507 research outputs found
Posteromedial bowing of the tibia: A benign condition or a case for limb reconstruction?
PURPOSE: To review the initial deformity and subsequent remodelling in posteromedial bowing of the tibia and the outcome of limb reconstruction in this condition. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In all, 38 patients with posteromedial bowing of the tibia presenting between 2000 and 2016 were identified. Mean follow-up from presentation was 78 months. A total of 17 patients underwent lengthening and deformity correction surgery, whilst three further patients are awaiting lengthening and deformity correction procedures. RESULTS: The greatest correction of deformity occurred in the first year of life, but after the age of four years, remodelling was limited. The absolute leg-length discrepancy (LLD) increased throughout growth with a mean 14.3% discrepancy in tibial length. In the lengthening group, mean length gained per episode was 45 mm (35 to 60). Mean duration in frame was 192 days, with a mean healing index of 42.4 days/cm. Significantly higher rates of recurrence in LLD were seen in those undergoing lengthening under the age of ten years (p = 0.046). Four contralateral epiphysiodeses were also performed. CONCLUSION: Posteromedial bowing of the tibia improves spontaneously during the first years of life, but in 20/38 (53%) patients, limb reconstruction was indicated for significant residual deformity and/or worsening LLD. For larger discrepancies and persistent deformity, limb reconstruction with a hexapod external fixator should be considered as part of the treatment options. Level of evidence Level IV (Case series)
Cryotomography of budding influenza a virus reveals filaments with diverse morphologies that mostly do not bear a genome at their distal end
Influenza viruses exhibit striking variations in particle morphology between strains. Clinical isolates of influenza A virus have been shown to produce long filamentous particles while laboratory-adapted strains are predominantly spherical. However, the role of the filamentous phenotype in the influenza virus infectious cycle remains undetermined. We used cryo-electron tomography to conduct the first three-dimensional study of filamentous virus ultrastructure in particles budding from infected cells. Filaments were often longer than 10 microns and sometimes had bulbous heads at their leading ends, some of which contained tubules we attribute to M1 while none had recognisable ribonucleoprotein (RNP) and hence genome segments. Long filaments that did not have bulbs were infrequently seen to bear an ordered complement of RNPs at their distal ends. Imaging of purified virus also revealed diverse filament morphologies; short rods (bacilliform virions) and longer filaments. Bacilliform virions contained an ordered complement of RNPs while longer filamentous particles were narrower and mostly appeared to lack this feature, but often contained fibrillar material along their entire length. The important ultrastructural differences between these diverse classes of particles raise the possibility of distinct morphogenetic pathways and functions during the infectious process
Exportaci?n de sacha inchi al mercado de Estados Unidos
Las caracter?sticas nutritivas del sacha Inchi, debidas a la cantidad de ?cidos grasos omega 3 que posee, han motivado que agricultores y empresas inicien la explotaci?n de esta semilla con el prop?sito de exportar sus derivados en el futuro. Sin embargo, su cultivo se realiza de manera artesanal y poco tecnificada y, en el caso de las exportaciones, estas no se sustentan en el an?lisis t?cnico del mercado externo, sino en contactos directos con algunos potenciales clientes. Abona a favor de la exportaci?n el que la tendencia mundial de consumo de aceites vegetales se haya incrementado en los ?ltimos a?os. Estados Unidos es el segundo mercado m?s importante, pues ah? la poblaci?n es cada vez m?s consciente de la necesidad de una alimentaci?n sana, nutritiva y equilibrada para evitar problemas de salud, lo que incluye el menor consumo de grasas de origen animal. Por estas razones, la presente investigaci?n busca establecer si es posible desarrollar un modelo de negocio exitoso que permita viabilizar la exportaci?n de los derivados del sacha inchi con est?ndares internacionales de competitividad global. Esta propuesta est? enmarcada en la producci?n de la empresa Agropex S.A.C., que produce aceite y est? interesada en la exportaci?n de este nuevo producto
Noncontact Material Testing Using Low-Energy Optical Generation and Detection of Acoustic Pulses
We will discuss preliminary results on the use of a low-energy laser and a sensitive laser interferometer for noncontact material testing of metals and nonmetals. There have been numerous reports [1–12] on the use of lasers to generate acoustic signals, but this is the first use of a relatively low-energy tunable laser source and improved interferometer to measure acoustic waveforms in both metals and nonmetals [13]. The use of a laser interferometer for the noncontact detection of acoustic pulses has also been reported previously [14–20], but we now report the use of a sensitive “non-Michelson” interferometer with increased signal-to-noise capabilities. The combination of these features allows noncontact, low-energy optical generation and optical detection in a variety of materials, in potentially hostile environments, and provides accurate accoustic waveforms which can be used to characterize specimens. These results, therefore, begin to demonstrate the feasibility of a portable (entirely) optical system for the nondestructive evaluation of materials
Intra-Organ Variation in Age-Related Mutation Accumulation in the Mouse
Using a transgenic mouse model harboring chromosomally integrated lacZ mutational target genes, we previously demonstrated that mutations accumulate with age much more rapidly in the small intestine than in the brain. Here it is shown that in the small intestine point mutations preferentially accumulate in epithelial cells of the mucosa scraped off the underlying serosa. The mucosal cells are the differentiated villus cells that have undergone multiple cell divisions. A smaller age-related increase, also involving genome rearrangements, was observed in the serosa, which consists mainly of the remaining crypts and non-dividing smooth muscle cells. In the brain we observed an accumulation of only point mutations in no other areas than hypothalamus and hippocampus. To directly test for cell division as the determining factor in the generation of point mutations we compared mutation induction between mitotically active and quiescent embryonic fibroblasts from the same lacZ mice, treated with either UV (a point mutagen) or hydrogen peroxide (a clastogen). The results indicate that while point mutations are highly replication-dependent, genome rearrangements are as easily induced in non-dividing cells as in mitotically active ones. This strongly suggests that the point mutations found to have accumulated in the mucosal part of the small intestine are the consequence of replication errors. The same is likely true for point mutations accumulating in hippocampus and hypothalamus of the brain since neurogenesis in these two areas continues throughout life. The observed intra-organ variation in mutation susceptibility as well as the variation in replication dependency of different types of mutations indicates the need to not only extend observations made on whole organs to their sub-structures but also take the type of mutations and mitotic activity of the cells into consideration. This should help elucidating the impact of genome instability and its consequences on aging and disease
Mind the gap: sentencing, rehabilitation and civic purgatory
This article discusses the relationships and tensions between the sentencing, statutory supervision and legal rehabilitation of lawbreakers under UK legislation. It does so with reference to both the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, which allows some criminal records to become ‘spent’ after a set period of time, and the Offender Rehabilitation Act 2014, which was designed to significantly expand statutory supervision arrangements. The article also demonstrates how, post-supervision, many former lawbreakers are cast into a state of ‘civic purgatory’, before suggesting that a more fully integrated approach to rehabilitation is required
Paedomorphic facial expressions give dogs a selective advantage
How wolves were first domesticated is unknown. One hypothesis suggests that wolves underwent a process of self-domestication by tolerating human presence and taking advantage of scavenging possibilities. The puppy-like physical and behavioural traits seen in dogs are thought to have evolved later, as a byproduct of selection against aggression. Using speed of selection from rehoming shelters as a proxy for artificial selection, we tested whether paedomorphic features give dogs a selective advantage in their current environment. Dogs who exhibited facial expressions that enhance their neonatal appearance were preferentially selected by humans. Thus, early domestication of wolves may have occurred not only as wolf populations became tamer, but also as they exploited human preferences for paedomorphic characteristics. These findings, therefore, add to our understanding of early dog domestication as a complex co-evolutionary process
Novel n-3 Docosapentaneoic Acid-Derived Pro-resolving Mediators Are Vasculoprotective and Mediate the Actions of Statins in Controlling Inflammation
“This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of a chapter published in Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology book series (AEMB, volume 1161). The final publication is available athttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-21735-8_7
Environmental Control of Phase Transition and Polyp Survival of a Massive-Outbreaker Jellyfish
A number of causes have been proposed to account for the occurrence of gelatinous zooplankton (both jellyfish and ctenophore) blooms. Jellyfish species have a complex life history involving a benthic asexual phase (polyp) and a pelagic sexual phase (medusa). Strong environmental control of jellyfish life cycles is suspected, but not fully understood. This study presents a comprehensive analysis on the physicochemical conditions that control the survival and phase transition of Cotylorhiza tuberculata; a scyphozoan that generates large outbreaks in the Mediterranean Sea. Laboratory experiments indicated that the influence of temperature on strobilation and polyp survival was the critical factor controlling the capacity of this species to proliferate. Early life stages were less sensitive to other factors such as salinity variations or the competitive advantage provided by zooxanthellae in a context of coastal eutrophication. Coherently with laboratory results, the presence/absence of outbreaks of this jellyfish in a particular year seems to be driven by temperature. This is the first time the environmental forcing of the mechanism driving the life cycle of a jellyfish has been disentangled via laboratory experimentation. Projecting this understanding to a field population under climatological variability results in a pattern coherent with in situ records
Imaging of the urinary tract: the role of CT and MRI
Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are increasingly valuable tools for assessing the urinary tract in adults and children. However, their imaging capabilities, while overlapping in some respects, should be considered as complementary, as each technique offers specific advantages and disadvantages both in actual inherent qualities of the technique and in specific patients and with a specific diagnostic question. The use of CT and MRI should therefore be tailored to the patient and the clinical question. For the scope of this article, the advantages and disadvantages of these techniques in children will be considered; different considerations will apply in adult practice
- …