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Dive into the research topics where B. Martínez-Fernández is active.

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Featured researches published by B. Martínez-Fernández.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2011

Development and Characterization of Protective Haemophilus parasuis Subunit Vaccines Based on Native Proteins with Affinity to Porcine Transferrin and Comparison with Other Subunit and Commercial Vaccines

Rafael Frandoloso; Sonia Martínez Martínez; Elías F. Rodríguez-Ferri; María J. García-Iglesias; Claudia Pérez-Martínez; B. Martínez-Fernández; César B. Gutiérrez-Martín

ABSTRACT Haemophilus parasuis is the agent responsible for causing Glässers disease, which is characterized by fibrinous polyserositis, polyarthritis, and meningitis in pigs. In this study, we have characterized native outer membrane proteins with affinity to porcine transferrin (NPAPT) from H. parasuis serovar 5, Nagasaki strain. This pool of proteins was used as antigen to developed two vaccine formulations: one was adjuvanted with a mineral oil (Montanide IMS 2215 VG PR), while the other was potentiated with a bacterial neuraminidase from Clostridium perfringens. The potential protective effect conferred by these two vaccines was compared to that afforded by two other vaccines, consisting of recombinant transferrin-binding protein (rTbp) A or B fragments from H. parasuis, Nagasaki strain, and by a commercially available inactivated vaccine. Five groups of colostrum-deprived piglets immunized with the vaccines described above, one group per each vaccine, and a group of nonvaccinated control animals were challenged intratracheally with a lethal dose (3 × 108 CFU) of H. parasuis, Nagasaki strain. The two vaccines containing rTbps yielded similar results with minimal protection against death, clinical signs, gross and microscopic lesions, and H. parasuis invasion. In contrast, the two vaccines composed of NPAPT antigen and commercial bacterin resulted in a strong protection against challenge (without deaths and clinical signs), mild histopathological changes, and no recovery of H. parasuis, thus suggesting their effectiveness in preventing Glässers disease outbreaks caused by serovar 5.


Current Vascular Pharmacology | 2012

Preclinical Evaluation of Coronary Stents: Focus on Safety Issues

Armando Pérez de Prado; Claudia Pérez-Martínez; Carlos Cuellas; José M. Gonzalo-Orden; Alejandro Diego; Marta Regueiro; B. Martínez-Fernández; Jose R. Altonaga; J. Francisco G. Marin; Felipe Fernández-Vázquez

In recent years, we have witnessed a revolution in the treatment of coronary artery disease. The development and improvement of drug eluting stents (DES) have lowered the incidence of restenosis to one-digit figures. In the search for a superior efficacy, animal models have played a key role. The classical swine model of coronary stenting remains the preferred model to measure restenosis, although the rabbit iliac artery stenting has become an accepted alternative. After widespread clinical use of DES, an unforeseen complication arose: late stent thrombosis. In a back-to-bench step, some data from animal models helped to explain the phenomenon. A delayed and incomplete vascular healing was detected. Toxic and hypersensitivity reactions to polymers and/or drugs seem to be the underlying causes. So, translational research focused on the safety aspect of these devices: development of better drug carriers as absorbable polymers or fully bioresorbable scaffolds, selection of different drugs and assessment of the re-endothelialization process. We review and evaluate the efficacy and safety of coronary stents in different animal models. Further improvements in this field such as, the selection of better animal models (e.g. hyperlipidemic, diabetic, atherosclerotic) that closely mimic the clinical setting and longer follow-up periods to detect late complications are also discussed.


Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2011

Análisis de la inflamación luminal inducida por distintos tipos de stent coronario en el modelo coronario animal mediante microscopía electrónica de barrido

Armando Pérez de Prado; Claudia Pérez-Martínez; Carlos Cuellas-Ramón; José M. Gonzalo-Orden; Marta Regueiro-Purriños; B. Martínez-Fernández; Alejandro Diego-Nieto; Felipe Fernández-Vázquez

There is histological evidence that drug-eluting stents are associated with delayed endothelialization and a persistent inflammatory state. Moreover, clusters of inflammatory cells have been observed on luminal surfaces by scanning electron microscopy. With the aim of quantifying this inflammatory response, we implanted one bare-metal stent and two drug-eluting stents containing different doses of vinblastine embedded in the same polymer into the coronary arteries of 12 domestic pigs. The density of inflammatory cells in a representative area (100 x 100 μm) was quantified at 3 and 7 days. Endothelialization was more complete in bare-metal stents than in drug-eluting stents at both 3 days (P=.016) and 7 days (P=.0001). The degree of inflammation induced by the drug-eluting stents was higher than that induced by the bare-metal stents at both 3 days (11.8±3.5% vs. 4.5±2%; P=.001) and 7 days (26.3±4.4% vs. 1.2±1.5%; P=.0001). In addition, the time sequence was inverted: the inflammatory response increased over time with the drug-eluting stents, while the opposite occurred with the bare-metal stents.


Journal of NeuroVirology | 2012

Perivascular inflammatory cells in ovine Visna/maedi encephalitis and their possible role in virus infection and lesion progression

Laura Polledo; J. González; Julio Benavides; B. Martínez-Fernández; Mª del Carmen Ferreras; Juan Francisco García Marín

We examined the distribution in the perivascular spaces of Visna/maedi antigen, T cells (CD3+, CD4+ and CD8+), B cells and macrophages by immunohistochemistry in 22 natural cases of Visna/maedi encephalitis. Sheep showed lymphocytic or histiocytic lesions. In mild lymphocytic lesions, the viral antigen was detected in perivascular cuffs where CD8+ T cells predominated, but in severe lymphocytic lesions, sparse antigen was identified, and CD8+/CD4+ T cells appeared in a similar proportion in multilayer perivascular sleeves. In histiocytic lesions, vessels were surrounded by macrophages with abundant viral antigen, with CD8+/CD4+ T cells and B cells in the periphery. These results could reflect different stages of virus neuroinvasion and clarify the neuropathogenesis of Visna/maedi encephalitis.


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2012

Recurrent Outbreaks of Myelodysplasia in Newborn Calves

Laura Polledo; J.F. García Marín; B. Martínez-Fernández; J. González; Joan Francesc Alonso; W. Salceda; M.J. García-Iglesias

The present study records recurrent outbreaks of myelodysplasia of unknown origin occurring in a specific geographical location in the north of Spain, and involving up to 30% of the calves born in affected herds. The affected calves were of different breeds and displayed non-progressive signs of spinal cord dysfunction. The disease has occurred annually in February-March over a period of at least 15 years. Only calves born to cattle grazed on mountainside pastures and under high grazing pressure were affected. Seven calves were subjected to necropsy examination. Myelodysplasia was not associated with vertebral defects or arthrogryposis and involved the entire length of the spinal cord. Microscopically, there was abnormal distribution of the grey matter, aberrations of the central canal and failure of formation of the ventral median fissure. Infectious, nutritional and physical disorders were ruled out as possible aetiologies. A critical period of embryonic susceptibility to the causal agent was identified. This was during the time of secondary neurulation when cows in the early stages of gestation were grazed on mountainside pastures. Consequently, the presence of neuroteratogenic plants in these pastures is proposed as a likely cause. Two plants, Carex brevicollis and Erythronium dens-canis, which contain alkaloids, were identified on the mountainsides where affected cattle were grazed and not in other pastures, and are proposed as the possible aetiology of the disease.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2012

TCT-564 Biodegradable-Polymer Biolimus Eluting Stents Show Better Antiproliferative Efficacy And Vascular Healing Pattern Than Permanent-Polymer Paclitaxel Eluting Stents in a Preclinical Coronary Model

Armando Pérez de Prado; Claudia Pérez-Martínez; Alejandro Diego; José M. Gonzalo-Orden; Carlos Cuellas; Marta Regueiro; B. Martínez-Fernández; José M. Ajenjo; María J. García-Iglesias; Felipe Fernández-Vázquez

Background: Second-generation drug eluting stents (DES) have shown a high efficacy in terms of restenosis prevention, like first-generation DES, with reduced rates of stent thrombosis, especially late stent thrombosis. The suggested mechanism for this superiority is a better morphological and functional healing response. The objective of this study is to compare the efficacy and safety results of 2 different, first and second-generation, DES in a swine model of normal coronary arteries. Methods: In 9 domestic juvenile swine (25 3 kg), one stent per coronary artery was implanted with an intended stent-to-artery ratio 1.1. We used 9 bare metal stents (BMS), 9 permanent-polymer paclitaxel eluting stents (PES) and 9 biodegradable-polymer biolimus eluting stents (BES). Quantitative coronary angiography was performed after 28 days to assess the in-stent % stenosis and the endothelium-dependent vasomotor response of the distal vessel (Acetylcholine 10-6M). We performed morphometric analyses of the in-stent % area stenosis and the endothelialization rate (haematoxylin-eosin stain, extent of luminal surface coverage with endothelial cells) at 3 levels of each stent sample. The eNOS endothelialization index measures the proportion of the whole luminal surface covered by eNOS endothelial cells. Results: All the stents were implanted as per-protocol, with a final stent:artery ratio 1.17 0.15. No baseline differences were observed between groups. The Table shows the restenosis and the functional healing parameters analyzed in each group.


Food Microbiology | 2004

Microbiological quality of vacuum-packed retail ostrich meat in Spain

Carlos Alonso-Calleja; B. Martínez-Fernández; Miguel Prieto; Rosa Capita


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2012

Patterns of Lesion and Local Host Cellular Immune Response in Natural Cases of Ovine Maedi-Visna

Laura Polledo; J. González; Julio Benavides; S. Morales; B. Martínez-Fernández; Laetitia Delgado; R. Reina; I. Glaria; Valentín Pérez Pérez; M.C. Ferreras; J.F. García Marín


Small Ruminant Research | 2013

Simple control strategy to reduce the level of Maedi-Visna infection in sheep flocks with high prevalence values (>90%)

Laura Polledo; J. González; C. Fernández; J. Miguélez; B. Martínez-Fernández; S. Morales; M.C. Ferreras; J.F. García Marín


Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2011

Scanning Electron Microscopy Analysis of Luminal Inflammation Induced by Different Types of Coronary Stent in an Animal Model

Armando Pérez de Prado; Claudia Pérez-Martínez; Carlos Cuellas-Ramón; José M. Gonzalo-Orden; Marta Regueiro-Purriños; B. Martínez-Fernández; Alejandro Diego-Nieto; Felipe Fernández-Vázquez

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J. González

University of Cantabria

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Armando Pérez de Prado

Complutense University of Madrid

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Valentín Pérez Pérez

Spanish National Research Council

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