INVESTIGADORES
RISSO Marikena Guadalupe
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Moving forward Strongyloides stercoralis detection, studying molecular typing as infection follow up strategy in immunocom promised patients
Autor/es:
REPETTO, SILVIA A; ARGUELLO, LISANA; BATALLA, ESTELA; BURGOS, JUAN M; GONZÁLEZ CAPPA, STELLA M; ALBA SOTO, CATALINA D; RISSO, MARIKENA G; RUYBAL, PAULA
Lugar:
Buenos Aires
Reunión:
Congreso; 18th ICID | International Congress on Infectious Diseases; 2018
Institución organizadora:
International Society for Infectious Diseases
Resumen:
Moving forward Strongyloides stercoralis detection, studying molecular typing as infection follow upstrategy in immunocompromised patientsS. Repetto1, L. Arguello, E. Batalla, J. Burgos, S. Gonzalez Cappa, C. Alba Soto, M. Risso, P. RuybalUniversidad de Buenos Aires, CABA, Argentina, Universidad de San Martin, San Martin, ArgentinaBackground: Strongyloides stercoralis is a geohelminth which affects 10-40% of the world population in tropical and subtropical areas. It produces chronic infections and severe symptoms in immunocompromised patients with high mortality. Although the parasitological cure is defined as the absence of larvae after one year of treatment, we have observed reactivations after the second year. We evaluated genetic diversity and its possible association with the clinical characteristics and evolution of this parasitosis.Methods & Materials: Twenty-two patients (18 immunocompromised) with diagnosis and follow-up of strongyloidosis from Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, Peru and Dominican Republic were evaluated. The DNA extracted from stool sample at the time of diagnosis was used as a template for amplification and sequencing of a 404 bp region of the mitochondrial gene cox1. The analysis of sequences was: consensus assembly (STADEN), alignment (MEGA6), haplotype resolution (PHASE, DNAsp), allele coding and discriminatory power calculation (PD, MLSTest). Sequences were analyzed in the context of sequences of S. stercoralis (581), S. fuelleborni, S. ratti, S. venezuelensis, S. planiceps, S. mirzai and S. papillosus. Results were expressed in frequencies and percentages. Level of significance was p