Publications by authors named "Eduardo A Gomez Landires"

Article Synopsis
  • Ancylostoma spp., particularly A. caninum, are hookworms found in urban and rural areas of Ecuador, transmitted through infected soil and contact with animals, potentially leading to diseases like cutaneous larva migrans.
  • The study analyzed 498 domestic dogs and 40 rodents for hookworm infection using various diagnostic methods and surveyed 236 people, assessing environmental and social factors influencing transmission.
  • Results showed a significant rate of infection in dogs (20%) and a small number in rodents (2.5%), with a few human cases of cutaneous larva migrans, indicating a risk of spreading ancylostomiasis.
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BACKGROUND Hepatic hydatidosis, or echinococcosis, is a zoonosis with worldwide prevalence and is potentially lethal in humans. This report presents a case of hydatidosis in a 40-year-old woman that was associated with a zoonotic transmission of Echinococcus granulosus from domestic dogs in an urban-marginal area of the city of Guayaquil, Ecuador. This report shows how early diagnosis and awareness favored the correct treatment of the disease.

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BACKGROUND Worldwide, there are few cases of Urbanorum spp. in humans; however, it is associated with gastrointestinal pathologies, where humans probably acquire the disease by fecal-oral transmission, by ingesting food or water with infective cysts. The main symptoms of the patients who have this presumed parasite are fever, vomiting, colic, dyspepsia, and watery diarrhea.

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BACKGROUND Hymenolepiasis is a globally prevalent zoonosis of the monoxenic cycle. Humans acquire the disease through fecal-oral transmission by ingesting food or water with infective eggs from infected rodents. This report presents 3 cases of hymenolepiasis in children, due to zoonotic transmission from rodents and presumably associated with the consumption of powdered milk contaminated with infective eggs of Hymenolepis nana, and shows that awareness and early diagnosis contributed to timely treatment of the disease.

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A synthetic lipid A analog (ONO-4007) exhibits antileishmanial activity by activating Leishmania-infected macrophages in experimental leishmaniasis. In the present in vitro study, ONO-4007 at concentrations between 0.01 and 1.

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UV radiation suppresses the immune response, a fact which raises the question of whether the phenomenon may find practical applications in the outcome of infectious diseases. In this study, BALB/c mice were exposed to low-dose UVB (250 J/m(2)) from Dermaray M-DMR-100 for 4 consecutive days. Twelve hours after the last UV exposure, groups of mice were injected with 2 x 10(6) Leishmania amazonensis promastigotes.

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