z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Influence of galantamine in the inflammatory process and tissular lesions caused by Trypanosoma cruzi QM2 strain
Author(s) -
Lucas Fadel Camargo,
Guilherme Donzalisky Pinheiro,
Priscilla Bianca de Oliveira,
Daniele Moraes Losada,
Eduardo Federighi Baisi Chagas,
Márcia Aparecida Sperança,
Agnaldo Bruno Chies,
Maria Angélica Spadella,
Luciamáre Perinetti Alves Martins
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
revista da sociedade brasileira de medicina tropical
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.503
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1678-9849
pISSN - 0037-8682
DOI - 10.1590/0037-8682-0201-2021
Subject(s) - trypanosoma cruzi , galantamine , chagas disease , acetylcholinesterase , parasitemia , amastigote , strain (injury) , biology , immunology , medicine , pharmacology , disease , enzyme , parasite hosting , leishmania , donepezil , dementia , world wide web , computer science , biochemistry , plasmodium falciparum , malaria
Trypanosoma cruzi infection triggers an inflammatory process with exacerbated production of cytokines that stimulate inflammatory and anti-inflammatory signals, including the efferent anti-inflammatory signal known as the anti-inflammatory cholinergic pathway. Thus, the use of anticholinesterase drugs, such as galantamine, could minimize the inflammatory process caused by this disease.METHODS For the study at 30, 60, and 90 days, 120 Swiss mice were divided into three groups. Each group was subdivided into four subgroups: uninfected/untreated (CTRL), uninfected/treated (GAL), infected/untreated (INF), and infected/treated (GAL/INF). The infected groups were inoculated intraperitoneally with 0.1 ml of mouse blood containing 5 × 10 4 trypomastigote forms of the T. cruzi QM2 strain. The galantamine-treated groups received 5 mg/kg of galantamine orally, through pipetting. From each subgroup, the parameters of parasitemia, histopathological analysis, butyrylcholinesterase activity (BuChE), and functional study of the colon were evaluated.RESULTS: BuChE performance was observed when AChE was suppressed, with increased activity in the GAL/INF group similar to the INF group on the 30 th day post infection, thus corroborating the absence of a significant difference in parasitic curves and histopathological analysis.CONCLUSIONS: The presence of an inflammatory process and nests of amastigotes, as well as evidence of reactivity to ACh and NOR, suggest that galantamine did not interfere with the colonic inflammatory response or even in colonic tissue parasitism at this stage of Chagas disease.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here