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Dive into the research topics where José Miguel Rubio is active.

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Featured researches published by José Miguel Rubio.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001

Genotypic Characterization of Toxoplasma gondii Strains Associated with Human Toxoplasmosis in Spain: Direct Analysis from Clinical Samples

Isabel Fuentes; José Miguel Rubio; Carmen Ramírez; Jorge Alvar

ABSTRACT Genetic analysis of the SAG2 locus was performed to determine the prevalence of the different genotypes of Toxoplasma gondii (strain types I, II, and III) associated with human toxoplasmosis in Spain. This determination was made directly from primary clinical samples, obviating the previous process of isolation in mice or cell culture. A total of 34 isolates of T. gondii, collected from immunocompromised patients and congenital infection cases, were analyzed. Restriction fragment length polymorphism in PCR-amplified SAG2 products was used to group strains into one of the three genotypes of T. gondii. Complete characterization of the SAG2 gene was successful in 76.5% of the cases, demonstrating the feasibility of direct genotype analysis from clinical samples of different origins. Strains of T. gondii type II were the most prevalent in immunocompromised patients, with 52% of cases, while strains of type I were present in 75% of the congenital infection cases. These data differ from previous reports that show type II strains to be mostly associated with all kinds of human toxoplasmosis. These differences might be an effect of selection in the process of culture and isolation of the samples performed by other researchers prior to strain characterization.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2002

A nested polymerase chain reaction (Ln-PCR) for diagnosing and monitoring Leishmania infantum infection in patients co-infected with human immunodeficiency virus

I. Cruz; Carmen Cañavate; José Miguel Rubio; M.A. Morales; C. Chicharro; Fernando Laguna; M. Jiménez-Mejías; G. Sirera; S. Videla; J. Alvar

We investigated a Leishmania-specific nested polymerase chain reaction (Ln-PCR) for the diagnosis and treatment monitoring of L. infantum infections in patients co-infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Peripheral blood and bone marrow samples from 89 HIV patients in Spain suspected of having leishmaniasis were examined by different diagnostic techniques (Ln-PCR, microscopy, NNN culture and indirect fluorescent antibody test). The sensitivity of Ln-PCR compared with microscopy and culture of bone marrow was 95.45% using blood and 100% when using bone marrow. 38 of these patients with confirmed leishmaniasis were entered in a chemotherapy trial (reported elsewhere), and samples from them were collected before treatment, one month after treatment ended and during follow-up (1-20 months), and examined similarly. Ln-PCR was shown to be a good method for testing efficacy of treatment and for predicting relapses after treatment (relapses were predicted on average 5 months earlier than when using classical diagnostic techniques). We suggest that Ln-PCR (especially using peripheral blood) should be the technique of choice for diagnosis, monitoring the success of treatment, and predicting relapses in patients with HIV and suspected or confirmed L. infantum infection.


Malaria Journal | 2014

First case of a naturally acquired human infection with Plasmodium cynomolgi

Thuy H Ta; Shamilah Hisam; Marta Lanza; Adela I Jiram; NorParina Ismail; José Miguel Rubio

Since 1960, a total of seven species of monkey malaria have been reported as transmissible to man by mosquito bite: Plasmodium cynomolgi, Plasmodium brasilianum, Plasmodium eylesi, Plasmodium knowlesi, Plasmodium inui, Plasmodium schwetzi and Plasmodium simium. With the exception of P. knowlesi, none of the other species has been found to infect humans in nature. In this report, it is described the first known case of a naturally acquired P. cynomolgi malaria in humans.The patient was a 39-year-old woman from a malaria-free area with no previous history of malaria or travel to endemic areas. Initially, malaria was diagnosed and identified as Plasmodium malariae/P. knowlesi by microscopy in the Terengganu State Health Department. Thick and thin blood films stained with 10% Giemsa were performed for microscopy examination. Molecular species identification was performed at the Institute for Medical Research (IMR, Malaysia) and in the Malaria & Emerging Parasitic Diseases Laboratory (MAPELAB, Spain) using different nested PCR methods.Microscopic re-examination in the IMR showed characteristics of Plasmodium vivax and was confirmed by a nested PCR assay developed by Snounou et al. Instead, a different PCR assay plus sequencing performed at the MAPELAB confirmed that the patient was infected with P. cynomolgi and not with P. vivax.This is the first report of human P. cynomolgi infection acquired in a natural way, but there might be more undiagnosed or misdiagnosed cases, since P. cynomolgi is morphologically indistinguishable from P. vivax, and one of the most used PCR methods for malaria infection detection may identify a P. cynomolgi infection as P. vivax.Simian Plasmodium species may routinely infect humans in Southeast Asia. New diagnostic methods are necessary to distinguish between the human and monkey malaria species. Further epidemiological studies, incriminating also the mosquito vector(s), must be performed to know the relevance of cynomolgi malaria and its implication on human public health and in the control of human malaria.The zoonotic malaria cannot be ignored in view of increasing interactions between man and wild animals in the process of urbanization.


Malaria Journal | 2010

First case of detection of Plasmodium knowlesi in Spain by Real time PCR in a traveller from Southeast Asia.

Thuy-Huong Ta Tang; Ana Salas; Marwa Ali-Tammam; María del Carmen Martínez; Marta Lanza; Eduardo Arroyo; José Miguel Rubio

Previously, Plasmodium knowlesi was not considered as a species of Plasmodium that could cause malaria in human beings, as it is parasite of long-tailed (Macaca fascicularis) and pig-tailed (Macaca nemestrina) macaques found in Southeast Asia. A case of infection by P. knowlesi is described in a Spanish traveller, who came back to Spain with daily fever after his last overseas travel, which was a six-month holiday in forested areas of Southeast Asia between 2008 and 2009. His P. knowlesi infection was detected by multiplex Real time quantitative PCR and confirmed by sequencing the amplified fragment. Using nested multiplex malaria PCR (reference method in Spain) and a rapid diagnostic test, the P. knowlesi infection was negative. This patient was discharged and asymptomatic when the positive result to P. knowlesi was reported. Prior to this case, there have been two more reports of European travellers with malaria caused by P. knowlesi, a Finnish man who travelled to Peninsular Malaysia during four weeks in March 2007, and a Swedish man who did a short visit to Malaysian Borneo in October 2006. Taken together with this report of P. knowlesi infection in a Spanish traveller returning from Southeast Asia, this is the third case of P. knowlesi infection in Europe, indicating that this simian parasite can infect visitors to endemic areas in Southeast Asia. This last European case is quite surprising, given that it is an untreated-symptomatic P. knowlesi in human, in contrast to what is currently known about P. knowlesi infection. Most previous reports of human P. knowlesi malaria infections were in adults, often with symptoms and relatively high parasite densities, up to the recent report in Ninh Thuan province, located in the southern part of central Vietnam, inhabited mainly by the Ra-glai ethnic minority, in which all P. knowlesi infections were asymptomatic, co-infected with P. malariae, with low parasite densities and two of the three identified cases were very young children under five years old.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001

Limited level of accuracy provided by available rapid diagnosis tests for malaria enhances the need for PCR-based reference laboratories.

José Miguel Rubio; I. Buhigas; M. Subirats; Margarita Baquero; S. Puente; A. Benito

ABSTRACT The rise of imported malaria cases and the high fatality rate in Europe make the search for new and easy diagnostic methods necessary. Rapid diagnosis tests (RDTs) are, in part, developed to cover the lack of diagnosis experience. Unfortunately, our data suggest that the accuracy of RDTs is insufficient and could increase the number of incorrect malaria diagnoses.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2002

Relapses versus Reinfections in Patients Coinfected with Leishmania infantum and Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1

Miguel A. Morales; Israel Cruz; José Miguel Rubio; Carmen Chicharro; Carmen Cañavate; Fernando Laguna; Jorge Alvar

In the Mediterranean basin, Leishmania infantum is a major opportunistic parasite in people with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and up to 9% of the patients with AIDS suffer from newly acquired or reactivated visceral leishmaniasis. Distinguishing between reinfections and relapses in these patients is important because some apparent treatment failures occur in patients with new rather than reactivated infections. Isoenzyme characterization is limited for use in determining relapsed versus newly acquired leishmaniasis in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients because of the variability of L. infantum and the predominance of the MON-1 zymodeme in people coinfected with HIV. A seminested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to amplify L. infantum minicircle kinetoplast DNA, and, after digestion, the restriction fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP) profiles showed that 3 (7.5%) of 40 patients coinfected with L. infantum and HIV had a new infection, whereas isoenzyme characterization indicated that all 40 patients had infection relapses. These results suggest the utility of this PCR-RFLP analysis in detecting leishmaniasis reinfection in HIV-positive patients.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2002

Plasmodium ovale Malaria Acquired in Central Spain

Juan Cuadros; Maria José Calvente; Agustín Benito; Juan Arévalo; Maria Angeles Calero; Javier Segura; José Miguel Rubio

We describe a case of locally acquired Plasmodium ovale malaria in Spain. The patient was a Spanish woman who had never traveled out of Spain and had no other risk factors for malaria. Because patients with malaria may never have visited endemic areas, occasional transmission of malaria to European hosts is a diagnostic and clinical challenge.


Parasitology Research | 2012

Detection of Cryptosporidium parvum and Cryptosporidium hominis in human patients in Cairo, Egypt

Nour M. Abd El Kader; María-Alejandra Blanco; Marwa Ali-Tammam; Abd El Rahman B. Abd El Ghaffar; Ahmed M. Osman; Nabila El Sheikh; José Miguel Rubio; Isabel Fuentes

Cryptosporidium is a significant cause of diarrheal disease in developing and industrialized nations. Cryptosporidium hominis and Cryptosporidium parvum are the main agents of cryptosporidiosis in humans. In Egypt, very little is known about genetic structure of Cryptosporidium spp. Therefore, this study was designed to examine samples from sporadic cases of cryptosporidiosis in Egyptians in order to identify the species involved in infection as well as the transmission dynamics and distribution of the parasite in the Great Cairo area. A total of 391 human faecal samples were collected, between May 2008 and March 2009, from ten public hospitals in Great Cairo. Initial screening by immunochromatographic detection kit “the Stick Crypto-Giardia; Operon” showed 23 possible positive cases. Twenty of them were confirmed by microscopic examination. PCR was performed by amplification of the oocyst wall protein (COWP) gene where 18 out of 23 samples were positive, one not detected by microscopy. Cryptosporidium genotyping was performed by RFLP analysis of PCR products of the diagnosis PCR. Only 15 samples rendered a digestion pattern. The genotyping distribution was nine cases showing C. hominis genotype, three showing C. parvum genotype and three showing mixed infection by C. hominis and C. parvum. The data showed an elevated prevalence of C. hominis (80.0%), the most anthroponotic species, suggesting a human–human transmission. Furthermore, the presence of up to 40% of samples infected with C. parvum shows that further investigations are required to determine the subgenotypes of C. parvum to clarify the mode of transmission in order to improve the control measures.


Parasitology International | 2011

Identification of a novel Assemblage B subgenotype and a zoonotic Assemblage C in human isolates of Giardia intestinalis in Egypt.

R.H. Soliman; I. Fuentes; José Miguel Rubio

Giardia intestinalis (G. intestinalis) is a flagellate parasite which has been considered the most common protozoan infecting human. Molecular techniques are of great value in studying the taxonomy, the zoonotic potential of animal isolates and the correlation between the genetic variability of the parasite and the range of clinical symptoms observed in humans. The present work aims at genotyping G. intestinalis isolates from Egypt using molecular techniques. PCR targeting the β-giardin locus, RFLP and sequencing were applied to 12 microscopically positive and 3 microscopically negative samples (which were positive by real time PCR targeting SSUr DNA). Two other loci, triose phosphate isomerase (TPI) gene and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) gene PCR and RFLP were also applied to all study isolates. The most frequent genotype was Assemblage B (13 out of 15), while Assemblage A and C were present in one sample each. This is the first report on zoonotic transmission of Assemblage C (dog genotype) to human in Egypt. Sequencing of the Assemblage B isolates revealed new subgenotypes with consistent mutations at specific positions, some of which were not characterized previously. The results shed light on the possibility that G. intestinalis can infect humans through a zoonotic route and open the door to wider investigations using different genetic loci to genotype Giardia isolates.


Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2004

Minimally Invasive Surgical Implantation of Left Ventricular Epicardial Leads for Ventricular Resynchronization Using Video-Assisted Thoracoscopy

Ángel L. Fernández; José B. García-Bengochea; Ramiro Ledo; Marino Vega; Antonio Amaro; Julian Alvarez; José Miguel Rubio; Juan Sierra; Daniel Sánchez

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Cardiac resynchronization via left ventricular or biventricular pacing is an option for selected patients with ventricular systolic dysfunction and widened QRS complex. Stimulation through a coronary vein is the technique of choice for left ventricular pacing, but this approach results in a failure rate of approximately 8%. We describe our initial experience with minimally invasive surgical implantation of left ventricular epicardial leads using video-assisted thoracoscopy. PATIENTS AND METHOD A total of 14 patients with congestive heart failure, NYHA functional class 3.2 (0.6) and mean ejection fraction 22.9 (6.8)% were included in this study. Left bundle branch block, QRS complex >140 ms and abnormal septal motion were observed in all cases. Epicardial leads were implanted on the left ventricular free wall under general anesthesia using video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. RESULTS Lead implantation was successful in 13 patients. Conversion to a small thoracotomy was necessary in one patient. All patients were extubated in the operating room. None of the patients died during their hospital stay. Follow-up showed reversal of ventricular asynchrony and significant improvement in ejection fraction and functional class. CONCLUSIONS Minimally invasive surgery for ventricular resynchronization using video-assisted thoracoscopy in selected patients is a safe procedure that makes it possible to choose the best site for lead implantation and provides adequate short- and medium-term stimulation.

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Agustín Benito

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Jerónimo Farré

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Marta Lanza

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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José Angel Cabrera

European University of Madrid

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Thuy-Huong Ta-Tang

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Isabel Fuentes

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Marwa Ali-Tammam

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Pedro Berzosa

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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