38 research outputs found
Does One Size Fit All? Drug Resistance and Standard Treatments: Results of Six Tuberculosis Programmes in Former Soviet Countries.
SETTING: After the collapse of the Soviet Union, countries in the region faced a dramatic increase in tuberculosis cases and the emergence of drug resistance. OBJECTIVE: To discuss the relevance of the DOTS strategy in settings with a high prevalence of drug resistance. DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of one-year treatment outcomes of short-course chemotherapy (SCC) and results of drug susceptibility testing (DST) surveys of six programmes located in the former Soviet Union: Kemerovo prison, Russia; Abkhasia, Georgia; Nagorno-Karabagh, Azerbaijan; Karakalpakstan, Uzbekistan; Dashoguz Velayat, Turkmenistan; and South Kazakhstan Oblast, Kazakhstan. Results are reported for new and previously treated smear-positive patients. RESULTS: Treatment outcomes of 3090 patients and DST results of 1383 patients were collected. Treatment success rates ranged between 87% and 61%, in Nagorno-Karabagh and Kemerovo, respectively, and failure rates between 7% and 23%. Any drug resistance ranged between 66% and 31% in the same programmes. MDR rates ranged between 28% in Karakalpakstan and Kemerovo prison and 4% in Nagorno-Karabagh. CONCLUSION: These results show the limits of SCC in settings with a high prevalence of drug resistance. They demonstrate that adapting treatment according to resistance patterns, access to reliable culture, DST and good quality second-line drugs are necessary
HST/NICMOS detection of a partially embedded, intermediate-mass pre-main-sequence population in the 30 Doradus Nebula
We present the detection of an intermediate-mass pre-main-sequence population
embedded in the nebular filaments surrounding the 30 Doradus region in the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) using HST/NICMOS. In addition to four previously
known luminous Class I infrared ``protostars,'' the NICMOS data reveal 20 new
sources with intrinsic infrared excess similar to Galactic pre-main sequence
stars. Based on their infrared brightness, these objects can be identified as
the LMC equivalent of Galactic pre-main sequence stars. The faintest LMC Young
Stellar Objects in the sample have colors similar to T Tauri and have about the
same brightness as T Tauri if placed at the distance of the LMC. We find no
evidence for a lower-mass cut-off in the initial mass function. Instead, the
whole spectrum of stellar masses from pre-main sequence stars with ~1.5Mo to
massive O stars still embedded in dense knots appears to be present in the
nebular filaments. The majority of the young stellar objects can be found to
the north of the central starburst cluster R136. This region is very likely
evolving into an OB association.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, uses emulateapj.sty and psfig.sty. accepted for
publication in the Astronomical Journal (August 2001 issue
Ancient Egyptian herbal wines
Chemical analyses of ancient organics absorbed into pottery jars from the beginning of advanced ancient Egyptian culture, ca. 3150 B.C., and continuing for millennia have revealed that a range of natural products—specifically, herbs and tree resins—were dispensed by grape wine. These findings provide chemical evidence for ancient Egyptian organic medicinal remedies, previously only ambiguously documented in medical papyri dating back to ca. 1850 B.C. They illustrate how humans around the world, probably for millions of years, have exploited their natural environments for effective plant remedies, whose active compounds have recently begun to be isolated by modern analytical techniques