19 results on '"Lasala MB"'
Search Results
2. Identifying causes of loss to follow up in newly diagnosed HIV‐infected patients
- Author
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Fridman, V, Bello, Ns, and Lasala, Mb
- Subjects
Medical appointments and schedules -- Management ,HIV patients -- Medical examination -- Management ,Company business management ,Health - Abstract
7‐11 November 2010, Tenth International Congress on Drug Therapy in HIV Infection, Glasgow, UK, Purpose of the study The aim of the study was to evaluate the cause of the lost to follow‐up in the newly diagnosed HIV positive patients, after the first visit [...]
- Published
- 2010
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3. Analysis of serious non-AIDS events among HIV-infected adults at Latin American sites
- Author
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Belloso, WH, primary, Orellana, LC, additional, Grinsztejn, B, additional, Madero, JS, additional, La Rosa, A, additional, Veloso, VG, additional, Sanchez, J, additional, Ismerio Moreira, R, additional, Crabtree-Ramirez, B, additional, Garcia Messina, O, additional, Lasala, MB, additional, Peinado, J, additional, and Losso, MH, additional
- Published
- 2010
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4. Quality of Life in Patients Treated with First-Line Antiretroviral Therapy Containing Nevirapine And/Or Efavirenz
- Author
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van Leth, Frank, Conway, Brian, Laplumé, Hector, Martin, Des, Fisher, Martin, Jelaska, Ante, Wit, Ferdinand W, Lange, Joep MA, Laplumé, H, Lasala, MB, Losso, MH, Bogdanowicz, E, Lattes, R, Krolewiecki, A, Zala, C, Orcese, C, Terlizzi, S, Duran, A, Ebensrteijn, J, Bloch, M, Russell, O, Russell, DB, Roth, NR, Eu, B, Austin, D, Gowers, A, Quan, D, Demonty, J, Peleman, R, Vandercam, B, Vogelaers, D, van der Gucht, B, van Wanzeele, F, Moutschen, MM, Badaro, R, Grinsztejn, B, Schechter, M, Uip, D, Netto, EN, Coelho, SS, Badaró, F, Pilotto, JH, Schubach, A, Barros, ML, Leite, OHM, Kiffer, CRV, Wunsch, CT, Nunes, D, Catalani, A, de Cassia Alves, Lira R, Dossin, TJ, D'Alló de Oliveira, MT, Martini, S, Conway, B, de Wet, JJ, Montaner, JSG, Murphy, C, Woodfall, B, Sestak, P, Phillips, P, Montessori, V, Harris, M, Tesiorowski, A, Willoughby, B, Voigt, R, Farley, J, Reynolds, R, Devlaming, S, Livrozet, JM, Rozenbaum, W, Sereni, D, Valantin, MA, Lascoux, C, Milpied, B, Brunet, C, Billaud, E, Huart, A, Reliquet, V, Charonnat, MF, Sicot, M, Esnault, JL, Slama, L, Staszewski, S, Bickel, M, Lazanas, MK, Stavrianeas, N, Mangafas, N, Zagoreos, I, Kourkounti, S, Paparizos, V, Botsi, Ch, Clarke, S, Brannigan, E, Boyle, N, Chiriani, A, Leoncini, F, Montella, F, Francesco, L, Ambu, S, Farese, A, Gargiulo, M, Di Sora, F, Lavria, F, Folgori, F, Beniowski, M, Boron Kaczmarska, A, Halota, W, Prokopowicz, D, Bander, DB, Leszuzyszyn-Pynka, MLP, Wnuk, AW, Bakowska, E, Pulik, P, Flisiak, R, Wiercinska-Drapalo, A, Mularska, E, Witor, A, Antunes, F, Sarmento, RSE, Doroana, M, Horta, AA, Vasconcelos, O, Andrews, SM, Huisamen, CB, Johnson, D, Martin, O, Bekker, L-G, Maartens, G, Wilson, D, Visagie, CJ, David, NJ, Rattley, M, Nettleship, E, Martin, DJ, Keyser, V, Moraites, TM, Moorhouse, MA, Pitt, JA, Orrell, CJ, Bester, C, Parboosing, R, Moodley, P, Gathiram, V, Woolf, D, Bernasconi, E, Magenta, L, Cardiello, P, Kroon, E, Ungsedhapand, C, Fisher, M, Wilkins, EGL, Stockwell, E, Day, J, Daintith, RS, Perry, N, Timaeus, C, Intosh-Roffet, J Mc, Powell, A, Youle, M, Tyrer, M, Madge, S, Drinkwater, A, Cuthbertson, Z, Carroll, A, Becker, S, Katner, H, Rimland, D, Saag, MS, Thompson, M, Witt, M, Aguilar, MM, LaVoy, A, Illeman, M, Guerrero, M, Gatell, J, Belsey, E, Hirschel, B, Potarca, A, Cronenberg, M, Kreekel, L, Meester, R, Khodabaks, J, Botma, H-J, Esrhir, N, Farida, I, Feenstra, M, Jansen, K, Klotz, A, Mulder, M, Ruiter, G, Bass, CB, Pluymers, E, de Vlegelaer, E, Leeneman (VCL), R, Carlier, H, van Steenberge, E, and Hall, D
- Abstract
Objective To assess whether differences in safety profiles between nevirapine (NVP) and efavirenz (EFV), as observed in the 2NN study, translated into differences in ‘health related quality of life’ (HRQoL).Design A sub-study of the 2NN study, with antiretro-viral-naive patients randomly allocated to NVP (once or twice daily), EFV or NVP+EFV, in addition to stavudine and lamivudine.Methods Comparing differences in changes of HRQoL over 48 weeks as measured with the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) questionnaire, using analysis of variance.Results The 2NN study enrolled 1216 patients. No validated questionnaires were available for 244 patients, and 55 patients had no HRQoL data at all, leaving 917 patients eligible for this sub-study. A total of 471 (51%) had HRQoL measurements both at baseline and week 48. The majority (69%) of patients without HRQoL measurements did, however, complete the study. The change in the physical health score (PHS) was 3.9 for NVP, 3.4 for EFV and 2.4 for NVP+EFV (P=0.712). For the mental health score (MHS) these values were 6.1, 7.0 and 3.9, respectively (P=0.098). A baseline plasma HIV-1 RNA concentration (pVL) =100 000 copies/ml and a decline in pVL (per log10) were independently associated with an increase of PHS. An increase of MHS was only associated with pVL decline. Patients experiencing an adverse event during follow-up had a comparable change in PHS but a significantly smaller change in MHS, compared with those without an adverse event.Conclusions First-line ART containing NVP and/or EFV leads to an improvement in HRQoL. The gain in HRQoL was similar for NVP and EFV, but slightly lower for the combination of these drugs.
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- 2004
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5. Clinical, microbiological, and genetic characteristics of heteroresistant vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia in a teaching hospital.
- Author
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Di Gregorio S, Perazzi B, Ordoñez AM, De Gregorio S, Foccoli M, Lasala MB, García S, Vay C, Famiglietti A, and Mollerach M
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- Area Under Curve, Argentina epidemiology, Bacteremia epidemiology, Colony Count, Microbial, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Genotype, Hospitals, Teaching, Humans, Prospective Studies, Staphylococcal Infections epidemiology, Bacteremia microbiology, Staphylococcal Infections microbiology, Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Vancomycin Resistance
- Abstract
The emergence of vancomycin intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (VISA) and heterogeneous VISA (hVISA) is of major concern worldwide. Our objective was to investigate the prevalence, phenotypic and molecular features of hVISA strains isolated from bacteremic patients and to determine the clinical significance of the hVISA phenotype in patients with bacteremia. A total of 104 S. aureus blood isolates were collected from a teaching hospital of Argentina between August 2009 and November 2010. No VISA isolate was recovered, and 3 out of 92 patients (3.3%) were infected with hVISA, 2 of them methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) (4.5% of MRSA). Macro Etest and prediffusion method detected 3/3 and 2/3 hVISA respectively. Considering the type of bacteremia, the three cases were distributed as follows: two patients had suffered multiple episodes of bacteremia (both hVISA strains recovered in the second episode), while only one patient had suffered a single episode of bacteremia with hVISA infection. MRSA bloodstream isolates exhibiting the hVISA phenotype were related to HA-MRSA Cordobes clone (ST5-SCCmec I-spa t149) and MRSA Argentinean pediatric clone (ST100-SCCmec IVNV-spa t002), but not to CA-MRSA-ST30-SCCmec IV-spa t019 clone that was one of the most frequent in our country. Although still relatively infrequent in our hospital, hVISA strains were significantly associated with multiple episodes of bacteremia (p=0.037) and genetically unrelated.
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- 2015
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6. Chagas disease in the immunosuppressed patient.
- Author
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Lattes R and Lasala MB
- Subjects
- Chagas Disease diagnosis, Chagas Disease drug therapy, Global Health, Humans, Treatment Outcome, Antiprotozoal Agents therapeutic use, Chagas Disease epidemiology, Chagas Disease pathology, Immunocompromised Host
- Abstract
This review addresses relevant aspects of Chagas disease in the immunocompromised host. Chagas disease--one of the world's most neglected diseases-has become a global public health concern. Novel transmission modalities, such as organ transplantation, evidence of parasite persistence in chronically infected individuals--with the potential for reactivation under immunosuppression--and the prolonged survival of immunosuppressed patients call for an appraisal of the disease in this particular setting. The management and outcome of solid organ transplantation in the infected recipient with special focus on heart transplantation is addressed. The guidelines for management and the outcome of the recipients of organs from infected donors are discussed, and comments on haematopoietic stem cell transplantation are included. Finally, Chagas disease in other situations of impairment of the immune system, such as HIV/AIDS and autoimmune diseases, are considered. Immunosuppression has become an increasingly frequent condition that might modify the natural history of Trypanosoma cruzi infection. A number of strategies are available for Chagas disease management in the immunosuppressed patient. First, according to recent recommendations from the health authorities in Argentina, most infected patients would benefit from being treated at diagnosis. This has not been validated for patients with different immunosuppressive disorders. A different strategy would involve treating only patients with documented reactivation (either parasitaemia or clinical manifestations). These different approaches are discussed. To reach a diagnosis of parasitaemia, monitoring is essential, either with conventional methods or with molecular techniques that are not yet available in all centres. Collaborative studies are needed to improve the level of evidence, which will allow for better guidelines., (© 2014 The Authors Clinical Microbiology and Infection © 2014 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.)
- Published
- 2014
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7. An improved DNA isolation technique for PCR detection of Strongyloides stercoralis in stool samples.
- Author
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Repetto SA, Alba Soto CD, Cazorla SI, Tayeldin ML, Cuello S, Lasala MB, Tekiel VS, and González Cappa SM
- Subjects
- Adult, Animals, DNA, Helminth genetics, Humans, Larva, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Species Specificity, Strongyloides stercoralis genetics, Strongyloidiasis parasitology, DNA, Helminth isolation & purification, Feces parasitology, Strongyloides stercoralis isolation & purification, Strongyloidiasis diagnosis
- Abstract
Strongyloides stercoralis is a nematode that causes severe infections in immunocompromised patients. The low parasitic burden of chronically infected patients makes diagnosis difficult to achieve by conventional methods. Here, an in-house (IH) method for the isolation of parasite DNA from stools and a PCR assay for the molecular diagnosis of S. stercoralis were optimized. DNA yield and purity improved with the IH method which included a step of incubation of stool samples with a glycine-SDS buffer and mechanical disruption prior to DNA extraction. For the PCR assay, the addition of bovine serum albumin was required to neutralize inhibitors present in stool. The analytical sensitivity of the PCR using DNA as template, isolated with the IH method, was superior to the commercial one. This study demonstrates that a combined method that adds the step of glycine-SDS buffer incubation plus mechanical disruption prior to DNA isolation with the commercial kit increased PCR sensitivity to levels of the IH method. Finally, our assay was tested on 17 clinical samples. With the IH method for DNA isolation, a S. stercoralis specific band was detected by PCR in the first stool sample in all patients (17/17), while with the commercial kit, our S. stercoralis-specific band was only observed in 7 samples. The superior efficiency of the IH and combined methods over the commercial kit was demonstrated when applied to clinical samples with low parasitic burden. These results show that the DNA extraction procedure is a key to increase sensitivity of the S. stercoralis PCR assay in stool samples. The method developed here could help to improve the molecular diagnosis of S. stercoralis., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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8. Analysis of suppressor and non-suppressor FOXP3+ T cells in HIV-1-infected patients.
- Author
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Arruvito L, Sabatté J, Pandolfi J, Baz P, Billordo LA, Lasala MB, Salomón H, Geffner J, and Fainboim L
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- Adult, Aged, Cell Count, Cohort Studies, Cytokines biosynthesis, Disease Susceptibility, Flow Cytometry, HIV Infections pathology, Humans, Lymphocyte Subsets immunology, Middle Aged, T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory immunology, Tissue Donors, Young Adult, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Forkhead Transcription Factors metabolism, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology
- Abstract
Recently, it was shown that peripheral blood FOXP3+CD4+ T cells are composed of three phenotypic and functionally distinct subpopulations. Two of them having in vitro suppressive effects were characterized as resting Treg cells (rTregs) and activated Treg cells (aTregs). A third subset, identified as FOXP3+ non-Tregs, does not display any suppressor activity and produce high levels of Th1 and Th17 cytokines upon stimulation. In the present study we focus on the characteristics of these three subsets of FOXP3+CD4+ T cells in untreated HIV-1-infected patients. We found that the absolute counts of rTregs, aTregs and FOXP3+ non-Tregs were reduced in HIV-1 patients compared with healthy donors. The relative frequency of rTregs and aTregs was similar in HIV-1 patients and healthy donors, while the frequency of FOXP3+ non-Tregs was significantly higher in HIV-1 patients, reaching a maximum in those patients with the lower values of CD4 counts. Contrasting with the observations made in FOXP3- CD4+ T cells, we did not find a negative correlation between the number of rTregs, aTregs or FOXP3+ non-Tregs and virus load. Studies performed with either whole PBMCs or sorted aTregs and FOXP3+ non-Tregs cells showed that these two populations of FOXP3+ T cells were highly permissive to HIV-1 infection. Upon infection, FOXP3+ non-Tregs markedly down-regulates its capacity to produce Th1 and Th17 cytokines, however, they retain the ability to produce substantial amounts of Th2 cytokines. This suggests that FOXP3+ non-Tregs might contribute to the polarization of CD4+ T cells into a Th2 profile, predictive of a poor outcome of HIV-1-infected patients.
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- 2012
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9. Endocarditis caused by methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus with reduced susceptibility to vancomycin: a case report.
- Author
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Perazzi B, Bello N, Mollerach M, Vay C, Lasala MB, and Famiglietti A
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- 2011
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10. High rate of strongyloidosis infection, out of endemic area, in patients with eosinophilia and without risk of exogenous reinfections.
- Author
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Repetto SA, Durán PA, Lasala MB, and González-Cappa SM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Chronic Disease, Endemic Diseases, Feces parasitology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, South America epidemiology, Strongyloidiasis complications, Young Adult, Eosinophilia etiology, Strongyloidiasis epidemiology
- Abstract
Strongyloides stercoralis chronic infections are usually asymptomatic and underestimated. We used direct fresh stool examination, Ritchie's method, and agar plate culture for diagnosis in patients with eosinophilia and previous residence in endemic areas. The frequency of strongyloidosis detected among these patients was high: 21 of 42 were positive. Among them, 10 were positive only by agar plate culture. After ivermectin treatment, patients resulted negative for parasitological tests and reduced their eosinophil counts. Half of the submitted patients that were followed 4-12 months after treatment remained negative without eosinophilia, except one who showed an eosinophil ascending curve before reappearance of larvae in stools. The high frequency of strongyloidosis found in this group emphasizes the relevance of including this parasitosis among differential diagnosis in patients with eosinophilia and past risk of S. stercoralis infection to prevent disseminated infections secondary to corticoid therapy.
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- 2010
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11. Congenital candidiasis: confirmation of mother-neonate transmission using molecular analysis techniques.
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Tiraboschi IC, Niveyro C, Mandarano AM, Messer SA, Bogdanowicz E, Kurlat I, and Lasala MB
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- Candida albicans classification, Candida albicans genetics, Catheterization, DNA Fingerprinting, Environmental Microbiology, Female, Fungemia microbiology, Genotype, Groin microbiology, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Karyotyping, Mothers, Mouth microbiology, Mycological Typing Techniques, Placenta microbiology, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length, Pregnancy, Premature Birth, Umbilicus microbiology, Candida albicans isolation & purification, Candidiasis diagnosis, Candidiasis transmission, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious microbiology
- Abstract
We describe a case of congenital acquired candidiasis in a preterm female delivered through Caesarean section due to the premature rupture of the amniotic membrane. The neonate presented with suspected chorioamnionitis and erythematous desquamative skin. Candida albicans was isolated from the placenta, mouth, groin, and periumbilical lesions. The infant developed candidemia due to Candida albicans and the same yeast was also isolated from a catheter. Culture inoculated with swabs from the mouth and vagina of the mother yielded C. albicans and C. krusei. All C. albicans isolates from the mother and the neonate were visually indistinguishable by molecular typing techniques which included chromosomal karyotyping and restriction endonuclease analysis followed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. These findings allowed the clinical condition to be confirmed as congenital acquisition of candidiasis in this case.
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- 2010
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12. HLA-driven convergence of HIV-1 viral subtypes B and F toward the adaptation to immune responses in human populations.
- Author
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Dilernia DA, Jones L, Rodriguez S, Turk G, Rubio AE, Pampuro S, Gomez-Carrillo M, Bautista CT, Deluchi G, Benetucci J, Lasala MB, Lourtau L, Losso MH, Perez H, Cahn P, and Salomón H
- Subjects
- Antigens, Viral genetics, Biological Evolution, Epitopes genetics, Gene Products, gag genetics, Gene Products, gag immunology, HIV-1 immunology, HLA-B Antigens immunology, Humans, Immunity, Models, Statistical, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic immunology, HIV-1 genetics, HLA Antigens immunology, Mutation, Selection, Genetic
- Abstract
Background: Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte (CTL) response drives the evolution of HIV-1 at a host-level by selecting HLA-restricted escape mutations. Dissecting the dynamics of these escape mutations at a population-level would help to understand how HLA-mediated selection drives the evolution of HIV-1., Methodology/principal Findings: We undertook a study of the dynamics of HIV-1 CTL-escape mutations by analyzing through statistical approaches and phylogenetic methods the viral gene gag sequenced in plasma samples collected between the years 1987 and 2006 from 302 drug-naïve HIV-positive patients. By applying logistic regression models and after performing correction for multiple test, we identified 22 potential CTL-escape mutations (p-value<0.05; q-value<0.2); 10 of these associations were confirmed in samples biologically independent by a Bayesian Markov Chain Monte-Carlo method. Analyzing their prevalence back in time we found that escape mutations that are the consensus residue in samples collected after 2003 have actually significantly increased in time in one of either B or F subtype until becoming the most frequent residue, while dominating the other viral subtype. Their estimated prevalence in the viral subtype they did not dominate was lower than 30% for the majority of samples collected at the end of the 80's. In addition, when screening the entire viral region, we found that the 75% of positions significantly changing in time (p<0.05) were located within known CTL epitopes., Conclusions: Across HIV Gag protein, the rise of polymorphisms from independent origin during the last twenty years of epidemic in our setting was related to an association with an HLA allele. The fact that these mutations accumulated in one of either B or F subtypes have also dominated the other subtype shows how this selection might be causing a convergence of viral subtypes to variants which are more likely to evade the immune response of the population where they circulate.
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- 2008
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13. [Risk factors associated with multiple-species candidemia].
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Benetucci A, Tiraboschi IN, Fernández N, Perazzi B, and Lasala MB
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Candida classification, Candidiasis epidemiology, Candidiasis microbiology, Fungemia epidemiology, Fungemia microbiology
- Abstract
The incidence of fungemia has increased over the past decade. Multiple-species candidemia (MSC) has been infrequently reported. From 1998 to 2004, of 155 patients with diagnosis of candidemia at the Hospital de Clinicas (University of Buenos Aires), seven cases of MSC were identified (6 adults and 1 newborn) and compared with 21 cases of similar age and sex with monomicrobial candidemia. There were no differences in clinical data and outcome, except for the mediana duration of hospital stay (39 days for patients with MSC vs. 18 days for patients with monomicrobial candidemia, the mean time of central venous catheter permanence previous to candidemia (32 days for patients with MSC vs. 12 days for patients with monomicrobial candidemia and the duration of candidemia (5 days for MSC and 1 day for monomicrobial candidemia. In conclusion, although MSC episodes are less common than those caused by monomicrobial candidemia, modifiable risk factors such as duration of hospitalization and central venous catheter permanence account for the development of MSC.
- Published
- 2008
14. [Candida albicans outbreak in a neonatal intensive care unit].
- Author
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Tiraboschi IN, Carnovale S, Benetucci A, Fernández N, Kurlat I, Foccoli M, and Lasala MB
- Subjects
- Adult, Argentina epidemiology, Candida albicans genetics, Candida albicans isolation & purification, Candidiasis congenital, Candidiasis microbiology, Candidiasis transmission, Carrier State epidemiology, Carrier State microbiology, Cross Infection microbiology, Cross Infection transmission, DNA, Fungal analysis, Disease Transmission, Infectious, Equipment Contamination, Female, Fungemia epidemiology, Fungemia microbiology, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Premature, Infant, Premature, Diseases microbiology, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Male, Mouth microbiology, Personnel, Hospital, Placenta microbiology, Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA Technique, Candidiasis epidemiology, Cross Infection epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks, Infant, Premature, Diseases epidemiology, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
- Abstract
The appearance of Candida albicans in three patients made physicians investigate an outbreak. Outbreak description and microbiologic screening: Case 1 developed C. albicans in the placenta culture and in the blood culture carried out on the 8th day of birth. Four days after this candidemia, C. albicans was recovered in a catheter tip of a second neonate (case 2) and finally five days later other newborn (case 3) developed C. albicans in the hemoculture. After that, the hands of all caregivers as well as case 3's incubator, case 1's mother, and from all nine neonates in the unit were studied with swabs. A wet mount was done to all swabs and then they were cultured in Chromagar Candida and SDA. All C. albicans were studied by RAPD. RAPD study showed that C. albicans recovered from placenta and blood cultures of case 1, the catheter tip of case 2 and the blood culture of case 3, resulted to be identical and these yeasts were related to the C. albicans from the mouth of case 1 mother and the mouth of another colonized newborn. C. albicans was not found in the others swabs. The isolations of identical C. albicans allowed to suppose the horizontal transmission from the case 1, that had acquired it congenitally. Not only isolation of unusual Candida species would be an alert. Despite patients' personal factors to justify a fungal infection, the recovery of C. albicans in a short period of time should warn physicians about the possibility of a horizontal transmission.
- Published
- 2007
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15. [Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in southern Argentina].
- Author
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Lázaro ME, Resa AJ, Barclay CM, Calanni L, Samengo L, Martinez L, Padula PJ, Pini N, Lasala MB, Elsner B, and Enria DA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Argentina epidemiology, Child, Disease Outbreaks, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, Orthohantavirus genetics, Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome mortality, Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, RNA, Viral analysis, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome complications
- Abstract
Andes virus was identified in 1995 as the etiologic agent of Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) in Southern Argentina. We describe herein the main clinical characteristics of 25 HPS confirmed cases acquired in this area between 1993 and September 1999. The mean age was 34 years (range 11-70), with 72% males. Clinical characteristics were similar to those previously reported for Sin Nombre virus (SNV) cases. However, in this group of patients we also observed conjuntival injection in 10/25 (42%), facial flushing in 8/25 (33%), pharyngeal congestion in 7/25 (29%) and petechiae in 3/25 (12%). On the other hand, BUN was increased in 83% of cases (mean 0.77 g/l range 0.31-2.01). Mean serum creatinine concentration was 26.8 mg/l (range: 8.1-110 mg/l) with serum creatinine being higher than 20 mg/l in 8/15 patients (53%). Urinalysis was abnormal in 12/12 cases and was characterized by presence of proteins, red blood cells and granular casts. Aminotransferases were increased in 90% of cases with levels 5-10 times over normal values in 50% of cases. Serum creatine kinase concentration was elevated in 11/14 cases. Two patients required hemodialysis. Case fatality rate was 44% (11/25) and 10 of these cases died among the first 10 days of illness. Mononuclear myocarditis was observed in two cases, a finding that has not been reported for SNV cases. During the 1996 HPS outbreak in Southern Argentina due to Andes virus, there were epidemiological and molecular evidences of person-to-person transmission, a feature not previously shown for other members of the hantavirus genus. These data would also be indicative of some distinctive clinical characteristics of HPS caused by Andes virus, with more frequent renal involvement than in SNV cases.
- Published
- 2000
16. Influence of ambroxol on amoxicillin levels in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid.
- Author
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Gené R, Poderoso JJ, Corazza C, Lasala MB, Wiemeyer JC, Fernández M, and Guerreiro RB
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- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Ambroxol pharmacology, Amoxicillin pharmacokinetics, Bromhexine analogs & derivatives, Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid analysis
- Abstract
Amoxicillin levels were measured in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid samples obtained from patients who after randomization were treated in double-blind fashion either with amoxicillin 1000 mg p.o.t.i.d. or with amoxicillin 1000 mg + ambroxol 60 mg p.o.t.i.d. Antibiotic levels were higher in the group receiving ambroxol (0.32 +/- 0.02 micrograms/ml; n = 8) than in the other one (0.19 +/- 0.02 micrograms/ml; n = 6). This difference was statistically significant (p less than 0.001). Comparisons of protein concentrations in BAL fluid samples and of amoxicillin plasma levels did not show significant differences in the two groups. These results seem to prove that ambroxol is able to increase the antibiotics concentration in the lungs, although the mechanism of action is still unclear. In addition it could be shown that the BAL technique is suitable for exploring the lung concentration of antibiotics.
- Published
- 1987
17. [Infection by HIV-1 and serologic control at blood banks].
- Author
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Rey JA, Kohan AI, Lasala MB, and López H
- Subjects
- Brazil, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, France, HIV Antibodies analysis, HIV-1 immunology, Humans, United States, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome prevention & control, Blood Banks, Transfusion Reaction
- Published
- 1988
18. [Cefoperazone. Experience in medico-surgical infections].
- Author
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López H, Marcenac FM, Fernández AJ, Lasala MB, and Lasala FG
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cefoperazone adverse effects, Drug Evaluation, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Bacterial Infections drug therapy, Cefoperazone therapeutic use, Surgical Wound Infection drug therapy
- Published
- 1983
19. [Shock not associated with hydrosaline depletion in a case of adrenal gland insufficiency of metastatic etiology].
- Author
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Peralta JG, Poderoso JJ, Bruno O, Elsner B, Biancolini C, Jorge M, Esteva H, Gene R, Lambierto A, and Lasala MB
- Subjects
- Adrenal Gland Neoplasms complications, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms pathology, Female, Humans, Hydrocortisone blood, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Middle Aged, Water-Electrolyte Balance, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms secondary, Adrenal Insufficiency etiology, Lung Neoplasms complications, Shock etiology
- Published
- 1983
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