10 research outputs found
Cooperative Diversity based WBAN by using STBC
This paper is focused towards a cooperative diversity-based wireless body area network (WBAN) by using Alamouti?s space-time block code (STBC) with rotational precoding scheme along with Max-Min and Harmonic Mean relay selection procedure. The considered WBAN model is served for healthcare service in order to mitigate the undesired effects of WBAN due to high path loss and fading as well as to keep a low transmit power while meeting to the desired WBAN quality of services
Comparison of spoligotyping, mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units typing and IS6110-RFLP in a study of genotypic diversity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Delhi, North India
The aim of the present study was to compare polymerase chain reaction
(PCR)-based methods - spoligotyping and mycobacterial interspersed
repetitive units (MIRU) typing - with the gold-standard IS6110
restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis in 101
isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to determine the genetic
diversity of M. tuberculosis clinical isolates from Delhi, North India.
Spoligotyping resulted in 49 patterns (14 clusters); the largest
cluster was composed of Spoligotype International Types (SITs)26
[Central-Asian (CAS)1-Delhi lineage], followed by SIT11
[East-African-Indian (EAI) 3-Indian lineage]. A large number of
isolates (75%) belonged to genotypic lineages, such as CAS, EAI and
Manu, with a high specificity for the Indian subcontinent, emphasising
the complex diversity of the phylogenetically coherent M. tuberculosis
in North India. MIRU typing, using 11 discriminatory loci, was able to
distinguish between all but two strains based on individual patterns.
IS6110-RFLP analysis (n = 80 strains) resulted in 67 unique isolates
and four clusters containing 13 strains. MIRUs discriminated all 13
strains, whereas spoligotyping discriminated 11 strains. Our results
validate the use of PCR-based molecular typing of M. tuberculosis using
repetitive elements in Indian isolates and demonstrate the usefulness
of MIRUs for discriminating low-IS6110-copy isolates, which accounted
for more than one-fifth of the strains in the present study
Acceptability and use of emergency contraception among married women in Bangalore, India
OBJECTIVE: To assess knowledge, acceptability, and use of emergency contraceptive pills (ECs) among lower-income married women in Bangalore, India. METHODS: EC counseling and supplies were offered to 322 women aged 18–25 years participating in a longitudinal reproductive health study. Participants completed interviews at enrollment and were followed for 1 year. EC acceptability and use were assessed, and factors associated with use were identified. RESULTS: 206/320 (64.4%) participants did not desire pregnancy but only 46/321 (14.3%) used an intrauterine device or contraceptive pills. Only 25 (7.8%) had heard of ECs. Overall, 123 (38.2%) participants requested advance provisions of ECs after counseling. Over a year, 37/263 (14.1%) women used ECs, usually within 3 days of unprotected sex (33 [89.2%]), and 32 (86.5%) took both pills together or 1 day apart. Thirty-six (97.3%) felt glad and 31 (83.8%) were relieved after taking ECs. Twenty-five (67.6%) women who used ECs sought permission from their husbands. The only factor associated with EC use was couples’ pregnancy intentions (odds ratio 4.71; 95% confidence interval, 1.43–15.58; P≤0.01). CONCLUSION: Indian women with access to ECs generally used them correctly and found them acceptable. Efforts to expand EC knowledge and access should be coupled with efforts to promote gender equality in the reproductive sphere
Comparison of spoligotyping, mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units typing and IS6110-RFLP in a study of genotypic diversity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Delhi, North India
The aim of the present study was to compare polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based methods - spoligotyping and mycobacterial interspersed repetitive units (MIRU) typing - with the gold-standard IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis in 101 isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to determine the genetic diversity of M. tuberculosis clinical isolates from Delhi, North India. Spoligotyping resulted in 49 patterns (14 clusters); the largest cluster was composed of Spoligotype International Types (SITs)26 [Central-Asian (CAS)1-Delhi lineage], followed by SIT11 [East-African-Indian (EAI) 3-Indian lineage]. A large number of isolates (75%) belonged to genotypic lineages, such as CAS, EAI and Manu, with a high specificity for the Indian subcontinent, emphasising the complex diversity of the phylogenetically coherent M. tuberculosis in North India. MIRU typing, using 11 discriminatory loci, was able to distinguish between all but two strains based on individual patterns. IS6110-RFLP analysis (n = 80 strains) resulted in 67 unique isolates and four clusters containing 13 strains. MIRUs discriminated all 13 strains, whereas spoligotyping discriminated 11 strains. Our results validate the use of PCR-based molecular typing of M. tuberculosis using repetitive elements in Indian isolates and demonstrate the usefulness of MIRUs for discriminating low-IS6110-copy isolates, which accounted for more than one-fifth of the strains in the present study
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Obesity, inflammatory and thrombotic markers, and major clinical outcomes in critically ill patients with COVID‐19 in the US
Objective
This study aimed to determine whether obesity is independently associated with major adverse clinical outcomes and inflammatory and thrombotic markers in critically ill patients with COVID‐19.
Methods
The primary outcome was in‐hospital mortality in adults with COVID‐19 admitted to intensive care units across the US. Secondary outcomes were acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), acute kidney injury requiring renal replacement therapy (AKI‐RRT), thrombotic events, and seven blood markers of inflammation and thrombosis. Unadjusted and multivariable‐adjusted models were used.
Results
Among the 4,908 study patients, mean (SD) age was 60.9 (14.7) years, 3,095 (62.8%) were male, and 2,552 (52.0%) had obesity. In multivariable models, BMI was not associated with mortality. Higher BMI beginning at 25 kg/m2 was associated with a greater risk of ARDS and AKI‐RRT but not thrombosis. There was no clinically significant association between BMI and inflammatory or thrombotic markers.
Conclusions
In critically ill patients with COVID‐19, higher BMI was not associated with death or thrombotic events but was associated with a greater risk of ARDS and AKI‐RRT. The lack of an association between BMI and circulating biomarkers calls into question the paradigm that obesity contributes to poor outcomes in critically ill patients with COVID‐19 by upregulating systemic inflammatory and prothrombotic pathways