2,272 research outputs found
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Dextran 500 Improves Recovery of Inflammatory Markers: An In Vitro Microdialysis Study.
Cerebral microdialysis (CMD) is used in severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) in order to recover metabolites in brain extracellular fluid (ECF). To recover larger proteins and avoid fluid loss, albumin supplemented perfusion fluid (PF) has been utilized, but because of regulatory changes in the European Union, this is no longer practicable. The aim with this study was to see whether fluid, absolute (AR), and relative (RR) recovery for the novel carrier, Dextran 500, was better than conventional PF for a range of cytokines and chemokines. An in vitro setup mimicking conditions observed in the neurocritical care of TBI patients was used, utilizing 100-kDa molecular-weight cut-off CMD catheters inserted through a triple-lumen bolt cranial access device into an external solution with diluted cytokine standards in known concentrations for 48 h (divided into 6-h epochs). Samples were run on a 39-plex Luminex (Luminex Corporation, Austin, TX) assay to assess cytokine concentrations. We found that fluid recovery was inadequate in 50% of epochs with conventional PF, whereas Dextran PF overcame this limitation. The AR was higher in the Dextran PF samples for a majority of cytokines, and RR was significantly increased for macrophage colony-stimulating factor and transforming growth factor-alpha. In summary, Dextran PF improved fluid and cytokine recovery as compared to conventional PF and is a suitable alternative to albumin supplemented PF for protein microdialysis.The work was supported by funding for SGC and KLHC from the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge (Neuroscience Theme; Brain Injury and Repair Theme). PJH is funded by a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Professorship, Academy of Medical Sciences/Health Foundation Senior Surgical Scientist Fellowship and the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge. EPT has received salary support from Swedish Society for Medical Research. AH is supported by the Royal College of Surgeons of England and the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge. The study consumables were purchased through the NIHR Research Professorship (Peter Hutchinson) and the Luminex 200 analyser was purchased with Medical Research Council (MRC) funding (G0600986 ID79068)
A reflective journal as learning process and contribution to quality and validity in interpretative phenomenological analysis
Using selected, contemporaneous illustrations from the reflective journal of a doctoral student undertaking data analysis for the first time, this article examines the relationship between journaling as a learning process when undertaking computer-assisted qualitative data analysis and establishing quality and validity in interpretative phenomenological analysis. The writing of the journal is shown both to enact some potential validity criteria (e.g. in producing an audit trail) whilst also recording and reflectively prompting the process of learning, interpretation and bracketing, thus evidencing transparency. By using a journal inside the software package and alongside the stages of the interpretative phenomenological analysis, analysis within the software package, it is argued that quality and validity become dynamic, not static constructs. These constructs are intimately linked to the researcher-learning-process and permit a critical stance to be taken
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Metabolism and inflammation: implications for traumatic brain injury therapeutics
Introduction: Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is a leading cause of death and disability in young people, affecting 69 million people annually, worldwide. The initial trauma disrupts brain homeostasis resulting in metabolic dysfunction and an inflammatory cascade, which can then promote further neurodegenerative effects for months or years, as a ‘secondary’ injury. Effective targeting of the cerebral inflammatory system is challenging due to its complex, pleiotropic nature. Cell metabolism plays a key role in many diseases, and increased disturbance in the TBI metabolic state is associated with poorer patient outcomes. Investigating critical metabolic pathways, and their links to inflammation, can potentially identify supplements which alter the brain’s long-term response to TBI and improve recovery.
Areas covered: The authors provide an overview of literature on metabolism and inflammation following TBI, and from relevant pre-clinical and clinical studies, propose therapeutic strategies.
Expert commentary: There is still no specific active drug treatment for TBI. Changes in metabolic and inflammatory states have been reported after TBI and appear linked. Understanding more about abnormal cerebral metabolism following TBI, and its relationship with cerebral inflammation, will provide essential information for designing therapies, with implications for neurocritical care and for alleviating long-term disability and neurodegeneration in post-TBI patients.MJK - Cambridge Australia Oliphant Scholarship in partnership with the Cambridge Trust; SGC – National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge; PJH – National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Research Professorship, Academy of Medical Sciences/Health Foundation Senior Surgical Scientist Fellowship and the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge; KLHC - KLHC – National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge (Neuroscience Theme; Brain Injury and Repair Theme). Our cerebral metabolism studies were funded by the Medical Research Council (Grant No. G1002277, ID98489). Our cytokine studies were supported by a joint Medical Research Council/Royal College of Surgeons of England Clinical Research Training Fellowship (G0802251) awarded to AH
J/Psi and Psi' total cross sections and formation times from data for charmonium suppression in collisions
The recent data for E866 experiment on the x_F dependence for charmonium
suppression in pA collisions at 800 GeV are analyzed using a time- and
energy-dependent preformed charmonium absorption cross section
\sigma_{abs}^\psi(\tau,\sqrt{s}). For \sqrt{s}=10 GeV the initially (\tau=0)
produced premeson has an absorption cross section of \sigma_{pr}~3mb. At the
same energy but for \tau -> \infty one deduces for the total cross sections
\sigma_{tot}^{J/Psi N}=(2.8\pm 0.3)mb, \sigma_{tot}^{J/Psi N}= (10.5\pm 3.6)mb.
The date are compatible with a formation time \tau_{1/2}=0.6 fm/c.Comment: 13 pages of Latex including 2 figures; typos in the abstract are
correcte
Quantifying the impact of climate change on drought regimes using the Standardised Precipitation Index
The study presents a methodology to characterise short- or long-term drought events, designed to aid understanding of how climate change may affect future risk. An indicator of drought magnitude, combining parameters of duration, spatial extent and intensity, is presented based on the Standardised Precipitation Index (SPI). The SPI is applied to observed (1955–2003) and projected (2003–2050) precipitation data from the Community Integrated Assessment System (CIAS). Potential consequences of climate change on drought regimes in Australia, Brazil, China, Ethiopia, India, Spain, Portugal and the USA are quantified. Uncertainty is assessed by emulating a range of global circulation models to project climate change. Further uncertainty is addressed through the use of a high-emission scenario and a low stabilisation scenario representing a stringent mitigation policy. Climate change was shown to have a larger effect on the duration and magnitude of long-term droughts, and Australia, Brazil, Spain, Portugal and the USA were highlighted as being particularly vulnerable to multi-year drought events, with the potential for drought magnitude to exceed historical experience. The study highlights the characteristics of drought which may be more sensitive under climate change. For example, on average, short-term droughts in the USA do not become more intense but are projected to increase in duration. Importantly, the stringent mitigation scenario had limited effect on drought regimes in the first half of the twenty-first century, showing that adaptation to drought risk will be vital in these regions
Estimation of Pap-test coverage in an area with an organised screening program: challenges for survey methods
BACKGROUND: The cytological screening programme of Viterbo has completed the second round of invitations to the entire target population (age 25–64). From a public health perspective, it is important to know the Pap-test coverage rate and the use of opportunistic screening. The most commonly used study design is the survey, but the validity of self-reports and the assumptions made about non respondents are often questioned. METHODS: From the target population, 940 women were sampled, and responded to a telephone interview about Pap-test utilisation. The answers were compared with the screening program registry; comparing the dates of Pap-tests reported by both sources. Sensitivity analyses were performed for coverage over a 36-month period, according to various assumptions regarding non respondents. RESULTS: The response rate was 68%. The coverage over 36 months was 86.4% if we assume that non respondents had the same coverage as respondents, 66% if we assume they were not covered at all, and 74.6% if we adjust for screening compliance in the non respondents. The sensitivity and specificity of the question, "have you ever had a Pap test with the screening programme" were 84.5% and 82.2% respectively. The test dates reported in the interview tended to be more recent than those reported in the registry, but 68% were within 12 months of each other. CONCLUSION: Surveys are useful tools to understand the effectiveness of a screening programme and women's self-report was sufficiently reliable in our setting, but the coverage estimates were strongly influenced by the assumptions we made regarding non respondents
Multiperspectival designs and processes in interpretative phenomenological analysis research
Researchers using interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) within applied research typically use homogenous samples exploring shared perspectives on a single phenomenon of interest. This article explores the challenges and opportunities involved with developing rigorous and epistemologically coherent research designs for capturing more complex and systemic experiential phenomena, through the use of multiple perspectives to explore the same phenomenon. We outline a series of multiple perspective designs and analytic procedures that can be adapted and used across many diverse settings and populations. Whilst building upon existing approaches within qualitative methods and IPA, these designs and procedures are intended to scaffold clear routes to practical application, psychological intervention, the design of behaviour change interventions, and other recommendations for policy and practice. We discuss a variety of conceptual antecedents which situate these designs within phenomenology, pluralistic idiography, qualitative psychology, and wider debates within psychology and other social and behavioural sciences
Stronger diversity effects with increased environmental stress : a study of multitrophic interactions between oak, powdery mildew and ladybirds
Recent research has suggested that increasing neighbourhood tree species diversity may mitigate the impact of pests or pathogens by supporting the activities of their natural enemies and/or reducing the density of available hosts. In this study, we attempted to assess these mechanisms in a multitrophic study system of young oak (Quercus), oak powdery mildew (PM, caused by Erysiphe spp.) and a mycophagous ladybird (Psyllobora vigintiduo-punctata). We assessed ladybird mycophagy on oak PM in function of different neighbourhood tree species compositions. We also evaluated whether these species interactions were modulated by environmental conditions as suggested by the Stress Gradient Hypothesis. We adopted a complementary approach of a field experiment where we monitored oak saplings subjected to a reduced rainfall gradient in a young planted forest consisting of different tree species mixtures, as well as a lab experiment where we independently evaluated the effect of different watering treatments on PM infections and ladybird mycophagy. In the field experiment, we found effects of neighbourhood tree species richness on ladybird mycophagy becoming more positive as the target trees received less water. This effect was only found as weather conditions grew drier. In the lab experiment, we found a preference of ladybirds to graze on infected leaves from trees that received less water. We discuss potential mechanisms that might explain this preference, such as emissions of volatile leaf chemicals. Our results are in line with the expectations of the Natural Enemies Hypothesis and support the hypothesis that biodiversity effects become stronger with increased environmental stress
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