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Featured researches published by Vicky Cevallos.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 1997

Epidemiology and aetiological diagnosis of corneal ulceration in Madurai, south India

Muthiah Srinivasan; Christine A. Gonzales; Celine George; Vicky Cevallos; Jeena Mascarenhas; B Asokan; John Wilkins; Gilbert Smolin; John P. Whitcher

AIMS/BACKGROUND To determine the epidemiological characteristics and risk factors predisposing to corneal ulceration in Madurai, south India, and to identify the specific pathogenic organisms responsible for infection. METHODS All patients with suspected infectious central corneal ulceration presenting to the ocular microbiology and cornea service at Aravind Eye Hospital, Madurai, from 1 January to 31 March 1994 were evaluated. Sociodemographic data and information pertaining to risk factors were recorded, all patients were examined, and corneal cultures and scrapings were performed. RESULTS In the 3 month period 434 patients with central corneal ulceration were evaluated. A history of previous corneal injury was present in 284 patients (65.4%). Cornea cultures were positive in 297 patients (68.4%). Of those individuals with positive cultures 140 (47.1%) had pure bacterial infections, 139 (46.8%) had pure fungal infections, 15 (5.1%) had mixed bacteria and fungi, and three (1.0%) grew pure cultures ofAcanthamoeba. The most common bacterial pathogen isolated was Streptococcus pneumoniae, representing 44.3% of all positive bacterial cultures, followed by Pseudomonas spp (14.4%). The most common fungal pathogen isolated was Fusariumspp, representing 47.1% of all positive fungal cultures, followed by Aspergillus spp (16.1%). CONCLUSIONS Central corneal ulceration is a common problem in south India and most often occurs after a superficial corneal injury with organic material. Bacterial and fungal infections occur in equal numbers with Streptococcus pneumoniaeaccounting for the majority of bacterial ulcers and Fusariumspp responsible for most of the fungal infections. These findings have important public health implications for the treatment and prevention of corneal ulceration in the developing world.


JAMA | 2008

Comparison of Annual and Biannual Mass Antibiotic Administration for Elimination of Infectious Trachoma

Muluken Melese; Wondu Alemayehu; Takele Lakew; Elizabeth Yi; Jenafir I. House; Jaya D. Chidambaram; Zhaoxia Zhou; Vicky Cevallos; Kathryn J. Ray; Kevin C. Hong; Travis C. Porco; Isabella Phan; Ali Zaidi; Bruce D. Gaynor; John P. Whitcher; Thomas M. Lietman

CONTEXT Treatment recommendations assume that repeated mass antibiotic distributions can control, but not eradicate or even locally eliminate, the ocular strains of chlamydia that cause trachoma. Elimination may be an important end point because of concern that infection will return to communities that have lost immunity to chlamydia after antibiotics are discontinued. OBJECTIVE To determine whether biannual treatment can eliminate ocular chlamydial infection from preschool children and to compare results with the World Health Organization-recommended annual treatment. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A cluster-randomized clinical trial of biannual vs annual mass azithromycin administrations to all residents of 16 rural villages in the Gurage Zone, Ethiopia, from March 2003 to April 2005. INTERVENTIONS At scheduled treatments, all individuals aged 1 year or older were offered a single dose of oral azithromycin either annually or biannually. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE Village prevalence of ocular chlamydial infection and presence of elimination at 24 months in preschool children determined by polymerase chain reaction, correcting for baseline prevalence. Antibiotic treatments were performed after sample collections. RESULTS Overall, 14,897 of 16,403 eligible individuals (90.8%) received their scheduled treatment. In the villages in which residents were treated annually, the prevalence of infection in preschool children was reduced from a mean of 42.6% (range, 14.7%-56.4%) to 6.8% (range, 0.0%-22.0%) at 24 months. In the villages in which residents were treated biannually, infection was reduced from 31.6% pretreatment (range, 6.1%-48.6%) to 0.9% (range, 0.0%-4.8%) at 24 months. Biannual treatment was associated with a lower prevalence at 24 months (P = .03, adjusting for baseline prevalence). At 24 months, no infection could be identified in 6 of 8 of those treated biannually and in 1 of 8 of those treated annually (P = .049, adjusting for baseline prevalence). CONCLUSION Local elimination of ocular chlamydial infection appears feasible even in the most severely affected areas, although it may require biannual mass antibiotic distributions at a high coverage level. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00221364.


PLOS Medicine | 2010

Antibiotic Selection Pressure and Macrolide Resistance in Nasopharyngeal Streptococcus pneumoniae: A Cluster-Randomized Clinical Trial

Alison H. Skalet; Vicky Cevallos; Berhan Ayele; Teshome Gebre; Zhaoxia Zhou; James H. Jorgensen; Mulat Zerihun; Dereje Habte; Yared Assefa; Paul M. Emerson; Bruce D. Gaynor; Travis C. Porco; Thomas M. Lietman; Jeremy D. Keenan

Jeremy Keenan and colleagues report that during a cluster-randomized clinical trial in Ethiopia, nasopharyngeal pneumococcal resistance to macrolides was significantly higher in communities randomized to receive azithromycin compared with untreated control communities.


Cornea | 2004

Trends in the etiology of infectious corneal ulcers at the F. I. Proctor Foundation.

Gita Varaprasathan; Kevin Miller; Thomas M. Lietman; John P. Whitcher; Vicky Cevallos; Masao Okumoto; Todd P. Margolis; Miao Yinghui; Emmett T. Cunningham

Objective: We analyzed laboratory results from corneal ulcers seen from 1976 to 1999 at the Francis I. Proctor Foundation, a referral center in San Francisco, to determine the relative frequencies of pathogens and to analyze for trends in frequencies of the most common pathogens. The results were compared with a previous study of corneal ulcers seen from 1948 to 1976 at the same institution. Methods: Ulcers presenting to the Proctor Foundation were Gram stained and cultured using standard techniques. Herpetic corneal ulcers were excluded from the study. Results: Organisms were isolated from 427 ulcers, 38% of all cases. Two hundred seventy-eight (59%) isolates were gram-positive bacteria, 145 (31%) gram-negative bacteria, 16 (3%) Acanthamoeba spp., and 36 (8%) fungi. Staphylococcus aureus was the most common organism, composing 20% of all isolates, followed by viridans group streptococci (12%), Streptococcus pneumoniae (11%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (6%), Moraxella spp. (5%), and Serratia marcescens (4%). Over the 24-year study period the proportion of positive cultures decreased and the incidence of S. marcescens increased significantly. Comparing the period of 1948–1976 to 1976–1999, the frequency of S. pneumoniae and P. aeruginosa decreased, and that of S. marcescens increased significantly. Conclusion: The common pathogens associated with corneal ulcers have changed over the past 50 years in Northern California, with S. pneumoniae and P. aeruginosa being isolated relatively less often and S. marcescens being isolated with increasing frequency. The decrease in isolation of organisms over the 1976–1999 period may have resulted from increasing empiric antibiotic treatment by referring ophthalmologists.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2005

Topical ocular antibiotics induce bacterial resistance at extraocular sites

Bruce D. Gaynor; Jaya D. Chidambaram; Vicky Cevallos; Yinghui Miao; K Miller; Hem Jha; Ramesh C. Bhatta; J.S.P. Chaudhary; S Osaki Holm; John P. Whitcher; K A Holbrook; Alicia M. Fry; Thomas M. Lietman

Aim: To compare the prevalence of antibiotic resistance found in nasopharyngeal Streptococcus pneumoniae between villages treated with topical tetracycline or systemic azithromycin as part of a trachoma control programme. Methods: All children aged 1–10 years were offered either single dose oral azithromycin treatment (20 mg/kg) or a course of topical 1% tetracycline ointment, depending on the area. Treatment was given annually for 3 years. Six months after the third annual treatment in each village, children were surveyed for nasopharyngeal carriage of S pneumoniae and resistance was determined using broth dilution MIC technique. Children in two additional villages, which had not yet been treated, were also surveyed. Results: Nasopharyngeal carriage of S pneumoniae was similar in the tetracycline treated, azithromycin treated, and untreated areas (p = 0.57). However, resistance to tetracycline and azithromycin was distributed differently between the three areas (p = 0.004). The village treated with topical tetracycline had a higher prevalence of tetracycline resistance than the other villages (p = 0.010), while the oral azithromycin treated village had a higher prevalence of macrolide resistance than the other villages (p = 0.014). Conclusions: Annual mass treatment with oral azithromycin may alter the prevalence of drug resistant S pneumoniae in a community. Surprisingly, topical tetracycline may also increase nasopharyngeal pneumococcal resistance. Topical antibiotics may have an effect on extraocular bacterial resistance.


Ophthalmic Epidemiology | 2004

How reliable is the clinical exam in detecting ocular chlamydial infection

Kevin Miller; Greg Schmidt; Muluken Melese; Wondu Alemayehu; Elizabeth Yi; Vicky Cevallos; Cathy Donnellan; Lynn Olinger; Demeke Fantaye; Bruce D. Gaynor; John P. Whitcher; Thomas M. Lietman

purpose To describe the relationship between the clinical exam for trachoma and the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for ocular chlamydia. methods One hundred children in a trachoma-endemic area of Ethiopia were examined three times and swabbed twice for PCR analysis. The assays were compared, and an analysis of the variance between exam and PCR was performed. results Inter-examiner agreement was 0.57 (Cohens κ), inter-PCR agreement 0.98, and agreement between examiner and PCR, 0.26–0.34. The positive predictive value of the exam in identifying infection was 66%. Inter-examiner variance accounted for 30% of the total variance between the exam and PCR, with the remainder presumably due to an underlying difference in what the exam and PCR measure. conclusions Despite modest inter-grader reliability and correlation with evidence of infection, the clinical exam is widely used due to its convenience and low cost. Efforts to make laboratory tests for ocular Chlamydia trachomatismore affordable would be useful.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2010

The Decline of Pneumococcal Resistance after Cessation of Mass Antibiotic Distributions for Trachoma

Sara J. Haug; Takele Lakew; Gabremaskal Habtemariam; Wondu Alemayehu; Vicky Cevallos; Zhaoxia Zhou; Jenafir I. House; Kathryn J. Ray; Travis C. Porco; Tina Rutar; Jeremy D. Keenan; Thomas M. Lietman; Bruce D. Gaynor

After 6 biannual mass distributions of oral azithromycin for trachoma in Ethiopian communities, 76.8% (95% confidence interval [CI], 66.3%-85.1%) of nasopharyngeal Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates from children aged 1-5 years were resistant to macrolides. Twelve and 24 months after the last azithromycin treatment, resistance decreased to 30.6% (95% CI, 18.8%-40.4%; P <.001 ) and 20.8% (95% CI, 12.7%-30.7%; P < .001), respectively. Macrolide resistance decreases after antibiotic pressure is removed.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 1999

Alterations in the conjunctival bacterial flora following a single dose of azithromycin in a trachoma endemic area

Kenneth C Chern; S K Shrestha; Vicky Cevallos; H L Dhami; Pawan Tiwari; Laurie Chern; John P. Whitcher; Thomas M. Lietman

BACKGROUND/AIMS The World Health Organisation has recommended repeated mass treatment of children in trachoma endemic areas with oral azithromycin. While chlamydia, the causative agent of trachoma, remains universally sensitive to azithromycin, there is concern that large scale programmes may alter the bacterial flora and induce resistance in streptococcal species. In this study the effect of a single dose of azithromcyin on the prevalence, species distribution, and resistance of conjunctival bacterial flora was determined. METHODS Baseline and 14 day follow up bacterial cultures were taken from the conjunctivae of 121 children who reside in a trachoma endemic area of Nepal. 91 children were treated with azithromycin at baseline and 31 children received deferred treatment at the 14 day follow up. RESULTS Although the prevalence of bacterial pathogens decreased significantly with azithromycin treatment, a significant change in the distribution of specific bacterial pathogens could not be demonstrated. Streptococcal resistance to azithromycin was found significantly more frequently after treatment. No change in the prevalence, distribution, or resistance pattern was found in the untreated control group. CONCLUSION Repeated mass treatment of trachoma endemic areas with oral azithromycin will have an effect on bacterial flora. However, further work needs to be done to determine if this will have any clinical relevance.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2003

Eliminating Trachoma in areas with limited disease

Bruce D. Gaynor; Yinghui Miao; Vicky Cevallos; Hem Jha; Jsp Chaudary; Ramesh C. Bhatta; Susan Osaki-Holm; Elizabeth Yi; Julius Schachter; John P. Whitcher; Thomas M. Lietman

The common wisdom is that a trachoma program cannot eliminate ocular chlamydia from a community, just reduce infection to a level where there would be minimal blindness. We describe the success of multiple mass antibiotic treatments, demonstrating that complete elimination of infection may be an attainable goal in an area with modest disease.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1999

Identification of bacterial pathogens in patients with endophthalmitis by 16S ribosomal DNA typing

C.Michele Knox; Vicky Cevallos; Todd P. Margolis; Deborah Dean

PURPOSE To determine whether sequence analysis of 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) can be used to detect bacterial pathogens in patients with postoperative endophthalmitis. METHODS In 10 eyes of 10 patients, vitreous specimens were collected for culture and rDNA typing. Variable segments of each ribosomal DNA specimen were amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), sequenced, and aligned by BLAST, a computer alignment program, against sequences in GenBank at the National Institutes of Health. RESULTS Specimens were available from five eyes with bacterial endophthalmitis diagnosed by Gram stain or culture. Amplified 16s rDNA sequences from the eyes of three patients were identical to microbiologic results. Polymerase chain reaction results were negative in two cases in which unusual organisms were detected. All five control specimens from patients with nonbacterial endophthalmitis or uveitis were PCR negative. Approximately 48 to 72 hours are required under ideal conditions for final species identification with this ribosomal typing technique. CONCLUSIONS 16S rDNA typing shows potential as a relatively rapid technique for identifying bacteria in vitreous samples.

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Zhaoxia Zhou

University of California

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Elizabeth Yi

University of California

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