244 research outputs found
Cystic Echinococcosis: Chronic, Complex, and Still Neglected
Cystic echinococcosis is a most clinically neglected
parasitic disease that urgently needs attention.
A valuable tool for diagnosing,
staging, and following up patients, ultrasound,
is readily available. Four management
procedures, surgery, percutaneous
sterilization techniques, anti-parasitic
treatment, and watch & wait, have
‘‘evolved’’ over decades, and been recently
summarized, but without adequate
comparative evaluation of efficacy, effectiveness,
rate of adverse events, relapse
rates, and cost. Clinical decision making is
on even shakier ground for extrahepatic
and extrapulmonary locations, which are
rarer and numbers needed to build
comparative trials hard to come by. There
is an obligation to put at least what we
have on an appropriate evidence base by
conducting comparative clinical trials at
the scale and quality that allow answering
these important questions. As one of the
expected results, clear criteria for the
watch & wait option alone might already
save a substantial proportion of patients
from unnecessary interventions and save
health services money. Difficult chronic
diseases clustering in poor rural areas need
intelligent, creative approaches, and this
one urgently needs operational research
incorporating the particularities of resource-
poor settings into consideration
Research Progress Reports: Fruit and Vegetable Processing and Technology Division, Department of Horticulture [1969]
Blueberry cultivars for frozen pies / J. F. Gallander, W. A. Gould, and H. Stammer -- Grape cultivars for jelly making / J. F. Gallander, W. A. Gould and G. A. Cahoon -- Evaluation of various grape cultivars for processing. III. Table wines / J. F. Gallander -- Evaluation of snap bean cultivars for processing / William Hildebolt and W. A. Gould -- Kraut snacks / J. R. Geisman -- Mechanical harvesting and bulk handling evaluation of tomato cultivars for processing / W. A. Gould, Jonnie Budke, Carol Foglesong and Louise Howiler --The effects of lye peeling variables upon tomato cultivars / Loren Lucas and W. A. Gould -- Amino acids in canned tomato juice / Jenia D. Dormitorio and W. A. Gould -- Factors affecting the viscosity of tomato juice / David E. Crean and W. A. Goul
Fitase - ferramenta de sustentabilidade do frango de corte.
Resumo: Recursos que permitam reduzir o custo alimentar e que não alterem significativamente o desempenho das aves podem ser a grande estratégia disponível às indústrias para a viabilidade financeira. Este estudo, englobando as fases de criação e abate, demonstra ser possível uma economia de R$ 1,00/frango abatido, através do uso de fitase em elevadas doses e adotando matriz nutricional arrojada, alcançando assim maior sustentabilidade econômica
The Global Burden of Alveolar Echinococcosis
Human alveolar echinococcosis (AE), caused by the larval stage of the fox tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis, is amongst the world's most dangerous zoonoses. Transmission to humans is by consumption of parasite eggs which are excreted in the faeces of the definitive hosts: foxes and, increasingly, dogs. Transmission can be through contact with the definitive host or indirectly through contamination of food or possibly water with parasite eggs. We made an intensive search of English, Russian, Chinese and other language databases. We targeted data which could give country specific incidence or prevalence of disease and searched for data from every country we believed to be endemic for AE. We also used data from other sources (often unpublished). From this information we were able to make an estimate of the annual global incidence of disease and disease burden using standard techniques for calculation of DALYs. Our studies suggest that AE results in a median of 18,235 cases globally with a burden of 666,433 DALYs per annum. This is the first estimate of the global burden of AE both in terms of global incidence and DALYs and demonstrates the burden of AE is comparable to several diseases in the neglected tropical disease cluster
Intercomparing different devices for the investigation of ice nucleating particles using Snomax® as test substance
Seven different instruments and measurement methods were used to examine the immersion freezing of bacterial ice nuclei from Snomax® (hereafter Snomax), a product containing ice-active protein complexes from non-viable Pseudomonas syringae bacteria. The experimental conditions were kept as similar as possible for the different measurements. Of the participating instruments, some examined droplets which had been made from suspensions directly, and the others examined droplets activated on previously generated Snomax particles, with particle diameters of mostly a few hundred nanometers and up to a few micrometers in some cases. Data were obtained in the temperature range from -2 to -38 °C, and it was found that all ice-active protein complexes were already activated above -12 °C. Droplets with different Snomax mass concentrations covering 10 orders of magnitude were examined. Some instruments had very short ice nucleation times down to below 1 s, while others had comparably slow cooling rates around 1 K min-1. Displaying data from the different instruments in terms of numbers of ice-active protein complexes per dry mass of Snomax, nm, showed that within their uncertainty, the data agree well with each other as well as to previously reported literature results. Two parameterizations were taken from literature for a direct comparison to our results, and these were a time-dependent approach based on a contact angle distribution (Niedermeier et al., 2014) and a modification of the parameterization presented in Hartmann et al. (2013) representing a time-independent approach. The agreement between these and the measured data were good; i.e., they agreed within a temperature range of 0.6 K or equivalently a range in nm of a factor of 2. From the results presented herein, we propose that Snomax, at least when carefully shared and prepared, is a suitable material to test and compare different instruments for their accuracy of measuring immersion freezing
The Disease Burden of Taenia solium Cysticercosis in Cameroon
Taenia solium cysticercosis is a zoonotic disease occurring in many developing countries. A relatively high prevalence in humans and pigs has been reported in several parts of the world, but insufficient data are available on the disease burden. Disease impact assessment needs detailed information on well-defined epidemiological and economic parameters. Our work conducted in West Cameroon over several years allowed us to collect the necessary information to estimate the impact of the parasite on the human and animal populations in this area using both cost and Disability Adjusted Life Year (DALY) estimations. This study identified the professional inactivity caused by the disease as the major loss factor in comparison to the cost of health care and losses due to infected pigs. These findings should allow a simpler estimation of the global disease burden based on information on salary levels and human cysticercosis prevalence in endemic areas of the world. In addition, the number of DALYs lost was higher than estimates already available for some other neglected tropical diseases in sub-Saharan Africa
Ice nucleation by water-soluble macromolecules
Cloud glaciation is critically important for the global radiation budget (albedo) and for initiation of precipitation. But the freezing of pure water droplets requires cooling to temperatures as low as 235 K. Freezing at higher temperatures requires the presence of an ice nucleator, which serves as a template for arranging water molecules in an ice-like manner. It is often assumed that these ice nucleators have to be insoluble particles. We point out that also free macromolecules which are dissolved in water can efficiently induce ice nucleation: the size of such ice nucleating macromolecules (INMs) is in the range of nanometers, corresponding to the size of the critical ice embryo. As the latter is temperature-dependent, we see a correlation between the size of INMs and the ice nucleation temperature as predicted by classical nucleation theory. Different types of INMs have been found in a wide range of biological species and comprise a variety of chemical structures including proteins, saccharides, and lipids. Our investigation of the fungal species Acremonium implicatum, Isaria farinosa, and Mortierella alpina shows that their ice nucleation activity is caused by proteinaceous water-soluble INMs. We combine these new results and literature data on INMs from fungi, bacteria, and pollen with theoretical calculations to develop a chemical interpretation of ice nucleation and water-soluble INMs. This has atmospheric implications since many of these INMs can be released by fragmentation of the carrier cell and subsequently may be distributed independently. Up to now, this process has not been accounted for in atmospheric models
Exploring local knowledge and perceptions on zoonoses among pastoralists in northern and eastern Tanzania
Background: Zoonoses account for the most commonly reported emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases in Sub-Saharan Africa. However, there is limited knowledge on how pastoral communities perceive zoonoses in relation to their livelihoods, culture and their wider ecology. This study was carried out to explore local knowledge and perceptions on zoonoses among pastoralists in Tanzania. Methodology and principal findings: This study involved pastoralists in Ngorongoro district in northern Tanzania and Kibaha and Bagamoyo districts in eastern Tanzania. Qualitative methods of focus group discussions, participatory epidemiology and interviews were used. A total of 223 people were involved in the study. Among the pastoralists, there was no specific term in their local language that describes zoonosis. Pastoralists from northern Tanzania possessed a higher understanding on the existence of a number of zoonoses than their eastern districts' counterparts. Understanding of zoonoses could be categorized into two broad groups: a local syndromic framework, whereby specific symptoms of a particular illness in humans concurred with symptoms in animals, and the biomedical framework, where a case definition is supported by diagnostic tests. Some pastoralists understand the possibility of some infections that could cross over to humans from animals but harm from these are generally tolerated and are not considered as threats. A number of social and cultural practices aimed at maintaining specific cultural functions including social cohesion and rites of passage involve animal products, which present zoonotic risk. Conclusions: These findings show how zoonoses are locally understood, and how epidemiology and biomedicine are shaping pastoralists perceptions to zoonoses. Evidence is needed to understand better the true burden and impact of zoonoses in these communities. More studies are needed that seek to clarify the common understanding of zoonoses that could be used to guide effective and locally relevant interventions. Such studies should consider in their approaches the pastoralists' wider social, cultural and economic set up
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