197 research outputs found
National Climate Observing System of Switzerland (GCOS Switzerland)
In recent decades, the global observation of climate and climate change has
become increasingly important. The Global Climate Observing System (GCOS)
established in 1992 addresses the entire climate system including physical,
chemical and biological properties of atmosphere, ocean and land surface.
This paper describes the GCOS implementation in Switzerland and highlights
some major achievements over the last few years. The Swiss GCOS Office was
established at the Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology MeteoSwiss
in February 2006, to coordinate all climate-relevant measurements in
Switzerland. The first-ever inventory of the country's long-term
climatological data series and international data centres, including an
assessment of their future prospects, was compiled in 2007. The National
Climate Observing System of Switzerland (GCOS Switzerland) includes
long-term climatological data series in the atmosphere and terrestrial
domains, international data and calibration centres, satellite-based
products and support of climate observations in developing countries. A
major milestone in the surface-based atmospheric observations was the
definition of the Swiss National Basic Climatological Network (NBCN),
consisting of 29 stations of greatest climatological importance. The NBCN
was further densified for precipitation with 46 additional daily
precipitation stations (NBCN-P). Analysis of the homogenized timeseries of
the average temperature in Switzerland shows a total warming of
+1.6 °C from 1864 to 2010. In the terrestrial domain, substantial
advances were made in all three subdomains hydrosphere, cryosphere and
biosphere. As example for the use of satellite data within GCOS Switzerland,
the 10-yr MODIS monthly mean cloud fraction climatology over Switzerland
from March 2000 to February 2010 is presented, which illustrates the
differences in cloud cover between mountainous regions and flatland regions
in winter, as well as the north-south gradient in cloud cover over
Switzerland in summer
Effect of stocking density and use of environmental enrichment materials on the welfare and the performance of pigs in the growth and finishing phases
Aim of study: To evaluate the effects of stocking density and the use of environmental enrichment (EE) objects on the welfare and the performance of pigs in the growing and finishing phases.Area of study: The southern region of Brazil.Material and methods: A total of 240 pigs, 120 immunocastrated males and 120 females, with an initial weight of 22.38 ± 2.38 kg and mean age of 65 days, were submitted to two stocking densities conditions (0.85 and 1.28 m²pig) with and without EE for 117 days. The experimental design was a 2×2×2 factorial (two categories, two densities, and two EE conditions), with six replicates. Performance variables and behavior were evaluated.Main results: For stocking density, there was a significant difference in the finishing phase from 148 to 161 days of age for the final weight (FW), average daily weight gain (ADWG), and feed conversion rate (FCR). For the EE factor, there was no difference in any of the phases or in the overall period. In the overall period, the higher availability of space improved the results of FW (140.56 kg vs 136.63 kg), ADWG (1.005 kg vs 0.974 kg), and FCR (2.05 vs 2.10). There was no effect of EE, stocking densities, or their interaction on the frequency of different behaviors of the pigs in the growth and finishing phases.Research highlights: There was no effect of interactions between enriched environments, stocking densities, and sex for animal performance and behavioral frequencies; however, differences between the factors were observed separately. The higher availability of space improved the results of FW, ADWG, and FCR
po 472 chemotherapy resistance associated epithelial to endothelial transition in gastric cancer
Introduction Gastric cancer (GC) is the fifth most common cancer worldwide and the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths. To date, gastrectomy and chemotherapy are the only therapeutic options, but drug resistance is the main cause for treatment failure. Vasculogenic mimicry (VM) is a new model of neovascularization in aggressive tumours and has been correlated with poor prognosis in GC patients. Our group has developed chemotherapy-resistant GC cells using the Caucasian adenocarcinoma cell line AGS and three drugs among the most used in clinic (5-fluorouracil, cisplatin and paclitaxel) henceforward denominated 5FUr, CISr, TAXr. Our study has highlighted phenotypical differences among chemo-sensitive and chemo-resistant cell lines such as acquisition of stem-like phenotype and increased capacity to form vessels. Material and methods Establishment of AGS resistant cell lines exposing cells to increasing dilution of drugs for over 9 months up to dilutions higher than IC50 values initially verified on AGS cells through MTT analysis. Quantitative RT-PCR, flow cytometry and western blot analysis for stemness and VM markers. Vasculogenic mimicryassay Results and discussions AGS cells acquired chemoresistance as indicated by the increase of IC50 values in drug-treated cells with respect to AGS. Furthermore, MTT assay highlighted that there is not cross-resistance among 5FUr, CISr and TAXr. Supportive data is that cells are MDR1 negative. Resistant cells showed an upregulation of Yamanaka factors either in qPCR and flow cytometer analysis, and particularly interesting is ALDH overexpression in 5FUr. TWIST upregulation suggested the investigation of VM which resulted particularly enhanced in 5FUr cells which demonstrated their ability to form and sustain vessels up to 96 hours in the tube formation assay. Markers of VM such Laminin γ2 and Ephrin A2 showed an increase in resistant cells and especially in 5FUr. Conclusion One of the most interesting result is that 5FUr cells acquire stemness properties and are positive to the tube formation assay suggesting that VM might be one mechanisms adopted by cells to avoid drugs exposure. These findings suggest that acquisition of chemoresistance could cause a relapse of disease in which tumour cells take advantage of their capability to perform VM in order to self-sustain their growth and that may be cause of poor outcomes
A Spatial Model of Mosquito Host-Seeking Behavior
Mosquito host-seeking behavior and heterogeneity in host distribution are important factors in predicting the transmission dynamics of mosquito-borne infections such as dengue fever, malaria, chikungunya, and West Nile virus. We develop and analyze a new mathematical model to describe the effect of spatial heterogeneity on the contact rate between mosquito vectors and hosts. The model includes odor plumes generated by spatially distributed hosts, wind velocity, and mosquito behavior based on both the prevailing wind and the odor plume. On a spatial scale of meters and a time scale of minutes, we compare the effectiveness of different plume-finding and plume-tracking strategies that mosquitoes could use to locate a host. The results show that two different models of chemotaxis are capable of producing comparable results given appropriate parameter choices and that host finding is optimized by a strategy of flying across the wind until the odor plume is intercepted. We also assess the impact of changing the level of host aggregation on mosquito host-finding success near the end of the host-seeking flight. When clusters of hosts are more tightly associated on smaller patches, the odor plume is narrower and the biting rate per host is decreased. For two host groups of unequal number but equal spatial density, the biting rate per host is lower in the group with more individuals, indicative of an attack abatement effect of host aggregation. We discuss how this approach could assist parameter choices in compartmental models that do not explicitly model the spatial arrangement of individuals and how the model could address larger spatial scales and other probability models for mosquito behavior, such as Lévy distributions
hepatitis a outbreak in italy 2013 a matched case control study
Between January and May 2013 a hepatitis A (HA) incidence increase was detected in Italy, signalling an outbreak. A retrospective matched case-control study was conducted to identify the source of infection. A case was defined as a resident of any of five regions (Apulia, autonomous province of Bolzano, Emilia-Romagna, Friuli-Venezia-Giulia and autonomous province of Trento), who had symptom onset between 1 January and 31 May2013 as well a positive test for anti-HA virus IgM. We compared each case with four age-and neighbourhood-matched controls. Overall 119 cases and 419 controls were enrolled. Berries were found as the main risk factor for HA (adjusted odds ratio (ORadj): 4.2; 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.5-7.0) followed by raw seafood (ORadj: 3.8; 95% CI: 2.2-6.8; PAF: 26%). Sequencing the virion protein (VP)1-2a region from 24 cases yielded a common sequence (GenBank number: KF182323). The same sequence was amplified from frozen mixed berries consumed by some cases as well as from isolates from Dutch and German HA patients, who had visited some of the affected Italian provinces during the outbreak. These findings suggested berries as the main source of the Italian outbreak. Control measures included voluntary recall of the confirmed frozen mixed berry batches and a trace-back investigation was initiated. The Ministry of Health website recommends frozen berries to be cooked for two minutes before eating.
Does reservoir host mortality enhance transmission of West Nile virus?
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Since its 1999 emergence in New York City, West Nile virus (WNV) has become the most important and widespread cause of mosquito-transmitted disease in North America. Its sweeping spread from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast was accompanied by widespread mortality among wild birds, especially corvids. Only sporadic avian mortality had previously been associated with this infection in the Old World. Here, we examine the possibility that reservoir host mortality may intensify transmission, both by concentrating vector mosquitoes on remaining hosts and by preventing the accumulation of "herd immunity".</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Inspection of the Ross-Macdonald expression of the basic reproductive number (<it>R</it><sub>0</sub>) suggests that this quantity may increase with reservoir host mortality. Computer simulation confirms this finding and indicates that the level of virulence is positively associated with the numbers of infectious mosquitoes by the end of the epizootic. The presence of reservoir incompetent hosts in even moderate numbers largely eliminated the transmission-enhancing effect of host mortality. Local host die-off may prevent mosquitoes to "waste" infectious blood meals on immune host and may thus facilitate perpetuation and spread of transmission.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Under certain conditions, host mortality may enhance transmission of WNV and similarly maintained arboviruses and thus facilitate their emergence and spread. The validity of the assumptions upon which this argument is built need to be empirically examined.</p
Cervical Screening within HIV Care: Findings from an HIV-Positive Cohort in Ukraine
HIV-positive women have an increased risk of invasive cervical cancer but cytologic screening is effective in reducing incidence. Little is known about cervical screening coverage or the prevalence of abnormal cytology among HIV-positive women in Ukraine, which has the most severe HIV epidemic in Europe
Characteristics of Early-Onset vs Late-Onset Colorectal Cancer: A Review.
The incidence of early-onset colorectal cancer (younger than 50 years) is rising globally, the reasons for which are unclear. It appears to represent a unique disease process with different clinical, pathological, and molecular characteristics compared with late-onset colorectal cancer. Data on oncological outcomes are limited, and sensitivity to conventional neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy regimens appear to be unknown. The purpose of this review is to summarize the available literature on early-onset colorectal cancer.
Within the next decade, it is estimated that 1 in 10 colon cancers and 1 in 4 rectal cancers will be diagnosed in adults younger than 50 years. Potential risk factors include a Westernized diet, obesity, antibiotic usage, and alterations in the gut microbiome. Although genetic predisposition plays a role, most cases are sporadic. The full spectrum of germline and somatic sequence variations implicated remains unknown. Younger patients typically present with descending colonic or rectal cancer, advanced disease stage, and unfavorable histopathological features. Despite being more likely to receive neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy, patients with early-onset disease demonstrate comparable oncological outcomes with their older counterparts.
The clinicopathological features, underlying molecular profiles, and drivers of early-onset colorectal cancer differ from those of late-onset disease. Standardized, age-specific preventive, screening, diagnostic, and therapeutic strategies are required to optimize outcomes
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