Publications by authors named "Laura Rodero"

Background: A retrospective study on the epidemiology of fungaemia due to yeasts of medical importance at the Hospital Nacional de Pediatría Prof. Dr. J.

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Tinea capitis is an infection caused by dermatophytes of the genera Microsporum and Trichophyton, and constitutes a major health problem in Argentina. The aim of the present study was to find out the incidence of those etiological agents and the therapeutic response in patients attending a High-Complexity Paediatric Hospital within a two-year period. A total of 98 tinea capitis were diagnosed, 13 of which were Celsus kerion.

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The in vitro activities of amphotericin B (AMB), itraconazole (ITC), voriconazole (VCZ) and terbinafine (TBF) alone and in the combinations AMB+VCZ, TBF+ITC and TBF+VCZ were evaluated against 29 clinical isolates of Fusarium spp. (15 Fusarium solani, 7 Fusarium oxysporum, 2 Fusarium decemcellulare, 2 Fusarium dimerum and 3 other Fusarium spp.).

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In vitro susceptibility of 58 isolates of Pichia anomala to five antifungal drugs using two broth microdilution methods (CLSI and EUCAST) was analyzed. Low susceptibility to itraconazole was observed. Fluconazole, voriconazole, amphotericin B, and caspofungin showed good antifungal activity, although relatively high drug concentrations were necessary to inhibit the isolates.

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An efficient microwave-assisted synthesis of new (Z)-5-arylidenerhodanines under solvent-free conditions is described and their in vitro antifungal activity was evaluated following the CLSI (formerly NCCLS) guidelines against a panel of both standardized and clinical opportunistic pathogenic fungi. An analysis of the structure-activity relationship (SAR) along with computational studies showed that the most active compounds (F- and CF(3)-substituted rhodanines) possess high logP values and low polarizability. Mechanism-based assays suggest that active compounds neither would bind to ergosterol nor would produce a damage to the fungal membrane.

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The physiological patterns, the sequence polymorphisms of the internal transcriber spacer (ITS), and intergenic spacer regions (IGS) of the rRNA genes and the antifungal susceptibility profile were evaluated for their ability to identify Trichosporon spp. and their specificity for the identification of 49 clinical isolates of Trichosporon spp. Morphological and biochemical methodologies were unable to differentiate among the Trichosporon species.

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Five sequential Cryptococcus neoformans isolates recovered from an AIDS patient with recurrent meningitis were analyzed. Four isolates were fluconazole susceptible, while the fifth isolate developed fluconazole resistance. Analysis of the 14-alpha lanosterol demethylase gene (ERG11) showed a point mutation in the resistant strain responsible for the amino acid substitution G484S.

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The aim of this study was to identify retrospectively trends in species distribution and susceptibility patterns of Candida species causing bloodstream infections in 99 medical centres (55 in Spain and 44 in Argentina) from 1996 to 1999. A total of 744 Candida isolates were sent to the mycology reference laboratories during the study period (514 to the Spanish laboratory and 230 to the Argentinian laboratory). Candida non-albicans strains caused more episodes of fungaemia than Candida albicans isolates in both Spain and Argentina.

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A bloodstream infection due to Candida haemulonii afflicting a patient with fever and a medical history of megaloblastic anemia is reported. The clinical isolate was misidentified by the API 20C and VITEK identification systems. The results of susceptibility tests showed that the MIC of amphotericin B for C.

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