63 research outputs found

    Occupational risk factors for shoulder chronic tendinous pathology in the Spanish automotive manufacturing sector: a casecontrol study

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    Background Musculoskeletal Diseases (MSDs) are among the most prevalent health problems encountered in the workforce in Europe. Multiple risk factors contribute to their onset. In the present study, different individual risk factors for chronic tendinous pathology affecting the shoulder were analysed in a sample of workers from the automotive manufacturing sector. Methods An observational retrospective study was conducted with 73 cases of officially recognised and compensated occupational diseases and 94 aleatory cases of healthy workers from the same car assembly company. The experimental group comprised individuals with tendinous chronic pathology of the rotator cuff. Multiple variables that identified the risks present in the job were assessed along with participants clinical evaluation. Furthermore, two standardised guidelines for risk factors assessment were also used: the Spanish National Institute of Social Security (INSS) and the American Occupational Information Network (O*Net). Both descriptive statistical analysis and Odds ratios calculations considering the occupational disease as a dependent variable were performed. Results The use of hand tools, exposure to mechanical pressure in the upper limbs and awkward postures were the most prevalent risk factors. Pressure on the palm of the hand and the hand tool impacting the hand were also important risk factors. Some psychosocial factors such as lack of autonomy and mental workload were also associated shoulder tendinous diseases. The association of age, load handling, and awkward postures were the core risk factors responsible for most of the tendinous chronic injuries of the shoulder in this sample of car assembly workers. Conclusions Both ergonomic and psychosocial factors were present and increased the risk of developing occupational chronic tendinopathies at the shoulder in this sample of workers. Aging, load handling, and awkward postures showed the strongest predictive values. Greater knowledge of how risk factors interact would facilitate the design of better preventive workplace strategies.Medicin

    Integrated graph measures reveal survival likelihood for buildings in wildfre events

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    Wildfre events have resulted in unprecedented social and economic losses worldwide in the last few years. Most studies on reducing wildfre risk to communities focused on modeling wildfre behavior in the wildland to aid in developing fuel reduction and fre suppression strategies. However, minimizing losses in communities and managing risk requires a holistic approach to understanding wildfre behavior that fully integrates the wildland’s characteristics and the built environment’s features. This complete integration is particularly critical for intermixed communities where the wildland and the built environment coalesce. Community-level wildfre behavior that captures the interaction between the wildland and the built environment, which is necessary for predicting structural damage, has not received sufcient attention. Predicting damage to the built environment is essential in understanding and developing fre mitigation strategies to make communities more resilient to wildfre events. In this study, we use integrated concepts from graph theory to establish a relative vulnerability metric capable of quantifying the survival likelihood of individual buildings within a wildfre-afected region. We test the framework by emulating the damage observed in the historic 2018 Camp Fire and the 2020 Glass Fire. We propose two formulations based on graph centralities to evaluate the vulnerability of buildings relative to each other. We then utilize the relative vulnerability values to determine the damage state of individual buildings. Based on a one-to-one comparison of the calculated and observed damages, the maximum predicted building survival accuracy for the two formulations ranged from 58 − 64% for the historical wildfres tested. From the results, we observe that the modifed random walk formulation can better identify nodes that lie at the extremes on the vulnerability scale. In contrast, the modifed degree formulation provides better predictions for nodes with mid-range vulnerability values

    Association of increased plasma cardiotrophin-1 with inappropriate left ventricular mass in essential hypertension

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    Inappropriate left ventricular mass is present when the value of left ventricular mass exceeds individual needs to compensate hemodynamic load imposed by increased blood pressure. The goal of this study was to investigate whether plasma concentration of cardiotrophin-1, a cytokine that induces exaggerated hypertrophy in cardiomyocytes with hypertensive phenotype, is related to inappropriate left ventricular mass in patients with essential hypertension. The study was performed in 118 patients with never-treated hypertension and without prevalent cardiac disease. The left ventricular mass prediction from stroke work (systolic blood pressurexDoppler stroke volume), sex, and height (in meters(2.7)) was derived. An observed left ventricular mass/predicted left ventricular mass value >128% defined inappropriate left ventricular mass. Plasma cardiotrophin-1 was measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The studies were repeated in a group of 45 patients after 1 year of antihypertensive treatment. At baseline 67 and 51 patients presented with appropriate and inappropriate left ventricular mass, respectively. Plasma cardiotrophin-1 was higher (P<0.001) in patients with inappropriate mass than in patients with appropriate mass and normotensive controls. A direct correlation was found between cardiotrophin-1 and observed left ventricular mass/predicted left ventricular mass ratio (r=0.330, P<0.001) in all hypertensive patients. After treatment, plasma cardiotrophin-1 decreased and increased in patients in which inappropriate left ventricular mass regressed and persisted, respectively, despite a similar reduction of blood pressure in the 2 subgroups of patients. Albeit descriptive in nature, these results suggest the hypothesis that an excess of cardiotrophin-1 may contribute to inappropriate left ventricular growth in hypertensive patients

    SelecciĂłn de algoritmos de preprocesamiento de datos del Hospital Delicia ConcepciĂłn Masvernat (Concordia, provincia de Entre RĂ­os) que permita el desarrollo de un componente de software para predicciĂłn de enfermedades cardiolĂłgicas

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    El sector sanitario, sin lugar a dudas es uno de los ĂĄmbitos en el que se administran grandes volĂșmenes de datos; principalmente en el ĂĄrea clĂ­nica.Esto conduce a identificar una importante necesidad de encontrar maneras deadministrar, integrar, analizar e interpretar ese gran conjunto de datos; procurando identificar patrones de comportamiento que sean de utilidad en latoma de decisiones mĂ©dicas. El proyecto de investigaciĂłn1 en el que se enmarca este artĂ­culo plantea como principal objetivo desarrollar un componente de software capaz de generar, con aprendizaje automatizado, un modelo con capacidades predictivas sobre enfermedades cardiolĂłgicas; que permita un mejor soporte a decisiones de diagnĂłstico clĂ­nico y un avance significativo en la medicina preventiva. Este artĂ­culo presenta una revisiĂłn exhaustiva de las herramientas de preprocesamiento de datos para analizar datos sanitarios masivos, en tĂ©rminos de la imputaciĂłn de valores perdidos, detecciĂłn de valores atĂ­picos, reducciĂłn, escalado, transformaciĂłn y particiĂłn de datos. AdemĂĄs, se proponen herramientas de ciencia de datos en el campo sanitario. Se ha presentado un anĂĄlisis en profundidad para describir los pros y los contras de las herramientas existentes para abordar los desafĂ­os prĂĄcticos. Los resultados obtenidos son Ăștiles para el desarrollo de investigaciones basadas en predicciĂłn de enfermedades en el campo sanitario.Sociedad Argentina de InformĂĄtica e InvestigaciĂłn Operativ

    Study of vascular risk in Navarre: objectives and design. Prevalence of metabolic syndrome and of vascular risk factors

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    BACKGROUND: To determine in a representative sample of the population the prevalence of risk factors and metabolic syndrome; their association with sub-clinical atherosclerotic lesions and their impact on cardiocerebrovascular disease 10 years after. MATERIAL AND METHODS: (Phase 1) Cross sectional survey of a random sample stratified by age and sex of the population of Navarre aged between 35 and 84. Antecedents, risk factors, physical and analytical exploration. (Phase II) Ten year follow-up cohort study, in 500 exposed to MS and 500 not exposed persons, aged between 45 and 74 years; with an 82.25% power to detect a risk ratio of 2; with analytical and image markers of sub-clinical atherosclerosis. (Phase III) Follow up of vascular events at ten years. RESULTS: The subjects recruited were 6,553; excluded or not found 871; the final sample was 5,682 (2,644 men and 3,038 women); 4,168 (73,4%) took part in the study. The prevalence of MS was 22.1% (95%CI 20.5 - 23.7) for men and 17,2% (95%CI 15.8 - 18.5) for women. The main cardiovascular RF were high compared to other geographical areas except for HDL cholesterol. The rate was 8.5% (95%CI 7.4 - 9.6) for men and 1.7% (95%CI 1.3 - 2.2) CONCLUSIONS: There are important differences in risk between sex, being worst for men. The high figures for HDL cholesterol and the low prevalence of MS might mean a lower risk of vascular events in Navarra

    Transiciones, conflictos y democracia : estudios de coyuntura

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    MĂ©xico ha vivido un largo proceso de transiciĂłn que ha desencadenado dinamismos econĂłmicos, culturales y polĂ­ticos. En la actual coyuntura, estos dinamismos muestran toda su complejidad, su inevitable articulaciĂłn y la tensiĂłn entre las fuerzas que intentan sostener un viejo modelo de gobernar y decidir el rumbo del paĂ­s, y aquellas que buscan abrirse a un espectro mucho mĂĄs amplio y diversificado de actores. En ellos se conjuntan las aspiraciones mĂĄs legĂ­timas de los mexicanos por avanzar en el reconocimiento y respeto de la pluralidad Ă©tnica, de gĂ©nero y entre generaciones, y por impulsar una dinĂĄmica en la que —en medio de los procesos de mundializaciĂłn— los distintos grupos e intereses de los mexicanos puedan ser incluidos. La transiciĂłn mexicana tiende a centrarse en la dimensiĂłn polĂ­tica. La intensidad que cobran los procesos polĂ­ticos y el Ă©nfasis que importantes analistas ponen en dichos procesos, contribuyen a que esta asociaciĂłn vaya cobrandoĂ­uerza. En este sentido, es necesario advertir que en las transiciones la tendencia privatizadora, la reducciĂłn del gasto social, asĂ­ como la necesidad de pactos sociales que sean respetados, la participaciĂłn creciente de la sociedad civil, etc. son factores importantes que, en medio de contradicciones, van generando nuevos esquemas de relaciĂłn entre gobierno y sociedad.ITESO, A.C

    COVID-19 Severity and Survival over Time in Patients with Hematologic Malignancies: A Population-Based Registry Study

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    Mortality rates for COVID-19 have declined over time in the general population, but data in patients with hematologic malignancies are contradictory. We identified independent prognostic factors for COVID-19 severity and survival in unvaccinated patients with hematologic malignancies, compared mortality rates over time and versus non-cancer inpatients, and investigated post COVID-19 condition. Data were analyzed from 1166 consecutive, eligible patients with hematologic malignancies from the population-based HEMATO-MADRID registry, Spain, with COVID-19 prior to vaccination roll-out, stratified into early (February–June 2020; n = 769 (66%)) and later (July 2020–February 2021; n = 397 (34%)) cohorts. Propensity-score matched non-cancer patients were identified from the SEMI-COVID registry. A lower proportion of patients were hospitalized in the later waves (54.2%) compared to the earlier (88.6%), OR 0.15, 95%CI 0.11–0.20. The proportion of hospitalized patients admitted to the ICU was higher in the later cohort (103/215, 47.9%) compared with the early cohort (170/681, 25.0%, 2.77; 2.01–3.82). The reduced 30-day mortality between early and later cohorts of non-cancer inpatients (29.6% vs. 12.6%, OR 0.34; 0.22–0.53) was not paralleled in inpatients with hematologic malignancies (32.3% vs. 34.8%, OR 1.12; 0.81–1.5). Among evaluable patients, 27.3% had post COVID-19 condition. These findings will help inform evidence-based preventive and therapeutic strategies for patients with hematologic malignancies and COVID-19 diagnosis.Depto. de MedicinaFac. de MedicinaTRUEFundaciĂłn Madrileña de HematologĂ­a y HemoterapiaFundaciĂłn Leucemia y LinfomaAsociaciĂłn Madrileña de HematologĂ­a y Hemoterapiapu

    Variation revealed by SNP genotyping and morphology provides insight into the origin of the tomato

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    Tomato, Solanum lycopersicum, is divided into two widely distributed varieties: the cultivated S. lycopersicum var. lycopersicum, and the weedy S. lycopersicum var. cerasiforme. Solanum pimpinellifolium is the most closely related wild species of tomato. The roles of S. pimpinellifolium and S. l. cerasiforme during the domestication of tomato are still under debate. Some authors consider S. l. cerasiforme to be the ancestor, whereas others think that S. l. cerasiforme is an admixture of S. pimpinellifolium and the cultivated S. l. lycopersicum. It is also not clear whether the domestication occurred in the Andean region or in Mesoamerica. We characterized 272 accessions (63 S. pimpinellifolium, 106 S. l. cerasiforme, 95 S. l. lycopersicum and 8 derived from hybridization processes) were morphologically and genetically using the SolCap platform (7,414 SNPs). The two species were distinguished in a PCA analysis and displayed a rich geographic structure. Solanum lycopersicum var. cerasiforme and S. l. lycopersicum were also differentiated in the PCA and Structure analyses, which supports maintaining them as different varieties. Solanum pimpinellifolium and the Andean S. l. cerasiforme were more diverse than the non-Andean S. lycopersicum. Solanum lycopersicum var. cerasiforme was morphologically and molecularly intermediate between S. pimpinellifolium and tomato. Solanum lycopersicum var. cerasiforme, with the exception of several Ecuadorian and Mexican accessions, is composed of the products of admixture processes according to the Structure analysis. The non-admixtured S. l. cerasiforme might be similar to the ancestral cultivars from which the cultivated tomato originated, and presents remarkable morphological diversity, including fruits of up to 6 cm in diameter. The data obtained would fit a model in which a pre-domestication took place in the Andean region, with the domestication being completed in Mesoamerica. Subsequently, the Spaniards took plants from Mesoamerica to Spain and from there they were exported to the rest of the world.Blanca Postigo, JM.; Cañizares Sales, J.; Cordero Romay, L.; Pascual Bañuls, L.; Díez Niclós, MJTDJ.; Nuez Viñals, F. (2012). Variation revealed by SNP genotyping and morphology provides insight into the origin of the tomato. PLoS ONE. 7(10):1-17. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0048198S11771

    Spatiotemporal Characteristics of the Largest HIV-1 CRF02_AG Outbreak in Spain: Evidence for Onward Transmissions

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    Background and Aim: The circulating recombinant form 02_AG (CRF02_AG) is the predominant clade among the human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) non-Bs with a prevalence of 5.97% (95% Confidence Interval-CI: 5.41–6.57%) across Spain. Our aim was to estimate the levels of regional clustering for CRF02_AG and the spatiotemporal characteristics of the largest CRF02_AG subepidemic in Spain.Methods: We studied 396 CRF02_AG sequences obtained from HIV-1 diagnosed patients during 2000–2014 from 10 autonomous communities of Spain. Phylogenetic analysis was performed on the 391 CRF02_AG sequences along with all globally sampled CRF02_AG sequences (N = 3,302) as references. Phylodynamic and phylogeographic analysis was performed to the largest CRF02_AG monophyletic cluster by a Bayesian method in BEAST v1.8.0 and by reconstructing ancestral states using the criterion of parsimony in Mesquite v3.4, respectively.Results: The HIV-1 CRF02_AG prevalence differed across Spanish autonomous communities we sampled from (p &lt; 0.001). Phylogenetic analysis revealed that 52.7% of the CRF02_AG sequences formed 56 monophyletic clusters, with a range of 2–79 sequences. The CRF02_AG regional dispersal differed across Spain (p = 0.003), as suggested by monophyletic clustering. For the largest monophyletic cluster (subepidemic) (N = 79), 49.4% of the clustered sequences originated from Madrid, while most sequences (51.9%) had been obtained from men having sex with men (MSM). Molecular clock analysis suggested that the origin (tMRCA) of the CRF02_AG subepidemic was in 2002 (median estimate; 95% Highest Posterior Density-HPD interval: 1999–2004). Additionally, we found significant clustering within the CRF02_AG subepidemic according to the ethnic origin.Conclusion: CRF02_AG has been introduced as a result of multiple introductions in Spain, following regional dispersal in several cases. We showed that CRF02_AG transmissions were mostly due to regional dispersal in Spain. The hot-spot for the largest CRF02_AG regional subepidemic in Spain was in Madrid associated with MSM transmission risk group. The existence of subepidemics suggest that several spillovers occurred from Madrid to other areas. CRF02_AG sequences from Hispanics were clustered in a separate subclade suggesting no linkage between the local and Hispanic subepidemics

    Abstracts from the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Meeting 2016

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