Popular Posts

Showing posts with label infeccion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label infeccion. Show all posts

Saturday, January 16, 2016

ZIKA VIRUS ON THE RUN!












LEA DENGUE Y VIRUS CON FIEBRES HEMORRAGICAS EN ESTE BLOG

LLAMENOS O CONTACTENOS SI NECESITA AYUDA: +58 412 3932265 carlosmixares@gmail.com




Photo

Aedes aegypti mosquitoes at a lab of the Institute of Biomedical Sciences of the Sao Paulo University. The species is known to carry Zika virus, which has been connected to birth defects. CreditNelson Almeida/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The first case of brain damage linked to the Zika virus within the United States was reported on Friday in Hawaii.
The Hawaii State Department of Health said that a baby born in an Oahu hospital with microcephaly — an unusually small head and brain — had been infected with the Zika virus, which is believed to have caused the same damage in thousands of babies in Brazil in recent months. The presence of the virus was confirmed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The child’s mother had lived in Brazil in May last year and probably was infected by a mosquito then, early in her pregnancy, the health department said. The virus presumably reached the embryo and damaged its developing brain.
“We are saddened by the events that have affected this mother and her newborn,” Dr. Sarah Park, Hawaii’s state epidemiologist, said in a statement. “This case further emphasizes the importance of the C.D.C. travel recommendations released today.”


Also on Friday, the C.D.C. recommended that pregnant women consider postponing travel to any countries or regions with active Zika virus transmission.
As of Saturday, those included 17 Latin American and Caribbean countries and territories: Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, French Guiana, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Martinique, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Saint Martin, Suriname, Venezuela and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. The list of countries with transmission has been steadily growing; on Saturday, Barbados reported its first cases.
Women considering becoming pregnant were advised to consult doctors before going to Zika-infested areas, and all travelers headed to such areas were urged to take vigorous measures to avoid mosquito bites.
There have been no confirmed cases of Zika virus transmission within Hawaii, Dr. Park said. Six Hawaii residents are known to have had the virus since 2014, but all picked it up through travel elsewhere. Nevertheless, Hawaii is undergoing an outbreak of dengue fever, and the same mosquitoes that transmit it also can transmit Zika.
A C.D.C. epidemiologist recently predicted that Zika would follow the same pattern that dengue has, with local transmission during hot weather in tropical parts of the country, including Florida, the Gulf Coast and Hawaii.
In Washington, administration officials said the decision to issue a travel alert developed quickly at the end of the week and triggered a flurry of diplomatic contacts with the countries named in the alert, given the potential economic and tourism impact that the decision could have. Officials said that notification effort delayed the C.D.C. announcement for several hours on Friday.
Scientists do not yet know how the Zika virus damages fetal brains. It is related to the dengue, yellow fever and West Nile viruses, which normally do not cause such damage; it is not closely related to rubella orcytomegalovirus, which are known to cause microcephaly.
The virus was first discovered in monkeys in the Zika Forest in Uganda in 1947. It is widespread in Africa and Southeast Asia but had never been seen as a major threat because the disease it causes is usually mild. About 80 percent of people who get the virus show no symptoms; those who do usually get a fever, rash and red eyes, but they rarely require hospitalization.
In 2007, the Asian strain of the virus was detected moving across the South Pacific; it caused a large outbreak on Yap Island that year. By late 2014, it had reached Easter Island, off the coast of Chile.
The connection to microcephaly was not made until late last year in Brazil. The virus first appeared in the country in May, and epidemiologists estimate that more than 1.5 million Brazilians have been infected.
In October, doctors in Pernambuco State noticed a surge in cases of microcephaly. Normally, about 150 cases of the birth defect are reported in Brazil each year. Since October, more than 3,500 have been reported there.
It is also not known whether the virus alone causes microcephaly or if it happens only if the mother has a previous infection, such as with dengue virus.
Dengue is unusual in that a first infection is rarely life-threatening, but a subsequent infection with a different strain can trigger dengue hemorrhagic fever, which can be fatal.
Hawaii is conducting a “Fight the Bite” campaign intended to stop its dengue outbreak. Residents have been urged to get rid of all standing water on their properties, to apply mosquito repellents and to try to avoid being bitten.
The Zika and dengue viruses — like virtually all mosquito-borne diseases — do not occur in mosquito larvae. Adult female mosquitoes pick them up by biting one infected human, and then, some days later, after the virus has traveled from their gut to their salivary glands, they infect another human. Dr. Park said neither the mother nor the baby in Hawaii is still infectious.

Friday, January 15, 2016

ENFERMEDADES INFECCIOSAS Y MICROBIOLOGIA CLINICA - UpToDate

Carlos E Mijares, MD is a former Fellow in Allergy / Immunology, pediatrics at University of Kansas. USA; and a former pregraduated student at Universidad Complutense de Madrid. España.


Buscar en

ISSN: 0213-005X

Enfermedades Infecciosas y Microbiología Clínica

Hoy está universalmente reconocida la renovada y creciente importancia de la patología infecciosa: aparición de nuevos agentes patógenos, de cepas resistentes, de procesos con expresión clínica hasta ahora desconocida, de cuadros de una gran complejidad. Paralelamente, la Microbiología y la Infectología Clínicas han experimentado un gran desarrollo como respuesta al reto planteado por la actual patología infecciosa. Enfermedades Infecciosas y Microbiología Clínica es la Publicación Oficial de la Sociedad Española SEIMC. Cumple con la garantía científica de esta Sociedad, la doble función de difundir trabajos de investigación, tanto clínicos como microbiológicos, referidos a la patología infecciosa, y contribuye a la formación continuada de los interesados en aquella patología mediante artículos orientados a ese fin y elaborados por autores de la mayor calificación invitados por la revista.
Sumario anterior | Sumario siguiente

FI 2014

2,172
© Thomson Reuters, Journal Citation Reports, 2014

Indexada en:

Index Current Contents/Clinical Medicine, JCR, SCI-Expanded, Index Medicus/Medline, Excerpta Medica/EMBASE, IBECS, IME, CANCERLIT, SCOPUS

Índice SCImago

SCImago Journal & Country Rank

Vol. 34. Núm. 01. Enero 2016

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

INMUNIZACION / VACUNA PREVIENE LA CULEBRILLA












Culebrilla (herpes zóster)


En esta página

Para ver, jugar y aprender

  • Información no disponible

Investigaciones

  • Información no disponible

Recursos

Introducción

El herpes zóster es una enfermedad causada por el virus de la varicela zoster, el mismo que causa la varicela. Después de tener varicela, el virus permanece en el cuerpo. Puede no causar problemas durante muchos años. A medida que envejece, el virus puede reaparecer como herpes zóster. Aunque es más común en personas mayores de 50 años de edad, cualquier persona que haya tenido varicela está en riesgo.
Usted no puede contagiarse con la culebrilla. Sin embargo, si usted tiene una erupción de culebrilla, puede transmitir el virus a alguien que nunca ha tenido varicela. Esto suele ocurrir en niños, quienes podrían contraer la varicela en lugar de herpes zóster. El virus se propaga a través del contacto directo con la erupción, y no puede propagarse por el aire.
Los primeros signos de herpes zóster incluyen ardor o dolor punzante y hormigueo o picazón, generalmente en un lado del cuerpo o la cara. El dolor puede ser leve o severo. Las erupciones o ampollas aparecen entre uno y 14 días después. Si la culebrilla aparece en su cara, puede afectar la vista o el oído. El dolor de la culebrilla puede durar semanas, meses o incluso años después de que las ampollas han sanado.
No hay cura para el herpes zóster. El tratamiento temprano con medicamentos que combaten el virus puede ayudar. Estos medicamentos también pueden ayudar a prevenir el persistente dolor.
Una vacuna puede prevenir la culebrilla o disminuir sus efectos. La vacuna se recomienda para las personas de 60 años o más. En algunos casos, los médicos pueden recomendarla a personas de entre 50 a 59 años.
NIH: Instituto Nacional de Alergias y Enfermedades Infecciosas

Comience aquí

Diagnósticos/Síntomas

Prevención/Exámenes

Asuntos relacionados

Condiciones específicas

Especialistas

Niños/as

Adolescentes

Personas mayores


Tema Imagen

Fotografía de un doctor hablando con una paciente mayor

MedlinePlus actualizaciones por email