8 results on '"Nogueira-Coito JM"'
Search Results
2. Isospora belli
- Author
-
Die AR and Nogueira Coito JM
- Published
- 2018
3. Isospora belli.
- Author
-
Ros Die A and Nogueira Coito JM
- Subjects
- Aged, Diarrhea drug therapy, Feces parasitology, Humans, Isospora ultrastructure, Isosporiasis drug therapy, Male, Paraproteinemias complications, Diarrhea parasitology, Isospora isolation & purification, Isosporiasis parasitology
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Community-acquired febrile urinary tract infection caused by extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing bacteria in hospitalised infants.
- Author
-
Hernández Marco R, Guillén Olmos E, Bretón-Martínez JR, Giner Pérez L, Casado Sánchez B, Fujkova J, Salamanca Campos M, and Nogueira Coito JM
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Community-Acquired Infections microbiology, Comorbidity, Escherichia coli enzymology, Escherichia coli isolation & purification, Escherichia coli Infections epidemiology, Escherichia coli Infections microbiology, Female, Fever etiology, Hospitals, Community statistics & numerical data, Humans, Infant, Inpatients, Male, Pyelonephritis epidemiology, Pyelonephritis microbiology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Spain epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Urinary Tract Infections microbiology, Vesico-Ureteral Reflux epidemiology, Bacterial Proteins analysis, Community-Acquired Infections epidemiology, Urinary Tract Infections epidemiology, beta-Lactam Resistance, beta-Lactamases analysis
- Abstract
Introduction: Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL) producing bacteria are infrequent pathogens of urinary tract infections in children. The objective of our study was to investigate the presence, clinically associated characteristics and risk factors for acquisition of urinary tract infection/acute pyelonephritis (UTI/APN) in hospitalised children <2years old caused by community-acquired ESBL., Methods: A case-control study in a second level community hospital in Spain, in which 537 episodes of UTI/APN were investigated in a retrospective study between November 2005 and August 2014. Cases were patients with ESBL strains. For each case, four ESBL-negative controls were selected. A questionnaire with the variables of interest was completed for every patient, and the groups were compared., Results: ESBL-positive strains were found in 19 (3,5%) cultures. Of these 16 (84%) were Escherichia coli. Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) of any grade was more frequent in the ESBL group (60 vs. 29%), although without statistical significance. Relapses were more frequent in the ESBL group (42% vs. 18%) (P=.029; OR=3.2; 95%CI: 1.09-9.5). The prevalence of UTI/APN due to ESBL-positive strains increased slightly from 2.7% in the period 2005-2009 to 4.4% in the period 2010-2014., Conclusions: ESBL UTI/APN were associated with more frequent relapses. VUR of any grade was twice more frequent in the ESBL group. Piperacillin/tazobactam, fosfomycin and meropenem showed an excellent activity. Aminoglycosides may be a therapeutic option, and in our patients gentamicin was the antibiotic most used., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier España, S.L.U. and Sociedad Española de Enfermedades Infecciosas y Microbiología Clínica. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Early intervention in pertussis outbreak with high attack rate in cohort of adolescents with complete acellular pertussis vaccination in Valencia, Spain, April to May 2015.
- Author
-
Miguez Santiyan A, Ferrer Estrems R, Chover Lara JL, Alberola Enguidanos J, Nogueira Coito JM, and Salazar Cifre A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Female, Humans, Incidence, Infection Control organization & administration, Male, Spain epidemiology, Whooping Cough diagnosis, Whooping Cough prevention & control, Whooping Cough transmission, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Disease Outbreaks, Pertussis Vaccine administration & dosage, Schools, Vaccination statistics & numerical data, Whooping Cough epidemiology
- Abstract
Forty-three pertussis cases reported in May 2015 in Valencia were linked to a school outbreak where 90% of the students had been vaccinated. Cases were diagnosed upon paediatrician consultation and in hospital emergency units. Approximately half of the cases were students born in 2002, the first age cohort with complete shift to acellular pertussis vaccine. Public health intervention, visiting school premises to conduct interviews, sample collection and early antibiotic prophylaxis stopped further spread in the community.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. [Infectious acute gastroenteritis in the emergency department of an urban hospital].
- Author
-
Muñoz Vicente E, Bretón Martínez JR, Ros Díez A, Rodríguez García A, Casado Sánchez B, Hernández Marco R, and Nogueira Coito JM
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Catchment Area, Health, Child, Preschool, Female, Gastroenteritis virology, Humans, Infant, Male, Spain epidemiology, Campylobacter Infections complications, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data, Gastroenteritis microbiology, Gastroenteritis rehabilitation, Hospitals, Urban statistics & numerical data, Rotavirus Infections complications, Salmonella Infections complications
- Abstract
Objectives: To examine the etiology, clinical, analytical and evolutionary characteristics of gastroenteritis in the pediatric population in the Emergency Department of Dr. Peset University Hospital in Health Care Area 10 in Valencia, Spain, over a 1-year period (2005)., Patients and Methods: Children < 15 years of age with acute diarrhea were prospectively enrolled in the Emergency Department. Data were collected through information sheets. Their stools were examined for diarrheagenic bacteria and viruses (rotavirus and adenovirus)., Results: 794 episodes of gastroenteritis were recorded. The incidence of rotavirus was 22 %, adenovirus 8 %, Campylobacter jejuni 7 % and Salmonella spp. 4 %. Socioeconomic characteristics were not helpful in differentiating disease due to specific enteropathogens. Ninety per cent cases caused by viruses only affected children under three years of age. Rotavirus gastroenteritis had a marked seasonal pattern (90 % cases in December-February). Among infants < or = 6 months of age rotavirus was less frequent as cause of diarrhea in breast-fed infants than in bottle-fed. Macroscopic blood in stools was reported almost exclusively among patients with a bacterial infection. In 96 % of all cases of diarrhea there was no dehydration, in 2 % it was mild, in 2 % moderate and none severe. Ten of the seventeen cases (59 %) of moderate dehydration were caused by rotavirus. Six percent of all children were hospitalised., Conclusions: Rotavirus was significantly more associated with the need for intravenous fluid therapy and hospitalisation than episodes negative for rotavirus. Rotavirus accounted for 3 % of hospitalisations in infants aged 1 month-2 years.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. [Can we improve the prevention of tuberculosis? Analysis of the application of chemoprophylaxis].
- Author
-
Franco Serrano J, Blanquer Olivas R, Flores Cid J, Domínguez Martínez A, Nogueira Coito JM, and Iñigo Zaera C
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, HIV Infections complications, Humans, Male, Antitubercular Agents therapeutic use, Isoniazid therapeutic use, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary prevention & control
- Abstract
To analyze the situations that make chemoprophylaxis for tuberculosis difficult. One hundred twenty-eight patients consecutive (106 HIV negative and 22 HIV positive) diagnosed of tuberculosis (TB) were studied. The patients were interviewed and a questionnaire was filled out in order to identify risk groups and determine what steps had been taken to prevent TB. In the HIV negative group, 63 (57.8%) had at least one risk factor. The most common were contact with persons with active TB (31.1%), former TB (15.1%), rapid weight loss or chronic malnutrition (13.2%) and residence in closed institutions (5.6%). Of the 51 (48.1%) for whom evaluation of chemoprophylaxis was indicated, 43 (84.3%) had been examined by a physician within the past five years; only 10 (23.3%) of them, however, had been checked for TB and isoniazide had been prescribed for only 4 (9.3%). In the HIV positive group, 13 (72.2%) of those for whom evaluation of chemoprophylaxis was indicated had been seen by a physician; 12 (97.7%) of them were given tuberculin tests checked for TB and isoniazide was prescribed for 4 (30.7%). None of the patients in either group who were prescribed a full course of prophylaxis actually took the drug enough. Most HIV negative patients for whom evaluation of chemoprophylaxis was indicated had been examined by a physician in the five years before disease was detected; less than a quarter of them were checked for TB, however. This situation is probably a consequence of the structure of health care in Spain as it affects TB control. Nearly all the HIV positive patients were checked for the disease, as they benefited from protocolized health care.
- Published
- 1996
8. [Ureaplasma urealyticum and Mycoplasma hominis: incidence and clinical significance of their isolation in the perinatal period].
- Author
-
Fullana Montoro A, Brines Solanes J, Nogueira Coito JM, Gil Esteve C, Sanchís Calvo A, Cervero Martí L, and Orellana López F
- Subjects
- Birth Weight, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Male, Mycoplasma Infections epidemiology, Pregnancy, Spain epidemiology, Ureaplasma Infections epidemiology, Ureaplasma urealyticum isolation & purification, Genitalia, Female microbiology, Infant, Newborn microbiology, Mycoplasma Infections microbiology, Ureaplasma Infections microbiology
- Abstract
In order to known the clinical significance of the colonization of the maternal genitalia and infant with genital mycoplasmas, we studied prospectively 219 pairs of mothers and newborns admitted for delivery to a general public hospital. U. urealyticum and M. hominis were isolated from 72 (32.9%) and 10 (4.6%) of the mothers, respectively. During the first 4 days of life. U. urealyticum and M. hominis were isolated from 23 (10.5%) and 1 (0.5%), of the newborn infants respectively. Maternal colonization by genital mycoplasmas was not associated with a longer duration of membrane rupture, nor with a shorter gestational age, nor with smaller neonatal weight and length. Neonatal colonization by U. urealyticum was not associated with shorter gestational age, nor with smaller birth weight and length, nor with the appearance of any disease during the first 3 months of life.
- Published
- 1992
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.