3,339 research outputs found

    Validation of a food frequency questionnaire for children and adolescents aged 4 to 11 years living in Salvador, Bahia.

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    OBJECTIVE: To assess the validity of a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) by applying it to children and adolescents living in Salvador, Bahia. METHODS: The validity of this FFQ with 98 food items was investigated among 108 children and adolescents who were selected from a sample of 1445 that had been planned for a study on the risk factors for asthma and other allergic diseases. The adults responsible for these children and adolescents gave responses for a 24-hour recall (R24h) and an FFQ. The average energy and nutrient values from the FFQ were compared with those from the R24h by means of the paired t test and Pearson correlation coefficients. The concordance was evaluated using the Bland-Altman method and kappa statistics. RESULTS: The energy and nutrient intake estimated using the FFQ was significantly higher than what was obtained using the R24h. The correlation coefficients adjusted for energy were statistically significant for protein, fat, vitamin C and zinc. The weighted kappa values ranged from 0.06 for vitamin A (p = 0.24) to 0.34 for energy (p < 0.00). The results from the Bland-Altman plots for lipid, protein and zinc showed the most significant validity parameters, and zinc was found to show the best concordance. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that the FFQ showed satisfactory validity for use in studies involving children and adolescents

    Risk factors for tuberculosis in older children and adolescents: a matched case-control study in Recife, Brazil.

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    BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis is a major disease worldwide and most research focus on risk factors for adults, although there is a marked adolescent peak in incidence. The objective of this study was to identify risk factors for tuberculosis in children aged 7 to 19. METHODS: A case control study matched by age with 169 cases and 477 controls. The study population consisted of adolescents and older children from Recife, Brazil. Cases were individuals diagnosed with tuberculosis in the control programme and controls were selected in the neighborhood of cases. Conditional logistic regression was used to identify risk factors. RESULTS: Cigarette smoking increased by 50% the risk of tuberculosis but that this was not statistically significant (OR = 1.6). Other risk factors were sleeping in the same house as a case of tuberculosis (OR = 31.6), living in a house with no piped water (OR = 7.7) (probably as a proxy for bad living conditions), illiteracy (OR = 3.7) and male sex (OR = 1.8). The increase in risk with living in houses with no piped water was much more marked in males. The proportion of cases of tuberculosis attributed to contact with someone with TB was 38% and to illiteracy, lack of piped water and smoking, 20%. CONCLUSION: Household contact with tuberculosis, social factors and male sex play the biggest role in determining risk of TB disease among children and adolescents in the study. We recommend further research on the relationship of cigarette smoking on tuberculosis in adolescents, and on whether the sex differentials are more marked in bad living conditions. Separate studies should be conducted in older children and in adolescents

    Selection bias: neighbourhood controls and controls selected from those presenting to a Health Unit in a case control study of efficacy of BCG revaccination.

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    BACKGROUND: In most case control studies the hardest decision is the choice of the control group, as in the ideal control group the proportion exposed is the same as in the population that produced the cases. METHODS: A comparison of two control groups in a case control study of the efficacy of BCG revaccination. One group was selected from subjects presenting to the heath unit the case attended for routine prevention and care; the second group was selected from the neighbourhood of cases. All Health Units from which controls were selected offered BCG revaccination. Efficacy estimated in a randomized control trial of BCG revaccination was used to establish that the neighbourhood control group was the one that gave unbiased results. RESULTS: The proportion of controls with scars indicating BCG revaccination was higher among the control group selected from Health Unit attenders than among neighbourhood controls. This excess was not removed after control for social variables and history of exposure to tuberculosis, and appears to have resulted from the fact that people attending the Health Unit were more likely to have been revaccinated than neighbourhood controls, although we can not exclude an effect of other unmeasured variables. CONCLUSION: In this study, controls selected from people presenting to a Health Unit overrepresented exposure to BCG revaccination. Had the results from the HU attenders control group been accepted this would have resulted in overestimation of vaccine efficacy. When the exposure of interest is offered in a health facility, selection of controls from attenders at the facility may result in over representation of exposure in controls and selection bias

    Geometric compensation applied to image analysis of cell populations with morphological variability: A new role for a classical concept

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    Immunofluorescence is the gold standard technique to determine the level and spatial distribution of fluorescent-tagged molecules. However, quantitative analysis of fluorescence microscopy images faces crucial challenges such as morphologic variability within cells. In this work, we developed an analytical strategy to deal with cell shape and size variability that is based on an elastic geometric alignment algorithm. Firstly, synthetic images mimicking cell populations with morphological variability were used to test and optimize the algorithm, under controlled conditions. We have computed expression profiles specifically assessing cell-cell interactions (IN profiles) and profiles focusing on the distribution of a marker throughout the intracellular space of single cells (RD profiles). To experimentally validate our analytical pipeline, we have used real images of cell cultures stained for E-cadherin, tubulin and a mitochondria dye, selected as prototypes of membrane, cytoplasmic and organelle-specific markers. The results demonstrated that our algorithm is able to generate a detailed quantitative report and a faithful representation of a large panel of molecules, distributed in distinct cellular compartments, independently of cell's morphological features. This is a simple end-user method that can be widely explored in research and diagnostic labs to unravel protein regulation mechanisms or identify protein expression patterns associated with disease.This work was supported by FEDER funds through the Operational Programme for Competitiveness Factors (COMPETE) and National Funds through the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), under the projects PTDC/BIM-ONC/0171/2012, PTDC/BIM-ONC/0281/2014, PTDC/BBB-IMG/0283/2014; Post-Doctoral grants SFRH/BPD/87705/2012-JF and SFRH/BPD/104208/2014-BS; and Doctoral grant SFRH/ BD/108009/2015-SM. We acknowledge the Programa IFCT (FCT Investigator) for funding JP research. We also thank to the American Association of Patients with Hereditary Gastric Cancer “No Stomach for Cancer” for funding the projects “Today’s present, tomorrow’s future on the study of germline E-cadherin missense mutations” and “Today’s Present, Tomorrow’s Future on the Study of Germline E-Cadherin Missense Mutations: A Step Forward on Providing Informed Genetic Counseling to Everyone”

    A CONTRIBUIÇÃO DA METODOLOGIA DO PROFESSOR NO PROCESSO DE ENSINO - APRENDIZAGEM EM ALUNO COM TRANSTORNO DO ESPECTRO AUTISTA/ADULTO NO “ATELIER ESTRUTURADO” NA CIDADE DE JOÃO PESSOA/PARAÍBA: UM ESTUDO DE CASO.

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    Este estudio tuvo como objetivo analizar la metodología (TEACCH) utilizado por los maestros contribuye Atelier estructurado en la enseñanza y aprendizaje del estudiante/ adulto con TEA-Trastorno del Espectro Autista, llevado a cabo desde marzo 2013 a diciembre 2013. La metodología fue el enfoque cualitativo, del tipo descriptivo, para la recolección de datos de la encuesta se utilizó la técnica de observación de Atelier y la entrevista con el profesor y la madre del alumno autista. En la discusión de los resultados las dificultades desarrolladas por el autismo de aprendizaje son relevantes para todos, sin embargo, el método utilizado en el proceso ha contribuido de manera constructiva hacia la metodología utilisada por el profesor, se señaló que "el diagnóstico tardío" de la portabilidad del Síndrome de Asperger, es uno de los factores que interfieren con el aprendizaje ya que el retraso para averiguar los efectos hay un tratamiento específico. Conclusión contribución relevante fue el método TEACCH, a las actividades cotidianas, tales como la higiene personal y la ayuda en la preparación de las comidas, incluso para adultos y necesitan estas habilidades para ser cada vez más independiente

    Universal Vectorial and Ultrasensitive Nanomechanical Force Field Sensor

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    Miniaturization of force probes into nanomechanical oscillators enables ultrasensitive investigations of forces on dimensions smaller than their characteristic length scale. Meanwhile it also unravels the force field vectorial character and how its topology impacts the measurement. Here we expose an ultrasensitive method to image 2D vectorial force fields by optomechanically following the bidimensional Brownian motion of a singly clamped nanowire. This novel approach relies on angular and spectral tomography of its quasi frequency-degenerated transverse mechanical polarizations: immersing the nanoresonator in a vectorial force field does not only shift its eigenfrequencies but also rotate eigenmodes orientation as a nano-compass. This universal method is employed to map a tunable electrostatic force field whose spatial gradients can even take precedence over the intrinsic nanowire properties. Enabling vectorial force fields imaging with demonstrated sensitivities of attonewton variations over the nanoprobe Brownian trajectory will have strong impact on scientific exploration at the nanoscale

    Modernização profissional no Exército Brasileiro: do alvorecer da Primeira Guerra Mundial à influência doutrinária da Missão Militar Francesa (1906-1930)

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    This article aims to analyze the relevance of the First World War to the process of modernization of the Brazilian Army from 1906 to 1930, which was marked by the first group of officers of the Brazilian Army as trainees in German Troop Corps, by the arrival of the French Military Mission (MMF) to Brazil in March 1920, when the first French instructors, headed by General Maurice Gustave Gamelin and the critic of General Tasso Fragoso, landed in the city of Rio de Janeiro concerning the year 1929, the need for reflection on the end of the MMF contract

    Towards conductive textiles: coating polymeric fibres with graphene

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    This is the final version of the article. Available from Springer Nature via the DOI in this record.Conducting fibres are essential to the development of e-textiles. We demonstrate a method to make common insulating textile fibres conductive, by coating them with graphene. The resulting fibres display sheet resistance values as low as 600 Ωsq−1, demonstrating that the high conductivity of graphene is not lost when transferred to textile fibres. An extensive microscopic study of the surface of graphene-coated fibres is presented. We show that this method can be employed to textile fibres of different materials, sizes and shapes, and to different types of graphene. These graphene-based conductive fibres can be used as a platform to build integrated electronic devices directly in textiles.The authors would like to thank Dr Yat-Tarng (Tommy) Shyng for the non-contact scanning measurements and would like to acknowledge financial support from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC grants EP/J000396/1, EP/K017160, EP/K010050/1, EP/G036101/1, EP/M002438/1, EP/M001024/1), the Royal Society Travel Exchange Grants 2012 and 2013, the European Commission FP7-ICT-2013-613024-GRASP and H2020-MSCA-IF-2015-704963, and the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), co-financed by FEDER (PT2020 Partnership Agreement), under contracts PTDC/QEQ-SUP/1413/2012, RECI/CTM-CER/0336/2012, IF/01088/2014, BI/UI89/2015, POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007679 (UID/CTM/50011/2013) and COMPETE:FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-027465

    Brain-derived neurotrophic factor in cerebrospinal fluid and plasma is not a biomarker for Huntington's disease

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    Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is implicated in the survival of striatal neurons. BDNF function is reduced in Huntington’s disease (HD), possibly because mutant huntingtin impairs its cortico-striatal transport, contributing to striatal neurodegeneration. The BDNF trophic pathway is a therapeutic target, and blood BDNF has been suggested as a potential biomarker for HD, but BDNF has not been quantified in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in HD. BDNF in CSF and plasma in the HD-CSF cohort (20 pre-manifest and 40 manifest HD mutation carriers and 20 age and gender-matched controls) were quantified using conventional ELISAs and an ultra-sensitive immunoassay. BDNF concentration was below the limit of detection of the conventional ELISAs, raising doubt about previous CSF reports in neurodegeneration. Using the ultra-sensitive method, BDNF concentration was quantifiable in all samples but did not differ between controls and HD mutation carriers in CSF or plasma, was not associated with clinical scores or MRI brain volumetric measures, and had poor ability to discriminate controls from HD mutation carriers, and premanifest from manifest HD. BDNF in CSF and plasma is unlikely to be a biomarker of HD progression, and urge caution in interpreting studies where conventional ELISA was used to quantify CSF BDNF
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