11 research outputs found
Prospective study of urinary tract infection surveillance after kidney transplantation
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Urinary tract infection (UTI) remains one of the main complications after kidney transplantation and it has serious consequences.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Fifty-two patients with kidney transplantation were evaluated for UTI at 3-145 days (mean 40.0 days) after surgery.. Forty-two received a graft from a live donor and 10 from a deceased donor. There were 22 female and 30 male patients, aged 11-47 years. Microscopic examinations, leukocyte esterase stick, and urinary culture were performed every third day and weekly after hospitalization. A positive culture was consider when patients presented bacterial counts up to 10<sup>5</sup> counts.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>UTI developed in 19/52 (37%) patients at 3-75 days (mean 19.5 days after transplantation. Recurrent infection was observed in 7/52 (13.4%) patients at days 17-65. UTI was more frequent in patients who received deceased grafts compared with live grafts (7/10, 70% <it>vs</it>. 12/42, 28%; p < 0.007). Female patients were more susceptible than male (11/22, 50% <it>vs</it>. 8/22, 36.35%; p < 0.042). Five-year survival rate was 94.5% (49/52 patients). Kidney Graft exit update is 47/52 (90.2%), and there were no significant differences between graft rejection and UTI (p = 0.2518). Isolated bacteria were <it>Escherichia coli </it>(31.5%), <it>Candida albicans </it>(21.0%) and <it>Enterococcus </it>spp. (10.5%), followed by <it>Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Morganella </it><it>morganii, Enterobacter cloacae </it>and <it>Micrococcus </it>spp. Secondary infections were produced by (7/19, 36.8%). <it>Enterococcus </it>spp. (57%), <it>E. coli </it>(28%) and <it>Micrococcus </it>spp. (14.2%). Antibiotic resistance was 22% for ciprofloxacin and 33% for ampicillin. Therapeutic alternatives were aztreonam, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, netilmicin and fosfomycin.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Surveillance of UTI for the first 3 months is a good option for improving quality of life of kidney transplantation patients and the exit of graft function especially for female patients and those receiving deceased grafts. Antibiograms provided a good therapeutic alternative to patients who presented with UTIs after receiving a kidney allograft.</p
Case report: A familial B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia associated with a new germline pathogenic variant in PAX5. The first report in Mexico
B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is one of the most common childhood cancers worldwide. Although most cases are sporadic, some familial forms, inherited as autosomal dominant traits with incomplete penetrance, have been described over the last few years. Germline pathogenic variants in transcription factors such as PAX5, IKZF1, and ETV6 have been identified as causal in familial forms. The proband was a 7-year-old Mexican girl diagnosed with high-risk B-ALL at five years and 11 months of age. Family history showed that the proband’s mother had high-risk B-ALL at 16 months of age. She received chemotherapy and was discharged at nine years of age without any evidence of recurrence of leukemia. The proband’s father was outside the family nucleus, but no history of leukemia or cancer was present up to the last contact with the mother. We performed exome sequencing on the proband and the proband’s mother and identified the PAX5 variant NM_016734.3:c.963del: p.(Ala322LeufsTer11), located in the transactivation domain of the PAX5 protein. The variant was classified as probably pathogenic according to the ACMG criteria. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first Mexican family with an inherited increased risk of childhood B-ALL caused by a novel germline pathogenic variant of PAX5. Identifying individuals with a hereditary predisposition to cancer is essential for modern oncological practice. Individuals at high risk of leukemia would benefit from hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, but family members carrying the pathogenic variant should be excluded as hematopoietic stem cell donors
Anales del III Congreso Internacional de Vivienda y Ciudad "Debate en torno a la nueva agenda urbana"
Acta de congresoEl III Congreso Internacional de Vivienda y Ciudad “Debates en torno a la NUEVa Agenda Urbana”, ha sido una apuesta de alto compromiso por acercar los debates centrales y urgentes que tensionan el pleno ejercicio del derecho a la ciudad. Para ello las instituciones organizadoras (INVIHAB –Instituto de Investigación de Vivienda y Hábitat y MGyDH-Maestría en Gestión y Desarrollo Habitacional-1), hemos convidado un espacio que se concretó con potencia en un debate transdisciplinario. Convocó a intelectuales de prestigio internacional, investigadores, académicos y gestores estatales, y en una metodología de innovación articuló las voces académicas con las de las organizaciones sociales y/o barriales en el Foro de las Organizaciones Sociales que tuvo su espacio propio para dar voz a quienes están trabajando en los desafíos para garantizar los derechos a la vivienda y los bienes urbanos en nuestras ciudades del Siglo XXI
An Autochthonous Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans Metapopulation Exploited for Two-Step Pyrite Biooxidation Improves Au/Ag Particle Release from Mining Waste
Pyrite bio-oxidation by chemolithotrophic acidophile bacteria has been applied in the mining industry to bioleach metals or to remove pyritic sulfur from coal. In this process, it is desirable to use autochthonous and already adapted bacteria isolated directly from the mining sites where biomining will be applied. Bacteria present in the remnant solution from a mining company were identified through cloning techniques. For that purpose, we extracted total RNA and performed reverse transcription using a novel pair of primers designed from a small region of the 16S gene (V1–V3) that contains the greatest intraspecies diversity. After cloning, a high proportion of individuals of the strains ATCC-23270 (NR_074193.1 and NR_041888.1) and DQ321746.1 of the well-known species Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans were found, as well as two new wild strains of A. ferrooxidans. This result showed that the acidic remnant solution comprises a metapopulation. We assayed these strains to produce bioferric flocculant to enhance the subsequent pyrite bio-oxidation, applying two-stage chemical–bacterial oxidation. It was shown that the strains were already adapted to a high concentration of endogenous Fe2+ (up to 20 g·L−1), increasing the volumetric productivity of the bioferric flocculant. Thus, no preadaptation of the community was required. We detected Au and Ag particles originally occluded in the old pyritic flotation tailings assayed, but the extraction of Au and Ag by cyanidation resulted in ca. 30.5% Au and 57.9% Ag
An Autochthonous <i>Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans</i> Metapopulation Exploited for Two-Step Pyrite Biooxidation Improves Au/Ag Particle Release from Mining Waste
Pyrite bio-oxidation by chemolithotrophic acidophile bacteria has been applied in the mining industry to bioleach metals or to remove pyritic sulfur from coal. In this process, it is desirable to use autochthonous and already adapted bacteria isolated directly from the mining sites where biomining will be applied. Bacteria present in the remnant solution from a mining company were identified through cloning techniques. For that purpose, we extracted total RNA and performed reverse transcription using a novel pair of primers designed from a small region of the 16S gene (V1–V3) that contains the greatest intraspecies diversity. After cloning, a high proportion of individuals of the strains ATCC-23270 (NR_074193.1 and NR_041888.1) and DQ321746.1 of the well-known species Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans were found, as well as two new wild strains of A. ferrooxidans. This result showed that the acidic remnant solution comprises a metapopulation. We assayed these strains to produce bioferric flocculant to enhance the subsequent pyrite bio-oxidation, applying two-stage chemical–bacterial oxidation. It was shown that the strains were already adapted to a high concentration of endogenous Fe2+ (up to 20 g·L−1), increasing the volumetric productivity of the bioferric flocculant. Thus, no preadaptation of the community was required. We detected Au and Ag particles originally occluded in the old pyritic flotation tailings assayed, but the extraction of Au and Ag by cyanidation resulted in ca. 30.5% Au and 57.9% Ag
Heterogenous Distribution of <i>MTHFR</i> Gene Variants among Mestizos and Diverse Amerindian Groups from Mexico
<div><p>Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) is a key enzyme in folate metabolism. Folate deficiency has been related to several conditions, including neural tube defects (NTDs) and cardiovascular diseases. Hence, <i>MTHFR</i> genetic variants have been studied worldwide, particularly the C677T and A1298C. We genotyped the C677T and A1298C <i>MTHFR</i> polymorphisms in Mexican Amerindians (MAs), from the largest sample included in a genetic study (n = 2026, from 62 ethnic groups), and in a geographically-matched Mexican Mestizo population (MEZ, n = 638). The 677T allele was most frequent in Mexican individuals, particularly in MAs. The frequency of this allele in both MAs and MEZs was clearly enriched in the South region of the country, followed by the Central East and South East regions. In contrast, the frequency of the 1298C risk allele in Mexicans was one of the lowest in the world. Both in MAs and MEZs the variants 677T and 1298C displayed opposite allele frequency gradients from southern to northern Mexico. Our findings suggest that in Mestizos the 677T allele was derived from Amerindians while the 1298C allele was a European contribution. Some subgroups showed an allele frequency distribution that highlighted their genetic diversity. Notably, the distribution of the frequency of the 677T allele was consistent with that of the high incidence of NTDs reported in MEZ.</p></div
Geographic distribution of allele frequencies for the C677T polymorphism in the MA population.
<p>CDMX, Mexico City; MEX, Mexico State; MOR, Morelos; OAX, Oaxaca; PUE, Puebla; SLP, San Luis Potosí. Striped States were not sampled because they are inhabited by neighboring indigenous included in this study. *States without indigenous population [<a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0163248#pone.0163248.ref032" target="_blank">32</a>].</p
Memorias del primer Simposio Nacional de Ciencias Agronómicas
Primer simposio nacional de Ciencias Agronómicas: El renacer del espacio de discusión científica para el Agro colombiano