1,234 research outputs found

    Marooned plants : vernacular naming practices in the Mascarene Islands

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    This article explores possible histories of plant exchanges and plant naming tied to the slave trade between East Africa, Madagascar and the Mascarene Islands. The subsequent 'marronnage' of slaves on these islands - their escape from captivity, sometimes to live in mountain hideouts - continues to inspire cultural references. Inspired by the use of the adjective 'marron/marronne' for a number of plants on Reunion Island, we compile evidence of plant exchanges and plant naming from ecological records, historical accounts and the use of descriptive, emotive or symbolic vernacular names as clues for deepening our knowledge of historical societies and environments. The evidence from the Mascarenes opens a window into the role of the African diaspora in plant introduction, diffusion, domestication and cultivation. We document that maroons relied on a variety of wild, escaped and cultivated plants for their subsistence. We also highlight the role of marronnage in the popular and literary imaginary, with the result that many plants are named 'marron/marrone' in a metaphorical sense. Finally, we identify a few plants that may have been transported, cultivated, or encouraged in one way or another by maroons. Along the way, we reflect on the pitfalls and opportunities of such interdisciplinary work

    Hyperglycemia and Hyperlipidemia Act Synergistically to Induce Renal Disease in LDL Receptor-Deficient BALB Mice

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    Diabetic nephropathy is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease in Western countries, but only a portion of diabetic patients develop diabetic nephropathy. Dyslipidemia represents an important aspect of the metabolic imbalance in diabetic patients. In this study, we addressed the impact of combined hyperlipidemia and hyperglycemia on renal pathology. Kidneys from wildtype (WT) or LDL receptor-deficient BALB/cBy mice (BALB. LDLR -/-) were examined at 22 weeks of age. Diabetes was induced by administration of streptozotocin and mice were randomly assigned to either standard chow or Western diet. Chow fed BALB. LDLR -/- mice did not demonstrate renal abnormalities, whereas BALB. LDLR -/- mice fed a Western diet showed occasional glomerular and tubulointerstitial foam cells. Diabetic WT mice had modestly increased glomerular cellularity and extracellular matrix. Hyperlipidemic and diabetic BALB. LDLR -/- mice exhibited an increase in glomerular cellularity and extracellular matrix, accumulation of glomerular and tubulointerstitial foam cells and mesangial lipid deposits. The tubular epithelium demonstrated pronounced lipid induced tubular degeneration with increased tubular epithelial cell turnover. Hyperlipidemia and hyperglycemia seem to act synergistically in inducing renal injury in the BALB. LDLR-/- mouse. This model of diabetic nephropathy is unique in its development of tubular lesions and may represent a good model for hyperlipidemia-exacerbated diabetic nephropathy. Copyright (C) 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel

    Comparison between anopheline mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) caught using different methods in a malaria endemic area of Papua New Guinea

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    The mosquito sampling efficiency of CDC (Centers for Disease Control) miniature light traps hung adjacent to mosquito nets, was compared with that of both indoor and outdoor human-bait collections in ten villages in the Wosera area of Papua New Guinea. The most frequently collected anopheline in the matched indoor and light trap samples was Anopheles koliensis Owen, followed by A. punctulatusDönitz, A. karwari (James), A. farauti Laveran (sensu lato), A. longirostris Brug and A. bancroftii Giles. All species were much less frequent in the light traps than in landing catches. The hypothesis that the numbers of mosquitoes in light traps are proportional to human landing catches was examined using regression models that allowed for sampling error in both entomological measurements. Light traps under-sampled A. punctulatus and A. farautis.l. at high densities. The models indicated that the ratio of light trap to landing catch females of A. koliensis and A. karwari increased with increasing mosquito density. Light trap catches of A. longirostris were proportional to indoor landing rates but when outdoor landing rates were high this species was under-sampled by light traps. Numbers of A. bancroftii in light traps were found to be proportional to those in outdoor landing catches, but were negatively related to those attempting to bite indoors. Circumsporozoite positivity rates for both Plasmodium falciparum Welch and P. vivax (Grassi & Feletti) in A. punctulatus and A. farauti s.l. were significantly higher in light trap collections than in either indoor or outdoor landing catches, suggesting that light traps may selectively sample older mosquitoes of these specie

    Geometric reconstruction methods for electron tomography

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    Electron tomography is becoming an increasingly important tool in materials science for studying the three-dimensional morphologies and chemical compositions of nanostructures. The image quality obtained by many current algorithms is seriously affected by the problems of missing wedge artefacts and nonlinear projection intensities due to diffraction effects. The former refers to the fact that data cannot be acquired over the full 180∘180^\circ tilt range; the latter implies that for some orientations, crystalline structures can show strong contrast changes. To overcome these problems we introduce and discuss several algorithms from the mathematical fields of geometric and discrete tomography. The algorithms incorporate geometric prior knowledge (mainly convexity and homogeneity), which also in principle considerably reduces the number of tilt angles required. Results are discussed for the reconstruction of an InAs nanowire

    Nurses\u27 Alumnae Association Bulletin - Volume 7 Number 11

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    Anna M. Shafer Barton Memorial Division Births Changes in the Ophthalmology Division Change of Address Clara Melville Fund Continental Tour Deceased Digest of Meetings Inter-County Hospitalization Plan Katherine Childs\u27 Letter Lost Members Marriages Miscellaneous Nursing Home Committee\u27s Report Physical Advantages President James L. Kauffman\u27s Letter President\u27s Greeting Private Duty Section Prizes Relief Fund School Nursing Silhouette of a Public Health Nurse Rooming-in of Infant with Mother Staff Activities The Student White Haven Divisio

    Area effects of bednet use in a malaria-endemic area in Papua New Guinea

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    Relationships between area coverage with insecticide-free bednets and prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum were investigated in 7 community-based surveys over a 33-month period in 1990-1993 in 6 villages in the Wosera area of Papua New Guinea. Spatial patterns in circumsporozoite rates for P. Falciparum, P. vivax isomorphs K210 and K247, and P. malariae, and the proportions of mosquito blood meals positive for specific human, goat, cat, dog and pig antigens were determined using ELISAs. P. falciparum prevalence in humans was better explained by bednet coverage in the immediate vicinity than by personal protection alone. Circumsporozoite rates for both P. falciparum and P. vivax were also inversely related to coverage with bednets. There was some increase in zoophagy in areas with high coverage, but relatively little effect on the human blood index or on overall mosquito densities. In this setting, protracted use of untreated bednets apparently reduces sporozoite rates, and the associated effects on prevalence are greater than can be accounted for by personal protection. Even at high bednet coverage most anophelines feed on human hosts, so the decreased sporozoite rates are likely to be largely due to reduction of mosquito survival. This finding highlights the importance of local vector ecology for outcomes of bednet programmes and suggests that area effects of untreated bednets should be reassessed in other setting

    Episodic memories among irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients: An important aspect of the IBS symptom experience

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    Objective: Some IBS patients possess detailed memories of the events surrounding their bowel symptom onset ( episodic memories ). In this exploratory study we sought to: (1) examine memory relationship with gastrointestinal (GI) symptom severity, extraintestinal symptoms, and mood; (2) qualitatively explore memory valence and content in IBS patients with or without episodic memories. Methods: Referral IBS patients Results: 14/29 (48.3%) of IBS subjects endorsed episodic memories of IBS symptom onset, often GI infections/enteritis (35.7%). Recall of the exact year (69%) and month (60%) of symptom onset were common. Episodic memories were associated with greater IBS symptom severity/bother, higher anxiety/depression, and poorer HRQOL. Though AMT and SCEPT memory specificity were not different based on episodic memories, overgeneralization to negatively-valenced cues in the AMT was associated with more severe IBS in those without episodic memory. Qualitative analysis revealed no observable differences in topic focus of IBS patients with and without episodic memories. Conclusions: IBS patients often endorse episodic memories associated with symptom onset, and this recall seems to associate with more severe symptoms. Overgeneralization responses to negative stimuli may lead to worse bowel symptoms in those without episodic memories. IBS memory specificity may associate with qualitative differences in processing psychosocial experiences and might be important to IBS pathophysiology

    Localization of PDGF α-receptor in the developing and mature human kidney

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    Localization of PDGF α-receptor in the developing and mature human kidney. Using in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry we describe the renal localization of the PDGF α-receptor. PDGF α-receptor mRNA was uniformly present in human metanephric kidney in interstitial cells and vascular arcades that course through the blastema. PDGF α-receptor mRNA was present in some mesangial structures in early glomeruli, but was largely lost as glomeruli matured. It was present in adventitial fibroblasts, but usually not in vascular smooth muscle cells or endothelial cells of the fetal vasculature. This pattern persisted in adult kidneys, with extensive expression of mRNA by interstitial cells and only occasional expression by mesangial cells. All in situ hybridization findings were corroborated by immunocytochemistry. Double immunolabeling confirmed the rare expression of the PDGF α-receptor protein by vascular smooth muscle cells and the absence of its expression by endothelial cells. Given that both PDGF A- and B-chain can promote smooth muscle cell and fibroblast migration and proliferation and that both signal through the PDGF α-receptor, these data suggest that PDGF α-receptor may play important roles in the early vasculogenesis of the fetal kidney as well as in the pathogenesis of renal interstitial fibrosis

    The cyclin kinase inhibitor p21CIP1/WAF1 limits glomerular epithelial cell proliferation in experimental glomerulonephritis

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    The cyclin kinase inhibitor p21CIP1/WAF1 limits glomerular epithelial cell proliferation in experimental glomerulonephritis.BackgroundDuring glomerulogenesis, visceral glomerular epithelial cells (VECs) exit the cell cycle and become terminally differentiated and quiescent. In contrast to other resident glomerular cells, VECs undergo little if any proliferation in response to injury. However, the mechanisms for this remain unclear. Cell proliferation is controlled by cell-cycle regulatory proteins where the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21Cip1,WAF1 (p21) inhibits cell proliferation and is required for differentiation of many nonrenal cell types.MethodsTo test the hypothesis that p21 is required to maintain a differentiated and quiescent VEC phenotype, experimental glomerulonephritis was induced in p21 knockout (-/-) and p21 wild-type (+/+) mice with antiglomerular antibody. DNA synthesis (proliferating cell nuclear antigen, bromodeoxyuridine staining), VEC proliferation (multilayers of cells in Bowman's space), matrix accumulation (periodic acid-Schiff, silver staining), apoptosis (TUNEL), and renal function (serum urea nitrogen) were studied on days 5 and 14 (N = 6 per time point). VECs were identified by location, morphology, ezrin staining, and electron microscopy. VEC differentiation was measured by staining for Wilms’ tumor-1 gene.ResultsKidneys from unmanipulated p21-/- mice were histologically normal and did not have increased DNA synthesis, suggesting that p21 was not required for the induction of VEC terminal differentiation. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen and bromodeoxyuridine staining was increased 4.3- and 3.3-fold, respectively, in p21-/- mice with glomerulonephritis (P < 0.0001 vs. p21+/+ mice). At each time point, VEC proliferation was also increased in nephritic p21-/- mice (P < 0.0001 vs. p21+/+ mice). VEC re-entry into the cell cycle was associated with the loss of Wilms’ tumor-1 gene staining. Nephritic p21-/- mice had increased extracellular matrix protein accumulation and apoptosis and decreased renal function (serum urea nitrogen) compared with p21+/+ mice (P < 0.001).ConclusionThese results show that the cyclin kinase inhibitor p21 is not required by VECs to attain a terminally differentiated VEC phenotype. However, the loss of p21, in disease states, is associated with VEC re-entry into the cell cycle and the development of a dedifferentiated proliferative phenotype
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