220 results on '"Camila González"'
Search Results
2. Knowledge, attitudes and practices towards yaws in endemic areas of Ghana, Cameroon and Côte d'Ivoire.
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Camila González Beiras, Adingra Tano Kouadio, Becca Louise Handley, Daniel Arhinful, Serges Tchatchouang, Ahouansou Stanislas Sonagnon Houndji, Eric Tettey Nartey, Dolphine Osei Sarpong, Gely Menguena, Philippe Ndzomo, Laud Anthony Basing, Kouadio Aboh Hugues, Ivy Brago Amanor, Mohammed Bakheit, Emelie Landmann, Patrick Awondo, Claudia Müller, Tania Crucitti, Nadine Borst, Lisa Becherer, Simone Lüert, Sieghard Frischmann, Aboubacar Sylla, Mireille S Kouamé-Sina, Emma Michèle Harding-Esch, Sascha Knauf, Oriol Mitjà, Sara Eyangoh, Kennedy Kwasi Addo, Solange Ngazoa Kakou, and Michael Marks
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Yaws, caused by Treponema pallidum ssp. pertenue, remains a significant public health concern in tropical regions of West Africa and the South Pacific, primarily affecting children in remote areas with limited access to hygiene and sanitation. In this study, conducted in three endemic countries of West Africa where yaws remains a significant public health concern (Ghana, Cameroon, and Côte d'Ivoire), we aimed to assess the knowledge, attitudes, and practices related to yaws among community members, community health workers (CHWs), and traditional healers. The study revealed variations in the perception of causes of yaws among community members: the majority or participants in Ghana attributed yaws to germs (60.2%); in Cameroon the most reported form of transmission was contact with or drinking infected water sources (44.6%); and in Côte d'Ivoire both of these answers were also the most prevalent (60.3% germs and 93.% water sources). A substantial proportion of participants in Côte d'Ivoire also associated yaws with witchcraft and divine punishment (44.8%). Only a small proportion of individuals in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire correctly identified contact with an infected person as a form of transmission (11.9% and 20.7%, respectively) and less than half in Cameroon (42.6%), although more than 98% of all participants reported avoidance behaviours towards yaws infected people due to fear of getting infected. Most participants expressed a preference for seeking care at hospitals (49.2%, 60.6%, 86.2%) or health care professionals including doctors and nurses (58.5%, 41,5% and 17.2%) if they were diagnosed with yaws, although a quarter of participants in Côte d'Ivoire also sought support from traditional healers. The CHWs interviewed were generally well-trained on yaws causes and treatment options, although they often reported low availability of treatment and diagnostic tests for yaws. Our findings underscore the need for community education, awareness campaigns, ongoing CHW training, and improved access to yaws treatment and diagnostic resources. The data also suggest that collaboration with traditional healers, who usually hold a highly esteemed position in the society, such as giving training on yaws causes and transmission or exchanging knowledge on treatment options, could be beneficial in certain regions, particularly in Côte d'Ivoire.
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- 2024
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3. Los números racionales en los currículos de Educación General Básica de Chile (1974-2012)
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Camila González-Peñaloza, Elena Castro-Rodríguez, and Juan Luis Piñeiro
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análisis curricular ,educación primaria ,documentos curriculares ,números racionales ,Education ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 - Abstract
Objetivo. El artículo presenta un análisis curricular del tratamiento de los números racionales en los cuatro programas de estudio de matemática que han estado vigentes en Chile desde 1974 al 2012. Metodología. Específicamente, se caracterizaron los objetivos de enseñanza-aprendizaje vinculados a las nociones de fracción, decimal y porcentaje, atendiendo a las categorías del National Council of Teacher of Mathematics (NCTM, 2003). Resultados. Se encontró que la mayoría de las nociones relativas al número racional y su comprensión son aspectos recurrentes; sin embargo, difieren en su uso flexible, en sus representaciones, en el cálculo y resolución de problemas. Discusión. Concluimos que la evolución observada en el tópico es relativa a los cambios sociales y de las políticas educativas del momento.
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- 2023
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4. Transmission ecology of Trypanosoma cruzi by Rhodnius prolixus (Reduviidae: Triatominae) infesting palm-tree species in the Colombian Orinoco, indicates risks to human populations.
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Plutarco Urbano, Carolina Hernández, Natalia Velásquez-Ortiz, Nathalia Ballesteros, Luisa Páez-Triana, Laura Vega, Vanessa Urrea, Angie Ramírez, Marina Muñoz, Carlos N Ibarra-Cerdeña, Camila González, and Juan David Ramírez
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundChagas disease, affecting approximately eight million individuals in tropical regions, is primarily transmitted by vectors. Rhodnius prolixus, a triatomine vector, commonly inhabits in ecotopes with diverse palm tree species, creating optimal conditions for vector proliferation. This study aims to explore the transmission ecology of Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative parasite of Chagas disease, by investigating the feeding patterns and natural infection rates of R. prolixus specimens collected from various wild palm species in the Colombian Orinoco region.Materials and methodsTo achieve this objective, we sampled 35 individuals from three palm species (Attalea butyracea, Acrocomia aculeata, and Mauritia flexuosa) in a riparian forest in the Casanare department of eastern Colombia, totaling 105 sampled palm trees. DNA was extracted and analyzed from 115 R. prolixus specimens at different developmental stages using quantitative PCR (qPCR) for T. cruzi detection and identification of discrete typing units. Feeding preferences were determined by sequencing the 12S rRNA gene amplicon through next-generation sequencing.ResultsA total of 676 R. prolixus specimens were collected from the sampled palms. The study revealed variation in population densities and developmental stages of R. prolixus among palm tree species, with higher densities observed in A. butyracea and lower densities in M. flexuosa. TcI was the exclusive T. cruzi discrete typing unit (DTU) found, with infection frequency positively correlated with R. prolixus abundance. Insects captured in A. butyracea exhibited higher abundance and infection rates than those from other palm species. The feeding sources comprised 13 mammal species, showing no significant differences between palm species in terms of blood sources. However, Didelphis marsupialis and Homo sapiens were present in all examined R. prolixus, and Dasypus novemcinctus was found in 89.47% of the insects.ConclusionThis study highlights the significance of wild palms, particularly A. butyracea, as a substantial risk factor for T. cruzi transmission to humans in these environments. High population densities and infection rates of R. prolixus were observed in each examined palm tree species.
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- 2024
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5. Ionizing Radiation-Induced Oxidative Stress in Computed Tomography—Effect of Vitamin C on Prevention of DNA Damage: PREVIR-C Randomized Controlled Trial Study Protocol
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Camilo G. Sotomayor, Camila González, Miki Soto, Nicolás Moreno-Bertero, Claudina Opazo, Baltasar Ramos, Gonzalo Espinoza, Álvaro Sanhueza, Gonzalo Cárdenas, Sebastián Yévenes, Jorge Díaz-Jara, José de Grazia, Marcia Manterola, Daniel Castro, Abraham A. I. J. Gajardo, and Ramón Rodrigo
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computed tomography ,ionizing radiation ,oxidative stress ,DNA damage ,antioxidants ,vitamin C ,Medicine - Abstract
Exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) is inevitable in various X-ray imaging examinations, with computed tomography (CT) being a major contributor to increased human radiation exposure. Ionizing radiation may cause structural damage to macromolecules, particularly DNA, mostly through an indirect pathway in diagnostic imaging. The indirect pathway primarily involves the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) due to water radiolysis induced by IR, leading to DNA damage, including double-strand breaks (DSB), which are highly cytotoxic. Antioxidants, substances that prevent oxidative damage, are proposed as potential radioprotective agents. This Study Protocol article presents the rationale for selecting vitamin C as a preventive measure against CT-associated IR-induced DNA damage, to be investigated in a randomized placebo-controlled trial, with a full in vivo design, using an oral easy-to-use schedule administration in the outpatient setting, for the single CT examination with the highest total global IR dose burden (contrast-enhanced abdomen and pelvis CT). The study also aims to explore the mediating role of oxidative stress, and it has been written in adherence to the Standard Protocol Items recommendations.
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- 2024
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6. Lifelong nnU-Net: a framework for standardized medical continual learning
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Camila González, Amin Ranem, Daniel Pinto dos Santos, Ahmed Othman, and Anirban Mukhopadhyay
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract As the enthusiasm surrounding Deep Learning grows, both medical practitioners and regulatory bodies are exploring ways to safely introduce image segmentation in clinical practice. One frontier to overcome when translating promising research into the clinical open world is the shift from static to continual learning. Continual learning, the practice of training models throughout their lifecycle, is seeing growing interest but is still in its infancy in healthcare. We present Lifelong nnU-Net, a standardized framework that places continual segmentation at the hands of researchers and clinicians. Built on top of the nnU-Net—widely regarded as the best-performing segmenter for multiple medical applications—and equipped with all necessary modules for training and testing models sequentially, we ensure broad applicability and lower the barrier to evaluating new methods in a continual fashion. Our benchmark results across three medical segmentation use cases and five continual learning methods give a comprehensive outlook on the current state of the field and signify a first reproducible benchmark.
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- 2023
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7. Prevalence and risk factors associated with Haemophilus ducreyi cutaneous ulcers in Cameroon.
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Philippe Ndzomo, Serges Tchatchouang, Earnest Njih Tabah, Theophilus Njamnshi, Mireille Victorine Noah Tsanga, Jude Alexis Bondi, Rebecca Handley, Camila González Beiras, Jules Tchatchueng, Claudia Müller, Simone Lüert, Sascha Knauf, Onana Boyomo, Emma Harding-Esch, Oriol Mitja, Tania Crucitti, Michael Marks, and Sara Eyangoh
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Epidemics of yaws-like cutaneous ulcers are regularly documented in children in the tropics. They occur mainly in poor and remote communities without access to health facilities. The integration of molecular tools into yaws control efforts has made it possible to describe Haemophilus ducreyi (HD) as a major cause of cutaneous ulcers. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of HD as cause of cutaneous ulcers, investigate its presence in asymptomatic individuals and identify associated risk factors. A cross-sectional study was conducted in yaws endemic districts of Cameroon. Participants included people presenting yaws-like ulcers and asymptomatic individuals. Swab samples were collected from each participant and tested for HD and Treponema pallidum (TP) using an established qPCR method. Additionally, demographic, habitat, proximity, and hygiene characteristics were collected using a structured questionnaire. A total of 443 individuals participated in the study, including 271 ulcer cases and 172 asymptomatic contacts. The prevalence of HD in ulcers was 30.3% (Confidence Interval (CI) 95% [24.8-35.7]) and the prevalence of asymptomatic HD carriage was 8.6% (CI95% [4.5-12.9]). TP was also detected in our sample among ulcer cases but in lower proportion (5.2% CI95% [2.5-7.8]) compared to HD. The adjusted logistic regression model showed that women were as much at risk of having HD cutaneous ulcer as men regardless of age. Physical proximity to a confirmed ulcer case was the major factor identified favouring HD transmission. HD ulcers were more likely to be present on Bantu individuals compared to Baka as well as HD colonization. These findings highlight HD as the most common cause of cutaneous ulcers in yaws-endemic communities in Cameroon. The exact implications of detecting HD on intact skin are not yet clear. Further studies are needed to understand the significance of this carriage in the spread dynamics of the disease.
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- 2023
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8. CHRONIC EXPOSURE TO A HIGH-FAT DIET AFFECTS THE NEUROCHEMICAL REGULATION OF THE LATERAL SEPTUM AND ITS PROJECTIONS TO THE LATERAL HYPOTHALAMUS
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Francisco Silva-Olivares, Victoria Collio, Camila González-Arancibia, Georgina Renard, and Ramón Sotomayor Zárate
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Published
- 2023
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9. 'LO QUE VALE EN TEORÍA, NO VALE EN LA PRÁCTICA'.
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Jorge Alarcón Leiva, Camila González Cancino, and Catalina Gotelli Alvial
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proyecto educativo institucional (pei) ,gestión pedagógica ,articulación ,rol profesional docente ,teoría y práctica educativa ,Education (General) ,L7-991 ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 ,Theory and practice of education ,LB5-3640 - Abstract
El Proyecto Educativo Institucional (PEI) es un instrumento político y técnico que orienta el quehacer institucional, a partir de una propuesta sobre el quehacer escolar. Uno de los desafíos docentes actuales reside en la exigencia de articular la gestión pedagógica de aula y los lineamientos declarados en el PEI, respecto al modelo de enseñanza aprendizaje, planificación de la enseñanza, evaluación de los aprendizajes, recursos educativos, desarrollo de competencias TICs e inclusión educativa. En este contexto, el estudio tiene el propósito de conocer la percepción de los docentes sobre la coherencia que existe entre el PEI y la gestión educativa. El estudio asume un enfoque investigativo de metodología mixta, bajo el paradigma positivista y hermenéutico, de tipo exploratorio. Para ello se aplicó una entrevista semi estructurada cómo técnica de recolección de información, a 21 docentes de la comuna de San Javier. Los principales resultados permiten concluir que los docentes comprenden y valoran la importancia del PEI. Sin embargo, no participan activamente en su elaboración, al mismo tiempo que presentan una amplia comprensión de su rol profesional, pero reportan que existen factores internos y externos de la profesión que limitan la implementación práctica de sus competencias en el aula.
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- 2022
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10. Morphological and molecular characterization of the parasite Dipylidium caninum infecting an infant in Colombia: a case report
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Paula Benitez-Bolivar, Silvia Rondón, Mario Ortiz, Juana Díaz-Díaz, Cielo León, Juan Riveros, Helverth Molina, and Camila González
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Dipylidium caninum ,Dipylidiasis ,Zoonosis ,Colombia ,28S gene ,human case ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Dipylidium caninum is the causal agent of dipylidiasis affecting mainly cats and dogs worldwide. Human cases of dipylidiasis are rare, and the diagnosis is prevalently based on morphological features of the parasite. Here we report the diagnosis of dipylidiasis through morphological and molecular characterization of D. caninum infecting an 11-month-old boy in Cajicá, Colombia. Methods Fresh faecal samples were obtained from the infant, and morphological identification of the parasite was performed through faecal smears. DNA was extracted from proglottids and used in PCR analyses for amplification of a 653-bp fragment of the nuclear ribosomal RNA (rRNA) encoding the 28S rRNA gene. A phylogeny study to better characterize the obtained DNA sequence was inferred using the maximum likelihood method and the Tamura-Nei model. Results After morphological and molecular analyses, D. caninum was identified as the etiological agent causing the infection in the infant. Results of phylogenetical analyses showed that the obtained sequence clusters within the feline genotype clade. After the diagnosis of the parasite, effective treatment with praziquantel was administered to the infant. Conclusions This is the third human case of dipylidiasis reported in Colombia, and the first study in South America to provide a molecular identification of D. caninum. Graphical abstract
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- 2022
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11. Altitudinal distribution and species richness of triatomines (Hemiptera:Reduviidae) in Colombia
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Sergio Méndez-Cardona, Mario I. Ortiz, María Cristina Carrasquilla, Patricia Fuya, Felipe Guhl, and Camila González
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Triatominae ,Chagas disease ,Distribution ,Species richness ,Colombia ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Chagas disease is considered to be endemic in up to 40% of the territory of Colombia, and to date 27 triatomine species have been reported the country. The purpose of this study was to update the geographical distribution of triatomine species in Colombia and assess the species richness patterns and their altitudinal distribution. Methods Occurrence data were compiled between 2007 and 2020, including from reports of entomological surveillance from the Instituto Nacional de Salud (INS), the Centro de Investigaciones en Microbiología y Parasitología Tropical (CIMPAT) at Universidad de Los Andes and a review of the literature. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) were used to describe general species richness patterns of the Triatominae subfamily. To establish the altitudinal distribution of the triatomine species, ranges were obtained from reports with unique elevation values. A generalized linear model was fitted, based on a Poisson distribution, to test the relation between triatomine species richness and Chagas disease cases (2012–2019). Results An updated geographical and altitudinal distribution for triatomine species in Colombia was established, with 507 municipalities added to the previously known distributions. The greatest triatomine richness in Colombia was found to be concentrated in the northeastern region of the country, extending towards the center to the departments of Arauca, Casanare and Meta. Regarding the altitudinal distribution, the study revealed that the species Rhodnius prolixus and Triatoma dimidiata have the greatest altitudinal ranges. The data also suggest a positive relation between species richness and number of Chagas disease cases reported per department. Conclusions Altitudinal ranges for 17 triatomine species found in Colombia are presented. Species richness and species composition patterns are also described, and areas with a higher risk of transmission based on the relation found with Chagas disease cases are highlighted. This updated distribution reveals that Panstrongylus geniculatus is the triatomine with the largest presence by municipalities in Colombia, being reported in 284 municipalities, followed by Rhodnius prolixus in 277 municipalities. Graphical Abstract
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- 2022
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12. Molecular detection of Candidatus Rickettsia colombianensi in ticks (Acari, Ixodidae) collected from herpetofauna in San Juan de Carare, Colombia
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Andrea Cotes-Perdomo, Juan Cárdenas-Carreño, Juliana Hoyos, Camila González, and Lyda R. Castro
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Reptiles ,Amphibians ,Ectoparasites ,Hosts ,Amblyomma dissimile ,Candidatus Rickettsia colombianensi ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Knowledge about ticks and Rickettsiae in Colombia is still limited and the areas of the country where studies have been conducted are scarce. In this study, ticks (Acari, Ixodidae) associated with reptiles and amphibians in San Juan de Carare, Santander department, were morphologically and molecularly identified and tested for the presence of Rickettsia. For the molecular characterization of ticks, CO1, 12S and 16S sequences were generated and compared with other sequences available in genbank. Our analyses confirmed that the collected ticks were Amblyomma dissimile, and we provide the first report of this species parasitizing the snake Leptodeira septentrionalis. Of the samples analyzed, 69% were positive for Rickettsia sp. using the gltA, ompA and sca1 genes. Rickettsia sequences generated in this study were also compared to sequences downloaded from genbank by Bayesian inference (BI) and maximum likelihood (ML) phylogenetic analyzes. The presence of a single Rickettsia species, Candidatus Rickettsia colombianensi, was identified. This study expands the knowledge regarding the distribution of A. dissimile ticks and Rickettsiae in Colombia.
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- 2022
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13. Sequencing of hsp70 for discernment of species from the Leishmania (Viannia) guyanensis complex from endemic areas in Colombia
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Juliana Hoyos, Mariana Rosales-Chilama, Cielo León, Camila González, and María Adelaida Gómez
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Leishmania (Viannia) ,Typing ,hsp70 ,Sand fly ,Human ,Mammalian ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Colombia is ranked very high among countries with the highest numbers of endemic Leishmania species (n = 9) causing human disease. Although much effort has been devoted to generating simple and specific tools for Leishmania species identification, challenges remain in the discrimination of species belonging to the Leishmania (Viannia) guyanensis complex: L. (V.) guyanensis and L. (V.) panamensis. Methods A set of seven reference strains of species belonging to the L. (Leishmania) and L. (Viannia) subgenera, clinical strains from human cases of cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL; n = 26) and samples collected from sylvatic mammals and sand flies (n = 7) from endemic areas in Colombia were analyzed in this study. The heat-shock protein 70 gene (hsp70) was amplified by PCR from DNA extracted from logarithmic-phase promastigotes or tissue samples, and the PCR products were sequenced. Sequence alignment was performed against a set of previously published and curated sequences, and phylogenetic analysis based on the maximum-likelihood and Bayesian inference approaches was conducted. Haplotype diversity among strains and species of the L. (V.) guyanensis complex was explored using a median-joining network. Results Sequencing of the hsp70 gene for L. (Viannia) spp. typing was comparable to species identification using isoenzyme electrophoresis or monoclonal antibodies. Complete species matching was found, except for one sylvatic sample with an identity yet unsolved. Among the L. (V.) panamensis clinical strains, two distinctive phylogenetic clusters were found to correlate with two different zymodemes: L. (V.) panamensis Z2.2 and Z2.3. Analysis of samples from sylvatic environments identified novel records of naturally infected wild mammal and sand fly species. Conclusions Our results support the adequacy of hsp70 gene sequencing as a single-locus approach for discrimination of L. (Viannia) spp., as well as for exploring the genetic diversity within the L. (V.) guyanensis complex. Graphical Abstract
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- 2022
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14. Subcutaneous anti-COVID-19 hyperimmune immunoglobulin for prevention of disease in asymptomatic individuals with SARS-CoV-2 infection: a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised clinical trialResearch in context
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Andrea Alemany, Pere Millat-Martinez, Marc Corbacho-Monné, Clara Suñer, Cristina Galvan-Casas, Caty Carrera, Dan Ouchi, Núria Prat, Jordi Ara, Nuria Nadal, Ricard Riel, Blanca Funollet, Carmen Ojeda-Ciurana, Lluis Esteve Balague, Betlem Salvador-González, Anna Forcada Arcarons, Josep Vidal-Alaball, María Isabel Del Cura-González, Ricardo Rodríguez Barrientos, Rafel Ramos-Blanes, Alberto Alum Bou, Elsa Mondou, Mireia Torres, Neus Campins, Ana Sanz, Yonggiang Tang, Miquel Àngel Rodriguez-Arias, Quique Bassat, Bonaventura Clotet, Oriol Mitjà, Adrià Aguilar-Uroz, Adrià Rosell-García-Ufano, Adrián Escudero Planas, Aida Baelo, Ainhoa Villahoz Martín, Alberto Moreno López, Alberto Roldan Ruiz, Alberto Santana Briongos, Alberto Tejera Bodas, Alejandro Alonso-Vallés, Alejandro Fletes-Pérez, Alejandro Hueso-Mor, Alex Boluda, Alex Santamaria, Alicia Santos Diestro, Almudena Revuelta-Álvarez, Álvaro Moreno Moreno, Ana Ortega de Felipe, Ana Chen-Ye, Ana Blázquez Valerón, Ana Belén Rodríguez Pérez, Ana Laura Tristán Morgalo, Ana Luisa Fernández-Allende, Andrea Bagán-Trejo, Andrés Fernández Juan, Ángel Zalve-Cano, Anna Mateo-Martínez, Antonio Valero Galván, Antonio Egidos-Plaja, Ariadna Jorge, Arturo Fraile Torres, Azahara Maria Pareja Leal, Bárbara Viader Castro, Barbara Fernandez Beato, Barbara Naveira Menchen, Beatriz Martin Poyatos, Beatriz García-Martínez, Belén Rodrigo Testillano, Belen Blanco Tejedor, Blanca López Pérez, Blanca Mencía Hernanz, Camila González-Beiras, Carlos Batres, Carmen Nuñez Garcia, Carmen Merino-Rodríguez, Carolina Rodríguez-Gilabert, Celia Bonilla Penedo, Christian Casado Gomez, Claudia Gonzalez Perez, Claudia Galindo-Tomás, Cristina Peral Bolaños, Cristina Blanco-Montes, Cristina Lupu-Yakovleva, Cristina Lopez Ruiz, Cristina Perez Mayoral, Cristina Fornes, Cristobal Garcia Corrochano, Daniel Gallardo Álvarez, Daniel Navarro Sanz, David Sanz Barrio, Debora Ramet Meseguer, Edna Margarita Vera-Jurado, Eduardo Perez Costa, Eilen Junet Bustillos-Sebastian, Elena Palomar Casado, Elena Dorrego Guerrero, Elena Medina Mateos, Elisa Rebeca Aragón Gaspar, Elisabeth Herrero-Vila, Enriqueta Paez Herrera, Esmeralda Rojas Powel, Esther Robres Medialdea, Esther Vall-Ribalta, Eva Lopez Perez, Felicia Mihaela Fer, Fernanda Vazquez Ángeles, Fernando Tirado Bejarano, Ferran Prats-Domenech, Ferran Borràs Martí, Gabriela Ardila-Mejia, Gèlia Costes, Gema Gómez Arquero, Gemma Flores Mateo, Guillem Pintos-Morell, Helena Mira-Centelles, Ignacio Astola Requena, Ignacio Ortega Martin, Iker Leivas-Gutierrez, Irene Escribano Valenciano, Irene Muñoz Gomez, Irina Ortega, Isabel Montserrat-Lloan, Itziar Gamboa, Jacobo Rodríguez de Torres de Paul, Jordi Cahís, Jordi Muñoz-Martinez, Jorge Iglesias Bermejo, Joselvis Virginia Cejas López, Josep Canudas, Juan Antonio García Lucas, Juan Carlos Martínez-Pino, Juana Torres Martínez, Judit Pujol-Corney, Judith González Jiménez, Júlia Gurí, Julio Labella Martín, Laia Garcia-Cano, Lara Sonsoles Perez Plata, Laura Muñoz Álvaro, Laura Rodríguez Andrés, Laura Vega Ruiz, Laura Cuevas Valiente, Laura Díaz Rodríguez, Laura Puigros, Lavinia Oristina Rciorang, Leticia Escudero, Liliana Figueroa Caballero, Lluna Ferrerfàbrega-Costals, Lucía Costafreda-Hernández, Lucía De-Paúl, Luis González Fernández-Medina, Ma Carmen Moliner Prada, Ma Cristina Berriochoa Martínez de Pisón, Maria Blanco Blasco, Maria Gil Jorge, María Cortijo Caballero, Maria Ubals, Maria Gordillo, Maria Alicia Guilloto López, Maria Concepción Moreno Calvo, María del Rosario Gil García, María Inmaculada Dueñas Román, Maria Josefa Gonzalez Sanchez, María Luisa Nicolás Campoy, Maria Luz González Velayos, Mario Mejías Zori, Mario Oliva Maqueda, Mario Caño de la Cruz, Mariona Palau-Morral, Marta Martín-Muñoz, Marta Cereceda Meca, Marta Díaz Urbina, Martha VerónicaPlazas, Martí Vall-Mayans, Martí Blasco, Mary Jane Chu-Sifuentes, Miguel García de Villasladad Peñaranda, Miguel Hernanz Sotoca, Miguel Iglesias Gonzalez, Miguel Ángel Labrador-Galván, Miguel Rodrigo de Vivar Azcarate, Miquel Gil-Fibla, Miquel Formentí-Pallarés, Mireia Esteve-Tugues, Miriam Juanes Perez, Miriam López Rubio, Mirian Recuero Renales, Mònica Hijós-Rullo, Montserrat Lleonart-Abadia, Nadia Finelli, Naiara Rojas-Bertier, Nataly Reyes-Calderón, Nerea Casado Larrañaga, Nerea Nuria Zurita Castrosin, Noélia Álvarez-Nieto, Nuria Leiva-Mora, Olga Tomillo-Martín, Omar Belghazi, Oriol Buscà, Pablo Mendoza Cediel, Pablo Macedo, Patricia Rodríguez Barroso, Patricia Ruiz Álvarez, Patricia Morales López, Patricia Jimenez Vara de Rey, Paz Lozano Ginés, Pilar Bris Rodriguez, Pilar Martínez-Alamillo, Rafa Salmerón Martínez, Raquel Botello Ariza, Raquel Vaquero Mena, Raquel González-Alonso, Raul Kaczmarczyk, Rita Barnadas Vintró, Rodrigo Hontecillas Martínez, Rosa Ribot-Rodríguez, Rosa Escobar-Sánchez, Rosario Paloma Montes Trinidad, Rubén Martínez Quintana, Ruben Arnay Arrogante, Ruben Berjon Sanchez, Ruben Picazo Navarro, Rubén Bastos, Samuel Martín Molinero, Samuel Dan Israel-Benchaya, Sandra Muñoz-Burguillo, Sandra Rodríguez-Salvador, Sara Avila, Sara Corral Gayubas, Sergio Nuñez Sánchez, Sofía Torres Weber, Susana Encabo Lopez, Teresa Torices Rasines, Valentí Sallas, Verónica Curto-Vicente, Verónica Gómez Hijosa, Verónica Daimiel-Pedrote, Verónica Gozalo, Vicente Barrios López, Virginia Ivette Castillo Montoya, Yuri Espinoza Pérez, María CristinaBerriochoa Martínez de Pisón, David Muñoz Castillo, Carlos Donato, and Isabel García García
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Hyperimmune immunoglobulin ,Antibody therapies ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Outpatients ,Asymptomatic individuals ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Anti-COVID-19 hyperimmune immunoglobulin (hIG) can provide standardized and controlled antibody content. Data from controlled clinical trials using hIG for the prevention or treatment of COVID-19 outpatients have not been reported. We assessed the safety and efficacy of subcutaneous anti-COVID-19 hyperimmune immunoglobulin 20% (C19-IG20%) compared to placebo in preventing development of symptomatic COVID-19 in asymptomatic individuals with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Methods: We did a multicentre, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, in asymptomatic unvaccinated adults (≥18 years of age) with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection within 5 days between April 28 and December 27, 2021. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1:1) to receive a blinded subcutaneous infusion of 10 mL with 1 g or 2 g of C19-IG20%, or an equivalent volume of saline as placebo. The primary endpoint was the proportion of participants who remained asymptomatic through day 14 after infusion. Secondary endpoints included the proportion of individuals who required oxygen supplementation, any medically attended visit, hospitalisation, or ICU, and viral load reduction and viral clearance in nasopharyngeal swabs. Safety was assessed as the proportion of patients with adverse events. The trial was terminated early due to a lack of potential benefit in the target population in a planned interim analysis conducted in December 2021. ClinicalTrials.gov registry: NCT04847141. Findings: 461 individuals (mean age 39.6 years [SD 12.8]) were randomized and received the intervention within a mean of 3.1 (SD 1.27) days from a positive SARS-CoV-2 test. In the prespecified modified intention-to-treat analysis that included only participants who received a subcutaneous infusion, the primary outcome occurred in 59.9% (91/152) of participants receiving 1 g C19-IG20%, 64.7% (99/153) receiving 2 g, and 63.5% (99/156) receiving placebo (difference in proportions 1 g C19-IG20% vs. placebo, −3.6%; 95% CI -14.6% to 7.3%, p = 0.53; 2 g C19-IG20% vs placebo, 1.1%; −9.6% to 11.9%, p = 0.85). None of the secondary clinical efficacy endpoints or virological endpoints were significantly different between study groups. Adverse event rate was similar between groups, and no severe or life-threatening adverse events related to investigational product infusion were reported. Interpretation: Our findings suggested that administration of subcutaneous human hyperimmune immunoglobulin C19-IG20% to asymptomatic individuals with SARS-CoV-2 infection was safe but did not prevent development of symptomatic COVID-19. Funding: Grifols.
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- 2023
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15. Deadly and venomous Lonomia caterpillars are more than the two usual suspects.
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Camila González, Liliana Ballesteros-Mejia, Juana Díaz-Díaz, Diana M Toro-Vargas, Angela R Amarillo-Suarez, Delphine Gey, Cielo León, Eduardo Tovar, Mónica Arias, Nazario Rivera, Luz Stella Buitrago, Roberto H Pinto-Moraes, Ida S Sano Martins, Thibaud Decaëns, Mailyn A González, Ian J Kitching, and Rodolphe Rougerie
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Caterpillars of the Neotropical genus Lonomia (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) are responsible for some fatal envenomation of humans in South America inducing hemostatic disturbances in patients upon skin contact with the caterpillars' spines. Currently, only two species have been reported to cause hemorrhagic syndromes in humans: Lonomia achelous and Lonomia obliqua. However, species identifications have remained largely unchallenged despite improved knowledge of venom diversity and growing evidence that the taxonomy used over past decades misrepresents and underestimates species diversity. Here, we revisit the taxonomic diversity and distribution of Lonomia species using the most extensive dataset assembled to date, combining DNA barcodes, morphological comparisons, and geographical information. Considering new evidence for seven undescribed species as well as three newly proposed nomenclatural changes, our integrative approach leads to the recognition of 60 species, of which seven are known or strongly suspected to cause severe envenomation in humans. From a newly compiled synthesis of epidemiological data, we also examine the consequences of our results for understanding Lonomia envenomation risks and call for further investigations of other species' venom activities. This is required and necessary to improve alertness in areas at risk, and to define adequate treatment strategies for envenomed patients, including performing species identification and assessing the efficacy of anti-Lonomia serums against a broader diversity of species.
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- 2023
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16. Characterization of morphological and biological aspects of venomous caterpillars of the genus Lonomia Walker (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) in Colombia.
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Diana M Toro-Vargas, Camila González, Rodolphe Rougerie, and Angela R Amarillo-Suárez
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The genus Lonomia Walker, 1855 (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) is of particular interest to the medical community, since the scoli of these caterpillars harbor a venom that induces hemorrhaging in humans. In Colombia, deadly encounters with Lonomia achelous (Cramer, 1777), have been reported since 2000. There is little information on the main biological and ecological aspects of this genus to help better understand and develop prevention strategies. This study aimed to describe morphological and biological aspects (especially of immature stages) of four recently reported species of Lonomia in Colombia that pose a risk to humans. We collected caterpillars and adults from five localities and reared them under laboratory conditions. Specimens were identified using DNA barcoding and dissection of adult male genitalia. We provided the first description, to our knowledge, of part of the life cycles of Lonomia casanarensis Brechlin, 2017 and Lonomia orientoandensis Brechlin & Meister, 2011 and the complete life cycles of Lonomia columbiana Lemaire, 1972 and Lonomia orientocordillera Brechlin, Käch & Meister, 2013. We also present the first records of the parasitoids of L. orientocordillera, and L. casanarensis and new host plants. This information will guide not only their morphological recognition and the identification of their parasitoids and hosts, but also will guide rearing methods of these and other Lonomia species in new studies to prevent incidents with humans and create specific antivenoms.
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- 2023
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17. Considerations for ensuring safety during telerehabilitation of people with stroke. A protocol for a scoping review.
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Ruvistay Gutierrez-Arias, Camila González-Mondaca, Vinka Marinkovic-Riffo, Marietta Ortiz-Puebla, Fernanda Paillán-Reyes, and Pamela Seron
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
IntroductionExercise interventions have a positive impact on people with stroke. However, access to exercise interventions is variable, and there may be a delay in the start of rehabilitation. Telerehabilitation has enabled the delivery of exercise interventions replacing the traditional face-to-face approach. Aspects related to the safety of people with stroke should be considered to avoid adverse events during the delivery of exercise interventions remotely. However, such information is scattered in the literature, and the detail with which measures taken during the implementation of exercise interventions for people with stroke are reported is unknown.ObjectiveTo summarise measures or aspects targeted at reducing the incidence of adverse events during the delivery of exercise interventions through telerehabilitation in patients after stroke.Materials and methodsA scoping review will be conducted. A systematic search in MEDLINE-Ovid, Embase-Ovid CENTRAL, CINAHL Complete (EBSCOhost), and other resources will be carried out. We will include primary studies, published in full text in any language, involving people with stroke who undergo telerehabilitation where exercise is the main component. Two reviewers will independently select studies and extract data, and disagreements will be resolved by consensus or a third reviewer. The results will be reported in a narrative form, using tables and figures to support them.DiscussionTo implement this strategy within rehabilitation services, one of the first aspects to be solved is to ensure the safety of people. The results of this scoping review could contribute an information base for clinicians and decision-makers when designing remotely delivered exercise intervention programs.Registration numberINPLASY202290104.
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- 2023
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18. Enhanced Astrocyte Activity and Excitatory Synaptic Function in the Hippocampus of Pentylenetetrazole Kindling Model of Epilepsy
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Franco Díaz, Freddy Aguilar, Mario Wellmann, Andrés Martorell, Camila González-Arancibia, Lorena Chacana-Véliz, Ignacio Negrón-Oyarzo, Andrés E. Chávez, Marco Fuenzalida, Francisco Nualart, Ramón Sotomayor-Zárate, and Christian Bonansco
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astrogliosis ,gliotransmission ,excitation–inhibition imbalance ,release probability ,PTZ-induced kindling ,epilepsy ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Epilepsy is a chronic condition characterized by recurrent spontaneous seizures. The interaction between astrocytes and neurons has been suggested to play a role in the abnormal neuronal activity observed in epilepsy. However, the exact way astrocytes influence neuronal activity in the epileptogenic brain remains unclear. Here, using the PTZ-induced kindling mouse model, we evaluated the interaction between astrocyte and synaptic function by measuring astrocytic Ca2+ activity, neuronal excitability, and the excitatory/inhibitory balance in the hippocampus. Compared to control mice, hippocampal slices from PTZ-kindled mice displayed an increase in glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) levels and an abnormal pattern of intracellular Ca2+-oscillations, characterized by an increased frequency of prolonged spontaneous transients. PTZ-kindled hippocampal slices also showed an increase in the E/I ratio towards excitation, likely resulting from an augmented release probability of excitatory inputs without affecting inhibitory synapses. Notably, the alterations in the release probability seen in PTZ-kindled slices can be recovered by reducing astrocyte hyperactivity with the reversible toxin fluorocitrate. This suggests that astroglial hyper-reactivity enhances excitatory synaptic transmission, thereby impacting the E/I balance in the hippocampus. Altogether, our findings support the notion that abnormal astrocyte–neuron interactions are pivotal mechanisms in epileptogenesis.
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- 2023
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19. Two Streptococcus pyogenes emm types and several anaerobic bacterial species are associated with idiopathic cutaneous ulcers in children after community-based mass treatment with azithromycin.
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Brad Griesenauer, Yue Xing, Katherine R Fortney, Xiang Gao, Camila González-Beiras, David E Nelson, Jie Ren, Oriol Mitjà, Qunfeng Dong, and Stanley M Spinola
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Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundIn yaws-endemic areas, two-thirds of exudative cutaneous ulcers (CU) are associated with Treponema pallidum subsp. pertenue (TP) and Haemophilus ducreyi (HD); one-third are classified as idiopathic ulcers (IU). A yaws eradication campaign on Lihir Island in Papua New Guinea utilizing mass drug administration (MDA) of azithromycin initially reduced but failed to eradicate yaws; IU rates remained constant throughout the study. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, we previously determined that Streptococcus pyogenes was associated with some cases of IU. Here, we applied shotgun metagenomics to the same samples we analyzed previously by 16S rRNA sequencing to verify this result, identify additional IU-associated microorganisms, and determine why S. pyogenes-associated IU might have persisted after MDA of azithromycin.Methodology/principal findingsWe sequenced DNA extracted from 244 CU specimens separated into four groups based upon microorganism-specific PCR results (HD+, TP+, TP+HD+, and TP-HD- or IU). S. pyogenes was enriched in IU (24.71% relative abundance [RA]) specimens compared to other ulcer sub-groups, confirming our prior results. We bioinformatically identified the emm (M protein gene) types found in the S. pyogenes IU specimens and found matches to emm156 and emm166. Only ~39% of IU specimens contained detectable S. pyogenes, suggesting that additional organisms could be associated with IU. In the sub-set of S. pyogenes-negative IU specimens, Criibacterium bergeronii, a member of the Peptostreptococcaceae, and Fusobacterium necrophorum (7.07% versus 0.00% RA and 2.18% versus 0.00% RA, respectively), were enriched compared to the S. pyogenes-positive sub-set. Although a broad range of viruses were detected in the CU specimens, none were specifically associated with IU.Conclusions/significanceOur observations confirm the association of S. pyogenes with IU in yaws-endemic areas, and suggest that additional anaerobic bacteria, but not other microorganisms, may be associated with this syndrome. Our results should aid in the design of diagnostic tests and selective therapies for CU.
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- 2022
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20. Evaluación del valor diagnóstico de la calprotectina fecal en pacientes con dispepsia
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Camila González, Ana Vásquez, Diego Córdova, Paula Abad, Juan González, Guillermo López, Juan Cordero, and Esteban González
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Dispepsia ,calprotectina ,endoscopia gastrointestinal ,colonoscopía ,enfermedades gastrointestinales ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
El diagnóstico de pacientes con dispepsia representa un desafío ya que en la mayoría de los casos se requieren observaciones endoscópicas complejas y costosas. En este estudio, evaluamos el rol del diagnóstico de la calprotectina fecal en pacientes con dispepsia. Para ello, en el año 2019 se realizó un estudio observacional en 149 pacientes con dispepsia registrados en el Centro de Especialistas en Gastroenterología de la entidad privada Cuenca, Ecuador. Los datos disponibles abarcaron edad, sexo, signos de alarma, valores de calprotectina fecal (CF) y hallazgos endoscópicos. Los pacientes en el grupo de edad >65 años fueron los más representados, el 56.4% de la población eran del sexo femenino, el 48.57% eran CF positivos de los cuales el 86.8% poseían valores significativos de CF. CF+ se asoció significativamente con los hallazgos por EDA/colonoscopia (p
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- 2022
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21. Lex Artis en oftalmología, análisis ético y bioético
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Claudia Lorena Arellano Martínez, María Fernanda Martínez Palomo, Rene Dávila Mendoza, Juan Manuel Paulin Huerta, Carlos Francisco Navas Villar, Ulises de Dios Cuadras, Jaime Francisco Rosales Padrón, Jane Nemer Yaspik, and Camila González Rodríguez
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acto médico ,deontología ,principialismo ,glaucoma ,catarata ,Science ,Medical philosophy. Medical ethics ,R723-726 - Abstract
Las personas dedicadas a otorgar servicios de la salud tienen el compromiso legal, ético, profesional y humano de velar por la salud y el bienestar de la sociedad. Un médico no sólo debe formarse en el ámbito académico y técnico, también debe construir y trabajar en su ética profesional. La actualización médica continua en medicina basada en evidencia y el continuo adiestramiento en el área práctica y clínica, si bien son de suma importancia, deben ir de la mano con la aplicación de los principios éticos tales como el respeto por la autonomía, la beneficencia, no maleficencia al paciente y la justicia. El análisis de casos clínicos reales a la luz de la ética es un ejercicio muy enriquecedor para trascender en nuestra práctica diaria. No solamente es de gran ayuda para detectar y prevenir conductas que pudieran vulnerar o atentar contra la dignidad de los pacientes, sino para reafirmar el valor y la centralidad de la persona humana en el abordaje médico.
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- 2022
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22. Entomological characterization of Aedes mosquitoes and arbovirus detection in Ibagué, a Colombian city with co-circulation of Zika, dengue and chikungunya viruses
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María C. Carrasquilla, Mario I. Ortiz, Cielo León, Silvia Rondón, Manisha A. Kulkarni, Benoit Talbot, Beate Sander, Heriberto Vásquez, Juan M. Cordovez, Camila González, and RADAM-LAC Research Team
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Dengue ,Zika ,Chikungunya ,Aedes aegypti ,Aedes albopictus ,Colombia ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Dengue, Zika and chikungunya are arboviruses of significant public health importance that are transmitted by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes. In Colombia, where dengue is hyperendemic, and where chikungunya and Zika were introduced in the last decade, more than half of the population lives in areas at risk. The objective of this study was to characterize Aedes spp. vectors and study their natural infection with dengue, Zika and chikungunya in Ibagué, a Colombian city and capital of the department of Tolima, with case reports of simultaneous circulation of these three arboviruses. Methods Mosquito collections were carried out monthly between June 2018 and May 2019 in neighborhoods with different levels of socioeconomic status. We used the non-parametric Friedman, Mann–Whitney and Kruskal–Wallis tests to compare mosquito density distributions. We applied logistic regression analyses to identify associations between mosquito density and absence/presence of breeding sites, and the Spearman correlation coefficient to analyze the possible relationship between climatic variables and mosquito density. Results We collected Ae. aegypti in all sampled neighborhoods and found for the first time Ae. albopictus in the city of Ibagué. A greater abundance of mosquitoes was collected in neighborhoods displaying low compared to high socioeconomic status as well as in the intradomicile compared to the peridomestic space. Female mosquitoes predominated over males, and most of the test females had fed on human blood. In total, four Ae. aegypti pools (3%) were positive for dengue virus (serotype 1) and one pool for chikungunya virus (0.8%). Interestingly, infected females were only collected in neighborhoods of low socioeconomic status, and mostly in the intradomicile space. Conclusions We confirmed the co-circulation of dengue (serotype 1) and chikungunya viruses in the Ae. aegypti population in Ibagué. However, Zika virus was not detected in any mosquito sample, 3 years after its introduction into the country. The positivity for dengue and chikungunya viruses, predominance of mosquitoes in the intradomicile space and the high proportion of females fed on humans highlight the high risk for arbovirus transmission in Ibagué, but may also provide an opportunity for establishing effective control strategies. Graphical abstract
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- 2021
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23. Determinants of Aedes mosquito density as an indicator of arbovirus transmission risk in three sites affected by co-circulation of globally spreading arboviruses in Colombia, Ecuador and Argentina
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Benoit Talbot, Beate Sander, Varsovia Cevallos, Camila González, Denisse Benítez, Claudio Carissimo, María C. Carrasquilla Ferro, Neris Gauto, Sergio Litwiñiuk, Karen López, Mario I. Ortiz, Patricio Ponce, Stephany D. Villota, Fabian Zelaya, Mauricio Espinel, Jianhong Wu, Marcos Miretti, and Manisha A. Kulkarni
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Disease risk ,Global health ,Mosquito vector ,Socio-economic status ,Wealth Index ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background The global impact of Zika virus in Latin America has drawn renewed attention to circulating mosquito-borne viruses in this region, such as dengue and chikungunya. Our objective was to assess socio-ecological factors associated with Aedes mosquito vector density as a measure of arbovirus transmission risk in three cities of potentially recent Zika virus introduction: Ibagué, Colombia; Manta, Ecuador; and Posadas, Argentina, in order to inform disease mitigation strategies. Methods We sampled Aedes mosquito populations in a total of 1086 households, using indoor and peridomestic mosquito collection methods, including light traps, resting traps, traps equipped with chemical attractant and aspirators. For each sampled household, we collected socio-economic data using structured questionnaires and data on microenvironmental conditions using iButton data loggers. Results A total of 3230 female Aedes mosquitoes were collected, of which 99.8% were Aedes aegypti and 0.2% were Aedes albopictus. Mean female Aedes mosquito density per household was 1.71 (standard deviation: 2.84). We used mixed-effects generalized linear Poisson regression analyses to identify predictors of Aedes density, using month, neighborhood and country as random-effects variables. Across study sites, the number of household occupants [incidence rate ratio (IRR): 1.08, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.01–1.14], presence of entry points for mosquitoes into the household (IRR: 1.51, 95% CI: 1.30–1.76) and presence of decorative vegetation (IRR: 1.52, 95% CI: 1.22–1.88) were associated with higher Aedes density; while being in the highest wealth tertile of household wealth (IRR: 0.78, 95% CI: 0.66–0.92), knowledge of how arboviruses are transmitted (IRR: 0.94, 95% CI: 0.89–1.00) and regular emptying of water containers by occupants (IRR: 0.79, 95% CI: 0.67–0.92) were associated with lower Aedes density. Conclusions Our study addresses the complexities of arbovirus vectors of global significance at the interface between human and mosquito populations. Our results point to several predictors of Aedes mosquito vector density in countries with co-circulation of multiple Aedes-borne viruses, and point to modifiable risk factors that may be useful for disease prevention and control. Graphical Abstract
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- 2021
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24. Host selection pattern and flavivirus screening of mosquitoes in a disturbed Colombian rainforest
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Juliana Hoyos, María Cristina Carrasquilla, Cielo León, Joel M. Montgomery, Stephanie J. Salyer, Nicholas Komar, and Camila González
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Studies on the feeding behavior of hematophagous insects, particularly those of medical importance, are relevant for tracking possible pathogen transmission routes and identifying biases in the choice of vertebrates. We evaluated host selection of blood-feeding mosquitoes in a disturbed forest in the Magdalena Medio valley in Colombia from March 2017 to April 2018, after the introduction of Zika virus to the Americas from the 2015–2016 outbreak. We estimated vertebrate diversity and collected blood-engorged female mosquitoes. Genomic DNA/RNA was extracted from the mosquito’s abdomen for vertebrate host identification and pathogen detection. We performed conventional PCR and sequencing, using universal primers targeting vertebrate regions of the eukaryotic mitochondrial genome to determine bloodmeal host. Additionally, we tested for the presence of flaviviruses in all mosquito samples with RT-PCR. Based on the identity and quantity of detected bloodmeals, we performed mosquito-vertebrate interaction network analysis and estimated topology metrics. In total, we collected 292 engorged female mosquitoes representing 20 different species. Bloodmeal analyses identified 26 vertebrate species, the majority of which were mammals (N = 16; 61.5%). No flaviviruses of medical importance were detected from the samples. Although feeding patterns varied, network analyses showed a high degree of specialization by mosquitoes and revealed ecological and phylogenetic relationships among the host community. We conclude that host selection or preference by mosquitoes is species specific.
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- 2021
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25. Prevalence and Molecular Characterisation of Blastocystis sp. Infecting Free-Ranging Primates in Colombia
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Silvia Rondón, Serena Cavallero, Andrés Link, Camila González, and Stefano D’Amelio
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Blastocystis sp. ,free-ranging primates ,Colombia ,molecular characterisation ,Medicine - Abstract
Infection with Blastocystis sp. has been reported in free-living and captive non-human primates (NHPs); however, surveys on Blastocystis sp. from north-western South America are scarce. This study aimed to identify Blastocystis sp. in free-ranging NHPs living in Colombia. A total of 212 faecal samples were collected from Ateles hybridus, Cebus versicolor, Alouatta seniculus, Aotus griseimembra, Sapajus apella, and Saimiri cassiquiarensis. Smears and flotation were used for morphological identification. For samples microscopically classified as positive for Blastocystis sp., we used conventional PCR to amplify and sequence two regions of the SSU rRNA gene and used Maximum Likelihood methods and Median Joining Network analyses for phylogenetic analyses. Via microscopy, 64 samples were Blastocystis sp. positive. Through molecular analyses, 18 sequences of Blastocystis sp. subtype 8 (ST8) were obtained. Strain and allele assignment together with a comparative phylogenetic approach confirmed that the sequences were ST8. Alleles 21, 156, and 157 were detected. Median Joining network analyses showed one highly frequent haplotype shared by specimens from Colombia and Peru and close relationships between haplotypes circulating in NHPs from Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil, and Mexico. This survey could support the elaboration of a more accurate epidemiological picture of the Blastocystis sp. infecting NHPs.
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- 2023
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26. Early-Life Exposure to Non-Absorbable Broad-Spectrum Antibiotics Affects the Dopamine Mesocorticolimbic Pathway of Adult Rats in a Sex-Dependent Manner
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Camila González-Arancibia, Victoria Collio, Francisco Silva-Olivares, Paula Montaña-Collao, Jonathan Martínez-Pinto, Marcela Julio-Pieper, Ramón Sotomayor-Zárate, and Javier A. Bravo
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antibiotics ,gut microbiota ,dopamine ,dopamine receptors ,VTA ,NAcc ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Gut microbiota with a stable, rich, and diverse composition is associated with adequate postnatal brain development. Colonization of the infant’s gut begins at birth when parturition exposes the newborn to a set of maternal bacteria, increasing richness and diversity until one to two first years of age when a microbiota composition is stable until old age. Conversely, alterations in gut microbiota by diet, stress, infection, and antibiotic exposure have been associated with several pathologies, including metabolic and neuropsychiatric diseases such as obesity, anxiety, depression, and drug addiction, among others. However, the consequences of early-life exposure to antibiotics (ELEA) on the dopamine (DA) mesocorticolimbic circuit are poorly studied. In this context, we administered oral non-absorbable broad-spectrum antibiotics to pregnant Sprague-Dawley dams during the perinatal period (from embryonic day 18 until postnatal day 7) and investigated their adult offspring (postnatal day 60) to assess methylphenidate-induced conditioned place preference (CPP) and locomotor activity, DA release, DA and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) content in ventral tegmental area (VTA), and expression of key proteins within the mesocorticolimbic system. Our results show that ELEA affect the rats conduct by increasing drug-seeking behavior and locomotor activity induced by methylphenidate of males and females, respectively, while reducing dopamine striatal release and VTA content of DOPAC in females. In addition, antibiotics increased protein levels of DA type 1 receptor in prefrontal cortex and VTA of female rats, and tyrosine hydroxylase in VTA of adult male and female rats. Altogether, these results suggest that ELEA alters the development of the microbiota-gut-brain axis affecting the reward system and the response to abuse drugs in adulthood.
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- 2022
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27. Monitoring the variation in the gut microbiota of captive woolly monkeys related to changes in diet during a reintroduction process
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Camilo Quiroga-González, Luis Alberto Chica Cardenas, Mónica Ramírez, Alejandro Reyes, Camila González, and Pablo R. Stevenson
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Microbiome is known to play an important role in the health of organisms and different factors such as diet have been associated with modifications in microbial communities. Differences in the microbiota composition of wild and captive animals has been evaluated; however, variation during a reintroduction process in primates has never been reported. Our aim was to identify changes in the bacterial composition of three individuals of reintroduced woolly monkeys (Lagothrix lagothricha) and the variables associated with such changes. Fecal samples were collected and the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced to determine gut microbial composition and functionality. Individual samples from released individuals showed a higher microbial diversity after being released compared to before liberation, associated with changes in their diet. Beta diversity and functionality analysis showed separation of samples from released and captive conditions and the major factor of variation was the moment of liberation. This study shows that intestinal microbiota varies depending on site conditions and is mainly associated with diet diversity. The intake of food from wild origin by released primates may promote a positive effect on gut microbiota, improving health, and potentially increasing success in reintroduction processes.
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- 2021
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28. Measuring spatial co-occurrences of species potentially involved in Leishmania transmission cycles through a predictive and fieldwork approach
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Marla López, Diana Erazo, Juliana Hoyos, Cielo León, Patricia Fuya, Ligia Lugo, Juan Manuel Cordovez, and Camila González
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The Leishmaniases are a group of neglected tropical diseases caused by different species of the protozoan parasite Leishmania, transmitted to its mammalian hosts by the bites of several species of female Phlebotominae sand flies. Many factors have contributed to shifts in the disease distribution and eco epidemiological outcomes, resulting in the emergence of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis outbreaks and the incrimination of vectors in unreported regions. New research development is vital for establishing the new paradigms of the present transmission cycles, hoping to facilitate new control strategies to reduce parasite transmission. Hereafter, this work aims to model and infer the current transmission cycles of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in Colombia defined by vector and mammal species distributed and interacting in the different regions and validate them by performing sand fly and mammal collections. Vector-host co-occurrences were computed considering five ecoregions of the Colombian territory defined by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and downloaded from The Nature Conservancy TNC Maps website. Four validation sites were selected based on Cutaneous Leishmaniasis prevalence reports. Sand flies and mammals captured in the field were processed, and species were defined using conventional taxonomic guidelines. Detection of infection by Leishmania was performed to identify transmission cycles in the selected areas. This study uses predictive models based on available information from international gazetteers and fieldwork to confirm sand fly and mammalian species' sustaining Leishmania transmission cycles. Our results show an uneven distribution of mammal samples in Colombia, possibly due to sampling bias, since only two departments contributed 50% of the available samples. Bats were the vertebrates with the highest score values, suggesting substantial spatial overlap with sand flies than the rest of the vertebrates evaluated. Fieldwork allowed identifying three circulating Leishmania species, isolated from three sand fly species. In the Montane Forest ecosystem, one small marsupial, Gracilinanus marica, was found infected with Leishmania panamensis, constituting the first record of this species infected with Leishmania. In the same locality, an infected sand fly, Pintomyia pia, was found. The overall results could support the understanding of the current transmission cycles of Leishmaniasis in Colombia.
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- 2021
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29. Análisis bibliométrico de las tesis de pregrado: caso de carrera de Kinesiología en una universidad chilena
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IGOR CIGARROA, CAMILA GONZÁLEZ-NABALÓN, RAFAEL ZAPATA-LAMANA, and JORGE ROJAS BRAVO
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bibliometría ,tesis académica ,fisioterapia ,encuestas y cuestionarios ,chile decs ,Medicine ,Nursing ,RT1-120 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Objetivo: Analizar las características metodológicas y de investigación, los antecedentes del sujeto de estudio y de las evaluaciones e intervenciones de las tesis de pregrado de la carrera de kinesiología en una universidad chilena durante los años 2010 - 2018.Materiales y métodos: Se analizaron 91 tesis; para su análisis se utilizó un instrumento validado que se organizó en tres grandes categorías: a) características metodológicas y de investigación, b) antecedentes del sujeto de estudio y c) antecedentes de las evaluaciones e intervenciones, y se registró un total de 38 ítems.Resultados: Se reportó que las tesis mayoritariamente las realizan dos estudiantes tesis-tas, en conjunto con un guía con grado licenciado, presentan un alcance descriptivo, diseño no experimental, temporalidad transversal, con muestras pequeñas, no probabilísticas, por conveniencia, utilizando cuestionarios y/o encuestas para medir parámetros de actividad y condición físicas principalmente en las áreas respiratoria y traumatológica. Las tesis cumplen con la estructura de un reporte científico, aun cuando un gran porcentaje de ellas tiene referencias poco actualizadas y no incluyen datos de aprobación del comité de ética. Los sujetos de estudio principalmente eran jóvenes y adultos pertenecientes a centros educativos de enseñanza básica, media, universitaria o a una red de atención de salud pública que presentaban algún diagnóstico médico de enfermedad cardiometabólica.Conclusión: Este estudio reveló información valiosa respecto a cómo se ha llevado a cabo la formación investigativa de esta carrera de la salud, identificó áreas de conocimiento, poblaciones y condiciones de salud poco exploradas y los tratamientos usados frecuentemente.
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- 2021
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30. Multicenter international assessment of a SARS-CoV-2 RT-LAMP test for point of care clinical application
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Suying Lu, David Duplat, Paula Benitez-Bolivar, Cielo León, Stephany D. Villota, Eliana Veloz-Villavicencio, Valentina Arévalo, Katariina Jaenes, Yuxiu Guo, Seray Cicek, Lucas Robinson, Philippos Peidis, Joel D. Pearson, Jim Woodgett, Tony Mazzulli, Patricio Ponce, Silvia Restrepo, John M. González, Adriana Bernal, Marcela Guevara-Suarez, Keith Pardee, Varsovia E. Cevallos, Camila González, and Rod Bremner
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Continued waves, new variants, and limited vaccine deployment mean that SARS-CoV-2 tests remain vital to constrain the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Affordable, point-of-care (PoC) tests allow rapid screening in non-medical settings. Reverse-transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) is an appealing approach. A crucial step is to optimize testing in low/medium resource settings. Here, we optimized RT-LAMP for SARS-CoV-2 and human β-actin, and tested clinical samples in multiple countries. “TTTT” linker primers did not improve performance, and while guanidine hydrochloride, betaine and/or Igepal-CA-630 enhanced detection of synthetic RNA, only the latter two improved direct assays on nasopharygeal samples. With extracted clinical RNA, a 20 min RT-LAMP assay was essentially as sensitive as RT-PCR. With raw Canadian nasopharygeal samples, sensitivity was 100% (95% CI: 67.6% - 100%) for those with RT-qPCR Ct values ≤ 25, and 80% (95% CI: 58.4% - 91.9%) for those with 25 < Ct ≤ 27.2. Highly infectious, high titer cases were also detected in Colombian and Ecuadorian labs. We further demonstrate the utility of replacing thermocyclers with a portable PoC device (FluoroPLUM). These combined PoC molecular and hardware tools may help to limit community transmission of SARS-CoV-2.
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- 2022
31. Deltamethrin resistance in Chagas disease vectors colonizing oil palm plantations: implications for vector control strategies in a public health-agriculture interface
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Johan M. Calderón, Patricia Fuya, Liliana Santacoloma, and Camila González
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Chagas disease ,Triatominae ,Insecticide resistance ,Biological pest control ,Oil palms ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Triatomine bugs are responsible for the vectorial transmission of the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, etiological agent of Chagas disease, a zoonosis affecting 10 million people and with 25 million at risk of infection. Several triatomine species of the genus Rhodnius have been found inhabiting palm crowns where insects can find shelter in leaves axils and blood from palm-associated vertebrates. Rhodnius prolixus insects have been collected in oil palms in Colombia, and high T. cruzi infection rates were found. Since pest control is carried out in oil palm plantations, continuous exposure to insecticides could be occurring in these triatomines. Some insecticides suggested for pest control in oil palm plantations are also recommended for triatomine control in human dwellings. In this study, our objective was to assess if triatomines inhabiting oil palms exhibit resistance to deltamethrin, an insecticide used for vector control. Methods Rhodnius prolixus nymphs were sampled in oil palms located in Tauramena, Colombia. To determine deltamethrin resistance, biological and biochemical assays were carried out on fifth-instar nymphs from the F1 generation. For biological assays, pure and commercial deltamethrin were used, and in biochemical assays, activities of detoxifying enzymes related to pyrethroid resistance, such as oxidases, esterases and transferases, were quantified. Results Deltamethrin lethal dosage 50 and 90 in R. prolixus from oil palms was significantly higher than in those from a susceptible colony suggesting possible deltamethrin resistance. Moreover, mortality with commercial deltamethrin was very low in insects from oil palms. In biochemical assays, the activity of evaluated detoxifying enzymes was significantly higher in R. prolixus from oil palms than in those from the susceptible colony. Conclusions Possible deltamethrin resistance found in R. prolixus insects from oil palms could threaten traditional vector control strategies in urban settings if insecticide-resistant triatomines can migrate from oil palms plantations. In palm oil producer countries such as Colombia, the oil palm plantations are growing constantly during the last years. We suggest that pest control strategies in oil palm crops should include triatomine surveillance and toxicological monitoring, especially in zones with several Chagas disease cases.
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- 2020
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32. Co-occurrence or dependence? Using spatial analyses to explore the interaction between palms and Rhodnius triatomines
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Johan M. Calderón and Camila González
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Triatomines ,Rhodnius-infested palms ,Ecological niche modeling ,Niche similarity ,Unlinked biotic predictors ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Triatomine bugs are responsible for the vectorial transmission of the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas disease, a zoonosis affecting 10 million people and with 25 million at risk of infection. Triatomines are associated with particular habitats that offer shelter and food. Several triatomine species of the genus Rhodnius have a close association with palm crowns, where bugs can obtain microclimatic stability and blood from the associated fauna. The Rhodnius-palm interaction has been reported in several places of Central and South America. However, the association in the distributions of Rhodnius species and palms has not been explicitly determined. Methods Niches of Rhodnius and palm species with reports of Rhodnius spp. infestation were estimated by minimum volume ellipsoids and compared in the environmental and the geographical space to identify niche similarity. Rhodnius spp. niche models were run with the palm distributions as environmental variables to determine if palm presence could be considered a predictor of Rhodnius spp. distributions, improving model performance. Results Niche similarity was found between all the studied Rhodnius and palm species showing variation in niche overlap among the involved species. Most of the areas with suitable conditions for Rhodnius species were also suitable to palm species, being favorable for more than one palm species in the majority of locations. Performance was similar in Rhodnius niche models with and without palm distributions. However, when palm distributions were included, their contribution to the model was high, being the most important variable in some Rhodnius spp. Conclusions To our knowledge, this is the first time that the distributions of Rhodnius and palm species were compared on a large scale and their spatial association explicitly studied. We found spatial association between Rhodnius and palm species can be explained because both organisms shared environmental requirements, and most of the areas with suitable conditions for Rhodnius species were also suitable to several palm species. Rhodnius presence would not be restricted to palm presence but the zones with palm presence could be more suitable for Rhodnius spp. presence.
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- 2020
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33. Principales retos de la profesión contable desde las perspectivas económica, digital y científica
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Camila González Montoya, Verónica Yulieth Puerta Castrillón, and Candy Lorena Chamorro González
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Profesión contable ,disciplina científica ,revolución económica ,Accounting. Bookkeeping ,HF5601-5689 - Abstract
El presente estudio identificó los principales retos de la profesión contable desde las perspectivas económica, digital y científica. Para ello, se utilizó un enfoque metodológico cualitativo con alcance descriptivo y método deductivo; las técnicas de investigación fueron revisión documental y aplicación de una entrevista semiestructura para obtener las apreciaciones de los profesionales contables en relación con el objeto de estudio. Los resultados reflejan que algunos retos son: análisis de inteligencia empresarial, detección de fraudes financieros, analítica de datos, competencias en blockchain, pensamiento crítico, gestión del conocimiento, consultoría de proyectos, servicios internacionales de contabilidad, entre otros. Se concluye así que la revolución económica, digital y científica impone diversos roles en el ejercicio profesional contable, los cuales variarán según las dinámicas futuras.
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- 2021
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34. Prevalence of Plasmodium parasites in non-human primates and mosquitoes in areas with different degrees of fragmentation in Colombia
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Silvia Rondón, Cielo León, Andrés Link, and Camila González
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Fragmented forest ,Plasmodium ,Anopheles ,Neotropical primates ,Magdalena River valley ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Parasites from the genus Plasmodium, the aetiological agent of malaria in humans, can also infect non-human primates (NHP), increasing the potential risk of zoonotic transmission with its associated global public health concerns. In Colombia, there are no recent studies on Plasmodium spp. infecting free-ranging NHP. Thus, this study aimed to determine the diversity of Plasmodium species circulating in fragmented forests in central Colombia, both in Anopheles mosquitoes and in the four sympatric NHP in the region (Ateles hybridus, Cebus versicolor, Alouatta seniculus and Aotus griseimembra), in order to evaluate the risk of infection to humans associated with the presence of sylvatic hosts and vectors infected with Plasmodium spp. Methods Overall, there were collected 166 fecal samples and 25 blood samples from NHP, and 442 individuals of Anopheles spp. DNA extraction, nested PCR using mitochondrial (cox3 gene) and ribosomal (18S rDNA) primers, electrophoresis and sequencing were conducted in order to identify Plasmodium spp. from the samples. Results Plasmodium falciparum was detected in two fecal samples of Alouatta seniculus, while Plasmodium vivax/simium infected Ateles hybridus, Cebus versicolor and Alouatta seniculus. Co-infections with P. vivax/simium and Plasmodium malariae/brasilianum were found in three individuals. The highest prevalence from blood samples was found for Plasmodium malariae/brasilianum in two Alouatta seniculus while Plasmodium vivax/simium was most prevalent in fecal samples, infecting four individuals of Alouatta seniculus. Seven Anopheles species were identified in the study site: Anopheles (Anopheles) punctimacula, Anopheles (An.) malefactor, Anopheles (Nyssorhynchus) oswaldoi, Anopheles (Nys.) triannulatus, Anopheles (An.) neomaculipalpus, Anopheles (Nys.) braziliensis and Anopheles (Nys.) nuneztovari. Infection with P. vivax/simium was found in An. nuneztovari, An. neomaculipalpus, and An. triannulatus. Furthermore, An. oswaldoi and An. triannulatus were found infected with P. malariae/brasilianum. The effect of fragmentation and distance to the nearest town measured in five forests with different degrees of fragmentation was not statistically significant on the prevalence of Plasmodium in NHP, but forest fragmentation did have an effect on the Minimum Infection Rate (MIR) in Anopheles mosquitoes. Conclusions The presence of Plasmodium spp. in NHP and Anopheles spp. in fragmented forests in Colombia has important epidemiological implications in the human–NHP interface and the associated risk of malaria transmission.
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- 2019
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35. Detection of Trypanosoma cruzi strains circulating in Córdoba department (Colombia) isolated from triatomines (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) collected by the community
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Cielo León, Mario Iván Ortiz, Catalina Tovar, Jorge Negrete, Ernesto Arroyo, and Camila González
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Trypanosoma cruzi ,Chagas disease ,Rhodnius ,Panstrongylus ,Reduviidae ,Triatominae ,Medicine ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 - Abstract
Introduction: From 2011 to 2016, 24 cases of Chagas disease were reported in Córdoba according to the national public health surveillance system (Sistema Nacional de Vigilancia en Salud Pública, Sivigila), but the information regarding Trypanosoma cruzi circulating strains and infection rates are unknown. Objectives: To establish the triatomine species with which people come in contact and recognize as Chagas disease vectors, as well as to assess the infection with trypanosomes and make an exploratory approach to host feeding preferences with the participation of the local community. Materials and methods: Triatomines sampling was conducted in 12 municipalities between 2011 and 2016; T. cruzi infection was established by k-PCR, SAT-PCR, while strain genotyping was done by mini-exon and SL-IR (spliced-leader intergenic region) sequence characterization. We also screened for blood sources. Results: Local community members collected the majority of triatomines and we identified three species: Rhodnius pallescens, Panstrongylus geniculatus, and Eratyrus cuspidatus. The overall T. cruzi infection rate in collected triatomines was 66.6% and we detected the TcIDOM and TcI sylvatic strains. Community-based insect collection allowed reporting the presence of P. geniculatus in two new disperse rural settlements, T. cruzi infection of P. geniculatus in Córdoba, and the first report of triatomines infected with T. cruzi in Montería municipality. Conclusions: These results revealed the presence of triatomines infected with T. cruzi inside dwellings in five municipalities of Córdoba. The dominant circulating T. cruzi strain was TcIDOM, a genotype associated with human Chagas disease and cardiomyopathies in Colombia. Our results highlight the importance of local community participation in entomological surveillance tasks.
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- 2019
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36. Generalist host species drive Trypanosoma cruzi vector infection in oil palm plantations in the Orinoco region, Colombia
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Diana Erazo, Nicole L. Gottdenker, Camila González, Felipe Guhl, Monica Cuellar, Troy J. Kieran, Travis C. Glenn, Juan D. Umaña, and Juan Cordovez
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Trypanosoma cruzi ,Rhodnius prolixus ,Elaeis guineensis ,Blood meal analysis ,Host community composition ,Generalist host ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Oil palm plantation establishment in Colombia has the potential to impact Chagas disease transmission by increasing the distribution range of Rhodnius prolixus. In fact, previous studies have reported Trypanosoma cruzi natural infection in R. prolixus captured in oil palms (Elaeis guineensis) in the Orinoco region, Colombia. The aim of this study is to understand T. cruzi infection in vectors in oil palm plantations relative to community composition and host dietary specialization by analyzing vector blood meals and comparing these results to vectors captured in a native palm tree species, Attalea butyracea. Methods Rhodnius prolixus nymphs (n = 316) were collected from A. butyracea and E. guineensis palms in Tauramena, Casanare, Colombia. Vector blood meals from these nymphs were determined by amplifying and sequencing a vertebrate-specific 12S rRNA gene fragment. Results Eighteen vertebrate species were identified and pigs (Sus scrofa) made up the highest proportion of blood meals in both habitats, followed by house mouse (Mus musculus) and opossum (Didelphis marsupialis). Individual bugs feeding only from generalist mammal species had the highest predicted vector infection rate, suggesting that generalist mammalian species are more competent hosts for T. cruzi infection . Conclusions Oil palm plantations and A. butyracea palms found in altered areas provide a similar quality habitat for R. prolixus populations in terms of blood meal availability. Both habitats showed similarities in vector infection rate and potential host species, representing a single T. cruzi transmission scenario at the introduced oil palm plantation and native Attalea palm interface.
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- 2019
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37. La posición de Trendelenburg no cambia el gasto cardíaco en voluntarios sanos
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Jaime de la Maza, Camila González, Alejandro Jankelevich, M. Carolina Cabrera, and Francisca Castillo
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Trendelenburg ,gasto cardiaco ,ecografía transtorácica ,Medicine ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Published
- 2019
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38. Genetics, Morphometrics and Health Characterization of Green Turtle Foraging Grounds in Mainland and Insular Chile
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Rocío Álvarez-Varas, Carol Medrano, Hugo A. Benítez, Felipe Guerrero, Fabiola León Miranda, Juliana A. Vianna, Camila González, and David Véliz
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Chelonia mydas ,regional connectivity ,geometric morphometrics ,Eastern Pacific ,Polynesia ,Easter Island ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Two divergent genetic lineages have been described for the endangered green turtle in the Pacific Ocean, occurring sympatrically in some foraging grounds. Chile has seven known green turtle foraging grounds, hosting mainly juveniles of different lineages. Unfortunately, anthropic factors have led to the decline or disappearance of most foraging aggregations. We investigated age-class/sex structure, morphological variation, genetic diversity and structure, and health status of turtles from two mainland (Bahia Salado and Playa Chinchorro) and one insular (Easter Island) Chilean foraging grounds. Bahia Salado is composed of juveniles, and with Playa Chinchorro, exclusively harbors individuals of the north-central/eastern Pacific lineage, with Galapagos as the major genetic contributor. Conversely, Easter Island hosts juveniles and adults from both the eastern Pacific and French Polynesia. Morphological variation was found between lineages and foraging grounds, suggesting an underlying genetic component but also an environmental influence. Turtles from Easter Island, unlike Bahia Salado, exhibited injuries/alterations probably related to anthropic threats. Our findings point to establishing legal protection for mainland Chile’s foraging grounds, and to ensure that the administrative plan for Easter Island’s marine protected area maintains ecosystem health, turtle population viability, and related cultural and touristic activities.
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- 2022
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39. Streptococcus pyogenes Is Associated with Idiopathic Cutaneous Ulcers in Children on a Yaws-Endemic Island
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Brad Griesenauer, Camila González-Beiras, Katherine R. Fortney, Huaiying Lin, Xiang Gao, Charmie Godornes, David E. Nelson, Barry P. Katz, Sheila A. Lukehart, Oriol Mitjà, Qunfeng Dong, and Stanley M. Spinola
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Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Cutaneous ulcers (CU) affect approximately 100,000 children in the tropics each year. While two-thirds of CU are caused by Treponema pallidumpertenueHaemophilus ducreyi
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- 2021
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40. Yaws re-emergence and bacterial drug resistance selection after mass administration of azithromycin: a genomic epidemiology investigation
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Mathew A Beale, PhD, Marc Noguera-Julian, PhD, Charmie Godornes, BSc, Maria Casadellà, PhD, Camila González-Beiras, PhD, Mariona Parera, BSc, August Kapa Jnr, BSc, Wendy Houinei, MPH, James Wangi, MPH, Marc Corbacho-Monne, MBBS, Roger Paredes, PhD, Fernando Gonzalez-Candelas, ProfPhD, Michael Marks, PhD, Sheila A Lukehart, ProfPhD, Nicholas R Thomson, ProfPhD, and Oriol Mitjà, PhD
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Summary: Background: In a longitudinal study assessing the WHO strategy for yaws eradication using mass azithromycin treatment, we observed resurgence of yaws cases with dominance of a single JG8 sequence type and emergence of azithromycin-resistant Treponema pallidum subspecies pertenue (T p pertenue). Here, we analyse genomic changes in the bacterial population using samples collected during the study. Methods: We did whole bacterial genome sequencing directly on DNA extracted from 37 skin lesion swabs collected from patients on Lihir Island, Papua New Guinea, between April 1, 2013, and Nov 1, 2016. We produced phylogenies and correlated these with spatiotemporal information to investigate the source of new cases and the emergence of five macrolide-resistant cases. We used deep amplicon sequencing of surveillance samples to assess the presence of minority macrolide-resistant populations. Findings: We recovered 20 whole T p pertenue genomes, and phylogenetic analysis showed that the re-emerging JG8 sequence type was composed of three bacterial sublineages characterised by distinct spatiotemporal patterns. Of five patients with resistant T p pertenue, all epidemiologically linked, we recovered genomes from three and found no variants. Deep sequencing showed that before treatment, the index patient had fixed macrolide-sensitive T p pertenue, whereas the post-treatment sample had a fixed resistant genotype, as did three of four contact cases. Interpretation: In this study, re-emergence of yaws cases was polyphyletic, indicating multiple epidemiological sources. However, given the genomic and epidemiological linkage of resistant cases and the rarity of resistance alleles in the general population, azithromycin resistance is likely to have evolved only once in this study, followed by onward dissemination. Funding: Wellcome and Provincial Deputation of Barcelona.
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- 2020
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41. Levantamiento de necesidades prioritarias para la igualdad de oportunidades de personas en situación de discapacidad que residen en la comuna de Santiago
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Camila González Caroca, Daniel Lagos Cerón, and Felipe Zapata Campos
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Industrial medicine. Industrial hygiene ,RC963-969 ,Industrial hygiene. Industrial welfare ,HD7260-7780.8 - Abstract
El año 2015 el Servicio Nacional de Discapacidad determinó que en Chile el 20% de la población mayor de 18 años presenta alguna situación de discapacidad. Sin embargo, actualmente no se cuenta con datos comunales sobre este fenómeno, complejizado el desarrollo de acciones locales que permitan el tránsito a una comunidad más inclusiva. Por lo anterior, esta investigación se realizó desde un enfoque cualitativo, con actores locales que respondieron a una convocatoria realizada desde la oficina de discapacidad de la comuna de Santiago a instituciones comunales y personas vinculadas al mundo de la discapacidad. Con ellos se incursiono en las percepciones de las personas en situación de discapacidad sobre los conceptos de discapacidad y discriminación, para posteriormente abordar los elementos que facilitan y obstaculizan la inclusión social y lo que consideran como necesidades prioritarias para la igualdad de oportunidades. Los resultados evidencian la percepción de discriminación existente en la comuna y recalcan la importancia de contar con políticas locales de inclusión y lineamientos para su desarrollo.
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- 2018
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42. Parasites of Free-Ranging and Captive American Primates: A Systematic Review
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Silvia Rondón, Serena Cavallero, Erika Renzi, Andrés Link, Camila González, and Stefano D’Amelio
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American non-human primates ,parasites ,zoonosis ,diagnostic methods ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The diversity, spread, and evolution of parasites in non-human primates (NHPs) is a relevant issue for human public health as well as for NHPs conservation. Although previous reviews have recorded information on parasites in NHPs (Platyrrhines) in the Americas, the increasing number of recent studies has made these inventories far from complete. Here, we summarize information about parasites recently reported in Platyrrhines, attempting to build on earlier reviews and identify information gaps. A systematic literature search was conducted in PubMed, ISI Web of Science, and Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature (LILACS), and following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Ninety-three studies were included after the screening process. Records for 20 genera of NHPs, including 90 species were found. Most of the studies were conducted on captive individuals (54.1%), and morphological approaches were the most used for parasite identification. The most commonly collected biological samples were blood and stool, and Protozoa was the most frequent parasite group found. There is still scarce (if any) information on the parasites associated to several Platyrrhine species, especially for free-ranging populations. The use of molecular identification methods can provide important contributions to the field of NHPs parasitology in the near future. Finally, the identification of parasites in NHPs populations will continue to provide relevant information in the context of pervasive habitat loss and fragmentation that should influence both human public health and wildlife conservation strategies.
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- 2021
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43. Seasonality, richness and prevalence of intestinal parasites of three neotropical primates (Alouatta seniculus, Ateles hybridus and Cebus versicolor) in a fragmented forest in Colombia
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Silvia Rondón, Mario Ortiz, Cielo León, Nelson Galvis, Andrés Link, and Camila González
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Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Studies on parasites infecting non-human primates are essential to better understand the potential threat to humans of zoonoses transmission, particularly under the current processes of pervasive land use change and biodiversity loss. The natural ecosystems in the Middle Magdalena river basin in Colombia have suffered a dramatic reduction and transformation into pastures and agroindustrial monocultures, threatening their biodiversity, and probably affecting the dynamics between parasites and their hosts, as well as altering the disease transmission cycles between wild populations and humans. This study evaluated seasonality, prevalence and richness of intestinal parasites in three species of neotropical primates: Cebus versicolor, Ateles hybridus and Alouatta seniculus, in a fragmented forest in the Middle Magdalena river valley, Colombia. One hundred and eighty five faecal samples were collected between 2010 and 2015. Direct faecal smears were performed with saline solution (0.85%) and iodine solution (1%), in order to identify larvae and eggs based on their morphology. A large proportion of the samples examined (72.9%) was positive for intestinal parasites; seven families of nematodes were identified: Trichuridae, Trichostrongylidae, Oxyuridae, Strongyloididae, Ancylostomatidae, Ascarididae and Gnathostomatidae, two of protozoans: Entamoebidae and Balantiididae, as well as some eggs of trematodes, cestodes and acanthocephalans. Additionally, DNA extraction and sequencing were conducted on 30 faecal samples in order to identify Giardia sp. and Blastocystis hominis, two parasite species also present in humans. Molecular testing for Giardia sp. was negative and Blastocystis hominis was identified in a single sample of Alouatta seniculus. No clear patterns were observed for prevalence of intestinal parasites according to the season; nonetheless, parasite species richness was higher during the dry season. This study builds on our current understanding of intestinal parasites infecting wild neotropical primates and provides novel information on the patterns of intestinal parasites in primate communities exposed to anthropogenic disturbance. Keywords: Faecal smears, Fragmented forest, Intestinal parasites, Howler monkeys, Spider monkeys, Capuchin monkeys
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- 2017
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44. Entomological characterization of malaria in northern Colombia through vector and parasite species identification, and analyses of spatial distribution and infection rates
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Camila González, Astrid Gisell Molina, Cielo León, Nicolás Salcedo, Silvia Rondón, Andrea Paz, Maria Claudia Atencia, Catalina Tovar, and Mario Ortiz
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Anopheles ,DNA Barcode ,Malaria ,Plasmodium falciparum ,Plasmodium vivax ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Malaria remains a worldwide public health concern and, in Colombia, despite the efforts to stop malaria transmission, the incidence of cases has increased over the last few years. In this context, it is necessary to evaluate vector diversity, infection rates, and spatial distribution, to better understand disease transmission dynamics. This information may contribute to the planning and development of vector control strategies. Results A total of 778 Anopheles mosquitoes were collected in fifteen localities of Córdoba from August 2015 to October 2016. Six species were identified and overall, Anopheles albimanus was the most widespread and abundant species (83%). Other species of the Nyssorhynchus subgenus were collected, including Anopheles triannulatus (13%), Anopheles nuneztovari (1%), Anopheles argyritarsis (
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- 2017
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45. SwimXYZ: A large-scale dataset of synthetic swimming motions and videos
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Guénolé, Fiche, Vincent, Sevestre, Camila, Gonzalez-Barral, Simon, Leglaive, and Renaud, Séguier
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Graphics - Abstract
Technologies play an increasingly important role in sports and become a real competitive advantage for the athletes who benefit from it. Among them, the use of motion capture is developing in various sports to optimize sporting gestures. Unfortunately, traditional motion capture systems are expensive and constraining. Recently developed computer vision-based approaches also struggle in certain sports, like swimming, due to the aquatic environment. One of the reasons for the gap in performance is the lack of labeled datasets with swimming videos. In an attempt to address this issue, we introduce SwimXYZ, a synthetic dataset of swimming motions and videos. SwimXYZ contains 3.4 million frames annotated with ground truth 2D and 3D joints, as well as 240 sequences of swimming motions in the SMPL parameters format. In addition to making this dataset publicly available, we present use cases for SwimXYZ in swimming stroke clustering and 2D pose estimation., Comment: ACM MIG 2023
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- 2023
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46. The Fumarprotocetraric Acid Inhibits Tau Covalently, Avoiding Cytotoxicity of Aggregates in Cells
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Camila González, Constanza Cartagena, Leonardo Caballero, Francisco Melo, Carlos Areche, and Alberto Cornejo
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lichens ,tauopathies ,α,β carbonyl group ,inhibitors ,aggregates ,cytotoxicity ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
Neurodegenerative disorders, including Tauopathies that involve tau protein, base their pathological mechanism on forming proteinaceous aggregates, which has a deleterious effect on cells triggering an inflammatory response. Moreover, tau inhibitors can exert their mechanism of action through noncovalent and covalent interactions. Thus, Michael’s addition appears as a feasible type of interaction involving an α, β unsaturated carbonyl moiety to avoid pathological confirmation and further cytotoxicity. Moreover, we isolated three compounds from Antarctic lichens Cladonia cariosa and Himantormia lugubris: protolichesterinic acid (1), fumarprotocetraric acid (2), and lichesterinic acid (3). The maleimide cysteine labeling assay showed that compounds 1, 2, and 3 inhibit at 50 µM, but compounds 2 and 3 are statistically significant. Based on its inhibition capacity, we decided to test compound 2 further. Thus, our results suggest that compound 2 remodel soluble oligomers and diminish β sheet content, as demonstrated through ThT experiments. Hence, we added externally treated oligomers with compound 2 to demonstrate that they are harmless in cell culture. First, the morphology of cells in the presence of aggregates does not suffer evident changes compared to the control. Additionally, the externally added aggregates do not provoke a substantial LDH release compared to the control, indicating that treated oligomers do not provoke membrane damage in cell culture compared with aggregates alone. Thus, in the present work, we demonstrated that Michael’s acceptors found in lichens could serve as a scaffold to explore different mechanisms of action to turn tau aggregates into harmless species.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. La sociedad y el estado en el pensamiento político de Jean-Paul Sartre
- Author
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Camila González Aliaga
- Subjects
Speculative philosophy ,BD10-701 ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 - Abstract
El pensamiento de Jean-Paul Sartre ha sido abordado ampliamente desde su perspectiva más reconocida, a saber, una filosofía de la libertad y la responsabilidad. Múltiples son los estudios sobre su existencialismo, su rol como intelectual o su relación con la filósofa Simone de Beauvoir. Sin embargo, su pensamiento político en torno a la teoría de la Sociedad y el Estado es aún una cuestión por indagar. En su obra Crítica de la Razón Dialéctica (1960) plantea cuestionamientos que se enmarcan en la posibilidad del surgimiento de una sociedad libre, la existencia de una soberanía popular y una concepción del Estado. Esta investigación busca abrir paso a la reflexión y discusión sobre las posibilidades de un pensamiento existencialista en el marco de lo político.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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48. Lo material como reflejo de un contexto sociopolítico
- Author
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Natalia Arcaya G., Luis Irrazabal M., Francisca Yuraszeck P., and Camila González S.
- Subjects
dictadura en chile ,poder ,configuración del paisaje ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
El actual Centro Cultural Gabriela Mistral (GAM) es un edificio ubicado en Santiago de Chile que tiene como proyecto difundir el acceso a la cultura y las artes. En 1972, bajo el Gobierno de la Unidad Popular, fue construido a causa de la Tercera Conferencia Mundial de Comercio de las Naciones Unidas. Luego del Golpe de Estado, en 1973, el edificio cambió sus funciones; pasó a llamarse “Edificio Diego Portales”, sus espacios fueron modificados, y muchas obras de arte retiradas y censuradas. Por medio de una comparación espacial de los distintos momentos de dicho inmueble, buscamos entender las dinámicas de poder que se están configurando en función del contexto sociopolítico en tiempos previos y durante la dictadura chilena.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Evaluating the spatial distribution of Leishmania parasites in Colombia from clinical samples and human isolates (1999 to 2016).
- Author
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Clemencia Ovalle-Bracho, Diana Londoño-Barbosa, Jussep Salgado-Almario, and Camila González
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
In Colombia, nine species of parasites of the genus Leishmania circulate in more than 20 sand fly species, putting at risk of contracting the disease approximately 60% of the population. The Federico Lleras Acosta Dermatological Center, a reference center in Colombia, has been treating patients with cutaneous and mucosal leishmaniasis for more than 15 years, identifying the infecting Leishmania species from different clinical samples, and recording systematically all the epidemiological and geographic information related to each diagnosed patient. With this valuable information, the objective of this work was to perform a long term and large-scale study, aiming to identify the Leishmania species circulating in Colombia from clinical samples from 1999 to 2016, and to assess their current and potential spatial distribution. In all, four Leishmania species were identified in 688 samples from 183 municipalities distributed in 28 of the 32 departments of the country, and 387 records were georeferenced, from 20 departments. The most widespread species was L. (V.) braziliensis, showing new collection records, and the species related to areas with highest leishmaniasis transmission was L. (V.) panamensis. Ecological niche models were built for the three species that had more than 20 georeferenced records, showing a potential distribution for L. (V.) braziliensis on 42% of the national territory mainly in the interandean valleys, and the Orinoquia and Amazon regions. Leishmania (V.) guyanensis potential distribution covers 36% of Colombia continental territory with a spatial distribution similar to that of L. (V.) braziliensis. There was a marked tendency of L. (V.) panamensis to be distributed in the northwest of the country occupying 35% of the national area and mainly in areas of transformed ecosystems. Species were identified in patients from areas where the occurrence of cases was unprecedented, which suggests that the distribution of Leishmania may be greater than currently known. To improve the predictive capacity of the models, we suggest incorporating, in future studies, Leishmania samples from vectors and reservoirs that have a greater dependence on environmental variables. Our results are an important tool for health systems because they allow potential areas of transmission and information gaps to be identified.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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50. Investigating Gut Permeability in Animal Models of Disease
- Author
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Marianela González-González, Camilo Díaz-Zepeda, Johana Eyzaguirre-Velásquez, Camila González-Arancibia, Javier A. Bravo, and Marcela Julio-Pieper
- Subjects
gut ,permeability ,barrier ,epithelium ,gastrointestinal disorders ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
A growing number of investigations report the association between gut permeability and intestinal or extra-intestinal disorders under the basis that translocation of gut luminal contents could affect tissue function, either directly or indirectly. Still, in many cases it is unknown whether disruption of the gut barrier is a causative agent or a consequence of these conditions. Adequate experimental models are therefore required to further understand the pathophysiology of health disorders associated to gut barrier disruption and to develop and test pharmacological treatments. Here, we review the current animal models that display enhanced intestinal permeability, and discuss (1) their suitability to address mechanistic questions, such as the association between gut barrier alterations and disease and (2) their validity to test potential treatments for pathologies that are characterized by enhanced intestinal permeability.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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