11 results on '"Cuevas, Luis E."'
Search Results
2. Tuberculosis diagnostics for children in highburden countries: what is available and what is needed.
- Author
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Cuevas, Luis E, Petrucci, Roberta, and Swaminathan, Soumya
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PERFORMANCE evaluation , *SEROLOGY , *DIAGNOSTIC specimens , *TUBERCULOSIS vaccines , *TREATMENT effectiveness ,DIAGNOSIS of tuberculosis in children - Abstract
Background: The diagnosis of childhood tuberculosis (TB) is complex and most of the new diagnostics for TB are for adults. Aims: To review the performance of TB diagnostics and their suitability to its characteristics in young children. Methods: Expert opinion and review of the literature. Main findings: The lack of a sufficient number of research studies on TB diagnostics for children hinders the preparation of systematic literature reviews. Information on test performance in children is often extrapolated from studies in adults and there is a dearth of evidence of test performance in children. Approaches to shorten the time required for diagnosis (by using a variety of specimens) are needed and there is preliminary evidence that such schemes are feasible. Diagnostics based on smear microscopy such as LED-FM, serological tests and IGRAS are unlikely to improve the diagnosis of active TB in children. Liquid and the MODS culture methods are more sensitive than solid culture, and new methods to detect mycobacterium nucleic acid or its components such as TrDNA fragments, LAMP assays and Xpert MTB/RIF have good potential to increase the number of cases confirmed. These tests should be evaluated in specimens which are easily accessible in children such as fine-needle aspiration biopsy, urine, blood and stools. Interpretation: The evaluation of new diagnostic tests for TB in children is overdue. The lack of suitable diagnostic tests hinders the proper management of children, the assessment of the real burden of childhood TB, evaluation of the efficacy of new treatments and vaccines and, ultimately, the development of effective control interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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3. Unusual norovirus and rotavirus genotypes in Ethiopia.
- Author
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Yassin, Mohammed A, Kirby, Andrew, Mengistu, Abebayehu A, Arbide, Isabel, Dove, Winifred, Beyer, Mandy, Cunliffe, Nigel A, and Cuevas, Luis E
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MOLECULAR epidemiology ,GASTROENTERITIS in children ,CHILD mortality ,ROTAVIRUS diseases ,NOROVIRUSES ,CROSS-sectional method ,POLYMERASE chain reaction - Abstract
Background: Gastro-enteritis is associated with significant mortality in low- and middle-income countries, and rotavirus and norovirus are the principal viral agents implicated. Aims: To investigate the molecular epidemiology and burden of disease associated with rotavirus and norovirus in children attending a health centre in Ethiopia. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in children attending a health centre in Awassa, southern Ethiopia. Children with diarrhoea (cases) and without diarrhoea (controls) were recruited over a 6-month period from December 2008 to May 2009. Rotavirus was detected by ELISA and genotyped by RT-PCR, and norovirus was amplified by RT-PCR with genotyping by sequence analysis of RT-PCR products. Results: Rotavirus was detected in 44/200 (22%) cases and in none of the controls, with genotypes G3P[6] (48%), G1P[8] (27%) and G2P[4] (7%) being the strains most commonly identified. Norovirus was detected in 16 (8%) of 200 cases and in 4 (7%) of 57 controls. Norovirus GII.3 was the strain most commonly detected (40%: 8/20) and ten other genotypes were also detected. Conclusion: Rotavirus is a common cause of severe gastro-enteritis in children in Ethiopia; however, norovirus occurred with a similar frequency in cases and controls. A globally uncommon strain type, G3P[6], predominated within the rotavirus strains detected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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4. Treatment outcome in children with tuberculosis in southern Ethiopia.
- Author
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Muňoz-Sellart, Montserrat, Yassin, Mohammed A., Tumato, Million, Merid, Yared, and Cuevas, Luis E.
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TUBERCULOSIS in children ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,HEALTH facilities ,THERAPEUTICS ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Our study took place at 8 tuberculosis diagnostic and treatment centres in Sidama Zone, southern Ethiopia. Our objectives were to assess the status of TB treatment in children and risk factors associated with unfavourable outcome. A retrospective study was based on information retained in TB registers of the centres. Demographic characteristics and treatment outcome of children registered between 2002 and 2007 were retrieved. Risk factors for unfavourable outcome (failure, default or death) were calculated. Of 851 (165 with smear-positive, 475 smear-negative and 206 extrapulmonary TB) children, 655 (77%) were cured or completed and 124 (14.6%) had unfavourable outcome. Treatment success rate increased with age from 66% in children <5 y old to 81% in 5-9-y-olds and 85% in ≥10-y-olds (p <0.001). 75% of patients with smear-negative TB had favourable outcome compared to 80.6% for smear-positive cases (p =0.06). Age <5 y, lack of smear conversion in the second month and living in rural areas were independent risk factors for unfavourable treatment outcome. In conclusion, the outcome of TB treatment varies with age, residency and smear results. Reporting only cases with smear-positive TB disproportionally excludes a higher proportion of children than adults. Surveillance systems to monitor TB outcome in children need to be improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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5. Diagnostic risk factors to differentiate tuberculous and acute bacterial meningitis.
- Author
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MOGHTADERI, ALI, ALAVI-NAINI, ROYA, IZADI, SHAHROKH, and CUEVAS, LUIS E.
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MENINGITIS diagnosis ,TUBERCULOSIS diagnosis ,CENTRAL nervous system diseases ,CHEST diseases - Abstract
The objective of this study was to identify independent predictor factors for diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis and develop a clinical prediction tool based upon a set of simple clinical and laboratory parameters in our local population. Clinical and laboratory features were compared in 68 patients with tuberculous meningitis and 123 cases of acute bacterial meningitis in 3 referral centres for tuberculosis in south-eastern Iran. Twenty-two clinical and laboratory features were analysed. Based on the best-fitted model a receiver operating characteristic curve with the highest surface under the curve was constructed. Disease duration before diagnosis (≥5 d) had the highest odds ratio of 21.9. Age over 30 y, CSF leukocyte count ≤1000×103 cells/ml and CSF lymphocytosis ≥70% were placed after disease duration with odds ratios of 5.1, 3.7 and 2.6, respectively. Sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratio for a positive test in this model were 84%, 88% and 7.4, respectively. The area under the ROC curve was 0.92. It appears that a single model can not predict TBM diagnosis in different populations. Using clinical and laboratory parameters may facilitate empirical diagnosis of TBM in endemically low income countries with limited microbiological diagnostic facilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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6. Current usefulness of Credé's method of preventing neonatal ophthalmia.
- Author
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Silva, Lusa Reis, Gurgel, Ricardo Queiroz, Lima, Dorothy Ribeiro Resende, and Cuevas, Luis E.
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NEONATAL diseases ,CONJUNCTIVA diseases ,EYE inflammation ,IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE ,CHLAMYDIA ,CHLAMYDIA infections ,NEISSERIA gonorrhoeae ,CONDOMS ,IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
The conjunctiva's bacterial profile at birth and 1 week after Credé's gonoccocal ophthalmic prophylaxis was evaluated over a 3-month period using culture and direct immunofluorescence. Thirty-four neonates received 10% silver vitellinate and 42 sterile saline. Chlamydia trachomatis was recovered in 7/34 and 9/42 neonates receiving silver vitellinate and saline at birth and in 8/34 and 12/42 after 1 week, respectively. Neisseria gonorrhoeae was not identified. Credé's may not be the ideal prophylactic method in areas with a low prevalence of N. gonorrhoeae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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7. Clinical presentation of adults with pulmonary tuberculosis with and without HIV infection in Nigeria.
- Author
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Lawson, Lovett, Yassin, Mohammed A., Thacher, Tom D., Olatunji, Olubunmi O., Lawson, Juliana O., Akingbogun, Titi I., Bello, Cornelius S.S., Cuevas, Luis E., and Davies, Peter D.O.
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TUBERCULOSIS complications ,HIV infections ,HIV-positive persons ,CHEST diseases ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,LUNG diseases ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Our aim was to describe the frequency of HIV infection among patients with tuberculosis and compare their characteristics with patients with TB but not infected with HIV. Patients with cough >3 weeks duration attending 8 hospitals in Abuja, Nigeria were screened with smear microscopy and culture and tested for HIV. Chest X-rays were graded by 2 readers. 731 (62%) of 1186 patients had positive cultures and 353 (48%) of these 731 patients were smear positive. 1002 (85%) patients were tested for HIV and 546 (55%) were positive. 53% (329/625) of the culture positive patients and 58% (217/377) of the culture negative patients were HIV positive. Anorexia, weight loss, low BMI (<18.5), haemoglobin (<11 gm/dl) and albumin and high ESR and liver enzymes were more frequently observed among patients with TB coinfected with HIV than in patients without HIV. Coinfected patients had less cavitations and lung involvement on X-rays than patients without HIV. In conclusion, the prevalence of HIV is very high among patients with TB in Abuja, Nigeria. The presence of HIV decreases the sensitivity of smear microscopy and complicates the diagnosis of TB. Selected clinical and laboratory parameters could be used to identify individuals with TB who are likely to be coinfected with HIV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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8. Zinc and infection: a review.
- Author
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Cuevas, Luis E. and Koyanagi, Ai
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MYCOBACTERIAL diseases , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *DIARRHEA , *INTESTINAL diseases , *IMMUNE response , *MALARIA , *CELLULAR immunity , *CLONAL selection theory - Abstract
Dietary zinc deficiency is widespread in developing countries and is often aggravated by intercurrent acute and chronic infections. Recent studies have demonstrated that zinc supplementation can significantly reduce the morbidity and mortality of apparently well-nourished children and shorten the time to recovery from acute infectious diseases. This review summarises current knowledge of the role of zinc in childhood diarrhoea, acute respiratory infections and malaria, and its potential role in diseases associated with impaired cellular immunity, namely tuberculosis, lepromatous leprosy and leishmaniasis, and explores avenues for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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9. HIV and Tuberculosis Coinfection in the Southern Region of Ethiopia: A Prospective Epidemiological Study.
- Author
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Yassin, Mohammed Ahmed, Takele, Luelseged, Gebresenbet, Sahlemariam, Girma, Emebet, Lera, Meskele, Lendebo, Ersido, and Cuevas, Luis E.
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COMMUNICABLE diseases ,HIV infections ,TUBERCULOSIS ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,MEDICAL microbiology - Abstract
HIV has played a key role in TB, modifying its incidence and clinical presentation. This study describes the prevalence of HIV among TB patients attending health facilities in the southern region of Ethiopia. The HIV prevalence was 18% for female and 21% for male TB patients. 15% and 30%, respectively, of the rural and urban patients with TB were HIV positive ( p <0.05). 19% (51/261) smear-positive PTB, 26% (36/137) smear-negative PTB and 11% (10/94) of the extrapulmonary TB patients were HIV positive. The proportion of patients with extra-PTB varied from 11% to 38% across the centres and was highest in the zones with the lowest HIV prevalence. In the light of limited diagnostic facilities, clinicians often make a clinical diagnosis of TB without laboratory confirmation. The increase in the number of TB cases could be due to HIV. However, the number of health facilities offering TB treatment in the area also increased (from 53 to 236) during the same period and the increase in TB is likely to be the result of a combination of factors, including improved detection and HIV. It is important to consider this multi-factorial phenomenon when interpreting the increase of TB in a geographical area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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10. Respiratory syncytial virus and metapneumovirus in children over two seasons with a high incidence of respiratory infections in Brazil.
- Author
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Serafino, Robert L., Gurgel, Ricardo Q., Dove, Winifred, Hart, C. Anthony, and Cuevas, Luis E.
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RESPIRATORY infections ,JUVENILE diseases ,CHILD death ,VIRUSES ,RESPIRATORY syncytial virus ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Acute respiratory infections (ARI) are one of the most important causes of death in children. Human metapneumovirus (HMPV), a virus first described in 2001, has now been detected in almost all continents. HMPV causes bronchiolitis and pneumonia with a clinical spectrum similar to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). We describe the incidence of HMPV and RSV during two consecutive seasons with a high incidence of ARI in Aracaju, Brazil. HMPV was responsible for 24% of cases of bronchiolitis in the 1st season (April-May 2002) but was not found in the 2nd year (April-May 2003). RSV was recovered from 61 (55%) children with ARI in 2002 and from 72 (68%) in 2003. Children with RSV bronchiolitis in 2002 had more hypoxia but less wheezing than in 2003. The incidence of HMPV and RSV genotypes causing bronchiolitis varied between the years. Long-term prospective studies are required to better describe the epidemiology of these viruses in children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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11. Zinc supplementation in Brazillian children with acute diarrhoea.
- Author
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Al-Sonboli, Nagla'a, Gurgel, Ricardo Q., Shenkin, Alan, Hart, C. Anthony, and Cuevas, Luis E.
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DIARRHEA ,THERAPEUTICS ,PEDIATRICS - Abstract
Although oral rehydration therapy greatly reduces mortality from diarrhoeal diseases, it has little effect on stool frequency. However, there is mounting evidence that zinc is an effective adjunct to the treatment of diarrhoea, although few studies have examined its efficacy in Latin America. This study assessed the efficacy of zinc supplementation in children with acute diarrhoea in Brazil. The study was a double-blind, placebocontrolled, randomised, clinical trial in children < 5 years of age attending emergency services in Sergipe, Brazil. Subjects received zinc or vitamin C as placebo. There was a marked reduction in the duration of the diarrhoea (1.1 vs 2.6 days) and of watery stools in the zinc-supplemented group. The efficacy of zinc was independent of the presence of viral enteropathogens in the stools. It is concluded that, similar to studies in India and Bangladesh, zinc could be an important adjunct for treating acute diarrhoea in Brazilian children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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