8 research outputs found

    Chikungunya: Emerging Viral Disease. Emergence in the work enivironment: first occupational accident known in Spain

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    Caso clínico[ES] La enfermedad del Chikungunya es una infección causada por el virus Chikungunya y transmitida al hombre por la picadura de mosquitos vectores del género Aedes. Aun siendo endémica de otros países, la elevada movilidad actual de la población por motivos lúdicos, laborales, comerciales y migratorios junto a la presencia del vector competente (Aedes albopictus) en numerosas zonas geográficas de España, hace que haya irrumpido en nuestro territorio en los últimos años. La palabra Chikungunya deriva del idioma Makonde (Mozambique). Significa «el que se encorva» en referencia a la postura frecuentemente adoptada por dolor articular. A pesar de su escasa mortalidad, la morbilidad puede ser elevada, afectando de forma significativa a la actividad de vida diaria y capacidad laboral del paciente, reflejado en el consecuente absentismo laboral y repercusión económica. En España, tanto desde el Servicio Sanitario Público como desde los Servicios Médicos de Salud Laboral y Servicios de Prevención, se debe estar preparado para el diagnóstico, seguimiento, tratamiento y prevención de enfermedades hasta ahora desconocidas en nuestro ámbito de trabajo. Este artículo describe el primer caso laboral en España por enfermedad del Chikungunya importada por contagio en Haití. [EN] Chikungunya disease is an infection caused by the Chikungunya virus, primarily transmitted to humans through the bite of vector mosquitoes of the genus Aedes.Although it is endemic in other countries, the current high mobility rate of the population due to leisure, work, commerce and migration, as well as the presence of the competent vector (Aedes albopictus) in many geographical areas of Spain, mean that it has spread across our territory over the last years.The word Chikungunya comes from the Makonde language (Mozanbique). If means „the one who bends down«, referring to the position usually adopted when feeling articular pain.Chikungunya does not often result in death, but morbility rate can be high. It does affect the patient’s daily life and work capacity, which consequently means absenteeism having an economic impact.In Spain, both from the Spanish Public health Service and from the Occupational Health and Preventive Services it is necessary to be prepared for the diagnosis, monitoring, treatment and prevention of diseases unknown in our work field until now.This article describes the first occupational disease case of Chikungunya in Spain imported by infection in Haiti.N

    Chikungunya: enfermedad vírica emergente: irrupción en el ámbito laboral: primer caso declarado en España como accidente de trabajo

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    La enfermedad del Chikungunya es una infección causada por el virus Chikungunya y transmitida al hombre por la picadura de mosquitos vectores del género Aedes. Aun siendo endémica de otros países, la elevada movilidad actual de la población por motivos lúdicos, laborales, comerciales y migratorios junto a la presencia del vector competente (Aedes albopictus) en numerosas zonas geográficas de España, hace que haya irrumpido en nuestro territorio en los últimos años. La palabra Chikungunya deriva del idioma Makonde (Mozambique). Significa "el que se encorva" en referencia a la postura frecuentemente adoptada por dolor articular. A pesar de su escasa mortalidad, la morbilidad puede ser elevada, afectando de forma significativa a la actividad de vida diaria y capacidad laboral del paciente, reflejado en el consecuente absentismo laboral y repercusión económica. En España, tanto desde el Servicio Sanitario Público como desde los Servicios Médicos de Salud Laboral y Servicios de Prevención, se debe estar preparado para el diagnóstico, seguimiento, tratamiento y prevención de enfermedades hasta ahora desconocidas en nuestro ámbito de trabajo. Este artículo describe el primer caso laboral en España por enfermedad del Chikungunya importada por contagio en Haití

    Neospora caninum infection during early pregnancy in cattle: how the isolate influences infection dynamics, clinical outcome and peripheral and local immune responses

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    International audienceThis work studies the influence of Neospora caninum intra-species diversity on abortion outcome, infection dynamics in terms of parasite dissemination and peripheral-local immune responses in pregnant cattle. Animals were intravenously inoculated at day 70 of pregnancy with 107 tachyzoites of two isolates showing marked differences in virulence in vitro and in pregnant mouse models: Nc-Spain7, a high virulence isolate, and Nc-Spain8, a low-to-moderate virulence isolate. After inoculation, pregnancy was monitored, and dams were culled when foetal death was detected. Foetal mortality occurred in all infected heifers between days 24 and 49 post-infection (pi), however, it was detected sooner in Nc-Spain7-infected animals (median day = 34) than those inoculated with Nc-Spain8 (median day = 41) with a trend towards significance (P < 0.11). Similar histological lesions were observed in placentomes and in most of the foetuses from the two infected groups. However, parasites were more frequently detected in the placenta and foetuses by PCR and in the foetal brain by immunohistochemistry in Nc-Spain7-infected animals. Specific antibodies were detected starting at day 13 post-infection in all infected cattle, with higher IgG levels in Nc-Spain7-infected group. IFN-γ and IL-4 profiles also varied between infected groups in PBMC stimulation assays. Infected animals showed significant increases in their cytokine mRNA levels (IFN-γ, IL-4, IL-10, IL-12p40 and TNF-α) in the caruncle at time of foetal death. Differences between the infected groups were also observed for cytokine profiles. These results demonstrate the influence of the N. caninum isolate on foetal death outcome, infection dynamics and immune responses in cattle

    Discovering HIV related information by means of association rules and machine learning

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    Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is still one of the main health problems worldwide. It is therefore essential to keep making progress in improving the prognosis and quality of life of affected patients. One way to advance along this pathway is to uncover connections between other disorders associated with HIV/AIDS-so that they can be anticipated and possibly mitigated. We propose to achieve this by using Association Rules (ARs). They allow us to represent the dependencies between a number of diseases and other specific diseases. However, classical techniques systematically generate every AR meeting some minimal conditions on data frequency, hence generating a vast amount of uninteresting ARs, which need to be filtered out. The lack of manually annotated ARs has favored unsupervised filtering, even though they produce limited results. In this paper, we propose a semi-supervised system, able to identify relevant ARs among HIV-related diseases with a minimal amount of annotated training data. Our system has been able to extract a good number of relationships between HIV-related diseases that have been previously detected in the literature but are scattered and are often little known. Furthermore, a number of plausible new relationships have shown up which deserve further investigation by qualified medical experts
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