58 research outputs found
Kinetics of antibodies in sera, saliva, and urine samples from adult patients with primary or secondary dengue 3 virus infections
SummaryObjectivesThe kinetics of three serological markers (IgM, IgA, and IgG) in serum, saliva, and urine samples from adult patients with primary or secondary dengue infection were studied.DesignSerum, saliva, and urine samples were collected from 22 patients with clinical and confirmed dengue 3 virus infection during the outbreak in Havana City in 2001. They were tested by capture IgM (MAC-ELISA), IgA (AAC-ELISA), and IgE (EAC-ELISA) and IgG ELISA inhibition method (EIM) to detect specific dengue antibodies.ResultsSimilar kinetics were observed in IgM, IgA, and IgG antibodies in saliva and IgA and IgG in urine samples from secondary cases compared with kinetics in serum samples, although the values were lower. No IgG antibody was detected in saliva and urine samples in primary cases and IgM antibody was not detected in urine samples from either primary or secondary infection. All secondary cases were positive for IgG in saliva and urine samples at day 7. The kinetics of specific IgE antibodies in primary and secondary cases were different.ConclusionsThe kinetics of three serological markers (IgM, IgA, and IgG) in serum, saliva, and urine samples from adult patients with primary or secondary dengue 3 virus infection were studied for the first time, showing its behavior and usefulness in dengue virus diagnosis. The specific IgE could play a role as a serological marker in secondary infections
Psychosocial burden in adult patients with atopic dermatitis
P16
Objective: Atopic dermatitis affects patients’ quality of life (QoL) in many ways. It is important to analyze the impact that the disease produces in order to better define the healthcare needs of adult patients with atopic dermatitis.
Patients and Methods: 14 adult patients with atopic dermatitis were interviewed. The qualitative interviews were semi-structured and supported by a simple script, which allowed a complete and flexible interview.
Results: Six affected areas of the patient’s life with atopic dermatitis were identified: economic, work-related, personal, psychosocial, clinical and relational. It is emphasized that atopic dermatitis has a great psychosocial impact on the adult patient, since it alters interpersonal relationships, generates rejection, stigmatization and social isolation, limits the patient in various areas and activities of their daily life or alters sleep, among others. The visible aspect, the itching-scratching cycle, the lack of awareness and ignorance of the disease, the lack of a definitive solution among the treatments and the side effects of some of them are of great concern.
Conclusions: The QoL of the patients with atopic dermatitis is negatively affected and a holistic multidisciplinary intervention is necessary in order to mitigate the negative impact of the disease
Quality of life in hidradenitis suppurativa: psychometric properties of HSQOL-24
P14
Introduction: Hidradenitis Suppurativa (HS) has been associated with impaired quality of life (QoL). There are various measuring systems to assess physical severity; however, there are no specific QoL questionnaires for this disease in the Spanish language.
Objective: To develop and validate a disease-specific instrument to measure QoL in patients with HS.
Methods: A literature search was carried out to prepare a semi structured interview for patients with HS, as well as a Delphi expert consensus among health professionals. The validation with a sample of 130 patients is presented. The preliminary validation of the HSQoL-24 was passed twice to a group of 30 patients with 30 ± 10 days of interval. The DLQI and the Skindex-29 were used for its validation.
Results: Cronbach alpha 0.87 indicates a good internal consistency of the questionnaire. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) with the DLQI was 0.70 (p-value) (< 0.001), and 0.87 (p-value) (< 0.001) with the Skindex-29.
Conclusions: The HSQoL-24 is the first specific self-administered questionnaire to assess QoL in patients with HS in Spanish. It is user friendly and easy to. This study demonstrates the excellent properties of the instrument: comprehensibility, reliability (test-retest), internal consistency, validity, comparison with DLQI and SKINDEX-29, and discriminative capacity
Patient reported outcomes (PROS) in psoriasis patients
P20
Introduction: Psoriasis is a chronic skin disease with negative physical, mental and social manifestations. Method: We carried out a longitudinal and prospective study under routine clinical practice conditions. The objective of the study was to measure quality of life with the Short Form-36 Survey (SF-36) and correlate the results with clinical variables using the PASI and BSA in a group of 17 patients with moderate to severe psoriasis treated with Ustekinumab. Results: In the baseline evaluation we observed the following results: 35.3% reported physical malfunction, 64.7% debilitating pain, 82.3% poor health in general, 76.4% bad vitality, 88.2% social malfunction, 100% emotional malfunction and 82.3% poor mental health. At week 78 we observed the following results: 41.15% reported very good physical functioning, 76.1% no pain, 58.8% good general health, 58.8% very good vitality, 70%, 5% good social functioning, 70.5% good emotional functioning and 52.9% good mental health. Conclusion: We observed that the perception of patients with moderate-severe psoriasis regarding their health at the beginning of treatment with Ustekinumab was poor and that they experienced a significant improvement throughout the successive weeks of treatment
Persistence of COVID-19 Symptoms after Recovery in Mexican Population
The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is responsible for the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19), a highly contagious infectious disease that has caused many deaths
worldwide. Despite global efforts, it continues to cause great losses, and leaving multiple unknowns
that we must resolve in order to face the pandemic more effectively. One of the questions that has
arisen recently is what happens, after recovering from COVID-19. For this reason, the objective of
this study is to identify the risk of presenting persistent symptoms in recovered from COVID-19.
This case-control study was conducted in one state of Mexico. Initially the data were obtained
from the participants, through a questionnaire about symptoms that they had at the moment of the
interview. Initially were captured the collected data, to make a dataset. After the pre-processed using
the R project tool to eliminate outliers or missing data. Obtained finally a total of 219 participants,
141 recovered and 78 controls. It was used confidence level of 90% and a margin of error of 7%.
From results it was obtained that all symptoms have an associated risk in those recovered. The relative
risk of the selected symptoms in the recovered patients goes from 3 to 22 times, being infinite for the
case of dyspnea, due to the fact that there is no control that presents this symptom at the moment of
the interview, followed by the nausea and the anosmia with a RR of 8.5. Therefore, public health
strategies must be rethought, to treat or rehabilitate, avoiding chronic problems in patients recovered
from COVID-19
Large Magnetoresistance of Isolated Domain Walls in La2/3Sr1/3MnO3 Nanowires
Generation, manipulation, and sensing of magnetic domain walls are cornerstones in the design of efficient spintronic devices. Half-metals are amenable for this purpose as large low field magnetoresistance signals can be expected from spin accumulation at spin textures. Among half metals, La1−xSrxMnO3 (LSMO) manganites are considered as promising candidates for their robust half-metallic ground state, Curie temperature above room temperature (Tc = 360 K, for x = 1/3), and chemical stability. Yet domain wall magnetoresistance is poorly understood, with large discrepancies in the reported values and conflicting interpretation of experimental data due to the entanglement of various source of magnetoresistance, namely, spin accumulation, anisotropic magnetoresistance, and colossal magnetoresistance. In this work, the domain wall magnetoresistance is measured in LSMO cross-shape nanowires with single-domain walls nucleated across the current path. Magnetoresistance values above 10% are found to be originating at the spin accumulation caused by the mistracking effect of the spin texture of the domain wall by the conduction electrons. Fundamentally, this result shows the importance on non-adiabatic processes at spin textures despite the strong Hund coupling to the localized t2g electrons of the manganite. These large magnetoresistance values are high enough for encoding and reading magnetic bits in future oxide spintronic sensors. © 2023 The Authors. Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.G.O. and D.S.-M. contributed equally to this work. The authors ac-knowledge received funding from the project To2Dox of FlagERA ERA-NET Cofund in Quantum Technologies implemented within the Euro-pean Union’s Horizon 2020 Program. This work was supported by Span-ish AEI through grants, PID2020-118078RB-I00, PID2020-11556RB-100and PID2020-117024GB-C43 and by Regional Government of MadridCAM through SINERGICO project Y2020/NMT-6661 CAIRO-CM. S.R.-G.also gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the Alexander vonHumboldt foundation. Work at CNRS/Thales supported by French ANR-22CE30-0020 "SUPERFAST". J.J.R was supported by the CSIC program forthe Spanish Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan funded by the Recovery and Resilience EU Facility EU regulation 2020/2094. The authorsthank the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie for theallocation of synchrotron radiation beamtime.Open access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.Supporting InformationPeer reviewe
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