25 research outputs found

    Communication in bacteria: an ecological and evolutionary perspective

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    Individual bacteria can alter their behaviour through chemical interactions between organisms in microbial communities - this is generally referred to as quorum sensing. Frequently, these interactions are interpreted in terms of communication to mediate coordinated, multicellular behaviour. We show that the nature of interactions through quorum-sensing chemicals does not simply involve cooperative signals, but entails other interactions such as cues and chemical manipulations. These signals might have a role in conflicts within and between species. The nature of the chemical interaction is important to take into account when studying why and how bacteria react to the chemical substances that are produced by other bacteria

    Acupuncture for post anaesthetic recovery and postoperative pain: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.

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    BACKGROUND We report on the design and implementation of a study protocol entitled Acupuncture randomised trial for post anaesthetic recovery and postoperative pain - a pilot study (ACUARP) designed to investigate the effectiveness of acupuncture therapy performed in the perioperative period on post anaesthetic recovery and postoperative pain. METHODS/DESIGN The study is designed as a randomised controlled pilot trial with three arms and partial double blinding. We will compare (a) press needle acupuncture, (b) no treatment and (c) press plaster acupressure in a standardised anaesthetic setting. Seventy-five patients scheduled for laparoscopic surgery to the uterus or ovaries will be allocated randomly to one of the three trial arms. The total observation period will begin one day before surgery and end on the second postoperative day. Twelve press needles and press plasters are to be administered preoperatively at seven acupuncture points. The primary outcome measure will be time from extubation to 'ready for discharge' from the post anaesthesia care unit (in minutes). The 'ready for discharge' end point will be assessed using three different scores: the Aldrete score, the Post Anaesthetic Discharge Scoring System and an In-House score. Secondary outcome measures will comprise pre-, intra- and postoperative variables (which are anxiety, pain, nausea and vomiting, concomitant medication). DISCUSSION The results of this study will provide information on whether acupuncture may improve patient post anaesthetic recovery. Comparing acupuncture with acupressure will provide insight into potential therapeutic differences between invasive and non-invasive acupuncture techniques. TRIAL REGISTRATION NCT01816386 (First received: 28 October 2012)

    Prognostic relevance of elevated pulmonary arterial pressure assessed non-invasively: Analysis in a large patient cohort with invasive measurements in near temporal proximity.

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    The clinical relevance of non-invasively derived pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) by Doppler echocardiography (DE) has been questioned in the past. However, transthoracic echocardiography is used as a cornerstone examination for patients with dyspnea and suspected pulmonary hypertension (PH). This study aimed to evaluate the prognostic value of non-invasive assessed PAP in a large population of patients with known or suspected cardiopulmonary disease.The analyses are based on data of patients of a tertiary cardiology center that received right heart catheterization (RHC) as well as non-invasively assessed PAP by DE within five days, and includes serological and clinical parameters in a retrospective follow-up for up to eight years.Of 1,237 patients, clinical follow-up was possible in 1,038 patients who were included in the statistical analysis. The mean-follow up time was 1,002 days. The composite endpoint of heart transplantation (HTx) or death occurred in n = 308 patients. Elevated PAP measured non-invasively as well as invasively had significant prognostic impact (hazard ratio (HR) 2.32; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.78-3.04; χ2 = 37.9; p<0.001 versus HR 2.84; 95%CI 2.11-3.82; χ2 = 51.9; p<0.001, respectively). By multivariate analysis, NYHA functional class, N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide, cardiac troponin T, left ventricular ejection fraction, and right ventricular dysfunction remained independently predictive. Incremental prognostic information in a multimodal approach was highly relevant.In this comprehensive study, elevated pulmonary arterial pressure measured by DE offers similar prognostic information on survival or need for HTx as right heart catheterization. Furthermore, the addition of functional capacity and serological biomarkers delivered incremental prognostic information

    Sudden infant death syndrome revisited: serotonin transporter gene, polymorphisms and promoter methylation

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    Background!#!Based on findings in the brain stems of SIDS victims, the serotonin transporter (5-HTT) gene has been discussed to be associated with SIDS.!##!Methods!#!In the largest study to date, we investigated the promoter length (5-HTTLPR) and intron 2 VNTR polymorphisms in 274 cases and 264 controls and the Ile425Val polymorphism in 65 cases and 64 controls. Moreover, the methylation of the internal promoter region was investigated in 35 cases and 14 controls.!##!Results!#!For 5-HTTLPR, we observed a trend towards an association of allele L (58.8% vs. 53.4%) with SIDS and significant results were observed after stratifying for age, season at death, and prone position. Nevertheless, when pooling all published data, a significant association of allele L with SIDS is confirmed (p: 0.001). For the intron 2 VNTR polymorphism, no significant differences were observed. After pooling, a significant accumulation of the rare allele 9 was observed in SIDS (2.1% vs. 0.6%; p: 0.018). For the Ile425Val polymorphism, no differences were observed.!##!Conclusion!#!We conclude that genetic variation at this gene might be of some importance in SIDS. Epigenetic analysis of the internal promoter, however, revealed no influence on the relative risk to succumb to SIDS.!##!Impact!#!This is the largest study published up to now on 5-HTT gene polymorphisms and SIDS. Polymorphisms in the 5-HTT gene appear to contribute (although to a small degree) to the risk to die from SIDS. There is no evidence that a methylation of the promoter region is of impact for the etiology of SIDS

    Prognostic relevance of elevated pulmonary arterial pressure assessed non-invasively: Analysis in a large patient cohort with invasive measurements in near temporal proximity - Fig 4

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    <p><b>Outcome differentiated by PAP for subgroup of patients:</b> left ventricular cardiomyopathy (CMP):A,B; valvular heart disease: C,D; ischemic heart disease (IHD): E,F and rare cardiac diseases: G;H. Invasive measurements by RHC (A,C,E,G) are compared to non-invasively assessment by DE (B,D,F,G). <b>Abbreviations:</b> m/sPAP mean/systolic pulmonary arterial pressure, HR hazard ratio, 95%CI 95% confidence interval, ns not significant.</p

    Incremental predictive information for survival of multimodal clinical settings based on complete-case data (n = 395).

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    <p><b>Abbreviations:</b> Clin: clinical assessment (age, sex, NYHA functional class), Clin+Echo: clinical assessment and transthoracic (Doppler) echocardiography (LV-EF, RV dysfunction, sPAP, RAP), Clin+Sero: clinical assessment and cardiac serological parameters (NT-proBNP, cTnT); Clin+Sero+Echo: clinical assessment, cardiac serological parameters and transthoracic echocardiography combined; Clin+Sero+Echo+RHC: Non-invasive diagnostics and RHC (CI, mPAP, RAP) combined; Clin+RHC: clinical assessment and RHC (CI, mPAP, RAP) combined. <b>**</b>p<0.001. NYHA New York Heart Association, LV-EF left ventricular ejection fraction, sPAP systolic pulmonary arterial pressure, RAP right atrial pressure, NT-proBNP N-terminal pro brain natriuretic peptide, cTnT cardiac troponin T, CI cardiac index, mPAP mean pulmonary arterial pressure, RHC right heart catheterization.</p
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