74 research outputs found

    The impact of educational and environmental interventions in Dutch worksite cafeterias

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    Environmental interventions as labeling of healthy foods and an increased availability of healthy foods may help consumers to meet the guidelines for a healthy diet. This article describes a study into the effectiveness of two environmental programs to be used in worksite cafeterias along with an educational program. The aim of the interventions was to reduce fat intake and increase fruit and vegetable intake. In the 'Labeling Program', low fat products were labeled. The 'Food Supply Program' comprised an increased availability of low-fat products and fruits and vegetables in worksite cafeterias. The 'Educational Program' consisted of information about healthy nutrition through brochures, table tents, a self help manual and posters. The design consisted of a pretest-posttest experimental control group design, with four conditions: the Educational Program, the Food Supply Program plus Educational Program, the Labeling Program plus Educational Program and a control group. Seventeen worksites were randomly assigned to one of the four research conditions. Total fat, fruit, and vegetable intake was measured with a quantitative, self-administered food frequency questionnaire (35 questions). Intake during lunch was measured by asking respondents to write down which food items they had purchased during their last lunch in the cafeteria. Furthermore, sales data for some targeted product categories were collected (milk, butter, cheese, meat products, desserts). For the whole study population, no significant effects on consumption data were found for any of the programs. The data showed a beneficial significant treatment effect of the Labeling Program on total fat intake, for respondents who believe they eat a high fat diet. Sales data revealed a significant effect of the labeling program on desserts, but not for the other products

    Evaluation of metabolic and biochemical blood parameters in lactating cows with Cystic Ovarian Disease

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    The aim of the study was to determine and evaluate different blood parameters associated to energetic, protein, mineral and liver metabolic processes together with productive and reproductive parameters in dairy cows of Santa Fe province (Argentina) that were diagnosed with cystic ovarian disease (COD). Lactating Argentine Holstein cows from five dairy herds with spontaneous COD (n= 80) diagnosed by ultrasound and control cows (n= 124) were included in the study. Blood samples were obtained from all cows to determine serum concentrations of: growth hormone, insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1), insulin, aspartate aminotransferase, alkalin phosphatase, gamma glutamiltransferase, albumin, total proteins, albumin: globulin ratio, total and direct bilirrubin, ?-hidroxibutirate, colesterol, glucose, urea, creatinin, calcium, phosphorus and magnesium. Serum concentrations of insulin and IGF-1 were lower (P<0.05) in COD than control cows. No significant differences among groups were observed in any other variables studied, however, the calving to conception interval was higher in cows with COD compared to controls. These results allowed us to conclude that there would be an association between blood concentrations of IGF-1 and insulin and COD that, ultimately, compromise the reproductive performance of the cow.Fil: Cattaneo, L. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Cátedra de Teriogenología. Santa Fe, ArgentinaFil: Barberis, F.C. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Cátedra de Teriogenología. Santa Fe, ArgentinaFil: Stangaferro, M.L. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Cátedra de Teriogenología. Santa Fe, ArgentinaFil: Signorini, M.L. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Rafaela. ArgentinaFil: Signorini, M.L. CONICET. ArgentinaFil: Ruiz, M.F. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Hospital de Salud Animal. Santa Fe, ArgentinaFil: Zimmermann, R. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias. Hospital de Salud Animal. Santa Fe, ArgentinaFil: Bo, G.A. Instituto de Reproducción Animal Córdoba (IRAC). ArgentinaFil: Hein, G.J. CONICET - Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Instituto de Ciencias Veterinarias del Litoral (ICiVet-Litoral). Esperanza, ArgentinaFil: Ortega, H.H. CONICET - Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Instituto de Ciencias Veterinarias del Litoral (ICiVet-Litoral). Esperanza, ArgentinaEl objetivo de este trabajo fue determinar y evaluar indicadores bioquímicos sanguíneos asociados a procesos metabólicos energéticos, proteicos, minerales y de funcionalidad hepática, junto con parámetros productivos y reproductivos en vacas lecheras que fueron diagnosticadas con enfermedad quística ovárica (COD) y controles. Se emplearon vacas Holando Argentino en lactancia de 5 rebaños de la provincia de Santa Fe (Argentina) que presentaban COD (n= 80) diagnosticada mediante ultrasonografía y controles clínicamente sanas (n= 124). De las vacas se obtuvo sangre coccígea para determinar las concentraciones séricas de las hormonas de crecimiento (GH), factor de crecimiento similar a la insulina-1 (IGF-1) e insulina, la actividad sérica de AST, FA, GGT y las concentraciones séricas de albúmina, proteínas totales, relación albúmina: globulinas, bilirrubina total y directa, ?-hidroxibutirato, colesterol, glucosa, urea, creatinina, calcio, fósforo y magnesio. Las concentraciones séricas de insulina e IGF-1 fueron menores (P<0,05) en las vacas con COD que en las controles. No se observaron diferencias significativas (P>0,05) entre ambos grupos en las demás variables séricas y productivas evaluadas, sin embargo, el intervalo parto-concepción fue mayor en vacas que presentaron COD. Los resultados nos permitieron concluir que habría una asociación entre los valores séricos de IGF-1 e insulina y la COD, y que ésta comprometería el futuro reproductivo de las vacas

    Seksuele disfunctie en relatieproblemen na prostaatkankerbehandeling: De gewenste zorg vanuit het oogpunt van patiënt en partner

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    Erectile dysfunction (ED) is one of the most common side effects of prostate cancer (PC) treatment and may lead to changes in a relationship. The aim of this study was to identify sexual and/or relational problems and to investigate what kind of supportive care is preferred by patients and their partners. A cross-sectional survey was performed among men diagnosed with PC enrolled in active surveillance or treated with laparoscopic radical prostatectomy, brachytherapy, intensity-modulated radiotherapy or hormonal therapy. If possible, partners were included as well. Out of 250 patients, 80,5% suffered from moderate to severe erectile complaints. Half of them (53,7%) was treated for ED and a great part was partially (30,7%) up to not satisfied (25,7%). Out of 168 partners, 50,6% found it difficult to cope with changes around sexuality. The majority of men (74,7%) preferred a standard consultation with a urologist-sexologist three months after treatment to discuss sexuality

    Prolonged antibiotic prophylaxis after pancreatoduodenectomy:systematic review and meta-analysis

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    Background: Previous studies have reported conflicting results of prolonged antibiotic prophylaxis on infectious complications after pancreatoduodenectomy. This study evaluated the effect of prolonged antibiotics on surgical-site infections (SSIs) after pancreatoduodenectomy. Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis was undertaken of SSIs in patients with perioperative (within 24 h) versus prolonged antibiotic (over 24 h) prophylaxis after pancreatoduodenectomy. SSIs were classified as organ/space infections or superficial SSI within 30 days after surgery. ORs were calculated using a Mantel–Haenszel fixed-effect model.Results:Ten studies were included in the qualitative analysis, of which 8 reporting on 1170 patients were included in the quantitative analysis. The duration of prolonged antibiotic prophylaxis varied between 2 and 10 days after surgery. Four studies reporting on 782 patients showed comparable organ/space infection rates in patients receiving perioperative and prolonged antibiotics (OR 1.35, 95 per cent c.i. 0.94 to 1.93). However, among patients with preoperative biliary drainage (5 studies reporting on 577 patients), organ/space infection rates were lower with prolonged compared with perioperative antibiotics (OR 2.09, 1.43 to 3.07). Three studies (633 patients) demonstrated comparable superficial SSI rates between patients receiving perioperative versus prolonged prophylaxis (OR 1.54, 0.97 to 2.44), as well as in patients with preoperative biliary drainage in 4 studies reporting on 431 patients (OR 1.60, 0.89 to 2.88). Conclusion: Prolonged antibiotic prophylaxis is associated with fewer organ/space infection in patients who undergo preoperative biliary drainage. However, the optimal duration of antibiotic prophylaxis after pancreatoduodenectomy remains to be determined and warrants confirmation in an RCT.</p

    Drivers of change and pressures on aquatic ecosystems : guidance on indicators and methods to assess drivers and pressures

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    The AQUACROSS project, funded under the EU’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, seeks to improve the management of aquatic ecosystems, thereby supporting the achievement of the EU 2020 Biodiversity Strategy and the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020. According to the structure of the AQUACROSS project, Work Package (WP) 4 builds on and forms part of the Assessment Framework (AF) developed in WP3. Task 4.1 builds the basis for the analysis of drivers of change and pressures on aquatic ecosystems (WP4) and should provide guidance for the analyses performed within the case studies. Hence, this Deliverable (D4.1) aims at the AQUCROSS consortia partners, in order to help guide their work going forward under Task 4.2. Within this deliverable, the following objectives are addressed: Conceptualise how drivers, pressures and environmental states are interwoven across the aquatic realms and in relation to complex social-ecological systems Define the role of drivers that directly or indirectly act on different levels, the interacting effects of these drivers, related human activities and the resulting pressures along the freshwater-marine continuum Deepen the understanding of the Driver-Pressure-State (D-P-S) part of the AF by exploring the existing qualitative and quantitative approaches of D-P-S assessment systems Identify the most suitable set of pressure-sensitive indicators, including indicators for ecosystem state Propose integrative indicators especially for newly emerging drivers and pressures based on currently used cost-effective indicator

    Impact of ocean acidification and high solar radiation on productivity and species composition of a late summer phytoplankton community of the coastal Western Antarctic Peninsula

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    The Western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP), one of the most productive regions of the Southern Ocean, is currently undergoing rapid environmental changes such as ocean acidification (OA) and increased daily irradiances from enhanced surface‐water stratification. To assess the potential for future biological CO2 sequestration of this region, we incubated a natural phytoplankton assemblage from Ryder Bay, WAP, under a range of pCO2 levels (180 μatm, 450 μatm, and 1000 μatm) combined with either moderate or high natural solar radiation (MSR: 124 μmol photons m−2 s−1 and HSR: 435 μmol photons m−2 s−1, respectively). The initial and final phytoplankton communities were numerically dominated by the prymnesiophyte Phaeocystis antarctica, with the single cells initially being predominant and solitary and colonial cells reaching similar high abundances by the end. Only when communities were grown under ambient pCO2 in conjunction with HSR did the small diatom Fragilariopsis pseudonana outcompete P. antarctica at the end of the experiment. Such positive light‐dependent growth response of the diatom was, however, dampened by OA. These changes in community composition were caused by an enhanced photosensitivity of diatoms, especially F. pseudonana, under OA and HSR, reducing thereby their competitiveness toward P. antarctica. Moreover, community primary production (PP) of all treatments yielded similar high rates at the start and the end of the experiment, but with the main contributors shifting from initially large to small cells toward the end. Even though community PP of Ryder Bay phytoplankton was insensitive to the changes in light and CO2 availability, the observed size‐dependent shift in productivity could, however, weaken the biological CO2 sequestration potential of this region in the future

    Efficiently Calculating Evolutionary Tree Measures Using SAT

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    We develop techniques to calculate important measures in evolutionary biology by encoding to CNF formulas and using powerful SAT solvers. Comparing evolutionary trees is a necessary step in tree reconstruction algorithms, locating recombination and lateral gene transfer, and in analyzing and visualizing sets of trees. We focus on two popular comparison measures for trees: the hybridization number and the rooted subtree-prune-and-regraft (rSPR) distance. Both have recently been shown to be NP-hard, and effcient algorithms are needed to compute and approximate these measures. We encode these as a Boolean formula such that two trees have hybridization number k (or rSPR distance k) if and only if the corresponding formula is satisfiable. We use state-of-the-art SAT solvers to determine if the formula encoding the measure has a satisfying assignment. Our encoding also provides a rich source of real-world SAT instances, and we include a comparison of several recent solvers (minisat, adaptg2wsat, novelty+p, Walksat, March KS and SATzilla).Postprint (author’s final draft

    Performance of novel VUV-sensitive Silicon Photo-Multipliers for nEXO

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    Liquid xenon time projection chambers are promising detectors to search for neutrinoless double beta decay (0νββ\nu \beta \beta), due to their response uniformity, monolithic sensitive volume, scalability to large target masses, and suitability for extremely low background operations. The nEXO collaboration has designed a tonne-scale time projection chamber that aims to search for 0νββ\nu \beta \beta of \ce{^{136}Xe} with projected half-life sensitivity of 1.35×10281.35\times 10^{28}~yr. To reach this sensitivity, the design goal for nEXO is \leq1\% energy resolution at the decay QQ-value (2458.07±0.312458.07\pm 0.31~keV). Reaching this resolution requires the efficient collection of both the ionization and scintillation produced in the detector. The nEXO design employs Silicon Photo-Multipliers (SiPMs) to detect the vacuum ultra-violet, 175 nm scintillation light of liquid xenon. This paper reports on the characterization of the newest vacuum ultra-violet sensitive Fondazione Bruno Kessler VUVHD3 SiPMs specifically designed for nEXO, as well as new measurements on new test samples of previously characterised Hamamatsu VUV4 Multi Pixel Photon Counters (MPPCs). Various SiPM and MPPC parameters, such as dark noise, gain, direct crosstalk, correlated avalanches and photon detection efficiency were measured as a function of the applied over voltage and wavelength at liquid xenon temperature (163~K). The results from this study are used to provide updated estimates of the achievable energy resolution at the decay QQ-value for the nEXO design
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