Exploració per autor "Cardona, Pere-Joan"
Ara es mostren els items 1-4 de 4
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A reaction-diffusion model to understand granulomas formation inside secondary lobule during tuberculosis infection
Català Sabaté, Martí; Prats Soler, Clara; López Codina, Daniel; Cardona, Pere-Joan; Alonso Muñoz, Sergio (Public Library of Science (PLOS), 2020-09-16)
Article
Accés obertMycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is the causative agent for tuberculosis, the most extended infectious disease around the world. When Mtb enters inside the pulmonary alveolus it is rapidly phagocytosed by the alveolar ... -
Low dose aerosol fitness at the innate phase of murine infection better predicts virulence amongst clinical strains of mycobacterium tuberculosis
Cardona, Pere-Joan; Cáceres, Neus; Llopis Fuste, Isaac; Marzo, Elena; Prats Soler, Clara; Vilaplana, Cristina; García de Viedma, Darío; Samper, Sofia; López Codina, Daniel (2012-01-03)
Article
Accés obertBackground: Evaluation of a quick and easy model to determine the intrinsic ability of clinical strains to generate active TB has been set by assuming that this is linked to the fitness of Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain ... -
Modeling tuberculosis transmission in urban cities through agent-based simulation: the case of Barcelona
Montañola Sales, Cristina; Prats Soler, Clara; Cardona, Pere-Joan; Gilabert, Joan-Francesc; López Codina, Daniel; Vilaplana, Cristina; Casanovas Garcia, Josep; Valls Ribas, Joaquim (Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), 2017)
Comunicació de congrés
Accés obertTuberculosis remains one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases. About one-third of the world’s population is infected with tuberculosis bacteria. Understanding the dynamics of transmission at different spatial ... -
The origin and maintenance of tuberculosis is explained by the induction of smear-negative disease in the paleolithic
Cardona, Pere-Joan; Català Sabaté, Martí; Prats Soler, Clara (2022-03-17)
Article
Accés obertIs it possible that the origin of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection was around 70,000 years before the common era? At that time Homo sapiens was just another primate species with discrete growth and a very low-density ...