Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.bahiana.edu.br:8443/jspui/handle/bahiana/2949
Título: Clinical and immunopathological findings during long term follow-up in Leishmania infantum experimentally infected dogs
Título(s) alternativo(s): Revista Acadêmica Scientific Reports
Autor(es): Andrade, Bruno Bezerril
Abbehusen, Melissa Moura Costa
Almeida, Valter dos Anjos
Solcà, Manuela da S.
Pereira, Laís da Silva
Costa, Dirceu Joaquim
Santana, Leonardo Gil
Bozza, Patricia Torres
Fraga, Deborah Bittencourt Moté
Veras, Patrícia Sampaio Tavares
Santos, Washington Luis Conrado dos
Brodskyn, Claudia Ida
Data do documento: 21-Nov-2017
Resumo: Canine Visceral Leishmaniasis (CVL) is caused by Leishmania infantum, which in the New World is transmitted by Lutzomyia longipalpis. While prospective clinical and immunological assessments of dogs experimentally challenged with L. infantum have been previously reported over a relatively short follow-up period, the long-term characterization of infected animals has not been performed to date. We evaluated dogs in a subclinical state for six years following experimental infection with L. infantum and Lu. longipalpis saliva, via an intradermal route, to characterize clinical, parasitological and immunological parameters arising from L. infantum experimental infection. We also assess these parameters in a group of naturally infected animals. The immune profiles of the experimentally and naturally infected animals exhibited increases of IFN-γ, IL-6 and IL-18, and decreases in TNF, IL-2, IL-8 and CXCL1, compared to controls. Our results indicate that over a six-year follow-up post-challenge, subclinically infected dogs presented low CVL clinical scores despite the persistence of Leishmania parasites in the lymph nodes, spleen and skin. Similarities observed among immune profiles in the context of experimental and natural infection seem to suggest that an enduring activation of the host immune response may lead to the control of parasite growth, thereby limiting disease severity.
URI: http://www7.bahiana.edu.br//jspui/handle/bahiana/2949
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