Publications by authors named "Teresa Del Rosal-Rabes"

The number of people with immunosuppression is increasing considerably due to their greater survival and the use of new immunosuppressive treatments for various chronic diseases. This is a heterogeneous group of patients in whom vaccination as a preventive measure is one of the basic pillars of their wellbeing, given their increased risk of contracting infections. This consensus, developed jointly by the Sociedad Española de Infectología Pediátrica (Spanish Society of Pediatric Infectious Diseases) and the Advisory Committee on Vaccines of the Asociación Española de Pediatría (Spanish Association of Paediatrics), provides guidelines for the development of a personalised vaccination schedule for patients in special situations, including general recommendations and specific recommendations for vaccination of bone marrow and solid organ transplant recipients, children with inborn errors of immunity, oncologic patients, patients with chronic or systemic diseases and immunosuppressed travellers.

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Background: Perinatal transmission of HIV has dramatically decreased in high-income countries in the last few years with current rates below 1%, but it still occurs in high-risk situations, mainly pregnant women with late diagnosis of infection, poor antiretroviral adherence and a high viral load (VL). In these high-risk situations, many providers recommend combined neonatal prophylaxis (CNP). Our aim was to evaluate the safety and toxicity of CNP in infants deemed at high-risk of HIV infection among mother-infant pairs in the Madrid Cohort.

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Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome is a primary immunodeficiency caused by variants in FAS-mediated apoptosis related genes and is characterized by lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly and autoimmunity. A total of six different variants in CASP10 have been described as potential causative of disease, although two of them have recently been considered polymorphisms. The high allele frequency of these variants in healthy population in addition to the broad clinical spectrum of the disease difficult the interpretation of their pathogenicity.

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X-linked Agammaglobulinemia is a primary immunodeficiency caused by mutations in BTK, a tyrosine kinase essential for B lymphocytes differentiation. Patients usually have very low or absent B lymphocytes and are not able to develop humoral specific responses. Here we present a boy, diagnosed with XLA due to a mutation on the promoter region of the gene, whose phenotype is characterised by low percentage of B cells, hypogammaglobulinemia, oscillating neutropenia, antibodies responses to some antigens after vaccination and IgE-mediated allergy.

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Article Synopsis
  • The term Mycoplasma pneumoniae-induced rash and mucositis (MIRM) is used to describe a skin condition linked to M. pneumoniae infections, which can be confused with other serious conditions like erythema multiforme and Stevens-Johnson syndrome.
  • A reported case showed severe oral and genital erosions similar to MIRM, but they were actually caused by a Chlamydia pneumoniae infection instead.
  • The authors suggest that C. pneumoniae should also be considered a possible cause of MIRM, recommending that the definition of MIRM be updated to reflect this.
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  • The study evaluated antimicrobial use in hospitalized children to identify improvement areas for prescribing practices.
  • A total of 171 pediatric patients were analyzed, with a prevalence of antimicrobial prescriptions at 49.7% and an appropriateness rate of 60.9%.
  • Common misuses included prolonged prescriptions and using broad-spectrum agents unnecessarily, highlighting the need for better antimicrobial stewardship in the hospital.
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Respiratory viral infections, particularly respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and rhinovirus, are the most importance risk factors for the onset of wheezing in infants and small children. Bronchiolitis is the most common acute respiratory infection in children under 1year of age, and the most common cause of hospitalization in this age group. RSV accounts for approximately 70% of all these cases, followed by rhinovirus, adenovirus, metapneumovirus and bocavirus.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study reviewed infants under 3 months diagnosed with tuberculosis from 1978 to 2014, finding only eight cases (1.4% of pediatric TB cases), which included confirmed congenital and postnatal tuberculosis.
  • Diagnostic methods for TB showed that gastric aspirate cultures and PCR testing had significantly higher success rates compared to traditional smear methods and IGRA tests.
  • The research highlights the rarity, severity, and diagnostic challenges of TB in this age group, emphasizing the need to rule out maternal genital TB in cases without known postnatal contacts through endometrial biopsy.
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