Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases ()

Anatomopathological study in BALB/c mice brains experimentally infected with Toxoplasma gondii

  • Marcos Gontijo da Silva,
  • Ruy de Souza Lino Junior,
  • Tatiane Luiza da Costa,
  • Joanna D´arc Herzog Soares,
  • Waldemar Naves do Amaral,
  • Mariza Martins Avelino,
  • Ana Maria de Castro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S1413-86702008000100012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 52 – 56

Abstract

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Toxoplasmosis is one of the most important diseases of the nervous central system, leading to severe symptoms and, many times, irreversible sequelae. This work demonstrated the main anatomopathological lesions caused by Toxoplasma gondii in brains from experimentally infected BALB/c mice. We analyzed 51 cases of mice that developed toxoplasmosis after experimental infection by intraperitoneal inoculation of blood, amniotic liquid and cerebrospinal fluid from fetuses, newly born children and pregnant women with clinical and laboratory signals of toxoplasmosis. In all experiments where we detected the parasite in mice we also detected pathological lesions in the animal brains with great polymorphism between experiments. Edema was the most found lesion in all cases. Besides, it was possible to demonstrate the inflammatory process in 82.4% of cases and necrosis in 64.7% of cases, in agreement with the literature that describes severe neurological damage in its hosts.

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