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Dive into the research topics where Laura C. Martinez is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura C. Martinez.


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 1999

Diarrhea and Enteric Emerging Viruses in HIV-Infected Patients

Miguel O. Giordano; Laura C. Martinez; Diego Rinaldi; Carlos Espul; Norma Martínez; María B. Isa; Ariel R. Depetris; Silvia Medeot; Silvia V. Nates

To evaluate the prevalence of enteric viruses and their possible association with diarrhea, 244 stool samples were collected from HIV-infected and uninfected patients with or without diarrhea (subgroups I-a, Ib, II-a, and II-b, respectively). Subjects were screened by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, latex agglutination, and enzyme immunoassays for rotaviruses, adenoviruses, picobirnaviruses, and astroviruses. Enteric viruses were found significantly more often in specimens from HIV patients (20%) than in specimens from uninfected HIV patients (0%) (p < 0.05). Picobirnavirus was detected in 14.63% of 82 HIV-infected patients with diarrhea, but it was detected neither in those without diarrhea (0%) (p < 0.05) nor in the groups of uninfected HIV subjects (0%) (p < 0.05). Nor could astrovirus (subgroups I-a [4.00%] versus subgroup I-b [5.26%],p > 0.05) or enteric adenovirus (subgroup I-a [1.22%] versus subgroup I-b [0%], p > 0.05) be linked to the diarrhea disorder in HIV-infected patients. Rotaviruses were not detected in any of the clinical subgroups studied. Enteric viruses were detected in 15 of 93 (16.13%) of the HIV-infected patients with CD4+ T cell count <200/microl and 3 of 19 (15.79%) of those HIV-infected individuals with a CD4+ T cell count 200-499/microl, showing no significant difference (p > 0.05). According to our data, unusual enteric viruses such as picobirnavirus, astrovirus, and enteric adenovirus occur in HIV-infected population in Córdoba, Argentina. However, only picobirnaviruses could be significantly associated with diarrhea in these patients.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2001

The epidemiology of acute viral gastroenteritis in hospitalized children in Cordoba city, Argentina: an insight of disease burden

Miguel O. Giordano; Leonardo J. Ferreyra; María B. Isa; Laura C. Martinez; Silvia Yudowsky; Silvia V. Nates

Information concerning the disease burden of viral gastroenteritis has important implications for the use and monitoring the impact of public health policies. The present study, carried out in Córdoba city, Argentina, documents the epidemiology of severe viral diarrhea as well as the burden of viral gastrointestinal disease in the hospital children admission. A total of 133 stools were collected from hospitalized children (Town Childhood Hospital) suffering from acute diarrhea and studied for the presence of Group A rotavirus, astrovirus and adenovirus 40/41 by enzyme-immuno assay, between November 1997 and October 1998. Enteric viruses accounted for 42.1% of the total diarrheal cases analyzed. Group A rotaviruses, astroviruses, adenoviruses 40/41 and mixed infections were found in 35.3, 4.5, 1.5, and 0.8% studied specimens respectively. We estimated that 1 in 27 children in the 0-35 month-old cohort/range would be annually hospitalized for a viral gastroenteritis illness. The major impact on viral diarrhea lies on rotaviral infection, accounting for 84.0% of the viral diarrheal cases analyzed and for approximately one third of severe diarrheas requiring hospital admission in Córdoba City, Argentina.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 1998

Detection of picobirnavirus in HIV-infected patients with diarrhea in Argentina.

Miguel O. Giordano; Laura C. Martinez; Diego Rinaldi; Susana Gúinard; Elizabeth Naretto; Rodolfo Casero; Yacci Mr; Ariel R. Depetris; Silvia Medeot; Silvia V. Nates

Diarrhea due to enteric pathogens is an important complication of advanced HIV infection. Picobirnaviruses are agents recently linked with human enteritis. In total, 197 fecal samples collected from HIV-infected and noninfected patients with and without diarrhea were investigated for the presence of rotavirus and picobirnavirus by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Picobirnavirus was detected in 8.8% of 57 HIV-infected patients with diarrhea, but it was detected in neither those without diarrhea (p<.018) nor in the group of subjects uninfected with HIV (p<.022). All genomic electropherotypes of picobirnavirus strains had a wide pattern. Picobirnavirus genome segments varied in size between 2.4 and 2.7 and 1.6 and 1.9 kbp for the slow and fast migrating bands, respectively. Rotaviruses were not detected in any of the clinical groups studied. Two methods for the extraction of nucleic acid-phenol/chloroform and guanidinium thiocynate (GTC)/silica-were compared. Detection of picobirnavirus by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was 2.5 times more sensitive following guanidinium thiocynate RNA extraction. This investigation offers preliminary results about the circulation of picobirnavirus in HIV-infected patients in Córdoba, Argentina.


Archives of Virology | 2007

Picobirnavirus (PBV) natural hosts in captivity and virus excretion pattern in infected animals

Gisela Masachessi; Laura C. Martinez; Miguel O. Giordano; Patricia A. Barril; B. M. Isa; Leonardo J. Ferreyra; D. Villareal; M. Carello; C. Asis; Silvia V. Nates

Summary.A picobirnavirus (PBV) analysis was carried out by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of 513 stool samples obtained from 150 animal species collected from the Córdoba city zoo. The purpose of the present study was to determine susceptible species for PBV infection, the viral excretion pattern in infected animals, and the potential association with PBV diarrheic illness.Our findings suggest that PBVs are widespread in animals and could have a similar excretion behavior to that previously detected in infected humans. No disease association with PBV infection could be demonstrated. Thus, infected animals could be persistently infected asymptomatic carriers and could serve as reservoirs of infection.


Intervirology | 2003

Molecular Diversity of Partial-Length Genomic Segment 2 of Human Picobirnavirus

Laura C. Martinez; Miguel O. Giordano; María B. Isa; Luis Fernando Alvarado; Jorge V. Pavan; Diego Rinaldi; Silvia V. Nates

Objectives: This study was carried out in order to evaluate the efficacy of the recently developed picobirnavirus (PBV) sets of primers and to establish the phylogenetic relationships of Argentine strains with PBV strains isolated in China and the USA. Methods: Thirteen fecal specimens tested as positive for PBV by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were analyzed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assays using primers target to the genomic segments 2 of PBV strains isolated in China and the USA. The amplicons were sequenced and analyzed. Results: Primers derived from the China strain produced amplicons in only 4 of the 13 specimens (30.76%). No sample was revealed as positive with the primers derived from the US strain. DNA sequencing of polymerase chain reaction products differed in nucleic acid and amino acid sequences by 13.9–42.28% and 18.1–51.1%, respectively. Despite this strain diversity, three domains of conserved nucleotide sequences as well as the amino acid motif D-S-D typical of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase gene of double-strand RNA viruses were identified. Comparatively, these conserved regions were also identified in homologous PBV strains from the USA and China. Phylogenetic analysis showed no time or geographic clustering. Conclusions: These findings provide evidence that PBV may represent an emerging heterogeneous group of viruses.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2008

Molecular Characterization of Porcine Picobirnaviruses and Development of a Specific Reverse Transcription-PCR Assay

Gabriela Carruyo; Guaniri Mateu; Laura C. Martinez; Flor H. Pujol; Silvia V. Nates; Ferdinando Liprandi; Juan E. Ludert

ABSTRACT The molecular characterization of partial- length genomic segment 2 of porcine picobirnavirus (PBV) strains and the development of a specific reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) assay for detection of virus in feces are reported. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the studied porcine isolates were more closely related (>85% identity) to human PBV belonging to genogroup I than to the other porcine PBV described so far. Analysis by RT-PCR and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of fecal samples collected in Venezuela and Argentina showed that PBV circulate at high frequencies in piglets.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Environmental Poliovirus Surveillance during Oral Poliovirus Vaccine and Inactivated Poliovirus Vaccine Use in Córdoba Province, Argentina

Judith E. Mueller; Maël Bessaud; Q. Sue Huang; Laura C. Martinez; Patricia A. Barril; Viviane Morel; Jean Balanant; Judy Bocacao; Joanne Hewitt; Brad D. Gessner; Francis Delpeyroux; Silvia V. Nates

ABSTRACT This study compares the presence of environmental poliovirus in two Argentinean populations using oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) or inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV). From January 2003 to December 2005, Córdoba City used IPV in routine infant immunizations, with the exception of intermittent OPV use in August 2005. Between May 2005 and April 2006, we collected weekly wastewater samples in Córdoba City and the provinces three major towns, which continued OPV use at all times. Wastewater samples were processed and analyzed for the presence of poliovirus according to WHO guidelines. During the months of IPV use in Córdoba City, the overall proportion of poliovirus-positive samples was 19%. During an intermittent switch from IPV to OPV, this proportion increased to 100% within 2 months. During the 3 months when IPV was reintroduced to replace OPV, a substantial proportion of samples (25%) remained positive for poliovirus. In the OPV-using sites, on average, 54% of samples were poliovirus positive. Seventy-seven percent of poliovirus isolates showed at least one mutation in the VP1-encoding sequence; the maximum genetic divergence from the Sabin strain was 0.7%. Several isolates showed mutations on attenuation markers in the VP1-encoding sequence. The frequency or type of virus mutation did not differ between periods of IPV and OPV use or by virus serotypes. This study indicates that the sustained transmission of OPV viruses was limited during IPV use in a middle-income country with a temperate climate. The continued importation of poliovirus and genetic instability of vaccine strains even in the absence of sustained circulation suggest that high poliovirus vaccine coverage has to be maintained for all countries until the risk of reintroduction of either wild or vaccine-derived poliovirus is close to zero worldwide.


Science of The Total Environment | 2012

Environmental surveillance of norovirus in Argentina revealed distinct viral diversity patterns, seasonality and spatio-temporal diffusion processes.

María Dolores Fernández; Carolina Torres; Hugo Ramiro Poma; Gabriela Riviello-López; Laura C. Martinez; Daniel M. Cisterna; Verónica Beatriz Rajal; Silvia V. Nates; Viviana Andrea Mbayed

Norovirus (NoV) contamination was evaluated in five rivers of Argentina between 2005 and 2011. NoV was present in all sampled rivers, with distinct NoV patterns in waters impacted by different-sized communities. In rivers affected by medium-sized populations (Salta and Córdoba cities) only one or two genotypes were present, GII.4 being the main one, with winter seasonality. In contrast, in the much more heavily populated area of Buenos Aires city the prevalent GII.4 was accompanied by several additional genotypes (GII.4, GII.b, GII.2, GII.7, GII.17, GII.e and GII.g) and one ungenotyped GII NoV, with no clear seasonality. GII.4 2006b was the main variant detected (60.9%). Phylogeographic and phylodynamic analyses performed in region D of the VP1 gene showed a most recent common ancestor in 2002 and a substitution rate of 3.7×10(-3) substitutions per site per year (HPD95%=2.3×10(-3)-5.2×10(-3)) for this variant still involving a significant population size with a slight decrease since 2008. The spatio-temporal diffusion analysis proposed Europe as an intermediate path between the American Continent and the rest of the World for NoV dissemination. Given the importance of NoV as a cause of epidemic gastroenteritis and the likelihood of its environmental transmission, the results of this work should increase public and institutional awareness of the health risk involved in sewage discharges into the environment. Environmental surveillance of enteric viruses could be a very useful tool not only to prevent waterborne outbreaks, but also to describe the epidemiology of the viruses. The detailed analysis of the viral genomes disposed into the environment contributed to the characterization of the dissemination, diversity and seasonality of NoV in its natural host population. In future studies, environmental surveillance and molecular analysis should be complemented with a quantitative viral risk assessment for estimating the disease burden from viruses in the environment.


Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2010

Picobirnavirus causes persistent infection in pigs.

Laura C. Martinez; Gisela Masachessi; Gabriela Carruyo; Leonardo J. Ferreyra; Patricia A. Barril; María B. Isa; Miguel O. Giordano; Juan E. Ludert; Silvia V. Nates

A study aimed to further understand the biology of porcine picobirnaviruses (PBV) was conducted between November 2003 and January 2008, on a farm located in the outskirts of Córdoba City, Argentina. PBV prevalence was examined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining (PAGE S/S) on a total of 265 samples collected from pigs divided into four groups, according to age and physiological status. PBV detection rate was highest in the group of sows sampled within the lactogenic period (38.02%; p<0.05), followed by pregnant sows (15.09%), piglets aged 2-5 months of age (18.42%) and adult (> or =50 weeks) male pigs (0%). In addition, 103 samples collected in 3 follow-up studies were analyzed by PAGE S/S and reverse transcription followed by PCR (RT-PCR). Two of these studies followed female pigs from weaning up to slaughter and a third one from weaning up to 4 pregnancy periods. The results provide evidence that PBV establishes a persistent infection in the host with periods of silence intermingled with periods of low and high viral excretion. High PBV excretion levels were detected by PAGE S/S and were conditioned by age (primary infection) and host physiological status. Low PBV excretion levels were detected by RT-PCR throughout the entire study period. Sequence analysis of selected amplicons indicated that the virus excreted through the follow-up study was the same. These results suggest that porcine PBV is maintained in nature by transmission from infected asymptomatic individuals to susceptible ones.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2004

Childhood astrovirus-associated diarrhea in the ambulatory setting in a Public Hospital in Cordoba city, Argentina.

Miguel O. Giordano; Laura C. Martinez; María B. Isa; Mirtha Paez Rearte; Silvia V. Nates

Human astroviruses have been increasingly identified as important agents of diarrheal disease in children. However, the disease burden of astrovirus infection is still incompletely assessed. This paper reports results on the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of astrovirus-associated diarrhea, as well as the impact of astrovirus infection on the ambulatory setting at a Public Hospital in Córdoba city, Argentina. From February 2001 through January 2002, 97 randomly selected outpatient visits for diarrhea among children < 36 months old were enrolled. A single specimen of stool from each child was collected and tested for astrovirus antigen by enzyme immunoassay. Astroviruses were detected in 12.37% of the diarrheal episodes. All the positive cases occurred in children 4 to 18 months, but the highest rate was in children aged 4 to 6 months (23.80%). The clinical symptoms of astrovirus associated-diarrhea were fever 41.66%, vomiting 25.00% and dehydration 8.33%; overall 16.66% required hospitalization. Astrovirus was identified through the year and no seasonally pattern was detected (cool semester 15.21% versus warm semester 9.80% p > 0.05). According to our estimation about one out of seventy-four children in this cohort would be assisted annually for an astroviral-diarrheal episode in the Public Hospital and one out of eight diarrheal cases could be attributed to astrovirus infection. Astrovirus is a common symptomatic infection in pediatric outpatient visits in the public hospital in the study area, contributing 12.37% of the overall morbidity from diarrhea.

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Silvia V. Nates

National University of Cordoba

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Miguel O. Giordano

National University of Cordoba

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María B. Isa

National University of Cordoba

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Gisela Masachessi

National University of Cordoba

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Patricia A. Barril

National University of Cordoba

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Leonardo J. Ferreyra

National University of Cordoba

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Jorge V. Pavan

National University of Cordoba

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Silvia Medeot

National University of Cordoba

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Viviana Ré

National University of Cordoba

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Ariel R. Depetris

National University of Cordoba

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