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au:Rossi, Magda Santos
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1.
SARS-CoV-2 and rhinovirus infections: are there differences in clinical presentation, laboratory abnormalities, and outcomes in the pediatric population?
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Pereira, Maria Fernanda Bádue
; Suguita, Priscila
; Litvinov, Nadia
; Farhat, Sylvia Costa Lima
; Paula, Camila Sanson Yoshino de
; Lázari, Carolina dos Santos
; Bedê, Pedro Vale
; Framil, Juliana Valeria de Souza
; Bueno, Catarina
; Branas, Priscila Cristina Abduch Adas
; Guimarães, Irina Monteiro da Costa
; Leite, Marcia Marques
; Navega, Ana Carolina Barsaglini
; Nanbu, Danilo Yamamoto
; Schvartsman, Claudio
; Pinho, João Renato Rebello
; Silva, Clovis Artur Almeida
; Marques, Heloisa Helena de Sousa
; Eisencraft, Adriana Pasmanik
; Rossi Jr, Alfio
; Delgado, Artur Figueiredo
; Leal, Gabriela Nunes
; Gibelli, Maria Augusta Cicaroni
; Palmeira, Patricia
; Sakita, Neusa Keico
; Santos, Emilly Henrique dos
; Rocha, Mussya Cisotto
; Kanunfre, Kelly Aparecida
; Okay, Thelma Suely
; Carneiro-Sampaio, Magda
; Carvalho, Werther Brunow de
.
Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo
- Journal Metrics
ABSTRACT This study aims to assess COVID-19 and other respiratory viruses in pediatric patients. Between April 17 and September 30, 2020, we collected 1,566 respiratory samples from 1,044 symptomatic patients who were younger than 18 years old to assess SARS-CoV-2 infection. Of these, 919 were analyzed for other respiratory pathogens (ORP). Patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 or ORP were included. We evaluated 76 pediatric COVID-19 infections and 157 other respiratory virus infections. Rhinovirus occurred in 132/157 (84%). COVID-19 patients who were significantly older, had more fevers, headaches and pneumonia than those with ORP. The median white blood cell count was lower in patients with SARS-CoV-2 than in those with ORP (6,470 versus 8,170; p=0.02). COVID-19 patients had significantly worse symptoms than those with ORP.
2.
Differences in children and adolescents with SARS-CoV-2 infection: a cohort study in a Brazilian tertiary referral hospital
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Marques, Heloisa Helena de Sousa
; Pereira, Maria Fernanda Badue
; Santos, Angélica Carreira dos
; Fink, Thais Toledo
; Paula, Camila Sanson Yoshino de
; Litvinov, Nadia
; Schvartsman, Claudio
; Delgado, Artur Figueiredo
; Gibelli, Maria Augusta Bento Cicaroni
; Carvalho, Werther Brunow de
; Odone Filho, Vicente
; Tannuri, Uenis
; Carneiro-Sampaio, Magda
; Grisi, Sandra
; Duarte, Alberto José da Silva
; Antonangelo, Leila
; Francisco, Rossana Pucineli Vieira
; Okay, Thelma Suely
; Batisttella, Linamara Rizzo
; Carvalho, Carlos Roberto Ribeiro de
; Brentani, Alexandra Valéria Maria
; Silva, Clovis Artur
; Eisencraft, Adriana Pasmanik
; Rossi Junior, Alfio
; Fante, Alice Lima
; Cora, Aline Pivetta
; Reis, Amelia Gorete A. de Costa
; Ferrer, Ana Paula Scoleze
; Andrade, Anarella Penha Meirelles de
; Watanabe, Andreia
; Gonçalves, Angelina Maria Freire
; Waetge, Aurora Rosaria Pagliara
; Silva, Camila Altenfelder
; Ceneviva, Carina
; Lazari, Carolina dos Santos
; Abellan, Deipara Monteiro
; Santos, Emilly Henrique dos
; Sabino, Ester Cerdeira
; Bianchini, Fabíola Roberta Marim
; Alcantara, Flávio Ferraz de Paes
; Ramos, Gabriel Frizzo
; Leal, Gabriela Nunes
; Rodriguez, Isadora Souza
; Pinho, João Renato Rebello
; Carneiro, Jorge David Avaizoglou
; Paz, Jose Albino
; Ferreira, Juliana Carvalho
; Ferranti, Juliana Ferreira
; Ferreira, Juliana de Oliveira Achili
; Framil, Juliana Valéria de Souza
; Silva, Katia Regina da
; Kanunfre, Kelly Aparecida
; Bastos, Karina Lucio de Medeiros
; Galleti, Karine Vusberg
; Cristofani, Lilian Maria
; Suzuki, Lisa
; Campos, Lucia Maria Arruda
; Perondi, Maria Beatriz de Moliterno
; Diniz, Maria de Fatima Rodrigues
; Fonseca, Maria Fernanda Mota
; Cordon, Mariana Nutti de Almeida
; Pissolato, Mariana
; Peres, Marina Silva
; Garanito, Marlene Pereira
; Imamura, Marta
; Dorna, Mayra de Barros
; Luglio, Michele
; Rocha, Mussya Cisotto
; Aikawa, Nadia Emi
; Degaspare, Natalia Viu
; Sakita, Neusa Keico
; Udsen, Nicole Lee
; Scudeller, Paula Gobi
; Gaiolla, Paula Vieira de Vincenzi
; Severini, Rafael da Silva Giannasi
; Rodrigues, Regina Maria
; Toma, Ricardo Katsuya
; Paula, Ricardo Iunis Citrangulo de
; Palmeira, Patricia
; Forsait, Silvana
; Farhat, Sylvia Costa Lima
; Sakano, Tânia Miyuki Shimoda
; Koch, Vera Hermina Kalika
; Cobello Junior, Vilson
.
OBJECTIVES: To compare demographic/clinical/laboratory/treatments and outcomes among children and adolescents with laboratory-confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). METHODS: This was a cross-sectional study that included patients diagnosed with pediatric COVID-19 (aged <18 years) between April 11, 2020 and April 22, 2021. During this period, 102/5,951 (1.7%) of all admissions occurred in neonates, children, and adolescents. Furthermore, 3,962 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) detection samples were processed in patients aged <18 years, and laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 occurred in 155 (4%) inpatients and outpatients. Six/155 pediatric patients were excluded from the study. Therefore, the final group included 149 children and adolescents (n=97 inpatients and 52 outpatients) with positive SARS-CoV-2 results. RESULTS: The frequencies of sore throat, anosmia, dysgeusia, headache, myalgia, nausea, lymphopenia, pre-existing chronic conditions, immunosuppressive conditions, and autoimmune diseases were significantly reduced in children and adolescents (p<0.05). Likewise, the frequencies of enoxaparin use (p=0.037), current immunosuppressant use (p=0.008), vasoactive agents (p=0.045), arterial hypotension (p<0.001), and shock (p=0.024) were significantly lower in children than in adolescents. Logistic regression analysis showed that adolescents with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 had increased odds ratios (ORs) for sore throat (OR 13.054; 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.750-61.977; p=0.001), nausea (OR 8.875; 95% CI 1.660-47.446; p=0.011), and lymphopenia (OR 3.575; 95% CI 1.355-9.430; p=0.010), but also had less hospitalizations (OR 0.355; 95% CI 0.138-0.916; p=0.032). The additional logistic regression analysis on patients with preexisting chronic conditions (n=108) showed that death as an outcome was significantly associated with pediatric severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) (OR 22.300; 95% CI 2.341-212.421; p=0.007) and multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) (OR 11.261; 95% CI 1.189-106. 581; p=0.035). CONCLUSIONS: Half of the laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases occurred in adolescents. Individuals belonging to this age group had an acute systemic involvement of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Pediatric SARS and MIS-C were the most important factors associated with the mortality rate in pediatric chronic conditions with COVID-19.
3.
Effects that nutritional and saline gradients have on the growth of Passiflora mucronata Lam. and Canavalia rosea (Sw.) DC. found in the restinga of Brazil
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Lourenço Junior, Jehová
; Zambom, Oberdan
; Rossi, Magda Santos
; Cuzzuol, Geraldo Rogério Faustini
.
Salinity and fertility are the main factors cited in Within the restinga (coastal woodland) biome in Brazil, the positioning of Canavalia rosea and Passiflora mucronata occur, respectively, near the shore-in the creeping psammophyte formation (CPF) - and far from the shore - in the Palmae formation (PF). The hypothesis that such positioning is related to salinity and fertility was tested by applying a salt gradient (increasing solutions of NaCl) and a nutritional gradient (different proportions of Hoagland solution). Neither species survived in solutions over 200 mM of NaCl. The shoots of P. mucronata showed negative growth (lower dry mass) in the first week of exposure to saline solutions. The roots of C. rosea showed great sensitivity to salinity, which resulted in greater growth reduction, with increasing plant age, in comparison with P. mucronata. C. rosea grew best in the nutrient-deficient solution, whereas P. mucronata responded best to the nutrient-rich solution, suggesting that C. rosea is better able to populate less fertile sites, such as the CPF, whereas P. mucronata is more suited to sites that are more fertile, such as the PF. Therefore, we can speculate that fertility is the only factor limiting the positioning of species in the restinga.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0102-33062013000200008
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