356 research outputs found
Aircraft noise and child blood pressure
The purpose of the study was to examine the existence of an association between child blood pressure (BP) and exposure to domestic jet aircraft noise in the context of the construction of a new parallel north-south runway at Sydney (Kingsford-Smith) Airport. The baseline study was commissioned and funded by the Federal Airports Corporation (FAC), with measurements conducted in 1994 and 1995. A follow-up longitudinal component to the study was subsequently commissioned and funded by the FAC in 1997, and measurements conducted in the same year. As the same individuals were measured and re-measured over changing conditions of exposure to aircraft noise, the quasiexperimental nature of the study allowed inferences to be made regarding exposure to aircraft noise and child BP. The main hypotheses for testing were that BP, and within-subject longitudinal changes in BP, are positively related to domestic jet aircraft noise exposure and longitudinal changes in domestic jet aircraft noise exposure respectively. Subsidiary hypotheses tested for evidence of short- and long-term BP adaptation effects where BPs were related to prior changes to aircraft noise exposures. A sample of 75 primary schools within a 20 km radius of Sydney Airport under various noise exposure conditions, both existing and those projected with the advent of the new runway, participated in the study. The baseline cohort comprised 1,230 Year 3/4 children attending the schools in 1994 and 1995, and the follow-up participants comprised 628 of the original baseline sample re-measured in 1997. Study participants were enrolled by active parental consent. The baseline response rate was approximately 40% of children in the participating schools. Systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure readings of the children were taken using automated BP measuring equipment along with anthropometric measurements (heights, weights, skinfold thicknesses and waist measurements). Parental surveys captured items pertaining to the childοΏ½s ethnic background as measured by the country of birth of the child and parent(s), residential address and housing structure, child eating habits and activity levels, along with family and child history of high blood pressure. Aircraft noise exposure data were collected by the National Acoustic Laboratories and processed into the energy-averaged noise metric used in Australia for aircraft noise exposure assessment called the Australian Noise Exposure Index (ANEI). Mean exposures for a given calendar month were used in the analysis. ANEI values were geocoded to exact geographic locations using digitised street maps from which values for each house and school address, also geocoded, were interpolated. A child BP measured in a given month was matched to a aircraft noise exposure value both at their school and residential address for that month for analysis. After adjusting for confounding and other factors, the cross-sectional relationship between BP and aircraft noise exposure was found to be inconsistent. SBP was nonsignificantly negatively associated with school aircraft noise exposure at baseline (0.05 mmHg/ANEI, cluster-sampling-adjusted p>0.05), but positively and non-significantly associated with school aircraft noise exposure at follow-up (0.05 mmHg/ANEI, p>0.05). As for SBP, baseline DBP was significantly negatively related to school aircraft noise exposure at (0.09 mmHg/ANEI, p0.05). Within-subject BP changes, occurring from baseline to follow-up, regressed on corresponding longitudinal changes in aircraft noise exposures produced inconsistent results. SBP change was positively and non-significantly (0.027 mmHg/ANEI, p>0.05) associated with corresponding school aircraft noise exposure change, while SBP change was negatively associated total aircraft noise exposure change (statistically nonsignificant, 0.06 mmHg/ANEI, p>0.05). DBP changes were similarly and nonsignificantly related to corresponding aircraft noise exposure changes. Some evidence for short-term BP adaptation to recent changes in aircraft noise exposure was found. Consistent negative associations between systolic and diastolic BP and recent changes in school aircraft noise exposure were found. This association was statistically significant at study baseline (SBP: 0.19 mmHg/ANEI, p0.05). In the presence of inconsistent cross-sectional BP-aircraft noise exposure associations, this finding is consistent with evidence of a homoeostatic BP response to recent changes in aircraft noise exposure, where resting BP returns to pre-existing levels unrelated to aircraft noise exposure. The public health implication of this finding appears to be benign
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Partnerships for skills training in the care home sector
Aim: This paper describes an initiative in North East London that aimed to facilitate access to training for care-home staff by using a mobile skills-centre in the form of an adapted bus.
Background: It has proved difficult to take a strategic approach to quality assurance in care homes and the first comprehensive national training strategy for the sector was not published until 2000. Staff value and benefit from training, but organizing the provision of education and training may be problematic, given resource constraints and staffing levels that make it difficult to release staff to go off-site.
Method: Collaboration between the School of Community and Health Sciences, City University London; My Home Life, an initiative led by Help the Aged in collaboration with the National Care Forum and City University London; local care homes; local primary care trusts (PCTs); and the Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning at City University London and Queen Mary University of London. The project involved facilitation, training in the mobile skills-centre and evaluation through questionnaires.
Findings: The project was successful at a number of different levels: providing training to care-home staff; fostering collaborative relationships between care homes and PCTs; providing a forum to enable a wider educational discussion of care-home needs; and stimulating the planning of future education programmes for care-home staff and of the provision in care homes of student nurse placements
PEX19 is a predominantly cytosolic chaperone and import receptor for class 1 peroxisomal membrane proteins
Integral peroxisomal membrane proteins (PMPs) are synthesized in the cytoplasm and imported posttranslationally. Here, we demonstrate that PEX19 binds and stabilizes newly synthesized PMPs in the cytosol, binds to multiple PMP targeting signals (mPTSs), interacts with the hydrophobic domains of PMP targeting signals, and is essential for PMP targeting and import. These results show that PEX19 functions as both a chaperone and an import receptor for newly synthesized PMPs. We also demonstrate the existence of two PMP import mechanisms and two classes of mPTSs: class 1 mPTSs, which are bound by PEX19 and imported in a PEX19-dependent manner, and class 2 mPTSs, which are not bound by PEX19 and mediate protein import independently of PEX19
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A sex-specific reconstitution bias in the competitive CD45.1/CD45.2 congenic bone marrow transplant model.
Allelic variants of the pan-haematopoietic cell marker CD45, identified as CD45.1 and CD45.2, have been established as a marker system to track haematopoietic cells following congenic mouse bone marrow transplants. Despite the frequent use of this model for studying the impact of genetic modifications on relative differentiation potential, it is now evident that a bias exists in CD45.1 versus CD45.2 cell reconstitution. While this bias has been demonstrated by reduced reconstitution potential in B cells of CD45.1 origin, differences in the development of other lymphocytes, as well as the impact of sex on this bias, remain uncertain. We performed bone marrow transplants with wild-type CD45.1 and CD45.2 donor cells, and characterised haematopoietic cell reconstitution in dual-expressing CD45.1/2 host mice. We report an increase in CD45.2 reconstitution in the bone marrow that persists in the spleen, thymus and blood. Through the use of CD45.1/2 hosts, we demonstrate the intrinsic bias towards CD45.2 reconstitution is independent of an immunogenic response to the CD45.1 epitope. Furthermore, we identify a sex-specific difference in reconstitution efficiencies, with female mice exhibiting a greater bias towards CD45.2 reconstitution than males. This work sheds new light on the limitations of the CD45.1/CD45.2 congenic system for tracking lymphocyte development
PEX3 functions as a PEX19 docking factor in the import of class I peroxisomal membrane proteins
PEX19 is a chaperone and import receptor for newly synthesized, class I peroxisomal membrane proteins (PMPs). PEX19 binds these PMPs in the cytoplasm and delivers them to the peroxisome for subsequent insertion into the peroxisome membrane, indicating that there may be a PEX19 docking factor in the peroxisome membrane. Here we show that PEX3 is required for PEX19 to dock at peroxisomes, interacts specifically with the docking domain of PEX19, and is required for recruitment of the PEX19 docking domain to peroxisomes. PEX3 is also sufficient to dock PEX19 at heterologous organelles and binds PEX19 via a conserved motif that is essential for this docking activity and for PEX3 function in general. Not surprisingly, transient inhibition of PEX3 abrogates class I PMP import but has no effect on class II PMP import or peroxisomal matrix protein import. Taken together, these results suggest that PEX3 plays a selective, essential, and direct role in PMP import as a docking factor for PEX19
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