725 research outputs found

    Food Security: Challenges for a sustainable world

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    On June 12, 2012, the Food Security session was held during the Forum on Science, Technology and Innovation for Sustainable Development at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, with co-conveners Prof. Thomas Rosswall, Chair, CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), and Dr. Lindiwe MajeleSibanda, CEO, Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources Policy Analysis Network (FANRPAN), South Africa. The invited forum lecturers called attention to a number of challenges that need to be tackled in order to achieve food security worldwide, such as climate change, loss of arable land, wars and social/cultural conflicts, population growth, loss of biodiversity

    Soil chemical management drives structural degradation of Oxisols under a no-till cropping system.

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    Made available in DSpace on 2018-07-06T01:17:20Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 PSoilChemicalsoilresearch....pdf: 615207 bytes, checksum: ec842638c37dea1ce182d8cd03f82c9f (MD5) Previous issue date: 2017-12-11bitstream/item/179426/1/P-Soil-Chemical-soil-research....pd

    Two protocols of aerobic exercise modulate the counter-regulatory axis of the renin-angiotensin system.

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    Aims: The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is a dual system with two opposite arms: i) the classical one formed by the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), angiotensin (Ang) II and angiotensin type 1 (AT1) receptors; ii) the counter-regulatory arm consisting of ACE2, Ang-(1?7) and Mas receptor. Physical exercise can modulate this system, however, only animal studies have compared the effects of different intensity protocols on the RAS. No data with humans were provided. Therefore, we investigated the acute effect of two protocols of isowork aerobic exercise [High-Intensity Interval Exercise (HIIE) and Moderate-Intensity Continuous Exercise (MICE)] in plasma and urinary levels of RAS components in physically active men. Main methods: The HIIE protocol included a 5-minute warm-up cycling at 60?70% of heart rate peak (HRp) intensity followed by 10 sets of 30 s above 90% with 1 min of recovery and 3 min of cool down. The MICE protocol was performed at a constant power corresponding to 60?70% of HRp and finalized at the same total work of HIIE. Blood and urine samples were collected before and after the protocols. Plasma and urinary levels of ACE, ACE2, Ang-(1?7) and Ang II were analyzed by enzyme-linked immunoassay. Key findings: While the HIIE protocol significantly increased urinary levels of ACE and plasma levels of ACE2, the MICE protocol elevated urinary concentrations of ACE2 and of Ang-(1?7). A greater increase of urine concentrations of Ang-(1?7) occurred in the MICE if compared with the HIIE protocol. Significance: Aerobic physical exercise acutely increases the activity of the counter-regulatory RAS axis, mostly the MICE protocol

    Simulation study of linear mixed models with contaminated normal distribution in animal breeding

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    Objetivou-se com esse trabalho comparar estimativas de componentes de vari?ncias obtidas por meio de modelos lineares mistos Gaussianos e Robustos, via Amostrador de Gibbs, em dados simulados. Foram simulados 50 arquivos de dados com 1.000 animais cada um, distribu?dos em cinco gera??es, em dois n?veis de efeito fixo e tr?s valores fenot?picos distintos para uma caracter?stica hipot?tica, com diferentes n?veis de contamina??o. Exceto para os dados sem contamina??o, quando os modelos foram iguais, o modelo Robusto apresentou melhores estimativas da vari?ncia residual. As estimativas de herdabilidade foram semelhantes em todos os modelos, mas as an?lises de regress?o mostraram que os valores gen?ticos preditos com uso do modelo Robusto foram mais pr?ximos dos valores gen?ticos verdadeiros. Esses resultados sugerem que o modelo linear normal contaminado oferece uma alternativa flex?vel para estima??o robusta em melhoramento gen?tico animal.Funda??o de Amparo ? Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais (FAPEMIG)Empresa de Pesquisa Agropecu?ria de Minas Gerais (EPAMIG)Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cient?fico e Tecnol?gico (CNPq)Coordena??o de Aperfei?oamento de Pessoal de N?vel Superior (CAPES)The objective of this study was to compare Gaussian and Robust linear mixed models for the estimation of variance components by REML and Gibbs Sampling, using data from fifty simulated populations consisting of 1,000 animals distributed in 5 generations. Two levels of fixed effect and three hypothetical phenotypic values for a trait, with different levels of contamination were used in the simulations. Additive and residual variance estimates were similar for both REML and Bayesian inference using the Gaussian and Robust model. The best estimates of residual variance in the presence of contaminants were obtained by the Robust model. Estimates of heritability were similar for all models, but regression analyses indicated that predicted genetic values obtained by the robust model were more similar to real breeding values. These results suggest that the contaminated normal linear model is a flexible alternative for robust estimation in animal breeding

    Identifying Implicit Vulnerabilities through Personas as Goal Models

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    When used in requirements processes and tools, personas have the potential to identify vulnerabilities resulting from misalignment between user expectations and system goals. Typically, however, this potential is unfulfilled as personas and system goals are captured with different mindsets, by different teams, and for different purposes. If personas are visualised as goal models, it may be easier for stakeholders to see implications of their goals being satisfied or denied, and designers to incorporate the creation and analysis of such models into the broader RE tool-chain. This paper outlines a tool-supported approach for finding implicit vulnerabilities from user and system goals by reframing personas as social goal models. We illustrate this approach with a case study where previously hidden vulnerabilities based on human behaviour were identified

    Ghrelin plasma levels, gastric ghrelin cell density and bone mineral density in women with rheumatoid arthritis.

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    Generalized bone loss can be considered an extra-articular manifestation of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) that may lead to the occurrence of fractures, resulting in decreased quality of life and increased healthcare costs. The peptide ghrelin has demonstrated to positively affect osteoblasts in vitro and has anti-inflammatory actions, but the studies that correlate ghrelin plasma levels and RA have contradictory results. We aimed to evaluate the correlation between total ghrelin plasma levels, density of ghrelin-immunoreactive cells in the gastric mucosa, and bone mineral density (BMD) in twenty adult women with established RA with 6 months or more of symptoms (mean age of 52.70?11.40 years). Patients with RA presented higher ghrelin-immunoreactive cells density in gastric mucosa (P=0.008) compared with healthy females. There was a positive relationship between femoral neck BMD and gastric ghrelin cell density (P=0.007). However, these same patients presented a negative correlation between plasma ghrelin levels and total femoral BMD (P=0.03). The present results indicate that ghrelin may be involved in bone metabolism of patients with RA. However, the higher density of ghrelin-producing cells in the gastric mucosa of these patients does not seem to induce a corresponding elevation in the plasma levels of this peptide

    Infective endocarditis caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in a young woman after ear piercing: a case report

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Ear piercing is a common practice among Korean adolescents and young women and usually is performed by nonmedical personnel, sometimes under suboptimal hygienic conditions. Consequently, ear piercing has been associated with various infectious complications, including fatal infective endocarditis. We report a case of infective endocarditis that was caused by community-associated methicillin-resistant <it>Staphylococcus aureus </it>after ear piercing and that was accompanied by a noticeable facial rash.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>A 29-year-old Korean woman underwent ear piercing six days before hospitalization. On admission, she had fever, erythematous maculopapular rashes on her face, signs of generalized emboli, vegetation in her mitral valve, and methicillin-resistant <it>S. aureus </it>bacteremia. On the basis of the blood culture results, she was treated with vancomycin in combination with gentamicin. On day six of hospitalization, a rupture of the papillary muscle of her mitral valve developed, and emergency cardiac surgery replacing her mitral valve with a prosthetic valve was performed. After eight weeks of antibiotic therapy, she was treated successfully and discharged without significant sequelae.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Numerable cases of body piercing-related infective endocarditis have been reported, and since ear piercing is commonplace nowadays, the importance of risk recognition cannot be overemphasized. In our report, a patient developed infective endocarditis that was caused by methicillin-resistant <it>S. aureus </it>after ear piercing and that was accompanied by an interesting feature, namely facial rash.</p

    Hypercalcemia after transplant nephrectomy in a hemodialysis patient: a case report

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Hypercalcemia is a complication often seen in chronic hemodialysis patients. A rare cause of this condition is sarcoidosis. Its highly variable clinical presentation is challenging. Especially in patients suffering chronic kidney graft failure the nonspecific constitutional symptoms of sarcoidosis like fever, weight loss, arthralgia and fatigue may be easily misleading.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>A 51 year old male developed hypercalcemia, arthralgia and B-symptoms after explantation of his kidney graft because of suspected acute rejection. The removed kidney showed vasculopathy and tubulointerstitial nephritis, which had not been overt in the biopsy taken half a year earlier. Despite explantation and withdrawal of the immunosuppression the patient's general condition deteriorated progressively. A rapid rise in serum calcium finally provoked us to check for sarcoidosis. CT scans of the lungs, broncho-alveolar-lavage and further lab tests confirmed the diagnosis.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This case demonstrates that withdrawal of immunosuppressive drugs sometimes unmasks sarcoidosis. It should be considered as differential diagnosis even in hemodialysis patients, in whom other reasons for hypercalcemia are much more common.</p
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