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Dive into the research topics where José Antonio Suárez is active.

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The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2010

Large Urban Outbreak of Orally Acquired Acute Chagas Disease at a School in Caracas, Venezuela

Belkisyolé Alarcón de Noya; Zoraida Díaz-Bello; Cecilia Colmenares; Raiza Ruiz-Guevara; Luciano Mauriello; Reinaldo Zavala-Jaspe; José Antonio Suárez; Teresa Abate; Laura Naranjo; Manuel Paiva; Lavinia Rivas; Julio Castro; Juan Marques; Ivan Mendoza; Harry Acquatella; Jaime R. Torres; Oscar Noya

BACKGROUND Trypanosoma cruzi oral transmission is possible through food contamination by vectors feces. Little is known about the epidemiology and clinical features of microepidemics of orally acquired acute Chagas disease (CD). METHODS A case-control, cohort-nested, epidemiological study was conducted during an outbreak of acute CD that affected a school community. Structured interviews were designed to identify symptoms and sources of infection. Electrocardiograms were obtained for all patients. Specific serum antibodies were assessed by immunoenzimatic and indirect hemagglutination tests. In some cases, parasitemia was tested directly or by culture, animal inoculation, and/or a polymerase chain reaction technique. RESULTS Infection was confirmed in 103 of 1000 exposed individuals. Of those infected, 75% were symptomatic, 20.3% required hospitalization, 59% showed ECG abnormalities, parasitemia was documented in 44, and 1 child died. Clinical features differed from those seen in vectorial transmission. The infection rate was significantly higher among younger children. An epidemiological investigation incriminated contaminated fresh guava juice as the sole source of infection. CONCLUSIONS This outbreak was unique, because it affected a large, urban, predominantly young, middle-class, otherwise healthy population and resulted in an unprecedented public health emergency. Rapid diagnosis and treatment avoided higher lethality. Food-borne transmission of T. cruzi may occur more often than is currently recognized.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2012

Non-capsulated and capsulated Haemophilus influenzae in children with acute otitis media in Venezuela: a prospective epidemiological study

Laura Naranjo; José Antonio Suárez; Rodrigo DeAntonio; Francis Sanchez; Alberto Calvo; Enza Spadola; Nicolás Rodríguez; Omaira Andrade; Francisca Bertuglia; Nelly Márquez; Maria Mercedes Castrejon; Eduardo Ortega-Barria; Romulo E. Colindres

BackgroundNon-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) and Streptococcus pneumoniae are major causes of bacterial acute otitis media (AOM). Data regarding AOM are limited in Latin America. This is the first active surveillance in a private setting in Venezuela to characterize the bacterial etiology of AOM in children < 5 years of age.MethodsBetween December 2008 and December 2009, 91 AOM episodes (including sporadic, recurrent and treatment failures) were studied in 87 children enrolled into a medical center in Caracas, Venezuela. Middle ear fluid samples were collected either by tympanocentesis or spontaneous otorrhea swab sampling method. Standard laboratory and microbiological techniques were used to identify bacteria and test for antimicrobial resistance. The results were interpreted according to Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) 2009 for non-meningitis isolates. All statistical analyses were performed using SAS 9.1 and Microsoft Excel (for graphical purposes).ResultsOverall, bacteria were cultured from 69.2% (63 of the 91 episodes); at least one pathogen (S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, S. pyogenes or M. catarrhalis) was cultured from 65.9% (60/91) of episodes. H. influenzae (55.5%; 35/63 episodes) and S. pneumoniae (34.9%; 22/63 episodes) were the most frequently reported bacteria. Among H. influenzae isolates, 62.9% (22/35 episodes) were non-capsulated (NTHi) and 31.4% (11/35 episodes) were capsulated including types d, a, c and f, across all age groups. Low antibiotic resistance for H. influenzae was observed to amoxicillin/ampicillin (5.7%; 2/35 samples). NTHi was isolated in four of the six H. influenzae positive samples (66.7%) from recurrent episodes.ConclusionsWe found H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae to be the main pathogens causing AOM in Venezuela. Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines with efficacy against these bacterial pathogens may have the potential to maximize protection against AOM.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2009

Prevalence of antiretroviral drug resistance among treatment-naive and treated HIV-infected patients in Venezuela

Héctor R. Rangel; Domingo Garzaro; Jaime R. Torres; Julio Castro; José Antonio Suárez; Laura Naranjo; John Ossenkopp; Nahir Martínez; Cristina Gutiérrez; Flor Helene Pujol

An in-house, low-cost method was developed to determine the genotypic resistance of immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) isolates. All 179 Venezuelan isolates analysed belonged to subtype B. Primary drug resistance mutations were found in 11% of 63 treatment-naïve patients. The prevalence of resistance in isolates from 116 HIV-positive patients under antiretroviral treatment was 47% to protease inhibitors, 65% to nucleoside inhibitors and 38% to non-nucleoside inhibitors, respectively. Around 50% of patients in the study harboured viruses with highly reduced susceptibility to the three classical types of drugs after only five years from their initial diagnoses.


Virology Journal | 2017

Human rotavirus strains circulating in Venezuela after vaccine introduction: predominance of G2P[4] and reemergence of G1P[8]

Esmeralda Vizzi; Oscar Piñeros; M. Daniela Oropeza; Laura Naranjo; José Antonio Suárez; Rixio Fernández; José L. Zambrano; Argelia Celis; Ferdinando Liprandi

BackgroundRotavirus (RV) is the most common cause of severe childhood diarrhea worldwide. Despite Venezuela was among the first developing countries to introduce RV vaccines into their national immunization schedules, RV is still contributing to the burden of diarrhea. Concerns exist about the selective pressure that RV vaccines could exert on the predominant types and/or emergence of new strains.ResultsTo assess the impact of RV vaccines on the genotype distribution 1 year after the vaccination was implemented, a total of 912 fecal specimens, collected from children with acute gastroenteritis in Caracas from February 2007 to April 2008, were screened, of which 169 (18.5%) were confirmed to be RV positive by PAGE. Rotavirus-associated diarrhea occurred all year-round, although prevailed during the coolest and driest months among unvaccinated children under 24 months old. Of 165 RV strains genotyped for G (VP7) and P (VP4) by seminested multiplex RT-PCR, 77 (46.7%) were G2P[4] and 63 (38.2%) G1P[8]. G9P[8], G3P[8] and G2P[6] were found in a lower proportion (7.3%). Remarkable was also the detection of <5% of uncommon combinations (G8P[14], G8P[4], G1P[4] and G4P[4]) and 3.6% of mixed infections. A changing pattern of G/P-type distribution was observed during the season studied, with complete predominance of G2P[4] from February to June 2007 followed by its gradual decline and the reemergence of G1P[8], predominant since January 2008. Phylogenetic analysis of VP7 and VP4 genes revealed a high similarity among G2P[4] and global strains belonging to G2-II and P[4]-V lineages. The amino acid substitution 96D → N, related with reemergence of the G2 genotype elsewhere, was observed. The G1P[8] strains from Caracas were grouped into the lineages G1-I and P[8]-III, along with geographically remote G1P[8] rotaviruses, but they were rather distant from Rotarix® vaccine and pre-vaccine strains. Unique amino acid substitutions observed on neutralization domains of the VP7 sequence from Venezuelan post-vaccine G1P[8] could have conditioned their re-emergence and a more efficient dissemination into susceptible population.ConclusionsThe results suggest that natural fluctuations of genotypes in combination with forces driving the genetic evolution could determine the spread of novel strains, whose long-term effect on the efficacy of available vaccines should be determined.


Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy | 2017

Long-term comparative pharmacovigilance of orally transmitted Chagas disease: first report

Belkisyolé Alarcón de Noya; Raiza Ruiz-Guevara; Oscar Noya; Julio Castro; John Ossenkopp; Zoraida Díaz-Bello; Cecilia Colmenares; José Antonio Suárez; Oscar Noya-Alarcón; Laura Naranjo; Humberto Gutiérrez; Giuseppa Quinci; Jaime R. Torres

ABSTRACT Background: Two old drugs are the only choice against Trypanosoma cruzi and little is known about their secondary effects in the acute stage of oral-transmitted Chagas disease (ChD). Methods: A cross-sectional analytical surveillance study was conducted in a sizable cohort of patients seen during the largest acute foodborne ChD microepidemic registered so far. Individuals were treated with benznidazole (BNZ) or nifurtimox (NFX). ‘Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events’ was assessed to categorize side effects according to severity. Results: Out of 176 treatments applied, 79% had one or more adverse effects, which predominated in adults (97.8%) as compared to children (75.5%). Risk of side effects with NFX was significantly higher than BNZ. Four adults and a child treated with NFX had severe side effects (pulmonary infarction, facial paralysis, neutropenia, blurred vision, bone marrow hypoplasia) warranting hospitalization, and drug suspension. Adverse effects frequently reported with NFX were abdominal pain, hyporexia, weight loss, headache, nausea and lymphocytosis, whereas skin rash, neurosensory effects, hyporexia, fatigue, pyrosis, abdominal pain and eosinophilia were observed with BNZ. Conclusions: Frequency and severity of side effects during treatment of acute oral infection by T. cruzi demand direct supervision and close follow-up, even in those asymptomatic, to prevent life-threatening situations.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2000

Enteric Virus Infections and Diarrhea in Healthy and Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Children

Mary B. Liste; Ivelisse Natera; José Antonio Suárez; Flor H. Pujol; Ferdinando Liprandi; Juan E. Ludert


Investigacion Clinica | 2006

High prevalence of secondary resistance mutations in Venezuelan HIV-1 isolates

Mariacarolina Dieudonne; Domingo Garzaro; Jaime R. Torres; Laura Naranjo; José Antonio Suárez; Julio Castro; Nahir Martínez; Erika Castro; Lisbeth Berrueta; Siham Salmen; Marisol Devesa; Héctor R. Rangel; Flor H. Pujol


Av. cardiol | 2008

Guía para el diagnóstico: manejo y tratamiento de enfermedad de chagas: en fase aguda a nivel de los establecimientos de salud

Belkisyolé Alarcón de Noya; Jaime R. Torres; José Antonio Suárez; Laura Naranjo; Oscar Noya; Raiza Ruiz


Vitae: Academia Biomédica Digital | 2002

Transmisión Vertical del VIH-SIDA

José Antonio Suárez; Laura Naranjo


Vitae-revista De La Facultad De Quimica Farmaceutica | 2013

Guía para el Diagnóstico, Manejo y Tratamiento de Enfermedad de Chagas en fase Aguda a nivel de los Establecimientos de Salud

Fátima Garrido; Julio Córdova; Lavinia Rivas; Luís Montiel; Guillermo Luces; Leyda Celis; Marjorie Mendoza; Blanca Márquez; Carmen Yánez; Cristina Sifontes; Manuel Paiva; Oswaldo Godoy; Rafael Borges; Raiza Ruiz; William Freites; Yaneth Acevedo; Santos Hinojosa; Amalia García; José Rafel Gonzalez; Karen Malavé; Liliana Vergara; Manuel Garrido; Sofía Brunnicelli; Yelitza Guzmán; Yolanda Alvarez González; Belkisyolé Alarcón de Noya; Ivan Mendoza; Jaime R. Torres; Jhon Ossenkopp; José Antonio Suárez

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Oscar Noya

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems

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Cristina Gutiérrez

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems

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Flor Helene Pujol

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems

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