540 research outputs found

    Infección por SARS-CoV-2 y obesidad

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    La pandemia por coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) ha tenido diferentes efectos. Uno de ellos fue concentrar la atención de múltiples investigadores y clínicos para dedicarse a estudiar y tratar de entender los retos de esta infección en diferentes poblaciones, que se han determinado en riesgo de presentar una manifestación más grave de la infección. La obesidad ha sido recientemente identificada como una de las comorbilidades de mayor riesgo junto con la insuficiencia cardíaca, con una probabilidad siete veces mayor para el requerimiento de ventilación mecánica invasiva. La obesidad es un factor en la gravedad de la enfermedad del SARS-CoV-2, que tiene un mayor impacto en pacientes con un índice de masa corporal (IMC) ?35 kg/m2 . Los pacientes con obesidad, especialmente aquellos con grado severo, deben tomar medidas adicionales para evitar el contagio con SARS-CoV-2, mediante el cumplimiento de las medidas de prevención durante la pandemia actual, si se quiere, de forma más rigurosa

    Herpes Simplex Virus Type 2 Antibodies: High Prevalence in Monogamous Women in Costa Rica

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    We studied the prevalence of antibody to Herpes simplex virus types I and 2 (HSV-I and HSV-2) in 766 randomly selected Costa Rican women 25-59 years of age in a national household survey in 1984-1985. Overall, 97.1% were seropositive for HSV-l and 39.4% for HSV -2. Only 1.1% of HSV -2 seropositive women gave a history of symptomatic genital herpes. HSV-2 virus antibody increased with age and with the number of lifetime sexual partners. HSV -2 seroprevalence among women who reported only 1 lifetime sexual partner was almost twice as high as the prevalence among women who denied sexual experience (30.5% vs. 17.7%) and reached 79.2% among women with \u3c 4 partners. HSV-2 seroprevalence was lower among women whose partners used condoms: 28.9% for those who had used condoms for at least 2 years vs. 44.3% for those who never used condoms

    Cardiometabolic Risk Factors, Metabolic Syndrome and Pre-Diabetes in Adolescents in the Sierra Region of Ecuador

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    Background: Excess weight (overweight and obesity) is the major modifiable risk factor for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and other non-communicable diseases. However, excess weight may not be as predictive of diabetes risk as once thought. While excess weight and other obesity-related non-communicable diseases are of growing concern in low-middle income countries in Latin America, there is limited research on risk factors associated with T2DM in adolescents. This study investigated prevalence of overweight, obesity, prediabetes, diabetes and metabolic syndrome in adolescents in Ecuador. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted with 433 adolescents from two schools in a small urban center in southern Ecuador and two schools in a large urban center in Quito. Risk factors were measured, including: height, weight, BMI, waist-to-hip ratio, fasting glucose, lipid panel, and HbA1c. Multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) was separately applied to risk factors and demographic factors as a set of dependent variables with sex, location and their interaction included as predictors. An independent t test was run on the data at 95% confidence intervals for the mean difference. The values for the triglycerides, LDL and VLDL were positively skewed. A Mann–Whitney U test was run on these data. Results: Using IOTF standards, 9.8% were overweight and 1.9% were obese. Only 1.6% of the sample met the criteria for prediabetes by fasting glucose but 12.4% of the sample met the criteria for prediabetes by HbA1c. None of the participants met criteria for diabetes. There were 2.3% of the participants that met the IDF criteria for metabolic syndrome. Adolescents from the larger urban center had higher rates of prediabetes, higher mean HbA1c, blood pressure, lipid values, and lower HDL levels. Conclusions: Use of HbA1c identifed more adolescents with prediabetes than FBG. The HbA1c measure is an attractive screening tool for prediabetes in developing countries. Although rates of obesity in Ecuadorian adolescents are low there is significant evidence to suggest that prediabetes is permeating the smaller urban centers. Traditional screening tools may underestimate this risk
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