76 research outputs found

    La entrevista estructurada en Psiquiatría.

    Get PDF
    Se analizan en este trabajo los fundamentos teóricos del proceso de estructuración de la entrevista psiquiátrica, así como las estrategias metodológicas seguidas para mejorar los niveles de fiabilidad del diagnóstico psiquiátrico. Para ello se toman como ejemplo las entrevistas psiquiátricas estructuradas o semi-estructuradas más significativas desarrolladas en los últimos años y que han tenido un especial impacto en nuestro país. Finalmente se presentan las entrevistas psiquiátricas de última generación (CIDI y SCAN) desarrolladas en el contexto de un programa multicéntrico internacional promovido por la OMS y la ADAMHA

    La entrevista estructurada en Psiquiatría.

    Get PDF
    Se analizan en este trabajo los fundamentos teóricos del proceso de estructuración de la entrevista psiquiátrica, así como las estrategias metodológicas seguidas para mejorar los niveles de fiabilidad del diagnóstico psiquiátrico. Para ello se toman como ejemplo las entrevistas psiquiátricas estructuradas o semi-estructuradas más significativas desarrolladas en los últimos años y que han tenido un especial impacto en nuestro país. Finalmente se presentan las entrevistas psiquiátricas de última generación (CIDI y SCAN) desarrolladas en el contexto de un programa multicéntrico internacional promovido por la OMS y la ADAMHA

    Carbon dioxide activation assisted by a bis(chlorodimethylsilyl)cyclopentadienyl titanium compound

    Get PDF
    A great deal of interest has focused on the role of metal ions\ud as the active centers in the fixation of CO2 and its transformation. Activation of CO2 by hydroxo and oxo metal complexes to afford metal hydrogencarbonato and carbonato\ud species, respectively, is related to the function of the carbonic\ud anhydrase metalloenzyme, which catalyzes the physiologically\ud important hydration of CO2 to hydrogencarbonate

    Photoinduced Proton Transfer as a Possible Mechanism for Highly Efficient Excited-State Deactivation in Proteins

    Get PDF
    CASSCF//CASPT2 pathways for a two-glycine minimal model system show that photoinduced electron-driven forward and backward proton transfer could play an important role for the stability of proteins against damage by UV radiation, when a hydrogen bond is located between the two amino acids. The overall photoinduced process involves two electron and proton transfer processes (forward and backward) and results in the reformation of the initial closed-shell electronic structure of the system.Ministerio de Educación y CienciaUniversidad de Alcal

    Chiral Hydrogen Bond Environment Providing Unidirectional Rotation in Photoactive Molecular Motors

    Get PDF
    Generation of a chiral hydrogen bond environment in efficient molecular photoswitches is proposed as a novel strategy for the design of photoactive molecular motors. Here, the following strategy is used to design a retinal-based motor presenting singular properties: (i) a single excitation wavelength is needed to complete the unidirectional rotation process (360°); (ii) the absence of any thermal step permits the process to take place at low temperatures; and (iii) the ultrafast process permits high rotational frequencies.Ministerio de Economía y CompetitividadMinisterio de Ciencia e InnovaciónUniversidad de Alcal

    A biomimetic molecular switch at work: coupling photoisomerization dynamics to peptide structural rearrangement

    Get PDF
    In spite of considerable interest in the design of molecular switches towards photo-controllable (bio)materials, few studies focused on the major influence of the surrounding environment on the switch photoreactivities. We present a combined experimental and computational study of a retinal-like molecular switch linked to a peptide, elucidating the effects on the photoreactivity and on the a-helix secondary structure. Temperature-dependent, femtosecond UV-vis transient absorption spectroscopy and high-level hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics methods were applied to describe the photoisomerization process and the subsequent peptide rearrangement. It was found that the conformational heterogeneity of the ground state peptide controls the excited state potential energy surface and the thermally activated population decay. Still, a reversible a-helix to a-hairpin conformational change is predicted, paving the way for a fine photocontrol of different secondary structure elements, hence (bio)molecular functions, using retinal-inspired molecular switches

    Fatty liver disease, an emerging etiology of hepatocellular carcinoma in Argentina

    Get PDF
    AIM To investigate any changing trends in the etiologies of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in Argentina during the last years. METHODS A longitudinal cohort study was conducted by 14 regional hospitals starting in 2009 through 2016. All adult patients with newly diagnosed HCC either with pathology or imaging criteria were included. Patients were classified as presenting non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) either by histology or clinically, provided that all other etiologies of liver disease were ruled out, fatty liver was present on abdominal ultrasound and alcohol consumption was excluded. Complete follow-up was assessed in all included subjects since the date of HCC diagnosis until death or last medical visit. RESULTS A total of 708 consecutive adults with HCC were included. Six out of 14 hospitals were liver transplant centers (n = 484). The prevalence of diabetes mellitus was 27.7%. Overall, HCV was the main cause of liver disease related with HCC (37%) including cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic patients, followed by alcoholic liver disease 20.8%, NAFLD 11.4%, cryptogenic 9.6%, HBV 5.4% infection, cholestatic disease and autoimmune hepatitis 2.2%, and other causes 9.9%. A 6-fold increase in the percentage corresponding to NAFLDHCC was detected when the starting year, i.e., 2009 was compared to the last one, i.e., 2015 (4.3% vs 25.6%; P < 0.0001). Accordingly, a higher prevalence of diabetes mellitus was present in NAFLD-HCC group 61.7% when compared to other than NAFLD-HCC 23.3% (P < 0.0001). Lower median AFP values at HCC diagnosis were observed between NAFLD-HCC and non-NAFLD groups (6.6 ng/mL vs 26 ng/mL; P = 0.02). Neither NAFLD nor other HCC etiologies were associated with higher mortality. CONCLUSION The growing incidence of NAFLD-HCC documented in the United States and Europe is also observed in Argentina, a confirmation with important Public Health implications.Fil: Piñero, Federico. Hospital Universitario Austral; Argentina. Sanatorio de la Trinidad San Isidro; ArgentinaFil: Pages, Josefina. Hospital Universitario Austral; ArgentinaFil: Marciano, Sebastián. Hospital Italiano; ArgentinaFil: Fernández, Nora. Hospital Británico de Buenos Aires; ArgentinaFil: Silva, Jorge. Provincia de San Juan. Hospital Rawson; ArgentinaFil: Anders, Margarita. Hospital Alemán; ArgentinaFil: Zerega, Alina. Sanatorio Allende; ArgentinaFil: Ridruejo, Ezequiel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. CEMIC-CONICET. Centro de Educaciones Médicas e Investigaciones Clínicas "Norberto Quirno". CEMIC-CONICET; ArgentinaFil: Ameigeiras, Beatriz. Gobierno de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires. Hospital General de Agudos "Ramos Mejía"; ArgentinaFil: D'amico, Claudia. Centro Especialidades Médicas Ambulatorias Mar del Plata; ArgentinaFil: Gaite, Luis. Clínica de Nefrología de Santa Fe; ArgentinaFil: Bermúdez, Carla. Hospital Italiano; ArgentinaFil: Cobos, Manuel. Hospital Alemán; ArgentinaFil: Rosales, Carlos. Provincia de San Juan. Hospital Rawson; ArgentinaFil: Romero, Gustavo. Gobierno de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires. Hospital de Gastroenterología "Dr. Carlos B. Udaondo"; ArgentinaFil: McCormack, Lucas. Hospital Alemán; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Reggiardo, Virginia. Gobierno de Santa Fe. Hospital Provincial del Centenario; ArgentinaFil: Colombato, Luis. Hospital Británico de Buenos Aires; ArgentinaFil: Gadano, Adrián Carlos. Hospital Italiano; ArgentinaFil: Silva, Marcelo. Hospital Universitario Austral; Argentin

    Structural Substituent Effect in the Excitation Energy of aChromophore: Quantitative Determination and Application toS-Nitrosothiols

    Get PDF
    A methodology for the prediction of excitation energies for substituted chromophores on the basis of ground state structures has been developed. The formalism introduces the concept of ?structural substituent excitation energy effect? for the rational prediction and quantification of the substituent effect in the excitation energy of a chromophore to an excited electronic state. This effect quantifies exclusively the excitation energy variation due to the structural changes of the chromophore induced by the substituent. Therefore, excitation bathochromic and hypsochromic shifts of substituted chromophores can be predicted on the basis of known ground and excited potential energy surfaces of a reference unsubstituted chromophore, together with the ground state minimum energy structure of the substituted chromophore. This formalism can be applied if the chemical substitution does not affect the nature of the electronic excitation, where the substituent effect can be understood as a force acting on the chromophore and provoking a structural change on it. The developed formalism provides a useful tool for quantitative and qualitative determination of the excitation energy of substituted chromophores and also for the analysis and determination of the structural changes affecting this energy. The proposed methodology has been applied to the prediction of the excitation energy to the first bright state of several S-nitrosothiols using the potential energy surfaces of methyl-S-nitrosothiol as a reference unsubstituted chromophore.Ministerio de Ciencia e InnovaciónUniversidad de Alcal

    Local genetic variation of inflammatory bowel disease in Basque population and its effect in risk prediction

    Get PDF
    [EN] Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is characterised by chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. Although its aetiology remains unknown, environmental and genetic factors are involved in its development. Regarding genetics, more than 200 loci have been associated with IBD but the transferability of those signals to the Basque population living in Northern Spain, a population with distinctive genetic background, remains unknown. We have analysed 5,411,568 SNPs in 498 IBD cases and 935 controls from the Basque population. We found 33 suggestive loci (p 0.68. In conclusion, we report on the genetic architecture of IBD in the Basque population, and explore the performance of European-descent genetic risk scores in this population.Samples and data used in the present work were provided by the Basque Biobank (http://www.biobancovasco.org).We want to thank Miguel Angel Vesga from the Basque Centre of Transfusion and Human Tissues for providing the access to control samples. This work was founded to MD by Gipuzkoako Foru Aldundia/Diputacion Foral de Gipuzkoa. The project that gave rise to these results rece
    corecore