Publications by authors named "J Perez-Molina"

Background: Despite effective antiretroviral therapy, people with HIV (PWH) experience persistent systemic inflammation and increased morbidity and mortality. Modulating the gut microbiome through fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) represents a novel therapeutic strategy. We aimed to evaluate proteomic changes in inflammatory pathways following repeated, low-dose FMT versus placebo.

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Untargeted metabolomic analysis is a powerful tool used for the discovery of novel biomarkers. Chagas disease (CD), caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, is a neglected tropical disease that affects 6-7 million people with approximately 30% developing cardiac manifestations. The most significant clinical challenge lies in its long latency period after acute infection, and the lack of surrogate markers to predict disease progression or cure.

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Background: In non-endemic countries, malaria can be transmitted through blood donations from imported cases. To ensure standards of quality and safety of human blood, the European Union and Spanish national law, requires a deferral period, or a screening by immunological or genomic test among those donors with potential risk of malaria. Scientific societies, European Committee on Blood Transfusion, and Spanish Society of Haematology and Haemotherapy, refer only to the result of the immunological test.

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Article Synopsis
  • - HIV is now viewed as a chronic disease with positive long-term outcomes, prompting the need for a new care model called the Optimal Care Model (OCM), which helps assess and classify patient complexity for better care.
  • - In a study of 94 adult patients living with HIV, the majority had low complexity and were predominantly cisgender men from Latin America and Africa, with most achieving an undetectable viral load.
  • - The OCM successfully classified many patients, but those with high or extreme complexity often fell into unclassifiable categories, suggesting the need for additional profiles focusing on mental health to enhance patient care.
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