3,656 research outputs found

    Factores familiares asociados a los Trastornos Alimentarios: una revisión

    Get PDF
    From a multifactorial perspective this study present a review about the family factors associated to eating disorders, considering theoretical and empirical contributions in national and international journals articles . The find of the research about the Eating Disorders and Family, indicate that the principal topics investigated are: family functioning, daughters and fathers relationships, stressful experiences, family psychopathology, attitudes and behaviors about weigh, eating and body image in the affected families. We conclude recognizing the heterogeneity of the families with Eating Disorders and the complex combination of family factors associated to eating psychopathology. More research is suggested about: family functioning in EDNOS patients, the father´s role, protective factors, coping stress, body image and family food

    Cambio de uso de suelo e implicaciones socioeconómicas en un área mazahua del altiplano mexicano

    Get PDF
    Se analizan los cambios de uso del suelo entre 2000 y 2010 de la región mazahua del Estado de México y sus implicaciones socioeconómicas. El estudio se sustenta en la geografía socioeconómica de Bonfil (1996) y los procesos de cambio de uso del suelo de Fernández y Prados (2010) para evaluar los cambios de uso del suelo. Se utilizó clasificación supervisada de máxima probabilidad y datos socioeconómicos y demográficos. Los resultados de análisis de imágenes fueron verificados mediante recorridos en campo. Los cambios pueden deberse al crecimiento poblacional, en los modos de vida y su consecuente demanda de alimentos y viviendas.Se analizan los cambios de uso del suelo entre 2000 y 2010 de la región mazahua del Estado de México y sus implicaciones socioeconómicas. El estudio se sustenta en la geografía socioeconómica de Bonfil (1996) y los procesos de cambio de uso del suelo de Fernández y Prados (2010) para evaluar los cambios de uso del suelo. Se utilizó clasificación supervisada de máxima probabilidad y datos socioeconómicos y demográficos. Los resultados de análisis de imágenes fueron verificados mediante recorridos en campo. Los cambios pueden deberse al crecimiento poblacional, en los modos de vida y su consecuente demanda de alimentos y viviendas

    Effects of irrigation with rich-arsenic water on an arugula (Eruca sativa L.) crop

    Get PDF
    Large areas of Chaco Pampean plain have aquifers containing high arsenic values. The use of these waters to irrigate horticultural species, in particular, those for fresh consumption could have direct effects on human health as well as on agricultural soils. The aim of this work was to evaluate the arsenic content in the species Eruca sativa L (arugula) and also to evaluate the soil when applying irrigation with waters prepared in the laboratory with different arsenic concentration and alkalinity. An assay with DBCA design and factorial arrangement was performed (soil type/alkalinity/As level) employing two types of soils with different textures (sandy loam and silty loam), developing 20 plants per pot. Pots were kept at 90% of field capacity with daily irrigation using water of different alkalinity and arsenic concentration. Three concentrations of arsenic were used (100, 250 and 500 μg.L-1), employing the starting water (not modified by As) as witness. Variables evaluated were vegetal dry matter and arsenic concentration in plant and soil. Irrigation conditions affected the arsenic content in the plant reaching toxicity levels similar to those cited in the literature, particularly in silty loam soil. Although the increase of arsenic concentration is evident in vegetal, it is not possible to establish a reliable relation between the arsenic concentration in the vegetal and the plant yield. Moreover, the arsenic content in the soil also increased with the irrigation showing higher levels in silty loam soil without reaching hazard limits in the first sowing. It is possible to conclude that although the arsenic concentration in fresh vegetal is within limits established by the legislation, its consumption could contribute to the daily intake of arsenic which, in turn, could add to the hazard of drinking water with arsenic.Amplias zonas de la planicie Chaco-Pampeana presentan acuíferos de los que se extrae agua que contiene valores elevados de arsénico. El empleo de este tipo de agua en el riego de especies hortícolas, particularmente de consumo fresco, podría tener consecuencias sanitarias directas sobre la población y también afectar los suelos. Los objetivos del trabajo se encuentran dirigidos a la evaluación del contenido de As en la especie Eruca sativa L. (rúcula) y en el suelo de cultivo al aplicar riego con aguas preparadas en el laboratorio con diferente concentración de As y alcalinidad. Se realiza un ensayo con diseño DBCA y arreglo factorial (tipo de suelo/ alcalinidad del agua/nivel As) empleando dos suelos texturalmente distintos (franco-arenoso y franco-limoso), con el desarrollo de 20 plantas por maceta. Las macetas se mantuvieron al 90% de la capacidad de campo (riegos diarios con dos tipos de agua de diferente alcalinidad) y 3 concentraciones de As (100, 250 y 500 μg.L-1), empleando agua sin modificar como testigo. Las variables evaluadas fueron materia seca vegetal y concentración de As en planta y suelo. Las condiciones de riego afectaron el tenor de As en planta alcanzando niveles de toxicidad similares a los citados en la literatura, particularmente en el suelo franco-limoso. Si bien es evidente el aumento de la concentración de As en vegetal, no es posible establecer una relación fehaciente entre la concentración de As en el vegetal y el rendimiento. El contenido de As en el suelo también aumentó con el riego, observándose mayores niveles en el suelo franco-limoso, sin alcanzar los límites de peligrosidad en una primera siembra. Puede concluirse que si bien la concentración de As en vegetal fresco se encuentra dentro de los límites establecidos por la Legislación, su consumo podría significar un aporte a la ingesta diaria de As, que se sumaría a los perjuicios ocasionados por el agua de bebida.Fil: Castillo, Nadia Sabiela. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestales; ArgentinaFil: Franco, Maria Luisina. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestales; ArgentinaFil: González, María José. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata. Centro de Química Inorgánica "Dr. Pedro J. Aymonino". Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Centro de Química Inorgánica "Dr. Pedro J. Aymonino"; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de la Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo. Instituto de Recursos Minerales. Provincia de Buenos Aires. Gobernación. Comisión de Investigaciones Científicas. Instituto de Recursos Minerales; ArgentinaFil: Sanillan, Juan Manuel. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas; ArgentinaFil: Vazquez, Mabel Elena. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias y Forestales; ArgentinaFil: Botto, Irma Lia. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata. Centro de Química Inorgánica "Dr. Pedro J. Aymonino". Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Centro de Química Inorgánica "Dr. Pedro J. Aymonino"; Argentin

    Toward application of biocontrol to inhibit wine spoilage yeasts: The use of statistical designs for screening and optimisation

    Get PDF
    Spoilage yeasts generate considerable economic losses in the wine industry, and although sulphur dioxide (SO2) is traditionally used for control, its use has become controversial because of its negative effects on health. Biocontrol has emerged as a partial alternative to SO2, and most research has focused on the selection of biocontrol yeasts and/or the mechanisms involved, while little research has been directed to the environmental conditions that make biocontrol effective for application. When there are two or more interacting yeasts, the physicochemical factors that affect their antagonism are many and therefore the application of biocontrol is complex. To reduce SO2, the present study aimed to elucidate biocontrol mechanisms of two yeast interactions and to establish optimal physicochemical conditions for biocontrol of the spoilage yeast during grape must fermentation. Through the use of statistical design, it was possible to find relevant physicochemical factors and optimise them. Wickerhamomyces anomalus “BWa156” developed an active supernatant against Zygosaccharomyces rouxii “BZr6” while supernatant from Metschnikowia pulcherrima “BMp29” was ineffective. In mixed must fermentations, the first interaction (BWa156 vs. BZr6) showed fewer physicochemical factors impacting biocontrol compared to the second interaction (BMp29 vs. BZr6). However, the fewer factors of the first interaction had a stronger effect on the decline in the spoilage population. Validations showed that the optimal conditions for biocontrol with the first interaction could be predicted. Analysis of the results with BWa156 vs. BZr6 and BMp29 vs. BZr6 suggests that the first interaction is a competition that includes a killer toxin, while the second interaction involves competition for iron resources. Response surface methodology (RSM) allowed a reduction in the number of experiments and permitted to find the optimal biocontrol conditions (SO2: 0 mg mL-1; pH: 3.7; Reducing sugars: 23 °Brix) for the interaction between BWa156 and BZr6.Fil: Kuchen, Benjamín. Departamento de Ingenieria Agronomica ; Facultad de Ingenieria ; Universidad Nacional de San Juan; ArgentinaFil: Vazquez, Fabio. Universidad Nacional de San Juan; ArgentinaFil: Maturano, Yolanda Paola. Departamento de Ingenieria Agronomica ; Facultad de Ingenieria ; Universidad Nacional de San Juan; ArgentinaFil: Scaglia, Gustavo Juan Eduardo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de San Juan; Faculta de Ingeniaría; Instituto de Ingeniería Química; ArgentinaFil: Pera, Licia Maria. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Tucumán. Planta Piloto de Procesos Industriales Microbiológicos; ArgentinaFil: Vallejo, Martha Dina. Universidad Nacional de San Juan; Argentin

    Loose ends: almost one in five human genes still have unresolved coding status

    Get PDF
    Seventeen years after the sequencing of the human genome, the human proteome is still under revision. One in eight of the 22 210 coding genes listed by the Ensembl/GENCODE, RefSeq and UniProtKB reference databases are annotated differently across the three sets. We have carried out an in-depth investigation on the 2764 genes classified as coding by one or more sets of manual curators and not coding by others. Data from large-scale genetic variation analyses suggests that most are not under protein-like purifying selection and so are unlikely to code for functional proteins. A further 1470 genes annotated as coding in all three reference sets have characteristics that are typical of non-coding genes or pseudogenes. These potential non-coding genes also appear to be undergoing neutral evolution and have considerably less supporting transcript and protein evidence than other coding genes. We believe that the three reference databases currently overestimate the number of human coding genes by at least 2000, complicating and adding noise to large-scale biomedical experiments. Determining which potential non-coding genes do not code for proteins is a difficult but vitally important task since the human reference proteome is a fundamental pillar of most basic research and supports almost all large-scale biomedical projects.National Institutes of Health [2 U41 HG007234 to I.J., L.M., J.M.R. and M.L.T., R01 HG004037 to I.J.]. Funding for open access charge: NIH [2 U41 HG007234].S

    Accelerometer-Measured Physical Activity, Inactivity, and Related Factors in Family Caregivers of Patients with Terminal Cancer

    Get PDF
    The physical activity (PA) and inactivity of family caregivers of cancer patients were investigated and related to burden and quality of life through a cross-sectional multicentre study. A total of 75 caregivers were recruited from June 2020 to March 2021. The levels of PA and inactivity were estimated with a wrist accelerometer, 24 h a day, for 7 consecutive days. The Quality of Life Family Version, the Caregiver Strain Index, the total duration of care, the average number of hours spent in care, and the assistance received were registered. Our results showed that moderate-to-vigorous PA was 96.40 ± 46.93 min/day, with 90.7% of participants performing more than 150 min/week of physical activity, and this was significantly associated with age (r = −0.237). Daily inactivity was 665.78 ± 94.92 min, and inactivity for 20–30 min was significantly associated with caregiver burden (r = 0.232) and quality of life (r = −0.322). Compliance with the World Health Organization recommendations was significantly associated with a lower quality of life (r = −0.269). The strength of these associations was limited (r ~0.2). In conclusion, the PA performed by most caregivers met the established recommendations, although older caregivers (>65 years old) performed lower moderate-to-vigorous PA than younger ones. In addition, the mean inactive time was high (11 h/day), showing slight relationships with the burden and quality of life of caregiversExternal funding for this study involving research, development, and innovation (R + D + I) in biomedical and health sciences in Andalusia was obtained from the Regional Health Ministry of “Junta de Andalucia”, under Project AP-0225-2019. This work was partially funded by Junta de Andalucia and ERDF with the project “UMA20-FEDERJA-154” of financial support for R + D + I projects in the ERDF-Andalusia Operational Programme 2014–2020 (Programa Operativo FEDER Andalucía 2014-2020). J.C.-P. is supported by a predoctoral grant from the Spanish Ministry of Education (Ministerio de Educación), grant number FPU19/02326. Partial funding for open access charge: Universidad de Málag

    Fade statistics of M-turbulent optical links

    Get PDF
    A new and generalized statistical model, called Málaga or simply ℳ distribution, has been derived recently to characterize the irradiance fluctuations of an unbounded optical wavefront propagating through a turbulent medium under all irradiance fluctuation conditions. The aforementioned model extends and unifies in a simple analytical closed-form expression most of the proposed statistical models for free-space optical (FSO) communications widely employed until now in the scientific literature. Based on that ℳ model, we have studied some important features associated to its fade statistics and expressed in terms of the expected number of fades per second. The derived expressions become relevant for many aspects in a FSO system, especially those ones related to determine the optimum threshold in a receiver based on a direct detection scheme employing a fixed detection threshold

    Carbapenemase-producing enterobacteriaceae in Spain in 2012

    Get PDF
    We report the epidemiological impact of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) in Spain in 2012. Of the 237 carbapenemases detected, 163 were from the OXA-48 group, 60 were from VIM-1, 8 were from KPC-2, 5 were from IMP, and 1 was from NDM-1. Interhospital spread of carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae was due to a limited number of multilocus sequence types (MLST) and carbapenemase types, including ST15-VIM-1, ST11-OXA-48, ST405-OXA-48, ST101-KPC-2, and ST11-VIM-1. The number of CPE cases in Spain has increased sharply in recent years, due mainly to the emergence of OXA-48.This study was supported by the Antibiotic Resistance Surveillance Program of the Spanish Centro Nacional de Microbiología of the Instituto de Salud Carlos III. Verónica Bautista was supported by the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, cofinanced by the European Development Regional Fund “A way to achieve Europe” ERDF, Spanish Network for the Research in Infectious Diseases (REIPI RD12/0015).S

    Effects of cellulase and xylanase enzymes mixed with increasing doses of Salix babylonica extract on in vitro rumen gas production kinetics of a mixture of corn silage with concentrate

    Get PDF
    Therefore, the objective of this study was to assess the effects of different doses of plant extracts when combined with exogenous fibrolytic enzymes on in vitro ruminal fermentation of a mixture of corn silage with concentrate.An in vitro gas production (GP) technique was used to investigate the effects of combining different doses of Salix babylonica extract (SB) with exogenous fibrolytic enzymes (EZ) based on xylanase (X) and cellulase (C), or their mixture (XC; 1:1 v/v) on in vitro fermentation characteristics of a total mixed ration of corn silage and concentrate mixture (50:50, w/w) as substrate. Four levels of SB (0, 0.6, 1.2 and 1.8 mL g–1 dry matter (DM)) and four supplemental styles of EZ (1 μL g–1 DM; control (no enzymes), X, C and XC (1:1, v/v) were used in a 4×4 factorial arrangement. In vitro GP (mL g–1 DM) were recorded at 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 24, 36, 48 and 72 h of incubation. After 72 h, the incubation process was stopped and supernatant pH was determined, and then filtered to determine dry matter degradability (DMD). Fermentation parameters, such as the 24 h gas yield (GY24), in vitro organic matter digestibility (OMD), metabolizable energy (ME), short chain fatty acid concentrations (SCFA), and microbial crude protein production (MCP) were also estimated. Results indicated that there was a SB´EZ interaction (P<0.0001) for the asymptotic gas production (b), the rate of gas production (c), GP from 6 to 72 h, GP2 (P=0.0095), and GP4 (P=0.02). The SB and different combination of enzymes supplementation influenced (P<0.001) in vitro GP parameters after 12 h of incubation; the highest doses of SB (i.e., 1.8 mL g–1 DM), in the absence of any EZ, quadratically increased (P<0.05) the initial delay before GP begins (L) and GP at different incubation times, with lowering b (quadratic effect, P<0.0001) and c (quadratic effect, P<0.0001; linear effect, P=0.0018). The GP was the lowest (P<0.05) when the highest SB level was combined with cellulose. There were SB´EZ interactions (P<0.001) for OMD, ME, the partitioning factor at 72 h of incubation (PF72), GY24, SCFA, MCP (P=0.0143), and pH (P=0.0008). The OMD, ME, GY24 and SCFA with supplementation of SB extract at 1.8 mL g–1 DM were higher (P<0.001) than the other treatments, however

    Post-stroke Neurogenesis: Friend or Foe?

    Get PDF
    The substantial clinical burden and disability after stroke injury urges the need to explore therapeutic solutions. Recent compelling evidence supports that neurogenesis persists in the adult mammalian brain and is amenable to regulation in both physiological and pathological situations. Its ability to generate new neurons implies a potential to contribute to recovery after brain injury. However, post-stroke neurogenic response may have different functional consequences. On the one hand, the capacity of newborn neurons to replenish the damaged tissue may be limited. In addition, aberrant forms of neurogenesis have been identified in several insult settings. All these data suggest that adult neurogenesis is at a crossroads between the physiological and the pathological regulation of the neurological function in the injured central nervous system (CNS). Given the complexity of the CNS together with its interaction with the periphery, we ultimately lack in-depth understanding of the key cell types, cell-cell interactions, and molecular pathways involved in the neurogenic response after brain damage and their positive or otherwise deleterious impact. Here we will review the evidence on the stroke-induced neurogenic response and on its potential repercussions on functional outcome. First, we will briefly describe subventricular zone (SVZ) neurogenesis after stroke beside the main evidence supporting its positive role on functional restoration after stroke. Then, we will focus on hippocampal subgranular zone (SGZ) neurogenesis due to the relevance of hippocampus in cognitive functions; we will outline compelling evidence that supports that, after stroke, SGZ neurogenesis may adopt a maladaptive plasticity response further contributing to the development of post-stroke cognitive impairment and dementia. Finally, we will discuss the therapeutic potential of specific steps in the neurogenic cascade that might ameliorate brain malfunctioning and the development of post-stroke cognitive impairment in the chronic phase.This work was supported by the grants from Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, PID2019-106581RB-I00 (MM); Leducq Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, TNE-19CVD01 (MM); Fundación La Caixa, HR17_00527 (MM); Instituto de Salud Carlos III and co-financed by the European Development Regional Fund “A Way to Achieve Europe,” PI20/00535 and RETICS RD16/0019/0009 (IL); by contracts FJC-039343-I (AG-C) from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation; and FPU01405265 (VM) and FPU19/02989 (EF) from the Spanish Ministry of Universities. The CNIC is supported by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (MCIN), and the Pro CNIC Foundation and is a Severo Ochoa Center of Excellence (SEV-2015-0505).S
    corecore