340 research outputs found
Pavimentazioni stradali in calcestruzzo: una scelta sostenibile
La realizzazione di pavimentazioni stradali in
calcestruzzo costituisce una tecnologia ampiamente
sperimentata e applicata allâestero,
ma non ancora diffusa in Italia. Le pavimentazioni
in calcestruzzo rappresentano un
ottimo investimento tecnico, vista lâelevata
durabilitĂ e la ridotta manutenzione richiesta.
Stati Uniti, Canada, Germania, Austria,
Belgio, Olanda e Regno Unito hanno maturato
esperienze decennali e tuttora svolgono
ricerche volte al raggiungimento di nuovi
obiettivi quali la sicurezza e la mitigazione
della congestione stradale.
Lâimpiego del calcestruzzo offre una valida
alternativa alle soluzioni in conglomerato bituminoso,
per una mobilitĂ piĂč sostenibile,
che riduca il proprio impatto sociale, economico
e ambientale
Conflict of interest regulation in European parliaments: Studying the evolution of complex regulatory regimes
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.The growing complexity of parliamentary ethics regulation adopted over the last decades makes the systematic examination of its nature and the rationales underpinning regulatory choices an important endeavor. In this paper we introduce conceptualizations and measurements of conflict of interest (COI) regulation directed toward assuring the impartial and unbiased decisionmaking of national parliamentarians. We distinguish the strictness of rules, the nature of enforcement, sanctions, and transparency requirements as core elements defining COI regimes. Applying our framework to 27 European democracies, we select two cases for in-depth analysis in which legislators chose very different solutions in response to growing pressures to regulate themselves, to inductively explore the drivers underpinning the choice of COI mechanisms: the United Kingdom, which adopted a highly transparency-oriented regime, and Belgium, which adopted a highly sanction-oriented COI regime. Echoing neo-institutionalist perspectives, the longitudinal analyses indicate how the two democraciesâ different institutional environments shape distinct answers to similar functional pressures.European Research CouncilCollege of Social Sciences and International Studies, University of Exete
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Diagnostic accuracy of prenatal ultrasound in identifying the level of the lesion in fetuses with open spina bifida: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
INTRODUCTION: The role of prenatal ultrasound in correctly identifying the level of the lesion in fetuses with open spina bifida has yet to be determined. The primary aim of this systematic review was to report the diagnostic accuracy of ultrasound in determining the level of the lesion in fetuses with open spina bifida. The secondary aim was to elucidate whether prenatal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) improves the diagnostic performance of prenatal imaging in correctly identifying the level of the lesion. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Inclusion criteria were studies reporting the agreement between ultrasound, MRI and postnatal or post-mortem assessment of fetuses with spina bifida. Agreement was defined as: complete (when the upper level of the lesion detected prenatally was the same recorded at postnatal or post-mortem evaluation), within one (when the upper level of the lesion recorded prenatally was within one vertebral body higher or lower than that reported postnatally) and within two vertebral bodies (when the upper level of the lesion recorded prenatally was within two vertebral bodies higher or lower than that reported postnatally or postmortem evaluation). Meta-analyses of proportions were used to combine data. RESULTS: Fourteen studies (655 fetuses) were included. Ultrasound was able to identify the correct level of the lesion in 40.9% (95% CI 26.9-55.6) of cases. The upper level of the lesion recorded on ultrasound was within one vertebral body in 76.2% (95% CI 65.0-85.9) of cases, while within two segments in 92.4% (95% CI 84.3-97.7). Fetal MRI detected the exact level of the lesion in 42.5% (95% CI 35.9-45.2) of cases; the level of the lesion recorded on MRI was higher in 26.4% (95% CI 20.0-33.3) of cases and lower in 32.4% (95% CI 25.5-39.7) than that confirmed postnatally. The upper level of the lesion recorded on MRI was within one vertebral body in 76.2% (95% CI 65.9-85.2) of cases, while within two segments in 94.2% (95% CI 90.2-97.2). CONCLUSIONS: Both ultrasound and MRI have a moderate diagnostic accuracy in identify the upper level of the lesion in fetuses with open spina bifida
Proteomic profiling of retinoblastoma-derived exosomes reveals potential biomarkers of vitreous seeding
Retinoblastoma (RB) is the most common tumor of the eye in early childhood. Although recent advances in conservative treatment have greatly improved the visual outcome, local tumor control remains difficult in the presence of massive vitreous seeding. Traditional biopsy has long been considered unsafe in RB, due to the risk of extraocular spread. Thus, the identification of new biomarkers is crucial to design safer diagnostic and more effective therapeutic approaches. Exosomes, membrane-derived nanovesicles that are secreted abundantly by aggressive tumor cells and that can be isolated from several biological fluids, represent an interesting alternative for the detection of tumor-associated biomarkers. In this study, we defined the protein signature of exosomes released by RB tumors (RBT) and vitreous seeding (RBVS) primary cell lines by high resolution mass spectrometry. A total of 5666 proteins were identified. Among these, 5223 and 3637 were expressed in exosomes RBT and one RBVS group, respectively. Gene enrichment analysis of exclusively and differentially expressed proteins and network analysis identified in RBVS exosomes upregulated proteins specifically related to invasion and metastasis, such as proteins involved in extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling and interaction, resistance to anoikis and the metabolism/catabolism of glucose and amino acids
Risk of fetal loss following amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling in twin pregnancy: systematic review and metaâanalysis
Objective
To assess the rate of fetal loss following amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling (CVS) in twin pregnancy.
Methods
MEDLINE, EMBASE and Cochrane databases were searched for studies reporting procedureârelated complications following amniocentesis or CVS in twin pregnancy. The primary outcome was the rate of procedureârelated fetal loss. The secondary outcomes were fetal loss occurring before 24âweeks of gestation and fetal loss occurring within 4âweeks after the procedure. Headâtoâhead metaâanalyses were used to compare directly each outcome, between women undergoing amniocentesis and those not undergoing amniocentesis and between women undergoing CVS and those not undergoing CVS, and to compute pooled risk differences (RD) between women exposed and those not exposed to each invasive procedure. Additionally, metaâanalyses of proportions were used to estimate the pooled rates of each of the three outcomes in women undergoing amniocentesis or CVS and in controls.
Results
Sixteen studies (3419 twin pregnancies undergoing and 2517 not undergoing an invasive procedure) were included. Headâtoâhead metaâanalyses comparing directly twin pregnancies undergoing and those not undergoing amniocentesis showed a higher risk for overall fetal loss in those undergoing amniocentesis (odds ratio (OR), 1.46 (Pâ=â0.04); RD, 0.013 (Pâ=â0.04)), while there was no difference in the risk of either fetal loss before 24âweeks of gestation (OR, 1.59 (Pâ=â0.06); RD, 0.010 (Pâ=â0.11)) or fetal loss within 4âweeks after the procedure (OR, 1.38 (Pâ=â0.3); RD, 0.003 (Pâ=â0.8)). Overall, the pooled rate of fetal loss was 2.4% (95%âCI, 1.4â3.6%) in twin pregnancies undergoing amniocentesis compared with 2.4% (95%âCI, 0.9â4.6%) in those not undergoing amniocentesis. Headâtoâhead metaâanalyses directly comparing twin pregnancies undergoing and those not undergoing CVS showed no significant difference in either overall fetal loss (OR, 1.61 (Pâ=â0.5); RD, 0.003 (Pâ=â0.8)) or fetal loss before 24âweeks of gestation (OR, 1.61 (Pâ=â0.5); RD, 0.003 (Pâ=â0.8)). Overall, the pooled rate of fetal loss was 2.0% (95%âCI, 0.0â6.5%) in twin pregnancies undergoing CVS compared with 1.8% (95%âCI, 0.3â4.2%) in those not undergoing CVS.
Conclusion
The risk of fetal loss following amniocentesis and CVS in twins is lower than reported previously and the rate of fetal loss before 24âweeks of gestation, or within 4âweeks after the procedure, did not differ from the background risk in twin pregnancy not undergoing invasive prenatal testing. These data can guide prenatal counseling for twin pregnancies undergoing invasive procedures
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Counseling in fetal medicine: Congenital cytomegalovirus infection.
Although the clinical work-up of CMV in pregnancy has gradually become more accurate, counseling for CMV is still challenging. Despite the potential feasibility of universal prenatal serological screening, its introduction in prenatal diagnosis continues to raise concerns related to its real cost-effectiveness. Contextually, anticipating the confirmation of fetal infection earlier in pregnancy is one of the most pressing issues to reduce the parental psychological burden. Amniocentesis is still the gold standard and recent data have demonstrated that it could be performed before 20Â weeks of gestation, provided that at least 8Â weeks have elapsed from the presumed date of maternal seroconversion. New approaches, such as chorionic villus sampling (CVS) and virome DNA, even if not yet validated as confirmation of fetal infection, have been studied alternatively to amniocentesis to reduce the time-interval from maternal seroconversion and the amniocentesis results. Risk stratification for sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) and long-term sequelae should be provided according to the prognostic predictors. Nevertheless, in the era of valacyclovir, maternal high-dose therapy, mainly for first trimester infections, can reduce the risk of vertical transmission and increase the likelihood of asymptomatic newborns, but it is still unclear whether valacyclovir continues to exert a beneficial effect on fetuses with positive amniocentesis. This review provides updated evidence-based key counseling points with GRADE recommendations
A Stochastic Model of Latently Infected Cell Reactivation and Viral Blip Generation in Treated HIV Patients
Motivated by viral persistence in HIV+ patients on long-term anti-retroviral treatment (ART), we present a stochastic model of HIV viral dynamics in the blood stream. We consider the hypothesis that the residual viremia in patients on ART can be explained principally by the activation of cells latently infected by HIV before the initiation of ART and that viral blips (clinically-observed short periods of detectable viral load) represent large deviations from the mean. We model the system as a continuous-time, multi-type branching process. Deriving equations for the probability generating function we use a novel numerical approach to extract the probability distributions for latent reservoir sizes and viral loads. We find that latent reservoir extinction-time distributions underscore the importance of considering reservoir dynamics beyond simply the half-life. We calculate blip amplitudes and frequencies by computing complete viral load probability distributions, and study the duration of viral blips via direct numerical simulation. We find that our model qualitatively reproduces short small-amplitude blips detected in clinical studies of treated HIV infection. Stochastic models of this type provide insight into treatment-outcome variability that cannot be found from deterministic models
Party-group relations in new southern European democracies in the crisis era
UID/CPO/04627/2013
PTDC/IVC-CPO/1864/2014publishersversionpublishe
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