1.American cutaneous leishmaniasis in children and adolescents from Northcentral Venezuela.
Olinda Delgado ; Sylvia Silva ; Virginia Coraspe ; Maria A Ribas ; Alfonso J Rodriguez-Morales ; Pedro Navarro ; Carlos Franco-Paredes
Tropical biomedicine 2008;25(3):178-83
American Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (ACL) comprises a broad range of cutaneous manifestations caused by different Leishmania species which may produce severe and chronic sequelae in adults. However, it has been suggested that ACL may show different clinical and epidemiological features in children and adolescents that need to be further elucidated. We evaluated the epidemiological features of ACL in a cohort of pediatric patients from Northcentral Venezuela between years 1997 and 2005. Mean age of patients was 9 years old, with a mean clinical evolution of 3 months. Lesions were located mostly in extremities. Forty patients (93%) were positive by MST, 97.7% by IFAT and 48.8% by smear. MST values tended to be related to patients' age, higher values being recorded in older patients (p=0.153).
Adjective Check List
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Venezuela
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Child
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MST
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Clinical
2.Venezuelan surgeons view concerning teaching human anatomical dissection.
Anatomy & Cell Biology 2017;50(1):12-16
Currently, the importance of human anatomical dissection have come under debate in many countries but there are not references in Venezuela on this concern. This survey's aim is to assess the insights of Venezuelan surgeons and their outlines of usage of human anatomical dissection in teaching and learning human anatomy. Sixty-five Venezuelan surgeons at the Centro Médico Docente La Trinidad completed an anonymous survey on current and future teaching practices in human anatomy. Eighty-nine point two three percent of surveyed (n=58) conferred importance to human anatomical dissection despite the arrival of new innovations in learning human anatomy. The group surveyed view human anatomical dissection-based teaching as the most beneficial method of teaching human anatomy and it should be bolstered in human anatomical education with matching use of three-dimensional computerized tomography imaging as a complementary form for teaching and learning.
Anonyms and Pseudonyms
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Education
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Humans*
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Learning
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Methods
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Surgeons*
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Trinidad and Tobago
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Venezuela
3.Prevalence of Fecal Carriage of CTX-M-15 Beta-Lactamase-Producing Escherichia coli in Healthy Children from a Rural Andean Village in Venezuela
María ARAQUE ; Indira LABRADOR
Osong Public Health and Research Perspectives 2018;9(1):9-15
OBJECTIVES: Antimicrobial resistant extended-spectrum-β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-PE) have been shown to be present in healthy communities. This study examined healthy children from the rural Andean village of Llano del Hato, Mérida, Venezuela, who have had little or no antibiotic exposure to determine the prevalence of fecal carriage of ESBL-producing Escherichia coli (ESBL-EC). METHODS: A total of 78 fecal samples were collected in healthy children aged from 1 to 5 years. ESBL-EC were selected in MacConkey agar plates with cefotaxime and further confirmed by the VITEK 2 system. ESBL were phenotypically detected and presence of bla genes and their variants were confirmed by molecular assays. Determination of phylogenetic groups was performed by PCR amplification. Risk factors associated with fecal carriage of ESBL-EC-positive isolates were analyzed using standard statistical methods. RESULTS: Of the 78 children studied, 27 (34.6%) carried ESBL-EC. All strains harbored the bla(CTX-M-15) allele. Of these, 8 were co-producers of bla(TEM-1), bla(TEM-5), bla(SHV-5) or bla(SHV-12). Co-resistance to aminoglycosides and/or fluoroquinolones was observed in 9 strains. 51.9% of ESBL-EC isolates were classified within phylogroup A. A significant, positive correlation was found between age (≥2.5 – ≤5 years), food consumption patterns and ESBL-EC fecal carriage. CONCLUSION: This is the first study describing the high prevalence of fecal carriage of ESBL-EC expressing CTX-M-15- among very young, healthy children from a rural Andean village in Venezuela with scarce antibiotic exposure, underlining the importance of this population as a reservoir.
Agar
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Alleles
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Aminoglycosides
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Cefotaxime
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Child
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Enterobacteriaceae
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Escherichia coli
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Escherichia
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Fluoroquinolones
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Humans
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Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Prevalence
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Risk Factors
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Venezuela
4.The reach of Spanish-language YouTube videos on physical examinations made by undergraduate medical students.
José M RAMOS-RINCÓN ; Isabel BELINCHÓN-ROMERO ; Francisco SÁNCHEZ-FERRER ; Guillermo Martínez de la TORRE ; Meggan HARRIS ; Javier SÁNCHEZ-FERNÁNDEZ
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 2017;14(1):31-
This study was conducted to evaluate the performance and reach of YouTube videos on physical examinations made by Spanish university students. We analyzed performance metrics for 4 videos on physical examinations in Spanish that were created by medical students at Miguel Hernández University (Elche, Spain) and are available on YouTube, on the following topics: the head and neck (7:30), the cardiovascular system (7:38), the respiratory system (13:54), and the abdomen (11:10). We used the Analytics application offered by the YouTube platform to analyze the reach of the videos from the upload date (February 17, 2015) to July 28, 2017 (2 years, 5 months, and 11 days). The total number of views, length of watch-time, and the mean view duration for the 4 videos were, respectively: 164,403 views (mean, 41,101 views; range, 12,389 to 94,573 views), 425,888 minutes (mean, 106,472 minutes; range, 37,889 to 172,840 minutes), and 2:56 minutes (range, 1:49 to 4:03 minutes). Mexico was the most frequent playback location, followed by Spain, Colombia, and Venezuela. Uruguay, Ecuador, Mexico, and Puerto Rico had the most views per 100,000 population. Spanish-language tutorials are an alternative tool for teaching physical examination skills to students whose first language is not English. The videos were especially popular in Uruguay, Ecuador, and Mexico.
Abdomen
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Cardiovascular System
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Colombia
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Ecuador
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Education, Medical
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Head
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Humans
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Mexico
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Neck
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Physical Examination*
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Puerto Rico
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Respiratory System
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Spain
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Students, Medical*
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Uruguay
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Venezuela
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Video Recording
5.Recent vaccine technology in industrial animals.
Hyunil KIM ; Yoo Kyoung LEE ; Sang Chul KANG ; Beom Ku HAN ; Ki Myung CHOI
Clinical and Experimental Vaccine Research 2016;5(1):12-18
Various new technologies have been applied for developing vaccines against various animal diseases. Virus-like particle (VLP) vaccine technology was used for manufacturing the porcine circovirus type 2 and RNA particle vaccines based on an alphavirus vector for porcine epidemic diarrhea (PED). Although VLP is classified as a killed-virus vaccine, because its structure is similar to the original virus, it can induce long-term and cell-mediated immunity. The RNA particle vaccine used a Venezuela equine encephalitis (VEE) virus gene as a vector. The VEE virus partial gene can be substituted with the PED virus spike gene. Recombinant vaccines can be produced by substitution of the target gene in the VEE vector. Both of these new vaccine technologies made it possible to control the infectious disease efficiently in a relatively short time.
Alphavirus
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Animal Diseases
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Animals*
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Circovirus
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Communicable Diseases
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Diarrhea
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Encephalitis Virus, Venezuelan Equine
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Encephalomyelitis, Equine
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Immunity, Cellular
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Porcine epidemic diarrhea virus
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RNA
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Vaccines
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Vaccines, Synthetic
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Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle
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Venezuela