13 research outputs found

    Genome-wide association study identifies two susceptibility loci for osteosarcoma

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    Osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone malignancy of adolescents and young adults. To better understand the genetic etiology of osteosarcoma, we performed a multistage genome-wide association study consisting of 941 individuals with osteosarcoma (cases) and 3,291 cancer-free adult controls of European ancestry. Two loci achieved genome-wide significance: a locus in the GRM4 gene at 6p21.3 (encoding glutamate receptor metabotropic 4; rs1906953; P = 8.1 × 10⁻⁹) and a locus in the gene desert at 2p25.2 (rs7591996 and rs10208273; P = 1.0 × 10⁻⁸ and 2.9 × 10⁻⁷, respectively). These two loci warrant further exploration to uncover the biological mechanisms underlying susceptibility to osteosarcoma

    Prevalência de criptosporidiose em bezerros na região de Araçatuba, Estado de São Paulo, Brasil Prevalence of cryptosporidiosis in calves from Araçatuba region, São Paulo State, Brazil

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    Avaliou-se a prevalência de oocistos de Cryptosporidium parvum em amostras de fezes de 459 bezerros com até 30 dias de idade e em amostras de água e piso dos bezerreiros de 33 propriedades leiteiras na região de Araçatuba-Estado de São Paulo. A maior porcentagem de excreção de oocistos foi verificada em bezerros com faixa etária variando entre oito e 14 dias de idade (14,5%) sendo, a menor taxa (6,4%), detectada no grupo de animais mais velhos (22 a 30 dias de vida). Observaram-se, na amostragem total, valores positivos aproximados de 10,26% pelo ensaio de imunoadsorção enzimática e de 12,4% pelo teste de Sheather. As amostras de água foram negativas e duas de solo positivas.<br>The purpose of this study was to evaluete the prevalence of Criptosporidium parvum oocists in faeces samples from 459 calves up to 30 days old and from water and floor samples from 33 farmers from Araçatuba region - Sâo Paulo. The higher percentage of oocists excreted was observed in calves with 8 to 14 days old, and the lower was noted in the oldest animals group (22 to 30 days old). In total amostrage 10.26% were positive using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and 12.4% by the Sheather test. The water samples were negative and two of soil positive

    Aspectos clínicos, morfológicos e imuno-histoquímicos da pitiose gastrintestinal canina

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    Através de um estudo retrospectivo dos casos de biópsias e necropsias de cães recebidos no Laboratório de Patologia Veterinária da Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, constatou-se a ocorrência de dois casos confirmados e de quatro casos suspeitos de pitiose gastrintestinal canina. Os dois casos diagnosticados e publicados tiveram a etiologia confirmada através da cultura e indução de zoosporogênese ou por nested-PCR. Neste estudo utilizou-se a técnica de imuno-histoquímica com anticorpo policlonal anti-Pythium insidiosum para confirmação da etiologia dos quatro casos suspeitos. A epidemiologia, sinais clínicos, lesões macroscópicas e microscópicas, características histoquímicas e imuno-histoquímicas e diagnósticos diferenciais são relatados e discutidos.<br>Four suspect and two confirmed cases of gastrointestinal pythiosis were found in a retrospective study of biopsy and necropsy cases of dogs received in the Laboratório de Patologia Veterinária at the Universidade Federal de Santa Maria. The two diagnosed and published cases have had the etiology confirmed by culture and zoosporogenesis induction or by nested-PCR. On this study, the etiologic diagnosis of four suspect cases was confirmed by immunohistochemistry using anti-Pythium insidiosum policlonal antibody. Epidemiology, clinical signs, gross and microscopic lesions, histochemistry, immunohistochemistry, and differential diagnoses are reported and discussed

    How military nurses rationalize their postoperative pain assessment decisions

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    Aim. This paper is a report of a study to explore how military nurses rationalize their postoperative pain assessment decisions, particularly when these differ from patients’ pain self-reports.Background. Postoperative pain is a complex phenomenon influenced by many factors that make assessment difficult. Nurses are taught to believe what patients say about their pain. However, their attitudes to pain are influenced by their cultural background and they may disagree with patients’ self-reports. Military nurses belong to a military culture with different pain attitudes that may also influence their postoperative pain assessment.Method. An ethnomethodological ethnography study was carried out in 2003. A purposive sample of 29 British military surgical/orthopaedic Registered Nurses were interviewed to identify their taken-for-granted assumptions and commonsense cultural knowledge surrounding postoperative pain assessment. The data were analysed using a systematic process of inductive reasoning aided by Non-numerical, Unstructured Data for Indexing, Searching and Theorizing (qsr n6, nud*ist).Findings. Participants told two distinct stories in their postoperative pain narratives. The first, the cultural story, described how military nurses normally assess postoperative pain and revealed taken-for-granted assumptions surrounding this assessment. However, when military nurses believe that patients over- or under-report their pain, the cultural story was challenged through a collective story in which nurses used their commonsense knowledge to account for these differences.Conclusion. Postoperative pain assessment within a military culture is complex, but all nurses need to be aware that their socialization into different nursing cultures may influence their attitudes to postoperative pain assessment.<br/

    Genome-wide association study identifies two susceptibility loci for osteosarcoma

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    Osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone malignancy of adolescents and young adults. To better understand the genetic etiology of osteosarcoma, we performed a multistage genome-wide association study consisting of 941 individuals with osteosarcoma (cases) and 3,291 cancer-free adult controls of European ancestry. Two loci achieved genome-wide significance: a locus in the GRM4 gene at 6p21.3 (encoding glutamate receptor metabotropic 4; rs1906953; P = 8.1 × 10⁻⁹) and a locus in the gene desert at 2p25.2 (rs7591996 and rs10208273; P = 1.0 × 10⁻⁸ and 2.9 × 10⁻⁷, respectively). These two loci warrant further exploration to uncover the biological mechanisms underlying susceptibility to osteosarcoma
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