Publications by authors named "Ondemar Dias"

Pretos Novos cemetery (PNC), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (1769-1830) was created exclusively to bury enslaved Africans who died upon arrival at the city or before being sold in the slave market. The PNC site may be unique in the Americas in allowing the study of African parasite infections acquired in Africa. We aimed to identify parasites infecting PNC individuals through paleoparasitological and paleogenetic analyses.

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Despite interest in the origins of syphilis, paleopathological analysis has not provided answers, and paleogenetic diagnosis remains a challenge. Even venereal syphilis has low infectivity which means there are few circulating bacteria for most of the individual's life. Human remains recovered from the Nossa Senhora do Carmo Church (17th to 19th centuries) and the Praça XV Cemetery (18th to 19th centuries), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, were subjected to paleogenetic analysis.

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Most paleoparasitological studies based on archeological sites in the New World are from pre-Columbian times. However, understanding of the introduction and spread of parasites with the arrival of European settlers and African slaves in America remains a topic for investigation. This study evaluated the presence of intestinal parasites in human remains from an archeological site of the colonial period, and compared the sensitivity of three parasitological techniques for paleoparasitological study.

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Article Synopsis
  • Paleoparasitological studies from Brazil's colonial period are limited, but this research analyzed human remains from the Praça XV Cemetery in Rio de Janeiro, dating back to the 18th and 19th centuries.
  • Evidence of intestinal infections was found in 8 out of 10 individuals, with the most common parasites identified being Trichuris sp. and Ascaris sp., along with protozoa cysts suggestive of Entamoeba sp.
  • The findings highlight the significance of examining sediments from preserved human remains, suggesting previous procedures may not fully reveal the extent of infections, making this study the first of its kind for Rio and the first report of human Taenia sp. in the Americas.
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Paleogenetic analysis for tuberculosis (TB) was conducted on bone and sediment samples dating from the 17th to 19th centuries from the archeological site of Nossa Senhora do Carmo Church in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Forty samples were analyzed, corresponding to 32 individuals from 28 burials, 22 of primary type and 6 of secondary type. The samples were collected following strict paleogenetic investigation guidelines and submitted to ancient DNA (aDNA) extraction.

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