Perfil de auto-anticorpos em índios das tribos Kaingang e Guarani do Sul do Brasil

  • Utiyama S
  • Guardiano J
  • Petzl-Erler M
  • et al.
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Abstract

This study investigated the autoantibody profile of 241 blood samples from 176 Kaingang and 65 Guarani Indians from three populations living on the Rio das Cobras and Ivai reservations, in the state of Parana, in southern Brazil. The presence of antimitochondrial, antismooth muscle, antinuclear, antiparietal cell, and anti-liver-kidney microsome antibodies was determined by indirect immunofluorescence. These results were compared with samples from 100 healthy Caucasian individuals from the general population of the state. Total positivity was 9% for the indigenous population and 4% for the control population. The prevalence of antismooth muscle antibodies was significantly higher among the Guarani and Kaingang individuals from the Rio das Cobras reservation (P = 0.03). It is likely that the increased exposure that these indigenous Brazilians have to infectious diseases that were previously unknown to them comes from more contact with nonnative populations, growing acculturation, and cultural practices that include scarification and tattooing. The presence of auto-antibodies in these Brazilian Indians may be related to mechanisms of molecular mimicry with viral or bacterial antigens.

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APA

Utiyama, S. R. da R., Guardiano, J., Petzl-Erler, M. L., Mocelim, V., & Messias-Reason, I. J. T. de. (2000). Perfil de auto-anticorpos em índios das tribos Kaingang e Guarani do Sul do Brasil. Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública, 7(6), 371–376. https://doi.org/10.1590/s1020-49892000000600003

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