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    Analysis of intestinal and nasopharyngeal microbiota of children with meningococcemia in pediatric intensive care unit: INMACS-PICU study

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    This article belongs to the Special Issue Pediatric Diagnostic Microbiology.Microbiota composition might play a role in the pathophysiology and course of sepsis, and understanding its dynamics is of clinical interest. Invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is an important cause of community-acquired serious infection, and there is no information regarding microbiota composition in children with meningococcemia. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the intestinal and nasopharyngeal microbiota composition of children with IMD.[Materials and Methods]: In this prospective, multi-center study, 10 children with meningococcemia and 10 age-matched healthy controls were included. Nasopharyngeal and fecal samples were obtained at admission to the intensive care unit and on the tenth day of their hospital stay. The V3 and V4 regions of the 16S rRNA gene were amplified following the 16S Metagenomic Sequencing Library Preparation.[Results]: Regarding the alpha diversity on the day of admission and on the tenth day at the PICU, the Shannon index was significantly lower in the IMD group compared to the control group (p = 0.002 at admission and p = 0.001, on the tenth day of PICU). A statistical difference in the stool samples was found between the IMD group at Day 0 vs. the controls in the results of the Bray–Curtis and Jaccard analyses (p = 0.005 and p = 0.001, respectively). There were differences in the intestinal microbiota composition between the children with IMD at admission and Day 10 and the healthy controls. Regarding the nasopharyngeal microbiota analysis, in the children with IMD at admission, at the genus level, Neisseria was significantly more abundant compared to the healthy children (p < 0.001). In the children with IMD at Day 10, genera Moraxella and Neisseria were decreased compared to the healthy children. In the children with IMD on Day 0, for paired samples, Moraxella, Neisseria, and Haemophilus were significantly more abundant compared to the children with IMD at Day 10. In the children with IMD at Day 10, the Moraxella and Neisseria genera were decreased, and 20 different genera were more abundant compared to Day 0.[Conclusions]: We first found alterations in the intestinal and nasopharyngeal microbiota composition in the children with IMD. The infection itself or the other care interventions also caused changes to the microbiota composition during the follow-up period. Understanding the interaction of microbiota with pathogens, e.g., N. meningitidis, could give us the opportunity to understand the disease’s dynamics.This study was supported by the Eskisehir Osmangazi University Scientific Research Grant (2018/11046).Peer reviewe

    Avrupa Birliği’nin Eğitim Politikası

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    Uluslararası İletişimin Ekonomi Politiği

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    European Union Media Law in Terms of European Union Audiovisual Policy

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    The Treaty of Rome did not grant the Community any specific powers in the field of audiovisual policy. At the start of the 1980s, the development of new broadcasting and distribution techniques and the realization that the European Community was falling further and further behind the United States in the making of television programmes prompted the Community institutions to take new initiatives with technological, economic and cultural aspects. In 1984, the European Commission presented a Green Paper on the establishment of a common market in broadcasting. In the same year the Council adopted resolutions concerning the development of a European programme-making industry, measures to combat audiovisual piracy and the harmonisation of the rules on the distribution of films by the various media. It was in 1986, with the proposal for a Television without Frontiers directive that the first real reference was made to a "Community audiovisual policy". The Television without Frontiers Directive is the cornerstone of the European Community's audiovisual policy. This Directive was adopted in 1989 and revised in 1997. In this paper the historical development of the Law of EU Media and audiovisual policy is analysed by theoretical study
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