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Dive into the research topics where Manuel Calvopiña is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuel Calvopiña.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2004

Epidemiology of leishmaniasis in Ecuador: Current status of knowledge: A review

Manuel Calvopiña; Rodrigo X. Armijos; Yoshihisa Hashiguchi

Although leishmaniasis is regarded as a significant health problem in Ecuador by the Ministry of Health, and the incidence has increased over the last years, an official map on the geographic distribution of disease and sand fly vectors or a control strategy do not exist yet. This article reviews the current situation based on published information to improve our knowledge and understand the epidemiological situation of leishmaniasis in Ecuador in order to help future research and to develop a national control strategy. The disease is endemic in most provinces throughout Pacific coastal region, Amazonian lowlands, and some inter-Andean valleys with a total 21,805 cases reported during 1990-2003. Whereas cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is found throughout Ecuador, mucocutaneous leishmaniasis (MCL) appears to be restricted to the Amazon region; one, parasitologically unconfirmed case of visceral form was reported in 1949. Most human infections are caused by Leishmania (Viannia) spp., which is distributed in the subtropical and tropical lowlands; infections due to L. (Leishmania) spp. are found in the Andean highlands and in the Pacific lowlands as well. The proven vectors are Lutzomyia trapidoi and Lu. ayacuchensis. Canis familiaris, Sciurus vulgaris, Potos flavus, and Tamandua tetradactyla have been found infected with Leishmania spp. It is estimated that around 3000-4500 people may be infected every year, and that 3.1 to 4.5 millions people are estimated to be at risk of contracting leishmaniasis.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1998

Treatment of human pulmonary paragonimiasis with triclabendazole: clinical tolerance and drug efficacy

Manuel Calvopiña; Ronald H. Guderian; Wilson Paredes; Martha E. Chico; Philip J. Cooper

An open clinical trial to determine the efficacy and tolerability of postprandial doses of triclabendazole against Paragonimus mexicanus in 62 patients with pulmonary paragonimiasis from the Ecuadorian Amazon region was performed. Praziquantel was used as therapeutic control. Patients were allocated at random to the following 4 therapeutic regimens: triclabendazole, 5 mg/kg once daily for 3 d (16 patients), 10 mg/kg twice on one day (15 patients), and 10 mg/kg in a single dose (16 patients), and praziquantel, 25 mg/kg thrice daily for 3 d (15 patients). Clinical tolerance, based on the frequency and severity of adverse reactions, was superior in all 3 triclabendazole regimens to that of praziquantel. No alteration was observed in hepato-renal functions or haematological values. The clinical symptoms resolved at a comparable rate in all 4 treatment groups. A more rapid parasitological response to treatment, as determined by the reduction in the average number of parasite eggs found in sputum, was seen in patients treated with triclabendazole than with praziquantel. By day 90, 60 patients had no egg detected in their sputum; 2 patients, treated with a single dose of 10 mg/kg, had a few and were re-treated with triclabendazole (5 mg daily for 3 d). On day 365, none of the patients had eggs in their sputum. Triclabendazole can be recommended as an alternative drug of choice for the treatment of pulmonary paragonimiasis; it is as effective as praziquantel in clearing infections and better tolerated.


Acta Tropica | 2002

Usefulness of sampling with cotton swab for PCR-diagnosis of cutaneous leishmaniasis in the New World

Tatsuyuki Mimori; T. Matsumoto; Manuel Calvopiña; Eduardo A. Gomez; H. Saya; Ken Katakura; Shigeo Nonaka; S. M. Shamsuzzaman; Yoshihisa Hashiguchi

In this study, we tested the polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-method to diagnose cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) by taking exudate materials from lesions with cotton swabs, using our previously tested (PCR) panel comprised of Leishmania (Viannia) panamensis, L. (V.) braziliensis, L. (V.) guyanensis, L. (Leishmania) mexicana and L. (L.) amazonensis. The objectives of the present study were to improve the sampling method convenient for the patients and to test the usefulness of samples taken with cotton swabs. Sixteen patients were clinically diagnosed to have CL including one case of diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis (DCL) in Ecuador and the causative Leishmania parasites were identified by PCR. All the 12 samples from CL patients of La Mana, positive for Leishmania DNA, were identified as L. (V.) panamensis, while two from CL of Huigra and one from DCL of San Ignacio were L. (L.) mexicana. In the field condition, taking biopsy material is not only painful but sometimes causes iatrogenic bacterial infections. Considering the sensitivity of the test, and convenient sampling procedure, it may be suggested that collection of exudates using cotton swabs may be a better alternative to biopsy sample for PCR-diagnosis of CL.


International Journal of Dermatology | 2006

Leishmaniasis recidiva cutis due to Leishmania (Viannia) panamensis in subtropical Ecuador: isoenzymatic characterization

Manuel Calvopiña; Hiroshi Uezato; Eduardo A. Gomez; Masataka Korenaga; Shigeo Nonaka; Yoshihisa Hashiguchi

Background  Information regarding leishmaniasis recidiva cutis (LRC), a clinical variant of cutaneous leishmaniasis, in the New World is scarce. LRC is characterized by slowly progressing lesion(s) that appear after a variable period of time, from months to years, in or around the scar of an apparently clinically healed sore.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1997

Chagas disease in Ecuador: evidence for disease transmission in an Indigenous population in the Amazon region.

Martha H. Chico; Carlos Sandoval; Angel Guevara; Manuel Calvopiña; Philip J. Cooper; Steve G. Reed; Ronald H. Guderian

Two well-defined synthetic peptides TcD and PEP2 were used in a sero-epidemiological study for the detection of Trypanosoma cruzi infections in an indigenous group in the Amazon region of Ecuador. Of the 18 communities studied along the Rio Napo, province of Napo, 15 (83.3%) were found to be positive for T. cruzi infection. Of the 1,011 individuals examined 61 (6.03%) resulted positive. A prevalence of infection of 4.8% was found in children aged 1-5 years. The prevalence of infection increased with age, with adults 50 years or older showing a maximum prevalence of 18.8%. Autochthonous transmission of T. cruzi is present among this isolated indigenous population.


International Journal of Dermatology | 2004

Itraconazole in the treatment of New World mucocutaneous leishmaniasis

Manuel Calvopiña; Angel G. Guevara; Rodrigo X. Armijos; Yoshihisa Hashiguchi; Robert N. Davidson; Philip J. Cooper

Background  A well‐tolerated oral drug is required for the treatment of mucocutaneous leishmaniasis (MCL). Current parenteral treatment regimens with pentavalent antimonials are associated with marked toxicity and significant rates of relapse.


Acta Tropica | 2013

First human cases of Leishmania (Viannia) naiffi infection in Ecuador and identification of its suspected vector species

Hirotomo Kato; Manuel Calvopiña; Hipatia Criollo; Yoshihisa Hashiguchi

Epidemiological surveillance of leishmaniasis was conducted in a northern Amazonian region of Ecuador, in which cutaneous leishmaniasis cases were recently reported. Sand flies were captured in the military training camp, and the natural infection of sand flies by Leishmania species was examined. Out of 334 female sand flies dissected, the natural infection by flagellates was microscopically detected in 3.9% of Lutzomyia yuilli yuilli and 3.7% of Lutzomyia tortura, and the parasite species were identified as Endotrypanum and Leishmania (Viannia) naiffi, respectively. After the sand fly surveillance, specimens from cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) patients considered to have acquired the infection in the training camp area were obtained, and the infected parasite species were identified as L. (V.) naiffi. The present study reported first cases of CL caused by L. (V.) naiffi infection in Ecuador. In addition, a high ratio of infection of Lu. tortura by L. (V.) naiffi in the same area strongly suggested that Lu. tortura is responsible for the transmission of L. (V.) naiffi in this area.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2014

Identifying Etiological Agents Causing Diarrhea in Low Income Ecuadorian Communities

Gabriela Vasco; Gabriel Trueba; Richard Atherton; Manuel Calvopiña; William Cevallos; Thamara Andrade; Martha Eguiguren; Joseph N. S. Eisenberg

Continued success in decreasing diarrheal disease burden requires targeted interventions. To develop such interventions, it is crucial to understand which pathogens cause diarrhea. Using a case-control design we tested stool samples, collected in both rural and urban Ecuador, for 15 pathogenic microorganisms. Pathogens were present in 51% of case and 27% of control samples from the urban community, and 62% of case and 18% of control samples collected from the rural community. Rotavirus and Shigellae were associated with diarrhea in the urban community; co-infections were more pathogenic than single infection; Campylobacter and Entamoeba histolytica were found in large numbers in cases and controls; and non-typhi Salmonella and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli were not found in any samples. Consistent with the Global Enteric Multicenter Study, focused in south Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, we found that in Ecuador a small group of pathogens accounted for a significant amount of the diarrheal disease burden.


Acta Tropica | 2009

Genetic diversity of ribosomal RNA internal transcribed spacer sequences in Lutzomyia species from areas endemic for New World cutaneous leishmaniasis.

Kei Kuwahara; Hirotomo Kato; Eduardo A. Gomez; Hiroshi Uezato; Tatsuyuki Mimori; Yu ichi Yamamoto; Manuel Calvopiña; Abraham G. Cáceres; Hiroyuki Iwata; Yoshihisa Hashiguchi

In this study, each of 60 rRNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) 1 and ITS2 sequences was determined from 44 individuals of 14 morphologically identified New World sand fly Lutzomyia species in Ecuador, and their interspecies and intraspecies genetic diversity was compared. Distinguishing between related species based on the ITS1 sequence was difficult because of variability, while the genetic diversity of ITS2 was distinct even among closely related species. Further, an assessment of intraspecies ITS sequence diversity in the subgenus Helcocyrtomyia revealed no correlation between sequence variation and geographic distribution. The results strongly suggested ITS2 to be a more suitable marker than ITS1 for the taxonomic analysis of Lutzomyia species including closely related species. Moreover, neither ITS sequence may be useful for the analysis of population structures in Lutzomyia species.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1997

An outbreak of bartonellosis in Zamora Chinchipe Province in Ecuador

Philip J. Cooper; Ronald H. Guderian; Paulina Orellana; Carlos Sandoval; Hector R. Olalla; Macias Valdez; Manuel Calvopiña; Angel Guevara; George E. Griffin

We report an outbreak of human bartonellosis in Zamora Chinchipe Province in Ecuador, which occurred in 1995-1996. Nineteen cases were seen, of which 18 presented with classical oroya fever (fever and profound anaemia) and one with verruga peruana; 11 of the cases (58%) had positive blood films containing Bartonella bacilliformis. The houses of cases and neighbouring controls were visited; blood samples for thin films and cultures were collected from members of each house and a questionnaire was administered to investigate possible risk factors for disease transmission. In none of those sampled was B. bacilliformis bacteriologically demonstrable. All case houses were located in isolated areas at the margin of forest and the presence of dead rodents was reported only in case houses (P < 0.05). We suggest that human bartonellosis is a zoonosis with a natural rodent reservoir and that migrant humans infected in this way may become a temporary reservoir host in populated areas.

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Eduardo A. Gomez

Catholic University of Santiago de Guayaquil

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Hirotomo Kato

Jichi Medical University

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William Cevallos

Central University of Ecuador

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Hiroshi Uezato

University of the Ryukyus

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Shigeo Nonaka

University of the Ryukyus

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