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      Electrocardiographic findings in Mexican chagasic subjects living in high and low endemic regions of Trypanosoma cruzi infection

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          Abstract

          In México the first human chronic chagasic case was recognized in 1940. In spite of an increasing number of cases detected since that time, Chagas disease in México has been poorly documented. In the present work we studied 617 volunteers subjects living in high and low endemic regions of Trypanosoma cruzi infection with seroprevalence of 22% and 4% respectively. Hemoculture performed in those seropositive subjects failed to demonstrate circulating parasites, however polymerase chain reaction identified up to 60% of them as positives. A higher level of anti-T. cruzi antibodies was observed in seropositive residents in high endemic region, in spite of similar parasite persistence (p < 0.05). On standard 12 leads electrocardiogram (ECG) 20% to 22% seropositive individuals from either region showed right bundle branch block or ventricular extrasystoles which were more prevalent in seropositive than in seronegative individuals (p < 0.05). In conclusion, the frequency or type of ECG abnormality was influenced by serologic status but not by endemicity or parasite persistence. Furthermore, Mexican indeterminate patients have a similar ECG pattern to those reported in South America.

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          A study of experimental reinfection by Trypanosoma cruzi in dogs.

          The role of reinfection in the evolution of Chagas' disease was evaluated in dogs alternately infected with the 147 and SC-1 strains of Trypanosoma cruzi. A parasitologic, serologic, clinical, and electrocardiographic follow-up was carried out on the infected and noninfected dogs. The dogs were reinfected five times over a period of 38 months. No deaths were observed during the experiment. They presented a brief oligosymptomatic acute phase. The level of parasitemia decreased progressively with the number of reinfections. Bloodstream parasites were not detectable after the fifth reinfection. All parasite samples isolated during the follow-up were zymodeme B, corresponding to strain 147, irrespective of the strain with which the dogs were first infected and of the triatomine species used for isolation. Conversely, amplification by the polymerase chain reaction of a segment of the T. cruzi mini-exon gene showed the simultaneous presence of both strains in three of the eight reinfected animals. Antibody titers were greater among the dogs successively infected than those infected only once. Neither amastigotes nor T. cruzi DNA were detected in the tissues of the infected dogs. Alterations related to Chagas' disease were identified only in the heart and consisted of chronic focal and discrete myocarditis, compatible with the indeterminate form of Chagas' disease. All infected dogs developed this form of the disease, which was independent of the number of infections.
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            Trypanosoma cruzi reinfections in mice determine the severity of cardiac damage.

            In two murine models we studied Trypanosoma cruzi reinfection in the acute and chronic phase of experimental Chagas' disease in order to elucidate the relevance of reinfections in determining the variability of cardiac symptoms and the irreversible cardiac damage. They were followed for 120 and 600 days post infection (p.i.) for the acute and chronic model, respectively. Reinfected mice reached higher parasitaemia levels than infected mice. The survival was 33 and 21% in the chronic phase for mice reinfected in the acute phase and 13% for mice reinfected in the chronic stage at the end of the experiments. Sixty-six percent of the infected group presented electrocardiographic abnormalities (heart frequency, prolonged PQ segment or QRS complex) in the chronic stage whereas 100% of the reinfected animals exhibited electric cardiac dysfunction since 90 and 390 days p.i. for the acute and chronic reinfected model, respectively (P<0.01). Heart histopathological studies showed fibrosis and necrosis areas and mononuclear infiltrates supporting the view that parasite persistence is a major factor in continuing the tissue inflammation. This work shows that T. cruzi reinfections could be related to the variability and severity of the clinical course of Chagas' disease and that parasite persistence is involved in exacerbation of the disease.
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              Morbidade da doença de Chagas: IV. Estudo longitudinal de dez anos em Pains e Iguatama, Minas Gerais, Brasil

              Um estudo evolutivo do tipo caso-controle sobre a morbidade da doença de Chagas foi feito com indivíduos pareados por idade e sexo, utilizando-se duas avaliações, eletrocardiográficas e radiológicas com intervalo de dez anos. No primeiro estudo foram analizados 264 de indivíduos com sorologia positiva e outros tantos com sorologia negativa, e no último, foram obtidoas informações sobre 235 pacientes entre positivos e 216 entre os negativos dos quais foram reconstituídos e reexaminados 110 pares com a mesma metodologia inicial. A incidência da cardiopatia chagásica nos casos da forma inderteminada e o gravamento da forma cardíaca já instalada foi de 38,3 e 24%, respectivamente, no peíodo considerado. A evolução da doença como um todo foi progressiva em 34,5% dos casos, inalterada e, 57,3% e regressiva (normalização do ECG) em 8.2%. A mortalidade geral foi 23% no grupo chagásico e 10,6% no grupo controle, enquanto a letalidade por cardiopatia chagásica foi de 17% e por cardiopatias de outras etiologias no grupo controle foi de 2,3%. Não houve óbitos entre os 130 casos inicialmente na forma indeterminada nem entre seis casos de megaesôfogo. A mortalidade por doença de chagas foi duas vezes mais elevada no sexo masculino, com grande predominância no grupo etário de 30 a 59 anos de idade.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                mioc
                Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
                Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz
                Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde (Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil )
                0074-0276
                1678-8060
                July 2003
                : 98
                : 5
                : 605-610
                Affiliations
                [04] Nagasaki orgnameNagasaki University orgdiv1Institute of Tropical Medicine Japan
                [02] Tapachula Chiapas orgnameFacultad de Ciencias Químicas México
                [01] Puebla orgnameHospital de Especialidades Centro Médico Nacional Manuel Ávila Camacho México
                [03] DF orgnameInstituto Nacional Cardiología México
                Article
                S0074-02762003000500004 S0074-0276(03)09800504
                10.1590/S0074-02762003000500004
                9291a59a-f2bd-4b91-a786-4179591ccf02

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 12 February 2003
                : 18 June 2003
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 38, Pages: 6
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                Epidemiology

                Trypanosoma cruzi,Chagas disease,polymerase chain reaction,seroprevalence,electrocardiogram alterations

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