120 resultados para sairaalat - lepra
Resumo:
Last October 2nd the Author smeared nine tubes of Loewenstein medium with material obtained from closed pustulae of a seven years old boy, L2 case of leprosy. This material was very rich in Hansen bacilli in its different forms, inclusive globus, as is seen in the figures 2 and 3 of Plate 1. Part of this material obtained from pustulae opened by galvanocautery, was inoculated, at the same day, into white rats and guinea-pigs. November 26th a new biopsy gave more rich material, which was smeared again into Loewenstein fresh medium. December 15th three of the first and two of the second series of tubes of cultures showed germination of a yellow, dry and rough culture, covering almost the total surface of the medium. Microscopic examination of the culture showed that it was a pure culture of an acid-fast organism. Passages into glycerinated potatoes germinated well covering the surface of the same with a clear yellow granulated culture remaining the fluid (glycerinated water) quite limpid. The germination in glycerinated broth produced a yellow velum in the surface of the medium, as is seen in fig. 3 of Plate 2, without becoming turbid. The microorganism isolated twice from the same source of material was cocciforme (as Mycobacterium pulviforme of Marchoux), in the original culture, becoming more bacilliforme, always acid-fast, after passage into glycerinated media. The A. sent his culture to foreigner colleagues to study it and will inoculate it soon into laboratory animals.
Resumo:
In this 2nd note upon the possibility of transmission of human leprosy by ticks, the A. relates his stepps to obtain the collaboration of his colleagues working in leprosaria in various States of Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay in such studies. Firstly the A. describes the positive results of examination of sediment of ticks, the cattle tick Boophilus microplus (Canestrini, 1888), received from Paraná (Leprosário São Roque) , which were put on active lepers, two of them sucking during 9 days and one during 7 days. Two out of three were killed for examination and were very strongly positive for acid-fast bacilli. A series of tubes of Loewenstein medium was smeared with the sediment of such ticks. Secondly the A. relates his personnal experiment, carried out in Rio de Janeiro, trying to infect normal ticks in lepers. The experiment with Boophilus microplus was negative and was twicely positive the experiment with Amblyomma cajennense Fabricius, 1794. The experiment is being in progress and will be continued in other places of Brazil. Finally, after being given the general characteristics of Boophilus microplus, the A. describes the non-chromogenic culture of a acid-fast bacillus isolated by him from sediment of ticks (Amblyomma cajennense) captured in lepers from Colônia Santa Isabel (Minas gerais), which parasitism was spontaneous. The first isolation was obtained in Loewenstein medium after 62 days incubation at 37°C. The culture is pure and the bacillus is permanent acid-fast. The plate1, in full color, represents this culture in its four generations. The colonies are pearl-white in color, dry, elevated and rough, developing slowly and beginning as white pinhead points scattered upon the surface of the medium. The culture is not yet rich enough to be inoculated into laboratory animals, which will be done when possible.
Resumo:
1 - A lepra murina foi encontrada na cidade do Rio de Janeiro, em 37 ratos, entre 10.000 examinados, dos quais 32 R. norvegicus, 3 R. alexandrinus e 2 M. musculus. 2 A infecção é mais freqüente em animais adultos (94,6%). 3 O sexo provavelmente não tem influência sobre a infecção. 4 A infecção ganglionar é a mais freqüente; foram observados 25 ratos com esta forma, 9 com a forma músculo-cutânea e 3 com a forma mista.
Resumo:
The AA. carried out experiments in the leprosarium São Roque, State of Paraná, South Brazil, to verify if the cattle tick Boophilus microplus could be experimentally infected in lepers, which was true. The AA. Tried also to be ascertained if Boophilus microplus and Amblyomma cajennense could change of hosts during their feedings which was true, both ticks continue feeding, the last species for many days, after being transferred from one to another leper. The junior A. describes in full their experiments and also a dermatites caused by tick bites. The senior A. brought to Rio de Janeiro most of the infected ticks for examination, which revealed a very high positivity. He smeared the sediments of lots of both species of ticks in Loewenstein medium and after a variable periode of incubation at 37° C. he obtained four new samples of cultures of acid-fast organisms, two from Amblyomma cajennense and two from Boophilus microplus. These cultures are being studied and will be inoculated into laboratory animals. The senior A. inoculated new batches of white rats with sediments of many ticks infected in lepers. Various hypotheses of both previous notes upon the subject now are verified facts. The A. is accumulating facts to draw the conclusions in the future. He also suggested the leprosy workers in the interior of the country to cooperate with him in such important studies, specially in the habitat of lepers in the rural zones of various States.
Resumo:
O A. fez a revisão bibliográfica sobre a patologia da lepra murina. Em 41 ratos espontaneamente infectados com lepra murina 39% tinham alopecia, especialmente no dorso; 78% tinham infiltração subcutânea; 13 apresentavam tumores que podiam atingir 5 cm. de maior diâmetro; oito animais tinham ulcerações variando em número de 1 a 15; 11 tinham nódulos, desde um desde um único até 10; dois apresentavam hipertrofia do baço e dois outros tinham pequenos nódulos na sua superfície; microabcessos no fíagado em cinco casos; dois ratos com pneumonia e dois outros com microabcessos no pulmão. Os demais orgãos estavam macroscopicamente normais. Foram feitos minuciososestudos histopatológicos com material de lepra murina espontânea e experimental. Granulomas foram vistos em cortes da pele, gânglios linfáticos, baço, médula óssea, fígado, pulmões e rins. os testículos estavam raramente atingidos. Os granulomas são constituidos por células mononucleares ou por grandes células semelhantes ás células epitelioides, nas quais existem numerosos bacilos. O processo infeccioso fica localizado por muito tempo nos gãnglios linfáticos. A lepra murina por sua natureza e provavel origem das células atingidas sugere ser uma doença primoedial do sistema retículo endotelial.
Resumo:
Os exames micropolariscópicos de cortes de tumores de ratos com lepra murina, não evidenciaram lipoides birefringentes. Os resultados obtidos na dosagem do colesterol na pele normal de ratos e nos tumores subcutâneos, mostraram valores quase iguais após a correção do teor em água dos tecidos. Sem esta correção, o tumos contem mais colesterol que a pele normal. Os lipídeos totais teem valores pouco maiores para o tumor do que para a pelo normal, mesmo referindo-se em gramas de tecino sêco. Esta pequena diferença não parece contudo significativa.
Resumo:
The A. succeeded, after various experiments, to infect ticks (Amblyoma cajennense) with STEFANSKY bacillus, upon feeding them in rats suffering from murine leprosy, in advanced stages. The A. thinks that will be ease to transfer the sickness from rat to rat by means of inoculation of triturate of infected ticks, as did MARCHOUX with Laelaps echdninus.
Resumo:
1) O A. revê as vias de infecção naturais e os processos de inoculações empregados em ratos, no estudo da lepra murina. 2) Na natureza, o contacto prolongado de animal sadio com doente e a infecção por via gástrica devem ser os modos comuns de contaminação. 3) Foram encontrados dentro do Polyplax spinulosa (Burmeister) capturados em ratos leprosos, bacilos ácido álcool resistentes. Tentativas de cultura com êste material, foram infrutíferas. 4) O A. infectou ratos colocando no estômago, por meio de sondas de vidro, material leproso. Em cinco animais, todos se infectaram. 5) Por via subcutânea e por via intraperitoneal, a infecção se processa em quase 100% dos casos. 6) Foi possível infectar gambás (Didelphis aurita) com lepra murina. Êsses animais provavelmente são mais suscetíveis à lepra dos ratos que à humana. 7) Conseguiu-se infectar pinto por inoculação de emulsão de lepra murina no músculo do peito, por via intraperitoneal e por via gástrica. 8) Pombos também se infectaram após inoculação no músculo do peito e por via venosa.
Resumo:
The A., after an intorductory history of his experience in leprosy, discusses the more convinient routine method of classification of leprosy cases, basing it in the facte that every case is mixt, i. e. when the skin shows any lesion the nerves of that region are also affected by the bacilli. Studying by a new thecnics, which he baptised before as "Lleras' method", the scarching of the agent of leprosy in tuberculoid cases, by examination of sub-corium lymph obtained from the lesion, he discovered new forms of the Hansen bacillus, which describes briefly, arriving at the following conclusions: 1. The A., after discussing about the evolution and clinical classification of leprosy, describes new forms of the HANSIN bacillus, discoverd in the lymph extracted from subcutis of leprosy lesion. 2. In 100 % of tuberculoid cases (total studied 29) the A. found, in the subcutis lymph, bacilli, granules, clubs or other forms of HANSEN bacillus. 3. Such bacteriological findigs and the proved mutation of tuberculoid leprosy into lepromatous type, demolished the basis of the so-called "polar" classification of leprosy. 4. Considering the proved facts already referred to, the A. arrived at the conclusion that 50 % of all papers published about tuberculoid leprosy, within the last ten years, are fanciful. 5. The presence, in the subcutis of lepers, of metamorphosic forms of HANSEN bacillus, is the cause of common relapses of negativated cases by treatment, which fact suggests a new therapeutics method to destroy such elements in loco, and exiges more strict examination before release of interned patients.
Resumo:
The A.A. started a new series of experiments upon the transmission of Leprosy to man by means of one of the more widespread hematophagi of the hinterland of Brazil, the Triatomidae. Two species of these insects were found naturally infected with Hansen's bacillus in huts of lepers in the interior of the State of Minas Gerais and one of the writers (S.A.) upon feeding the same insects on lepromatous cases could obtain two strains of acid-fast bacilli cultures smearing Lowenstein medium with the intestinal contains of the same. The first phase of the experiments lasted five months and the results, partially positive, are here describe. More than one hundred Triatomidae (Triatoma infestans and Panstrongylus megistus) bred in the Institute Oswaldo Cruz and fed in normal pigeons until convenient growth were put on lepromatous lesions, which they sucked many times, and them after one or more days they were put to be fed on selected regions of the skin of four negativated cases of leprosy. The arguments in favour and against the possibility of obtaining new lesions of leprosy in such burnet out patients were discussed. The A.A. are not authorized to draw any definite conclusions, but the few facts registered are worth of divulgation, in orther that other workers send their suggestions. Three out of the four volunteers showed moderate local reactions between 1 to 4 days after being sucked by the infected insectes. After five months experiments subcutanous lymph were obtained from the points where the insects have bitten. A very few acid-fast bacilli were found in such material. The patients, being kept in separation from infectious cases, will be followed up during months or a year in order to be detected any suspicious experimental lesions of leprosy.