7 results on '"Gatej, Raluca"'
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2. Hantavirus infection—Hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome: the first case series reported in Romania and review of the literature
- Author
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Maftei, Irinel-Doina, Segall, Liviu, Panculescu-Gatej, Raluca, Ceianu, Cornelia, and Covic, Adrian
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- 2012
- Full Text
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3. Childhood aggression and the co-occurrence of behavioural and emotional problems: results across ages 3-16 years from multiple raters in six cohorts in the EU-ACTION project.
- Author
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Hendriks, Anne, Fung Ip, Hill, Hagenbeek, Fiona, Nivard, Michel, van Dongen, Jenny, van Beijsterveldt, Toos, Bartels, Meike, Boomsma, Dorret I., Finkenauer, Catrin, Middeldorp, Christel, Roetman, Peter, Gatej, Raluca, Lamers, Audri, Vermeiren, Robert, Lu, Yi, Lichtenstein, Paul, Hankemeijer, Thomas, Kluft, Cees, Lundström, Sebastian, and Rose, Richard
- Subjects
AFFECTIVE disorders ,ANXIETY diagnosis ,DIAGNOSIS of mental depression ,BEHAVIOR disorders ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,AGE distribution ,ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,CHILD Behavior Checklist ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PARENTING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SELF-evaluation ,SEX distribution ,COMORBIDITY ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Childhood aggression and its resulting consequences inflict a huge burden on affected children, their relatives, teachers, peers and society as a whole. Aggression during childhood rarely occurs in isolation and is correlated with other symptoms of childhood psychopathology. In this paper, we aim to describe and improve the understanding of the co-occurrence of aggression with other forms of childhood psychopathology. We focus on the co-occurrence of aggression and other childhood behavioural and emotional problems, including other externalising problems, attention problems and anxiety-depression. The data were brought together within the EU-ACTION (Aggression in Children: unravelling gene-environment interplay to inform Treatment and InterventiON strategies) project. We analysed the co-occurrence of aggression and other childhood behavioural and emotional problems as a function of the child’s age (ages 3 through 16 years), gender, the person rating the behaviour (father, mother or self) and assessment instrument. The data came from six large population-based European cohort studies from the Netherlands (2x), the UK, Finland and Sweden (2x). Multiple assessment instruments, including the Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL), the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) and Multidimensional Peer Nomination Inventory (MPNI), were used. There was a good representation of boys and girls in each age category, with data for 30,523 3- to 4-year-olds (49.5% boys), 20,958 5- to 6-year-olds (49.6% boys), 18,291 7- to 8-year-olds (49.0% boys), 27,218 9- to 10-year-olds (49.4% boys), 18,543 12- to 13-year-olds (48.9% boys) and 10,088 15- to 16-year-olds (46.6% boys). We replicated the well-established gender differences in average aggression scores at most ages for parental ratings. The gender differences decreased with age and were not present for self-reports. Aggression co-occurred with the majority of other behavioural and social problems, from both externalising and internalising domains. At each age, the co-occurrence was particularly prevalent for aggression and oppositional and ADHD-related problems, with correlations of around 0.5 in general. Aggression also showed substantial associations with anxiety-depression and other internalizing symptoms (correlations around 0.4). Co-occurrence for self-reported problems was somewhat higher than for parental reports, but we found neither rater differences, nor differences across assessment instruments in co-occurrence patterns. There were large similarities in co-occurrence patterns across the different European countries. Finally, co-occurrence was generally stable across age and sex, and if any change was observed, it indicated stronger correlations when children grew older. We present an online tool to visualise these associations as a function of rater, gender, instrument and cohort. In addition, we present a description of the full EU-ACTION projects, its first results and the future perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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4. Dobrava Virus Carried by the Yellow-Necked Field Mouse Apodemus flavicollis, Causing Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome in Romania.
- Author
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Panculescu-Gatej, Raluca Ioana, Sirbu, Anca, Dinu, Sorin, Waldstrom, Maria, Heyman, Paul, Murariu, Dimitru, Petrescu, Angela, Szmal, Camelia, Oprisan, Gabriela, Lundkvist, Åke, and Ceianu, Cornelia S.
- Subjects
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HEMORRHAGIC fever with renal syndrome , *NEUTRALIZATION tests , *HANTAVIRUSES , *YELLOW-necked mouse , *SERODIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) has been confirmed by serological methods during recent years in Romania. In the present study, focus-reduction neutralization tests (FRNT) confirmed Dobrava hantavirus (DOBV) as the causative agent in some HFRS cases, but could not distinguish between DOBV and Saaremaa virus (SAAV) infections in other cases. DOBV was detected by a DOBV-specific TaqMan assay in sera of nine patients out of 22 tested. Partial sequences of the M genomic segment of DOBV were obtained from sera of three patients and revealed the circulation of two DOBV lineages in Romania. Investigation of rodents trapped in Romania found three DOBV-positive Apodemus flavicollis out of 83 rodents tested. Two different DOBV lineages were also detected in A. flavicollis as determined from partial sequences of the M and S genomic segments. Sequences of DOBV in A. flavicollis were either identical or closely related to the sequences obtained from the HFRS patients. The DOBV strains circulating in Romania clustered in two monophyletic groups, together with strains from Slovenia and the north of Greece. This is the first evidence for the circulation of DOBV in wild rodents and for a DOBV etiology of HFRS in Romania. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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5. Indirect Immunofluorescence Assay for the Simultaneous Detection of Antibodies against Clinically Important Old and New World Hantaviruses.
- Author
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Lederer, Sabine, Lattwein, Erik, Hanke, Merle, Sonnenberg, Karen, Stoecker, Winfried, Lundkvist, Åke, Vaheri, Antti, Vapalahti, Olli, Chan, Paul K. S., Feldmann, Heinz, Dick, Daryl, Schmidt-Chanasit, Jonas, Padula, Paula, Vial, Pablo A., Panculescu-Gatej, Raluca, Ceianu, Cornelia, Heyman, Paul, Avšič-Županc, Tatjana, and Niedrig, Matthias
- Subjects
HANTAVIRUSES ,HEMORRHAGIC fever with renal syndrome ,HANTAVIRUS diseases ,FOOT & mouth disease ,ADULT respiratory distress syndrome ,IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE - Abstract
In order to detect serum antibodies against clinically important Old and New World hantaviruses simultaneously, multiparametric indirect immunofluorescence assays (IFAs) based on biochip mosaics were developed. Each of the mosaic substrates consisted of cells infected with one of the virus types Hantaan (HTNV), Puumala (PUUV), Seoul (SEOV), Saaremaa (SAAV), Dobrava (DOBV), Sin Nombre (SNV) or Andes (ANDV). For assay evaluation, serum IgG and IgM antibodies were analyzed using 184 laboratory-confirmed hantavirus-positive sera collected at six diagnostic centers from patients actively or previously infected with the following hantavirus serotypes: PUUV (Finland, n = 97); SEOV (China, n = 5); DOBV (Romania, n = 7); SNV (Canada, n = 23); ANDV (Argentina and Chile, n = 52). The control panel comprised 89 sera from healthy blood donors. According to the reference tests, all 184 patient samples were seropositive for hantavirus-specific IgG (n = 177; 96%) and/or IgM (n = 131; 72%), while all control samples were tested negative. In the multiparametric IFA applied in this study, 183 (99%) of the patient sera were IgG and 131 (71%) IgM positive (accordance with the reference tests: IgG, 96%; IgM, 93%). Overall IFA sensitivity for combined IgG and IgM analysis amounted to 100% for all serotypes, except for SNV (96%). Of the 89 control sera, 2 (2%) showed IgG reactivity against the HTNV substrate, but not against any other hantavirus. Due to the high cross-reactivity of hantaviral nucleocapsid proteins, endpoint titrations were conducted, allowing serotype determination in >90% of PUUV- and ANDV-infected patients. Thus, multiparametric IFA enables highly sensitive and specific serological diagnosis of hantavirus infections and can be used to differentiate PUUV and ANDV infection from infections with Murinae-borne hantaviruses (e.g. DOBV and SEOV). Author Summary: Hantaviruses are the causative agents of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) and hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome (HCPS) — serious emerging diseases, with case-fatality rates of up to 15% and about 35%, respectively. So far, over 21 human pathogenic serotypes have been described, which are classified into New World (circulating in the Americas) and Old World (Asia and Europe) hantaviruses. The prodromal phase of hantavirus infections — fever, myalgia, headache and gastrointestinal symptoms — is indistinguishable from those of many other viral infections. The cardiopulmonary phase of HFRS and diuretic phase of HFRS mimic the acute respiratory distress syndrome and renal failure, respectively. In this context, clinical diagnosis has to be confirmed by laboratory testing, which is predominantly based on serology. Although there is an increasing awareness of hantaviruses, infections are still underdiagnosed, in part due to a lack of available standardized serological assays. This study evaluated a commercial multiparametric indirect immunofluorescence assay for the simultaneous detection of antibodies against clinically important Old World (Hantaan, Puumala, Seoul, Saaremaa and Dobrava) and New World (Sin Nombre and Andes) hantaviruses. Test performance was found to be comparable to established highly sensitive and specific in-house assays. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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6. Correction: Indirect Immunofluorescence Assay for the Simultaneous Detection of Antibodies against Clinically Important Old and New World Hantaviruses.
- Author
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Lederer, Sabine, Lattwein, Erik, Hanke, Merle, Sonnenberg, Karen, Stoecker, Winfried, Lundkvist, Åke, Vaheri, Antti, Vapalahti, Olli, Chan, Paul K. S., Feldmann, Heinz, Dick, Daryl, Schmidt-Chanasit, Jonas, Padula, Paula, Vial, Pablo A., Panculescu-Gatej, Raluca, Ceianu, Cornelia, Heyman, Paul, Avšič-Županc, Tatjana, and Niedrig, Matthias
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IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE ,HANTAVIRUSES ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,IMMUNOGLOBULIN M ,PHOSPHOLIPASE A2 - Published
- 2020
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7. First serologic evidence for the circulation of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus in Romania.
- Author
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Ceianu CS, Panculescu-Gatej RI, Coudrier D, and Bouloy M
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigens, Viral immunology, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Hemorrhagic Fever, Crimean epidemiology, Hemorrhagic Fever, Crimean virology, Humans, Immunoglobulin G blood, Immunoglobulin M blood, Nucleoproteins immunology, Recombinant Proteins, Romania epidemiology, Sheep, Sheep Diseases virology, Antibodies, Viral blood, Arachnid Vectors virology, Hemorrhagic Fever Virus, Crimean-Congo immunology, Hemorrhagic Fever, Crimean veterinary, Sheep Diseases epidemiology, Ticks virology
- Abstract
Serum samples from sheep in localities situated in the county of Tulcea, Northern Dobrogea, were tested with an IgG sandwich ELISA using a recombinant Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) antigen. In all, 131 sera out of 471 tested (27.8%) had IgG antibodies specific to CCHFV. This is the first evidence for the circulation of CCHFV virus in Romania.
- Published
- 2012
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