84 research outputs found
Mild depression levels alter self-perceptions of future but not the recall of verbal information in elderly inpatients
In order to determine the correlation of levels of symptoms of depression and rate of forgetting and perception of the future, a total of 68 elderly inpatients without Major Depression admitted to a general hospital were evaluated by: 1) the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), 2) the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), 3) a questionnaire on future self-perceptions (FSPQ), and 4) a test on the recall of verbal information to estimate the rate of forgetting. They were grouped according to the clinical prognosis of their disease (good, N = 48, 25 women, 23 men, age mean ± SD, 68 ± 6.64; poor, N = 20, 10 women, 10 men, age mean± SD, 69 ± 6.68) which correlates with morbidity-mortality rates (low/high). There was no relationship between mild levels of signs and symptoms of depression and increased forgetting. However, levels of depression were negatively correlated to the score of future perceptions (B = -0.18, beta = -0.29, P = 0.032). Patients with diseases with good prognosis did not present different levels of depression, rates of forgetting or future expectations from those of patients with poor prognosis (high mortality rates). However, individuals with negative FSPQ scores showed significantly higher MADRS scores, independent of the type of disease. These data suggest that the modifications in the processing of information related to the future are present in clinical patients without Major Depression but they occur within a small range of very mild signs and symptoms of depression
Clinicopathological and toxicological aspects of poisoning by the clomazone herbicide in sheep
AbstractClomazone (2-[(2-chlorophenyl)methyl]-4,4-dimethyl-3-isoxazolidinone) is a herbicide which has been widely used in southern Brazil in the rice cultivation and can be toxic for humans and animals. This study reports the first outbreak poisoning due to clomazone in a flock of 103 sheep, 20 of which showed mainly neurological and respiratory signs. Clomazone was detected in soil and vegetation samples and in the liver, kidney and muscles of poisoned animals. The poisoning was experimentally reproduced in three sheep by the administration of a 134mgkg body weight dose of clomazone. In both the natural and experimental cases, the clinical signs included tachypnea, anorexia, somnolence, weakness and ataxia. Macroscopically, there were no significant changes. Histologically, vacuolization in the white matter, perineuronal vacuoles and congestion of the leptomeningeal and brain vessels were observed. Ultrastructurally, the vacuolar lesions in the brain corresponded to swelling of the dendrites and astrocytic processes. It is concluded that clomazone causes toxic neuropathy in sheep
Non-linear regression models for Approximate Bayesian Computation
Approximate Bayesian inference on the basis of summary statistics is
well-suited to complex problems for which the likelihood is either
mathematically or computationally intractable. However the methods that use
rejection suffer from the curse of dimensionality when the number of summary
statistics is increased. Here we propose a machine-learning approach to the
estimation of the posterior density by introducing two innovations. The new
method fits a nonlinear conditional heteroscedastic regression of the parameter
on the summary statistics, and then adaptively improves estimation using
importance sampling. The new algorithm is compared to the state-of-the-art
approximate Bayesian methods, and achieves considerable reduction of the
computational burden in two examples of inference in statistical genetics and
in a queueing model.Comment: 4 figures; version 3 minor changes; to appear in Statistics and
Computin
Autoimmune hepatitis in 828 Brazilian children and adolescents: clinical and laboratory findings, histological profile, treatments, and outcomes
In this large clinical series of Brazilian children and adolescents, autoimmunehepatitis-1 was more frequent, and patients with autoimmune hepatitis-2 exhibited higherdisease remission rates with earlier response to treatment. Patients with autoimmune hepatitis-1 had a higher risk of death.sentation, laboratory findings, histological profile, treatments, and outcomes of children andadolescents with autoimmune hepatitis.Methods: The medical records of 828 children and adolescents with autoimmune hepatitiswere reviewed. A questionnaire was used to collect anonymous data on clinical presentation,biochemical and histological findings, and treatments.Results: Of all patients, 89.6% had autoimmune hepatitis-1 and 10.4% had autoimmunehepatitis-2. The female sex was predominant in both groups. The median age at symptomonset was 111.5 (6; 210) and 53.5 (8; 165) months in the patients with autoimmune hepatitis1 and autoimmune hepatitis-2, respectively. Acute clinical onset was observed in 56.1% and58.8% and insidious symptoms in 43.9% and 41.2% of the patients with autoimmune hepatitis-1and autoimmune hepatitis-2, respectively. The risk of hepatic failure was 1.6-fold higher forautoimmune hepatitis-2. Fulminant hepatic failure occurred in 3.6% and 10.6% of the patientswith autoimmune hepatitis-1 and autoimmune hepatitis-2, respectively; the risk was 3.1-foldhigher for autoimmune hepatitis-2. The gamma globulin and immunoglobulin G levels were sig-nificantly higher in autoimmune hepatitis-1, while the immunoglobulin A and C3 levels werelower in autoimmune hepatitis-2. Cirrhosis was observed in 22.4% of the patients; biochem-ical remission was achieved in 76.2%. The actuarial survival rate was 93.0%. A total of 4.6%underwent liver transplantation, and 6.9% died (autoimmune hepatitis-1: 7.5%; autoimmunehepatitis-2: 2.4%).Conclusions: In this large clinical series of Brazilian children and adolescents, autoimmunehepatitis-1 was more frequent, and patients with autoimmune hepatitis-2 exhibited higherdisease remission rates with earlier response to treatment. Patients with autoimmune hepatitis-1 had a higher risk of death.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Anatomical and histological characteristics of teeth in agouti (Dasyprocta prymnolopha Wagler, 1831)
Demografia de perfilhos basilares em pastagem de Brachiaria decumbens adubada com nitrogĂŞnio
Análise de crescimento do capim Coastcross-1 sob adubação nitrogenada em duas idades de rebrotação
Reduced SLIT2 is associated with increased cell proliferation and arsenic trioxide resistance in acute promyelocytic Leukemia
The SLIT-ROBO axis plays an important role in normal stem-cell biology, with possible
repercussions on cancer stem cell emergence. Although the Promyelocytic Leukemia (PML) protein
can regulate SLIT2 expression in the central nervous system, little is known about SLIT2 in acute
promyelocytic leukemia. Hence, we aimed to investigate the levels of SLIT2 in acute promyelocytic
leukemia (APL) and assess its biological activity in vitro and in vivo. Our analysis indicated that
blasts with SLIT2high transcript levels were associated with cell cycle arrest, while SLIT2low APL
blasts displayed a more stem-cell like phenotype. In a retrospective analysis using a cohort of
patients treated with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and anthracyclines, high SLIT2 expression was
correlated with reduced leukocyte count (p = 0.024), and independently associated with improved
overall survival (hazard ratio: 0.94; 95% confidence interval: 0.92–0.97; p < 0.001). Functionally,
SLIT2-knockdown in primary APL blasts and cell lines led to increased cell proliferation and resistance
to arsenic trioxide induced apoptosis. Finally, in vivo transplant of Slit2-silenced primary APL blasts
promoted increased leukocyte count (p = 0.001) and decreased overall survival (p = 0.002) compared
with the control. In summary, our data highlight the tumor suppressive function of SLIT2 in APL and
its deteriorating effects on disease progression when downregulated
Atividade da colinesterase plasmática como biomarcador de impacto ambiental em tartarugas verdes (Chelonia mydas) no litoral do Arquipélago de Fernando de Noronha, Pernambuco
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