188 research outputs found
Feed the Future Mali: Scaling up technological and institutional livestock innovations
United States Agency for International Developmen
Serological and molecular investigation for brucellosis in swine in selected districts of Uganda
Brucellosis is a notifiable zoonotic disease affecting livestock, humans and wildlife in Uganda. Human brucellosis cases are frequently reported and the increasing incidence is suggestive of increasing disease in the livestock population. Pigs are among the livestock species that can be infected with human pathogenic Brucella suis biovars 1 and 3 and can be a significant source of brucellosis for humans. Uganda has a rapidly growing pig population and the pork consumption per capita is the highest in East Africa. The objective of this work was to determine the seroprevalence of brucellosis in Ugandan pigs
Comorbidité lèpre et tuberculose: à propos de six cas
Objectif : Rapporter 6 observations de co-infection de la lèpre et de la tuberculose. Méthodes : Il s’agissait d’une série rétrospective transversale à visée descriptive réalisée au Centre Hospitalier de l’Ordre de Malte à Dakar (Sénégal) sur une période de 15 ans (2001-2016).Résultats : Six dossiers étaient étudiés. La moyenne d’âge des patients était de 29 ans ± 10,4 [15 - 42 ans] avec un sex ratio H/F de 2 (4 hommes pour 2 femmes). Quatre patients avaient une lèpre lépromateuse et deux une lèpre borderline (boderline lépromateuse). Le délai médian d’évolution entre la tuberculose et la lèpre était de 32 mois [5 mois- 48 mois]. Les formes de tuberculose retrouvées étaient des formes purement pulmonaires dans 4 cas et multifocale (pleural et ganglionnaire ; pleural puis neurologique) dans 2 cas. Les facteurs de risque de survenue de la tuberculose étaient la corticothérapie générale au long cours, la malnutrition, l’anémie, le tabagisme et la grossesse. La sérologie antirétrovirale à VIH était négative chez tous les patients. Les traitements de la lèpre et de la tuberculose étaient prescrits selon les protocoles de l’OMS. Tous les patients étaient déclarés guéris de la lèpre et de la tuberculose.Conclusion : la survenue de la lèpre dans sa forme multibacillaire sur un terrain immunitaire déficitaire pourrait favoriser soit la réactivation d'une tuberculose latente sous-jacente ou une surinfection de la lèpre par Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Il paraît donc important de rechercher activement la tuberculose durant le screening des patients atteints de lèpre surtout lépromateus
Neural feedback strategies to improve grasping coordination in neuromusculoskeletal prostheses
Conventional prosthetic arms suffer from poor controllability and lack of sensory feedback. Owing to the absence of tactile sensory information, prosthetic users must rely on incidental visual and auditory cues. In this study, we investigated the effect of providing tactile perception on motor coordination during routine grasping and grasping under uncertainty. Three transhumeral amputees were implanted with an osseointegrated percutaneous implant system for direct skeletal attachment and bidirectional communication with implanted neuromuscular electrodes. This neuromusculoskeletal prosthesis is a novel concept of artificial limb replacement that allows to extract control signals from electrodes implanted on viable muscle tissue, and to stimulate severed afferent nerve fibers to provide somatosensory feedback. Subjects received tactile feedback using three biologically inspired stimulation paradigms while performing a pick and lift test. The grasped object was instrumented to record grasping and lifting forces and its weight was either constant or unexpectedly changed in between trials. The results were also compared to the no-feedback control condition. Our findings confirm, in line with the neuroscientific literature, that somatosensory feedback is necessary for motor coordination during grasping. Our results also indicate that feedback is more relevant under uncertainty, and its effectiveness can be influenced by the selected neuromodulation paradigm and arguably also the prior experience of the prosthesis user
The scale dependence and structure of convergence fields preceding the initiation of deep convection
Links between convergence and convection are poor in global models, and poor representation of convection is the source of many model biases in the tropics. State-of-the-art convection-permitting simulations allow us to analyze realistic convection statistically. The analysis of fractal dimension is used to show that in convection-permitting simulations (grid spacings 1.5, 4, and 12 km) of the West African monsoon, 50% of deep convective initiations occur in the near vicinity of low-level boundary layer convergence lines that are orientated along the mean wind. In these simulations, more than 80% of the initiations occur within large-scale (300 × 300 km) convergence, with some 20% in large-scale divergence, and almost all cases occur within local scale (60 × 60 km) convergence. The behavior alters in a simulation with a convection scheme and a grid spacing of 12 km; initiation is less frequent over convergence lines, and there is less dependency on high-magnitude low-level local convergence. Key Points Fifty percent of storms initiate along convergence lines Most initiations occur in large and local scale convergence Parameterized convection exhibits a weaker dependence on strong convergence ©2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved
The observed diurnal cycle of low-level stratus clouds over southern West Africa: a case study
This study presents the first detailed observational analysis of
the complete diurnal cycle of stratiform low-level clouds (LLC) and involved
atmospheric processes over southern West Africa (SWA). The data used here
were collected during the comprehensive DACCIWA
(Dynamics-Aerosol-Chemistry-Cloud-Interactions in West Africa) ground-based
campaign, which aimed at monitoring LLC characteristics and capturing the
wide range of atmospheric conditions related to the West African monsoon
flow. In this study, in situ and remote sensing measurements from the
supersite near Savè (Benin) collected during a typical day, which is
characterized by the onset of a nocturnal low-level jet (NLLJ) and the
formation of LLC, are analyzed. The associated dynamic and thermodynamic
conditions allow the identification of five different phases related to the
LLC diurnal cycle: the stable, jet, stratus I, stratus II, and convective
phases. The analysis of relative humidity tendency shows that cooling is a
dominant process for LLC formation, which leads to a continuous increase in
relative humidity at a maximum rate of 6 % h−1, until finally saturation is reached and LLC form with a
cloud-base height near the height of NLLJ maximum. Results of heat budget
analysis illustrate that horizontal cold-air advection, related to the
maritime inflow, which brings the cool maritime air mass and a prominent NLLJ
wind profile, has the dominant role in the observed strong cooling of
−1.2 K h−1 during the jet phase. The contribution from horizontal
cold advection is quantified to be up to 68 %, while radiative cooling
and sensible heat flux divergence both contribute 16 % to the observed heat
budget below the NLLJ maximum. After the LLC form (stratus phases I and II),
turbulent mixing is an important factor leading to the cooling below the
cloud base, while strong radiative cooling at the cloud top helps to maintain
thick stratus.</p
Evaluation of SMN Protein, Transcript, and Copy Number in the Biomarkers for Spinal Muscular Atrophy (BforSMA) Clinical Study
BACKGROUND: The universal presence of a gene (SMN2) nearly identical to the mutated SMN1 gene responsible for Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) has proved an enticing incentive to therapeutics development. Early disappointments from putative SMN-enhancing agent clinical trials have increased interest in improving the assessment of SMN expression in blood as an early "biomarker" of treatment effect. METHODS: A cross-sectional, single visit, multi-center design assessed SMN transcript and protein in 108 SMA and 22 age and gender-matched healthy control subjects, while motor function was assessed by the Modified Hammersmith Functional Motor Scale (MHFMS). Enrollment selectively targeted a broad range of SMA subjects that would permit maximum power to distinguish the relative influence of SMN2 copy number, SMA type, present motor function, and age. RESULTS: SMN2 copy number and levels of full-length SMN2 transcripts correlated with SMA type, and like SMN protein levels, were lower in SMA subjects compared to controls. No measure of SMN expression correlated strongly with MHFMS. A key finding is that SMN2 copy number, levels of transcript and protein showed no correlation with each other. CONCLUSION: This is a prospective study that uses the most advanced techniques of SMN transcript and protein measurement in a large selectively-recruited cohort of individuals with SMA. There is a relationship between measures of SMN expression in blood and SMA type, but not a strong correlation to motor function as measured by the MHFMS. Low SMN transcript and protein levels in the SMA subjects relative to controls suggest that these measures of SMN in accessible tissues may be amenable to an "early look" for target engagement in clinical trials of putative SMN-enhancing agents. Full length SMN transcript abundance may provide insight into the molecular mechanism of phenotypic variation as a function of SMN2 copy number. TRIAL REGISTRY: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00756821
Animal-related factors associated with moderate-to-severe diarrhea in children younger than five years in western Kenya: A matched case-control study
Background Diarrheal disease remains among the leading causes of global mortality in children younger than 5 years. Exposure to domestic animals may be a risk factor for diarrheal disease. The objectives of this study were to identify animal-related exposures associated with cases of moderate-to-severe diarrhea (MSD) in children in rural western Kenya, and to identify the major zoonotic enteric pathogens present in domestic animals residing in the homesteads of case and control children. Methodology/Principal findings We characterized animal-related exposures in a subset of case and control children (n = 73 pairs matched on age, sex and location) with reported animal presence at home enrolled in the Global Enteric Multicenter Study in western Kenya, and analysed these for an association with MSD. We identified potentially zoonotic enteric pathogens in pooled fecal specimens collected from domestic animals resident at children’s homesteads. Variables that were associated with decreased risk of MSD were washing hands after animal contact (matched odds ratio [MOR] = 0.2; 95% CI 0.08–0.7), and presence of adult sheep that were not confined in a pen overnight (MOR = 0.1; 0.02–0.5). Variables that were associated with increased risk of MSD were increasing number of sheep owned (MOR = 1.2; 1.0–1.5), frequent observation of fresh rodent excreta (feces/urine) outside the house (MOR = 7.5; 1.5–37.2), and participation of the child in providing water to chickens (MOR = 3.8; 1.2–12.2). Of 691 pooled specimens collected from 2,174 domestic animals, 159 pools (23%) tested positive for one or more potentially zoonotic enteric pathogens (Campylobacter jejuni, C. coli, non-typhoidal Salmonella, diarrheagenic E. coli, Giardia, Cryptosporidium, or rotavirus). We did not find any association between the presence of particular pathogens in household animals, and MSD in children. Conclusions and significance Public health agencies should continue to promote frequent hand washing, including after animal contact, to reduce the risk of MSD. Future studies should address specific causal relations of MSD with sheep and chicken husbandry practices, and with the presence of rodents
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