2 resultados para Lopes, Manuel,1907-2005

em Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual da Universidade de São Paulo


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Abstract Background Hepatitis C chronic liver disease is a major cause of liver transplant in developed countries. This article reports the first nationwide population-based survey conducted to estimate the seroprevalence of HCV antibodies and associated risk factors in the urban population of Brazil. Methods The cross sectional study was conducted in all Brazilian macro-regions from 2005 to 2009, as a stratified multistage cluster sample of 19,503 inhabitants aged between 10 and 69 years, representing individuals living in all 26 State capitals and the Federal District. Hepatitis C antibodies were detected by a third-generation enzyme immunoassay. Seropositive individuals were retested by Polymerase Chain Reaction and genotyped. Adjusted prevalence was estimated by macro-regions. Potential risk factors associated with HCV infection were assessed by calculating the crude and adjusted odds ratios, 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) and p values. Population attributable risk was estimated for multiple factors using a case–control approach. Results The overall weighted prevalence of hepatitis C antibodies was 1.38% (95% CI: 1.12%–1.64%). Prevalence of infection increased in older groups but was similar for both sexes. The multivariate model showed the following to be predictors of HCV infection: age, injected drug use (OR = 6.65), sniffed drug use (OR = 2.59), hospitalization (OR = 1.90), groups socially deprived by the lack of sewage disposal (OR = 2.53), and injection with glass syringe (OR = 1.52, with a borderline p value). The genotypes 1 (subtypes 1a, 1b), 2b and 3a were identified. The estimated population attributable risk for the ensemble of risk factors was 40%. Approximately 1.3 million individuals would be expected to be anti-HCV-positive in the country. Conclusions The large estimated absolute numbers of infected individuals reveals the burden of the disease in the near future, giving rise to costs for the health care system and society at large. The known risk factors explain less than 50% of the infected cases, limiting the prevention strategies. Our findings regarding risk behaviors associated with HCV infection showed that there is still room for improving strategies for reducing transmission among drug users and nosocomial infection, as well as a need for specific prevention and control strategies targeting individuals living in poverty.

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O sistema estuarino‐lagunar de Cananéia‐Iguape, localizado no sul do Estado de São Paulo, sudeste do Brasil, encerra um complexo de canais, associados a uma planície costeira, cuja evolução data dos eventos transgressivo‐regressivos do Quaternário superior e cujos processos sedimentares recentes foram dramaticamente alterados em função da atividade antrópica, nos últimos 150 anos, determinada, basicamente, pela abertura de um canal artificial, o Valo Grande. Uma análise de documentos cartográficos, dos últimos 100 anos (Commissão Geographica e Geologica do Estado de S. Paulo, 1914; Freitas, 2005; Nascimento Jr et al., 2008), além de imagens de satélites, revela que, após a abertura do Valo Grande, houve uma enorme intensificação no processo sedimentar de parte do sistema lagunar, em função, não somente da erosão das margens do canal artificial mas, também, por conta do aumento expressivo sedimentos para o sistema estuarino‐lagunar, levando à formação de um “delta intra‐lagunar antropogênico” (“man‐made intra‐lagoonal delta”) cuja evolução e morfologia atual estão sendo investigados.