84 results on '"Edmundo, Larrieu"'
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52. Successful control of Echinococcosis in Argentina and Chile through a One Health approach, including vaccination of the sheep intermediate host
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Thelma Veronica Poggio, Tomas Chacon, and Edmundo Larrieu
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Cystic echinococcosis ,control ,South America ,vaccine ,Biochemistry ,QD415-436 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Cystic echinococcosis control in South American countries requires a comprehensive integrative ‘One Health’ approach. While insular nations have seen successful in their elimination programmes, South American countries face persistent challenges in hostile environments, with Echinococcus granulosus s.l., posing a significant public health concern. Vaccination of intermediate hosts has demonstrated the efficacy of the EG95 vaccine in reducing transmission rates. For example, since 2009, Rio Negro Province in Argentina has added, with marked success, the EG95 vaccine to the control programme, supplementing dog deworming. The Aysen Region of Chile has also reported encouraging preliminary results in reducing cyst prevalence in vaccinated sheep after 3 years of vaccination. The challenges in aligning control strategies with socio-cultural factors, especially in indigenous communities, underlines the need for context-specific strategies. The Rio Negro programme demonstrated commendable compliance, underlining the importance of community engagement in achieving lasting success. The most promising strategies for effective echinococcosis control involved dog deworming and the routine vaccination of sheep and/or goats, underscoring the importance of sustained implementation until all grazing animals have been replaced. For lasting success, these interventions need to be combined with a robust surveillance system.
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53. Humoral response and evolution of Echinococcus infection in experimentally infected sheep
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Roberto Lamberti, Laura Cavagion, Antonio Gatti, Claudio Calvo, Lilia Gino, Veronica Véspoli Puches, Angela Rosa Alvarez, Emiliano Alvarez, Mariela García Cachau, Mariela Morete, and Edmundo Larrieu
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Echinococcosis ,humoral response ,sheep ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
There is little information on the humoral response of sheep experimentally infected with Echinococcus granulosus. Thus, the objective of this study was to evaluate this response and measure its evolution. Doses of 10, 100, 1000 and 10000 E. granulosus eggs were prepared and inoculated via intraruminal puncture. Blood samples were obtained before inoculation and every 48 h after inoculation, until they became seropositive. Thereafter, they were taken monthly for the first year and then every three months until 1700 days of observation had been completed. An ELISA test, with total hydatid fluid antigen, was used for immunodiagnosis. The average optical density of the 12 inoculated sheep was found to be above the mean cutoff value 10 days after inoculation, went on increasing until 180 days after inoculation and remained above the cutoff level until the end of the observation period. This confirms that the antibody response of sheep to E. granulosus infection occurs before production of hydatid fluid and that activation, mobilization and establishment of oncospheres in the tissues generates a persistent response from the host's immune system.
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54. Vigilancia de la equinococosis quística en perros y niños en la provincia de Río Negro, Argentina
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Edmundo Larrieu, Marcos Seleiman, Eduardo Herrero, Guillermo Mujica, José Luis Labanchi, Daniel Araya, Claudia Grizmado, Luis Sepúlveda, Arnoldo Calabro, Gabriel Talmón, Pablo Crowley, Silvina Albarracín, Marcos Arezo, Marcela Volpe, Agustín Ávila, Alicia Pérez, Leonardo Uchiumi, Juan Carlos Salvitti, and Graciela Santillan
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Equinococosis ,Coproantígenos ,Control ,Casos ,Vigilancia ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
La equinococosis quística (EQ) es una enfermedad endémica en la provincia de Río Negro, Argentina. El programa de control de esta afección desarrolla sistemas de vigilancia epidemiológica basados en las técnicas de coproELISA/Western blot (WB) en muestras de heces de perros recolectadas del suelo, a fin de determinar establecimientos ganaderos (unidades epidemiológicas o UE) con transmisión presente. El objetivo de esta investigación fue evaluar la prevalencia de EQ en establecimientos ganaderos y su relación con la presencia de casos de EQ en niños de 0 a 14 años. Se seleccionaron aleatoriamente UE donde se obtuvieron muestras de materia fecal canina, las que fueron procesadas mediante coproELISA/WB. Asimismo, se identificaron casos nuevos ocurridos en niños del rango etario señalado. Se obtuvieron 571 muestras de 278 UE; 37 (6,5 %) fueron positivas a coproELISA/WB de 37 (13,3 %) UE con transmisión presente. Las diferencias con el relevamiento efectuado en el período 2003-2004 resultaron no significativas (p = 0,9), mientras que las diferencias con el relevamiento efectuado en UE de poblaciones originarias en 2009-2010 resultaron significativas (p = 0,02). Con relación a la densidad animal en el área de trabajo, las UE que dieron un resultado negativo tuvieron un promedio de 2 (DE: 2,1) perros por UE, en las UE con infección presente el promedio fue de 3 (DE 4,2), esta diferencia fue estadísticamente significativa (p = 0,02). Se diagnosticaron 12 casos en niños menores de 15 años. Se estableció que los casos de hidatidosis, en promedio, se situaron a menor distancia de los campos positivos a coproELISA/WB que de los campos negativos (p= 0,00307). La prueba de coproELISA/WB permitió identificar la dispersión de EQ en establecimientos ganaderos y analizar su relación con la ocurrencia de casos en niños.
55. HANTAVIRUS PULMONARY SYNDROME IN THE PROVINCE OF RIO NEGRO, ARGENTINA, 1993-1996
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Resa A, G. Cantoni, Arellano O, E. Herrero, Alicia Perez, Lazaro M, De Bunder S, Edmundo Larrieu, and Amestoy Am
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Adolescent ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Epidemiology ,Argentina ,Rodentia ,Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome ,Disease Outbreaks ,Environmental protection ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Child ,Aged ,Disease Reservoirs ,Hantavirus ,Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome ,Incidence ,Mortality rate ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,Female ,Seasons ,Demography - Abstract
Early in 1995 the first case of Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome was serologically confirmed in El Bolsón (Province of Río Negro, Argentina), corresponding to the third outbreak reported in Argentina. A total of 26 cases of HPS related to the Andean region of Rio Negro Province, were reported from 1993 to 1996, 17 in El Bolsón, 4 in San Carlos de Bariloche, and 5 in Buenos Aires. The incidence rate was 5.03 x 100000 with a mortality rate of 51.85 x 100. The occurrence of cases was mainly seasonal, with a significantly greater number in the spring, and the persons affected mainly lived in urban or periurban areas. In four cases, the affected individuals were members of a couple, spouses or live-in contacts. Seven cases were Health workers (physicians, nurses or administrative staff). Twelve cases were related among them, due to an outbreak of 80 days. Two of them did not visit the Andean region. A total of 139 rodents were captured and seven of them, Olygoryzomys longicaudatus, were found to be serologically positive. The possibility of infection by contact with rodents or fecal matter is being analyzed and also hypothesis related with interhuman transmissionEm 1995, o primeiro caso de Síndrome Pulmonar pelo Hantavírus (HPS) foi sorologicamente confirmado em El Bolsón (Província de Rio Negro, Argentina), correspondendo ao terceiro surto relatado na Argentina. Um total de 26 casos de HPS relacionados com a região Andina, Província de Rio Negro, foram relatados de 1993 a 1996, 17 em El Bolsón, 4 em São Carlos de Bariloche e 5 em Buenos Aires. O índice de incidência foi de 5,03 x 100.000 com índice de mortalidade de 51,85 x 100. A ocorrência de casos foi principalmente sasonal, com números significativamente maiores na primavera, e as pessoas afetadas viviam principalmente nas áreas urbanas e periurbanas. Em 4 casos, os indivíduos afetados eram membros de um casal, esposas ou viviam em contato. Sete casos eram trabalhadores da Saúde (médicos, enfermeiras e pessoal administrativo). Doze casos estavam relacionados entre si, devidos a um surto de 80 dias. Dois deles não visitaram a região Andina. Um total de 139 roedores foram capturados e sete deles, Olygoryzomys longicaudatus, foram sorologicamente positivos. A possibilidade de infecção por contato com roedores ou fezes está sendo analisada e também a hipótese de transmissão interhumana
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- 1997
56. A community-based study to examine the epidemiology of human cystic echinococcosis in Rio Negro Province, Argentina
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Mario Del Carpio, Edmundo Larrieu, Margaret R. Slater, Christine M. Budke, Sergio Moguillansky, Glenda M. Bingham, and Guillermo Mujica
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Adult ,Male ,Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Echinococcosis, Hepatic ,Adolescent ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Argentina ,Community based study ,Young Adult ,Ultrasound screening ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Epidemiology ,Medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Child ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Community level ,Cystic echinococcosis ,business.industry ,Public health ,Data Collection ,Middle Aged ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Population study ,Parasitology ,Female ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Although cystic echinococcosis (CE) is an important public health problem in Rio Negro Province, current epidemiological data for CE, in this region of Argentina, are not available. Therefore, a community-based study, which incorporated diagnostic imaging and a questionnaire, was conducted in Ingeniero Jacobacci, a small town in southern Rio Negro Province. This study sought to assess the prevalence of human CE, in the study population, and to evaluate epidemiologic factors associated with CE transmission within the study area. Of the 560 individuals who volunteered to participate in the study, 189 (34%) were children and 371 (66%) were adults. All study participants were screened for CE using abdominal ultrasound scanning, with CE-positive or suspect individuals also receiving thoracic radiographs. The overall prevalence of CE was 7.1% (40/560), with 1.6% (3/189) of children, and 10% (37/371) of adults diagnosed as CE-positive. Although 92.5% (37/40) of the CE-positive individuals had only hepatic lesions, two participants had both hepatic and pulmonary lesions, and one participant had a single renal lesion. Approximately 92% (340/371) of the adult study participants completed the questionnaire, which was used to identify factors associated with an increased risk for human infection. Age, level of education, dog ownership, and contact with sheep were found to be significantly associated with CE status. This study demonstrated that CE continues to be highly endemic in this region of Rio Negro Province, Argentina. In addition, community-based ultrasound screening surveys are a noninvasive, effective approach to case detection at the community level.
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- 2013
57. Humoral response and evolution of Echinococcus infection in experimentally infected sheep
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Emiliano Alvarez, Mariela Alejandra García Cachau, Edmundo Larrieu, Angela Rosa Alvarez, Lilia Mabel Gino, Antonio Gatti, Mariela Morete, Veronica Véspoli Puches, Roberto Lamberti, Claudio Calvo, and Laura Jorgelina Cavagión
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Animal Experimentation ,Veterinary medicine ,sheep ,Sheep Diseases ,Random Allocation ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Immunity ,Echinococcosis ,parasitic diseases ,Helminths ,Animals ,Echinococcus granulosus ,lcsh:SF1-1100 ,Sheep ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Inoculation ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Immunity, Humoral ,Echinococcus ,Humoral immunity ,Parasitology ,lcsh:Animal culture ,humoral response - Abstract
There is little information on the humoral response of sheep experimentally infected with Echinococcus granulosus. Thus, the objective of this study was to evaluate this response and measure its evolution. Doses of 10, 100, 1000 and 10000 E. granulosus eggs were prepared and inoculated via intraruminal puncture. Blood samples were obtained before inoculation and every 48 h after inoculation, until they became seropositive. Thereafter, they were taken monthly for the first year and then every three months until 1700 days of observation had been completed. An ELISA test, with total hydatid fluid antigen, was used for immunodiagnosis. The average optical density of the 12 inoculated sheep was found to be above the mean cutoff value 10 days after inoculation, went on increasing until 180 days after inoculation and remained above the cutoff level until the end of the observation period. This confirms that the antibody response of sheep to E. granulosus infection occurs before production of hydatid fluid and that activation, mobilization and establishment of oncospheres in the tissues generates a persistent response from the host's immune system.
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- 2013
58. Pilot field trial of the EG95 vaccine against ovine cystic echinococcosis in Rio Negro, Argentina: early impact and preliminary data
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Daniel Araya, Laura Jorgelina Cavagión, Jose Luis Labanchi, Mariela Alejandra García Cachau, David D. Heath, Edmundo Larrieu, Arnoldo Calabro, Alicia Perez, Roberto Lamberti, Marcos Seleiman, Antonio Gatti, Graciela Santillán, Guillermo Ruesta, Gabriel Talmon, Lilia Mabel Gino, Eduardo Herrero, Marshall W. Lightowlers, Marcos Arezzo, Charles G. Gauci, Cristian A. Alvarez Rojas, Claudia Grizmado, Guillermo Mujica, and Marta Cabrera
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Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Echinococcosis, Hepatic ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Argentina ,Sheep Diseases ,Pilot Projects ,Booster dose ,Dogs ,parasitic diseases ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Dog Diseases ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Feces ,Vaccines ,Sheep ,biology ,business.industry ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Echinococcosis ,Vaccination ,Praziquantel ,Infectious Diseases ,Parasitology ,Insect Science ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cystic echinococcosis is endemic in the Rio Negro province of Argentina. After 30 years of control using praziquantel in dogs the transmission rate to humans and sheep has decreased significantly, however transmission persists. The objective of the study is to assess the impact of the inclusion of the EG95 vaccine for sheep in the control programme, including analysis of the vaccine's operative feasibility in field conditions. The vaccine was applied in an area comprising four communities of native people including 79 farms with 3146 lambs and 311 dogs in total. Seventy one farms were designated as control areas where no vaccinations were undertaken while vaccinations of lambs undertaken on 91 farms. Lambs received two vaccinations with the EG95 vaccine followed by a single booster injection when the animals were 1-1.5 years of age. Farm locations were defined using GPS coordinates for the houses. Evidence for Echinococcus granulosus transmission was monitored by coproantigen ELISA on samples of dog faeces, by E. granulosus-specific PCR using soil samples, and anti-E. granulosus antibody assessments in sera from 2 to 4 teeth lambs, purgation of dogs to detect E. granulosus worms and necropsy on adult sheep. Before the vaccine was introduced, 26.2% of sheep with 2-4 teeth were positive using ELISA/WB, the prevalence decreased to 7.8% at the third year following use of the vaccine. Necropsy of animals older than 6 years (not vaccinated) showed that 66.1% of animals were infected with E. granulosus. In dogs, 4% was found positive for E. granulosus using arecoline purgation and 24.7% of the farms were infected using coproELISA/WB. During the first year of vaccination 2721 lambs received the first vaccine dose and 2448 received a booster. In the second year 2138 lambs were initially vaccinated and 1745 received a booster, and 1308 animals received the third dose. During the third year 1110 lambs received the first dose from which 539 received a booster and 723 animals received the third dose. An analysis of advantages and limitations of the diagnostic techniques used and the ability of the geospatial analysis to detect risk area are included. Based in the immunodiagnostic techniques, the EG95 vaccine has been able to prevent the infection in animals up to 3 years old. Also, the difficulties in the field for the correct vaccine administration and the social features and habits that may impact on echinococcosis control are included in the analysis.
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- 2012
59. Early diagnosis, treatment and follow-up of cystic echinococcosis in remote rural areas in Patagonia: impact of ultrasound training of non-specialists
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Jose Luis Labanchi, Enrico Brunetti, Sam Goblirsch, Carlos Mercapide, Mario Del Carpio, Jorge Moguilensky, Arnoldo Calabro, Eduardo Herrero, José Sustercic, Carlos Chiosso, Daniel Araya, Sergio Mancini, Marcela Volpe, Juan Carlos Salvitti, Ricardo Saad, Gabriel Talmon, Leonardo Uchiumi, Guillermo Mujica, Hector Panomarenko, and Edmundo Larrieu
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Rural Population ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,Adolescent ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Practice ,Argentina ,Albendazole ,Global Health ,Pelvis ,Neglect ,Echinococcosis ,General Practitioners ,Abdomen ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Child ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Mass screening ,Ultrasonography ,media_common ,Anthelmintics ,biology ,Cystic echinococcosis ,business.industry ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Neglected Disease ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Early Diagnosis ,Infectious Diseases ,Diagnosis treatment ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,Medicine ,Health Services Research ,Rural area ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Cystic echinococcosis (CE) is a chronic, complex and neglected disease caused by the larval stage of Echinococcus granulosus. The effects of this neglect have a stronger impact in remote rural areas whose inhabitants have no chances of being diagnosed and treated properly without leaving their jobs and travelling long distances, sometimes taking days to reach the closest referral center. Background In 1980 our group set up a control program in endemic regions with CE in rural sections of Rio Negro, Argentina. Since 1997, we have used abdominopelvic ultrasound (US) as a screening method of CE in school children and determined an algorithm of treatment. Objectives To describe the training system of general practitioners in early diagnosis and treatment of CE and to evaluate the impact of the implementation of the field program. Materials and Methods In 2000, to overcome the shortage of radiologists in the area, we set up a short training course on Focused Assessment with Sonography for Echinococcosis (FASE) for general practitioners with no previous experience with US. After the course, the trainees were able to carry out autonomous ultrasound surveys under the supervision of the course faculty. From 2000 to 2008, trainees carried out 22,793 ultrasound scans in children from 6 to 14 years of age, and diagnosed 87 (0.4%) new cases of CE. Forty-nine (56.4%) were treated with albendazole, 29 (33.3%) were monitored expectantly and 9 (10.3%) were treated with surgery. Discussion The introduction of a FASE course for general practitioners allowed for the screening of CE in a large population of individuals in remote endemic areas with persistent levels of transmission, thus overcoming the barrier of the great distance from tertiary care facilities. The ability of local practitioners to screen for CE using US saved the local residents costly travel time and missed work and proved to be an efficacious and least expensive intervention tool for both the community and health care system., Author Summary Cystic echinococcosis (CE) is an important and widespread disease that affects sheep, cattle, and humans living in areas where sheep and cattle are raised. CE is highly endemic in rural sections of Rio Negro, Argentina, where our group is based. However, it requires continuous monitoring of both populations with human disease best assessed by means of ultrasound (US) screening. This is challenging in remote rural areas due to the shortage of imaging specialists. To overcome this hurdle, we set up a two-day training program of Focused Assessment with Sonography for Echinococcosis (FASE) on CE for family medicine practitioners with no previous experience in US. After the course, they were equipped with portable US scanners and dispatched to remote rural areas in Rio Negro where they screened patients, located and staged the cysts and decided on the treatment with the help of surgeons and radiologists in local tertiary care centers. The need to travel to referral hospitals for traditional surgical interventions was therefore limited to a few cases. US was instead brought to rural areas thereby extending affordable healthcare to people who would otherwise not have access to it.
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- 2012
60. Critical analysis of cystic echinococcosis control programs and praziquantel use in South America, 1974-2010
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Fabián Zanini and Edmundo Larrieu
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Program evaluation ,Adolescent ,Sheep Diseases ,Rural Health ,Praziquantel ,law.invention ,Dogs ,law ,Echinococcosis ,Zoonoses ,parasitic diseases ,Preventive Health Services ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Dog Diseases ,Socioeconomics ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Anthelmintics ,Infection Control ,Vaccines ,Sheep ,Rural health ,Incidence ,Vaccination ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Epidemiologic Surveillance ,Helminth Proteins ,South America ,medicine.disease ,Drug Utilization ,Local community ,Geography ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Antigens, Helminth ,Population Surveillance ,Asymptomatic Diseases ,Carrier State ,Rural area ,medicine.drug ,Forecasting ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
Cystic echinococcosis (CE) is one of the most prevalent zoonoses in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru, and Uruguay. Control programs in South America were originally modeled after programs developed in insular territories, such as Tasmania and New Zealand. The advent and proven effectiveness of praziquantel, plus the experience of insular models, produced high expectations for rapid advances; however, after 30 years of praziquantel use, no endemic area in South America has obtained eradication. In fact, only modest gains in CE control have been made and impact on prevalence among humans has been slight. A major impediment has been the infrastructure needed to administer praziquantel to dogs in rural areas 8 times per year over numerous years, a requirement for rapid attack stage 1. Such an infrastructure has not been financially or politically sustainable in endemic areas, which tend to be the poorest. On the other hand, certain areas in Argentina have had success with simple and economically viable alternatives. Based primarily on continuous field work supported by the local community, these strategies have significantly decreased transmission to humans, the health sector's main objective. In addition, new possibilities and tools, such as the EG95 vaccine, are being evaluated; as are early detection and treatment of asymptomatic carriers.
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- 2010
61. Treatment of liver hydatidosis: How to treat an asymptomatic carrier?
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Edmundo Larrieu and Bernardo Frider
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Echinococcosis, Hepatic ,Biopsy, Fine-Needle ,Autopsy ,Disease ,Albendazole ,Asymptomatic ,Pharmacotherapy ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Cyst ,Anthelmintics ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Echinococcosis ,Surgery ,Echinococcus ,Natural history ,Editorial ,Liver ,Asymptomatic Diseases ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Asymptomatic carrier - Abstract
Liver hydatidosis is the most common clinical presentation of cystic echinococcosis (CE). Ultrasonographic mass surveys have demonstrated the true prevalence, including the asymptomatic characteristic of the majority of cases, providing new insight into the natural history of the disease. This raises the question of whether to treat or not to treat these patients, due to the high and unsuspected prevalence of CE. The high rate of liver/lung frequencies of cyst localization, the autopsy findings, and the involution of cysts demonstrated in long time follow-up of asymptomatic carriers contribute to this discussion. The decision to treat an asymptomatic patient by surgery, albendazole, or puncture aspiration injection and re-aspiration or to wait and watch, is based on conflicting reports in the literature, the lack of complications in untreated patients over time, and the spontaneous disappearance and involution of cysts. All these points contribute to difficulties of individual clinical decisions. The patients should be informed of the reasons and the risks of watchful/waiting without treatment, the possibility of complications, and the risks of the other options. As more information on the natural history of liver hydatidosis is acquired, selection of the best treatment will be come easier. Without this knowledge it would be very difficult to establish definitive rules of treatment. At present, it is possible to manage these patients over time and to wait for the best moment for treatment. Follow-up studies must be conducted to achieve this objective.
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- 2010
62. Programme for ultrasound diagnoses and treatment with albendazole of cystic echinococcosis in asymptomatic carriers: 10 years of follow-up of cases
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Hector Panomarenko, Carlos Mercapide, Eduardo Herrero, Daniel Araya, Sergio Mancini, Gabriel Mujica, Leonardo Uchiumi, Edmundo Larrieu, Marcela Volpe, Gabriel Talmon, José Sustercic, Jose Luis Labanchi, Mario Del Carpio, Jorge Moguilensky, Martín Odriozola, and Juan Carlos Salvitti
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Adolescent ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Population ,Helminthiasis ,Prevalence ,Argentina ,Albendazole ,Asymptomatic ,Echinococcosis ,medicine ,Humans ,Cyst ,education ,Child ,Asymptomatic Infections ,Ultrasonography ,Anthelmintics ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Carrier State ,Parasitology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Drug Monitoring ,business ,Asymptomatic carrier ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cystic echinococcosis is an endemic disease in the Province of Rio Negro, Argentina. Ultrasound surveys carried out in 1984 found prevalence rates of 5.6% in children between 6 and 14 years of age. Objective To describe and to evaluate the results of the strategy applied in school children by hospital services of the Province of Rio Negro with regard to diagnosis, treatment and monitoring of cystic echinococcosis and to evaluate simultaneously the results of the control program against cystic echinococcosis. Materials and methods In 1997 ultrasound was chosen to carry out population surveys and the medical treatment criteria for the detected cases were standardized. The population under study involved 5745 students in the first survey and 22,793 in subsequent studies. The detected cases were classified according to Gharbi's scheme. A treatment algorithm was defined based only on monitoring (“watch and wait”), albendazole, surgery (open or laparoscopic) or mini-invasive procedures, according to type, location and size of the cyst. Information was also obtained on cases notified to the Health System between 1980 and 2008. Results In the first survey, 70 carriers (1.2%) were detected; of these, 25 started albendazole treatment (35.7%) and only 3 (4.3%) underwent surgery. Ten years after treatment, 60.1% of 42 cases, presented Types IV and V cysts and 14.5% presented total involution of their cysts. In subsequent studies, 87 (0.4%) cases were detected, 49 of which started albendazole treatment (56.3%) and 9 underwent surgery (10.3%). The incidence rate of cystic echinococcosis cases decreased from 38 × 100,000 in 1980 to 3.7 × 100,000 in 2008. Discussion A strong decrease in cystic echinococcosis was obtained although persistent levels of transmission were maintained. The cases produced under these conditions are diagnosed by means of ultrasound surveys and are treated using a plan based on albendazole and monitoring by the Health System during a period of 10 years.
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- 2009
63. [Pathophysiology and immune response in sheep experimentally infected with Echinococcus granulosus]
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Edmundo, Larrieu, Angela R, Alvarez, Antonio, Gatti, Sergio, Mancini, Ricardo, Bigatti, Daniel, Araya, Verónica, Vespoli, Juan, García Vinet, Mariela, García Cacheau, Emiliano, Alvarez, and Laura, Cavagion
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Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Disease Models, Animal ,Dogs ,Sheep ,Time Factors ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Echinococcosis ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Animals ,Sheep Diseases - Abstract
The immune response to Echinococcus granulosus in sheep has not been extensively investigated. The objective of this study was to increase the information on the physiopathology of E. granulosus and the immune response elicited in sheep. Animals were experimentally inoculated with three different doses of E. granulosus eggs and the immune response was evaluated over 500 days using enzyme immunoassay with three antigenic preparations: total hydatid fluid, purified fraction of hydatid fluid and purified lipoprotein fraction. Sheep were slaughtered at different intervals to observe the macroscopic and microscopic development of the parasite. Immune response was detected at 10 days and was maintained throughout the observation period, being initially proportional to the load of inoculated eggs and then decreasing over time. Fertile cysts were identified 10 months after inoculation and live onchosphere 500 days after inoculation. Antibody response to E. granulosus in sheep preceded hydatid fluid formation and was generated by the mobility of the onchosphere. Early histological identification of fertile cysts indicates that feeding dogs with viscera of young sheep can produce cycles of infection. Furthermore, the presence of live onchosphere in the liver here found contributes to a better knowledge of the pathogenesis of this disease it could be hypothetically considered as a cause for the repeated surgeries necessary in man after the extirpation of a hydatid cyst.
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- 2009
64. Pilot Field Trial of the EG95 Vaccine Against Ovine Cystic Echinococcosis in Rio Negro, Argentina: Second Study of Impact
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Marshall W. Lightowlers, Katherina A. Vizcaychipi, Arnoldo Calabro, Meritxell Donadeu, Jose Luis Labanchi, Thelma Veronica Poggio, Graciela Santillán, Claudia Grizmado, Daniel Araya, Gabriel Talmon, Luis Sepulveda, Graciela Céspedes, Mariela Alejandra García Cachau, Marcos Seleiman, Lilia Mabel Gino, Charles G. Gauci, Eduardo Herrero, Roberto Lamberti, Guillermo Mujica, Pablo Crowley, and Edmundo Larrieu
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Veterinary medicine ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,CIENCIAS MÉDICAS Y DE LA SALUD ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Argentina ,Ciencias de la Salud ,Sheep Diseases ,Booster dose ,Parasite Load ,Ovinos ,Vacuna EG95 ,purl.org/becyt/ford/3.3 [https] ,Echinococcosis ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Animals ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Immunization Schedule ,Vaccines ,Salud Ocupacional ,Sheep ,biology ,business.industry ,Transmission (medicine) ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Helminth Proteins ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Echinococcosis quistica ,Vaccination ,Treatment Outcome ,Infectious Diseases ,Echinococcus ,Antigens, Helminth ,Cohort ,purl.org/becyt/ford/3 [https] ,Livestock ,business ,Ensayo a campo ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Cystic echinococcosis (CE) is an important zoonotic disease caused by the cestode parasite Echinococcus granulosus. It occurs in many parts of the world where pastoral activities predominate, including the Rio Negro province of Argentina. Although CE control activities have been undertaken in the western regions of Rio Negro for more than two decades, the disease continues to remain prevalent in both the human and livestock animal populations. Vaccination of animal intermediate hosts of CE with the EG95 vaccine may provide a new opportunity to improve the effectiveness of CE control measures, although data are lacking about field application of the vaccine. Aims Evaluate the impact of EG95 vaccination in sheep on the transmission of Echinococcus granulosus in a field environment. Methodology Two trial sites were established in western Rio Negro province within indigenous communities. Vaccination of lambs born into one trial site was introduced and continued for 6 years. Prior to initiation of the trial, and at the end of the trial, the prevalence of CE in sheep was determined by necropsy. Weaned lambs received two injections of EG95 vaccine, approximately one month apart, and a single booster injection one year later. Vaccination was not implemented at the second trial site. A total of 2725 animals were vaccinated in the first year. Animals from this cohort as well as age-matched sheep from the control area were evaluated by necropsy. Key results Introduction of the vaccine led to a statistically significant in the number and size of hydatid cysts in comparison to the situation prior to the introduction of the vaccine, or compared to CE prevalence in the control area where the vaccine was not applied. The prevalence of infection in the vaccinated area was also significantly reduced by 62% compared to the re-intervention level, being lower than the prevalence seen in the control area, although the difference from the control area after the intervention was not significant possibly due to limitations in the numbers of animals available for necropsy. Conclusions Vaccination of sheep with the EG95 vaccine provides a valuable new tool which improves the effectiveness of CE control activities. Vaccination was effective even in a difficult, remote environment where only approximately half the lambs born into the communities were fully vaccinated., Author Summary Hydatid disease, otherwise known as cystic echinococcosis (CE), is caused by Echinococcus granulosus. The disease is common in many pastoral areas, including parts of the Rio Negro province of Argentina, and is formally recognised by the WHO as a Neglected Tropical Disease. We undertook the first scientific evaluation of the EG95 vaccine against transmission of hydatid disease in a field situation. Sheep in remote indigenous communities of Rio Negro were vaccinated over a six year period. Young lambs received two injections of vaccine and a single booster injection as one year old sheep. A similar region acted as a control where vaccination was not implemented. Evaluation of the outcomes of vaccination revealed a significant, 62% decrease in the prevalence of hydatid infection in 6 year old sheep. Our study provides a template for the application of vaccination in future efforts to control transmission of E. granulosus and reduce the burden of human disease caused by the parasite.
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- 2015
65. [Epidemiological surveillance of cystic echinococcosis in dogs, sheep farms and humans in the Rio Negro Province]
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Alicia, Pérez, María T, Costa, Gustavo, Cantoni, Sergio, Mancini, Carlos, Mercapide, Eduardo, Herrero, Marcela, Volpe, Daniel, Araya, Gabriel, Talmon, Carlos, Chiosso, Gabriela, Vázquez, Mario, Del Carpio, Graciela, Santillan, and Edmundo, Larrieu
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Sheep ,Adolescent ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Incidence ,Arecoline ,Blotting, Western ,Argentina ,Sheep Diseases ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Cholinergic Agonists ,Feces ,Dogs ,Echinococcosis ,Population Surveillance ,Zoonoses ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Humans ,Dog Diseases ,Child ,Parasite Egg Count - Abstract
The surveillance of infection for Echinococcus granulosus in the Province of Rio Negro during 1980-2002 included serological and ultrasonographic screening in humans and arecoline test in dogs. In lieu of the limitations of the arecoline test the proposal was to supplant that test for the copro ELISA-copro/Western Blot complex applied to feces collected from the environment. The objective was to compare the pros and cons of the two tests and to evaluate the human and the canine infection prevalence. The working area encompassed 7 Departments with systematic canine parasiticide activities (Program Area) and 4 Departments, not endemic, as Control Area. The arecoline test was applied to the dogs in assembled groups with the voluntary participation of their owners (not randomized sampling). Samples for the detection of coproantigens were obtained from sheep farms selected at random and analyzed by the complex copro-ELISA /Western Blot. Prevalence in man was determined by screening the school population (6 to 14 years old) by ultrasound, and by means of the compulsory notification of cases from the official system. Dogs (416) were tested with arecoline, 365 of which belonged to the Program Area. Of these 19 (5.2%) resulted positive, while none of 51 dogs from the Control Area were positive. Samples (748) of feces were tested to detect coproantigens, obtaining 37 positive samples within the Program Area and 4 within the Control Area. Farms (271) from the livestock estate unit were evaluated, out of which 236 belonged to the Program Area, gave 32 (13.6%) positive results, while 4 (11.4%) of 35 from the Control Area resulted positive. Sonography tests (7421) were done in the Program Area detecting 40 (0.5%) carriers, while in the Control Area, over 1732 tests, 9 (0.5%) resulted positive. The arecoline test provides information about the dog prevalence while the detection of coproantigens in feces collected from the environment allowed to enhance the quality of the information, and the identification of environments where specific control activities focusing on risk must be concentrated. Also the study allowed to recognize new transmission areas.
- Published
- 2006
66. Ovine echinococcosis I. Immunological diagnosis by enzyme immunoassay
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Antonio, Gatti, Angela Rosa, Alvarez, Daniel, Araya, Sergio, Mancini, Eduardo, Herrero, Graciela, Santillan, and Edmundo, Larrieu
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Male ,Sheep ,Taenia ,Blotting, Western ,Reproducibility of Results ,Sheep Diseases ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Echinococcus ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Echinococcosis ,Antigens, Helminth ,Animals ,Female ,Sentinel Surveillance ,Abattoirs - Abstract
Immunodiagnosis in sheep presents problems of sensitivity and specificity, limiting its applicability in surveillance systems. The objective of this study was to develop a sensitive, specific and accessible technique for diagnosing cystic echinococcosis in naturally infected sheep and to evaluate the validity of necropsy as a reference test. A total of 247 sheep were studied at slaughterhouses, confirming the parasitological diagnosis with histology. Serum was processed with enzyme immunoassay (EIA) using three antigen preparations: total hydatid liquid (LHT), purified fraction of LHT (S2B) and purified lipoprotein (B). Western Blot (WB) was used as a control. EIA proved effective for differentiating Echinococcus granulosus from larval stage of Taenia hydatigena and intestinal cestodes in all three antigen preparations. Serums from macroscopically negative sheep were reactive to EIA and positive with WB. In the whole flock, sensitivity was 89.2% for LHT, 80.0% for S2B and 86.4% for B. Sensitivity in lambs was 78.6% for LHT, 75.0% for S2B and 64.3% for B. Macroscopic diagnosis at the time of slaughter was found to have limitations as a reference test for immunodiagnosis of cystic equinococcosis in sheep, so it was necessary to include histology and WB as reference tests. LHT was the antigen preparation of greatest value and EIA proved to be a sensitive and specific technique, adequate for surveillance systems and for evaluating control programmes.
- Published
- 2006
67. [Surveillance of foodborne diseases in the province of Rio Negro, Argentina, 1993-2001]
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Silvana, Di Pietro, Karina, Haritchabalet, Gustavo, Cantoni, Liliana, Iglesias, Sergio, Mancini, Ana, Temperoni, Jose L, Labanchi, Norma, Barbarossa, Maria T, Garcia, Mariela, Cofre, Silvia, Rosales, Eduardo, Herrero, Ricardo, Bigatti, Omar, Orellana, and Edmundo, Larrieu
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Foodborne Diseases ,Epidemiologic Studies ,Food Handling ,Population Surveillance ,Gram-Negative Bacteria ,Argentina ,Food Microbiology ,Humans ,Salmonella Food Poisoning ,Trichinellosis ,Staphylococcal Food Poisoning ,Escherichia coli Infections ,Disease Outbreaks - Abstract
A total of 39 outbreaks of foodborne diseases affecting 958 people in the province of Rio Negro, Argentina between 1993 and 2001 are described and evaluated. The main causal agents were identified involving food, sites of occurrence, risk factors and notification system used. Salmonella spp (38%), Trichinella spiralis (15%), Escherichia coli (13%) and Staphylococcus aureus (15%) were the most frequent agents present in outbreaks. Salmonella spp produced the largest number of cases (52%). Food involved were cooked meat (36%), cheese (10%), sandwiches (10%), deserts (10%) and ice cream (8%). Indeed, ice creams were involved in the largest number of cases and of people affected. In relation to the source of food, 41% of outbreaks were caused by homemade meals, 23% by catering or ice cream parlor, 13% in family parties, 8% in county fairs and 8% in hotel restaurants. In 28% of the outbreaks the etiological agent was identified exclusively by epidemiological analysis, in 64% isolation of the agent was carried out, and in 8% of the cases, a final diagnosis could not be obtained. Validity of epidemiological studies in foodborne disease, the necessity of strengthening the notification system of outbreaks, and the importance of good practices in food handling are analyzed.
- Published
- 2005
68. Echinococcosis quística: epidemiología y control en América del Sur
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Hugo Tamayo, Primo Arambulo Iii, Edmundo Larrieu, and Albino Belloto
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Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,High prevalence ,biology ,Epidemiology ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Zoonosis ,Hydatidosis ,Disease ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Praziquantel ,Cystic echinococcosis ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,Control ,medicine ,Veterinary public health ,Parasitology ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Socioeconomics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Hydatidosis is a zoonosis produced by a parasite, Echinococcus granulosus, of high prevalence in Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Peru and the south of Brazil, producing high losses for cattle raising and for health systems. Man acts as a host for the metacestode and is infected when ingesting fertile eggs adhering to the anus or hair of parasitized dogs or by ingestion of vegetables or water polluted with canine feces. Major epidemiological risk factors are: to slaughter sheep in the household, to cohabit with a great number of dogs during the first years of life, to have a history of hydatidosis cases in the family nucleus, to use non-potable water and to be in contact with parasitized dogs. It has been estimated that over 2000 new human cases are reported every year in the region, with rates of incidence ranging from 41 per 100,000 in the Patagonian region in southern Argentina, 80 per 100,000 in the XI Region of Chile, up to 100 x 100,000 in the Flores Department of Uruguay. Successful programs based on systematic canine deparasitation with praziquantel have been developed in Uruguay, Chile and Argentina, with diverse organization models. Traditionally, cystic echinococcosis has been regarded as a disease requiring surgical resolution. However, during the last years alternative methods have been developed including chemotherapeutic treatment with albendazol and minimally invasive surgical procedures such as echo-assisted puncture (PAIR). The Ministers of Agriculture and Health attending the XII RIMSA approved Resolution RIMSA12.R7 requesting the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) to strengthen cooperative actions and coordination among countries and their institutions in matters related to hydatidosis control and prevention. In implementing this directive, the PAHO through the Program of Veterinary Public Health and its specialized center, the Pan American Center of Foot-and-Mouth Disease (PANAFTOSA), initiated actions to consolidate efforts carried out throughout the continent for hydatidosis control, establishing the mechanisms of collaboration among countries that have been developing control actions and drawing up a strategy of joint action aimed to strengthen and to support the actions \\ overall thrust.
- Published
- 2004
69. Seroprevalencia de hantavirus en roedores y casos humanos en el sur de la Argentina
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Mariela Alejandra García Cachau, Sergio Mancini, Gustavo Cantoni, Edmundo Larrieu, Eduardo Herrero, Jose Luis Labanchi, María de los Angeles Bruni, Paula Padula, Silvina Albarracin, Emiliano Alvarez, Odila Arellano, and Laura Jorgelina Cavagión
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Roedores ,Epidemiology ,Pulmonary syndrome ,Río Negro ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Argentina ,General Medicine ,Rodents ,Humanos ,Sindrome Pulmonar ,Síndrome Pulmonar por Hantavirus ,Epidemiología ,Epidemiologia ,Hantavirus - Abstract
En la Provincia de Río Negro, Argentina, se presentaron casos humanos de síndrome pulmonar por hantavirus (SPH) en la región de la cordillera andino patagónica. El virus Andes ha sido identificado en la región, tanto en el roedor Oligoryzomys longicaudatus como en seres humanos, demostrándose la transmisión principalmente del roedor al hombre y la factibilidad de la transmisión de persona a persona. El objetivo del presente trabajo es presentar nueva información sobre especies de roedores portadores de hantavirus en Argentina, su prevalencia de anticuerpos para hantavirus (período 1999-2001) y la relación del tamaño de las poblaciones de roedores y su seroprevalencia con la ocurrencia de casos humanos (período 1996-2001). Para ello, se procedió a la colocación de 3973 trampas para captura viva de roedores, tipo sherman en seis operativos efectuados entre octubre de 1999 y mayo de 2001. Se obtuvieron muestras de sangre de los roedores las que fueron procesadas mediante enzimoinmunoensayo con antígenos elaborados a partir de virus Andes. Una síntesis de los resultados indica 397 roedores capturados, con un éxito de trampeo del 10% y una prevalencia de anticuerpos contra hantavirus del 1.0%. Se observaron importantes diferencias en las especies capturadas en cada una de las regiones. Se capturaron O. longicaudatus y A. Olivaceus seropositivos y O. flavescens y C. Laucha potencialmente portadores de hantavirus Se registraron 6 casos humanos en el período 1993-1995 (correspondientes a estudios retrospectivos), 21 casos se notificaron en el período 1996-1998 y 6 en el período 1999-2001 Se analiza la correlación entre ocurrencia de casos humanos, seroprevalencia en roedores y éxito de trampeo. In the Province of Río Negro, Argentina, human cases of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) have occurred in the region of the Patagonian Andean range. The Andes virus has been identified in the region, both in the rodent Oligoryzomys longicaudatus and in human beings, demonstrating mainly transmission from rodents to human and the possibility of person-to-person transmission. The goal of this paper is to present new information on hantavirus rodent carrier species in Argentina, the prevalence of antibodies to hantavirus (1999-2001 period) and the relationship of the rodent population size and seroprevalence with the occurrence of human cases (1996-2001 period). To this end, a total of 3,973 Sherman type traps for capturing live rodents were placed in six campaigns from October 1999 to May 2001. Rodent blood samples were obtained and processed by means of enzymoimmunoassay with antigens developed from the Andes virus. A summary of results indicates 397 captured rodents, with a 10% trapping success rate and a 1.0% prevalence of antibodies to hantavirus. Considerable differences were observed in species captured in each region. Seropositive O. longicaudatus and A. olivaceus specimens, as well as potential hantavirus O. flavescens and C. laucha carriers, were captured. Six human cases were recorded during the 1993-1995 period (corresponding to retrospective studies), while 21 cases were reported in 1996-1998 and 6 in 1999-2001. The correlation between occurrence of human cases, seroprevalence in rodents and trapping success is analyzed. Fil: Larrieu, Edmundo. Secretaria de Estado de Salud, Provincia de Rio Negro; Argentina. Fil: Herrero, Eduardo. Universidad Nacional de la Pampa. Faculdad de Ciencias Veterinarias; Argentina. Fil: Cachau, Mariela Garcia. Secretaria de Estado de Salud, Provincia de Rio Negro; Argentina. Fil: Labanchi, Jose Luis. Secretaria de Estado de Salud, Provincia de Rio Negro; Argentina. Fil: Mancini, Sergio. Secretaria de Estado de Salud, Provincia de Rio Negro; Argentina. Fil: Padula, Paula. ANLIS Dr.C.G.Malbrán. Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Infecciosas; Argentina. Fil: Cantoni, Gustavo. Secretaria de Estado de Salud, Provincia de Rio Negro; Argentina. Fil: Cavagion, Laura. Universidad Nacional de la Pampa. Faculdad de Ciencias Veterinarias; Argentina. Fil: Alvarez, Emiliano. Universidad Nacional de la Pampa. Faculdad de Ciencias Veterinarias; Argentina. Fil: Bruni, Maria. Universidad Nacional de la Pampa. Faculdad de Ciencias Veterinarias; Argentina. Fil: Albarracin, Silvina. Secretaria de Estado de Salud, Provincia de Rio Negro; Argentina. Fil: Arellano, Odila. Secretaria de Estado de Salud, Provincia de Rio Negro; Argentina.
- Published
- 2003
70. Ultrasonographic diagnosis and medical treatment of human cystic echinococcosis in asymptomatic school age carriers: 5 years of follow-up
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Mario Del Carpio, Martín Odriozola, Hector Panomarenko, Gustavo Cantoni, Edmundo Larrieu, Alicia Perez, Jose Sustersic, Carlos Mercapide, Maria Fernanda Baeta Neves Alonso da Costa, Eduardo Herrero, Juan Carlos Salvitti, Jose Luis Labanchi, and Ricardo Bigatti
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Endemic Diseases ,National Health Programs ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Argentina ,Albendazole ,Asymptomatic ,Echinococcosis ,parasitic diseases ,Abdomen ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Child ,Ultrasonography ,Anthelmintics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Surgery ,Echinococcus ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,El Niño ,Insect Science ,Abdominal ultrasonography ,Carrier State ,Parasitology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
Hydatidosis or cystic echinococcosis (CE) caused by Echinococcus granulosus is endemic in the Province of Rio Negro, Argentina. The objective of this investigation was to evaluate the results of a program carried out in endemic areas of the Province of Rio Negro, Argentina, in the years 1997-2002. Abdominal ultrasonography was used, classifying the cases detected according to WHO guidelines. A treatment algorithm was defined which included observation, albendazol therapy, PAIR or surgery, according to cyst type and size. A total of 5745 schoolchildren were evaluated, detecting hydatid cyst carriers in 70 (1.2%). Of these; 40 (57.1%) were included in follow-up protocol, 25 (35.7%) in treatment protocol with albendazol, 2 (2.9%) with PAIR and 3 (4.3%) with conventional surgery. After a mean of 44 months, among 25 cases treated with albendazol, in 2 (8%) cysts underwent total involution, in 17 (68%) they presented positive changes, in one (4%) they remained unchanged and in 4 (16%) they progressed to type II, while 1 (4%) displayed negative evolutionary changes. Out of 39 cases under observation alone protocol, in 8 cases (21%) cysts underwent total involution, in 7 (18%) they presented positive changes, in 11 (28%) they remained unchanged, in 2 (5%) they progressed to Type II and in 11 (28%) they presented negative evolutionary changes and had to be included in the other protocol types. In this study, conventional surgery, was applied to 10% of detected cases. The combination of ultrasonographic screening and albendazol treatment showed promising results.
- Published
- 2003
71. A case-control study of the risk factors for cystic echinococcosis among the children of Rio Negro province, Argentina
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M. del Carpio, Sergio Moguillansky, G. Bianchi, Edmundo Larrieu, Costa Mt, and Z. E. Yadon
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Adolescent ,Helminthiasis ,Argentina ,Immediate family ,Dogs ,Echinococcosis ,Risk Factors ,Water Supply ,parasitic diseases ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Odds Ratio ,Animals ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Animal Husbandry ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Child ,Family Health ,Analysis of Variance ,Sheep ,biology ,Transmission (medicine) ,business.industry ,Case-control study ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Health Surveys ,Infectious Diseases ,El Niño ,Case-Control Studies ,Multivariate Analysis ,Parasitology ,Female ,business ,Demography - Abstract
In 1984 the prevalence of cystic echinococcosis (CE) in Rio Negro province in central Argentina reached alarming levels, with almost 6% of children aged 7-13 years infected with the causative agent, Echinococcus granulosus. Although the control activities developed between 1980-2000 have now lowered the prevalence of infection in this age-group to 1.1%, transmission of E. granulosus has clearly not ceased. The aim of the present study was to identify possible flaws in the control programme and the risk factors associated with CE. The 24 cases and 66 controls used were identified during a survey of the 1,070 schoolchildren attending 12 schools in Ingeniero Jacobacci, Rio Negro province. In interviews based around a standardized questionnaire, the adult female with responsibility for each subject (usually the mother but sometimes a grandmother or guardian) was asked 70 questions about the child and his or her immediate family, their contact with dogs and relevant environmentmental factors, and their level of contact with the control programme. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to determine odds ratios (OR) and their 95% confidence intervals (CI). The main risk factors found to be significantly associated with CE were having a family member with the disease (OR = 3.11; CI = 0.92-10.47), spending the first years of life surrounded by a large number of dogs (OR = 2.11; CI = 1.2-3.5), and having a father who slaughtered sheep at his workplace (OR = 1.14; CI = 1.04-1.24). Obtaining drinking water from a tap (OR = 0.28; CI = 0.08-1.01) also remained in the final model, as a protective factor.
- Published
- 2002
72. Epidemiological surveillance of human hydatidosis by means of ultrasonography: its contribution to the evaluation of control programs
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Edmundo Larrieu, Jorge Moguilensky, Juan Carlos Salvitti, Bernardo Frider, Martín Odriozola, and Gustavo Cantoni
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Rural Population ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Adolescent ,Veterinary (miscellaneous) ,Prevalence ,Helminthiasis ,Argentina ,medicine.disease_cause ,Asymptomatic ,Echinococcosis ,Epidemiology ,Infestation ,Abdomen ,Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Child ,Mass screening ,Ultrasonography ,Infection Control ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Echinococcus ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,El Niño ,Insect Science ,Population Surveillance ,Parasitology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Epidemiological surveillance for hydatidosis is based on initial determination and follow-up of the infestation rate in man, sheep and dogs. The use of ultrasonography (US) as a screening method has demonstrated its usefulness in detecting asymptomatic human carriers of abdominal hydatidosis. To evaluate the contribution of US to epidemiological surveillance within the framework of disease control programs, we performed 719 US studies in school children from 7 to 13 years of age, in rural areas of Rio Negro, Argentina, subjected to canine deparasitization during 1984/1986 and 1997/1998. In the first period, 15/268 (5.6%), while in the second, 5/451 (1.1%) carriers were detected (P < 0.0004). The average diameter of the cysts was 4.71 cm in 1984/1986 and 2.14 in 1997/1998. US as a mass screening method allows evaluation of early changes in human prevalence rates, closely related to infestation rates in sheeps and dogs, thus providing a sensitive indicator of the evaluation of control programs.
- Published
- 2001
73. Programa de control de la hidatidosis en la Provincia de Río Negro, Argentina.: 1980-1997
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Amar S. Thakur, Sergio Mancini, Edmundo Larrieu, Jose Luis Labanchi, Susana Romeo, Gustavo Cantoni, Eduardo Herrero, Ricardo Bigatti, Costa Mt, Gabriel Talmon, Daniel Araya, and Alicia Perez
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Rural Population ,Adolescent ,Urban Population ,Argentina ,Sheep Diseases ,Dogs ,Echinococcosis ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Humans ,Dog Diseases ,Cestode infections ,Child ,epidemiología ,Sheep ,Incidence ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Disease control ,hydatidosis ,Geography ,Child, Preschool ,hidatidosis ,Parasitology ,Female ,epidemiology ,Humanities ,control - Abstract
La hidatidosis constituye un serio problema de Salud Publica en la Provincia de Rio Negro, Argentina. Los factores que han motivado esta situacion incluyen una economia rural basada en la ganaderia ovina extensiva, bajas condiciones socioculturales en una porcion importante de la poblacion rural, habitos de faenamiento domiciliario de ovinos adultos para consumo humano con entrega de las visceras resultantes del acto para consumo de los perros e infraestructura de faena en pequenas comunidades rurales altamente deficiente. Esta situacion ha promovido la instrumentacion de un programa de control basado en la desparasitacion canina sistematica con praziquantel, la vigilancia con arecolina, la educacion sanitaria, el control de faena, la legislacion y la atencion de las personas. El programa, puesto en marcha en 1980, cubrio inicialmente con acciones sistematicas 51.479 km2, alcanzandose en 1992 120,013 km2 bajo control. 11.915 canes rurales han recibido 1,870,423 comprimidos de praziquantel con coberturas que en promedio fueron del 65%. Se efectuaron 21.444 controles de materia fecal canina mediante la dosificacion con bromhidrato de arecolina, (control anual del 11,2% de los canes bajo programa). La prevalencia equinococcosica inicial era de 41,5%, siendo en 1996 del 2,9%. La hidatidosis ovina, por su parte, presenta una disminucion acentuada de la prevalencia, ubicandose en 1996 en el 5,5%. En relacion a hidatidosis humana, 1,720 casos nuevos fueron diagnosticados en toda la provincia en el periodo 1980/1996, el 31,4% de los cuales correspondieron a infectados asintomaticos, mediante encuestas serologicas o ecograficas (48.826 encuestas serologicas a poblacion escolar y a pobladores rurales adultos y 2.762 encuestas ultrasonograficas). El numero de casos humanos nuevos en el grupo de edad 0-10 anos presenta una disminucion del 77% desde la puesta en marcha del programa. Por el contrario, zonas no tratadas muestran una tendencia estable en la aparicion de casos humanos nuevos. En el periodo 1980/1986 se produjeron 581 casos nuevos en las areas bajo programa, mientras que en el periodo 1990/1996 el numero de casos nuevos fue de 275. Las encuestas ultrasonograficas en poblacion asintomatica, por su parte, arrojaron tasas de positividad del 5,5% (1984), 4,1% (1986) y 2,1% (1996). El modelo desarrollado, basado en una estructura de ejecucion descentralizada, con activa participacion comunitaria, seleccion de tecnologias sencillas y enfoque de riesgo; sustentado en el tiempo sobre la base de una firme decision politica de continuidad programatica y a su bajo costo operativo habria en tal sentido, modificado la capacidad de reproduccion del parasito.
- Published
- 2000
74. Rate of infection and of reinfection by Echinococcus granulosus in rural dogs of the province of Rio Negro, Argentina
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Edmundo Larrieu, Jose Luis Labanchi, Liliana Iglesias, Gustavo Cantoni, Costa Mt, Daniel Araya, Amar S. Thakur, Alberto Aquino, Sergio Mancini, Eduardo Herrero, and Ricardo Bigatti
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Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prevalence ,Argentina ,Rural Health ,Dogs ,Echinococcosis ,Recurrence ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Helminths ,Animals ,Anthelmintic ,Dog Diseases ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Retrospective Studies ,General Veterinary ,biology ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Echinococcus ,Praziquantel ,Taeniidae ,Parasitology ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Hydatidosis (cystic echinococcosis) constitutes a serious public health problem in the Province of Rio Negro, Argentina. In the present work it was intended to evaluate the prevalence of the canine echinococcosis in rural areas of the Province of Rio Negro and studied the reinfection rate in dogs after treatment with Praziquantel during the period 1980–1997. A total of 496 dogs were studied in 18 canine concentrations in order to establish the initial prevalence rate which was 42.3%. From 1980 onward dogs should have been systematically treated with anthelmintic every 2 months in rural areas and every 6 months in urban areas. We estimated that approximately 65% of dogs were treated. To determine the reinfection rate, 476 dogs (1984) and 598 dogs (1996) were studied after anthelmintic treatment during two sequential time periods (0–45; 46–90 days). In both cases treated animals were compared with untreated dogs. Prevalences were 3.5%, 6.7% and 21.3% in 1984 and 0.8%, 4.0% and 10.0% in 1996. For the purpose of surveillance a total number of 21,444 dogs were studied during 18 years. Prevalence of Echinococcus granulosus decreased significantly in the first year from 42.3% to 6.1%.
- Published
- 2000
75. Evaluation of the losses produced by hydatidosis and cost/benefit analysis of different strategic interventions of control in the Province of Rio Negro, Argentina
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Alicia Perez, Juan Carlos Salvitti, Edmundo Larrieu, G. Cantoni, Amar Thakur, M. del Carpio, S. Romeo, Carlos Mercapide, and Costa Mt
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,treatment ,Medical treatment ,business.industry ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Argentina ,Health Care Costs ,costo ,Disease control ,Surgery ,hydatidosis ,tratamiento ,Echinococcosis ,cost ,hidatidosis ,medicine ,Humans ,Parasitology ,Cestode infections ,business ,control ,Humanities - Abstract
Los programas de control de la hidatidosis requieren de la elaboración de ecuaciones costo/beneficio para la justificación técnica del mantenimiento de su fuente de financiamiento. Así, el objetivo del presente trabajo es analizar los costos para los servicios de salud de la Provincia de Río Negro, Argentina, la atención médica de los casos económicamente alternativas futuras en las estrategias de control. Para ello se obtuvo información de casos humanos atendidos en tres hospitales, tratados con métodos quirúrgicos convencionales, con quimioterapia y con PAIR (punción, aspiración, inyección y reaspiración), procediéndose a valorizar las prácticas médicas efectuadas. Se estimaron asimismo costos del programa de control basado en la desparasitación de perros y de programas alternativos basados en diagnóstico masivo en personas mediante ecografía y serología, y tratamientos no convencionales. Se estimmó un costo de tratamiento de US$ 4.511 por paciente, US$ 5.936 en cirugía convencional, US$ 1988 en PAIR y US$ 1.350 en quimioterapia con albendazol. Los costos globales de atención médica para 1997 fueron estimados en US$ 293.215, resultando un 77% inferiores a 1980. Se estimaron los costos operativos del programa tradicional de control en US$ 440000 y uno alternativo basado en diagnóstico y tratamiento en US$ 260.218. Se analizan relaciones costo/beneficio para cada una de las estrategias planteadas.
- Published
- 2000
76. Hidatidosis en la provincia de La Pampa, Argentina, 1998
- Author
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Arian Pombar, Edmundo Larrieu, Claudio Calvo, Lilia Mabel Gino, Carlos Aguado, Roberto Lamberti, and Emiliano Alvarez
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Endemic Diseases ,Taenia ,Argentina ,hydatidosis ,Dogs ,Echinococcosis ,hidatidosis ,Prevalence ,epimiology ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Parasitology ,Dog Diseases ,control ,Retrospective Studies ,epidemiología - Abstract
Echinococcus granulosus is the agent that causes the classical hydatidosis or cystic echinoccosis. The most spread cycle in South America is the sheep-dog cycle, and offers favorable conditions for the development of the parasite. As the province of La Pampa shows an endemic presence with notification of cases and infected dogs, the present work has the aim of contributing to the study of the distribution and prevalence of the disease in the distritc of Maracó, La Pampa, Argentina. Dogs of 36 farms that had ovines, were dosed with arecoline hydrobromide at a dose of 3.5 mg/kg. Dogs from 27 (75%) farms resulted positive to Tenia sp. and 3 (8.3%) to E. granulosus. Blood samples were taken to all the people living in all the inquired farm and were processed by the ELISA test for hydatidosis. A retrospective survey on cases of human hydatidosis attended in the Hospital of General Pico, head if the sanitary region, and in two private clinics was performed. Analysis of clinical records indicated 11 cases operated during the period 1996/1997 (annual incidence rate of 6.8 x 100,000 inhabitants). It is of public health interest to fulfill epidemiologic investigations in other districts of the Province of La Pampa with the aim of delimitating the endemic distribution within the province and also organizing surveillance systems o human hydatidosis. Echinococcus granulosus es el agente causal de la hidatidosis clásica o equinococcosis quística. En América del Sur el ciclo mas extendido es el que involucra al perro y la oveja al existir condiciones ideales para la existencia del parásito. En la Provincia de La Pampa mantiene una presencia endémica con notificación de casos de infección humana y perros infectados con E. granulosus. En el presente trabajo de evalúa la prevalencia y distribución en el Departamento Maracó, Provincia de La Pampa. Perros de 36 establecimientos ganaderos fueron evaluados con bromhidrato de arecolina a la dosis de 3,5 mg/kg. En 27 establecimientos se detectó Taenia sp. y en tres E. granulosus. Se tomaron muestras de sangre de todos los habitantes de los estacimientos ganaderos las que fueron procesadas por enzimoinmunoensayo (ELISA). Asimismo, se efectuó un estudio retrospectivo sobre casos de hidatidosis tratados en el hospital de General Pico y dos clínicas privadas. Once casos humanos fueron tratados en período 96/97 (tasa deincidencia 6,79 x 100000). La Provincia de La Pampa parece mantener una presencia endémica con notificación de casos y perros infectados. A consecuencia de ello es de interés sanitario ampliar las investigaciones a otros departamentos provinciales a los efectos de delimitar el área endémica de distribución y organizar sistemas de vigilancia epidemiológica de la enfermedad.
- Published
- 1999
77. Tratamiento de quistes hidatícos hepáticos por aspiración percutánea e inyección de solución salina hipertónica: Resultados de un trabajo cooperativo
- Author
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Mario Del Carpio, Juan D. Molina, Eduardo López, Daniel Correa, Víctor Peláez, Carlos Kugler, Edmundo Larrieu, and Marcelo Guangiroli
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous aspiration ,Percutaneous ,business.industry ,vaciamiento percutáneo ,Quiste hidatídico ,medicine.disease ,Echinococcosis ,Hypertonic saline ,Surgery ,tratamiento ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,hígado ,Parasitology ,Cyst ,business ,Prospective cohort study ,Anaphylaxis ,Cooperative work - Abstract
Percutaneous puncture-aspiration-injection-reaspiration (PAIR) of hydatid liver cysts, was performed in 38 patients 14-80 years old, with a total of 60 liver hydatid cysts. After aspiration under computed tomography guidance, hypertonic saline was injected into the cystic cavities of patients as a scolecidal agent. No major complications were associated with the procedures. In the follow-up period of 18 months, control CT scans of 35 cysts revealed a gradual decrease in cyst size with a mean volume reduction of 66%. Complications included two cases of urticaria, one case of anaphylaxis and one subcapsular hematoma. No mortality occurred. It is concluded that percutaneous aspiration and hypertonic saline injection for liver hydatid cysts appears to be an effective form of treatment and may eventually prove to be an alternative to surgical intervention.
- Published
- 1999
78. Long-term outcome of asymptomatic liver hydatidosis
- Author
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Edmundo Larrieu, Bernardo Frider, and Martín Odriozola
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Echinococcosis, Hepatic ,Helminthiasis ,Autopsy ,Asymptomatic ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Cyst ,Serologic Tests ,Longitudinal Studies ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Ultrasonography ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Echinococcosis ,Surgery ,Natural history ,Cohort ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine the outcome of asymptomatic liver hydatid cysts in a cohort of 33 out of 59 carriers by evaluating clinical and ultrasonographic (US) changes 10-12 years after initial diagnosis.We compared US features and cyst size with the original descriptions from 1984-1986. Patients were questioned about hydatid-related symptoms and signs.Thirty-three of the 59 carriers could be reevaluated, five (15.2%) of whom had undergone surgery without presenting symptoms, while of 28 unoperated cases, 21 (75%) remained asymptomatic. Of the unoperated cases evaluated by US, in 8/14 (57.1%) there were no modifications in cyst size during the 10-12-year period, in five (35.7%) growth was slight (3 cm) and in one (7.1%) the cyst grew 4 cm. Mean cyst growth in all 14 cases was 0.7 cm.Despite the limited number of cases, our results show that most asymptomatic liver hydatid cases (75%) remain symptom-free for more than 10 years, regardless of cyst size or type. We believe that such carriers are at low risk of developing complications, so that it is difficult to establish specific rules for their therapy, if any. Longitudinal follow-up of larger series of asymptomatic hepatic hydatidosis cases is essential to gain a deeper insight into the natural history of such patients, and to draw up comprehensive guidelines for treatment.
- Published
- 1999
79. Participación comunitaria y tecnología en el diagnóstico precoz de la hidatidosis humana
- Author
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Edmundo Larrieu, Alicia Perez, G. Cantoni, Gimenez Nelsy, Emilio Coltorti, J. Alvarez, and Eduardo A. Guarnera
- Subjects
Infectious Diseases ,Community participation ,Political science ,Inmunodiagnóstico ,Atención Primaria ,General Medicine ,Atencion primaria ,Hidatidosis ,Humanities - Abstract
The basic strategy for development of hydatid struggle programs is in the actuality: Primary Attention of Health. In the present work and in this instance, it's arm a precocious detection system of hydatid disease, fixed in immunologic diagnostic by means of ELISA technical beginning with blood capillary samples, taked in filter paper by teachers and sanitaries agents from official services of Rio Negro Province. 177 teachers and 45 sanitaries agents were trained, correspondent to 25 schools, 3 lodging schools and 9 Hospitals all of them from rural area. 890 blood samples during the training were obtained. Lastly, the trained personal armed the system and they obtained 728 samples in the beginning of the Program. It hadn't statistical differences in the reactivity of both samples. The serological prevalence found was 1.32%. The activity displayed by teachers and sanitaries agents permited to detect 21 new cases it was the 20% of new cases diagnosticated in this area in the period of work. The viability and the importance of the incorporation of non traditional effectors into the Hydatid Control Programs is discussed. La estrategia básica para el desarrollo de programas de lucha contra la hidatidosis es en la actualidad la de atención primaria de la salud. En el presente trabajo, y en ese marco, se instrumenta un sistema de detección precoz de la hidatidosis basado en el diagnóstico inmunológico mediante la técnica de Elisa, a partir de muestras de sangre capilar tomadas en papel de filtro por maestras y agentes sanitarios de los servicios oficiales de la provincia de Rio Negro. Fueron entrenadas 177 maestras y 45 agentes sanitarios correspondientes a 25 escuelas, 3 albergues y 9 hospitales, todos del medio rural. Se obtuvieron 890 muestras de sangre durante el entrenamiento. Posteriormente el personal entrenado instrumentó el sistema obteniendo 728 muestras al inicio del programa. No hubo diferencias estadísticas en la reactividad de ambas muestras. La prevalencia serológica hallada fue del 1.32%. La actividad desplegada por maestras y agentes sanitarios permitió detectar 21 casos nuevos, lo cual constituyó el 20% de los casos nuevos diagnosticados en el área en el período de trabajo. Se discute la viabilidad y la importancia de la incorporación de efectores no tradicionales en los Programas de Control de la Hidatidosis.
- Published
- 1993
80. Contribution to Hydatidosis as an urban zoonosis
- Author
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Edmundo Larrieu, Omar Zavaleta, and Jorge Iriarte
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Public health ,Zoonosis ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,Spite ,medicine ,Rural area ,Socioeconomics ,Hidatidosis ,Socioeconomic status - Abstract
En la República Argentina, la hidatidosis constituye un serio problema que afecta a la salud publica y tiene graves repercusiones socioeconómicas. Las fuertes corrientes urbanisticas han traido consigo el traslado de algunas costumbres rurales hacia los centros poblados. A partir ae ello la hidatidosis en las areas endêmicas ha adquirido importância como zoonosis urbana. Si bien las cifras de infección canina halladas (1.12%) son significativamente inferiores que en las áreas rurales de la misma región, la capacidad potencial de infectar al hombre es muy superior en canes domiciliados en áreas de gran densidad demográfica. Las altas tasas de infección humana halladas son demostrativas de los aspectos señalados. In Argentina hydatidosis is a serious problem of Public Health with socioeconomic effects Strong urbanistic populational streams brought from the country local habits to urban areas. Hydatidosis became them an urban zoonosis. In spite of data on canine infection found (1.12%) are lower than those found in rural areas from the same region, the potential capacity to infect humans is higher in dogs from areas of high demographic density. The high incidences of human infections found are in accordance with this idea.
- Published
- 1988
81. Human hydatidosis: field ecography to detect groups of risk and to evaluate the control program
- Author
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Edmundo Larrieu, Bernardo Frider, Gustavo Andreani, Georgina Andreani, Alberto Aquino, and Reinaldo de la Fuente
- Subjects
Grupos de Riesgo ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,business.industry ,Population ,Ecografía ,Early detection ,General Medicine ,Epidemiologic Surveillance ,Infectious Diseases ,Control ,medicine ,Radiology ,Hidatidosis ,business ,education - Abstract
El desarrollo de equipos ultrasonográficos portátiles ha permitido incorporar esta técnica a los métodos de detección precoz de la Hidatidosis Humana. En esta experiência fueron efectuadas 690 ecografias, hallándose un 5.51% de imágenes compatibles en población general y un 12.24% en grupos de riesgo (convivientes de casos operados). Se observo una disminución significativa de los porcentajes de infección en el hombre en población general en Ias áreas bajo programa de control, utilizándose Ias encuestas ecográficas para esta determinación. Se concluyó sobre la posibilidad de incorporar la ecografía a los sistemas de vigilância epidemiológica de la hidatidosis humana. The development of small ultrasonographic equipment has permitted to incorporate this technique to the methods of early detection of Human Hydatidosis. 689 ecographies were carried out in this experience, and 5.51% of compatible images in the whole population, and 12.24% in groups of risk (those living together with the operated ones) were found. It was observed a significant decrease in the infection percentages in man in the whole population of areas under Control Program, using the ecographic screening. In conclusion, ecography might be incorporated to the epidemiologic surveillance system of human Hydatidosis.
- Published
- 1989
82. Seroepidemiology of human hydatidosis: use of dried blood samples on filter paper
- Author
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Emilio Cohorti, Alberto Aquino, Eduardo A. Guarnera, Edmundo Larrieu, and Graciela Santillán
- Subjects
Immunodiffusion ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,Screening test ,Population ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Echinococcosis ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Dried blood ,education ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Blood Specimen Collection ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,Filter paper ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Echinococcus ,Surgery ,Infectious Diseases ,Blood Preservation ,Antigens, Helminth ,Immunoassay ,Parasitology ,business ,Field conditions - Abstract
Programmes for the control of hydatidosis caused by Echinococcus granulosus in Argentina use an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) as a screening test for population surveys aimed at detecting asymptomatic patients. Persons thus selected are referred to health centres for the arc 5 double diffusion test and imaging techniques. One of the most costly procedures of these surveys is the collection of blood samples under field conditions; the possibility of collecting dry blood samples on filter paper was therefore investigated. In a survey of 497 rural inhabitants of an endemic area, the same number of hydatidosis cases (22) were identified by EIA using (i) serum samples and (ii) capillary blood samples obtained by finger prick and collected on filter paper. The latter system was both simpler and cheaper.
- Published
- 1988
83. Ultrasound scanning as a screening technique for hydatidosis in developing countries
- Author
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Juan C. Chiesa, Emma Martinez, Gaston A. Saint Martin, Edmundo Larrieu, and Carlos Dapcich
- Subjects
Echinococcosis, Hepatic ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Argentina ,Developing country ,Hydatid cyst ,Rural Health ,Abdominal cysts ,Ultrasound screening ,Sonographer ,Screening method ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medical physics ,Radiology ,Diagnostic Errors ,business ,Developing Countries ,Ultrasonography ,Field conditions - Abstract
This study presents new evidence as to the usefulness of ultrasound scanning in field conditions, to screen out hydatidosis in endemic areas, and to compare its detection capability with serological methods. It also intends to demonstrate that for an efficient rural ultrasound screening, neither an experienced ultra sonographer nor expensive and sophisticated equipment is necessary, it can be done by suitably trained personnel (eg, nurse, public health worker), using basic equipment, without public health installations or electricity, thus making it a feasible, simple, fast, and cheap screening method for hydatidosis.
- Published
- 1988
84. Critical analysis of cystic echinococcosis control programs and praziquantel use in South America, 1974-2010 Análisis crítico de los programas de control de la equinococosis quística y uso del prazicuantel en América del Sur, 1974-2010
- Author
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Edmundo Larrieu and Fabian Zanini
Catalog
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