14 research outputs found

    Factores de crecimiento plaquetarios en el tratamiento de la tendinitis del tendón flexor digital superficial de un caballo de carreras

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    La tendinitis es una patología frecuente en los caballos de carreras. Su resolución no quirúrgica se basa en la disminución de la intensidad del entrenamiento del animal y en un tratamiento médico adecuado, que consiste en la administración de antiinflamatorios tanto sistémicos como tópicos, así como diuréticos para disminuir el edema, acompañados de vendajes y duchas frías. Además de este tratamiento conservador, se esta utilizando en medicina deportiva equina la infiltración local de plasma autólogo rico en factores de crecimiento plaquetarios (PRP), con muy buenos resultados. Para explicar en qué consiste, cómo se lleva a cabo y qué efectos tiene este tratamiento, se parte del caso clínico de una yegua de carreras PSI (pura sangre inglés), que presenta una tendinitis aguda en el tendón flexor digital superficial. Se reduce el nivel de entrenamiento y se instaura el tratamiento médico conservador descrito, junto con la infiltración local de PRP, que se obtiene a partir de la sangre de la yegua mediante un protocolo de sucesivas centrifugaciones. La pauta de tratamiento es de una infiltración semanal durante tres semanas consecutivas, tras las cuales una reevaluación ecográfica muestra una aparente recuperación macroscópica del tendón, que se revela completa en el tercer control ecográfico realizado un mes más tarde. Se concluye que la infiltración local de PRP, como complemento de las medidas de manejo y terapéuticas adecuadas, parece mostrar muy buenos resultados, favoreciendo el proceso de cicatrización y recuperación tisular y posibilitando el retorno del animal a una vida deportiva de calidad.Tendonitis is a frequent disease in racehorses. Its not-surgery resolution is based on decrease of the training intensity and on correct medical treatment, which consists in systemic antiISSN: 1988-2688 RCCV VOL. 3 (2). 2009 253 inflammatory, diuretics to decrease swelling, topic treatment with dressings and cold showers. Furthermore, it has being already used autologous plateled riched plasma (PRP) in equine sports medicine, with very good outcome. To explain this treatment, we resort to case report of a Thoroughbred (TB) racehorse mare with an acute superficial digital flexor tendonitis. We reduce her training level and treat with the classical medical therapy combined with PRP injection, which is obtained by means of successively centrifugations of the mare’s blood. The guideline was a local infiltration each week during three weeks. After that, an ultrasonography reevaluation shows an apparent macroscopic tendon recuperation that is full one month later. As a conclusion, this is a good outcome example of local PRP infiltration as a complement of correct therapy and management, which improves the tissue recuperation and makes possible animal return to high quality sports live

    Towards a holistic understanding of pastoralism

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    Pastoralism is a globally-important livelihood, with large social, environmental and economic importance across much of our planet. Yet, it is also a vulnerable practice with widespread crises, urgently calling for better systemic understanding. The current disciplinary compartmentalization of research not only hampers this but allows perpetuation of unfortunate misconceptions. Furthermore, a long-standing marginalization of the livelihood prevails, with pastoralism being largely overlooked in international environmental and economic forums or sustainability agendas. Here we call for transformative approaches to pastoralism research that can advance an integrated understanding of these social-ecological systems through a comparative lens. We develop a framework that uses: i) timescales from the distant past to the present, ii)social, economic and environmental dimensions, and iii) diverse geographic contexts and scales, to capture emerging properties allowing for cross-cultural comparisons. We provide specific guidelines for formally developing a coherent set of sustainability indicators that are transferable across time and space, and can track sustainability. In an exploratory exercise, we also show that very distinct pastoralist systems have undergone similar transitions across time, approaching critical thresholds and then either collapsing or recovering. An integrated view of the interactions between the environmental, social and economic dimensions of these transitions allows for an improved understanding of potential tipping points, hence supporting more proactive and informed decision-making. We conclude that the need for a paradigm shift in pastoralism science and policy is pressing. Determining when, where and how is pastoralism not only sustainable, but also the most adaptive livelihood, has become a priority. This paper is based on Manzano et al. (2021).Peer reviewe

    Occurrence of Hepatitis E Virus in Pigs and Pork Cuts and Organs at the Time of Slaughter, Spain, 2017

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    Zoonotic hepatitis E, mainly caused by hepatitis E virus (HEV) genotype (gt) 3, is a foodborne disease that has emerged in Europe in recent decades. The main animal reservoir for genotype 3 is domestic pigs. Pig liver and liver derivates are considered the major risk products, and studies focused on the presence of HEV in pig muscles are scarce. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the presence of HEV in different organs and tissues of 45 apparently healthy pigs from nine Spanish slaughterhouses (50% national production) that could enter into the food supply chain. Anti-HEV antibodies were evaluated in serum by an ELISA test. Ten samples from each animal were analyzed for the presence of HEV RNA by reverse transcription real-time PCR (RT-qPCR). The overall seroprevalence obtained was 73.3% (33/45). From the 450 samples analyzed, a total of 26 RT-qPCR positive samples were identified in the liver (7/45), feces (6/45), kidney (5/45), heart (4/45), serum (3/45), and diaphragm (1/45). This is the first report on detection of HEV RNA in kidney and heart samples of naturally infected pigs. HEV RNA detection was negative for rib, bacon, lean ham, and loin samples. These findings indicate that pig meat could be considered as a low risk material for foodborne HEV infection.This study was partially supported by the RTA2014-00024-C04 from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Innovation. NG and DR-L received a research grant by INTERPORC.S

    Occurrence of Hepatitis E Virus in Pigs and Pork Cuts and Organs at the Time of Slaughter, Spain, 2017

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    Zoonotic hepatitis E, mainly caused by hepatitis E virus (HEV) genotype (gt) 3, is a foodborne disease that has emerged in Europe in recent decades. The main animal reservoir for genotype 3 is domestic pigs. Pig liver and liver derivates are considered the major risk products, and studies focused on the presence of HEV in pig muscles are scarce. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the presence of HEV in different organs and tissues of 45 apparently healthy pigs from nine Spanish slaughterhouses (50% national production) that could enter into the food supply chain. Anti-HEV antibodies were evaluated in serum by an ELISA test. Ten samples from each animal were analyzed for the presence of HEV RNA by reverse transcription realtime PCR (RT-qPCR). The overall seroprevalence obtained was 73.3% (33/45). From the 450 samples analyzed, a total of 26 RT-qPCR positive samples were identified in the liver (7/45), feces (6/45), kidney (5/45), heart (4/45), serum (3/45), and diaphragm (1/45). This is the first report on detection of HEV RNA in kidney and heart samples of naturally infected pigs. HEV RNA detection was negative for rib, bacon, lean ham, and loin samples. These findings indicate that pig meat could be considered as a low risk material for foodborne HEV infection.Fil: García, Nerea. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Hernández, Marta. Universidad de Burgos; EspañaFil: Gutierrez Boada, Maialen. Universidad de Burgos; EspañaFil: Valero, Antonio. Universidad de Córdoba; EspañaFil: Navarro, Alejandro. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Muñoz Chimeno, Milagros. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Instituto de Salud; EspañaFil: Fernández Manzano, Alvaro. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Escobar, Franco Matias. Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Fisicoquímicas y Naturales. Departamento de Microbiología e Inmunología; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Córdoba; ArgentinaFil: Martínez, Irene. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Bárcena, Carmen. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: González, Sergio. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Avellón, Ana. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Instituto de Salud; EspañaFil: Eiros, Jose M.. Hospital Universitario Rio Hortega; EspañaFil: Fongaro, Gislaine. Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina; BrasilFil: Domínguez, Lucas. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Goyache, Joaquín. Universidad Complutense de Madrid; EspañaFil: Rodríguez Lázaro, David. Universidad de Burgos; Españ

    Adjuvant dabrafenib and trametinib for patients with resected BRAF-mutated melanoma: DESCRIBE-AD real-world retrospective observational study

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    BRAF and MEK inhibitor, dabrafenib plus trametinib, adjuvant therapy is effective for high-risk resected melanoma patients with BRAF-V600 mutations. However, real-world evidence is limited. We aimed to determine the feasibility of this therapy in routine clinical practice. DESCRIBE-AD, a retrospective observational study, collected real-world data from 25 hospitals in Spain. Histologically confirmed and resected BRAF-mutated melanoma patients aged & GE;18 years who were previously treated with dabrafenib plus trametinib adjuvant therapy, were included. The primary objectives were treatment discontinuation rate and time to discontinuation. The secondary objectives included safety and efficacy. From October 2020 to March 2021, 65 patients were included. Dabrafenib and trametinib discontinuation rate due to treatment-related adverse events (TRAEs) of any grade was 9%. Other reasons for discontinuation included patients' decisions (6%), physician decisions (6%), unrelated adverse events (3%), disease progression (5%), and others (5%). The median time to treatment discontinuation was 9 months [95% confidence interval (CI), 5-11]. G3-4 TRAEs occurred in 21.5% of patients, the most common being pyrexia (3%), asthenia (3%), and diarrhoea (3%). Unscheduled hospitalisations and clinical tests occurred in 6 and 22% of patients, respectively. After 20-month median follow-up (95% CI, 18-22), 9% of patients had exitus due to disease progression, with a 12-month relapse-free survival and overall survival rates of 95.3% and 100%, respectively. Dabrafenib and trametinib adjuvant therapy proved effective for melanoma patients in a real-world setting, with a manageable toxicity profile. Toxicity frequencies were low leading to low incidence of unscheduled medical visits, tests, and treatment discontinuations

    The large trans-Neptunian object 2002 TC302 from combined stellar occultation, photometry, and astrometry data

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    Context. Deriving physical properties of trans-Neptunian objects is important for the understanding of our Solar System. This requires observational efforts and the development of techniques suitable for these studies. Aims. Our aim is to characterize the large trans-Neptunian object (TNO) 2002 TC302. Methods. Stellar occultations offer unique opportunities to determine key physical properties of TNOs. On 28 January 2018, 2002 TC302 occulted a mv ~ 15.3 star with designation 593-005847 in the UCAC4 stellar catalog, corresponding to Gaia source 130957813463146112. Twelve positive occultation chords were obtained from Italy, France, Slovenia, and Switzerland. Also, four negative detections were obtained near the north and south limbs. This represents the best observed stellar occultation by a TNO other than Pluto in terms of the number of chords published thus far. From the 12 chords, an accurate elliptical fit to the instantaneous projection of the body can be obtained that is compatible with the near misses. Results. The resulting ellipse has major and minor axes of 543 ± 18 km and 460 ± 11 km, respectively, with a position angle of 3 ± 1 degrees for the minor axis. This information, combined with rotational light curves obtained with the 1.5 m telescope at Sierra Nevada Observatory and the 1.23 m telescope at Calar Alto observatory, allows us to derive possible three-dimensional shapes and density estimations for the body based on hydrostatic equilibrium assumptions. The effective diameter in equivalent area is around 84 km smaller than the radiometrically derived diameter using thermal data from Herschel and Spitzer Space Telescopes. This might indicate the existence of an unresolved satellite of up to ~300 km in diameter, which is required to account for all the thermal flux, although the occultation and thermal diameters are compatible within their error bars given the considerable uncertainty of the thermal results. The existence of a potential satellite also appears to be consistent with other ground-based data presented here. From the effective occultation diameter combined with absolute magnitude measurements we derive a geometric albedo of 0.147 ± 0.005, which would be somewhat smaller if 2002 TC302 has a satellite. The best occultation light curves do not show any signs of ring features or any signatures of a global atmosphere.Funding from Spanish projects AYA2014-56637-C2-1-P, AYA2017-89637-R, from FEDER, and Proyecto de Excelencia de la Junta de Andalucía 2012-FQM1776 is acknowledged. We would like to acknowledge financial support by the Spanish grant AYA-RTI2018-098657-JI00 “LEO-SBNAF” (MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE) and the financial support from the State Agency for Research of the Spanish MCIU through the “Center of Excellence Severo Ochoa” award for the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (SEV- 2017-0709). Part of the research received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, under grant agreement no. 687378 and from the ERC programme under Grant Agreement no. 669416 Lucky Star. The following authors acknowledge the respective CNPq grants: FB-R 309578/2017-5; RV-M 304544/2017-5, 401903/2016-8; J.I.B.C. 308150/2016-3; MA 427700/2018-3, 310683/2017-3, 473002/2013-2. This study was financed in part by the Coordenação de Aperfeiaçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - Brasil (CAPES) - Finance Code 001 and the National Institute of Science and Technology of the e-Universe project (INCT do e-Universo, CNPq grant 465376/2014-2). GBR acknowledges CAPES-FAPERJ/PAPDRJ grant E26/203.173/2016, MA FAPERJ grant E-26/111.488/2013 and ARGJr FAPESP grant 2018/11239-8. E.F.-V. acknowledges support from the 2017 Preeminent Postdoctoral Program (P3) at UCF. C.K., R.S., A.F-T., and G.M. have been supported by the K-125015 and GINOP-2.3.2-15-2016-00003 grants of the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office (NKFIH), Hungary. G.M. was also supported by the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office (NKFIH) grant PD-128 360. R.K. and T.P. were supported by the VEGA 2/0031/18 grant

    Cut-offs and response criteria for the Hospital Universitario la Princesa Index (HUPI) and their comparison to widely-used indices of disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis

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    Objective To estimate cut-off points and to establish response criteria for the Hospital Universitario La Princesa Index (HUPI) in patients with chronic polyarthritis. Methods Two cohorts, one of early arthritis (Princesa Early Arthritis Register Longitudinal PEARL] study) and other of long-term rheumatoid arthritis (Estudio de la Morbilidad y Expresión Clínica de la Artritis Reumatoide EMECAR]) including altogether 1200 patients were used to determine cut-off values for remission, and for low, moderate and high activity through receiver operating curve (ROC) analysis. The areas under ROC (AUC) were compared to those of validated indexes (SDAI, CDAI, DAS28). ROC analysis was also applied to establish minimal and relevant clinical improvement for HUPI. Results The best cut-off points for HUPI are 2, 5 and 9, classifying RA activity as remission if =2, low disease activity if >2 and =5), moderate if >5 and <9 and high if =9. HUPI''s AUC to discriminate between low-moderate activity was 0.909 and between moderate-high activity 0.887. DAS28''s AUCs were 0.887 and 0.846, respectively; both indices had higher accuracy than SDAI (AUCs: 0.832 and 0.756) and CDAI (AUCs: 0.789 and 0.728). HUPI discriminates remission better than DAS28-ESR in early arthritis, but similarly to SDAI. The HUPI cut-off for minimal clinical improvement was established at 2 and for relevant clinical improvement at 4. Response criteria were established based on these cut-off values. Conclusions The cut-offs proposed for HUPI perform adequately in patients with either early or long term arthritis

    Validation of Deep Learning techniques for quality augmentation in diffusion MRI for clinical studies

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    The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of deep learning (DL) techniques in improving the quality of diffusion MRI (dMRI) data in clinical applications. The study aims to determine whether the use of artificial intelligence (AI) methods in medical images may result in the loss of critical clinical information and/or the appearance of false information. To assess this, the focus was on the angular resolution of dMRI and a clinical trial was conducted on migraine, specifically between episodic and chronic migraine patients. The number of gradient directions had an impact on white matter analysis results, with statistically significant differences between groups being drastically reduced when using 21 gradient directions instead of the original 61. Fourteen teams from different institutions were tasked to use DL to enhance three diffusion metrics (FA, AD and MD) calculated from data acquired with 21 gradient directions and a b-value of 1000 s/mm2. The goal was to produce results that were comparable to those calculated from 61 gradient directions. The results were evaluated using both standard image quality metrics and Tract-Based Spatial Statistics (TBSS) to compare episodic and chronic migraine patients. The study results suggest that while most DL techniques improved the ability to detect statistical differences between groups, they also led to an increase in false positive. The results showed that there was a constant growth rate of false positives linearly proportional to the new true positives, which highlights the risk of generalization of AI-based tasks when assessing diverse clinical cohorts and training using data from a single group. The methods also showed divergent performance when replicating the original distribution of the data and some exhibited significant bias. In conclusion, extreme caution should be exercised when using AI methods for harmonization or synthesis in clinical studies when processing heterogeneous data in clinical studies, as important information may be altered, even when global metrics such as structural similarity or peak signal-to-noise ratio appear to suggest otherwise

    Crystal defects and optical emissions of pulse electrodeposited ZnO

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    ZnO has been widely studied in the last decades as an n-type semiconductor due to its wide application range, for example, in optoelectronics, solar cells, light-emitting diodes, thermoelectrics, amongst others. The material efficiency for certain applications is highly dependent on the presenting film morphology. Electrodeposition is well-known as a technique with precise control over the structural and morphological properties of the obtained materials. When the structural and morphological properties are tuned, it is possible to find a wide variety of defects in the ZnO structure. In this study, ZnO films were grown using pulsed electrodeposition with variation of the reduction potential. The crystal order, structural defects and optical emissions of the films have been analyzed by X-Ray Diffraction (XRD), X-ray Absorption Near-Edge Structure (XANES), Extended X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (EXAFS) and Photoluminescence (PL). ZnO film grown at less negative reduction potential presents a stronger texture along [0001] by XRD, higher crystalline order, and more zinc vacancies by XANES and EXAFS. The films obtained at less negative potential present less OH trapped in the ZnO structure and a relatively higher level of defects O, O, O and O than those grown at higher reduction potentials by PL. This will be related to the fact that at less negative potentials there is less concentration of OH at the film surface than at more negative potentials. The combination of X-ray absorption spectroscopy and photoluminescence reveals the complicated nature of the atomic defect in electrodeposited ZnO films. Allowing to evidence the preferential presence of atomic defect as a function of the reduction potential. In this work, we have also compared those defects with reference compounds such as a Zn foil and ZnO polycrystalline powder.The authors would like to acknowledge financial support from MAT2017-86450-C4-1-R, MAT2017-86450-C4-3-R, and RTI2018-095303-A-C52. C.V.M acknowledges financial support from Juan de la Cierva Incorporación grants IJCI-2017-31350. A.S. and A.M.N. acknowledge the financial support from the Comunidad de Madrid for an “Atracción de Talento Investigador” contract No. 2017-t2/IND5395 and 2018-T1/IND-10360, respectively. We acknowledge The European Synchrotron (ESRF), MICIU, and CSIC for provision of synchrotron radiation facilities in using the BM25-SpLine beamline. We also thank the BM25-SpLine staff for the technical support beyond their duties. We acknowledge the service from the MiNa Laboratory at IMN, and funding from CM (project SpaceTec, S2013/ICE2822), MINECO (project CSIC13-4E-1794) and EU (FEDER, FSE)

    El virus de la Hepatitis E: un patógeno zoonósico emergente en Europa

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    El virus de la hepatitis E (VHE) es considerado como el agente principal de hepatitis viral aguda epidémica en países en vías de desarrollo (se estima que se producen cada año alrededor de 20 millones de infecciones por el VHE en todo el mundo), mientras que en países desarrollados se dan casos principalmente esporádicos relacionados, en la mayoría de los casos, con los animales, considerándose actualmente la hepatitis E una zoonosis emergente. Existen cuatro genotipos principales del VHE (de un total de 8) que muestran características epidemiológicas y clínicas diferenciadas. El VHE se transmite a menudo a través del consumo de alimentos tanto de origen animal como vegetal y agua, existiendo factores medioambientales implicados en el ciclo de transmisión de este virus. El peligro real de la infección por el VHE y de la enfermedad originada dependerá no solo del genotipo del virus, si no, también, de los diversos escenarios ambientales en las zonas de elevada prevalencia del virus, las condiciones de salubridad e higiene, el tipo de alimento consumido y las costumbres sociales asociadas al consumo de los mismos, además de factores profesionales. El desarrollo de estrategias precisas de prevención y control de la infección por VHE debe basarse en avances en el conocimiento de la etiología, la epidemiología y los métodos de control del mismo
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