19 research outputs found

    Earliest evidence for the ivory trade in southern Africa : isotopic and ZooMS analysis of seventh-tenth century AD ivory from KwaZulu-Natal

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    KwaGandaganda, Ndondondwane and Wosi were major Early Farming Community settlements in what is today the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa. These sites have yielded, among other remains, abundant evidence of ivory and ivory working dating to the seventh–tenth centuries ad, pre-dating by approximately 200 years the better-known ivory artefacts from sites in the Limpopo River Valley and surrounding regions. We report the results of carbon, nitrogen and strontium isotope analysis to explore the origins and procurement of this ivory, in combination with Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry (ZooMS) to identify the species of animals from which it was derived. All of the ivory studied using ZooMS was elephant, despite the presence of hippopotamus remains on all three sites. Some ivory was probably obtained from elephant herds that lived close to the sites, in the densely wooded river valleys favoured by both elephants and early farmers. Other material came from savannah environments further afield. Ivory found at these three sites was drawn from different catchments, implying a degree of landscape/resource partitioning even at this early stage. These communities clearly invested substantial effort in obtaining ivory from across the region, which speaks to the importance of this commodity in the economy of the time. We suggest that some ivory items were for local use, but that some may have been intended for more distant markets via Indian Ocean trade

    The role of IL-4, IL-13 and IL-4Rα in the development of protective and pathological responses to Trichinella spiralis

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    T helper type 2 (Th2) responses have been shown to be important in protective responses to gastrointestinal (GI) helminth infections and in the development of the intestinal pathology accompanying expulsion of the parasite. Different inbred mouse strains have been shown to develop different cytokine profiles following infection with GI helminths with increased resistance observed in those strains where Th2 cytokines predominate. The aim of this study was to determine the role of IL-4, IL-13 and IL-4Rα and the impact of host background on the development of the protective and pathological responses induced by infection with the gastrointestinal helminth Trichinella spiralis. IL-4, IL-13 and IL-4Rα were required for the generation of Th2 responses to T. spiralis; however, the role these responses play in the development of protection and enteropathy was less clear. IL-4Rα-deficiency mice resulted in substantially reduced parasite expulsion, intestinal pathology and Th2 responses. Similarly, lack of IL-13 resulted in inhibited expulsion and the development of enteropathy. Although Th2 responses were reduced in BALB/c IL-4–/– mice, neither expulsion nor enteropathy were different from wild-type mice. In contrast, C57BL/6 IL-4–/– exhibited delayed expulsion and reduced pathology, suggesting that host genetics are important in the function of individual cytokines. Thus, differences in background genotype may be an important component in the development host protection and the development of intestinal pathology accompanying the loss of GI helminths

    Three horizontal muscle surgery for large-angle infantile esotropia: Validation of a table of amounts of surgery

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    PurposeTo validate a table of amounts of three horizontal muscle surgery in patients with large-angle infantile esotropia (60 prism dioptres, PD).MethodsA prospective interventional case series reporting the postoperative alignment of 51 patients (27 male, 24 female) over a 15-year period was conducted. Surgery amounts were according to a published table developed on a previous patient cohort (n=49), using bilateral medial rectus recession with graded unilateral lateral rectus resection. Kaplan-Meier life-table survival curves were formulated for success to orthotropia (±10 PD) after one and subsequent horizontal muscle surgeries for up to 8 years follow-up.ResultsThe median preoperative deviation was 65 PD (range 60-80 PD) and median age at surgery was 11.8 months (range 5.1 months-3.6 years). Surgical success to orthotropia (±10 PD) after one surgery was 100% at 2 months, 95.7% at 6 months, 91.3% at 12 months, 77.8% at 4 years, and 73.6% at 8 years. Postoperative failure requiring further horizontal surgery occurred in 17.6% (residual esotropia 4, consecutive exotropia 5).ConclusionsOur second cohort has reproduced the success rate of the previous cohort (77.8% vs 77.1% at 4 years). If the published table of surgical amounts is used, three horizontal muscle surgery in large-angle infantile esotropia (≥60 PD) appears to have a good long-term success rate, and does not lead to the high rates of either residual esotropia or consecutive exotropia reported by others in the literature

    Sociopolitical Discontinuity in the Near East C. 2200 B.C.E.: Scenarios from Palestine and Egypt

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