154 research outputs found

    Uma revisão da Covid longa: sintomas

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    Coronavírus (CoVs) estão envolvidos em grandes surtos mundiais. Quando há instalação de COVID-19, os indivíduos estão suscetíveis a vários graus de gravidade. Após a resolução da doença, pacientes passaram a relatar a persistência de sintomas, “COVID-19 longo” foi designado à situação, que descreve sinais e sintomas que continuam ou desenvolvem após a COVID-19 aguda. O objetivo desta revisão foi realizar uma pesquisa sistemática sobre os sintomas mais associados ao COVID-longo. A busca de artigos foi feita via PubMed/MEDLINE, Lilacs e SciELO, sendo selecionados independentemente por dois revisores na plataforma Rayyan. A qualidade metodológica e o risco de viés foram avaliados com a Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS). Diante dos critérios de inclusão e exclusão, 63 artigos foram para a análise qualitativa, sendo que 28 desses artigos foram utilizados para a construção do estudo. Os sintomas analisados foram: dispneia, disfunção olfatória, fadiga, tosse, mialgia, disfunção gustativa, cefaleia, dor no peito e diarreia. Dispneia foi relatada em 22 artigos, disfunção olfatória foi abordada em 19 estudos, fadiga é citada em 18 artigos, tosse é abordada em 18 estudos, mialgia foi descrita em 17 artigos, disfunção gustativa esteve presente em 15 artigos, cefaleia em 13 análises, dor no peito em 11, e diarreia esteve em 10 dos estudos. A inflamação persistente foi o mecanismo patológico associado às sequelas, visto que existem anormalidades imunológicas, presentes em até 8 meses após a infecção, que se relacionam com o desenvolvimento dos sintomas do COVID-19 longo. Com essa análise, o reconhecimento e a abordagem desses sintomas tornam-se necessárias para o cuidado com o paciente

    Puberdade precoce e tardia: revisão de literatura

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    Introdução: A puberdade é o processo de maturação que ocorre na adolescência, marcado por transformações físicas, cognitivas e psicológicas, que podem se manifestar de forma precoce ou tardia, mediante fatores de risco, sendo necessário o acompanhamento e tratamento adequados. Objetivos: Realizar uma revisão da literatura sobre puberdade precoce e tardia, com enfoque nas etiologias, fatores de risco, diagnósticos e tratamentos. Métodos: Este é um estudo observacional retrospectivo da literatura a partir de artigos publicados no Pubmed. Resultados: Foram analisados 18.947 artigos, sendo 13.241 sobre puberdade precoce e 5.706 sobre puberdade tardia. Com os critérios de exclusão, restaram 22 artigos acerca de puberdade precoce e 12 sobre puberdade tardia. A seleção de títulos excluiu 8 artigos de puberdade precoce e 2 de puberdade tardia. Após leitura e análise, 2 artigos foram excluídos e restaram 15 que compuseram a revisão, a partir da qual foi feita a síntese de dados. Conclusão: O estudo mostrou que ainda é necessário estudar melhor as diversas causas de alterações do tempo da puberdade, assim como buscar novos métodos de diagnóstico e tratamento para melhorar a qualidade de vida desses pacientes

    Tradução e adaptação ilustrada.

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    Characteristics and outcomes of patients with COVID-19 admitted to the ICU in a university hospital in São Paulo, Brazil - study protocol

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    NEOTROPICAL ALIEN MAMMALS: a data set of occurrence and abundance of alien mammals in the Neotropics

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    Biological invasion is one of the main threats to native biodiversity. For a species to become invasive, it must be voluntarily or involuntarily introduced by humans into a nonnative habitat. Mammals were among first taxa to be introduced worldwide for game, meat, and labor, yet the number of species introduced in the Neotropics remains unknown. In this data set, we make available occurrence and abundance data on mammal species that (1) transposed a geographical barrier and (2) were voluntarily or involuntarily introduced by humans into the Neotropics. Our data set is composed of 73,738 historical and current georeferenced records on alien mammal species of which around 96% correspond to occurrence data on 77 species belonging to eight orders and 26 families. Data cover 26 continental countries in the Neotropics, ranging from Mexico and its frontier regions (southern Florida and coastal-central Florida in the southeast United States) to Argentina, Paraguay, Chile, and Uruguay, and the 13 countries of Caribbean islands. Our data set also includes neotropical species (e.g., Callithrix sp., Myocastor coypus, Nasua nasua) considered alien in particular areas of Neotropics. The most numerous species in terms of records are from Bos sp. (n = 37,782), Sus scrofa (n = 6,730), and Canis familiaris (n = 10,084); 17 species were represented by only one record (e.g., Syncerus caffer, Cervus timorensis, Cervus unicolor, Canis latrans). Primates have the highest number of species in the data set (n = 20 species), partly because of uncertainties regarding taxonomic identification of the genera Callithrix, which includes the species Callithrix aurita, Callithrix flaviceps, Callithrix geoffroyi, Callithrix jacchus, Callithrix kuhlii, Callithrix penicillata, and their hybrids. This unique data set will be a valuable source of information on invasion risk assessments, biodiversity redistribution and conservation-related research. There are no copyright restrictions. Please cite this data paper when using the data in publications. We also request that researchers and teachers inform us on how they are using the data

    NEOTROPICAL CARNIVORES: a data set on carnivore distribution in the Neotropics

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    Mammalian carnivores are considered a key group in maintaining ecological health and can indicate potential ecological integrity in landscapes where they occur. Carnivores also hold high conservation value and their habitat requirements can guide management and conservation plans. The order Carnivora has 84 species from 8 families in the Neotropical region: Canidae; Felidae; Mephitidae; Mustelidae; Otariidae; Phocidae; Procyonidae; and Ursidae. Herein, we include published and unpublished data on native terrestrial Neotropical carnivores (Canidae; Felidae; Mephitidae; Mustelidae; Procyonidae; and Ursidae). NEOTROPICAL CARNIVORES is a publicly available data set that includes 99,605 data entries from 35,511 unique georeferenced coordinates. Detection/non-detection and quantitative data were obtained from 1818 to 2018 by researchers, governmental agencies, non-governmental organizations, and private consultants. Data were collected using several methods including camera trapping, museum collections, roadkill, line transect, and opportunistic records. Literature (peer-reviewed and grey literature) from Portuguese, Spanish and English were incorporated in this compilation. Most of the data set consists of detection data entries (n = 79,343; 79.7%) but also includes non-detection data (n = 20,262; 20.3%). Of those, 43.3% also include count data (n = 43,151). The information available in NEOTROPICAL CARNIVORES will contribute to macroecological, ecological, and conservation questions in multiple spatio-temporal perspectives. As carnivores play key roles in trophic interactions, a better understanding of their distribution and habitat requirements are essential to establish conservation management plans and safeguard the future ecological health of Neotropical ecosystems. Our data paper, combined with other large-scale data sets, has great potential to clarify species distribution and related ecological processes within the Neotropics. There are no copyright restrictions and no restriction for using data from this data paper, as long as the data paper is cited as the source of the information used. We also request that users inform us of how they intend to use the data

    Brazilian Flora 2020: Leveraging the power of a collaborative scientific network

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    International audienceThe shortage of reliable primary taxonomic data limits the description of biological taxa and the understanding of biodiversity patterns and processes, complicating biogeographical, ecological, and evolutionary studies. This deficit creates a significant taxonomic impediment to biodiversity research and conservation planning. The taxonomic impediment and the biodiversity crisis are widely recognized, highlighting the urgent need for reliable taxonomic data. Over the past decade, numerous countries worldwide have devoted considerable effort to Target 1 of the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation (GSPC), which called for the preparation of a working list of all known plant species by 2010 and an online world Flora by 2020. Brazil is a megadiverse country, home to more of the world's known plant species than any other country. Despite that, Flora Brasiliensis, concluded in 1906, was the last comprehensive treatment of the Brazilian flora. The lack of accurate estimates of the number of species of algae, fungi, and plants occurring in Brazil contributes to the prevailing taxonomic impediment and delays progress towards the GSPC targets. Over the past 12 years, a legion of taxonomists motivated to meet Target 1 of the GSPC, worked together to gather and integrate knowledge on the algal, plant, and fungal diversity of Brazil. Overall, a team of about 980 taxonomists joined efforts in a highly collaborative project that used cybertaxonomy to prepare an updated Flora of Brazil, showing the power of scientific collaboration to reach ambitious goals. This paper presents an overview of the Brazilian Flora 2020 and provides taxonomic and spatial updates on the algae, fungi, and plants found in one of the world's most biodiverse countries. We further identify collection gaps and summarize future goals that extend beyond 2020. Our results show that Brazil is home to 46,975 native species of algae, fungi, and plants, of which 19,669 are endemic to the country. The data compiled to date suggests that the Atlantic Rainforest might be the most diverse Brazilian domain for all plant groups except gymnosperms, which are most diverse in the Amazon. However, scientific knowledge of Brazilian diversity is still unequally distributed, with the Atlantic Rainforest and the Cerrado being the most intensively sampled and studied biomes in the country. In times of “scientific reductionism”, with botanical and mycological sciences suffering pervasive depreciation in recent decades, the first online Flora of Brazil 2020 significantly enhanced the quality and quantity of taxonomic data available for algae, fungi, and plants from Brazil. This project also made all the information freely available online, providing a firm foundation for future research and for the management, conservation, and sustainable use of the Brazilian funga and flora

    Extracting the speed of sound in the strongly interacting matter created in ultrarelativistic lead-lead collisions at the LHC

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    International audienceUltrarelativistic nuclear collisions create a strongly interacting state of hot and dense quark-gluon matter that exhibits a remarkable collective flow behavior with minimal viscous dissipation. To gain deeper insights into its intrinsic nature and fundamental degrees of freedom, we extracted the speed of sound in this medium created using lead-lead (PbPb) collisions at a center-of-mass energy per nucleon pair of 5.02 TeV. The data were recorded by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 0.607 nb1^{-1}. The measurement is performed by studying the multiplicity dependence of the average transverse momentum of charged particles emitted in head-on PbPb collisions. Our findings reveal that the speed of sound in this matter is nearly half the speed of light, with a squared value of 0.241 ±\pm 0.002 (stat) ±\pm 0.016 (syst) in natural units. The effective medium temperature, estimated using the mean transverse momentum, is 219 ±\pm 8 (syst) MeV. The measured squared speed of sound at this temperature aligns precisely with predictions from lattice quantum chromodynamic (QCD) calculations. This result provides a stringent constraint on the equation of state of the created medium and direct evidence for a deconfined QCD phase being attained in relativistic nuclear collisions

    Measurement of multijet azimuthal correlations and determination of the strong coupling in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

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    International audienceA measurement is presented of a ratio observable that provides a measure of the azimuthal correlations among jets with large transverse momentum pTp_\mathrm{T}. This observable is measured in multijet events over the range of pTp_\mathrm{T} = 360-3170 GeV based on data collected by the CMS experiment in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 134 fb1^{-1}. The results are compared with predictions from Monte Carlo parton-shower event generator simulations, as well as with fixed-order perturbative quantum chromodynamics (pQCD) predictions at next-to-leading-order (NLO) accuracy obtained with different parton distribution functions (PDFs) and corrected for nonperturbative and electroweak effects. Data and theory agree within uncertainties. From the comparison of the measured observable with the pQCD prediction obtained with the NNPDF3.1 NLO PDFs, the strong coupling at the Z boson mass scale is αS(mZ)\alpha_\mathrm{S}(m_\mathrm{Z}) = 0.1177 ±\pm 0.0013 (exp) 0.0073+0.0116_{-0.0073}^{+0.0116} (theo) = 0.11770.0074+0.0117_{-0.0074}^{+0.0117}, where the total uncertainty is dominated by the scale dependence of the fixed-order predictions. A test of the running of αS(mZ)\alpha_\mathrm{S}(m_\mathrm{Z}) in the TeV region shows no deviation from the expected NLO pQCD behaviour
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