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1.
Blood Adv ; 7(9): 1823-1830, 2023 05 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36453638

There is no consensus on the best donor for children with nonmalignant disorders and immune deficiencies in the absence of a matched related donor (MRD). We evaluated the 2-year overall survival (OS) after umbilical cord blood transplantation (UCBT) in patients with nonmalignant disorders from 2009 to 2020 enrolled in a prospective clinical trial using either 5/6 or 6/6 UCB as the cell source. Patients receive a fully ablative busulfan, cyclophosphamide, and fludarabine without serotherapy. Fifty-five children were enrolled, median age 5 months (range, 1-111 months); primary immune deficiency (45), metabolic (5), hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (1), and hematologic disorders (4). Twenty-six patients had persistent infections before transplant. Nineteen of them (34%) were 6/6 matched, and 36 (66%) were 5/6 human leukocyte antigen-matched. The OS at 2 years was 91% (95% cumulative incidence, 79-96), with a median follow-up of 4.3 years. The median time to neutrophil and platelet recovery were 17 days (range, 5-39 days) and 37 days (range, 20-92 days), respectively. All but one evaluable patient achieved full donor chimerism. The cumulative incidence of acute GVHD grades 2-4 on day 100 was 16% (n = 9). All patients with viral infections at the time of transplant cleared the infection at a median time of 54 days (range, 44-91 days). All evaluable patients underwent correction of their immune or metabolic defects. We conclude that in the absence of MRD, UCBT following myeloablative conditioning without serotherapy is an excellent curative option in young children with nonmalignant disorders. This trial has been registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00950846.


Cord Blood Stem Cell Transplantation , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Infant , Busulfan , Cyclophosphamide/therapeutic use , Prospective Studies
2.
Rev Soc Bras Med Trop ; 54: e04712020, 2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33656149

INTRODUCTION: This communication reports the colonization of Panstrongylus megistus in an urban area of the municipality of Taboão da Serra in the metropolitan region of São Paulo. METHODS: After receiving a notification from the population, entomological research comprising active search, collection, identification, and examination of triatomines was conducted. Wild animals were captured and examined. RESULTS: A colony of triatomines was found to be associated with dogs in the backyard of the property. CONCLUSIONS: The colonization of P. megistus shows the potential for their occupation of artificial ecotopes, which may pose a risk to the human population.


Chagas Disease , Didelphis , Panstrongylus , Triatominae , Animals , Brazil , Chagas Disease/veterinary , Cities , Dogs , Insect Vectors
3.
Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop ; 54: e0471-2020, 2021. tab, graf
Article En | LILACS | ID: biblio-1155586

Abstract INTRODUCTION: This communication reports the colonization of Panstrongylus megistus in an urban area of the municipality of Taboão da Serra in the metropolitan region of São Paulo. METHODS: After receiving a notification from the population, entomological research comprising active search, collection, identification, and examination of triatomines was conducted. Wild animals were captured and examined. RESULTS: A colony of triatomines was found to be associated with dogs in the backyard of the property. CONCLUSIONS: The colonization of P. megistus shows the potential for their occupation of artificial ecotopes, which may pose a risk to the human population.


Animals , Dogs , Panstrongylus , Triatominae , Chagas Disease/veterinary , Didelphis , Brazil , Cities , Insect Vectors
4.
J Neurotrauma ; 31(2): 189-97, 2014 Jan 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23965000

Abstract Although several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have been conducted in human models of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), to date no studies have explicitly examined how injury may differentially affect both the positive phase of the hemodynamic response function (HRF) as well as the post-stimulus undershoot (PSU). Animal models suggest that the acute and semi-acute stages of mTBI are associated with significant disruptions in metabolism and to the microvasculature, both of which could impact on the HRF. Therefore, fMRI data were collected on a cohort of 30 semi-acute patients with mTBI (16 males; 27.83±9.97 years old; 13.00±2.18 years of education) and 30 carefully matched healthy controls (HC; 16 males; 27.17±10.08 years old; 13.37±2.31 years of education) during a simple sensory-motor task. Patients reported increased cognitive, somatic, and emotional symptoms relative to controls, although no group differences were detected on traditional neuropsychological examination. There were also no differences between patients with mTBI and controls on fMRI data using standard analytic techniques, although mTBI exhibited a greater volume of activation during the task qualitatively. A significant Group×Time interaction was observed in the right supramarginal gyrus, bilateral primary and secondary visual cortex, and the right parahippocampal gyrus. The interaction was the result of an earlier time-to-peak and positive magnitude shift throughout the estimated HRF in patients with mTBI relative to HC. This difference in HRF shape combined with the greater volume of activated tissue may be indicative of a potential compensatory mechanism to injury. The current study demonstrates that direct examination and modeling of HRF characteristics beyond magnitude may provide additional information about underlying neuropathology that is not available with more standard fMRI analyses.


Brain Injuries/physiopathology , Brain/physiopathology , Functional Neuroimaging/methods , Hemodynamics/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Adult , Female , Functional Neuroimaging/instrumentation , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Young Adult
5.
Cereb Cortex ; 23(3): 560-9, 2013 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22371310

Unlike the visual system, a direct mapping of extrapersonal space does not exist within human auditory cortex (AC). Thus, models (contralateral bias vs. neglect) of how auditory spatial attention is allocated remain debated, as does the role of hemispheric asymmetries. To further examine these questions, 27 participants completed an exogenous auditory orienting task while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging. Resting-state data were also collected to characterize intrinsic activity within the AC. Current results provide the first evidence of hemispheric specialization in the "where" (right secondary AC) auditory processing stream during both evoked (orienting task) and intrinsic (resting-state data) activity, suggesting that spontaneous and evoked activity may be synchronized by similar cortical hierarchies. Strong evidence for a contralateral bias model was observed during rapid deployment stages (facilitation) of auditory attention in bilateral AC. However, contralateral bias increased for left and decreased for right AC (neglect model) after longer stimulus onset asynchronies (inhibition of return), suggesting a role for higher-order cortical structures in modulating AC functioning. Prime candidates for attentional modulation include the frontoparietal network, which demonstrated right hemisphere lateralization across multiple attentional states.


Attention/physiology , Auditory Cortex/physiology , Auditory Perception/physiology , Brain Mapping , Dominance, Cerebral/physiology , Adult , Auditory Pathways/physiology , Female , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Models, Neurological
6.
J Neurosci ; 32(50): 17961-9, 2012 Dec 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23238712

Pediatric mild traumatic brain injury (pmTBI) is the most prevalent neurological insult in children and is associated with both acute and chronic neurobehavioral sequelae. However, little is known about underlying pathophysiology and how injuries change as a function of recovery. Fractional anisotropy, axial diffusivity, and radial diffusivity were examined in 15 semi-acute pmTBI patients and 15 well-matched controls, with a subset of participants returning for a second visit. A novel analytic strategy was applied to capture spatially heterogeneous white matter injuries (lesions) in addition to standard analyses. Evidence of cognitive dysfunction after pmTBI was observed in the domains of attention (p = 0.02, d = -0.92) and processing speed (p = 0.05, d = -0.73) semi-acutely. Region of interest (ROI) and voxelwise analyses indicated increased anisotropic diffusion for pmTBI patients, with an elevated number of clusters with high anisotropy. Metrics of increased anisotropy were able to objectively classify pmTBI from healthy controls at 90% accuracy but were not associated with neuropsychological deficits. Little evidence of recovery in white matter abnormalities was observed over a 4-month interval in returning patients, indicating that physiological recovery may lag behind subjective reports of normality. Increased anisotropic diffusion has been previously linked with cytotoxic edema after TBI, and the magnitude and duration of these abnormalities appear to be greater in pediatric patients. Current findings suggest that developing white matter may be more susceptible to initial mechanical injury forces and that anisotropic diffusion provides an objective biomarker of pmTBI.


Brain Injuries/complications , Brain Injuries/pathology , Brain/pathology , Cognition Disorders/etiology , Cognition Disorders/pathology , Adolescent , Anisotropy , Brain/physiopathology , Brain Injuries/physiopathology , Child , Cognition Disorders/physiopathology , Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Female , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Male
7.
Brain Imaging Behav ; 6(2): 343-54, 2012 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22673802

Previous work suggests that the ability to selectively attend to and resolve conflicting information may be the most enduring cognitive deficit following mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). The current study used fMRI to evaluate potential differences in hemodynamic activation in 22 mTBI patients and 22 carefully matched healthy controls (HC) during a multimodal selective attention task (numeric Stroop). Behavioral data indicated faster reaction times for congruent versus incongruent trials and for stimuli presented at 0.66 compared to 0.33 Hz across both groups, with minimal differences in behavioral performance across the groups. Similarly, there were no group-wise differences in functional activation within lateral and medial prefrontal cortex during the execution of cognitive control (incongruent versus congruent trials). In contrast, within-group comparisons indicated robust patterns of attention-related modulations (ARM) within the bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and bilateral visual streams for HC but not mTBI patients. In addition, mTBI patients failed to exhibit task-induced deactivation within the default-mode network (DMN) under conditions of higher attentional load. In summary, in spite of near normal behavioral performance, current results suggest within-group abnormalities during both the top-down allocation of visual attention and in regulating the DMN during the semi-acute stage of mTBI.


Attention , Brain Injuries/physiopathology , Brain/physiopathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
8.
Brain ; 135(Pt 4): 1281-92, 2012 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22505633

Mild traumatic brain injury is the most prevalent neurological insult and frequently results in neurobehavioural sequelae. However, little is known about the pathophysiology underlying the injury and how these injuries change as a function of time. Although diffusion tensor imaging holds promise for in vivo characterization of white matter pathology, both the direction and magnitude of anisotropic water diffusion abnormalities in axonal tracts are actively debated. The current study therefore represents both an independent replication effort (n = 28) of our previous findings (n = 22) of increased fractional anisotropy during semi-acute injury, as well as a prospective study (n = 26) on the putative recovery of diffusion abnormalities. Moreover, new analytical strategies were applied to capture spatially heterogeneous white matter injuries, which minimize implicit assumptions of uniform injury across diverse clinical presentations. Results indicate that whereas a general pattern of high anisotropic diffusion/low radial diffusivity was present in various white matter tracts in both the replication and original cohorts, this pattern was only consistently observed in the genu of the corpus callosum across both samples. Evidence for a greater number of localized clusters with increased anisotropic diffusion was identified across both cohorts at trend levels, confirming heterogeneity in white matter injury. Pooled analyses (50 patients; 50 controls) suggested that measures of diffusion within the genu were predictive of patient classification, albeit at very modest levels (71% accuracy). Finally, we observed evidence of recovery in lesion load in returning patients across a 4-month interval, which was correlated with a reduction in self-reported post-concussive symptomatology. In summary, the corpus callosum may serve as a common point of injury in mild traumatic brain injury secondary to anatomical (high frequency of long unmyelinated fibres) and biomechanics factors. A spatially heterogeneous pattern of increased anisotropic diffusion exists in various other white matter tracts, and these white matter anomalies appear to diminish with recovery. This macroscopic pattern of diffusion abnormalities may be associated with cytotoxic oedema following mechanical forces, resulting in changes in ionic homeostasis, and alterations in the ratio of intracellular and extracellular water. Animal models more specific to the types of mild traumatic brain injury typically incurred by humans are needed to confirm the histological correlates of these macroscopic markers of white matter pathology.


Biomarkers/metabolism , Brain Injuries/metabolism , Brain Injuries/pathology , Brain/pathology , Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/pathology , Adolescent , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Anisotropy , Case-Control Studies , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Regression Analysis , Severity of Illness Index , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Young Adult
9.
J Neurotrauma ; 29(12): 2124-36, 2012 Aug 10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22533632

Studies in adult mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) have shown that two key measures of attention, spatial reorienting and inhibition of return (IOR), are impaired during the first few weeks of injury. However, it is currently unknown whether similar deficits exist following pediatric mTBI. The current study used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate the effects of semi-acute mTBI (<3 weeks post-injury) on auditory orienting in 14 pediatric mTBI patients (age 13.50±1.83 years; education: 6.86±1.88 years), and 14 healthy controls (age 13.29±2.09 years; education: 7.21±2.08 years), matched for age and years of education. The results indicated that patients with mTBI showed subtle (i.e., moderate effect sizes) but non-significant deficits on formal neuropsychological testing and during IOR. In contrast, functional imaging results indicated that patients with mTBI demonstrated significantly decreased activation within the bilateral posterior cingulate gyrus, thalamus, basal ganglia, midbrain nuclei, and cerebellum. The spatial topography of hypoactivation was very similar to our previous study in adults, suggesting that subcortical structures may be particularly affected by the initial biomechanical forces in mTBI. Current results also suggest that fMRI may be a more sensitive tool for identifying semi-acute effects of mTBI than the procedures currently used in clinical practice, such as neuropsychological testing and structural scans. fMRI findings could potentially serve as a biomarker for measuring the subtle injury caused by mTBI, and documenting the course of recovery.


Auditory Perception/physiology , Brain Injuries/psychology , Orientation/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adolescent , Attention/physiology , Biomechanical Phenomena , Child , Cues , Female , Hearing/physiology , Hemodynamics/physiology , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Neuropsychological Tests , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Reaction Time/physiology , Space Perception/physiology
10.
Hum Brain Mapp ; 33(1): 50-62, 2012 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21391258

The relationship between head motion and diffusion values such as fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) is currently not well understood. Simulation studies suggest that head motion may introduce either a positive or negative bias, but this has not been quantified in clinical studies. Moreover, alternative measures for removing bias as result of head motion, such as the removal of problematic gradients, has been suggested but not carefully evaluated. The current study examined the impact of head motion on FA and MD across three common pipelines (tract-based spatial statistics, voxelwise, and region of interest analyses) and determined the impact of removing diffusion weighted images. Our findings from a large cohort of healthy controls indicate that while head motion was associated with a positive bias for both FA and MD, the effect was greater for MD. The positive bias was observed across all three analysis pipelines and was present following established protocols for data processing, suggesting that current techniques (i.e., correction of both image and gradient table) for removing motion bias are likely insufficient. However, the removal of images with gross artifacts did not fundamentally change the relationship between motion and DTI scalar values. In addition, Monte Carlo simulations suggested that the random removal of images increases the bias and reduces the precision of both FA and MD. Finally, we provide an example of how head motion can be quantified across different neuropsychiatric populations, which should be implemented as part of any diffusion tensor imaging quality assurance protocol.


Brain Injuries/diagnosis , Diffusion Tensor Imaging/methods , Head Movements/physiology , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Adolescent , Adult , Anisotropy , Artifacts , Brain Injuries/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Male , Motion
11.
Rev. esp. nutr. comunitaria ; 15(4): 218-228, oct.-dic. 2009. tab
Article Es | IBECS | ID: ibc-80583

La fragilidad es un síndrome multidimensional que afectaa los adultos mayores. En este artículo se revisan datos delperfil de riesgos en salud y nutrición de la población mayoren México que sugieren la existencia de fragilidad y lanecesidad de investigar y de instaurar medidas nutricionalespreventivas al respecto.Se revisan algunos de los cambios vinculados al proceso deenvejecimiento, factores asociados a los problemas de malnutrición,así como diferentes definiciones de la fragilidad,sus componentes y sus conexiones con el estado nutricionaly otros padecimientos que elevan la vulnerabilidad de lapoblación mayor. Por último, se describen algunas alternativasde prevención dietética y nutricional que han mostradoser efectivas para resolver el problema y que podrían serevaluadas en México(AU)


Frailty is a multidimensional syndrome that affects olderpeople. Data of risk profile in health and nutrition of thepopulation in Mexico suggest frailty and the need to investigateand establish preventive nutritional interventions.It reviews some of the changes related to aging process,malnutrition associated factors, as well as different definitionsof frailty, its components and their connections withthe nutritional status and other diseases that increase thevulnerability in elderly people. Finally it describes effectivealternatives for dietary and nutritional prevention in solvingthe problem and could be evaluated in México(AU)


Humans , Male , Female , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , 52503 , Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Frail Elderly/statistics & numerical data , Mexico/epidemiology , Health Services for the Aged/standards , Health Services for the Aged , Health of the Elderly , Nutrition Surveys , Risk Factors
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