Yesenia Castillo
Cayetano Heredia University
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Featured researches published by Yesenia Castillo.
Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2012
Javier A. Bustos; Silvia Rodriguez; Juan A. Jimenez; Luz M. Moyano; Yesenia Castillo; Viterbo Ayvar; James C. Allan; Philip S. Craig; Armando E. Gonzalez; Robert H. Gilman; Victor C. W. Tsang; Hector H. Garcia
ABSTRACT Taenia solium causes taeniasis and cysticercosis, a zoonotic complex associated with a significant burden of epilepsy in most countries. Reliable diagnosis and efficacious treatment of taeniasis are needed for disease control. Currently, cure can be confirmed only after a period of at least 1 month, by negative stool microscopy. This study assessed the performance of detection by a coproantigen enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (CoAg-ELISA) for the early evaluation of the efficacy of antiparasitic treatment of human T. solium taeniasis. We followed 69 tapeworm carriers who received niclosamide as standard treatment. Stool samples were collected on days 1, 3, 7, 15, 30, and 90 after treatment and were processed by microscopy and CoAg-ELISA. The efficacy of niclosamide was 77.9% (53/68). Thirteen patients received a second course of treatment and completed the follow-up. CoAg-ELISA was therefore evaluated for a total of 81 cases (68 treatments, 13 retreatments). In successful treatments (n = 64), the proportion of patients who became negative by CoAg-ELISA was 62.5% after 3 days, 89.1% after 7 days, 96.9% after 15 days, and 100% after 30 days. In treatment failures (n = 17), the CoAg-ELISA result was positive for 70.6% of patients after 3 days, 94.1% after 7 days, and 100% after 15 and 30 days. Only 2 of 17 samples in cases of treatment failure became positive by microscopy by day 30. The presence of one scolex, but not multiple scolices, in posttreatment stools was strongly associated with cure (odds ratio [OR], 52.5; P < 0.001). CoAg-ELISA is useful for the assessment of treatment failure in taeniasis. Early assessment at day 15 would detect treatment failure before patients become infective.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2013
Alonso Zea-Vera; Erika G. Cordova; Silvia Rodriguez; Isidro Gonzales; E. Javier Pretell; Yesenia Castillo; Sheila Castro-Suarez; Sarah Gabriël; Victor C. W. Tsang; Pierre Dorny; Hector H. Garcia
BACKGROUND Computed tomography (CT) remains the standard neuroimaging screening exam for neurocysticercosis, and residual brain calcifications are the commonest finding. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is more sensitive than CT but is rarely available in endemic regions. Enzyme-linked immunoelectrotransfer blot (EITB) assay uses antibody detection for diagnosis confirmation; by contrast, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) antigen detection (Ag-ELISA) detects circulating parasite antigen. This study evaluated whether these assays predict undetected viable cysts in patients with only calcified lesions on brain CT. METHODS Serum samples from 39 patients with calcified neurocysticercosis and no viable parasites on CT were processed by Ag-ELISA and EITB. MRI was performed for each patient within 2 months of serologic testing. Conservatively high ELISA and EITB cutoffs were used to predict the finding of viable brain cysts on MRI. RESULTS Using receiver operating characteristic-optimized cutoffs, 7 patients were Ag-ELISA positive, and 8 had strong antibody reactions on EITB. MRI showed viable brain cysts in 7 (18.0%) patients. Patients with positive Ag-ELISA were more likely to have viable cysts than Ag-ELISA negatives (6/7 vs 1/32; odds ratio, 186 [95% confidence interval, 1-34 470.0], P < .001; sensitivity 85.7%, specificity 96.9%, positive likelihood ratio of 27 to detect viable cysts). Similar but weaker associations were also found between a strong antibody reaction on EITB and undetected viable brain cysts. CONCLUSIONS Antigen detection, and in a lesser degree strong antibody reactions, can predict viable neurocysticercosis. Serological diagnostic methods could identify viable lesions missed by CT in patients with apparently only calcified cysticercosis and could be considered for diagnosis workup and further therapy.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2010
Juan A. Jimenez; Silvia Rodriguez; Luz M. Moyano; Yesenia Castillo; Hector H. Garcia
Objective To determine whether Ziehl‐Neelsen staining can differentiate Taenia solium from Taenia saginata eggs.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2015
Armando E. Gonzalez; Javier A. Bustos; Hector H. Garcia; Silvia Rodriguez; Mirko Zimic; Yesenia Castillo; Nicolas Praet; Sarah Gabriël; Robert H. Gilman; Pierre Dorny
Taenia solium cysticercosis is a common parasitic infection of humans and pigs. We evaluated the posttreatment evolution of circulating parasite-specific antigen titers in 693 consecutive blood samples from 50 naturally infected cysticercotic pigs, which received different regimes of antiparasitic drugs (N = 39, 7 groups), prednisone (N = 5), or controls (N = 6). Samples were collected from baseline to week 10 after treatment, when pigs were euthanized and carefully dissected at necropsy. Antigen levels decreased proportionally to the efficacy of treatment and correlated with the remaining viable cysts at necropsy (Pearsons p = 0.67, P = 0.000). A decrease of 5 times in antigen levels (logarithmic scale) compared with baseline was found in 20/26 pigs free of cysts at necropsy, compared with 1/24 of those who had persisting viable cysts (odds ratio [OR] = 76.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 8.1-3308.6, P < 0.001). Antigen monitoring reflects the course of infection in the pig. If a similar correlation exists in infected humans, this assay may provide a minimally invasive and easy monitoring assay to assess disease evolution and efficacy of antiparasitic treatment in human neurocysticercosis.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2018
Hector H. Garcia; Yesenia Castillo; Isidro Gonzales; Javier A. Bustos; Herbert Saavedra; Louis Jacob; Oscar H. Del Brutto; Patricia P. Wilkins; Armando E. Gonzalez; Robert H. Gilman
To evaluate the diagnostic performance of two commercially available ELISA kits, Novalisa® and Ridascreen®, for the detection of antibodies to Taenia solium, compared to serological diagnosis of neurocysticercosis (NCC) by LLGP‐EITB (electro‐immunotransfer blot assay using lentil‐lectin purified glycoprotein antigens).
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2009
Mirko Zimic; Monica Pajuelo; Daniel Rueda; César López; Yanina Arana; Yesenia Castillo; Maritza Calderon; Silvia Rodriguez; Patricia Sheen; Joseph M. Vinetz; Armando Gonzales; Hector H. Garcia; Robert H. Gilman
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2009
Yesenia Castillo; Silvia Rodriguez; Hector H. Garcia; Jef Brandt; Alike Van Hul; Maria Silva; Richar Rodríguez-Hidalgo; Mylagritos Portocarrero; D. Paolo Melendez; Armando E. Gonzalez; Robert H. Gilman; Pierre Dorny
Experimental Parasitology | 2016
Adriana Paredes; Patricia Sáenz; Miguel Marzal; Miguel A. Orrego; Yesenia Castillo; Andrea Rivera; Siddhartha Mahanty; Cristina Guerra-Giraldez; Hector H. Garcia; Theodore E. Nash
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2018
Hector H. Garcia; Seth E. O'Neal; John Noh; Sukwan Handali; Robert H. Gilman; Armando E. Gonzalez; Victor C. W. Tsang; Silvia Rodriguez; Manuel Martinez; Isidro Gonzales; Herbert Saavedra; Manuela Verastegui; Javier A. Bustos; Mirko Zimic; Holger Mayta; Yesenia Castillo; Yagahira Castro; Maria T. Lopez; Cesar M. Gavidia; Luz M. Moyano; Ricardo Gamboa; Claudio Muro; Percy Vilchez; Theodore E. Nash; Siddhartha Mahanty; Jon S. Friedland
Archive | 2013
Alonso Zea-Vera; Erika G. Cordova; Silvia Rodriguez; Isidro Gonzales; Yesenia Castillo; Sheila Castro-Suarez; Sarah Gabriël; Hector H. Garcia