65 research outputs found
Dominant Role of Nucleotide Substitution in the Diversification of Serotype 3 Pneumococci over Decades and during a Single Infection
Streptococcus pneumoniae of serotype 3 possess a mucoid capsule and cause disease associated with high mortality rates relative to other pneumococci. Phylogenetic analysis of a complete reference genome and 81 draft sequences from clonal complex 180, the predominant serotype 3 clone in much of the world, found most sampled isolates belonged to a clade affected by few diversifying recombinations. However, other isolates indicate significant genetic variation has accumulated over the clonal complex’s entire history. Two closely related genomes, one from the blood and another from the cerebrospinal fluid, were obtained from a patient with meningitis. The pair differed in their behaviour in a mouse model of disease and in their susceptibility to antimicrobials, with at least some of these changes attributable to a mutation that upregulated
the patAB efflux pump. This indicates clinically important phenotypic variation can accumulate rapidly through
small alterations to the genotype
Effects of partitioning and extrapolation on the connectivity of potential magnetic fields
Coronal magnetic field may be characterized by how its field lines
interconnect regions of opposing photospheric flux -- its connectivity.
Connectivity can be quantified as the net flux connecting pairs of opposing
regions, once such regions are identified. One existing algorithm will
partition a typical active region into a number of unipolar regions ranging
from a few dozen to a few hundred, depending on algorithmic parameters. This
work explores how the properties of the partitions depend on some algorithmic
parameters, and how connectivity depends on the coarseness of partitioning for
one particular active region magnetogram. We find the number of connections
among them scales with the number of regions even as the number of possible
connections scales with its square.
There are several methods of generating a coronal field, even a potential
field. The field may be computed inside conducting boundaries or over an
infinite half-space. For computation of connectivity, the unipolar regions may
be replaced by point sources or the exact magnetogram may be used as a lower
boundary condition. Our investigation shows that the connectivities from these
various fields differ only slightly -- no more than 15%. The greatest
difference is between fields within conducting walls and those in the
half-space. Their connectivities grow more different as finer partitioning
creates more source regions. This also gives a quantitative means of
establishing how far away conducting boundaries must be placed in order not to
significantly affect the extrapolation. For identical outer boundaries, the use
of point sources instead of the exact magnetogram makes a smaller difference in
connectivity: typically 6% independent of the number of source regions
Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis associated with injecting new psychoactive substances
Background Staphylococcus aureus infective endocarditis (IE) associated with injection of new psychoactive substances (NPS) in Edinburgh from 2014 to 2016 was observed. We compared these infections with a series of S. aureus IE cases in a non-injecting population within Edinburgh.
Methods NPS-associated S. aureus IE diagnosed between 1 January 2014 and 31 May 2016 in persons who inject drugs (PWID) were compared with a series of S. aureus IE cases from non-PWID.
Results There was a fourfold increase in the annual incidence of S. aureus IE, mainly due to NPS use in PWID. A larger vegetation diameter was seen on echocardiogram in PWID vs non-PWID (median 1.7 cm vs 0.65 cm; p = 0.009) with more embolic complications in PWID (15 PWID vs 1 non-PWID; p = 2.1 x 10-7) but no difference in 90-day mortality (2 PWID vs 4 non-PWID; p = 0.39).
Conclusions NPS-associated S. aureus IE correlated with complications, such as deep organ embolic abscesses, that were different from non-PWID S. aureus IE. The alarming increase in incidence resolved with targeted public health and legislative measures
On Solving the Coronal Heating Problem
This article assesses the current state of understanding of coronal heating,
outlines the key elements of a comprehensive strategy for solving the problem,
and warns of obstacles that must be overcome along the way.Comment: Accepted by Solar Physics; Published by Solar Physic
Erratum to: 36th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1208-6.]
Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia in tropical and low and middle income countries: a systematic review and meta-regression
Objective: Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP), the commonest opportunistic infection in HIV-infected patients in the developed world, is less commonly described in tropical and low and middle income countries (LMIC). We sought to investigate predictors of PCP in these settings. Design Systematic review and meta-regression. METHODS: Meta-regression of predictors of PCP diagnosis (33 studies). Qualitative and quantitative assessment of recorded CD4 counts, receipt of prophylaxis and antiretrovirals, sensitivity and specificity of clinical signs and symptoms for PCP, co-infection with other pathogens, and case fatality (117 studies). RESULTS: The most significant predictor of PCP was per capita Gross Domestic Product, which showed strong linear association with odds of PCP diagnosis (p30%; treatment was largely appropriate. Prophylaxis appeared to reduce the risk for development of PCP, however 24% of children with PCP were receiving prophylaxis. CD4 counts at presentation with PCP were usually <200×10 3/ ml. CONCLUSIONS: There is a positive relationship between GDP and risk of PCP diagnosis. Although failure to diagnose infection in poorer countries may contribute to this, we also hypothesise that poverty exposes at-risk patients to a wide range of infections and that the relatively non-pathogenic P. jirovecii is therefore under-represented. As LMIC develop economically they eliminate the conditions underlying transmission of virulent infection: P. jirovecii , ubiquitous in all settings, then becomes a greater relative threat
- …