818 research outputs found

    Evaluation and optimization of the Sysmex UF1000i system for the screening of urinary tract infection in primary health care elderly patients

    Get PDF
    Objective Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a common problem in the elderly population. Urine culture is still considered the "gold standard" to diagnose infection in this population. However, urine cultures are laborious and costly, and most samples will yield no growth. Methods An evaluation was made of the Sysmex UF-1000i flow cytometer as a screening tool for UTI in an elderly population older than 65 years who lived in the community, using 346 urine samples submitted for culture. Results The Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) analysis showed a significant difference (P < 0.01) between 0.98 bacteria area under the curve value and 0.82 of white blood cells (WBC). The combination of both counts for screening did not show any improvement in specificity or sensitivity. According to our data, the use of a single cut-off point of 200 bacteria/μL is suggested, in which the sensitivity and specificity were 99.11% and 91.59%, respectively, with a NPV of 99.49%. Moreover, this cut-off value could avoid 60.24% of the samples to be cultured, with a minimal false negative results rate of 0.87%. Conclusions The stratification of age groups stratification helps in selecting a more adjusted Sysmex UF1000i cut-off limit, leading to an improvement in the screening parameters that would imply a better management of these infections, as well as a high reduction in the workload and cost savings

    Exploitation of nuclear and cytoplasm variability in Hordeum chilense for wheat breeding

    Get PDF
    Hordeum chilense Roem. et Schultz. is a diploid wild barley native to Chile and Argentina. The high crossability of this species with other members of the Triticeae tribe promoted the development of the new species × Tritordeum Ascherson et Graebner. Hexaploid tritordeum was developed from the hybrid derived from the cross between H. chilense (used as female parent) and durum wheat. The interest of H. chilense is based on the presence of traits potentially useful for wheat breeding, including high endosperm carotenoid content, septoria tritici blotch resistance and abiotic stress tolerance. Besides, the variability at cytoplasm level is also important in this species. The development of common wheat-H. chilense alloplasmic lines (nucleus from wheat and cytoplasm from H. chilense) results in fertile or male sterile genotypes, depending on the accession donating the cytoplasm. Furthermore, these alloplasmic lines constitute an ideal system for deepening our knowledge on nuclear-cytoplasm interactions. In conclusion, H. chilense is an interesting source of variability for wheat breeding. © 2011 NIAB.Our work in this area is supported by grants (to S. G. A.) AGL2008-03720, and P09-AGR-4817 from Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, Junta de Andalucía and FEDER. C. R.-S. acknowledges financial support from CSIC (JAE-Doc program).Peer Reviewe

    High-Speed Rail Versus Air Transportation: Case Study of Madrid–Barcelona, Spain.

    Full text link
    Travel time savings, better quality of the supplied services, greater comfort for the users, and improved accessibility are the main factors of success of High Speed Rail(HSR)links. This paper presents the results from a revealed and stated preference survey conducted to both HSR and air transport users in the Madrid Barcelona corridor. The data gathered from the stated preference survey was used to calibrate a modal choice model aiming at explaining competition between HSR and air transportation in the corridor. From the model, the authors obtain that prices and service frequency are the most important variables to compete with the other mode. In addition, they found that check-in and security controls at the airport are a crucial variable for the users in their modal choice. Other policies, such as the improvement of parking facilities at the train stations, play a secondary role

    Episodic melting and magmatic recycling along 50 Ma in the Variscan belt linked to the orogenic evolution in NW Iberia

    Get PDF
    The advent of a large amount of more precise U-Pb age data on Variscan granitoids from NW Iberia in recent years has provided a more focused picture of the magmatic history of the Western European Variscan belt (WEVB). Based on these data, three main pulses of magmatic activity seem to be well established

    In situ monitoring of laser-induced periodic surface structures formation on polymer films by grazing incidence small-angle X-ray scattering

    Get PDF
    9 pags.; 9 figs.© 2015 American Chemical Society. The formation of laser-induced periodic surface structures (LIPSS) on model spin-coated polymer films has been followed in situ by grazing incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) using synchrotron radiation. The samples were irradiated at different repetition rates ranging from 1 up to 10 Hz by using the fourth harmonic of a Nd:YAG laser (266 nm) with pulses of 8 ns. Simultaneously, GISAXS patterns were acquired during laser irradiation. The variation of both the GISAXS signal with the number of pulses and the LIPSS period with laser irradiation time is revealing key kinetic aspects of the nanostructure formation process. By considering LIPSS as one-dimensional paracrystalline lattice and using a correlation found between the paracrystalline disorder parameter, g, and the number of reflections observed in the GISAXS patterns, the variation of the structural order of LIPSS can be assessed. The role of the laser repetition rate in the nanostructure formation has been clarified. For high pulse repetition rates (i.e., 10 Hz), LIPSS evolve in time to reach the expected period matching the wavelength of the irradiating laser. For lower pulse repetition rates LIPSS formation is less effective, and the period of the ripples never reaches the wavelength value. Results support and provide information on the existence of a feedback mechanism for LIPSS formation in polymer films.The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from the MINECO (MAT2011-23455, MAT2012-33517 and CTQ 2013-43086-P). E.R., I.M.-F., and A.R-R. also thank MINECO for a Ramon y Cajal contract (RYC-2011-08069) and FPI ́ fellowships (BES-2010-030074 and BES-2013-062620).Peer Reviewe

    Gold(III) Porphyrin Was Used as an Electron Acceptor for Efficient Organic Solar Cells

    Get PDF
    [Abstract] The widespread use of nonfullerene-based electron-accepting materials has triggered a rapid increase in the performance of organic photovoltaic devices. However, the number of efficient acceptor compounds available is rather limited, which hinders the discovery of new, high-performing donor:acceptor combinations. Here, we present a new, efficient electron-accepting compound based on a hitherto unexplored family of well-known molecules: gold porphyrins. The electronic properties of our electron-accepting gold porphyrin, named VC10, were studied by UV−Vis spectroscopy and by cyclic voltammetry (CV) , revealing two intense optical absorption bands at 500−600 and 700−920 nm and an optical bandgap of 1.39 eV. Blending VC10 with PTB7-Th, a donor polymer, which gives rise to an absorption band at 550−780 nm complementary to that of VC10, enables the fabrication of organic solar cells (OSCs) featuring a power conversion efficiency of 9.24% and an energy loss of 0.52 eV. Hence, this work establishes a new approach in the search for efficient acceptor molecules for solar cells and new guidelines for future photovoltaic material designF.L. and P.d.l.C. thank MCI (Spain) (PID2019-105049RB-I00), MICIU (RED2018-102815-T), the Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha, and the European Social Fund (SBPLY/17/180501/000254) for financial support. V.C. thanks MECD for an FPU grant (FPU15/02170). G.D.S. thanks the Government of India SERI-DST (DST/TMD/SERI/D05(c)) for financial support. J.M. thanks the MICINN for grant PGC2018-094620-A-I00Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha; SBPLY/17/180501/000254Government of India; DST/TMD/SERI/D05(c

    Idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis

    Get PDF
    Mujer de 36 años de edad quien consulta por cuadro clínico de ocho meses de evolución consistente en dolor abdominal, asociado a diarrea y emesis, siendo manejada inicialmente como cuadro de colon irritable. Ante la persistencia del dolor solicitan estudios imagenológicos con hallazgos sugestivos de masa retroperitoneal por lo cual remiten para valoración por cirugía. Al examen físico se encuentra dolor a la palpación abdominal generalizada sin adenopatías o masas. Paraclínicos con resonancia abdominal evidenciando masa sólida retroperitoneal de localización paraaórtica izquierda y espacio interaortocavo, englobando de forma circunferencial la aorta abdominal a la emergencia de arterias renales comprometiendo tejidos adyacentes, con disminución del tamaño del riñón izquierdo, compensando con hipertrofia del riñón derecho. Marcadores tumorales negativos, colonoscopia sin evidencia de masas. Es llevada a biopsia guiada por TAC con patología conclusiva de fibrosis retroperitoneal idiopática. Conclusión: se presenta un caso de fibrosis retrooperitoneal idiopática, enfermedad de muy baja frecuencia de presentación en la práctica clínica diariaCaso Clínico260-262The case of a 36-year-old woman who consults for history of abdominal pain associated to diarrhea and emesis of eight months of evolution, being initially handled as irritable bowel syndrome, is presented. Given the persistence of pain, imaging studies suggestive of retroperitoneal mass were requested and were referred for assessment by surgery. Physical examination showed generalized pain at abdominal palpation without lymphadenopathy or masses. Abdominal resonance showed solid retroperitoneal mass of left para-aortic location and interaortocaval space, circumferentially encompassing the abdominal aorta at the emergence of renal arteries engaging adjacent tissue with decreased size of the left kidney, compensated by right kidney hyperthrophy. Tumor markers were negative, and colonoscopy did not show evidence of masses. A carried CT-guided biopsy was performed with conclusive pathology of idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis. Conclusion: a case of idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis, disease with very low frequency in everyday clinical practice, is presente

    Limits of the power of Tissue P systems with cell division

    Get PDF
    Tissue P systems generalize the membrane structure tree usual in original models of P systems to an arbitrary graph. Basic opera- tions in these systems are communication rules, enriched in some variants with cell division or cell separation. Several variants of tissue P systems were recently studied, together with the concept of uniform families of these systems. Their computational power was shown to range between P and NP ? co-NP , thus characterizing some interesting borderlines between tractability and intractability. In this paper we show that com- putational power of these uniform families in polynomial time is limited by the class PSPACE . This class characterizes the power of many clas- sical parallel computing model

    Toxic Effects of the Cylindrospermopsin and Chlorpyrifos Combination on the Differentiated SH-SY5Y Human Neuroblastoma Cell Line

    Get PDF
    Due to climate change and anthropogenic activities, the levels of pollution of aquatic and terrestrial environments have increased in the last decades. In this sense, the rise of cyanobacterial blooms, which release secondary metabolites with toxic properties, and the global use of pesticides for agricultural purposes have a negative impact on ecosystems. Thus, it would be interesting to study the concomitance of both types of toxicants in the same sample, since it is possible that they appear together. The aim of the present work was to state the effects of the interaction between the cyanotoxin cylindrospermopsin and the pesticide chlorpyrifos in differentiated SH-SY5Y neuronal cells to assess how they could affect the nervous system. To this end, cytotoxicity, morphological, and acetylcholinesterase activity studies were performed during 24 and 48 h. The results revealed a concentration-dependent decrease in viability and interaction between both toxicants, together with clear signs of apoptosis and necrosis induction. In this sense, different stages on the differentiation process would lead to differences in the toxicity exerted by the compounds both isolated as in combination, which it is not observed in non-differentiated cells. Additionally, the acetylcholinesterase activity appeared not to be affected, which is a clear difference compared to non-differentiated cells. These results show the importance of studying not only the toxicants themselves, but also in combination, to assess their possible effects in a more realistic scenario.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación PID 2019-104890RB-I0

    Identification of polyketide synthase genes required for aspinolide biosynthesis in Trichoderma arundinaceum

    Get PDF
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00253-022-12182-9[EN] The fungus Trichoderma arundinaceum exhibits biological control activity against crop diseases caused by other fungi. Two mechanisms that likely contribute to this activity are upregulation of plant defenses and production of two types of antifungal secondary metabolites: the sesquiterpenoid harzianum A (HA) and the polyketide-derived aspinolides. The goal of the current study was to identify aspinolide biosynthetic genes as part of an effort to understand how these metabolites contribute to the biological control activity of T. arundinaceum. Comparative genomics identified two polyketide synthase genes (asp1 and asp2) that occur in T. arundinaceum and Aspergillus ochraceus, which also produces aspinolides. Gene deletion and biochemical analyses in T. arundinaceum indicated that both genes are required for aspinolide production: asp2 for formation of a 10-member lactone ring and asp1 for formation of a butenoyl subsituent at position 8 of the lactone ring. Gene expression and comparative genomics analyses indicated that asp1 and asp2 are located within a gene cluster that occurs in both T. arundinaceum and A. ochraceus. A survey of genome sequences representing 35 phylogenetically diverse Trichoderma species revealed that intact homologs of the cluster occurred in only two other species, which also produced aspinolides. An asp2 mutant inhibited fungal growth more than the wild type, but an asp1 mutant did not, and the greater inhibition by the asp2 mutant coincided with increased HA production. These findings indicate that asp1 and asp2 are aspinolide biosynthetic genes and that loss of either aspinolide or HA production in T. arundinaceum can be accompanied by increased production of the other metabolite(s).SIPublicación en abierto financiada por el Consorcio de Bibliotecas Universitarias de Castilla y León (BUCLE), con cargo al Programa Operativo 2014ES16RFOP009 FEDER 2014-2020 DE CASTILLA Y LEÓN, Actuación:20007-CL - Apoyo Consorcio BUCL
    corecore