728 research outputs found
Appropriate antivenom doses for six types of envenomations caused by snakes in taiwan
Six of the 15 species of venomous snakes found in Taiwan are responsible for most of the clinically significant envenomations in the country. These species are: Trimeresurus mucrosquamatus, Trimeresurus stejnegeri, Naja atra, Bungarus multicinctus, Deinagkistrodon acutus and Daboia russelii siamensis, which together can be subdivided into three groups based on their venom effects. Primary treatment consists of rapid administration of appropriate antivenoms. The present study aimed to identify a proper dose of antivenom for each snake group as well as to describe hemorrhagic, neurotoxic, and mixed effects of their venoms. A retrospective chart review identified 72 snakebite cases referred to an emergency department. Data on epidemiology, examination findings, snake identification, treatment, antivenom dose and complications were collected. After excluding 14 patients, data from 58 victims were analyzed. Most studied cases were male (86%). Significantly higher doses of antivenom were administered against neurotoxic envenomations (mean dose: three vials) compared with the other two (p < 0.05). Moreover, patients affected by neurotoxic bites were more likely to develop blurred vision and other complications (p < 0.05). Multivariate logistic regression analysis indicated that neurotoxic envenomation was a risk factor for complications (OR: 8.84, 95% CI: 1.06-73.73). Neurotoxic envenomations and complication occurrence were positively correlated with antivenom dosage. In conclusion, patients affected by neurotoxic envenomations received higher doses of antivenom than others whereas incidence of complications was associated with higher antivenom doses
Privacy-Preserving Quantum Two-Party Geometric Intersection
Privacy-preserving computational geometry is the research area on the
intersection of the domains of secure multi-party computation (SMC) and
computational geometry. As an important field, the privacy-preserving geometric
intersection (PGI) problem is when each of the multiple parties has a private
geometric graph and seeks to determine whether their graphs intersect or not
without revealing their private information. In this study, through
representing Alice's (Bob's) private geometric graph G_A (G_B) as the set of
numbered grids S_A (S_B), an efficient privacy-preserving quantum two-party
geometric intersection (PQGI) protocol is proposed. In the protocol, the oracle
operation O_A (O_B) is firstly utilized to encode the private elements of
S_A=(a_0, a_1, ..., a_(M-1)) (S_B=(b_0, b_1, ..., b_(N-1))) into the quantum
states, and then the oracle operation O_f is applied to obtain a new quantum
state which includes the XOR results between each element of S_A and S_B.
Finally, the quantum counting is introduced to get the amount (t) of the states
|a_i+b_j> equaling to |0>, and the intersection result can be obtained by
judging t>0 or not. Compared with classical PGI protocols, our proposed
protocol not only has higher security, but also holds lower communication
complexity
Failure of PCR to Detect Treponema pallidum ssp. pertenue DNA in Blood in Latent Yaws.
Yaws, caused by Treponema pallidum ssp. pertenue, is a neglected tropical disease closely related to venereal syphilis and is targeted for eradication by 2020. Latent yaws represents a diagnostic challenge, and current tools cannot adequately distinguish between individuals with true latent infection and individuals who are serofast following successful treatment. PCR on blood has previously been shown to detect T. pallidum DNA in patients with syphilis, suggesting that this approach may be of value in yaws. We performed real-time PCR for Treponema pallidum ssp. pertenue on blood samples from 140 children with positive T. pallidum Particle Agglutination (TPPA) and Rapid Plasma Reagin (RPR) tests and 7 controls (negative serology), all collected as part of a prospective study of yaws in the Solomon Islands. All samples were also tested by a nested PCR for T. pallidum. 12 patients had clinical evidence of active yaws whilst 128 were considered to have latent yaws. 43 children had high titre rapid plasma reagins (RPRs) of ≥1:32. PCR testing with both assays gave negative results in all cases. It is possible that the failure to detect T. pallidum ssp. pertenue in blood reflects lower loads of organism in latent yaws compared to those in latent infection with T. pallidum ssp. pertenue, and/or a lower propensity for haematogenous dissemination in yaws than in syphilis. As the goal of the yaws control programme is eradication, a tool that can differentiate true latent infection from individuals who are serofast would be of value; however, PCR of blood is not that tool
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