19 results on '"Mercado, Juan Carlos"'
Search Results
2. Zika virus infection enhances future risk of severe dengue disease
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Katzelnick, Leah C, Narvaez, César, Arguello, Sonia, Lopez Mercado, Brenda, Collado, Damaris, Ampie, Oscarlett, Elizondo, Douglas, Miranda, Tatiana, Bustos Carillo, Fausto, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Latta, Krista, Schiller, Amy, Segovia-Chumbez, Bruno, Ojeda, Sergio, Sanchez, Nery, Plazaola, Miguel, Coloma, Josefina, Halloran, M Elizabeth, Premkumar, Lakshmanane, Gordon, Aubree, Narvaez, Federico, de Silva, Aravinda M, Kuan, Guillermina, Balmaseda, Angel, and Harris, Eva
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Rare Diseases ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Vaccine Related ,Infectious Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Biodefense ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Antibodies ,Viral ,Dengue Vaccines ,Dengue Virus ,Humans ,Immunogenicity ,Vaccine ,Nicaragua ,Risk ,Serogroup ,Severe Dengue ,Zika Virus ,Zika Virus Infection ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
The Zika pandemic sparked intense interest in whether immune interactions among dengue virus serotypes 1 to 4 (DENV1 to -4) extend to the closely related Zika virus (ZIKV). We investigated prospective pediatric cohorts in Nicaragua that experienced sequential DENV1 to -3 (2004 to 2015), Zika (2016 to 2017), and DENV2 (2018 to 2020) epidemics. Risk of symptomatic DENV2 infection and severe disease was elevated by one prior ZIKV infection, one prior DENV infection, or one prior DENV infection followed by one ZIKV infection, compared with being flavivirus-naïve. By contrast, multiple prior DENV infections reduced dengue risk. Further, although high preexisting anti-DENV antibody titers protected against DENV1, DENV3, and ZIKV disease, intermediate titers induced by previous ZIKV or DENV infection enhanced future risk of DENV2 disease and severity, as well as DENV3 severity. The observation that prior ZIKV infection can modulate dengue disease severity like a DENV serotype poses challenges to development of dengue and Zika vaccines.
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- 2020
3. Dynamics and determinants of the force of infection of dengue virus from 1994 to 2015 in Managua, Nicaragua
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Katzelnick, Leah C, Ben-Shachar, Rotem, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Rodriguez-Barraquer, Isabel, Elizondo, Douglas, Arguello, Sonia, Nuñez, Andrea, Ojeda, Sergio, Sanchez, Nery, Mercado, Brenda Lopez, Gresh, Lionel, Burger-Calderon, Raquel, Kuan, Guillermina, Gordon, Aubree, Balmaseda, Angel, and Harris, Eva
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Pediatric ,Prevention ,Vaccine Related ,Immunization ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Biodefense ,Rare Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Antibodies ,Viral ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Dengue ,Dengue Virus ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Nicaragua ,Prospective Studies ,Public Health Surveillance ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Time Factors ,dengue virus ,force of infection ,cohort study ,transmission intensity - Abstract
Dengue virus (DENV) is the most prevalent human vector-borne viral disease. The force of infection (FoI), the rate at which susceptible individuals are infected in a population, is an important metric for infectious disease modeling. Understanding how and why the FoI of DENV changes over time is critical for developing immunization and vector control policies. We used age-stratified seroprevalence data from 12 years of the Pediatric Dengue Cohort Study in Nicaragua to estimate the annual FoI of DENV from 1994 to 2015. Seroprevalence data revealed a change in the rate at which children acquire DENV-specific immunity: in 2004, 50% of children age >4 years were seropositive, but by 2015, 50% seropositivity was reached only by age 11 years. We estimated a spike in the FoI in 1997-1998 and 1998-1999 and a gradual decline thereafter, and children age
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- 2018
4. Comparison of Four Serological Methods and Two Reverse Transcription-PCR Assays for Diagnosis and Surveillance of Zika Virus Infection
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Balmaseda, Angel, Zambrana, José Victor, Collado, Damaris, García, Nadezna, Saborío, Saira, Elizondo, Douglas, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Gonzalez, Karla, Cerpas, Cristhiam, Nuñez, Andrea, Corti, Davide, Waggoner, Jesse J, Kuan, Guillermina, Burger-Calderon, Raquel, and Harris, Eva
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Pediatric ,Rare Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Prevention ,Vaccine Related ,Clinical Research ,Biodefense ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,Cross Reactions ,Dengue ,Dengue Virus ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Female ,Humans ,Nicaragua ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Serologic Tests ,Zika Virus ,Zika Virus Infection ,ELISA ,RT-PCR ,Zika virus ,dengue virus ,diagnosis ,serological assay ,surveillance ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology - Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus that is responsible for recent explosive epidemics in the Americas. Notably, ZIKV infection during pregnancy has been found to cause congenital birth defects, including microcephaly, and ZIKV has been associated with Guillain-Barré syndrome in adults. Diagnosis and surveillance of Zika in the Americas have been challenging due to similar clinical manifestations and extensive antibody cross-reactivity with endemic flaviviral diseases, such as dengue. We evaluated four serological and two reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) methods in acute-phase (mean day, 1.8), early-convalescent-phase (mean day, 16.7), and late-convalescent-phase (mean, ~7 months) samples from the same individuals in a long-term pediatric cohort study in Nicaragua. Well-characterized samples from 301 cases of Zika, dengue, or non-Zika, nondengue febrile illnesses were tested. Compared to a composite reference, an in-house IgM antibody capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (MAC-ELISA) and the NIAID-Biodefense and Emerging Infections (BEI) MAC-ELISA measuring IgM yielded sensitivities of 94.5% and 70.1% and specificities of 85.6% and 82.8%, respectively. The NS1 blockade-of-binding ELISA measuring anti-ZIKV NS1 antibody levels yielded sensitivities of 85.0% and 96.5% and specificities of 91.4% and 92.6% at early and late convalescence, respectively. An inhibition ELISA detecting total anti-ZIKV antibodies had sensitivity and specificity values of 68.3% and 58.3% for diagnosis and 94.0% and 98.6% for measuring annual infection incidence. Finally, the ZCD and Trioplex real-time RT-PCR assays detecting Zika, chikungunya, and dengue viruses both yielded a sensitivity of 96.1% and specificity of 100%. Together, these assays resolve the urgent need for diagnostic and surveillance tools for countries affected by Zika virus infections.
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- 2018
5. Differences in Transmission and Disease Severity Between 2 Successive Waves of Chikungunya
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Gordon, Aubree, Gresh, Lionel, Ojeda, Sergio, Chowell, Gerardo, Gonzalez, Karla, Sanchez, Nery, Saborio, Saira, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Kuan, Guillermina, Balmaseda, Angel, and Harris, Eva
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- 2018
6. Antibody-dependent enhancement of severe dengue disease in humans
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Katzelnick, Leah C., Gresh, Lionel, Halloran, M. Elizabeth, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Kuan, Guillermina, Gordon, Aubree, Balmaseda, Angel, and Harris, Eva
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- 2017
7. Prior dengue virus infection and risk of Zika: A pediatric cohort in Nicaragua
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Gordon, Aubree, Gresh, Lionel, Ojeda, Sergio, Katzelnick, Leah C., Sanchez, Nery, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Chowell, Gerardo, Lopez, Brenda, Elizondo, Douglas, Coloma, Josefina, Burger-Calderon, Raquel, Kuan, Guillermina, Balmaseda, Angel, and Harris, Eva
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Pediatric diseases -- Development and progression -- Care and treatment ,Dengue fever -- Development and progression -- Care and treatment ,Comorbidity -- Forecasts and trends ,Zika virus infection -- Development and progression -- Care and treatment ,Virus diseases ,Genetic disorders ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Epidemics ,Dengue virus ,Infection ,Medical research ,Epidemiology ,Pediatrics ,Children ,Market trend/market analysis ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Background Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged in northeast Brazil in 2015 and spread rapidly across the Americas, in populations that have been largely exposed to dengue virus (DENV). The impact of prior DENV infection on ZIKV infection outcome remains unclear. To study this potential impact, we analyzed the large 2016 Zika epidemic in Managua, Nicaragua, in a pediatric cohort with well-characterized DENV infection histories. Methods and findings Symptomatic ZIKV infections (Zika cases) were identified by real-time reverse transcription PCR and serology in a community-based cohort study that follows approximately 3,700 children aged 2-14 years old. Annual blood samples were used to identify clinically inapparent ZIKV infections using a novel, well-characterized serological assay. Multivariable Poisson regression was used to examine the relation between prior DENV infection and incidence of symptomatic and inapparent ZIKV infection. The generalized-growth method was used to estimate the effective reproduction number. From January 1, 2016, to February 28, 2017, 560 symptomatic ZIKV infections and 1,356 total ZIKV infections (symptomatic and inapparent) were identified, for an overall incidence of 14.0 symptomatic infections (95% CI: 12.9, 15.2) and 36.5 total infections (95% CI: 34.7, 38.6) per 100 person-years. Effective reproduction number estimates ranged from 3.3 to 3.4, depending on the ascending wave period. Incidence of symptomatic and total ZIKV infections was higher in females and older children. Analysis of the effect of prior DENV infection was performed on 3,027 participants with documented DENV infection histories, of which 743 (24.5%) had experienced at least 1 prior DENV infection during cohort follow-up. Prior DENV infection was inversely associated with risk of symptomatic ZIKV infection in the total cohort population (incidence rate ratio [IRR]: 0.63; 95% CI: 0.48, 0.81; p < 0.005) and with risk of symptomatic presentation given ZIKV infection (IRR: 0.62; 95% CI: 0.44, 0.86) when adjusted for age, sex, and recent DENV infection (1-2 years before ZIKV infection). Recent DENV infection was significantly associated with decreased risk of symptomatic ZIKV infection when adjusted for age and sex, but not when adjusted for prior DENV infection. Prior or recent DENV infection did not affect the rate of total ZIKV infections. Our findings are limited to a pediatric population and constrained by the epidemiology of the site. Conclusions These findings support that prior DENV infection may protect individuals from symptomatic Zika. More research is needed to address the possible immunological mechanism(s) of cross-protection between ZIKV and DENV and whether DENV immunity also modulates other ZIKV infection outcomes such as neurological or congenital syndromes., Author(s): Aubree Gordon 1, Lionel Gresh 2, Sergio Ojeda 2, Leah C. Katzelnick 3, Nery Sanchez 2, Juan Carlos Mercado 2,4, Gerardo Chowell 5, Brenda Lopez 2, Douglas Elizondo 2, [...]
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- 2019
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8. Trends in Patterns of Dengue Transmission over 4 Years in a Pediatric Cohort Study in Nicaragua
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Balmaseda, Angel, Standish, Katherine, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Matute, Juan Carlos, Tellez, Yolanda, Saborio, Saira, Hammond, Samantha N., Nuñez, Andrea, Avilés, William, Henn, Matthew R., Holmes, Edward C., Gordon, Aubree, Coloma, Josefina, Kuan, Guillermina, and Harris, Eva
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- 2010
9. Acute steroid-induced myopathy during lung Maturation in a patient with threatened preterm Delivery
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Rojas-Suarez José Antonio, Arrieta-López Elizabeth, Miranda-Quintero Jesid E, Fernández-Mercado Juan Carlos, and De la Ossa-Mercado Olga
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Myopathy ,Steroids ,Fetal maturation. ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Myopathy caused by steroids is a serious and unusual side effect related with administration of high doses of steroids. In this article we had reported a possible deleterious and serious effect on the mother health when steroids are used in the treatment of preterm childbirth. The case of a pregnant patient of 28 gestational week that consults to the emergency department with signs of preterm birth, receives tocolysis and lung maturation with Betametasona (12 mg the first day and 12 mg at 24 hours after first dose); thereafter, patient refer dizziness and blurry vision, which progress rapidly to pain in lower limbs, with weakness, being generalized then to four limbs, for acute weakness and imminence of respiratory failure the patient was transferred to the intensive care unit (ICU) for respiratory vigilance, possible ventilatory support and study of this weakness. Myopathy caused by steroids is generally related with high doses of steroids. These patients, present a clinical typical picture characterized by widespread weakness of four extremities, muscular atrophy, normal CK or moderately high and myopathic changes in the EMG, the clinical presentation improves slowly. This report invite us to questioning the apparent innocuousness of steroids in pulmonary maturity and the dose of the same one, as well as to using them well in agreement to the indication of the same one keeping in mind the risk - benefit of the medicine.RESUMENLa miopatía causada por esteroides es un efecto secundario grave muy poco frecuente asociado a la administración de dosis altas de esteroides. Se reportan los posibles efectos deletéreos sobre la salud materna que puede tener la administración de corticosteroides frente al riesgo de un parto pretérmino. Se presenta el caso de una paciente gestante de 28 semanas que consulta al servicio de urgencia por infección de vías urinarias y amenaza de parto pretérmino, que recibe uteroinhibicion y maduración pulmonar con Betametasona (12 mg primer día y 12 mg a las 24 horas de primera dosis); luego de segunda dosis de maduración pulmonar la paciente refiere vértigo y visión borrosa, la cual progresó rápidamente a dolor, con pérdida de fuerza muscular en miembros inferiores, generalizándose luego a las cuatro extremidades, por lo que ante la inminencia de falla respiratoria se traslada a unidad de cuidados intermedios para vigilancia ventilatoria y estudio de miopatía.Discusión: La miopatía por esteroides, se produce con dosis altas de corticoides. Estos pacientes, presentan un cuadro clínico típico caracterizado por debilidad generalizada de las cuatro extremidades, atrofia muscular, CK normal o moderadamente elevada y cambios miopáticos en el EMG, el cuadro clínico mejora aunque de forma lenta. Conclusiones: Este reporte nos invita a cuestionar la aparente inocuidad de los esteroides en maduración pulmonar y la dosis de la misma, así como a utilizarlos bien de acuerdo a la indicación del mismo teniendo en cuenta el riesgo – beneficio del medicamento.
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- 2010
10. Evaluation of immunological markers in serum, filter-paper blood spots, and saliva for dengue diagnosis and epidemiological studies
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Balmaseda, Angel, Saborio, Saira, Tellez, Yolanda, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Pérez, Leonel, Hammond, Samantha N., Rocha, Crisanta, Kuan, Guillermina, and Harris, Eva
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- 2008
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11. CERTOLIZUMAB-INDUCED MYOPERICARDITIS AND CARDIOGENIC SHOCK IN A PATIENT WITH RHUPUS SYNDROME
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Mendoza, Juan Alan Fuentes, Pimentel-Esparza, Juan Andres, gomez, omar, Mercado, Juan Carlos Alonso, Ricaño, Manuel, Jaime, Juan Fuentes, and Nieto, Jorge Antonio Cervantes
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- 2023
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12. Dengue and Zika virus infections in children elicit cross-reactive protective and enhancing antibodies that persist long term.
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Katzelnick, Leah C., Zambrana, Jose Victor, Elizondo, Douglas, Collado, Damaris, Garcia, Nadezna, Arguello, Sonia, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Miranda, Tatiana, Ampie, Oscarlett, Mercado, Brenda Lopez, Narvaez, César, Gresh, Lionel, Binder, Raquel A., Ojeda, Sergio, Sanchez, Nery, Plazaola, Miguel, Latta, Krista, Schiller, Amy, Coloma, Josefina, and Carrillo, Fausto Bustos
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DENGUE viruses ,ZIKA virus infections ,ARBOVIRUS diseases ,ZIKA virus ,VACCINE effectiveness ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,NATURAL immunity - Abstract
Persistent protection: Dengue virus (DENV) and Zika virus (ZIKV) infections are mosquito-transmitted viruses that are known to elicit cross-protective antibody-mediated immune responses. It has been previously thought that initial infection with DENV or ZIKV leads to antibodies that are initially protective but wane over time to a point where they become enhancing and drive severe disease. Here, Katzelnick et al. longitudinally followed 4189 children in two cohorts in Nicaragua for up to 11 years, evaluating anti-DENV and anti-ZIKV antibody responses over time. The authors found that cross-reactive antibodies elicited by a first infection with DENV or ZIKV were unexpectedly stable over time and waned slowly after secondary infection. Together, these findings have implications for understanding natural and vaccine-elicited immunity to DENV and ZIKV. Dengue virus serotypes 1 to 4 (DENV1–4) and Zika virus (ZIKV) are mosquito-borne flaviviruses that induce both virus-specific and broadly reactive antibodies. A first DENV infection is thought to induce antibodies that wane over 2 years to titers that can subsequently enhance severe dengue disease. Secondary DENV infection with a different serotype is thought to induce stable, cross-serotype protective antibodies. Low dengue disease incidence after the recent Zika pandemic led to the hypothesis that ZIKV infection is also transiently cross protective. We investigated antibody kinetics in 4189 children up to 11 years after one and multiple DENV and ZIKV infections in longitudinal cohorts in Nicaragua. We used a DENV inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (iELISA), which measures antibodies associated with protection against dengue and Zika disease and with enhancement of dengue disease severity. Unexpectedly, we found that overall DENV iELISA titers stabilized by 8 months after primary DENV infection to a half-life longer than a human life and waned, although gradually, after secondary DENV infection. Similarly, DENV iELISA titers were stable or rose after primary ZIKV infection but declined in individuals with histories of DENV and ZIKV infection. In contrast, kinetics of anti-ZIKV antibodies after ZIKV infection were similar regardless of prior DENV immunity. We observed heterogeneity in DENV iELISA titer, suggesting that individual antibody titer set point, rather than waning, is important for future dengue disease risk. Together, these findings change our understanding of anti-flavivirus antibody kinetics and have implications for measuring vaccine efficacy and for predicting future dengue and Zika outbreaks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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13. Seroprevalence of Anti-Chikungunya Virus Antibodies in Children and Adults in Managua, Nicaragua, After the First Chikungunya Epidemic, 2014-2015.
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Kuan, Guillermina, Ramirez, Stephania, Gresh, Lionel, Ojeda, Sergio, Melendez, Marlon, Sanchez, Nery, Collado, Damaris, Garcia, Nadezna, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Gordon, Aubree, Balmaseda, Angel, and Harris, Eva
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CHIKUNGUNYA ,SEROPREVALENCE ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Chikungunya is a viral disease transmitted by Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus mosquitoes. In late 2013, chikungunya virus (CHIKV) was introduced into the Caribbean island of St. Martin. Since then, approximately 2 million chikungunya cases have been reported by the Pan American Health Organization, and most countries in the Americas report autochthonous transmission of CHIKV. In Nicaragua, the first imported case was described in July 2014 and the first autochthonous case in September 2014. Here, we conducted two studies to analyze the seroprevalence of anti-CHIKV antibodies after the first chikungunya epidemic in a community-based cohort study (ages 2–14 years) and in a cross-sectional survey of persons aged ≥15 years in the same area of Managua, Nicaragua. Routine annual serum samples collected from 3,362 cohort participants in March/April 2014 and 2015, and 848 age-stratified samples collected from persons ≥15 years old at the end of May-beginning of June 2015 were used to estimate the seroprevalence of anti-CHIKV antibodies after the first epidemic (October 2014 to February 2015 in the study population). Using an Inhibition ELISA assay that measures total anti-CHIKV antibodies, the seroprevalence was significantly higher in those aged ≥15 (13.1% (95%CI: 10.9, 15.5)) than in the pediatric population (6.1% (95%CI: 5.3, 6.9)). The proportion of inapparent infections was 58.3% (95%CI: 51.5, 65.1) in children and 64.9% (95%CI: 55.2, 73.7) in the ≥15 study population. We identified age, water availability, household size, and socioeconomic status as factors associated with the presence of anti-CHIKV antibodies. Overall, this is the first report of CHIKV seropositivity in continental Latin America and provides useful information for public health authorities in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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14. The Nicaraguan Pediatric Dengue Cohort Study: Incidence of Inapparent and Symptomatic Dengue Virus Infections, 2004–2010.
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Gordon, Aubree, Kuan, Guillermina, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Gresh, Lionel, Avilés, William, Balmaseda, Angel, and Harris, Eva
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DENGUE hemorrhagic fever ,DENGUE viruses ,VIRUS diseases ,DENGUE ,COHORT analysis ,INFECTION - Abstract
Dengue, caused by the four serotypes of dengue virus (DENV), is the most prevalent mosquito-borne viral disease of humans. To examine the incidence and transmission of dengue, the authors performed a prospective community-based cohort study in 5,545 children aged 2–14 years in Managua, Nicaragua, between 2004 and 2010. Children were provided with medical care through study physicians who systematically recorded medical consult data, and yearly blood samples were collected to evaluate DENV infection incidence. The incidence of dengue cases observed was 16.1 cases (range 3.4–43.5) per 1,000 person-years (95% CI: 14.5, 17.8), and a pattern of high dengue case incidence every other year was observed. The incidence of DENV infections was 90.2 infections (range 45.2–105.3) per 1,000 person-years (95% CI: 86.1, 94.5). The majority of DENV infections in young children (<6 years old) were primary (60%) and the majority of infections in older children (≥9 years of age) were secondary (82%), as expected. The incidence rate of second DENV infections (121.3 per 1,000 person-years; 95% CI: 102.7, 143.4) was significantly higher than the incidence rate of primary DENV infections (78.8 per 1,000 person-years; 95% CI: 73.2, 84.9). The rigorous analytic methodology used in this study, including incidence reporting in person-years, allows comparison across studies and across different infectious diseases. This study provides important information for understanding dengue epidemiology and informing dengue vaccine policy. Author Summary: Dengue is a major public health problem worldwide with 40 million cases annually. We conducted a large-scale prospective cohort study of dengue virus infection in children aged 2–14 years in Managua, Nicaragua. The observed rate of dengue cases was 16.1 cases per 1,000 persons per year. The observed rate of dengue virus infections was 90.2 infections per 1,000 persons per year. The observed rate of dengue virus infections is similar to the rates reported in Asian cohort studies, while the rate of dengue cases was lower than that observed in Asian cohort studies. The rate of dengue cases varied more than the rate of dengue virus infections, and a clear pattern of high dengue case incidence every other year was observed. The rigorous analytic methodology used in this study allows comparison of incidence of dengue virus infections and dengue cases across studies and across different infectious diseases. Our estimates of the burden of dengue in Nicaraguan children have significant policy implications for dengue vaccines as they become available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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15. Symptomatic Versus Inapparent Outcome in Repeat Dengue Virus Infections Is Influenced by the Time Interval between Infections and Study Year.
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Montoya, Magelda, Gresh, Lionel, Mercado, Juan Carlos, Williams, Katherine L., Vargas, Maria José, Gutierrez, Gamaliel, Kuan, Guillermina, Gordon, Aubree, Balmaseda, Angel, and Harris, Eva
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DENGUE hemorrhagic fever ,DENGUE viruses ,VIRUS diseases ,DENGUE ,ARBOVIRUSES ,VACCINE development - Abstract
Four dengue virus serotypes (DENV1-4) circulate globally, causing more human illness than any other arthropod-borne virus. Dengue can present as a range of clinical manifestations from undifferentiated fever to Dengue Fever to severe, life-threatening syndromes. However, most DENV infections are inapparent. Yet, little is known about determinants of inapparent versus symptomatic DENV infection outcome. Here, we analyzed over 2,000 DENV infections from 2004 to 2011 in a prospective pediatric cohort study in Managua, Nicaragua. Symptomatic cases were captured at the study health center, and paired healthy annual samples were examined on a yearly basis using serological methods to identify inapparent DENV infections. Overall, inapparent and symptomatic DENV infections were equally distributed by sex. The mean age of infection was 1.2 years higher for symptomatic DENV infections as compared to inapparent infections. Although inapparent versus symptomatic outcome did not differ by infection number (first, second or third/post-second DENV infections), substantial variation in the proportion of symptomatic DENV infections among all DENV infections was observed across study years. In participants with repeat DENV infections, the time interval between a first inapparent DENV infection and a second inapparent infection was significantly shorter than the interval between a first inapparent and a second symptomatic infection. This difference was not observed in subsequent infections. This result was confirmed using two different serological techniques that measure total anti-DENV antibodies and serotype-specific neutralizing antibodies, respectively. Taken together, these findings show that, in this study, age, study year and time interval between consecutive DENV infections influence inapparent versus symptomatic infection outcome, while sex and infection number had no significant effect. Moreover, these results suggest that the window of cross-protection induced by a first infection with DENV against a second symptomatic infection is approximately 2 years. These findings are important for modeling dengue epidemics and development of vaccines. Author Summary: The four serotypes of the mosquito-borne dengue virus (DENV) infect an estimated 100 million humans annually, resulting in tens of millions of dengue cases and hundreds of thousands of cases of severe disease. However, infection with DENV does not always lead to clinical signs, and a large proportion of DENV infections are inapparent. Here, we studied the factors that influence whether a DENV infection is inapparent or symptomatic. Data from over 2,000 DENV infections (∼1,600 inapparent and ∼400 symptomatic) were collected during 7 years from an ongoing prospective cohort study of children in Managua, Nicaragua. We show that whether a person is infected for the first, the second, or the third time with different DENV serotypes, the proportion of symptomatic infections is similar. However, the proportion of symptomatic infection varied substantially across study years, and symptomatic infections tended to happen in older children when compared to inapparent infections. We also show that if a second DENV infection happens within a period of ∼2 years after the first infection, the second infection is more likely to be inapparent. However, if the time interval between first and second DENV infections is longer, this protection wanes and the infection is likely to be symptomatic. These findings are important for the modeling of dengue epidemics and the development of new vaccines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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16. Cephalic tetanus following penetrating eye trauma: a case report.
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Del Pilar Morales E, Bertrán Pasarell J, Cardona Rodriguez Z, Almodovar Mercado JC, and Figueroa Navarro A
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- Head, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Eye Injuries, Penetrating complications, Tetanus etiology
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Tetanus is a potentially life-threatening infection characterized by muscle spasms. Cephalic tetanus is limited to muscles and nerves in the head and can occur after trauma to this area. Because of the rarity of cephalic tetanus clinicians may be unfamiliar with the clinical presentation unsuspecting of the diagnosis.
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- 2014
17. Index cluster study of dengue virus infection in Nicaragua.
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Reyes M, Mercado JC, Standish K, Matute JC, Ortega O, Moraga B, Avilés W, Henn MR, Balmaseda A, Kuan G, and Harris E
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- Adolescent, Base Sequence, Cluster Analysis, DNA Primers, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, Humans, Male, Nicaragua epidemiology, Phylogeny, Dengue epidemiology
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Traditional study designs do not identify acute asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic dengue virus (DENV) infections, thus limiting our understanding of immunologic and viral factors that modulate infection outcome. In the 2006 and 2007 dengue seasons, we conducted a pilot index cluster study in Managua, Nicaragua, in which 442 persons living within 50 meters of 22 index cases identified through an ongoing pediatric cohort study were evaluated for DENV infection. Post-enrollment and pre-enrollment DENV infections were confirmed in 12 (2.7%) and 19 (4.3%) contacts, respectively. Five (42%) post-enrollment infections were asymptomatic, and DENV-2 was identified in 9 (75%) infections. Phylogenetic analysis with full-length DENV genomic sequence from contacts, index cases, and cohort dengue cases indicated focal transmission and infection outside the local area. We demonstrate the feasibility of identification of acute asymptomatic and pre-symptomatic cases in urban Latin America, the first report of such a study in the Americas, and identify age and concomitant immunity to DENV of contacts as a key factor in index cluster study design.
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- 2010
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18. Serotype-specific differences in clinical manifestations of dengue.
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Balmaseda A, Hammond SN, Pérez L, Tellez Y, Saborío SI, Mercado JC, Cuadra R, Rocha J, Pérez MA, Silva S, Rocha C, and Harris E
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- Adolescent, Antibodies, Viral blood, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dengue blood, Dengue pathology, Dengue virology, Female, Hematocrit, Hemorrhage pathology, Hemorrhage virology, Humans, Infant, Male, Platelet Count, Serotyping, Shock pathology, Shock virology, Thrombocytopenia pathology, Thrombocytopenia virology, Dengue classification, Dengue Virus growth & development
- Abstract
Dengue, the most prevalent arthropod-borne viral disease of humans, is caused by four serotypes of dengue virus (DENV 1-4). Although all four DENV serotypes cause a range of illness, defining precisely which clinical characteristics are associated with the distinct serotypes has been elusive. A cross-sectional study was conducted on 984 and 313 hospitalized children with confirmed DENV infections during two time periods, respectively, in the same hospitals in Nicaragua: a 3-year period (1999-2001) when DENV-2 accounted for 96% of the viruses identified, and the 2003 dengue season when DENV-1 predominated (87% of identified serotypes). When the two periods were compared, more shock (OR 1.91, 95% CI 1.35-2.71) and internal hemorrhage (OR 2.05, CI 1.16-3.78) were observed in the period when DENV-2 predominated, whereas increased vascular permeability was associated to a greater degree with the DENV-1 period (OR 2.36, CI 1.80-3.09). Compared with the DENV-2 period, the DENV-1 season was associated with more hospitalized primary dengue cases (OR 3.86, CI 2.72-5.48) and more primary DENV infections with severe manifestations (OR 2.93, CI 2.00-4.28). These findings provide new data to characterize the pathogenic potential of distinct DENV serotypes in human populations.
- Published
- 2006
19. Differences in dengue severity in infants, children, and adults in a 3-year hospital-based study in Nicaragua.
- Author
-
Hammond SN, Balmaseda A, Pérez L, Tellez Y, Saborío SI, Mercado JC, Videa E, Rodriguez Y, Pérez MA, Cuadra R, Solano S, Rocha J, Idiaquez W, Gonzalez A, and Harris E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Age Factors, Child, Child, Preschool, Cost of Illness, Dengue etiology, Dengue pathology, Female, Hospitals, Urban, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Nicaragua epidemiology, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Severity of Illness Index, Dengue epidemiology
- Abstract
To investigate age-related differences in dengue severity, 114 infants, 1,211 children, and 346 adults with laboratory-confirmed dengue virus (DEN) infections presenting to three hospitals in major urban centers in Nicaragua were recruited from 1999 to 2001. The age distribution of dengue cases and the circulating serotype (predominantly DEN2) were representative of national data. Similar results were obtained when either dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome or its principal manifestations (vascular permeability, internal hemorrhage, marked thrombocytopenia, and/or shock) were analyzed in relation to age and immune status. The burden of disease and of severe dengue was found predominantly in infants 4-9 months of age and in children 5-9 years old, and secondary DEN infection was a risk factor for severity in children. Age-related differences were identified in the prevalence of specific clinical manifestations as well as in their association with a confirmed DEN diagnosis. This represents one of the few comprehensive studies to analyze characteristics of dengue in infants, children, and adults in the same population and highlights age-related differences in dengue severity.
- Published
- 2005
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