| Literature DB >> 12887027 |
Cristiano Marcelo Espinola Carvalho1, Márcia Cristina Ribeiro Andrade, Sérgio Salles Xavier, Regina Helena Riccioppo Mangia, Constança Carvalho Britto, Ana Maria Jansen, Octavio Fernandes, Joseli Lannes-Vieira, Maria Glória Bonecini-Almeida.
Abstract
Severe chronic damage to the heart and gastrointestinal tract in patients with Chagas' disease are often observed 10-20 years after the acute phase. The course of long-lasting infection with the Colombian strain of Trypanosoma cruzi was studied in seven rhesus monkeys infected for 15-19 years. Subpatent parasitemia was detected in all studied animals, using hemoculture (two of seven), artificial xenodiagnosis (three of seven), and a polymerase chain reaction PCR (six of six). High titers of specific IgG antibody to T. cruzi persisted throughout the chronic phase of infection. Abnormal electrocardiographic (three of six) and echocardiographic (one of six) patterns detected in the T. cruzi-infected monkeys were possibly related to parasite-triggered myocardial damage. The results suggest that rhesus monkeys experimentally infected with T. cruzi, besides reproducing the acute phase of Chagas' disease, also develop chronic chagasic cardiomyopathy.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12887027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0002-9637 Impact factor: 2.345