G
Gonzalo J. Domingo
Researcher at PATH
Publications - 112
Citations - 5029
Gonzalo J. Domingo is an academic researcher from PATH. The author has contributed to research in topics: Malaria & Plasmodium falciparum. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 98 publications receiving 4327 citations. Previous affiliations of Gonzalo J. Domingo include Imperial College London & The Hertz Corporation.
Papers
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Point-of-care diagnostics for global health.
TL;DR: The context in which the diagnostics must operate, some of the appropriate diagnostic technologies already in distribution, and some emerging technologies that promise to address this challenge are reviewed.
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Towards non- and minimally instrumented, microfluidics-based diagnostic devices
TL;DR: Progress toward development of disposable, low-cost, easy-to-use microfluidics-based diagnostics that require no instrument at all is reviewed.
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Targeting vivax malaria in the Asia Pacific: The Asia Pacific Malaria Elimination Network Vivax Working Group
Nicholas M. Anstey,Sarah Auburn,J K Baird,Katherine E. Battle,A Bobogare,Arna Chancellor,S Chasombat,Qin Cheng,Gonzalo J. Domingo,Chris Drakeley,Tobgyel Drukpa,Lek Dysoley,F Esperanza Espino,Peter W. Gething,Prakash Ghimire,Roly Gosling,P Grewal-Daumerie,Si Hay,Rosalind E. Howes,Jimee Hwang,J Karim,Wasif A. Khan,J-Y Kim,Benedikt Ley,Kylie Mannion,James S. McCarthy,WM Keong,Ivo Mueller,Rinzin Namgay,Ric N. Price,Gao Qi,M Rebueno,John C. Reeder,Jack S. Richards,J Sattabongkot-Prachumsri,GD Shanks,Carol Hopkins Sibley,Asik Surya,George Taleo,ND Thang,Thongpaseuth,Kamala Thriemer,Hidayat Trimarsanto,Lasse S Vestergaard,L von Seidelein,Maxine Whittaker,VW Grp +46 more
TL;DR: The issues faced and the solutions found in developing this robust strategic partnership between national programmes and research partners within the APMEN Vivax Working Group are described.
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Maternal Malaria and Gravidity Interact to Modify Infant Susceptibility to Malaria
Theonest K. Mutabingwa,Melissa C Bolla,Jin-Long Li,Gonzalo J. Domingo,Xiaohong Li,Michal Fried,Patrick E. Duffy,Patrick E. Duffy +7 more
TL;DR: Preventable antimalarial chemotherapy administered to multigravid women close to term may reduce the frequency of parasitemia in their offspring, especially in offspring of PM-positive women.
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Natural and induced dyskinetoplastic trypanosomatids: how to live without mitochondrial DNA.
TL;DR: The data available on dyskinetoplasty in trypanosomes is summarized and the roles the mitochondrion and its genome play during the life cycle of T. brucei are revisited, questioning the therapeutic value of attempts to target mitochondrial gene expression with specific drugs.