13 research outputs found

    Safety of percutaneous ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration of adrenal lesions in dogs: Perception of the procedure by radiologists and presentation of 50 cases

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    Background Percutaneous ultrasound (US)-guided fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of adrenal gland lesions is controversial in veterinary medicine. Objective To evaluate the frequency and radiologists' perception of the risk of the procedure as well as determining the incidence of complications. Methods Retrospective study. A first survey was submitted by e-mail to all board-certified radiologists of the American College of Veterinary Radiology (ACVR) and European College of Veterinary Diagnostic Imaging (ECVDI). A second survey was sent to radiologists who declared having performed the procedure at least once in their career (observational cross-sectional case study). Results The first survey was sent to 977 diplomates and answered by 138. Of 138 diplomates, 40 currently performed the procedure and 98 did not; 44 of the 98 gave the hypertensive crisis risk in pheochromocytoma as a reason. To the second survey, 12 of 65 responded positively; 50 dogs with 58 lesions were recruited, including 23 pheochromocytomas. Complications were reported in 4 of 50 dogs; 3 hemorrhages (1 mild and 1 moderate) and 1 death from acute respiratory distress syndrome (possibly related to laryngeal paralysis). No hypertensive crisis was reported. There was no relationship between the method of FNA/type of needle used and occurrence of complications. Based on the recollection of these 65 radiologists, who performed approximately 200 FNA of adrenal lesions, a death rate of approximately 1% was estimated. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Percutaneous US-guided FNA of adrenal lesions can be considered a minimally risky procedure, despite the negative perception by radiologists

    Heterogeneity and Evolutionary Tunability of Escherichia coli Resistance against Extreme Acid Stress

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    Since acidic environments often serve as an important line of defense against bacterial pathogens, it is important to fully understand how the latter manage to mount and evolve acid resistance mechanisms. Escherichia coli, a species harboring many pathovars, is typically equipped with the acid fitness island (AFI), a genomic region encoding the GadE master regulator together with several GadE-controlled functions to counter acid stress. This study reveals that gadE and consequently AFI functions are heterogeneously expressed even in the absence of any prior acid stress, thereby preemptively creating acid-resistant subpopulations within a clonal E. coli population. Directed evolution efforts selecting for modulated gadE expression confirm that a gain-of-function mutation in the EvgS sensor kinase can constitutively upregulate gadE expression and concomitant acid resistance. However, we reveal that such upregulation of EvgS also causes cross-resistance to heat stress because of SafA-mediated cross-activation of the PhoPQ regulon. Surprisingly, loss of function of the serC gene (encoding phosphoserine/phosphohydroxythreonine aminotransferase) can also significantly upregulate gadE expression, acid resistance, and heat cross-resistance, although via a currently cryptic mechanism. As such, our data reveal a noisy expression of gadE in E. coli that is functional for the survival of sudden acid stress and that can readily be genetically tuned.ISSN:2165-049

    Safety of percutaneous ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration of adrenal lesions in dogs: Perception of the procedure by radiologists and presentation of 50 cases

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    Background: Percutaneous ultrasound (US)-guided fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of adrenal gland lesions is controversial in veterinary medicine. Objective: To evaluate the frequency and radiologists' perception of the risk of the procedure as well as determining the incidence of complications. Methods: Retrospective study. A first survey was submitted by e-mail to all board-certified radiologists of the American College of Veterinary Radiology (ACVR) and European College of Veterinary Diagnostic Imaging (ECVDI). A second survey was sent to radiologists who declared having performed the procedure at least once in their career (observational cross-sectional case study). Results: The first survey was sent to 977 diplomates and answered by 138. Of 138 diplomates, 40 currently performed the procedure and 98 did not; 44 of the 98 gave the hypertensive crisis risk in pheochromocytoma as a reason. To the second survey, 12 of 65 responded positively; 50 dogs with 58 lesions were recruited, including 23 pheochromocytomas. Complications were reported in 4 of 50 dogs; 3 hemorrhages (1 mild and 1 moderate) and 1 death from acute respiratory distress syndrome (possibly related to laryngeal paralysis). No hypertensive crisis was reported. There was no relationship between the method of FNA/type of needle used and occurrence of complications. Based on the recollection of these 65 radiologists, who performed approximately 200 FNA of adrenal lesions, a death rate of approximately 1% was estimated. Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Percutaneous US-guided FNA of adrenal lesions can be considered a minimally risky procedure, despite the negative perception by radiologists

    Transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of a NAC1 transcription factor in Medicago truncatula roots

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    Legume roots develop two types of lateral organs, lateral roots and nodules. Nodules develop as a result of a symbiotic interaction with rhizobia and provide a niche for the bacteria to fix atmospheric nitrogen for the plant. The Arabidopsis NAC1 transcription factor is involved in lateral root formation, and is regulated post-transcriptionally by miRNA164 and by SINAT5-dependent ubiquitination. We analyzed in Medicago truncatula the role of the closest NAC1 homolog in lateral root formation and in nodulation. MtNAC1 shows a different expression pattern in response to auxin than its Arabidopsis homolog and no changes in lateral root number or nodulation were observed in plants affected in MtNAC1 expression. In addition, no interaction was found with SINA E3 ligases, suggesting that post-translational regulation of MtNAC1 does not occur in M. truncatula. Similar to what was found in Arabidopsis, a conserved miR164 target site was retrieved in MtNAC1, which reduced protein accumulation of a GFP-miR164 sensor. Furthermore, miR164 and MtNAC1 show an overlapping expression pattern in symbiotic nodules, and overexpression of this miRNA led to a reduction in nodule number. This work suggests that regulatory pathways controlling a conserved transcription factor are complex and divergent between M. truncatula and Arabidopsis

    Résistance, dissidence et opposition en RDA 1949-1990

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    Les manifestations de l'automne 1989 en RDA ont eu tendance à occulter d’autres formes de résistance et d’opposition, plus anciennes et moins spectaculaires, comme les actions de contre-propagande, la critique de dissidents marxistes, l’existence de subcultures ou l’émergence d’une presse clandestine qui ont pourtant, elles aussi, contribué à l’effritement du régime. Cet ouvrage dresse le premier bilan en langue française des manifestations de résistance, de dissidence et d’opposition en RDA. Il réunit les travaux d’historiens, de politistes et de germanistes, français et allemands, ainsi que les témoignages de plusieurs acteurs des années 1950 à 1990. Sont abordés la contestation de masse, la critique réformiste et les mouvements citoyens, mais aussi les marges de manœuvre gagnées dans la littérature, les arts plastiques et le cinéma. Doté d’un glossaire, l’ouvrage propose également des réflexions sur l’approche comparative et les transferts notionnels liés aux phénomènes de résistance en France, sous le national-socialisme et dans le bloc de l’Est.The 1989 demonstrations in the GDR have tended to eclipse other longer-standing and less spectacular forms of opposition and resistance, such as anti-propaganda actions, criticism from Marxist dissidents, the existence of subcultures or the appearance of an underground Press system, all of which, however, also played a part in the erosion of the communist system

    Testing a postselectional account of across-dimension switch costs

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    In visual search for a pop-out target, responses are faster when the target dimension from the previous trial is repeated than when it changes. Currently, it is unclear whether these across-dimension switch costs originate from processes that guide attention to the target or from later processes (e.g., target identification or response selection). The present study tested two critical predictions of a response-selection account of across-dimension switch costs-namely, (1) that switch costs should occur even when visual attention is guided by a completely different feature and (2) that changing the target dimension should affect the speed of responding, but not the speed of eye movements to the target. The results supported both predictions, indicating that changes of the target dimension do not affect early processes that guide attention to the target but, rather, affect later processes, which commence after the target has been selected. © 2010 The Psychonomic Society, Inc

    Simply shapely: relative, not absolute shapes are primed in pop-out search

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    Visual search is typically faster when the target from the previous trial is repeated than when it changes. This priming effect is commonly attributed to a selection bias for the target feature value or against the nontarget feature value that carries over to the next trial. By contrast, according to a relational account, what is primed in visual search is the target-nontarget relationship-namely, the feature that the target has in relation to the features in the nontarget context (e.g., larger, darker, redder)-and switch costs occur only when the target-nontarget relations reverse across trials. Here, the relational account was tested against current feature-based views in three eye movement experiments that used different shape search tasks (e.g., geometrical figures varying in the number of corners). For all tested shapes, reversing the target-nontarget relationships produced switch costs of the same magnitude as directly switching the target and nontarget features across trials ("full-switch"). In particular, changing only the nontargets produced large switch costs, even when the target feature was always repeated across trials. By contrast, no switch costs were observed when both the target and nontarget features changed, such that the coarse target-nontarget relations remained constant across trials. These results support the relational account over feature-based accounts of priming and indicate that a target's shape can be encoded relative to the shapes in the nontarget context
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