HLA-DR) in T lymphocytes as well as an increase in the frequency of CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells, and NK cells that express the immunological checkpoint protein PD-1 in patients with a severe/critical condition compared to healthy controls. Regarding the cytotoxic profile of peripheral blood mononuclear cells, an increase in the response of CD4+ T cells was already observed at the baseline level and scarcely changed upon PMA and Ionomycin stimulation. Meanwhile, CD8+ T lymphocytes decreased the cytotoxic response, evidencing a profile of exhaustion in patients with severe COVID-19. As observed by t-SNE, there were CD4+ T-cytotoxic and CD8+ T with low granzyme production, evidencing their dysfunction in severe/critical conditions. In addition, purified CD8+ T lymphocytes from patients with severe COVID-19 showed increased constitutive expression of differentially expressed genes associated with the caspase pathway, inflammasome, and antiviral factors, and, curiously, had reduced expression of TNF-alpha. The cytotoxic profile of CD4+ T cells may compensate for the dysfunction/exhaustion of TCD8+ in acute SARS-CoV-2 infection. These findings may provide an understanding of the interplay of cytotoxicity between CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells in the severity of acute COVID-19 infection.
  • article 77 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Obesity as a risk factor for COVID-19: an overview
    (2021) ALBERCA, Ricardo Wesley; OLIVEIRA, Luana de Mendonca; BRANCO, Anna Claudia Calvielli Castelo; PEREIRA, Natalli Zanete; SATO, Maria Notomi
    The current coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic presents a huge challenge for health-care systems worldwide. Many different risk factors are associated with disease severity, such as older age, diabetes, hypertension, and most recently obesity. The incidence of obesity has been on the rise for the past 25 years, reaching over 2 billion people throughout the world, and obesity itself could be considered a pandemic. In this review, we summarize aspects involved with obesity, such as changes in the immune response, nutritional factors, physiological factors, and the gut-lung axis, that impact the viral response and the COVID-19 prognosis.
  • article 12 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    COVID-19 Disease Course in Former Smokers, Smokers and COPD Patients
    (2021) ALBERCA, Ricardo Wesley; LIMA, Julia Cataldo; OLIVEIRA, Emily Araujo de; GOZZI-SILVA, Sarah Cristina; RAMOS, Yasmim Alefe Leuzzi; ANDRADE, Milena Mary de Souza; BESERRA, Danielle Rosa; OLIVEIRA, Luana de Mendonca; BRANCO, Anna Claudia Calvielli Castelo; PIETROBON, Anna Julia; PEREIRA, Natalli Zanete; TEIXEIRA, Franciane Mouradian Emidio; FERNANDES, Iara Grigoletto; DUARTE, Alberto Jose da Silva; BENARD, Gil; SATO, Maria Notomi
    The severe respiratory and systemic disease named coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) is caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Currently, the COVID-19 pandemic presents a huge social and health challenge worldwide. Many different risk factors are associated with disease severity, such as systemic arterial hypertension, diabetes mellitus, obesity, older age, and other co-infections. Other respiratory diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and smoking are common comorbidities worldwide. Previous investigations have identified among COVID-19 patients smokers and COPD patients, but recent investigations have questioned the higher risk among these populations. Nevertheless, previous reports failed to isolate smokers and COPD patients without other comorbidities. We performed a longitudinal evaluation of the disease course of smokers, former smokers, and COPD patients with COVID-19 without other comorbidities, from hospitalization to hospital discharge. Although no difference between groups was observed during hospital admission, smokers and COPD patients presented an increase in COVID-19-associated inflammatory markers during the disease course in comparison to non-smokers and former smokers. Our results demonstrated that smoking and COPD are risk factors for severe COVID-19 with possible implications for the ongoing pandemic.
  • article 13 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    SARS-CoV-2 Infection and CMV Dissemination in Transplant Recipients as a Treatment for Chagas Cardiomyopathy: A Case Report
    (2021) GOZZI-SILVA, Sarah Cristina; BENARD, Gil; ALBERCA, Ricardo Wesley; YENDO, Tatiana Mina; TEIXEIRA, Franciane Mouradian Emidio; OLIVEIRA, Luana de Mendonca; BESERRA, Danielle Rosa; PIETROBON, Anna Julia; OLIVEIRA, Emily Araujo de; BRANCO, Anna Claudia Calvielli Castelo; ANDRADE, Milena Mary de Souza; FERNANDES, Iara Grigoletto; PEREIRA, Natalli Zanete; RAMOS, Yasmim Alefe Leuzzi; LIMA, Julia Cataldo; PROVENCI, Bruna; MANGINI, Sandrigo; DUARTE, Alberto Jose da Silva; SATO, Maria Notomi
    Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). COVID-19 has infected over 90 million people worldwide, therefore it is considered a pandemic. SARS-CoV-2 infection can lead to severe pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), septic shock, and/or organ failure. Individuals receiving a heart transplantation (HT) may be at higher risk of adverse outcomes attributable to COVID-19 due to immunosuppressives, as well as concomitant infections that may also influence the prognoses. Herein, we describe the first report of two cases of HT recipients with concomitant infections by SARS-CoV-2, Trypanosoma cruzi, and cytomegalovirus (CMV) dissemination, from the first day of hospitalization due to COVID-19 in the intensive care unit (ICU) until the death of the patients.
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Platelet-Based Biomarkers for Diagnosis and Prognosis in COVID-19 Patients
    (2021) ALBERCA, Ricardo Wesley; SOLIS-CASTRO, Rosa Liliana; SOLIS-CASTRO, Maria Edith; CARDOSO, Fernanda; DUARTE, Alberto Jose da Silva; OLIVEIRA, Luana de Mendonca; PEREIRA, Natalli Zanete; GOZZI-SILVA, Sarah Cristina; OLIVEIRA, Emily Araujo de; AOKI, Valeria; ORFALI, Raquel Leao; BESERRA, Danielle Rosa; ANDRADE, Milena Mary de Souza; SATO, Maria Notomi
    Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused millions of deaths worldwide. COVID-19's clinical manifestations range from no symptoms to a severe acute respiratory syndrome, which can result in multiple organ failure, sepsis, and death. Severe COVID-19 patients develop pulmonary and extrapulmonary infections, with a hypercoagulable state. Several inflammatory or coagulatory biomarkers are currently used with predictive values for COVID-19 severity and prognosis. In this manuscript, we investigate if a combination of coagulatory and inflammatory biomarkers could provide a better biomarker with predictive value for COVID-19 patients, being able to distinguish between patients that would develop a moderate or severe COVID-19 and predict the disease outcome. We investigated 306 patients with COVID-19, confirmed by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 RNA detected in the nasopharyngeal swab, and retrospectively analyzed the laboratory data from the first day of hospitalization. In our cohort, biomarkers such as neutrophil count and neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio from the day of hospitalization could predict if the patient would need to be transferred to the intensive care unit but failed to identify the patients & PRIME; outcomes. The ratio between platelets and inflammatory markers such as creatinine, C-reactive protein, and urea levels is associated with patient outcomes. Finally, the platelet/neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio on the first day of hospitalization can be used with predictive value as a novel severity and lethality biomarker in COVID-19. These new biomarkers with predictive value could be used routinely to stratify the risk in COVID-19 patients since the first day of hospitalization.
  • article 71 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Pregnancy, Viral Infection, and COVID-19
    (2020) ALBERCA, Ricardo Wesley; PEREIRA, Natalli Zanete; OLIVEIRA, Luanda Mara Da Silva; GOZZI-SILVA, Sarah Cristina; SATO, Maria Notomi
    Pregnancy comprises a unique immunological condition, to allow fetal development and to protect the host from pathogenic infections. Viral infections during pregnancy can disrupt immunological tolerance and may generate deleterious effects on the fetus. Despite these possible links between pregnancy and infection-induced morbidity, it is unclear how pregnancy interferes with maternal response to some viral pathogens. In this context, the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) can induce the coronavirus diseases-2019 (COVID-19) in pregnant women. The potential risk of vertical transmission is unclear, babies born from COVID-19-positive mothers seems to have no serious clinical symptoms, the possible mechanisms are discussed, which highlights that checking the children's outcome and more research is warranted. In this review, we investigate the reports concerning viral infections and COVID-19 during pregnancy, to establish a correlation and possible implications of COVID-19 during pregnancy and neonatal's health.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Long-term effects of COVID-19 in diabetic and non-diabetic patients
    (2022) ALBERCA, Ricardo Wesley; RAMOS, Yasmim Alefe Leuzzi; PEREIRA, Natalli Zanete; BESERRA, Danielle Rosa; BRANCO, Anna Claudia Calvielli Castelo; ORFALI, Raquel Leao; AOKI, Valeria; DUARTE, Alberto Jose da Silva; SATO, Maria Notomi
    The literature presents several reports of the impact of glycemic control and diabetes in the inflammatory and coagulatory response during coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Nevertheless, the long-term impact of the COVID-19 in diabetic patients is still to be explored. Therefore, we recruited 128 patients and performed a longitudinal analysis on COVID-19-associated biomarkers of patients with COVID-19, tree and 6 months after COVID-19 recovery and put into perspective the possible long-term complication generated after COVID-19. In our investigation, we failed to verify any long-term modification on inflammatory biomarkers, but detected an increase in the glycemia and glycated hemoglobin in patients without any pre-existing history or diagnosis of diabetes (non-diabetic patients). Although diabetic and non-diabetic patients presented elevated levels of glycated hemoglobin, the c-peptide test indicated a normal beta cell function in all patients.
  • article 9 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Frequencies of CD33+CD11b+HLA-DR-CD14-CD66b+and CD33+CD11b+HLA-DR-CD14+CD66b-Cells in Peripheral Blood as Severity Immune Biomarkers in COVID-19
    (2020) ALBERCA, Ricardo Wesley; ANDRADE, Milena Mary de Souza; BRANCO, Anna Claudia Calvielli Castelo; PIETROBON, Anna Julia; PEREIRA, Natalli Zanete; FERNANDES, Iara Grigoletto; OLIVEIRA, Luana de Mendonca; TEIXEIRA, Franciane Mouradian Emidio; BESERRA, Danielle Rosa; OLIVEIRA, Emily Araujo de; GOZZI-SILVA, Sarah Cristina; RAMOS, Yasmim Alefe Leuzzi; BRITO, Cyro Alves de; ARNONE, Marcelo; ORFALI, Raquel Leao; AOKI, Valeria; DUARTE, Alberto Jose da Silva; SATO, Maria Notomi
    Common clinical features of patients with Coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) vary from fever, to acute severe respiratory distress syndrome. Several laboratory parameters are reported as indicators of COVID-19 severity. We hereby describe the possible novel severity biomarkers for COVID-19, CD11b+CD33+HLA-DR-CD14+ cells and CD11b+CD33+HLA-DR-CD66b+ cells.