-
11 Beiträge
-
0 Fotos
-
0 Videos
-
Female
-
07/02/1988
-
Follower 0 Menschen
© 2026 Webyourself Social Media Platform
Deutsch
Neueste Updates
-
The necessity of emergency surgery for severe spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (SSICH) patients on long-term oral antiplatelet therapy (LOAPT) remains unclear. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect and safety of emergency surgery for SSICH patients on LOAPT (SSICH-LOAPT patients). In this study, a retrospective review of patients admitted to our institution for SSICH from January 2012 to December 2018 was conducted. The collected data included demographic, clinical, and surgical information. The outcome was recorded at 3 months after primary hemorrhage. The outcome of SSICH-LOAPT patients receiving emergency surgery and conservative treatment were compared. The risk of postoperative intracranial bleeding (PIB) in operated SSICH-LOAPT patients was further investigated. A total of 522 SSICH patients were retrospectively reviewed, including 181 SSICH-LOAPT patients and 269 operated patients. The total mortality and in-hospital mortality were 40.6% and 19.3%, respectively. As compared with SSICH-LOAPT patients receiving conservative treatment, the operated SSICH-LOAPT patients showed a lower total (p = 0.043) and in-hospital mortality (p = 0.024). When compared with operated patients not on LOAPT, the operated patients on LOAPT exhibited a higher rate of PIB (OR, 2.34; 95% CI 1.14-4.79; p = 0.018). As demonstrated by the multivariate logistic analysis, dual antiplatelet therapy were independent risk factors associated with PIB in operated SSICH-LOAPT patients (OR, 3.42; CI, 1.01-11.51; p = 0.047). Despite of increasing risk of PIB, emergency surgery could improve the outcome of SSICH-LOAPT patients as it could be effective in reducing mortality. Dual antiplatelet therapy was the independent risk factor related to the PIB in operated SSICH-LOAPT patients.Introduction Patients at risk should be admitted to the ICU if there is room for improvement. Patients who have no room for improvement or the risk of death is either too high or too low should not be admitted to the ICU. Aim To investigate ward patient characteristics, outcomes, and survival rates after an emergency call for evaluation by an intensivist. Material and method This is a prospective observational study of patients hospitalized at a general hospital in Greece. A data recording form was completed by the investigators in order to collect the required data. Results 115 patients (58.3%, n = 67 men and 41.7%, n = 48 women) of mean age 67.1 ± 13.8 years (range 27-92 years) were evaluated by an intensivist and were recorded. 28.7% (n = 33) were hospitalized in a surgical clinic, 67% (n = 77) were hospitalized in internal medicine clinics (oncology), and 4.3% (n = 5) of the patients were treated in the emergency department, the radiotherapy department, or the radiology department. 73% (n = 84/115) of the patients were hospitalized in the ICU. Total survival rate was 49.6% (57/115). Of the 31 patients who did not enter the ICU (out of 115 patients), 15 survived (13% of the 115 patients or 48.4% of the 31 patients not admitted to the ICU). Five (5) of them had a cardiac arrest and either died without entering the ICU or continued their hospitalization in the ward. The survival rates of the patients not admitted to the ICU who continued hospitalization at the ward was 57.7% (15/26). Of the 84 patients admitted to the ICU, 42 survived (36.5% of the 115 patients or 50% of the 84 patients admitted to the ICU). Conclusions The survival rates of these patients are quite low and possibly multifactorial due to the severity of the disease, the unnecessary call for an intensivist due to an irreversible condition, or the delayed call of an intensivist.Objectives The comparison of cognitive performance of older adults with frailty and non-frail ones (according to Fried's criteria) was investigated. Methods/design The differences in performance between people with frailty and individuals without frailty according to Fried were tested using a Virtual Reality (VR) application. The Fried criteria for frailty were used to categorize users into study groups, while standardized batteries were used for a Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment, including Activities of Daily Living (ADL), lifestyle, cognition, and depression screening. A group of 80 elders (78.08 years old in average) played the VR game entitled Virtual Supermarket (VSM). From those, 39 were healthy controls and 30 were categorized as pre-frail and 11 as frail. The VSM application presented users with a virtual shopping experience where users had to locate and purchase items displayed in a shopping list. This application was designed to test player's ability to reproduce a typical customer behavior in a simulated environment which requires spatial orientation, short-term memory, selective attention, and cognition speed. The performance, duration, and error rate were used as measurements. Results The analysis showed that there was a statistically significant difference in game performance between the different user groups with X2 (2) = 9.929, p = 0.007. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sc79.html Moreover, the multinomial logistic regression model generated, which based on game performance metrics, was found to be statistically significant with X2 (4) = 15.662, p = 0.004. Conclusions Results shed more light toward the possible use of VR for distant self-administered evaluation of the frail status.Background Low compliance rates with medication after an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is a serious public health problem with adverse socioeconomic implications for both patients and their families as well as for health systems in general. The aims of the study are to measure the levels of compliance with medication in the treatment of patients who suffered from ACS and to investigate the factors contributing to the noncompliance. Methods The sample consisted of 100 patients hospitalized in the coronary care unit (CCU) of a general hospital. The compliance of patients with treatment, which was measured with the GR-SMAQ and ARMS scales, was measured at 3, 6, and 12 months after their hospitalization. The t-test and control X2 were used, and the value of statistical significance was set to 0.05. Results According to the GR-SMAQ and ARMS scales, compliance of patients at 3, 6, and 12 months after hospitalization is low (58%, 70%, 32% with ARMS scale and 54%, 58%, 38% with GR-SMAQ scale, respectively). Patients who were readmitted to CCU had 68.
The necessity of emergency surgery for severe spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (SSICH) patients on long-term oral antiplatelet therapy (LOAPT) remains unclear. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect and safety of emergency surgery for SSICH patients on LOAPT (SSICH-LOAPT patients). In this study, a retrospective review of patients admitted to our institution for SSICH from January 2012 to December 2018 was conducted. The collected data included demographic, clinical, and surgical information. The outcome was recorded at 3 months after primary hemorrhage. The outcome of SSICH-LOAPT patients receiving emergency surgery and conservative treatment were compared. The risk of postoperative intracranial bleeding (PIB) in operated SSICH-LOAPT patients was further investigated. A total of 522 SSICH patients were retrospectively reviewed, including 181 SSICH-LOAPT patients and 269 operated patients. The total mortality and in-hospital mortality were 40.6% and 19.3%, respectively. As compared with SSICH-LOAPT patients receiving conservative treatment, the operated SSICH-LOAPT patients showed a lower total (p = 0.043) and in-hospital mortality (p = 0.024). When compared with operated patients not on LOAPT, the operated patients on LOAPT exhibited a higher rate of PIB (OR, 2.34; 95% CI 1.14-4.79; p = 0.018). As demonstrated by the multivariate logistic analysis, dual antiplatelet therapy were independent risk factors associated with PIB in operated SSICH-LOAPT patients (OR, 3.42; CI, 1.01-11.51; p = 0.047). Despite of increasing risk of PIB, emergency surgery could improve the outcome of SSICH-LOAPT patients as it could be effective in reducing mortality. Dual antiplatelet therapy was the independent risk factor related to the PIB in operated SSICH-LOAPT patients.Introduction Patients at risk should be admitted to the ICU if there is room for improvement. Patients who have no room for improvement or the risk of death is either too high or too low should not be admitted to the ICU. Aim To investigate ward patient characteristics, outcomes, and survival rates after an emergency call for evaluation by an intensivist. Material and method This is a prospective observational study of patients hospitalized at a general hospital in Greece. A data recording form was completed by the investigators in order to collect the required data. Results 115 patients (58.3%, n = 67 men and 41.7%, n = 48 women) of mean age 67.1 ± 13.8 years (range 27-92 years) were evaluated by an intensivist and were recorded. 28.7% (n = 33) were hospitalized in a surgical clinic, 67% (n = 77) were hospitalized in internal medicine clinics (oncology), and 4.3% (n = 5) of the patients were treated in the emergency department, the radiotherapy department, or the radiology department. 73% (n = 84/115) of the patients were hospitalized in the ICU. Total survival rate was 49.6% (57/115). Of the 31 patients who did not enter the ICU (out of 115 patients), 15 survived (13% of the 115 patients or 48.4% of the 31 patients not admitted to the ICU). Five (5) of them had a cardiac arrest and either died without entering the ICU or continued their hospitalization in the ward. The survival rates of the patients not admitted to the ICU who continued hospitalization at the ward was 57.7% (15/26). Of the 84 patients admitted to the ICU, 42 survived (36.5% of the 115 patients or 50% of the 84 patients admitted to the ICU). Conclusions The survival rates of these patients are quite low and possibly multifactorial due to the severity of the disease, the unnecessary call for an intensivist due to an irreversible condition, or the delayed call of an intensivist.Objectives The comparison of cognitive performance of older adults with frailty and non-frail ones (according to Fried's criteria) was investigated. Methods/design The differences in performance between people with frailty and individuals without frailty according to Fried were tested using a Virtual Reality (VR) application. The Fried criteria for frailty were used to categorize users into study groups, while standardized batteries were used for a Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment, including Activities of Daily Living (ADL), lifestyle, cognition, and depression screening. A group of 80 elders (78.08 years old in average) played the VR game entitled Virtual Supermarket (VSM). From those, 39 were healthy controls and 30 were categorized as pre-frail and 11 as frail. The VSM application presented users with a virtual shopping experience where users had to locate and purchase items displayed in a shopping list. This application was designed to test player's ability to reproduce a typical customer behavior in a simulated environment which requires spatial orientation, short-term memory, selective attention, and cognition speed. The performance, duration, and error rate were used as measurements. Results The analysis showed that there was a statistically significant difference in game performance between the different user groups with X2 (2) = 9.929, p = 0.007. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sc79.html Moreover, the multinomial logistic regression model generated, which based on game performance metrics, was found to be statistically significant with X2 (4) = 15.662, p = 0.004. Conclusions Results shed more light toward the possible use of VR for distant self-administered evaluation of the frail status.Background Low compliance rates with medication after an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is a serious public health problem with adverse socioeconomic implications for both patients and their families as well as for health systems in general. The aims of the study are to measure the levels of compliance with medication in the treatment of patients who suffered from ACS and to investigate the factors contributing to the noncompliance. Methods The sample consisted of 100 patients hospitalized in the coronary care unit (CCU) of a general hospital. The compliance of patients with treatment, which was measured with the GR-SMAQ and ARMS scales, was measured at 3, 6, and 12 months after their hospitalization. The t-test and control X2 were used, and the value of statistical significance was set to 0.05. Results According to the GR-SMAQ and ARMS scales, compliance of patients at 3, 6, and 12 months after hospitalization is low (58%, 70%, 32% with ARMS scale and 54%, 58%, 38% with GR-SMAQ scale, respectively). Patients who were readmitted to CCU had 68.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 75 Ansichten 0 BewertungenBitte loggen Sie sich ein, um liken, teilen und zu kommentieren! -
BACKGROUND To explore the potential therapeutic effect of total flavonoids (TFs) extracted from Scabiosa comosa Fisch. ex Roem. et Schult on liver fibrosis in rat models and to identify the possible targets and pathways of TF in treating liver fibrosis by using a quantitative proteomics method. METHODS Sixty Wistar rats were equally randomized into five groups a blank control group, a model group, and high-, intermediate-, and low-dose TF treatment groups. Except for the blank control group, rats in the other four groups were intragastrically administered with CCL4 2 mL/kg to establish the liver fibrosis models. Furthermore, the high-, intermediate-, and low-dose TF groups were intragastrically given TF at a dose of 200, 100 and 50 mg/kg, respectively. After 10 weeks, the rats were sacrificed, and blood and liver samples were collected. Serum alanine transaminase (ALT), Aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels were measured, and hematoxylin and eosin (HE) staining and Masson's tmechanism of TF extract of Scabiosa comosa Fisch. ex Roem. et Schult may be the inhibition of key proteins FABP and vWF in PPAR, ECM RECEPTOR INTERACTION pathway.Traditional single model based soft sensors may have poor performance on quality prediction for batch processes because of the strong nonlinearity, multiple-phase, and time-varying characteristics. Therefore, a phase partition based ensemble learning framework upon least squares support vector regression (LSSVR) is proposed for soft sensor modeling. Firstly, multiway principal component analysis (****) is employed to handle high-dimensional datasets and extract essential correlation information. Then, different operation phases of the process can be identified by the phase partition strategy based on Gaussian mixture model (GMM) method. Meanwhile, the optimal Gaussian component number is determined by Bayesian information criterion (BIC) technique. Further, multiple localized LSSVR models are constructed to characterize the various dynamic relationships between quality and process variables for local regions, while the grid search (GS) and ten-fold cross-validation methods are introduced to parameter optimization for each local model. Finally, the posterior probability for each test sample with respect to different phases can be estimated by Bayesian inference strategy, and local outputs are integrated to produce the final quality prediction results. Feasibility and superiority of the proposed soft sensor are validated through a case study for penicillin fermentation process. It can achieve satisfactory prediction accuracy and effectively tackle nonlinear and multi-phase modeling problems in chemical and biological processes.High-density urban habitats provide a hotbed for the rapid spread of infectious diseases. School children densely aggregate in classrooms. So schools are high incidence area of infectious diseases. This paper aims at investigating the transmission of influenza-like-illness within households with a school child using a survey study of fourth grade elementary school students in Shanghai, China. We found that the pairwise transmission probability within a household is only 0.172, which implies that the average number of infections caused by a single infectious individual in a household in Shanghai is only 0.304. Thus, the majority of transmission must occur outside of a household for a disease to cause an outbreak.Here we study how the structure and growth of a cellular population vary with the distribution of maturation times from each stage. We consider two cell cycle stages. The first represents early G1. The second includes late G1, S, G2, and mitosis. Passage between the two reflects passage of an important cell cycle checkpoint known as the restriction point. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sodium-l-ascorbyl-2-phosphate.html We model the population as a system of partial differential equations. After establishing the existence of solutions, we characterize the maturation rates and derive the steady-state age and stage distributions as well as the asymptotic growth rates for models with exponential and inverse Gaussian maturation time distributions. We find that the stable age and stage distributions, transient dynamics, and asymptotic growth rates are substantially different for these two maturation models. We conclude that researchers modeling cellular populations should take care when choosing a maturation time distribution, as the population growth rate and stage structure can be heavily impacted by this choice. Furthermore, differences in the models' transient dynamics constitute testable predictions that can help further our understanding of the fundamental process of cellular proliferation. We hope that our numerical methods and programs will provide a scaffold for future research on cellular proliferation.Purpose In order to classify different types of health data collected in clinical practice of hernia surgery more effectively and improve the classification performance of support vector machine (SVM). Methods A prospective randomized study was conducted. Sixty patients undergoing hernia repair under general anesthesia were randomly divided into two groups, PLMA group (n = 30) and ETT group (n = 30), for airway management. Heart rate, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, mean arterial pressure, respiratory parameters and the incidence of complications related to ProSeal laryngeal mask airway (PLMA) and endotracheal tube (ETT) were collected in clinical experiments in order to evaluate the operation condition. On the basis of this experiment, at first, expert credibility is introduced to process the index value; secondly, the classification weight of the index is objectively determined by the information entropy output of the index itself; finally, a comprehensive classification model of support vector machine based on key sample set is proposed and its advantages are evaluated. Result After classifying the experimental data, we found that SVM can accurately judge the effect of surgery by data. In this experiment, PLMA method is better than ETT method in xenon repair operation. Discussion SVM has great accuracy and practicability in judging the outcome of xenon repair operation. Conclusion The proposed index classification weight model can deal with the uncertainties caused by uncertain information and give the confidence of the uncertain information. Compared with the traditional SVM method, the proposed method based on SVM and key sample set greatly reduces the number of samples that misjudge the effect of samples, and improves the practicability of SVM method. It is concluded that PLMA is superior to the ETT technique to hernia surgical. The idea of constructing classification model based on key sample set proposed in this paper can also be used for reference in other data mining methods.
BACKGROUND To explore the potential therapeutic effect of total flavonoids (TFs) extracted from Scabiosa comosa Fisch. ex Roem. et Schult on liver fibrosis in rat models and to identify the possible targets and pathways of TF in treating liver fibrosis by using a quantitative proteomics method. METHODS Sixty Wistar rats were equally randomized into five groups a blank control group, a model group, and high-, intermediate-, and low-dose TF treatment groups. Except for the blank control group, rats in the other four groups were intragastrically administered with CCL4 2 mL/kg to establish the liver fibrosis models. Furthermore, the high-, intermediate-, and low-dose TF groups were intragastrically given TF at a dose of 200, 100 and 50 mg/kg, respectively. After 10 weeks, the rats were sacrificed, and blood and liver samples were collected. Serum alanine transaminase (ALT), Aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels were measured, and hematoxylin and eosin (HE) staining and Masson's tmechanism of TF extract of Scabiosa comosa Fisch. ex Roem. et Schult may be the inhibition of key proteins FABP and vWF in PPAR, ECM RECEPTOR INTERACTION pathway.Traditional single model based soft sensors may have poor performance on quality prediction for batch processes because of the strong nonlinearity, multiple-phase, and time-varying characteristics. Therefore, a phase partition based ensemble learning framework upon least squares support vector regression (LSSVR) is proposed for soft sensor modeling. Firstly, multiway principal component analysis (MPCA) is employed to handle high-dimensional datasets and extract essential correlation information. Then, different operation phases of the process can be identified by the phase partition strategy based on Gaussian mixture model (GMM) method. Meanwhile, the optimal Gaussian component number is determined by Bayesian information criterion (BIC) technique. Further, multiple localized LSSVR models are constructed to characterize the various dynamic relationships between quality and process variables for local regions, while the grid search (GS) and ten-fold cross-validation methods are introduced to parameter optimization for each local model. Finally, the posterior probability for each test sample with respect to different phases can be estimated by Bayesian inference strategy, and local outputs are integrated to produce the final quality prediction results. Feasibility and superiority of the proposed soft sensor are validated through a case study for penicillin fermentation process. It can achieve satisfactory prediction accuracy and effectively tackle nonlinear and multi-phase modeling problems in chemical and biological processes.High-density urban habitats provide a hotbed for the rapid spread of infectious diseases. School children densely aggregate in classrooms. So schools are high incidence area of infectious diseases. This paper aims at investigating the transmission of influenza-like-illness within households with a school child using a survey study of fourth grade elementary school students in Shanghai, China. We found that the pairwise transmission probability within a household is only 0.172, which implies that the average number of infections caused by a single infectious individual in a household in Shanghai is only 0.304. Thus, the majority of transmission must occur outside of a household for a disease to cause an outbreak.Here we study how the structure and growth of a cellular population vary with the distribution of maturation times from each stage. We consider two cell cycle stages. The first represents early G1. The second includes late G1, S, G2, and mitosis. Passage between the two reflects passage of an important cell cycle checkpoint known as the restriction point. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sodium-l-ascorbyl-2-phosphate.html We model the population as a system of partial differential equations. After establishing the existence of solutions, we characterize the maturation rates and derive the steady-state age and stage distributions as well as the asymptotic growth rates for models with exponential and inverse Gaussian maturation time distributions. We find that the stable age and stage distributions, transient dynamics, and asymptotic growth rates are substantially different for these two maturation models. We conclude that researchers modeling cellular populations should take care when choosing a maturation time distribution, as the population growth rate and stage structure can be heavily impacted by this choice. Furthermore, differences in the models' transient dynamics constitute testable predictions that can help further our understanding of the fundamental process of cellular proliferation. We hope that our numerical methods and programs will provide a scaffold for future research on cellular proliferation.Purpose In order to classify different types of health data collected in clinical practice of hernia surgery more effectively and improve the classification performance of support vector machine (SVM). Methods A prospective randomized study was conducted. Sixty patients undergoing hernia repair under general anesthesia were randomly divided into two groups, PLMA group (n = 30) and ETT group (n = 30), for airway management. Heart rate, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, mean arterial pressure, respiratory parameters and the incidence of complications related to ProSeal laryngeal mask airway (PLMA) and endotracheal tube (ETT) were collected in clinical experiments in order to evaluate the operation condition. On the basis of this experiment, at first, expert credibility is introduced to process the index value; secondly, the classification weight of the index is objectively determined by the information entropy output of the index itself; finally, a comprehensive classification model of support vector machine based on key sample set is proposed and its advantages are evaluated. Result After classifying the experimental data, we found that SVM can accurately judge the effect of surgery by data. In this experiment, PLMA method is better than ETT method in xenon repair operation. Discussion SVM has great accuracy and practicability in judging the outcome of xenon repair operation. Conclusion The proposed index classification weight model can deal with the uncertainties caused by uncertain information and give the confidence of the uncertain information. Compared with the traditional SVM method, the proposed method based on SVM and key sample set greatly reduces the number of samples that misjudge the effect of samples, and improves the practicability of SVM method. It is concluded that PLMA is superior to the ETT technique to hernia surgical. The idea of constructing classification model based on key sample set proposed in this paper can also be used for reference in other data mining methods.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 34 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
P1 region sequences of two Russian HPeV-1 strains clustered with rare contemporary HPeV-1A strains, whereas their P3 regions were phylogenetically closer to the archival Harris strain. The Russian HPeV-5 strain formed a common cluster with other HPeV-5 strains only for the P1 region, while the P3 region grouped with the German HPeV-2 strain. In the Russian HPeV-5 strain, the lack of the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) motif at the C-terminus of VP1 was observed. This is the first complete genome characterization of the Russian HPeV strains detected in sporadic cases of pediatric acute gastroenteritis. Bone marrow stromal cell antigen 2 (BST2 or tetherin) is a host-encoded, interferon-inducible antiviral restriction factor which blocks the release of enveloped viruses. Few studies have assessed the role of BST2 polymorphisms on HIV-1 acquisition or disease progression in sub-Saharan Africa. This study investigated the frequency of four HIV-1-associated BST2 variants rs3217318, rs12609479, rs10415893 and rs113189798 in uninfected and HIV-1 infected black South Africans. Homozygosity for the rs12609479-A minor allele, previously associated with decreased HIV-1 acquisition risk, was underrepresented in HIV-1 uninfected black South Africans (2%) compared to reference African (9%) and in particular European populations (61%) (p = .047 and p less then .0001, respectively). To determine if any of these gene variants influenced HIV-1 control in the absence of antiretroviral treatment (ART), we compared HIV-1 infected ART-naïve progressors [n = 72] and controllers [n = 71], the latter includes elite controllers [EC n = 23; VL less then 50 RNA copies/ml]. Heterozygosity for the rs12609479 SNP (G/A) was enriched in progressors compared to ECs (47.2% vs 21.7%, OR = 3.50 [1.16-10.59], p = .03), while rs113189798 heterozygosity (A/G) showed a strong trend of overrepresentation in ECs compared to progressors (47.8% vs 26.4%, OR = 0.39 [0.14-1.04], p = .07). Heterozygosity for the promoter indel rs3217318 (i19/Δ19) was associated with a faster rate of CD4+ T-cell decline in progressors (p = .0134). Carriage of the rs3217318 (i19/Δ19), rs12609479 (G/G), rs10415893(G/A) and rs113189798 (A/G) combined genotype, denoted as i19Δ19 GG GA AG, was associated with significantly higher CD4+ T-cell counts in progressors (p = .03), a finding predominantly driven by the _GG_AG combination. Our data suggest that the possession of select BST2 genotype combinations may be implicated in HIV-1 disease progression and natural spontaneous control. Pathogenic viruses are viruses that can infect and replicate within human cells and cause diseases. The continuous emergence and re-emergence of pathogenic viruses has become a major threat to public health. Whenever pathogenic viruses emerge, their rapid detection is critical to enable implementation of specific control measures and the limitation of virus spread. Further molecular characterization to better understand these viruses is required for the development of diagnostic tests and countermeasures. Advances in molecular biology techniques have revolutionized the procedures for detection and characterization of pathogenic viruses. The development of PCR-based techniques together with DNA sequencing technology, have provided highly sensitive and specific methods to determine virus circulation. Pathogenic viruses potentially having global catastrophic consequences may emerge in regions where capacity for their detection and characterization is limited. Development of a local capacity to rapidly identify new viruses is therefore critical. This article reviews the molecular biology of pathogenic viruses and the basic principles of molecular techniques commonly used for their detection and characterization. The principles of good laboratory practices for handling pathogenic viruses are also discussed. This review aims at providing researchers and laboratory personnel with an overview of the molecular biology of pathogenic viruses and the principles of molecular techniques and good laboratory practices commonly implemented for their detection and characterization. V.Functionalizing black phosphorus nanosheet (BP) with efficient drug loading and endowing mesoporous silica nanomaterials with appropriate biodegradation for controllable tumor-targeted chemo-photothermal therapy are still urgent challenges. Herein, an ordered mesoporous silica-sandwiched black phosphorus nanosheet (BP@MS) with the vertical pore coating was prepared. The strategy could not only enhance the BP's dispersity and improve its doxorubicin (DOX)-loading efficiency, but also facilitate post-modification such as PEGylation and conjugation of targeting ligand, TKD peptide, yielding BSPT. A DOX-loaded BSPT-based system (BSPTD) showed heat-stimulative, pH-responsive, and sustained release manners. In vitro and in vivo results demonstrated that BSPTD had a delayed but finally complete degradation in physiological medium, contributing to an optimal therapeutic window and good biosafety. As a result, BSPTD can achieve an effective chemo-photothermal synergistic targeted therapy of tumor. Moreover, treating by BSPTD was found to be capable of remarkably inhibiting the lung metastasis of tumor, attributing to the photothermal degradation-facilitated secondary drug delivery. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ulixertinib-bvd-523-vrt752271.html Our study provided a robust strategy to functionalize BP nanosheet and biodegrade the mesoporous silica for extended biomedical applications. Abdominal and peritoneal pain after surgery is common and burdensome, yet the lack of standardized diagnostic criteria for this type of acute pain impedes basic, translational, and clinical investigations. The collaborative effort among the Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks (ACTTION), American Pain Society (APS), and American Academy of Pain Medicine (AAPM) Pain Taxonomy (AAAPT) provides a systematic framework to classify acute painful conditions. Using this framework, a multidisciplinary working group reviewed the literature and developed core diagnostic criteria for acute abdominal and peritoneal pain after surgery. In this report, we apply the proposed AAAPT framework to four prototypical surgical procedures resulting in abdominal and peritoneal pain as examples cesarean delivery, cholecystectomy, colorectal surgical procedures, and pancreas resection. These diagnostic criteria address the three most common surgical procedures performed in the United States, capture diverse surgical approaches, and may also be applied to other surgical procedures resulting in abdominal and peritoneal pain.
P1 region sequences of two Russian HPeV-1 strains clustered with rare contemporary HPeV-1A strains, whereas their P3 regions were phylogenetically closer to the archival Harris strain. The Russian HPeV-5 strain formed a common cluster with other HPeV-5 strains only for the P1 region, while the P3 region grouped with the German HPeV-2 strain. In the Russian HPeV-5 strain, the lack of the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) motif at the C-terminus of VP1 was observed. This is the first complete genome characterization of the Russian HPeV strains detected in sporadic cases of pediatric acute gastroenteritis. Bone marrow stromal cell antigen 2 (BST2 or tetherin) is a host-encoded, interferon-inducible antiviral restriction factor which blocks the release of enveloped viruses. Few studies have assessed the role of BST2 polymorphisms on HIV-1 acquisition or disease progression in sub-Saharan Africa. This study investigated the frequency of four HIV-1-associated BST2 variants rs3217318, rs12609479, rs10415893 and rs113189798 in uninfected and HIV-1 infected black South Africans. Homozygosity for the rs12609479-A minor allele, previously associated with decreased HIV-1 acquisition risk, was underrepresented in HIV-1 uninfected black South Africans (2%) compared to reference African (9%) and in particular European populations (61%) (p = .047 and p less then .0001, respectively). To determine if any of these gene variants influenced HIV-1 control in the absence of antiretroviral treatment (ART), we compared HIV-1 infected ART-naïve progressors [n = 72] and controllers [n = 71], the latter includes elite controllers [EC n = 23; VL less then 50 RNA copies/ml]. Heterozygosity for the rs12609479 SNP (G/A) was enriched in progressors compared to ECs (47.2% vs 21.7%, OR = 3.50 [1.16-10.59], p = .03), while rs113189798 heterozygosity (A/G) showed a strong trend of overrepresentation in ECs compared to progressors (47.8% vs 26.4%, OR = 0.39 [0.14-1.04], p = .07). Heterozygosity for the promoter indel rs3217318 (i19/Δ19) was associated with a faster rate of CD4+ T-cell decline in progressors (p = .0134). Carriage of the rs3217318 (i19/Δ19), rs12609479 (G/G), rs10415893(G/A) and rs113189798 (A/G) combined genotype, denoted as i19Δ19 GG GA AG, was associated with significantly higher CD4+ T-cell counts in progressors (p = .03), a finding predominantly driven by the _GG_AG combination. Our data suggest that the possession of select BST2 genotype combinations may be implicated in HIV-1 disease progression and natural spontaneous control. Pathogenic viruses are viruses that can infect and replicate within human cells and cause diseases. The continuous emergence and re-emergence of pathogenic viruses has become a major threat to public health. Whenever pathogenic viruses emerge, their rapid detection is critical to enable implementation of specific control measures and the limitation of virus spread. Further molecular characterization to better understand these viruses is required for the development of diagnostic tests and countermeasures. Advances in molecular biology techniques have revolutionized the procedures for detection and characterization of pathogenic viruses. The development of PCR-based techniques together with DNA sequencing technology, have provided highly sensitive and specific methods to determine virus circulation. Pathogenic viruses potentially having global catastrophic consequences may emerge in regions where capacity for their detection and characterization is limited. Development of a local capacity to rapidly identify new viruses is therefore critical. This article reviews the molecular biology of pathogenic viruses and the basic principles of molecular techniques commonly used for their detection and characterization. The principles of good laboratory practices for handling pathogenic viruses are also discussed. This review aims at providing researchers and laboratory personnel with an overview of the molecular biology of pathogenic viruses and the principles of molecular techniques and good laboratory practices commonly implemented for their detection and characterization. V.Functionalizing black phosphorus nanosheet (BP) with efficient drug loading and endowing mesoporous silica nanomaterials with appropriate biodegradation for controllable tumor-targeted chemo-photothermal therapy are still urgent challenges. Herein, an ordered mesoporous silica-sandwiched black phosphorus nanosheet (BP@MS) with the vertical pore coating was prepared. The strategy could not only enhance the BP's dispersity and improve its doxorubicin (DOX)-loading efficiency, but also facilitate post-modification such as PEGylation and conjugation of targeting ligand, TKD peptide, yielding BSPT. A DOX-loaded BSPT-based system (BSPTD) showed heat-stimulative, pH-responsive, and sustained release manners. In vitro and in vivo results demonstrated that BSPTD had a delayed but finally complete degradation in physiological medium, contributing to an optimal therapeutic window and good biosafety. As a result, BSPTD can achieve an effective chemo-photothermal synergistic targeted therapy of tumor. Moreover, treating by BSPTD was found to be capable of remarkably inhibiting the lung metastasis of tumor, attributing to the photothermal degradation-facilitated secondary drug delivery. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ulixertinib-bvd-523-vrt752271.html Our study provided a robust strategy to functionalize BP nanosheet and biodegrade the mesoporous silica for extended biomedical applications. Abdominal and peritoneal pain after surgery is common and burdensome, yet the lack of standardized diagnostic criteria for this type of acute pain impedes basic, translational, and clinical investigations. The collaborative effort among the Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks (ACTTION), American Pain Society (APS), and American Academy of Pain Medicine (AAPM) Pain Taxonomy (AAAPT) provides a systematic framework to classify acute painful conditions. Using this framework, a multidisciplinary working group reviewed the literature and developed core diagnostic criteria for acute abdominal and peritoneal pain after surgery. In this report, we apply the proposed AAAPT framework to four prototypical surgical procedures resulting in abdominal and peritoneal pain as examples cesarean delivery, cholecystectomy, colorectal surgical procedures, and pancreas resection. These diagnostic criteria address the three most common surgical procedures performed in the United States, capture diverse surgical approaches, and may also be applied to other surgical procedures resulting in abdominal and peritoneal pain.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 81 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
The structure-property relationship established from this new bonding-interaction perspective will help in designing improved chalcogenide materials for diverse applications, based on a fundamental chemical-bonding point of view.Background Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) infection is suggested to be a risk factor of metabolic syndrome (MS) and lipid abnormalities. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of H pylori infection on MS and lipid abnormalities according to sex differences. Materials and methods We analyzed a total of 4551 adults who received health checkups from January 2016 to May 2017. We enrolled participants who did not have a history of hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, or cancer among those who underwent endoscopy with a rapid urease test. Results We included a total of 1065 participants, and 663 patients (62.3%) were H pylori-positive. The H pylori infection rate was 59.3% (426/719) in males and 68.5% (237/346) in females. The mean level of total cholesterol (P = .003), low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (P = .046), and triglycerides (P = .029) were statistically higher in H pylori-infected males. The mean level of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol was statistically lower in H pylori-infected females (P = .032). Multivariate analysis showed that total cholesterol in males (odds ratio [OR], 1.007; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.002-1.011) and HDL cholesterol in females (OR, 0.983; 95% CI, 0.968-0.998) were associated with active H pylori infection. The prevalence of MS was higher in both male and female H pylori-infected groups; however, there was no statistical significance. Conclusions H pylori infection is significantly related to increased total cholesterol in males and to decreased HDL cholesterol in females, which suggests that H pylori could affect lipid profiles and may be different by sex.The pervasive use of distributional semantic models or word embeddings for both cognitive modeling and practical application is because of their remarkable ability to represent the meanings of words. However, relatively little effort has been made to explore what types of information are encoded in distributional word vectors. Knowing the internal knowledge embedded in word vectors is important for cognitive modeling using distributional semantic models. Therefore, in this paper, we attempt to identify the knowledge encoded in word vectors by conducting a computational experiment using Binder et al.'s (2016) featural conceptual representations based on neurobiologically motivated attributes. In an experiment, these conceptual vectors are predicted from text-based word vectors using a neural network and linear transformation, and prediction performance is compared among various types of information. The analysis demonstrates that abstract information is generally predicted more accurately by word vectors than perceptual and spatiotemporal information, and specifically, the prediction accuracy of cognitive and social information is higher. Emotional information is also found to be successfully predicted for abstract words. These results indicate that language can be a major source of knowledge about abstract attributes, and they support the recent view that emphasizes the importance of language for abstract concepts. Furthermore, we show that word vectors can capture some types of perceptual and spatiotemporal information about concrete concepts and some relevant word categories. This suggests that language statistics can encode more perceptual knowledge than often expected.To investigate the nature and strength of noncovalent interactions at the fullerene surface, molecular torsion balances consisting of C60 and organic moieties connected through a biphenyl linkage were synthesized. NMR and computational studies show that the unimolecular system remains in equilibrium between well-defined folded and unfolded conformers owing to restricted rotation around the biphenyl C-C bond. The energy differences between the two conformers depend on the substituents and is ascribed to differences in the intramolecular noncovalent interactions between the organic moieties and the fullerene surface. Fullerenes favor interacting with the π-faces of benzenes bearing electron-donating substituents. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/a-1155463.html The correlation between the folding free energies and corresponding Hammett constants of the substituents in the arene-containing torsion balances reflects the contributions of the electrostatic interactions and dispersion force to face-to-face arene-fullerene interactions.Most invasive breast cancers express hormone receptors (HR) and typically have a favorable prognosis following endocrine therapy. Patients at a higher risk of recurrence can be identified by multigene prognostic classifiers such as the 21-gene recurrence score (RS) assay, 70-gene prognostic signature, PAM-50, 12-gene molecular score, and others. The 21-gene RS assay (Oncotype Dx™, Genomic Health, Redwood City, CA) has level I clinical evidence and is the most widely used multigene assay in North America. The RS assay is based on reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction that can be performed on the RNA isolated from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue. It evaluates the expression of 16 cancer-related genes developed based on a multi-step approach. Due to its ability to assess recurrence risk and predict potential benefit from chemotherapy, the assay is recommended for patients with node-negative, HR-positive, and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative breast cancer by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, National Comprehensive Cancer Network clinical practice guidelines in oncology, European Society for Medical Oncology clinical practice guidelines, and St. Gallen consensus panel guidelines. The RS assay has also been incorporated in the prognostic stage groups in the 8th edition of the American Joint Commission of Cancer staging manual in order to provide essential genomic information for optimal treatment decisions. This review will focus on the utility of the RS assay in HR-positive and HER2-negative breast cancer patients, including risk of distant and locoregional recurrence in node-negative and node-positive tumors, association with radiotherapy, special subtypes of breast cancer, practical issues related to selecting tumors for testing, and overview of the recently published TailorX (Trial Assigning IndividuaLized Options for treatment [Rx]) results.
The structure-property relationship established from this new bonding-interaction perspective will help in designing improved chalcogenide materials for diverse applications, based on a fundamental chemical-bonding point of view.Background Helicobacter pylori (H pylori) infection is suggested to be a risk factor of metabolic syndrome (MS) and lipid abnormalities. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of H pylori infection on MS and lipid abnormalities according to sex differences. Materials and methods We analyzed a total of 4551 adults who received health checkups from January 2016 to May 2017. We enrolled participants who did not have a history of hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, or cancer among those who underwent endoscopy with a rapid urease test. Results We included a total of 1065 participants, and 663 patients (62.3%) were H pylori-positive. The H pylori infection rate was 59.3% (426/719) in males and 68.5% (237/346) in females. The mean level of total cholesterol (P = .003), low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (P = .046), and triglycerides (P = .029) were statistically higher in H pylori-infected males. The mean level of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol was statistically lower in H pylori-infected females (P = .032). Multivariate analysis showed that total cholesterol in males (odds ratio [OR], 1.007; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.002-1.011) and HDL cholesterol in females (OR, 0.983; 95% CI, 0.968-0.998) were associated with active H pylori infection. The prevalence of MS was higher in both male and female H pylori-infected groups; however, there was no statistical significance. Conclusions H pylori infection is significantly related to increased total cholesterol in males and to decreased HDL cholesterol in females, which suggests that H pylori could affect lipid profiles and may be different by sex.The pervasive use of distributional semantic models or word embeddings for both cognitive modeling and practical application is because of their remarkable ability to represent the meanings of words. However, relatively little effort has been made to explore what types of information are encoded in distributional word vectors. Knowing the internal knowledge embedded in word vectors is important for cognitive modeling using distributional semantic models. Therefore, in this paper, we attempt to identify the knowledge encoded in word vectors by conducting a computational experiment using Binder et al.'s (2016) featural conceptual representations based on neurobiologically motivated attributes. In an experiment, these conceptual vectors are predicted from text-based word vectors using a neural network and linear transformation, and prediction performance is compared among various types of information. The analysis demonstrates that abstract information is generally predicted more accurately by word vectors than perceptual and spatiotemporal information, and specifically, the prediction accuracy of cognitive and social information is higher. Emotional information is also found to be successfully predicted for abstract words. These results indicate that language can be a major source of knowledge about abstract attributes, and they support the recent view that emphasizes the importance of language for abstract concepts. Furthermore, we show that word vectors can capture some types of perceptual and spatiotemporal information about concrete concepts and some relevant word categories. This suggests that language statistics can encode more perceptual knowledge than often expected.To investigate the nature and strength of noncovalent interactions at the fullerene surface, molecular torsion balances consisting of C60 and organic moieties connected through a biphenyl linkage were synthesized. NMR and computational studies show that the unimolecular system remains in equilibrium between well-defined folded and unfolded conformers owing to restricted rotation around the biphenyl C-C bond. The energy differences between the two conformers depend on the substituents and is ascribed to differences in the intramolecular noncovalent interactions between the organic moieties and the fullerene surface. Fullerenes favor interacting with the π-faces of benzenes bearing electron-donating substituents. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/a-1155463.html The correlation between the folding free energies and corresponding Hammett constants of the substituents in the arene-containing torsion balances reflects the contributions of the electrostatic interactions and dispersion force to face-to-face arene-fullerene interactions.Most invasive breast cancers express hormone receptors (HR) and typically have a favorable prognosis following endocrine therapy. Patients at a higher risk of recurrence can be identified by multigene prognostic classifiers such as the 21-gene recurrence score (RS) assay, 70-gene prognostic signature, PAM-50, 12-gene molecular score, and others. The 21-gene RS assay (Oncotype Dx™, Genomic Health, Redwood City, CA) has level I clinical evidence and is the most widely used multigene assay in North America. The RS assay is based on reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction that can be performed on the RNA isolated from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue. It evaluates the expression of 16 cancer-related genes developed based on a multi-step approach. Due to its ability to assess recurrence risk and predict potential benefit from chemotherapy, the assay is recommended for patients with node-negative, HR-positive, and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)-negative breast cancer by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, National Comprehensive Cancer Network clinical practice guidelines in oncology, European Society for Medical Oncology clinical practice guidelines, and St. Gallen consensus panel guidelines. The RS assay has also been incorporated in the prognostic stage groups in the 8th edition of the American Joint Commission of Cancer staging manual in order to provide essential genomic information for optimal treatment decisions. This review will focus on the utility of the RS assay in HR-positive and HER2-negative breast cancer patients, including risk of distant and locoregional recurrence in node-negative and node-positive tumors, association with radiotherapy, special subtypes of breast cancer, practical issues related to selecting tumors for testing, and overview of the recently published TailorX (Trial Assigning IndividuaLized Options for treatment [Rx]) results.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 34 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
served. For permissions, please e-mail journals.permissions@oup.com.BACKGROUND In general, pulse protein is limiting in the indispensable amino acid methionine, and antinutritional factors in pulses can affect methionine bioavailability. Complementation with grains such as rice can improve pulse protein quality, but knowledge of methionine bioavailability in pulses and grains is necessary to correct for available methionine when planning and assessing dietary protein intake. OBJECTIVES The study objectives were to determine the bioavailability of methionine in rice and chickpeas separately and to assess the effect of complementation of chickpeas and rice. METHODS Eleven healthy young men ( less then 30 y, BMI less then 25 kg/m2) were studied in a repeated-measures design using the indicator amino acid oxidation (IAAO) method, with l-[1-13C]phenylalanine as the indicator. Each received 7 or 10 methionine intakes in random order 4 intakes of l-methionine-0.5, 1, 2, and 3 mg⋅kg-1⋅d-1 (reference diet); 3 intakes of methionine from rice and from chickpeas; and 3 intakes from the 736. Copyright © The Author(s) 2020.The present study introduces a novel monoclonal anti-α9 integrin antibody (MA9-413) with human variable regions, isolated by phage display technology. MA9-413 specifically binds to both human and mouse α9 integrin by recognizing a conserved loop region designated as L1 (amino acids 104-122 of human α9 integrin). MA9-413 inhibits human and mouse α9 integrin-dependent cell adhesion to ligands and suppresses synovial inflammation and osteoclast activation in a mouse model of arthritis. This is the first monoclonal anti-α9 integrin antibody that can react with and functionally inhibit both human and mouse α9 integrin. MA9-413 allows data acquisition both in animal and human pharmacological studies without resorting to surrogate antibodies. Since MA9-413 showed certain therapeutic effects in the mouse arthritis model, it can be considered as a useful therapy against rheumatoid arthritis and other α9 integrin-associated diseases. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/a-1155463.html © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Japanese Biochemical Society. All rights reserved.Transposable elements (TEs) comprise a major fraction of vertebrate genomes, yet little is known about their expression and regulation across tissues, and how this varies across major vertebrate lineages. We present the first comparative analysis integrating TE expression and TE regulatory pathway activity in somatic and gametic tissues for a diverse set of 12 vertebrates. We conduct simultaneous gene and TE expression analyses to characterize patterns of TE expression and TE regulation across vertebrates, and examine relationships between these features. We find remarkable variation in the expression of genes involved in TE negative regulation across tissues and species, yet consistently high expression in germline tissues, particularly in testes. Most vertebrates show comparably high levels of TE regulatory pathway activity across gonadal tissues except for mammals, where reduced activity of TE regulatory pathways in ovarian tissues may be the result of lower relative germ cell densities. We also find that all vertebrate lineages examined exhibit remarkably high levels of TE-derived transcripts in somatic and gametic tissues, with recently-active TE families showing higher expression in gametic tissues. Although most TE-derived transcripts originate from inactive ancient TE families (and are likely incapable of transposition), such high levels of TE-derived RNA in the cytoplasm may have secondary, unappreciated biological relevance. © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.Animals move in diverse ways, as indicated in part by the wide variety of gaits and modes that have been described for vertebrate locomotion. **** variation in the gaits of limbed animals is associated with changing speed, whereas different modes of snake locomotion are often associated with moving on different surfaces. For several decades different types of snake locomotion have been categorized as one of four major modes rectilinear, lateral undulation, sidewinding and concertina. Recent empirical work shows that the scheme of four modes of snake locomotion is overly conservative. For example, during aquatic lateral undulation the timing between muscle activity and lateral bending changes along the length of the snake, which is unlike terrestrial lateral undulation. The motor pattern used to prevent sagging while bridging gaps also suggests that arboreal lateral undulation on narrow surfaces or with a few discrete points of support has a different motor pattern than terrestrial lateral undulation when the spectively, resulting in a total of eleven distinct gaits previously recognized as only four. © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.Stripe rust of wheat, caused by the obligate biotrophic fungus Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici, is a major threat to wheat production world-wide with an estimated yearly loss of US $1 billion. The recent advances in long-read sequencing technologies and tailored-assembly algorithms enabled us to disentangle the two haploid genomes of Pst. This provides us with haplotype-specific information at a whole-genome level. Exploiting this novel information, we perform whole genome comparative genomics of two P. striiformis f. sp. tritici isolates with contrasting life histories. We compare one isolate of the old European lineage (PstS0), which has been asexual for over 50 years, and a Warrior isolate (PstS7 lineage) from a novel incursion into Europe in 2011 from a sexual population in the Himalayan region. This comparison provides evidence that long-term asexual evolution leads to genome expansion, accumulation of transposable elements, and increased heterozygosity at the single nucleotide, structural and allele levels. At the whole genome level, candidate effectors are not compartmentalized and do not exhibit reduced levels of synteny. Yet we were able to identify two subsets of candidate effector populations. About 70% of candidate effectors are invariant between the two isolates while 30% are hypervariable. The latter might be involved in host adaptation on wheat and explain the different phenotypes of the two isolates. Overall this detailed comparative analysis of two haplotype-aware assemblies of P. striiformis f. sp. tritici are the first steps in understanding the evolution of dikaryotic rust fungi at a whole genome level. © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.
served. For permissions, please e-mail journals.permissions@oup.com.BACKGROUND In general, pulse protein is limiting in the indispensable amino acid methionine, and antinutritional factors in pulses can affect methionine bioavailability. Complementation with grains such as rice can improve pulse protein quality, but knowledge of methionine bioavailability in pulses and grains is necessary to correct for available methionine when planning and assessing dietary protein intake. OBJECTIVES The study objectives were to determine the bioavailability of methionine in rice and chickpeas separately and to assess the effect of complementation of chickpeas and rice. METHODS Eleven healthy young men ( less then 30 y, BMI less then 25 kg/m2) were studied in a repeated-measures design using the indicator amino acid oxidation (IAAO) method, with l-[1-13C]phenylalanine as the indicator. Each received 7 or 10 methionine intakes in random order 4 intakes of l-methionine-0.5, 1, 2, and 3 mg⋅kg-1⋅d-1 (reference diet); 3 intakes of methionine from rice and from chickpeas; and 3 intakes from the 736. Copyright © The Author(s) 2020.The present study introduces a novel monoclonal anti-α9 integrin antibody (MA9-413) with human variable regions, isolated by phage display technology. MA9-413 specifically binds to both human and mouse α9 integrin by recognizing a conserved loop region designated as L1 (amino acids 104-122 of human α9 integrin). MA9-413 inhibits human and mouse α9 integrin-dependent cell adhesion to ligands and suppresses synovial inflammation and osteoclast activation in a mouse model of arthritis. This is the first monoclonal anti-α9 integrin antibody that can react with and functionally inhibit both human and mouse α9 integrin. MA9-413 allows data acquisition both in animal and human pharmacological studies without resorting to surrogate antibodies. Since MA9-413 showed certain therapeutic effects in the mouse arthritis model, it can be considered as a useful therapy against rheumatoid arthritis and other α9 integrin-associated diseases. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/a-1155463.html © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Japanese Biochemical Society. All rights reserved.Transposable elements (TEs) comprise a major fraction of vertebrate genomes, yet little is known about their expression and regulation across tissues, and how this varies across major vertebrate lineages. We present the first comparative analysis integrating TE expression and TE regulatory pathway activity in somatic and gametic tissues for a diverse set of 12 vertebrates. We conduct simultaneous gene and TE expression analyses to characterize patterns of TE expression and TE regulation across vertebrates, and examine relationships between these features. We find remarkable variation in the expression of genes involved in TE negative regulation across tissues and species, yet consistently high expression in germline tissues, particularly in testes. Most vertebrates show comparably high levels of TE regulatory pathway activity across gonadal tissues except for mammals, where reduced activity of TE regulatory pathways in ovarian tissues may be the result of lower relative germ cell densities. We also find that all vertebrate lineages examined exhibit remarkably high levels of TE-derived transcripts in somatic and gametic tissues, with recently-active TE families showing higher expression in gametic tissues. Although most TE-derived transcripts originate from inactive ancient TE families (and are likely incapable of transposition), such high levels of TE-derived RNA in the cytoplasm may have secondary, unappreciated biological relevance. © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.Animals move in diverse ways, as indicated in part by the wide variety of gaits and modes that have been described for vertebrate locomotion. Much variation in the gaits of limbed animals is associated with changing speed, whereas different modes of snake locomotion are often associated with moving on different surfaces. For several decades different types of snake locomotion have been categorized as one of four major modes rectilinear, lateral undulation, sidewinding and concertina. Recent empirical work shows that the scheme of four modes of snake locomotion is overly conservative. For example, during aquatic lateral undulation the timing between muscle activity and lateral bending changes along the length of the snake, which is unlike terrestrial lateral undulation. The motor pattern used to prevent sagging while bridging gaps also suggests that arboreal lateral undulation on narrow surfaces or with a few discrete points of support has a different motor pattern than terrestrial lateral undulation when the spectively, resulting in a total of eleven distinct gaits previously recognized as only four. © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.Stripe rust of wheat, caused by the obligate biotrophic fungus Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici, is a major threat to wheat production world-wide with an estimated yearly loss of US $1 billion. The recent advances in long-read sequencing technologies and tailored-assembly algorithms enabled us to disentangle the two haploid genomes of Pst. This provides us with haplotype-specific information at a whole-genome level. Exploiting this novel information, we perform whole genome comparative genomics of two P. striiformis f. sp. tritici isolates with contrasting life histories. We compare one isolate of the old European lineage (PstS0), which has been asexual for over 50 years, and a Warrior isolate (PstS7 lineage) from a novel incursion into Europe in 2011 from a sexual population in the Himalayan region. This comparison provides evidence that long-term asexual evolution leads to genome expansion, accumulation of transposable elements, and increased heterozygosity at the single nucleotide, structural and allele levels. At the whole genome level, candidate effectors are not compartmentalized and do not exhibit reduced levels of synteny. Yet we were able to identify two subsets of candidate effector populations. About 70% of candidate effectors are invariant between the two isolates while 30% are hypervariable. The latter might be involved in host adaptation on wheat and explain the different phenotypes of the two isolates. Overall this detailed comparative analysis of two haplotype-aware assemblies of P. striiformis f. sp. tritici are the first steps in understanding the evolution of dikaryotic rust fungi at a whole genome level. © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 28 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
Cancer is the second leading cause of death globally. Death rates from cancer reflect global inequality; approximately 70% of deaths from cancers occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Due to high costs of cancer treatment and limited access to resources, these countries are unable to use treatment as a primary means for reducing cancer burden. Thus, redirecting focus from treatment to prevention in LMICs and considering prevention as a global public health imperative are critical. The AMA Code of Medical Ethics and policies can guide efforts to promote and support cancer prevention in LMICs. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.Although low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) bear 75% of the cancer burden globally, their available resources to treat cancer constitute less than 5% of global health resources. This inequity makes it imperative to take appropriate measures to treat and prevent cancer in LMICs, which should include consideration of trade and patent policies. This article highlights some impediments to effective use of existing policies to promote access to treatment and prevention measures in LMICs and offers recommendations about next steps. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.Cancer care in low-resource regions is complex, as resources and infrastructure for cancer care and prevention are limited. Mortality rates for breast cancer in particular are higher in regions where treatments are unavailable, unaffordable, or cost ineffective. Clinical breast examination is a reasonable screening approach, although its effects on mortality have not yet been shown. This article recommends focusing on early detection of symptomatic disease (ie, downstaging) and treatment of early detected breast cancers with potentially curative strategies. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) have been widely referred to as "safer," "healthier," and more "effective" smoking cessation aids, but little evidence supports such claims. New concerns about pulmonary injuries associated with ENDS suggest reasons for concern about these products' health risks and potential for nicotine addiction. Nevertheless, multinational tobacco companies heavily market ENDS to retain customers with nicotine addiction, and global progress against tobacco use might slow as a result. The tobacco industry has managed to divide the tobacco control community by offering hope of harm reduction without actual evidence of ENDS' effectiveness or long-term safety. Low- and middle-income countries need this evidence to assess ENDS' value in mitigating tobacco use. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.Limited understanding of public health disease prevention programs often leads to resistance, which ultimately results in low vaccine uptake. This article suggests how public health practitioners can improve public understanding of cervical cancer and HPV vaccination programs, which is key to improving health literacy, using culturally appropriate materials and approaches to boost public acceptance of vaccine programs. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.As training in helminthology has declined in the medical microbiology curriculum, many rare species of zoonotic cestodes have fallen into obscurity. Even among specialist practitioners, knowledge of human intestinal cestode infections is often limited to three genera, Taenia, Hymenolepis and Dibothriocephalus. However, five genera of uncommonly encountered zoonotic Cyclophyllidea (Bertiella, Dipylidium, Raillietina, Inermicapsifer and Mesocestoides) may also cause patent intestinal infections in humans worldwide. Due to the limited availability of summarized and taxonomically accurate data, such cases may present a diagnostic dilemma to clinicians and laboratories alike. In this review, historical literature on these cestodes is synthesized and knowledge gaps are highlighted. Clinically relevant taxonomy, nomenclature, life cycles, morphology of human-infecting species are discussed and clarified, along with the clinical presentation, diagnostic features and molecular advances, where available. Due to the limited awareness of these agents and identifying features, it is difficult to assess the true incidence of these 'forgotten' cestodiases as clinical misidentifications are likely to occur. Also, the taxonomic status of many of the human-infecting species of these tapeworms is unclear, hampering accurate species identification. Further studies combining molecular data and morphological observations are necessary to resolve these long-standing taxonomic issues and to elucidate other unknown aspects of transmission and ecology.Haemoproteus species (Haemoproteidae) are widespread blood parasites and are transmitted by Culicoides biting midges and Hippoboscidae louse flies. Although these pathogens may cause morbidity or mortality, the vectors and patterns of transmission remain unknown for the great majority of avian haemoproteids. Haemoproteus nucleocondensus has been frequently reported in Europe in great reed warblers Acrocephalus arundinaceus after their arrival from African wintering grounds, but this infection has not been found in juveniles at the breeding sites. The factors that prevent its transmission remain unclear. This study was designed to test whether the sporogony of H. nucleocondensus (lineage hGRW8) can be completed in Culicoides impunctatus, one of the most abundant European biting midge species. Wild-caught females were infected with H. nucleocondensus from great reed warblers. Microscopic examination and PCR-based methods were used to detect sporogonic stages and to confirm species identity. This study showed that H. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ipi-549.html nucleocondensus completes sporogony in C. impunctatus, suggesting that there are no obstacles to its transmission from the point of view of vector availability and average temperature in Northern Europe. We discuss other ecological factors which should be considered to explain why the transmission of H. nucleocondensus and some other Southern origin haemosporidians are interrupted in North Europe.
Cancer is the second leading cause of death globally. Death rates from cancer reflect global inequality; approximately 70% of deaths from cancers occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Due to high costs of cancer treatment and limited access to resources, these countries are unable to use treatment as a primary means for reducing cancer burden. Thus, redirecting focus from treatment to prevention in LMICs and considering prevention as a global public health imperative are critical. The AMA Code of Medical Ethics and policies can guide efforts to promote and support cancer prevention in LMICs. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.Although low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) bear 75% of the cancer burden globally, their available resources to treat cancer constitute less than 5% of global health resources. This inequity makes it imperative to take appropriate measures to treat and prevent cancer in LMICs, which should include consideration of trade and patent policies. This article highlights some impediments to effective use of existing policies to promote access to treatment and prevention measures in LMICs and offers recommendations about next steps. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.Cancer care in low-resource regions is complex, as resources and infrastructure for cancer care and prevention are limited. Mortality rates for breast cancer in particular are higher in regions where treatments are unavailable, unaffordable, or cost ineffective. Clinical breast examination is a reasonable screening approach, although its effects on mortality have not yet been shown. This article recommends focusing on early detection of symptomatic disease (ie, downstaging) and treatment of early detected breast cancers with potentially curative strategies. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) have been widely referred to as "safer," "healthier," and more "effective" smoking cessation aids, but little evidence supports such claims. New concerns about pulmonary injuries associated with ENDS suggest reasons for concern about these products' health risks and potential for nicotine addiction. Nevertheless, multinational tobacco companies heavily market ENDS to retain customers with nicotine addiction, and global progress against tobacco use might slow as a result. The tobacco industry has managed to divide the tobacco control community by offering hope of harm reduction without actual evidence of ENDS' effectiveness or long-term safety. Low- and middle-income countries need this evidence to assess ENDS' value in mitigating tobacco use. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.Limited understanding of public health disease prevention programs often leads to resistance, which ultimately results in low vaccine uptake. This article suggests how public health practitioners can improve public understanding of cervical cancer and HPV vaccination programs, which is key to improving health literacy, using culturally appropriate materials and approaches to boost public acceptance of vaccine programs. © 2020 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.As training in helminthology has declined in the medical microbiology curriculum, many rare species of zoonotic cestodes have fallen into obscurity. Even among specialist practitioners, knowledge of human intestinal cestode infections is often limited to three genera, Taenia, Hymenolepis and Dibothriocephalus. However, five genera of uncommonly encountered zoonotic Cyclophyllidea (Bertiella, Dipylidium, Raillietina, Inermicapsifer and Mesocestoides) may also cause patent intestinal infections in humans worldwide. Due to the limited availability of summarized and taxonomically accurate data, such cases may present a diagnostic dilemma to clinicians and laboratories alike. In this review, historical literature on these cestodes is synthesized and knowledge gaps are highlighted. Clinically relevant taxonomy, nomenclature, life cycles, morphology of human-infecting species are discussed and clarified, along with the clinical presentation, diagnostic features and molecular advances, where available. Due to the limited awareness of these agents and identifying features, it is difficult to assess the true incidence of these 'forgotten' cestodiases as clinical misidentifications are likely to occur. Also, the taxonomic status of many of the human-infecting species of these tapeworms is unclear, hampering accurate species identification. Further studies combining molecular data and morphological observations are necessary to resolve these long-standing taxonomic issues and to elucidate other unknown aspects of transmission and ecology.Haemoproteus species (Haemoproteidae) are widespread blood parasites and are transmitted by Culicoides biting midges and Hippoboscidae louse flies. Although these pathogens may cause morbidity or mortality, the vectors and patterns of transmission remain unknown for the great majority of avian haemoproteids. Haemoproteus nucleocondensus has been frequently reported in Europe in great reed warblers Acrocephalus arundinaceus after their arrival from African wintering grounds, but this infection has not been found in juveniles at the breeding sites. The factors that prevent its transmission remain unclear. This study was designed to test whether the sporogony of H. nucleocondensus (lineage hGRW8) can be completed in Culicoides impunctatus, one of the most abundant European biting midge species. Wild-caught females were infected with H. nucleocondensus from great reed warblers. Microscopic examination and PCR-based methods were used to detect sporogonic stages and to confirm species identity. This study showed that H. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ipi-549.html nucleocondensus completes sporogony in C. impunctatus, suggesting that there are no obstacles to its transmission from the point of view of vector availability and average temperature in Northern Europe. We discuss other ecological factors which should be considered to explain why the transmission of H. nucleocondensus and some other Southern origin haemosporidians are interrupted in North Europe.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 27 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
in English, Portuguese A endometriose é uma doença crónica caracterizada pela presença de endométrio funcional fora da cavidade uterina que afeta aproximadamente 10% das mulheres em idade reprodutiva. A endometriose cutânea com localização habitual na parede abdominal é uma manifestação rara da doença. Apresenta-se o caso de uma mulher jovem nulípara com um nódulo umbilical doloroso e de crescimento recente com placa dolorosa subcutânea periumbilical, sem outra sintomatologia associada. A anamnese revelou dois episódios semelhantes nos últimos dois anos. Foi realizada biópsia cutânea da lesão e o exame anatomopatológico foi compatível com endometriose. Os autores fazem uma revisão desta entidade clínica e realçam a importância do reconhecimento desta forma de apresentação, rara em nulíparas, dada a associação frequente a focos de endometriose noutras localizações e que podem condicionar um baixo nível de fertilidade.in English, Portuguese Introdução As mastocitoses caraterizam-se pela expansão clonal de mastócitos, com acumulação de mastócitos morfológica e imunofenotipicamente anormais em diferentes órgãos. A pele é o órgão mais frequentemente envolvido. Virtualmente, todas as crianças e mais de 80% dos adultos com mastocitose apresentam lesões cutâneas.Material e Métodos O presente artigo descreve os sinais e sintomas associados à mastocitose na pele, tendo por base a revisão das normas de orientação de consenso internacionais, recentemente publicadas.Discussão De acordo com a classificação proposta pela Organização Mundial de Saúde em 2016, a mastocitose divide-se em mastocitose cutânea, mastocitose sisté**** e sarcoma de mastócitos. A mastocitose cutânea pode subdividir-se em três subtipos a mastocitose cutânea maculopapular (também denominada urticária pigmentosa), mastocitose cutânea difusa e mastocitoma cutâneo. A telangiectasia macular eruptiva perstans já não é considerada uma entidade independente.Conclusão As manifestações cutâneas da mastocitose são variáveis, dependendo da idade de início da doença. Recentemente a classificação da mastocitose cutânea foi atualizada. Nas crianças, a mastocitose ocorre como mastocitose cutânea que tende à regressão espontânea durante a adolescência. Quando tem início na idade adulta, a mastocitose é geralmente sisté****, sendo a forma mais frequente a mastocitose sisté**** indolente, que normalmente também cursa com manifestações cutâneas e tem um curso crónico.in English, Portuguese Introdução A asma atinge mais de 339 milhões de pessoas mundialmente. Na Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa, em 2016, a sua prevalência variou entre 9,15% (Portugal) e 3,91% (Brasil). Os programas de gestão da doença crónica pretendem melhorar o estado de saúde de doentes com doença crónica e reduzir os custos associados. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ipi-549.html O objetivo deste estudo é identificar modelos de ‘gestão e controlo da asma’ implementados na Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa, analisando-os através do modelo de gestão integrada de doença.Material e Métodos Realizou-se uma revisão rápida da literatura científica indexada na PubMed, e de literatura cinzenta sobre ‘gestão e controlo da asma’ nos países da Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa.Resultados Portugal, Brasil e Moçambique apresentaram publicações sobre ‘gestão e controlo da asma’, em diferentes fases de implementação dos programas. A gestão clínica e organização e prestação de cuidados são as dimensões mais abordados nas publicações.Discussão A implementação de programas de gestão e controlo da asma é influenciada pelos sistemas de saúde, estruturas de prestação de cuidados em que se inserem, meio político e social envolventes. As dimensões do financiamento e dos sistemas de informação são as mais difíceis de implementar, dado o desenvolvimento econó****, social e tecnológico da maioria dos países em estudo.Conclusão Apenas Portugal, Brasil e Moçambique adotaram a gestão integrada de doença da asma como principal forma de gestão e controlo da asma. Os programas desenvolvidos por estes países podem servir de modelo nos restantes países em estudo.in English, Portuguese Introdução Orientações atuais recomendam a utilização da Escala de Uso Indevido de Opióides para rastrear comportamentos aberrantes, relativos ao uso de opióides em dor crónica. Os objetivos foram a sua tradução, adaptação cultural e validação para a população portuguesa com dor crónica. Material e Métodos O processo de tradução e adaptação cultural seguiu as recomendações. Adultos com dor crónica medicados com opióides, seguidos num hospital português de grande dimensão, foram convidados a completar a versão traduzida. Recurso a estatística descritiva, alfa de Cronbach, correlações inter-item, item-total, intra-classe, e análise de componentes principais. Resultados A tradução decorreu conforme planeado e a amostra de validação foi de 98 doentes (mediana de idades = 62,5 anos). Relativamente à consistência interna, alfa Cronbach global = 0,778, correlações item-total dos itens > 0,20 (quatro exceções), e coeficiente de correlação intra-classe = 0,90 (entre teste e reteste). Relativamente à validade, os 17 itens apresentaram um índice de validade de conteúdo > 0,80. Extraíram-se seis componentes principais, que explicaram 66,3% da variância. Discussão A versão portuguesa da Escala de Uso Indevido de Opióides foi adequadamente traduzida, adaptada e validada; demonstrando boa qualidade relativamente à confiabilidade e validade. Este é o primeiro instrumento para rastrear comportamentos aberrantes, relativos ao uso de opióides em portugueses com dor crónica. Consequentemente, ajudará e promoverá a identificação do uso indevido de opióides nestes doentes. Conclusão A implementação deste questionário poderá reduzir a incidência e morbimortalidade do uso indevido de opióides em doentes com dor crónica, e deverá melhorar o tratamento da dor crónica em Portugal.
in English, Portuguese A endometriose é uma doença crónica caracterizada pela presença de endométrio funcional fora da cavidade uterina que afeta aproximadamente 10% das mulheres em idade reprodutiva. A endometriose cutânea com localização habitual na parede abdominal é uma manifestação rara da doença. Apresenta-se o caso de uma mulher jovem nulípara com um nódulo umbilical doloroso e de crescimento recente com placa dolorosa subcutânea periumbilical, sem outra sintomatologia associada. A anamnese revelou dois episódios semelhantes nos últimos dois anos. Foi realizada biópsia cutânea da lesão e o exame anatomopatológico foi compatível com endometriose. Os autores fazem uma revisão desta entidade clínica e realçam a importância do reconhecimento desta forma de apresentação, rara em nulíparas, dada a associação frequente a focos de endometriose noutras localizações e que podem condicionar um baixo nível de fertilidade.in English, Portuguese Introdução As mastocitoses caraterizam-se pela expansão clonal de mastócitos, com acumulação de mastócitos morfológica e imunofenotipicamente anormais em diferentes órgãos. A pele é o órgão mais frequentemente envolvido. Virtualmente, todas as crianças e mais de 80% dos adultos com mastocitose apresentam lesões cutâneas.Material e Métodos O presente artigo descreve os sinais e sintomas associados à mastocitose na pele, tendo por base a revisão das normas de orientação de consenso internacionais, recentemente publicadas.Discussão De acordo com a classificação proposta pela Organização Mundial de Saúde em 2016, a mastocitose divide-se em mastocitose cutânea, mastocitose sistémica e sarcoma de mastócitos. A mastocitose cutânea pode subdividir-se em três subtipos a mastocitose cutânea maculopapular (também denominada urticária pigmentosa), mastocitose cutânea difusa e mastocitoma cutâneo. A telangiectasia macular eruptiva perstans já não é considerada uma entidade independente.Conclusão As manifestações cutâneas da mastocitose são variáveis, dependendo da idade de início da doença. Recentemente a classificação da mastocitose cutânea foi atualizada. Nas crianças, a mastocitose ocorre como mastocitose cutânea que tende à regressão espontânea durante a adolescência. Quando tem início na idade adulta, a mastocitose é geralmente sistémica, sendo a forma mais frequente a mastocitose sistémica indolente, que normalmente também cursa com manifestações cutâneas e tem um curso crónico.in English, Portuguese Introdução A asma atinge mais de 339 milhões de pessoas mundialmente. Na Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa, em 2016, a sua prevalência variou entre 9,15% (Portugal) e 3,91% (Brasil). Os programas de gestão da doença crónica pretendem melhorar o estado de saúde de doentes com doença crónica e reduzir os custos associados. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ipi-549.html O objetivo deste estudo é identificar modelos de ‘gestão e controlo da asma’ implementados na Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa, analisando-os através do modelo de gestão integrada de doença.Material e Métodos Realizou-se uma revisão rápida da literatura científica indexada na PubMed, e de literatura cinzenta sobre ‘gestão e controlo da asma’ nos países da Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa.Resultados Portugal, Brasil e Moçambique apresentaram publicações sobre ‘gestão e controlo da asma’, em diferentes fases de implementação dos programas. A gestão clínica e organização e prestação de cuidados são as dimensões mais abordados nas publicações.Discussão A implementação de programas de gestão e controlo da asma é influenciada pelos sistemas de saúde, estruturas de prestação de cuidados em que se inserem, meio político e social envolventes. As dimensões do financiamento e dos sistemas de informação são as mais difíceis de implementar, dado o desenvolvimento económico, social e tecnológico da maioria dos países em estudo.Conclusão Apenas Portugal, Brasil e Moçambique adotaram a gestão integrada de doença da asma como principal forma de gestão e controlo da asma. Os programas desenvolvidos por estes países podem servir de modelo nos restantes países em estudo.in English, Portuguese Introdução Orientações atuais recomendam a utilização da Escala de Uso Indevido de Opióides para rastrear comportamentos aberrantes, relativos ao uso de opióides em dor crónica. Os objetivos foram a sua tradução, adaptação cultural e validação para a população portuguesa com dor crónica. Material e Métodos O processo de tradução e adaptação cultural seguiu as recomendações. Adultos com dor crónica medicados com opióides, seguidos num hospital português de grande dimensão, foram convidados a completar a versão traduzida. Recurso a estatística descritiva, alfa de Cronbach, correlações inter-item, item-total, intra-classe, e análise de componentes principais. Resultados A tradução decorreu conforme planeado e a amostra de validação foi de 98 doentes (mediana de idades = 62,5 anos). Relativamente à consistência interna, alfa Cronbach global = 0,778, correlações item-total dos itens > 0,20 (quatro exceções), e coeficiente de correlação intra-classe = 0,90 (entre teste e reteste). Relativamente à validade, os 17 itens apresentaram um índice de validade de conteúdo > 0,80. Extraíram-se seis componentes principais, que explicaram 66,3% da variância. Discussão A versão portuguesa da Escala de Uso Indevido de Opióides foi adequadamente traduzida, adaptada e validada; demonstrando boa qualidade relativamente à confiabilidade e validade. Este é o primeiro instrumento para rastrear comportamentos aberrantes, relativos ao uso de opióides em portugueses com dor crónica. Consequentemente, ajudará e promoverá a identificação do uso indevido de opióides nestes doentes. Conclusão A implementação deste questionário poderá reduzir a incidência e morbimortalidade do uso indevido de opióides em doentes com dor crónica, e deverá melhorar o tratamento da dor crónica em Portugal.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 48 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
PURPOSE This article aims to analyze the intersections between delirium, physical exercise and rehabilitation, to better understand their interrelation and to visualize future lines of research. METHODS In this narrative review, after an overview of brain neurophysiology and function, as common substrates to understand the relationship between delirium and physical function, we explore the scientific evidence in (1) physical dysfunction as a risk factor for delirium; (2) physical dysfunction as a symptom of delirium and (3) functional consequences related to delirium. Later, we analyze the physical therapy as one of the main strategies in multicomponent interventions to prevent delirium, by examining intervention studies including rehabilitation, which have shown to be effective in managing delirium. Finally, we analyze how frailty, delirium and physical exercise interact with each other. RESULTS This review confirms the close relationship between delirium and physical dysfunction; therefore, it is not surprising that physical exercise is widely used in delirium preventive strategies. Although delirium is catalogued as a neurocognitive disorder, scientific evidence shows that it is also a motor disorder, which is to be expected, since a vast body of literature already supports an interaction between motor and cognitive function. CONCLUSION The motor component of delirium should be taken into account when designing interventions or strategies to address delirium. These interventions may have a special importance in frail older adults.PURPOSE Understanding the quality of evidence of delirium education studies will assist in designing future education interventions that seek to improve the well-known deficits in delirium prevention, detection and care. The aim of this study is to systematically review the methodological strengths and limitations, as well as the impact of delirium educational interventions for healthcare professionals working in inpatient settings. METHODS MEDLINE, EMBASE, The Cochrane Library, PsychINFO and CINAHL databases were searched according to PRISMA guidelines for delirium educational interventions in hospital inpatient settings from 2007 to 2017. Identified studies were rated using a standardised quality assessment criteria checklist (Kmet). Reported outcomes were organised by level on the Kirkpatrick model for educational outcomes. The search was repeated in March 2018. RESULTS 1354 papers were screened, of which 42 studies met the inclusion criteria. Interventions delivered included face-to-face education (n = 34), e-learning (n = 8) and interprofessional education (n = 8). Quality of studies varied in Kmet score (14-96%). There were 17 high-quality studies (Kmet > 80%) and 4 very high-quality studies (Kmet over > 90%). Thirty-eight studies (90%) reported improved outcomes post-intervention. In terms of Kirkpatrick level of educational outcomes, 6 studies were rated at level 1; 13 studies at level 2; 15 studies at level 3; and 8 studies at level 4. Thirteen studies measured intervention sustainability with variable impacts. CONCLUSIONS Healthcare professional education has benefits for inpatient delirium care, as shown by the high number of good-quality studies and the majority demonstrating improved outcomes post-intervention. The sustainability of educational interventions warrants further exploration.PURPOSE The aim of Delirium Café was to try a new learning method to increase awareness of delirium and improve delirium care in an acute hospital setting in Helsinki, Finland. https://www.selleckchem.com/ METHOD World Café-an active learning method, with four facilitators and four stations covering important aspects of delirium recognition and management, was used. RESULTS 22 junior doctors and 4 members of the senior staff participated in the event on 13th of March 2019, the World Delirium Awareness Day (WDAD). Nobody dropped out during the 1 h training. Feedback on the educational method was positive. CONCLUSION Delirium Café seems to be both feasible and applicable as a new interactive-learning method in postgraduate medical teaching.PURPOSE Pain and delirium are common problems for older people. Both conditions are prevalent in acute hospital settings. In people living in the community, delirium often precipitates presentation to the emergency department. Pain and delirium are known to interact in a complex and multidirectional way. This can make it challenging for staff to recognize and treat pain in people with delirium. METHODS This paper aims to explore the complex relationship between pain and delirium and on pain assessment in delirium, drawing together evidence from a range of settings including acute medical, cardiac and orthopaedic post-operative cohorts, as well as from aged care. RESULTS A limited number of studies suggest there is an association between pain and delirium; however, this is a complex, particularly where analgesics which may-themselves cause delirium are prescribed. Factors acting on the pathway between pain and delirium may include depression, sleep deprivation and disturbance of the cholinergic system. Delirium affects the ability to self-report pain. The fluctuating nature of delirium as well as reduced awareness and attention may challenge practitioners in recognizing, assessing and treating pain. Evidence concerning the reliability and validity of current observational and self-assessment tools in people with delirium is unclear but some show promise in this population. CONCLUSION The current evidence base regarding assessing pain in people with delirium is lacking. Tentative recommendations, drawing on current guidelines require robust testing. Guidelines for people with pain and dementia require adaptations regarding the unique characteristics of delirium. The complex interplay between dementia, pain and delirium warrants further investigation across a range of settings.PURPOSE Delirium is a geriatric syndrome often occurring in hospitalized older patients. Since there is no established treatment for delirium, it is important to identify patients at high risk to develop it, to implement preventive interventions. As yet, there is no conclusive evidence that different drugs classes are effective in preventing delirium; whereas they have potentially severe adverse effects. The non-pharmacological interventions to prevent delirium are quite diverse, ranging from single-component interventions to complex multi-component interventions that deploy simultaneous care for different risk factors. The aim of this review was to summarize the evidence concerning the efficacy of non-pharmacological interventions in delirium prevention in older adults. METHODS Extensive PubMed search using the following keywords with different combinations delirium (with or without "prevention") AND non-pharmacological; interventions; multi-component. The reference lists of retrieved articles and, most of all, systematic reviews and meta-analysis, were screened for additional pertinent studies.
PURPOSE This article aims to analyze the intersections between delirium, physical exercise and rehabilitation, to better understand their interrelation and to visualize future lines of research. METHODS In this narrative review, after an overview of brain neurophysiology and function, as common substrates to understand the relationship between delirium and physical function, we explore the scientific evidence in (1) physical dysfunction as a risk factor for delirium; (2) physical dysfunction as a symptom of delirium and (3) functional consequences related to delirium. Later, we analyze the physical therapy as one of the main strategies in multicomponent interventions to prevent delirium, by examining intervention studies including rehabilitation, which have shown to be effective in managing delirium. Finally, we analyze how frailty, delirium and physical exercise interact with each other. RESULTS This review confirms the close relationship between delirium and physical dysfunction; therefore, it is not surprising that physical exercise is widely used in delirium preventive strategies. Although delirium is catalogued as a neurocognitive disorder, scientific evidence shows that it is also a motor disorder, which is to be expected, since a vast body of literature already supports an interaction between motor and cognitive function. CONCLUSION The motor component of delirium should be taken into account when designing interventions or strategies to address delirium. These interventions may have a special importance in frail older adults.PURPOSE Understanding the quality of evidence of delirium education studies will assist in designing future education interventions that seek to improve the well-known deficits in delirium prevention, detection and care. The aim of this study is to systematically review the methodological strengths and limitations, as well as the impact of delirium educational interventions for healthcare professionals working in inpatient settings. METHODS MEDLINE, EMBASE, The Cochrane Library, PsychINFO and CINAHL databases were searched according to PRISMA guidelines for delirium educational interventions in hospital inpatient settings from 2007 to 2017. Identified studies were rated using a standardised quality assessment criteria checklist (Kmet). Reported outcomes were organised by level on the Kirkpatrick model for educational outcomes. The search was repeated in March 2018. RESULTS 1354 papers were screened, of which 42 studies met the inclusion criteria. Interventions delivered included face-to-face education (n = 34), e-learning (n = 8) and interprofessional education (n = 8). Quality of studies varied in Kmet score (14-96%). There were 17 high-quality studies (Kmet > 80%) and 4 very high-quality studies (Kmet over > 90%). Thirty-eight studies (90%) reported improved outcomes post-intervention. In terms of Kirkpatrick level of educational outcomes, 6 studies were rated at level 1; 13 studies at level 2; 15 studies at level 3; and 8 studies at level 4. Thirteen studies measured intervention sustainability with variable impacts. CONCLUSIONS Healthcare professional education has benefits for inpatient delirium care, as shown by the high number of good-quality studies and the majority demonstrating improved outcomes post-intervention. The sustainability of educational interventions warrants further exploration.PURPOSE The aim of Delirium Café was to try a new learning method to increase awareness of delirium and improve delirium care in an acute hospital setting in Helsinki, Finland. https://www.selleckchem.com/ METHOD World Café-an active learning method, with four facilitators and four stations covering important aspects of delirium recognition and management, was used. RESULTS 22 junior doctors and 4 members of the senior staff participated in the event on 13th of March 2019, the World Delirium Awareness Day (WDAD). Nobody dropped out during the 1 h training. Feedback on the educational method was positive. CONCLUSION Delirium Café seems to be both feasible and applicable as a new interactive-learning method in postgraduate medical teaching.PURPOSE Pain and delirium are common problems for older people. Both conditions are prevalent in acute hospital settings. In people living in the community, delirium often precipitates presentation to the emergency department. Pain and delirium are known to interact in a complex and multidirectional way. This can make it challenging for staff to recognize and treat pain in people with delirium. METHODS This paper aims to explore the complex relationship between pain and delirium and on pain assessment in delirium, drawing together evidence from a range of settings including acute medical, cardiac and orthopaedic post-operative cohorts, as well as from aged care. RESULTS A limited number of studies suggest there is an association between pain and delirium; however, this is a complex, particularly where analgesics which may-themselves cause delirium are prescribed. Factors acting on the pathway between pain and delirium may include depression, sleep deprivation and disturbance of the cholinergic system. Delirium affects the ability to self-report pain. The fluctuating nature of delirium as well as reduced awareness and attention may challenge practitioners in recognizing, assessing and treating pain. Evidence concerning the reliability and validity of current observational and self-assessment tools in people with delirium is unclear but some show promise in this population. CONCLUSION The current evidence base regarding assessing pain in people with delirium is lacking. Tentative recommendations, drawing on current guidelines require robust testing. Guidelines for people with pain and dementia require adaptations regarding the unique characteristics of delirium. The complex interplay between dementia, pain and delirium warrants further investigation across a range of settings.PURPOSE Delirium is a geriatric syndrome often occurring in hospitalized older patients. Since there is no established treatment for delirium, it is important to identify patients at high risk to develop it, to implement preventive interventions. As yet, there is no conclusive evidence that different drugs classes are effective in preventing delirium; whereas they have potentially severe adverse effects. The non-pharmacological interventions to prevent delirium are quite diverse, ranging from single-component interventions to complex multi-component interventions that deploy simultaneous care for different risk factors. The aim of this review was to summarize the evidence concerning the efficacy of non-pharmacological interventions in delirium prevention in older adults. METHODS Extensive PubMed search using the following keywords with different combinations delirium (with or without "prevention") AND non-pharmacological; interventions; multi-component. The reference lists of retrieved articles and, most of all, systematic reviews and meta-analysis, were screened for additional pertinent studies.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 34 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
The biogenic precipitates displayed higher crystallinity for Co sulfides (up to the formation of nanocrystalline cobalt pentlandite, Co9S8) and lower crystallinity for Co-rich mackinawite, suggestive of mineral-specific bacterial interaction. The revealed precipitation and transformation pathways of Co (Fe) sulfides in this study allows for a better constraint of Co biogeochemistry in various natural and engineered environments.Acrylic acid (AA) is an important industrial chemical used for several applications including superabsorbent polymers and acrylate esters. Here, we report the development of a new biosynthetic pathway for the production of AA from glucose in metabolically engineered Escherichia coli through the β-alanine (BA) route. The AA production pathway was partitioned into two modules an AA forming downstream pathway and a BA forming upstream pathway. We first validated the operation of the downstream pathway in vitro and in vivo, and then constructed the downstream pathway by introducing efficient enzymes (Act, Acl2, and YciA) screened out of various microbial sources and optimizing the expression levels. For the direct fermentative production of AA from glucose, the downstream pathway was introduced into the BA producing E. coli strain. The resulting strain could successfully produce AA from glucose in flask cultivation. AA production was further enhanced by expressing the upstream genes (panD and aspA) under the constitutive BBa_J23100 promoter. Replacement of the native promoter of the acs gene with the BBa_J23100 promoter in the genome increased AA production to 55.7 mg/L in flask. Fed-batch fermentation of the final engineered strain allowed production of 237 mg/L of AA in 57.5 h, representing the highest AA titer reported to date.The sparse selection of available cathode materials that allow for reversible intercalation (deintercalation) of Al3+ species represents a major hurdle in the development of efficient Al-ion batteries. Herein, we developed cathodes based on TiS2 nanobelts that are capable of withstanding the high charge density of Al-ion species with minimal host lattice/ion interactions. The fabricated TiS2 nanobelts are highly anisotropic and are directly grown on a carbon current collector yielding a spatially controlled array. The sum of evidence presented in this work indicates that one-dimensional TiS2 nanobelt arrays can reversibly accommodate an unprecedented amount of Al ion species within their layered structure with no significant volume expansion as well as full retention of the nanobelt morphology. Thus, the one-dimensional morphology, nanoscale dimensions, short ion diffusion paths, high electrical conductivity, and absence of additives that hinder ion migration lead to Al-based TiS2 electrochemical devices exhibiting high specific capacity, less capacity fade, and resilience under higher cycling rates at both room temperature and elevated temperatures when compared to TiS2 platelets. We also present the effects of sulfur vacancies on the electrochemical performance of Al-based TiS2-x nanobelt array batteries. Although Al-ion batteries are still in their infancy, we believe our TiS2 nanobelt array cathode insertion hosts may play an important role in addressing the poor kinetics of solid-state Al-ion diffusion to enable efficient alternatives beyond lithium energy storage devices.Proteins are versatile macromolecules with diverse structure, charge, and function. They are ideal building blocks for biomaterials for drug delivery, biosensing, or tissue engineering applications. Simultaneously, the need to develop green alternatives to chemical processes has led to renewed interest in multienzyme biocatalytic routes to fine, specialty, and commodity chemicals. Therefore, a method to reliably assemble protein complexes using protein-protein interactions would facilitate the rapid production of new materials. Here we show a method for modular assembly of protein materials using a supercharged protein as a scaffolding "hub" onto which target proteins bearing oppositely charged domains have been self-assembled. The physical properties of the material can be tuned through blending and heating and disassembly triggered using changes in pH or salt concentration. The system can be extended to the synthesis of living materials. Our modular method can be used to reliably direct the self-assembly of proteins using small charged tag domains that can be easily encoded in a fusion protein.Although the fundamental importance and biotechnological potential of multibacterial communities, also called biofilms, are well-known, our ability to control them is limited. We present a new way of dynamically controlling bacteria-bacteria adhesions by using blue light and how these photoswitchable adhesions can be used to regulate multicellularity and associated bacterial behavior. To achieve this, the photoswitchable proteins nMagHigh and pMagHigh were expressed on bacterial surfaces as adhesins to allow multicellular clusters to assemble under blue light and reversibly disassemble in the dark. Regulation of the bacterial cell-cell adhesions with visible light provides unique advantages including high spatiotemporal control, tunability, and noninvasive remote regulation. Moreover, these photoswitchable adhesions make it possible to regulate collective bacterial functions including aggregation, quorum sensing, biofilm formation, and metabolic cross-feeding between auxotrophic bacteria with light. Overall, the photoregulation of bacteria-bacteria adhesions provides a new way of studying bacterial cell biology and will enable the design of biofilms for biotechnological applications.Histone post-translational modifications (HPTMs) serve as signal platforms for recruitment of binding proteins (readers) to regulate gene expression. Accumulated evidence suggests that the intensive distribution of HPTMs may result in crosstalk, which increases or inhibits the recruitment of reader proteins, further altering the functional outcome of HPTMs. Therefore, the comprehensive identification of multiple interactions between combinatorial HPTMs and reading domains is essential to understand the chromatin-templated processes. However, it is still a big challenge to profile these complicated interactions due to various limitations including rather weak, transient and multiple interactions between HPTMs and readers, the high dynamic property of HPTMs as well as the low abundance of reader proteins. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/acetosyringone.html Here we developed an integrated approach to profile the complicated interactions between combinatorial HPTMs and dual domains. Based on a combinatorial HPTM peptide library (trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 4 and its neighboring PTMs) and five affinity tag proteins containing tandem-domain probes, histone interactions can be profiled by pull-down assay combined with mass spectrometry analysis.
The biogenic precipitates displayed higher crystallinity for Co sulfides (up to the formation of nanocrystalline cobalt pentlandite, Co9S8) and lower crystallinity for Co-rich mackinawite, suggestive of mineral-specific bacterial interaction. The revealed precipitation and transformation pathways of Co (Fe) sulfides in this study allows for a better constraint of Co biogeochemistry in various natural and engineered environments.Acrylic acid (AA) is an important industrial chemical used for several applications including superabsorbent polymers and acrylate esters. Here, we report the development of a new biosynthetic pathway for the production of AA from glucose in metabolically engineered Escherichia coli through the β-alanine (BA) route. The AA production pathway was partitioned into two modules an AA forming downstream pathway and a BA forming upstream pathway. We first validated the operation of the downstream pathway in vitro and in vivo, and then constructed the downstream pathway by introducing efficient enzymes (Act, Acl2, and YciA) screened out of various microbial sources and optimizing the expression levels. For the direct fermentative production of AA from glucose, the downstream pathway was introduced into the BA producing E. coli strain. The resulting strain could successfully produce AA from glucose in flask cultivation. AA production was further enhanced by expressing the upstream genes (panD and aspA) under the constitutive BBa_J23100 promoter. Replacement of the native promoter of the acs gene with the BBa_J23100 promoter in the genome increased AA production to 55.7 mg/L in flask. Fed-batch fermentation of the final engineered strain allowed production of 237 mg/L of AA in 57.5 h, representing the highest AA titer reported to date.The sparse selection of available cathode materials that allow for reversible intercalation (deintercalation) of Al3+ species represents a major hurdle in the development of efficient Al-ion batteries. Herein, we developed cathodes based on TiS2 nanobelts that are capable of withstanding the high charge density of Al-ion species with minimal host lattice/ion interactions. The fabricated TiS2 nanobelts are highly anisotropic and are directly grown on a carbon current collector yielding a spatially controlled array. The sum of evidence presented in this work indicates that one-dimensional TiS2 nanobelt arrays can reversibly accommodate an unprecedented amount of Al ion species within their layered structure with no significant volume expansion as well as full retention of the nanobelt morphology. Thus, the one-dimensional morphology, nanoscale dimensions, short ion diffusion paths, high electrical conductivity, and absence of additives that hinder ion migration lead to Al-based TiS2 electrochemical devices exhibiting high specific capacity, less capacity fade, and resilience under higher cycling rates at both room temperature and elevated temperatures when compared to TiS2 platelets. We also present the effects of sulfur vacancies on the electrochemical performance of Al-based TiS2-x nanobelt array batteries. Although Al-ion batteries are still in their infancy, we believe our TiS2 nanobelt array cathode insertion hosts may play an important role in addressing the poor kinetics of solid-state Al-ion diffusion to enable efficient alternatives beyond lithium energy storage devices.Proteins are versatile macromolecules with diverse structure, charge, and function. They are ideal building blocks for biomaterials for drug delivery, biosensing, or tissue engineering applications. Simultaneously, the need to develop green alternatives to chemical processes has led to renewed interest in multienzyme biocatalytic routes to fine, specialty, and commodity chemicals. Therefore, a method to reliably assemble protein complexes using protein-protein interactions would facilitate the rapid production of new materials. Here we show a method for modular assembly of protein materials using a supercharged protein as a scaffolding "hub" onto which target proteins bearing oppositely charged domains have been self-assembled. The physical properties of the material can be tuned through blending and heating and disassembly triggered using changes in pH or salt concentration. The system can be extended to the synthesis of living materials. Our modular method can be used to reliably direct the self-assembly of proteins using small charged tag domains that can be easily encoded in a fusion protein.Although the fundamental importance and biotechnological potential of multibacterial communities, also called biofilms, are well-known, our ability to control them is limited. We present a new way of dynamically controlling bacteria-bacteria adhesions by using blue light and how these photoswitchable adhesions can be used to regulate multicellularity and associated bacterial behavior. To achieve this, the photoswitchable proteins nMagHigh and pMagHigh were expressed on bacterial surfaces as adhesins to allow multicellular clusters to assemble under blue light and reversibly disassemble in the dark. Regulation of the bacterial cell-cell adhesions with visible light provides unique advantages including high spatiotemporal control, tunability, and noninvasive remote regulation. Moreover, these photoswitchable adhesions make it possible to regulate collective bacterial functions including aggregation, quorum sensing, biofilm formation, and metabolic cross-feeding between auxotrophic bacteria with light. Overall, the photoregulation of bacteria-bacteria adhesions provides a new way of studying bacterial cell biology and will enable the design of biofilms for biotechnological applications.Histone post-translational modifications (HPTMs) serve as signal platforms for recruitment of binding proteins (readers) to regulate gene expression. Accumulated evidence suggests that the intensive distribution of HPTMs may result in crosstalk, which increases or inhibits the recruitment of reader proteins, further altering the functional outcome of HPTMs. Therefore, the comprehensive identification of multiple interactions between combinatorial HPTMs and reading domains is essential to understand the chromatin-templated processes. However, it is still a big challenge to profile these complicated interactions due to various limitations including rather weak, transient and multiple interactions between HPTMs and readers, the high dynamic property of HPTMs as well as the low abundance of reader proteins. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/acetosyringone.html Here we developed an integrated approach to profile the complicated interactions between combinatorial HPTMs and dual domains. Based on a combinatorial HPTM peptide library (trimethylation of histone H3 lysine 4 and its neighboring PTMs) and five affinity tag proteins containing tandem-domain probes, histone interactions can be profiled by pull-down assay combined with mass spectrometry analysis.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
Working memory capacity is known to predict the performance of novices and experts on a variety of tasks found in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics). A common feature of STEM tasks is that they require the problem solver to encode and transform complex spatial information depicted in disciplinary representations that seemingly exceed the known capacity limits of visuospatial working memory. Understanding these limits and how visuospatial information is encoded and transformed differently by STEM learners presents new avenues for addressing the challenges students face while navigating STEM classes and degree programs. Here, we describe two studies that explore student accuracy at detecting color changes in visual stimuli from the discipline of chemistry. We demonstrate that both naive and novice chemistry students' encoding of visuospatial information is affected by how information is visually structured in "chunks" prevalent across chemistry representations. In both studies we show that students are more accurate at detecting color changes within chemistry-relevant chunks compared to changes that occur outside of them, but performance was not affected by the dimensionality of the structure (2D vs 3D) or the presence of redundancies in the visual representation. These studies support the hypothesis that strategies for chunking the spatial structure of information may be critical tools for transcending otherwise severely limited visuospatial capacity in the absence of expertise.BACKGROUND Studies indicate that low graft-to-recipient weight ratio (GRWR) affect graft survival in adult-to-adult living donor liver transplantation. However, the potential role of GRWR in the prognosis of patients following living donor liver transplantation according to patient characteristics remains controversial. This study aimed to update the role of GRWR in patients following living donor liver transplantation. METHODS PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library were comprehensively searched for studies comparing low GRWR ( less then 0.8%) with normal GRWR (≥ 0.8%) in the prognosis following living donor liver transplantation from inception to March 2019. The 1-, 3-, and 5-year summary survival rates, small-for-size syndrome (SFSS), perioperative mortality, biliary complications, postoperative bleeding, and acute rejection were calculated using the random-effects model. RESULTS Eighteen studies comprising 4001 patients were included. Patients with low GRWR were associated with lower 1-year and 3-year survival rates compared to patients with normal GRWR, while no significant difference was found in the association of 5-year survival rate with low and normal GRWRs. Moreover, the risk of SFSS significantly increased in patients with low GRWR. Finally, no significant differences were observed in the association of low and normal GRWRs with the risk of perioperative mortality, biliary complications, postoperative bleeding, and acute rejection. CONCLUSION The results of this study indicated that low GRWR was associated with poor prognosis for patients following living donor liver transplantation, especially in terms of 1- and 3-year survival rates and SFSS.Given the increasing utilization of online recruitment and delivery for prevention programming, the current study was designed to examine the ways in which recruitment and eligibility factors affect the resulting size and composition of participants in an online intervention. Study hypotheses were tested from a sample of 2512 low-income individuals who sought to enroll in OurRelationship, a web-based intervention for distressed couples. Results indicated that more than half of the sample (62%) learned about the OurRelationship program from results of an online search engine. Differences in participant characteristics were observed on the basis of recruitment source, with individuals recruited from an online search and from social media being characterized by higher levels of relationship distress and personal psychological distress relative to those who learned about the program through other means. Partner participation requirements also had a significant effect on the final sample of participants, as more than half of help-seeking individuals (52%) had partners who did not complete the screening enrollment form and were thus ineligible to receive services. Furthermore, compared with individuals whose partners completed the enrollment form, individuals whose partners did not participate were characterized by greater levels of break-up potential, physical aggression, communication conflict, psychological distress, and anger. Findings from the study suggest that some, but not all, online sources recruit more at-risk populations as well as illustrate the ways in which partner participation requirements can screen out interested individuals that appear in most need of services. Implications for prevention researchers and practitioners are discussed.The use of finite mixture modeling (FMM) to identify unobservable or latent groupings of individuals within a population has increased rapidly in applied prevention research. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/cpi-1205.html However, many prevention scientists are still unaware of the statistical assumptions underlying FMM. In particular, finite mixture models (FMMs) typically assume that the observed indicator variables are normally distributed within each latent subgroup (i.e., within-class normality). These assumptions are rarely met in applied psychological and prevention research, and violating these assumptions when fitting a FMM can lead to the identification of spurious subgroups and/or biased parameter estimates. Although new methods have been developed that relax the within-class normality assumption when fitting a FMM, prevention scientists continue to rely on FMM methods that assume within-class normality. The purpose of the current article is to introduce prevention researchers to a FMM method for heavy-tailed data FMM with Student t distributions. We begin by reviewing the distributional assumptions that underlie FMM and the limitations of FMM with normal distributions. Next, we introduce FMM with Student t distributions, and show, step by step, the analytic and substantive results of fitting a FMM with normal and Student t distributions to data from a smoking-cessation trial. Finally, we extend the results of the applied example to draw conclusions about the use of FMM with Student t distributions in applied settings and to provide guidelines for researchers who wish to use these methods in their own research.
Working memory capacity is known to predict the performance of novices and experts on a variety of tasks found in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics). A common feature of STEM tasks is that they require the problem solver to encode and transform complex spatial information depicted in disciplinary representations that seemingly exceed the known capacity limits of visuospatial working memory. Understanding these limits and how visuospatial information is encoded and transformed differently by STEM learners presents new avenues for addressing the challenges students face while navigating STEM classes and degree programs. Here, we describe two studies that explore student accuracy at detecting color changes in visual stimuli from the discipline of chemistry. We demonstrate that both naive and novice chemistry students' encoding of visuospatial information is affected by how information is visually structured in "chunks" prevalent across chemistry representations. In both studies we show that students are more accurate at detecting color changes within chemistry-relevant chunks compared to changes that occur outside of them, but performance was not affected by the dimensionality of the structure (2D vs 3D) or the presence of redundancies in the visual representation. These studies support the hypothesis that strategies for chunking the spatial structure of information may be critical tools for transcending otherwise severely limited visuospatial capacity in the absence of expertise.BACKGROUND Studies indicate that low graft-to-recipient weight ratio (GRWR) affect graft survival in adult-to-adult living donor liver transplantation. However, the potential role of GRWR in the prognosis of patients following living donor liver transplantation according to patient characteristics remains controversial. This study aimed to update the role of GRWR in patients following living donor liver transplantation. METHODS PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library were comprehensively searched for studies comparing low GRWR ( less then 0.8%) with normal GRWR (≥ 0.8%) in the prognosis following living donor liver transplantation from inception to March 2019. The 1-, 3-, and 5-year summary survival rates, small-for-size syndrome (SFSS), perioperative mortality, biliary complications, postoperative bleeding, and acute rejection were calculated using the random-effects model. RESULTS Eighteen studies comprising 4001 patients were included. Patients with low GRWR were associated with lower 1-year and 3-year survival rates compared to patients with normal GRWR, while no significant difference was found in the association of 5-year survival rate with low and normal GRWRs. Moreover, the risk of SFSS significantly increased in patients with low GRWR. Finally, no significant differences were observed in the association of low and normal GRWRs with the risk of perioperative mortality, biliary complications, postoperative bleeding, and acute rejection. CONCLUSION The results of this study indicated that low GRWR was associated with poor prognosis for patients following living donor liver transplantation, especially in terms of 1- and 3-year survival rates and SFSS.Given the increasing utilization of online recruitment and delivery for prevention programming, the current study was designed to examine the ways in which recruitment and eligibility factors affect the resulting size and composition of participants in an online intervention. Study hypotheses were tested from a sample of 2512 low-income individuals who sought to enroll in OurRelationship, a web-based intervention for distressed couples. Results indicated that more than half of the sample (62%) learned about the OurRelationship program from results of an online search engine. Differences in participant characteristics were observed on the basis of recruitment source, with individuals recruited from an online search and from social media being characterized by higher levels of relationship distress and personal psychological distress relative to those who learned about the program through other means. Partner participation requirements also had a significant effect on the final sample of participants, as more than half of help-seeking individuals (52%) had partners who did not complete the screening enrollment form and were thus ineligible to receive services. Furthermore, compared with individuals whose partners completed the enrollment form, individuals whose partners did not participate were characterized by greater levels of break-up potential, physical aggression, communication conflict, psychological distress, and anger. Findings from the study suggest that some, but not all, online sources recruit more at-risk populations as well as illustrate the ways in which partner participation requirements can screen out interested individuals that appear in most need of services. Implications for prevention researchers and practitioners are discussed.The use of finite mixture modeling (FMM) to identify unobservable or latent groupings of individuals within a population has increased rapidly in applied prevention research. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/cpi-1205.html However, many prevention scientists are still unaware of the statistical assumptions underlying FMM. In particular, finite mixture models (FMMs) typically assume that the observed indicator variables are normally distributed within each latent subgroup (i.e., within-class normality). These assumptions are rarely met in applied psychological and prevention research, and violating these assumptions when fitting a FMM can lead to the identification of spurious subgroups and/or biased parameter estimates. Although new methods have been developed that relax the within-class normality assumption when fitting a FMM, prevention scientists continue to rely on FMM methods that assume within-class normality. The purpose of the current article is to introduce prevention researchers to a FMM method for heavy-tailed data FMM with Student t distributions. We begin by reviewing the distributional assumptions that underlie FMM and the limitations of FMM with normal distributions. Next, we introduce FMM with Student t distributions, and show, step by step, the analytic and substantive results of fitting a FMM with normal and Student t distributions to data from a smoking-cessation trial. Finally, we extend the results of the applied example to draw conclusions about the use of FMM with Student t distributions in applied settings and to provide guidelines for researchers who wish to use these methods in their own research.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
5 vs 1.7 ng/mL, p = 0.06, and 117 vs 59 ng/mL*minutes, p = 0.09, respectively). After receiving IN epinephrine, the histamine group had a significantly lower Tmax versus the saline group (6 vs 70 min, respectively; p = 0.02). Following IN epinephrine administration, the histamine group showed rapidly increased heart rate at 5 min, while there was a delayed increase in heart rate (occurring 30-60 min after administration) in the saline group. Clinical observations included salivation and emesis. CONCLUSION IN histamine led to more rapid epinephrine absorption and immediately increased heart rate compared with IN saline. IN epinephrine decreased histamine-induced nasal congestion.BACKGROUND The use of high-throughput analytical techniques has enabled the description of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) subtypes. The TCF3-HLF translocation is a very rare rearrangement in ALL that is associated with an extremely poor prognosis. The TCF3-HLF fusion gene in the described case resulted in the fusion of the homeobox-related gene of TCF3 to the leucine zipper domain of HLF. The TCF3-HLF fusion gene product acts as a transcriptional factor leading to the dedifferentiation of mature B lymphocytes into an immature state (lymphoid stem cells). This process initiates the formation of pre-leukaemic cells. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/a-1331852.html Due to the rarity of this chromosomal aberration, only a few cases have been described in the literature. The advantage of this work is the presentation of an interesting case of clonal evolution of cancer cells and the cumulative implications (diagnostic and prognostic) of the patient's genetic alterations. CASE PRESENTATION This work presents a patient with diagnosed with TCF3-HLF-positive ALL. Moreover, the additional genetic alterations, which play a key role in the pathogenesis of ALL, were detected in this patient deletion of a fragment from the long arm of chromosome 13 (13q12.2-q21.1) containing the RB1 gene, intragenic deletions within the PAX5 gene and NOTCH1 intragenic duplication. CONCLUSIONS A patient with coexistence of chromosomal alterations and the TCF3-HLF fusion has not yet been described. Identifying all these chromosomal aberrations at the time of diagnosis could be sufficient to determine the cumulative effects of the described deletions on the activity of other oncogenes or tumour suppressors, as well as on the clinical course of the disease. On the other hand, complex changes in the patient's karyotype and clonal evolution of cancer cells call into question the effectiveness of experimental therapy.BACKGROUND Khat (Catha edulis) is a stimulant leaf khat comes from a tree which grows in countries bordering the Red Sea which are along the east coast of Africa and in west Asia. The psycho- active component within these leaves is cathinone. In Ethiopia, Khat is chewed routinely by users for its euphoric effects and as a recreational drug, and chewing khat has an important role as well in both traditional and religious ceremonies. In this case report, we describe the case of a 33-year-old male patient presented with psychotic symptoms after prolonged and heavy khat chewing. CASE PRESENTATION Findings on psychiatric evaluation encompassing detailed history and mental state examination suggest khat induced psychotic disorder severe in full remission; khat use disorder, severe, in early remission. CONCLUSIONS This case demonstrates that the use of excess khat above 2 bundles for prolonged duration can manifest with psychotic episodes. A small number of case studies had supported a causal relationship between heavy khat use and psychosis or psychotic symptoms. There have been suicidal attempts and homicidal acts in those who used excess and prolonged use of khat. In our case, the improvement attributed to stopping the khat rather than taking antipsychotics. Therefore, we recommend an urgent social intervention to change the community norms regarding Khat use through psycho-education in media, institution and in person about the relationship between khat use and mental illness. In addition, we suggest the role of religious institutions on the management of khat use not be overlooked. Finally, this study makes a powerful argument for researchers and policy makers to do clinical study to settle a causal effect relation of khat on mental health.BACKGROUND Skin marker-based three-dimensional kinematic gait analysis were commonly used to assess the functional performance and movement biomechanics of the pelvic limb in dogs. Unfortunately, soft tissue artefact would compromise the accuracy of the reproduced pelvic limb kinematics. Multibody kinematics optimization framework was often employed to compensate the soft tissue artefact for a more accurate description of human joint kinematics, but its performance on the determination of canine pelvic limb skeletal kinematics has never been evaluated. This study aimed to evaluate a multibody kinematics optimization framework used for the determination of canine pelvic limb kinematics during gait by comparing its results to those obtained using computed tomography model-based fluoroscopy analysis. RESULTS Eight clinically normal dogs were enrolled in the study. Fluoroscopy videos of the stifle joint and skin marker trajectories were acquired when the dogs walked on a treadmill. The pelvic limb kinematics were reconstructed through marker-based multibody kinematics optimization and single-body optimization. The reference kinematics data were derived via a model-based fluoroscopy analysis. The use of multibody kinematics optimization yielded a significantly more accurate estimation of flexion/extension of the hip and stifle joints than the use of single-body optimization. The accuracy of the joint model parameters and the weightings to individual markers both influenced the soft tissue artefact compensation capability. CONCLUSIONS Multibody kinematics optimization designated for soft tissue artefact compensation was established and evaluated for its performance on canine gait analysis, which provided a further step in more accurately describing sagittal plane kinematics of the hip and stifle joints.
5 vs 1.7 ng/mL, p = 0.06, and 117 vs 59 ng/mL*minutes, p = 0.09, respectively). After receiving IN epinephrine, the histamine group had a significantly lower Tmax versus the saline group (6 vs 70 min, respectively; p = 0.02). Following IN epinephrine administration, the histamine group showed rapidly increased heart rate at 5 min, while there was a delayed increase in heart rate (occurring 30-60 min after administration) in the saline group. Clinical observations included salivation and emesis. CONCLUSION IN histamine led to more rapid epinephrine absorption and immediately increased heart rate compared with IN saline. IN epinephrine decreased histamine-induced nasal congestion.BACKGROUND The use of high-throughput analytical techniques has enabled the description of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) subtypes. The TCF3-HLF translocation is a very rare rearrangement in ALL that is associated with an extremely poor prognosis. The TCF3-HLF fusion gene in the described case resulted in the fusion of the homeobox-related gene of TCF3 to the leucine zipper domain of HLF. The TCF3-HLF fusion gene product acts as a transcriptional factor leading to the dedifferentiation of mature B lymphocytes into an immature state (lymphoid stem cells). This process initiates the formation of pre-leukaemic cells. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/a-1331852.html Due to the rarity of this chromosomal aberration, only a few cases have been described in the literature. The advantage of this work is the presentation of an interesting case of clonal evolution of cancer cells and the cumulative implications (diagnostic and prognostic) of the patient's genetic alterations. CASE PRESENTATION This work presents a patient with diagnosed with TCF3-HLF-positive ALL. Moreover, the additional genetic alterations, which play a key role in the pathogenesis of ALL, were detected in this patient deletion of a fragment from the long arm of chromosome 13 (13q12.2-q21.1) containing the RB1 gene, intragenic deletions within the PAX5 gene and NOTCH1 intragenic duplication. CONCLUSIONS A patient with coexistence of chromosomal alterations and the TCF3-HLF fusion has not yet been described. Identifying all these chromosomal aberrations at the time of diagnosis could be sufficient to determine the cumulative effects of the described deletions on the activity of other oncogenes or tumour suppressors, as well as on the clinical course of the disease. On the other hand, complex changes in the patient's karyotype and clonal evolution of cancer cells call into question the effectiveness of experimental therapy.BACKGROUND Khat (Catha edulis) is a stimulant leaf khat comes from a tree which grows in countries bordering the Red Sea which are along the east coast of Africa and in west Asia. The psycho- active component within these leaves is cathinone. In Ethiopia, Khat is chewed routinely by users for its euphoric effects and as a recreational drug, and chewing khat has an important role as well in both traditional and religious ceremonies. In this case report, we describe the case of a 33-year-old male patient presented with psychotic symptoms after prolonged and heavy khat chewing. CASE PRESENTATION Findings on psychiatric evaluation encompassing detailed history and mental state examination suggest khat induced psychotic disorder severe in full remission; khat use disorder, severe, in early remission. CONCLUSIONS This case demonstrates that the use of excess khat above 2 bundles for prolonged duration can manifest with psychotic episodes. A small number of case studies had supported a causal relationship between heavy khat use and psychosis or psychotic symptoms. There have been suicidal attempts and homicidal acts in those who used excess and prolonged use of khat. In our case, the improvement attributed to stopping the khat rather than taking antipsychotics. Therefore, we recommend an urgent social intervention to change the community norms regarding Khat use through psycho-education in media, institution and in person about the relationship between khat use and mental illness. In addition, we suggest the role of religious institutions on the management of khat use not be overlooked. Finally, this study makes a powerful argument for researchers and policy makers to do clinical study to settle a causal effect relation of khat on mental health.BACKGROUND Skin marker-based three-dimensional kinematic gait analysis were commonly used to assess the functional performance and movement biomechanics of the pelvic limb in dogs. Unfortunately, soft tissue artefact would compromise the accuracy of the reproduced pelvic limb kinematics. Multibody kinematics optimization framework was often employed to compensate the soft tissue artefact for a more accurate description of human joint kinematics, but its performance on the determination of canine pelvic limb skeletal kinematics has never been evaluated. This study aimed to evaluate a multibody kinematics optimization framework used for the determination of canine pelvic limb kinematics during gait by comparing its results to those obtained using computed tomography model-based fluoroscopy analysis. RESULTS Eight clinically normal dogs were enrolled in the study. Fluoroscopy videos of the stifle joint and skin marker trajectories were acquired when the dogs walked on a treadmill. The pelvic limb kinematics were reconstructed through marker-based multibody kinematics optimization and single-body optimization. The reference kinematics data were derived via a model-based fluoroscopy analysis. The use of multibody kinematics optimization yielded a significantly more accurate estimation of flexion/extension of the hip and stifle joints than the use of single-body optimization. The accuracy of the joint model parameters and the weightings to individual markers both influenced the soft tissue artefact compensation capability. CONCLUSIONS Multibody kinematics optimization designated for soft tissue artefact compensation was established and evaluated for its performance on canine gait analysis, which provided a further step in more accurately describing sagittal plane kinematics of the hip and stifle joints.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
Mehr Storys