Journal Information
Issue
Vol. 29. Issue 1. (In progress)(January - February 2025)
This issue is in progress but contains articles that are final and fully citable.
Original articles
Hospitalization due to pneumococcal disease in the Unified Health System in Brazil: A retrospective analysis of administrative data
Daniela V. Pachito, Mauricio Longato, Guilherme Cordeiro, Paulo H.R.F. Almeida, Ricardo Macarini Ferreira, Ana Paula N. Burian
Full text access
Investigation of natural infection of BALB C mice by Bartonella henselae
Luciene Silva dos Santos, Sayros Akyro Soares Martins, Francine Ramos Scheffer, Alexandre Seiji Maekawa, Rafaela de Paula Silva, Gabriel Rabelo de Araújo, Paulo Eduardo Neves Ferreira Velho, Marina Rovani Drummond
Full text access
Review articles
Dysregulation in the microbiota by HBV and HCV infection induces an altered cytokine profile in the pathobiome of infection
Marcos Daniel Mendes Padilha, Francisco Tiago de Vasconcelos Melo, Rogério Valois Laurentino, Andrea Nazaré Monteiro Rangel da Silva, Rosimar Neris Martins Feitosa
Full text access
Brief communications
Combined therapeutic option for NDM-producing Serratia Marcescens – an in vitro study from clinical samples
Balbina Chilombo Albano, Leticia Ramos Dantas, Gabriel Burato Ortis, Paula Hansen Suss, Felipe Francisco Tuon
Full text access
Seroprevalence of hepatitis E virus infection in blood donors from Piauí State, Northeast Brazil
João Paulo da Silva-Sampaio, Raniela Borges Sinimbu, Julia Trece Marques, Abilio Francisco de Oliveira Neto, Livia Melo Villar
Full text access
Presence of dengue virus RNA in urine and oral fluid of laboratory-confirmed dengue patients: Implications for wastewater surveillance
Christine Stauber, Leile Camila Jacob-Nascimento, Caroline Grosch, Moisés da Silva Sousa, Moyra M. Portilho, Rosângela O. Anjos, Margo A. Brinton, Uriel Kitron, ... Guilherme S. Ribeiro
Highlights
- •
Patients with dengue can shed dengue virus RNA in urine and oral fluids.
- •
Dengue RNA was detectable in acute and convalescent urine samples.
- •
Wastewater-based epidemiology may be useful for monitoring dengue transmission.
Full text access