Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ladys Sarmiento is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ladys Sarmiento.


American Journal of Dermatopathology | 1998

The asteroid bodies of sporotrichosis

Gerzaín Rodríguez; Ladys Sarmiento

Some believe that asteroid bodies (AB) in sporotrichosis are nonspecific and are equivalent to the AB of sarcoidosis and other granulomatous diseases. We studied 25 skin biopsy specimens of sporotrichosis in which AB were demonstrated, ten of them with Sporothrix-positive culture. Immunohistochemistry was performed in paraffin-embedded biopsy specimens using an anti-Sporothrix antibody. The same procedures were done with seven biopsy specimens of lobomycosis, which contained AB within giant cells. These did not react with the anti-Sporothrix antibody, and by electron microscopy they displayed filamentous and myelin figures similar to the AB of sarcoidosis. In sporotrichosis, the AB are extracellular eosinophilic structures, 15-35 microm in diameter, and located within abscesses. One to three are found in a section. They consist of a central yeast, surrounded by eosinophilic spicules. The yeast stains with the anti-Sporothrix antibody, while the spicules do not. Therefore, AB in sporotrichosis are specific for disease. Visualization of the spicules alone can lead to the demonstration of the AB in adjacent sections, and thus is a useful clue in the diagnosis of sporotrichosis. Sporotrichotic AB must not be confused with the intracellular AB seen in giant cells of granulomatous reactions, which are filamentous and myelin figures that contain lipid.


Tuberculosis Research and Treatment | 2011

Effect of an Oxadiazoline and a Lignan on Mycolic Acid Biosynthesis and Ultrastructural Changes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Eduard Baquero; Wiston Quiñones; Wellman Ribón; María Leonor Caldas; Ladys Sarmiento; Fernando Echeverri

Tuberculosis (TB) is an important disease that causes thousands of deaths around the world. Resistance against antitubercular available drugs has been reported; so, research on new effective antimycobacterial molecules is needed. Antimycobacterial activity of three lignans and two synthetic hydrazones was assessed against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv by antimycobacterial microdilution assay (TEMA). An oxadiazoline (AC451) and a lignan (ethoxycubebin) were the most active compounds (MIC 6.09 and 62.4 μM, resp.). Several changes in mycolic acid profile of treated bacteria were detected with both compounds by mass spectrometry analysis. Additionally, the level of reduction of mycolic acids in ethoxycubebin treatment was correlated to disruption in bacterial morphology.


Vector-borne and Zoonotic Diseases | 2008

Cellular location of KMP-11 protein in Trypanosoma rangeli.

Hugo Díez; Ladys Sarmiento; María Leonor Caldas; Marleny Montilla; María del Carmen Thomas; Manuel Carlos López; Concepción J. Puerta

We describe the localization of the KMP-11 protein in the Trypanosoma rangeli parasite determined by immunoelectron microscopy using a monoclonal antibody generated against the Trypanosoma cruzi KMP-11 protein. The data reported herein show that the T. rangeli KMP-11 protein is mainly accumulated in the parasite cytoplasm, the coat, the flagellum, and the flagellar pocket. The high degree of sequence homology between the KMP-11 proteins from both parasites suggests that the KMP-11 protein from T. rangeli, like that of T. cruzi, could also be associated with the parasite cytoskeleton.


Biomedica | 2018

Cambios ultrastructurales en núcleos de células C6/36 infectadas con virus dengue de tipo 2

Jorge Rivera; Aura Caterine Rengifo; Ladys Sarmiento; Taylor Díaz; Katherine Laiton-Donato; Martha Gracia; Sigrid J. Camacho; Myriam Velandia-Romero; Jaime E. Castellanos; María Leonor Caldas

INTRODUCTION Dengue virus replication has been considered mainly cytoplasmic, however, studies indicate that some flaviviruses may use the intranuclear pathway as part of the machinery that the virus uses to increase infection capacity in the host cell. This paper describes alterations at nuclear level in the cell infected with dengue, which are likely involved in the virus replication processes. OBJECTIVE This paper addresses the ultrastructural observations of C6/36 cells of the Aedes albopictus mosquito infected with dengue virus type 2. MATERIALS AND METHODS C6/36 cells were infected in culture medium with the serum of a patient positively diagnosed for dengue 2. Subsequently, the cells were incubated for 10 days and the cytopathic effect was assessed. The cells were processed for immunofluorescence assays and transmission electron microscopy. RESULTS The immunofluorescence assays confirmed the presence of viral protein E associated with cellular syncytia in the culture. In the ultrastructural study, the infected cells showed vesicular-tubular structures and dilated cisterns of the endoplasmic reticulum at the cytoplasmic level. Viral particles were found exclusively in cytoplasm localized within the vacuoles. Nuclei of cellular syncytia showed membrane structures arranged in a circular shape and, in some cases, these syncytia displayed lysis; in no case viral particles were observed at the nuclear level. CONCLUSIONS The ultrastructural alterations of nuclei in cells infected with the dengue virus using electron microscopy techniques had not been reported before, as far as we know. It is likely that such modifications are associated with replicative processes at an intranuclear level as an alternate replication mechanism.


Infectio | 2013

Glucógeno hepático en dengue severo: análisis histopatológico

Ladys Sarmiento; Aura Caterine Rengifo; Jorge Rivera; Marcela Neira; Edgar Parra; Jairo A. Méndez; Gerzaín Rodríguez; María Leonor Caldas

Background: Dengue virus affects various organs, but the liver is the main target of damage and where the most severe damage can occur. There are few studies on the histological changes in the liver during dengue infection. Aims: To analyze the histopathological post-mortem alterations in livers from patients with severe dengue.


Biomedica | 2011

Morphological changes in lung tissue of victims associated with the 2009 A H1N1/v09 influenza pandemic in Colombia

Jorge Rivera; Ladys Sarmiento; Edgar Parra; Gabriel Toro; Marcela Neira; Jairo Méndez; Juliana Barbosa; María Leonor Caldas

INTRODUCTION Influenza is an acute respiratory infection that may be seasonal or pandemic. In 2009 The World Health Organization (WHO) declared an influenza pandemia; 3,876 cases and 239 deaths were reported in Colombia. OBJECTIVE The morphological changes in lung tissues associated with virus infection H1N1/v09 were described from autopsied victims. Materials and methods. Seventy-five cases were diagnosed by RT-PCR for influenza A H1N1/v09, of which the lungs of 20 were selected for morphological study by light microscopy, optical microscopy, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry. RESULTS Of the 75 cases, 83% had viral pneumonitis and 17% alveolitis. Complications included intra-alveolar hemorrhage (66%), edema (89%), diffuse alveolar damage (2%), and bacterial co-infection (32%). Morphological changes were as follows: destruction of the alveolar epithelium and interstitium, edema, macrophages with vacuolated cytoplasm,and infiltration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the alveolar lumen and interstitium, vacuolization cytoplasmic type I pneumocytes and electronedense bodies in cellular debris in the alveolar lumen, and immunoreactivity of viral antigens in bronchiolar epithelial cells and alveolar infiltrate. CONCLUSION The low percentage of bacterial co-infection observed in these cases was a prominent feature, and suggested that the fatal result was probably not associated with secondary bacterial disease (Indicated by previous reports). The tissue lesions were attributed to tissue damage due to viral lesion, as well as the cellular and humoral inflammatory response associated with infiltration by polymorphonucleocytes and macrophages in the interstitium and alveolar lumen.


Biomedica | 1999

La lepra y el riñón

Gerzaín Rodríguez; Joaquín Berrio; Ladys Sarmiento


Biomedica | 1993

Evaluación de un método inmunohistoquímico para el diagnóstico de la fiebre amarilla

Orlando Ricaurte; Ladys Sarmiento; María Leonor Caldas


Biomedica | 2010

Elaboración y evaluación de un antisuero para la detección inmunohistoquímica del virus de la rabia en tejido cerebral fijado en aldehídos

Nina Paola Lamprea; Lina María Ortega; Gerardo Santamaría; Ladys Sarmiento; Orlando Torres-Fernández


Biomedica | 2002

La célula de langerhans.

Ladys Sarmiento; Sandra Peña

Collaboration


Dive into the Ladys Sarmiento's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gerzaín Rodríguez

National University of Colombia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge