19 research outputs found

    Puerperal Complications Following Elective Cesarean Sections for Twin Pregnancies

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    OBJECTIVE: To estimate the maternal puerperal morbidity in elective and emergent cesareans in twins. STUDY DESIGN: We evaluated postpartum complications among patients who underwent elective cesarean birth for twin pregnancy. This group was compared to matched singletons and to emergent cesareans in twins. RESULTS: During the period September 1994-March 2006 there were 299 (47.4%) elective and 80 (12.7%) emergent cesarean sections in twin pregnancies, for a total of 379 (60.1%) cesarean births for both twins. Controls included 299 cases of elective cesareans in singletons. The comparison between elective and emergent cesareans and between elective cesareans in twins and in singletons found no significant differences in postpartum fever, scar infection, and postpartum hemorrhage. Venous thromboembolism occurred in two twin pregnancies, one in the elective and one in the emergent cesarean group. Postpartum hysterectomy was required in a singleton pregnancy following an elective cesarean birth. CONCLUSION: At present, no data exist to show a disadvantage for a planned cesarean birth for twins.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Clonal relatedness of Proteus mirabilis strains causing urinary tract infections in companion animals and humans

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    Research Areas: Microbiology. Veterinary SciencesABSTRACT - Proteus mirabilis is a major cause of urinary tract infection (UTI) in humans and companion animals. This study aimed to evaluate the antimicrobial resistance, virulence and clonal relatedness of P. mirabilis isolated from dogs, cats and humans with UTI. P. mirabilis isolated from companion animals (N = 107) and humans (N = 76) with UTI were compared by PFGE analysis after overnight Nod macro-restriction using Dice/UPGMA with a 1.5% tolerance. Strains were characterized for antimicrobial resistance by disk diffusion. Twenty-four resistance genes and four virulence genes were screened by PCR. Thirty-nine clusters (similarity > 80%) and 73 single pulse-types were detected. Nine clusters included P. mirabilis isolated from community and hospital patients, including strains with 100% similarity. A high number of clusters (43.6%, n = 17/39) included strains from companion animals and humans. Similarity between some companion animal and human strains varied between 80-100%. One strain from a dog was 100% similar to one human community-acquired P. mirabilis. One P. mirabilis from a cat was found to be 94.7% and 92.4% similar to community and hospital patient strains, respectively. P. mirabilis CMY-2-producers did not cluster all together. Nevertheless, cluster C36 included five P. mirabilis from companion animals (similarity 85.8%-95.7%), of which, four (80%) were multidrug-resistant CMY-2-producers. This study shows that companion animals and humans become infected with closely related P. mirabilis strains. The high number of clusters containing companion animals and human strains points to the zoonotic nature of P. mirabilis. These results underline the potential role of companion animals as reservoirs and in the dissemination of uropathogenic P. mirabilis to humans and vice versa.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Reframing gender and feminist knowledge construction in marketing and consumer research: missing feminisms and the case of men and masculinities

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    Gender has been theorised and studied in many ways and across different disciplines. Although a number of these theorisations have been recognised and adopted in marketing and consumer research, the significance of feminism in knowledge construction has largely remained what we would call ‘unfinished’. Based on a critical reframing of gender research in marketing and consumer research, in dialogue with feminist theory, this article offers theoretical and practical suggestions for how to reinvigorate these research efforts. The analysis highlights dominant theorisations of gender, relating to gender as variable, difference and role; as fundamental difference and structuring; and as cultural and identity constructions. This reframing emphasises various neglected or ‘missing feminisms’, including queer theory; critical race, intersectional and transnational feminisms; material-discursive feminism; and critical studies on men and masculinities. A more detailed discussion of the latter, as a relatively new, growing and politically contentious area, is further developed to highlight more specifically which feminist and gender theories are mainly in use in marketing and consumer research and which are little or not used. In the light of this, it is argued that marketing and related disciplines have thus far largely neglected several key contemporary gender and feminist theorisations, particularly those that centre on gender power relations. The potential impact of these theoretical frames on transdisciplinary studies in marketing and consumer research and research agenda(s) is discussed

    Ephemeral Masculinities? Tracking Men, Partners and Fathers in the Geography of Family Holidays

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    The discussion presented in the following pages is anchored in data derived from a broader sociological study into contemporary family rituals. The core argument is that in heterosexual couples, the family–centred holidays presents an opportunity for the everyday gendered division of domestic labour and children care work to be negotiated and temporarily restructured. Through its focus on the role men play in family holidays, this chapter makes an important contribution to debates about masculinity, travel and familial relationships within heterosexual couples. While one needs to be attentive to the complex realities of the modern family life and intra-family relations towards travel and tourism, studying the traditional nuclear family remains an exciting and fruitful work to the extent that one cannot neglect the fact that this model is (still) behind many experiences and representations of families on holidays

    Guia dos peixes de água doce e migradores de Portugal Continental

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    Num total de cerca de 35 500 espécies de peixes conhecidas em todo o mundo, aproxima- damente 18 000 espécies habitam ecossistemas de água doce. Apesar de representarem menos de 1% da superfície terrestre, os ecossistemas de água doce possuem uma enorme diversidade de condições tipicamente instáveis que, associadas ao isolamento geográfico das bacias hidrográficas, favorecem a formação de novas espécie

    Molecular Epidemiology of Sporadic and Outbreak-Related Salmonella Typhi Isolates in the Brazilian North Region: A Retrospective Analysis from 1995 to 2013

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    Typhoidal salmonellosis is a global public health problem occurring in developing endemic regions. In Brazil, cases are mostly registered in the North and Northeast regions. Molecular characterization of the strains is important to understand the epidemiology of disease infections and to design control strategies. The present study retrospectively evaluates the genotyping features of sporadic and outbreak-related Salmonella Typhi isolates from the Brazilian North region. Bacterial isolates were recovered from blood and a rectal swab of patients in the states of Acre and Pará, Brazilian North region, in the period of 1995 to 2013, and were submitted to genotyping by applying Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and Pulsed Field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE) reference methods. MLST genotyping revealed the presence of epidemic clones ST1 and ST2, and 20 pulsotypes were identified by PFGE, including four distinct clusters (A–D), and six subclusters (A1–D1) with indistinguishable strains in different periods and locations. To conclude, the obtained data demonstrates the temporal stability, adaptation, and transmission of outbreak-related and sporadic S. Typhi strains over time, contributing to the transmission chain in the region
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