Estudio de 500 cepas de leumduras aisladas de diverso material humano
Abstract
Se identifican 500 cepas de levaduras procedentes de diverso material humano, obteniéndose 27 especies diferentes, con los siguientes porcentajes para los cuatro primeros lugares: C. albicans, 48,4%, C. tropicalis. 20,6%, C. parapsilosis, 13.8% y T. glabrata, 6,8% c albicans prevalece en muestras de material endógeno con un 52% y C. parapsilosis en el material exógeno orgánico con 42 %. Se llama particularmente la atención sobre el alto porcentaje de T' glabrata en el medio interno, sobre todo en orina y Flujos vaginales. Se recomienda proseguir las investigaciones sobre esta especie, considerada hasta el presente como no patógena para el hombre y animales de experimentación. Sobresale también la incidencia de C: parapsilosis en muestras de lesiones superficiales (42%), por lo que se piensa sea una levadura de contaminación. Por último, se suministra experiencias personales obtenidas durante el proceso de investigación
Copyright (c) 2012 Guillermo Casas Rincón
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Kasmera journal is registered under a Creative Commons an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0), available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/deed.en; which guarantees the freedom to share-copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and adapt-remix, transform and build from the material, provided that the name of the authors, the Department of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, Zulia´s University and Kasmera Journal, you must also provide a link to the original document and indicate if changes have been made.
The Department of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, University of Zulia and Kasmera Journal do not retain the rights to published manuscript and the contents are the sole responsibility of the authors, who retain their moral, intellectual, privacy and publicity rights. The guarantee on the intervention of the manuscript (revision, correction of style, translation, layout) and its subsequent dissemination is granted through a license of use and not through a transfer of rights, which represents the Kasmera Journal and Department Infectious Diseases, University of Zulia are exempt from any liability that may arise from ethical misconduct by the authors.
Kasmera is considered a green SHERPA/RoMEO journal, that is, it allows self-archiving of both the pre-print (draft of a manuscript) and the post-print (the corrected and peer-reviewed version) and even the final version (layout as it will be published in the journal) both in personal repositories and in institutional and databases.