971 research outputs found

    Aggressiveness of fusarium section liseola isolates causing maize ear rot in Argentina

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    Developing resistance to species of Fusarium in maize (Zea mays L.) is important to prevent field mycotoxin contamination. Isolates representative of natural conditions need to be identified to maximize selection responses. Sixty isolates belonging to Fusarium section Liseola collected from a major maize growing region in Argentina were tested for sexual compatibility with eight standard tester strains (A-H) of the Gibberella fujikuroi complex. A twenty-nine isolate sub-sample (MAT-A: 26, MAT-E: 2 and MAT-D: 1) was tested for in vitro production of fumonisins and for aggressiveness to two maize hybrids after silk inoculation. Mating population A (F. verticillioides) was the most prevalent species (90%) coexisting with some isolates belonging to MAT-D (F.proliferatum) and MAT-E(F. subglutinans). Fumonisin production varied from 0.4 to 2884 mg g-1 for MAT-A and from 0.3 to 0.6 mg g-1 for MAT-E. The only isolate from MATD produced undetectable levels. Most isolates showed mild aggressiveness but two uncommon highly aggressive strains (MAT-A and D) were also identified. No associations between fumonisin production and disease severity were observed. Differences in disease severity between moderately resistant and susceptible hybrids varied across years and isolates suggesting that responses to selection might depend on the isolate used to produce the inoculum. The use of isolate mixtures might reduce genotype-by-isolate interaction although it would hinder identification of resistance to specific strains.EEA PergaminoFil: Iglesias, Juliana. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Pergamino. Departamento de Maíz; ArgentinaFil: Presello, Daniel. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Pergamino. Departamento de Maíz; ArgentinaFil: Botta, Grisela. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Pergamino; ArgentinaFil: Lori, G.A. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Centro de Investigaciones de Fitopatología (CIDEFI-CIC); ArgentinaFil: Fauguel, Carolina Maria. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Pergamino; Argentin

    The role of self-treatment guidelines in self-management education for adult asthmatics

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    Guidelines on asthma management have changed considerably in the last two decades. Patient education has gained in popularity and especially asthma self-management training is thought to be essential in the treatment of adult asthma. Since 1989 many researchers have added self-treatment guidelines to self-management programmes and several studies have found improvements in health outcomes, such as lung function, quality of life, use of health care facilities and asthma symptoms. However, because of the lack of proper control groups, it is not clear whether this has to be attributed to self-treatment guidelines or to, for example, more education or more medical attention. The only two studies that were placebo controlled did not show an effect of self-treatment. To assess the added benefit of self-treatment guidelines to a self-management programme, randomized ‘placebo’ controlled trials of sufficient size with sufficient follow-up time are necessary. The only difference between intervention and control groups should be guidelines for self-treatment

    Synopsis of Bauhinia sect. Pauletia (Cav.) DC. (Leguminosae: Caesalpinioideae: Cercideae) in Brazil

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    This treatment presents a key to identification, brief synonymy and taxonomic comments for nineteen taxa (eighteen species and one subspecies) of the genus Bauhinia sect. Pauletia, belonging to five series: Aculeatae, Acuminatae, Ariaria, Pentandrae and Perlebia. The distribution of the native species was plotted on three maps. Two plates, illustrative of Bauhinia aculeata and B. tarapotensis are presented.Este trabalho apresenta chave para identificação, sinonímia sumária e comentários sobre taxonomia para dezenove táxons (dezoito espécies e uma subespécie) do gênero Bauhinia sect. Pauletia pertencentes às séries Aculeatae, Acuminatae, Ariaria, Pentandrae e Perlebia. A distribuição das espécies nativas foi plotada em três mapas. Duas pranchas, ilustrativas de Bauhinia aculeata e de B. tarapotensis, são apresentadas.477491Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq

    Welfare of horses from Mexico and the United States of America transported for slaughter in Mexico: Fitness profiles for transport and pre-slaughter logistics

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    Every year thousands of horses from Mexico and the United States of America (USA) are transported to slaughter in Mexico, but little is known about their welfare or pre-slaughter logistics. In this study, we recorded the origin, sex, age and condition of horses (121 journeys, 2648 animals) upon arrival to an abattoir in northern Mexico, including transport details. Horse welfare was measured indirectly via individual scores for body condition, coat quality, lameness, ocular and nasal discharge, as well as reactivity to a chute restraint test, all performed shortly after unloading. The average journey duration was 9.69 (±7.6) hours for horses from Mexico and 16.77 (±4.51) hours for horses from the USA (77 % of all journeys). The prevalence of ocular discharge, nasal discharge, skin wounds, lameness and diarrhoea, were 23 %, 12 %, 11 %, 9 %, 1 % (respectively) of all the horses observed, with no significant differences between Mexican and American horses (P = 0.05). During the chute test the American horses were calmer than the Mexican ones (P < 0.001), who were more restless and aggressive (P = 0.001). Likewise, vocalizations in their three variants during the restraint, neigh/whinny (P = 0.018), nicker (P < 0.001), and snort (P = 0.018), were more common in horses from Mexico. In order to help characterize fitness for transport, a two-step cluster analysis was applied using the welfare indicators, suggesting the existence of four clusters (C) evaluated on arrival at the abattoir (from good to very poor fitness): good (profile C4, n = 769, 29.1 %), average (profile C1, n = 799 horses, 30.2 %), poor (profile C3, n = 586, 22.1 %) and very poor (profile C2, n = 494, 18.6 %). In fact, the C4 best welfare group had 0% lame, 0% nasal discharge, 16.4 % ocular discharge, 7.9 % skin wounds. Instead, the C2 poorest welfare group had 45.8 % lame, 61.1 % nasal discharge, 42.8 % ocular discharge, and 19.9 % skin wounds. Results show potential for using nasal discharge, lameness and ocular discharge as key indicators of horse fitness and welfare on abattoir. The study provides detailed scientific data to help establish strategies regarding optimal days of recovery post-transport and fattening for homogenization of weights between animals of different origins, logistic planning, and optimization of logistic resources to minimize the biological cost of long-distance transport

    Measuring echogenicity and area of the puborectalis muscle:method and reliability

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    OBJECTIVES: To develop a semi-automated method to assess puborectalis muscle echogenicity on three-dimensional/four-dimensional (3D/4D) volume transperineal ultrasound images using 4D View and Matlab® software and evaluate its intra- and interobserver reliability. METHOD: The data of 23 women in their first trimester were included. 3D/4D volume datasets were obtained at rest. Two inexperienced observers were trained by an experienced observer to construct tomographic ultrasound images (TUI) from the original data and to delineate all structures. Puborectalis muscle area (PMA) and the mean echogenicity of the puborectalis muscle (MEP) were calculated offline. Intra- and interobserver reliability were determined by intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) and their 95% CIs. RESULTS: The development of a semi-automated method to calculate puborectalis area and echogenicity is described in detail. PMA and MEP measurements in pregnant women demonstrated almost perfect intraobserver reliability for both inexperienced observers, with ICC values ranging from 0.88 to 0.99. The interobserver reliability showed ICCs of 0.63 for PMA and almost perfect ICC values, of 0.96-0.98, for echogenicity. The majority of intraobserver mismatch between two delineations of PMA occurred near the borders. CONCLUSIONS: Matlab software can be used to provide reliable measurements of the area and echogenicity of the puborectalis muscle. As the latter can be used to assess structural changes in the puborectalis muscle, it appears a promising new tool for studying pelvic floor structural anatomy

    Inhalation technique of 166 adult asthmatics prior to and following a self-management prograM

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    Self-management of asthma and self-treatment of exacerbations are considered important in the treatment of asthma. For successful self-treatment, medication has to be inhaled correctly, but the percentage of patients inhaling effectively varies widely. As part of a self-management program we checked and corrected inhalation technique. This paper addresses differences among inhalers in relation to patient characteristics and the effect of instruction, 1 year after enrollment. Maneuvers that are essential for adequate inhalation were identified. When errors in inhalation technique were observed, patients were instructed in the correct use of their devices. One year later, inhalation technique was checked again. Only patients who used the same inhaler throughout the entire study period were analyzed. Of the 245 adult asthmatic patients who were enrolled in the self-management program, 166 used the same inhaler throughout the study period. One hundred twenty patients (72%) performed all key items correctly at baseline and this increased to 80% after 1 year. At follow-up, older patients were less likely to demonstrate a perfect inhalation. Patients with a Diskhaler(r) made fewest errors. Adjustment for differences in patient characteristics did not significantly change the results. Because many patients with asthma use their inhaler ineffectively, there is a need to know which inhaler leads to fewest errors. Diskhaler was nominated by this study. When patients are not able to demonstrate adequate inhalation technique in a “tranquil” setting, it is doubtful that they can do so when they experience an exacerbation. Therefore, inhalation instruction should be considered an essential ingredient, not only of self-management programs, but also of asthma patient care in general

    Androgen-dependent Protein Interactions within an Intron 1 Regulatory Region of the 20-kDa Protein Gene

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    The 20-kDa protein gene is androgen regulated in rat ventral prostate. Intron 1 contains a 130-base pair complex response element (D2) that binds androgen (AR) and glucocorticoid receptor (GR) but transactivates only with AR in transient cotransfection assays in CV1 cells using the reporter vector D2-tkCAT. To better understand the function of this androgen-responsive unit, nuclear protein interactions with D2 were analyzed by DNase I footprinting in ventral prostate nuclei of intact or castrated rats and in vitro with ventral prostate nuclear protein extracts from intact, castrated, and testosterone-treated castrated rats. Multiple androgen-dependent protected regions and hypersensitive sites were identified in the D2 region with both methods. Mobility shift assays with 32P-labeled oligonucleotides spanning D2 revealed specific interactions with ventral prostate nuclear proteins. Four of the D2-protein complexes decreased in intensity within 24 h of castration. UV cross-linking of the androgen-dependent DNA binding proteins identified protein complexes of approximately 140 and 55 kDa. The results demonstrate androgen-dependent nuclear protein-DNA interactions within the complex androgen response element D2
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