324 research outputs found

    Trabal, Calders i la parĂČdia de la novel·la

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    Propuesta de tratamiento para maltratadores

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    La violencia de gĂ©nero es un problema universal y actual, al que se ha intentado dar respuestas desde 1995, con el que se han implicado mĂșltiples instituciones, organismos y sociedad en general. En los Ășltimos años las investigaciones desarrolladas han sido muy prolĂ­feras, frecuentemente centradas en la figura de las vĂ­ctimas, pero tambiĂ©n atendiendo al maltratador como parte esencial del tratamiento. Ente trabajo a partir del anĂĄlisis de la figura del maltratador y la revisiĂłn de programa de tratamiento existentes, pretende aportar a los actuales programas de tratamiento para hombres maltratadores, componentes de intervenciĂłn basados en terapias de tercera generaciĂłn, mĂĄs especĂ­ficamente AceptaciĂłn y Compromiso (Hayes, Stroshal y Wilson, 1999), “buenas vidas” o “vidas satisfactorias” (Ward, 2011), y los cĂ­rculos de apoyo y responsabilidad, que se han comenzado a aplicar en otros ĂĄmbitos delictivos diferentes al de hombres maltratadores.Gender violence is a universal and current problem, to which responses have been attempted since 1995, with which multiple institutions, organizations and society in general have been involved. In recent years, the investigations carried out have been very prolific, frequently focusing on the figure of the victims, but also treating the abuser as an essential part of the treatment. This work, based on the analysis of the figure of the abuser and the revision of the existing treatment program, aims to contribute to the current treatment programs for male abusers, intervention components based on third-generation therapies, more specifically Acceptance and Commitment (Hayes, Stroshal and Wilson, 1999), “good lives” or “satisfactory lives” (Ward, 2011), and circles of support and responsibility, which have begun to be applied in other criminal areas other than that of male abusers.PsicologĂ­

    056: Biological efficacy of a 600mg loading dose of clopidogrel in ST-elevation myocardial infarction

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    BackgroundOptimal platelet reactivity (PR) inhibition is critical to prevent thrombotic events in primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). We aimed to determine the relationship between high on-treatment platelet reactivity (HTPR) and ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) following a 600mg loading dose (LD) of clopidogrel.Methods and resultsWe performed a prospective monocentre study enrolling patients on clopidogrel undergoing PCI. The VASP index was used to assess PR inhibition after clopidogrel LD. HTPR was defined according to the consensus as a VASP index ≄50%. The present study included 833 patients undergoing PCI. Most patients had PCI for an acute coronary syndrome (58.7%). The mean VASP index was 50±23% with a large inter-individual variability (range: 1–94%). Patients with a VASP index ≄50% were significantly older (p=0.03), with a higher BMI (p<0.001), more often diabetic (p=0.03), taking omeprazole (p=0.03), admitted for an ACS and with a high fibrinogen level compared to good responders (VASP<50%). In multivariate analysis BMI, omeprazole use, acute coronary syndrome and high fibrinogen level (p<0.001) remained significantly associated with HTPR. Of importance, in this analysis STEMI was independently associated with HTPR when compared with the other forms of ACS (NSTEMI and unstable angina) with an odd ratio of 2.14 (95% CI: 1.3 –3.5; p=0.003).ConclusionSTEMI is associated with high on-treatment platelet reactivity following 600mg of clopidogrel. The present results suggest that 600mg of clopidogrel may not be able to achieve an optimal PR inhibition in STEMI patients undergoing PCI and more potent drugs may be preferred

    Pepper Mild Mottle Virus, a Plant Virus Associated with Specific Immune Responses, Fever, Abdominal Pains, and Pruritus in Humans

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    Background: Recently, metagenomic studies have identified viable Pepper mild mottle virus (PMMoV), a plant virus, in the stool of healthy subjects. However, its source and role as pathogen have not been determined. Methods and Findings: 21 commercialized food products containing peppers, 357 stool samples from 304 adults and 208 stool samples from 137 children were tested for PMMoV using real-time PCR, sequencing, and electron microscopy. Anti-PMMoV IgM antibody testing was concurrently performed. A case-control study tested the association of biological and clinical symptoms with the presence of PMMoV in the stool. Twelve (57%) food products were positive for PMMoV RNA sequencing. Stool samples from twenty-two (7.2%) adults and one child (0.7%) were positive for PMMoV by real-time PCR. Positive cases were significantly more likely to have been sampled in Dermatology Units (p<10−6), to be seropositive for anti-PMMoV IgM antibodies (p = 0.026) and to be patients who exhibited fever, abdominal pains, and pruritus (p = 0.045, 0.038 and 0.046, respectively). Conclusions: Our study identified a local source of PMMoV and linked the presence of PMMoV RNA in stool with a specific immune response and clinical symptoms. Although clinical symptoms may be imputable to another cofactor, including spicy food, our data suggest the possibility of a direct or indirect pathogenic role of plant viruses in humans

    A French Cohort of Childhood Leukemia Survivors: Impact of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation on Health Status and Quality of Life

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    AbstractThe late effects and quality of life (QoL) in childhood acute leukemia survivors were compared between hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients and patients who underwent conventional therapy. The study included 943 patients, 256 of whom underwent HSCT (27.1%). Medical visits were conducted to detect the occurrence of physical late effects. Based on patient age, different questionnaires were used to assess QoL. To evaluate the association between HSCT and each type of late effect or QoL dimension, the appropriate multivariate regressions were performed. QoL mean scores were compared with those obtained for age- and sex-matched French control subjects. Of all the survivors, 674 (71.5%) had at least 1 late effect, with the risk being 5.0 CI95 (3.0-8.6) times higher for transplantation survivors. For child survivors, scoring of QoL showed no significant differences between the treatment groups. The adult HSCT survivors reported lower physical dimension QoL scores than chemotherapy survivors. Compared with French norms, the survivor group reported a significantly lower mental composite score; however, the physical composite score showed no significant difference. Thus, transplanted survivors have a high risk of developing late effects, resulting in a decreased physical well-being in adulthood. However, long after treatment completion, childhood leukemia survivors report that effects on psychological well-being are more important than they are in physical QoL dimensions

    BMC Nephrol

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    BACKGROUND: To describe the quality of life of adolescents initiating haemodialysis, to determine the factors associated with quality of life, and to assess coping strategies and their impact on quality of life. METHODS: All adolescents initiating haemodialysis between September 2013 and July 2015 in French paediatric haemodialysis centres were included. Quality of life data were collected using the "Vecu et Sante Percue de l'Adolescent et l'Enfant" questionnaire, and coping data were collected using the Kidcope questionnaire. Adolescent's quality of life was compared with age- and sex-matched French control. RESULTS: Thirty-two adolescents were included. Their mean age was 13.9 +/- 2.0 years. The quality of life score was lowest in leisure activities and highest in relationships with medical staff. Compared with the French control, index, energy-vitality, relationships with friends, leisure activities and physical well-being scores were significantly lower in haemodialysis population. In multivariate analyses, active coping was positively associated with quality of life and especially with energy-vitality, relationships with parents and teachers, and school performance. In contrast, avoidant and negative coping were negatively associated with energy-vitality, psychological well-being and body image for avoidant coping, and body image and relationships with medical staff for negative coping. CONCLUSIONS: The quality of life of haemodialysis adolescents, and mainly the dimensions of leisure activities, physical well-being, relationships with friends and energy-vitality, were significantly altered compared to that of the French population. The impact of coping strategies on quality of life seems to be important. Given the importance of quality of life and coping strategies in adolescents with chronic disease, health care professionals should integrate these aspects into care management

    Highly Sensitive Flow Cytometry Allows Monitoring of Changes in Circulating Immune Cells in Blood After Tdap Booster Vaccination

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    © 2021 Diks, Khatri, Oosten, de Mooij, Groenland, Teodosio, Perez-Andres, Orfao, Berbers, Zwaginga, van Dongen and Berkowska.Antigen-specific serum immunoglobulin (Ag-specific Ig) levels are broadly used as correlates of protection. However, in several disease and vaccination models these fail to predict immunity. In these models, in-depth knowledge of cellular processes associated with protective versus poor responses may bring added value. We applied high-throughput multicolor flow cytometry to track over-time changes in circulating immune cells in 10 individuals following pertussis booster vaccination (Tdap, BoostrixÂź, GlaxoSmithKline). Next, we applied correlation network analysis to extensively investigate how changes in individual cell populations correlate with each other and with Ag-specific Ig levels. We further determined the most informative cell subsets and analysis time points for future studies. Expansion and maturation of total IgG1 plasma cells, which peaked at day 7 post-vaccination, was the most prominent cellular change. Although these cells preceded the increase in Ag-specific serum Ig levels, they did not correlate with the increase of Ig levels. In contrast, strong correlation was observed between Ag-specific IgGs and maximum expansion of total IgG1 and IgA1 memory B cells at days 7 to 28. Changes in circulating T cells were limited, implying the need for a more sensitive approach. Early changes in innate immune cells, i.e. expansion of neutrophils, and expansion and maturation of monocytes up to day 5, most likely reflected their responses to local damage and adjuvant. Here we show that simultaneous monitoring of multiple circulating immune subsets in blood by flow cytometry is feasible. B cells seem to be the best candidates for vaccine monitoring.K is supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie SkƂodowska-Curie grant agreement No 707404. The here presented study is a pilot study for the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) PERISCOPE program, a Joint Undertaking under grant agreement No 115910. This Joint Undertaking receives support from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA), and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF). The flow cytometric studies in this study were supported by the EuroFlow Consortium. The EuroFlow Consortium received support from the FP6-2004-LIFESCIHEALTH-5 program of the European Commission (grant LSHB-CT-2006-018708) as Specific Targeted Research Project (STREP)

    Structure and N-acetylglucosamine binding of the distal domain of mouse adenovirus 2 fibre

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    15 pags, 8 figsMurine adenovirus 2 (MAdV-2) infects cells of the mouse gastrointestinal tract. Like human adenoviruses, it is a member of the genus Mastadenovirus, family Adenoviridae. The MAdV-2 genome has a single fibre gene that expresses a 787 residue-long protein. Through analogy to other adenovirus fibre proteins, it is expected that the carboxy-terminal virus-distal head domain of the fibre is responsible for binding to the host cell, although the natural receptor is unknown. The putative head domain has little sequence identity to adenovirus fibres of known structure. In this report, we present high-resolution crystal structures of the carboxy-terminal part of the MAdV-2 fibre. The structures reveal a domain with the typical adenovirus fibre head topology and a domain containing two triple ß-spiral repeats of the shaft domain. Through glycan microarray profiling, saturation transfer difference nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, isothermal titration calorimetry and site-directed mutagenesis, we show that the fibre specifically binds to the monosaccharide N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc). The crystal structure of the complex reveals that GlcNAc binds between the AB and CD loops at the top of each of the three monomers of the MAdV-2 fibre head. However, infection competition assays show that soluble GlcNAc monosaccharide and natural GlcNAc-containing polymers do not inhibit infection by MAdV-2. Furthermore, site-directed mutation of the GlcNAc-binding residues does not prevent the inhibition of infection by soluble fibre protein. On the other hand, we show that the MAdV-2 fibre protein binds GlcNAc-containing mucin glycans, which suggests that the MAdV-2 fibre protein may play a role in viral mucin penetration in the mouse gut.This research was sponsored by grant BFU2014-53425-P (to M. J. v. R.), coordinated grants CTQ2015-64597-P-C02-01 and CTQ2015-64597-P-C02-02 (to J. J. B. and F. J. C., respectively), grant BFU2015-70052-R (to M. M.) and the Spanish Adenovirus Network (AdenoNet, BIO2015-68990-REDT), all from the Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación. Financial support to M. M. from the CIBER of Respiratory Diseases (CIBERES) from the Spanish Institute of Health Carlos III is also acknowledged. These grants are co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund of the European Union. A. K. S. and T. H. N. were recipients of pre-doctoral fellowships from La Caixa and CSIC-VAST, respectively. The expression vectors were designed and created in Hungary, and this was financed by the Hungarian Scientific Research Fund (OTKA K100163). M. K. thanks Enterprise Ireland for a Commercialisation Fund grant (CF/2015/0089), A. K. acknowledges the National University of Ireland for a Cancer Care West Hardiman PhD scholarship and L. J. acknowledges the EU FP7 programme in support of the GlycoHIT consortium (grant no. 260600). This work was supported by R01 AI104920 (to J. G. S.) from the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (www.niaid.nih.gov). S. S. W. was also supported by the Helen Riaboff Whiteley Endowment to the University of Washington and by Public Health Service, National Research Service Awards T32 AI083203 from the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases and T32 GM007270 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences

    Increased serum levels of fractalkine and mobilisation of CD34+CD45− endothelial progenitor cells in systemic sclerosis

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    International audienceBackground: The disruption of endothelial homeostasis is a major determinant in the pathogenesis of systemic sclerosis (SSc) and is reflected by soluble and cellular markers of activation, injury and repair. We aimed to provide a combined assessment of endothelial markers to delineate specific profiles associated with SSc disease and its severity
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