43 research outputs found
Evaluation of a simple polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)-based membrane for blood-feeding of malaria and dengue fever vectors in the laboratory
BACKGROUND: Controlled blood-feeding is essential for
maintaining laboratory colonies of disease-transmitting
mosquitoes and investigating pathogen transmission. We evaluated
a low-cost artificial feeding (AF) method, as an alternative to
direct human feeding (DHF), commonly used in mosquito
laboratories. METHODS: We applied thinly-stretched pieces of
polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membranes cut from locally
available seal tape (i.e. plumbers tape, commonly used for
sealing pipe threads in gasworks or waterworks). Approximately 4
ml of bovine blood was placed on the bottom surfaces of inverted
Styrofoam cups and then the PTFE membranes were thinly stretched
over the surfaces. The cups were filled with boiled water to
keep the blood warm (~37 degrees C), and held over netting cages
containing 3-4 day-old inseminated adults of female Aedes
aegypti, Anopheles gambiae (s.s.) or Anopheles arabiensis.
Blood-feeding success, fecundity and survival of mosquitoes
maintained by this system were compared against DHF. RESULTS:
Aedes aegypti achieved 100% feeding success on both AF and DHF,
and also similar fecundity rates (13.1 +/- 1.7 and 12.8 +/- 1.0
eggs/mosquito respectively; P > 0.05). An. arabiensis had
slightly lower feeding success on AF (85.83 +/- 16.28%) than DHF
(98.83 +/- 2.29%) though these were not statistically different
(P > 0.05), and also comparable fecundity between AF (8.82
+/- 7.02) and DHF (8.02 +/- 5.81). Similarly, for An. gambiae
(s.s.), we observed a marginal difference in feeding success
between AF (86.00 +/- 10.86%) and DHF (98.92 +/- 2.65%), but
similar fecundity by either method. Compared to DHF, mosquitoes
fed using AF survived a similar number of days [Hazard Ratios
(HR) for Ae. aegypti = 0.99 (0.75-1.34), P > 0.05; An.
arabiensis = 0.96 (0.75-1.22), P > 0.05; and An. gambiae
(s.s.) = 1.03 (0.79-1.35), P > 0.05]. CONCLUSIONS: Mosquitoes
fed via this simple AF method had similar feeding success,
fecundity and longevity. The method could potentially be used
for laboratory colonization of mosquitoes, where DHF is
unfeasible. If improved (e.g. minimizing temperature
fluctuations), the approach could possibly also support studies
where vectors are artificially infected with blood-borne
pathogens
Improving access to health care for malaria in Africa: a review of literature on what attracts patients
BACKGROUND: Increasing access to health care services is considered central to improving the health of populations. Existing reviews to understand factors affecting access to health care have focused on attributes of patients and their communities that act as 'barriers' to access, such as education level, financial and cultural factors. This review addresses the need to learn about provider characteristics that encourage patients to attend their health services. METHODS: This literature review aims to describe research that has identified characteristics that clients are looking for in the providers they approach for their health care needs, specifically for malaria in Africa. Keywords of 'malaria' and 'treatment seek*' or 'health seek*' and 'Africa' were searched for in the following databases: Web of Science, IBSS and Medline. Reviews of each paper were undertaken by two members of the team. Factors attracting patients according to each paper were listed and the strength of evidence was assessed by evaluating the methods used and the richness of descriptions of findings. RESULTS: A total of 97 papers fulfilled the inclusion criteria and were included in the review. The review of these papers identified several characteristics that were reported to attract patients to providers of all types, including lower cost of services, close proximity to patients, positive manner of providers, medicines that patients believe will cure them, and timeliness of services. Additional categories of factors were noted to attract patients to either higher or lower-level providers. The strength of evidence reviewed varied, with limitations observed in the use of methods utilizing pre-defined questions and the uncritical use of concepts such as 'quality', 'costs' and 'access'. Although most papers (90%) were published since the year 2000, most categories of attributes had been described in earlier papers. CONCLUSION: This paper argues that improving access to services requires attention to factors that will attract patients, and recommends that public services are improved in the specific aspects identified in this review. It also argues that research into access should expand its lens to consider provider characteristics more broadly, especially using methods that enable open responses. Access must be reconceptualized beyond the notion of barriers to consider attributes of attraction if patients are to receive quality care quickly
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A research agenda to improve incidence and outcomes of assisted vaginal birth.
Access to emergency obstetric care, including assisted vaginal birth and caesarean birth, is crucial for improving maternal and childbirth outcomes. However, although the proportion of births by caesarean section has increased during the last few decades, the use of assisted vaginal birth has declined. This is particularly the case in low- and middle-income countries, despite an assisted vaginal birth often being less risky than caesarean birth. We therefore conducted a three-step process to identify a research agenda necessary to increase the use of, or reintroduce, assisted vaginal birth: after conducting an evidence synthesis, which informed a consultation with technical experts who proposed an initial research agenda, we sought and incorporated the views of women's representatives of this agenda. This process has allowed us to identify a comprehensive research agenda, with topics categorized as: (i)Â the need to understand women's perceptions of assisted vaginal birth, and provide appropriate and reliable information; (ii)Â the importance of training health-care providers in clinical skills but also in respectful care, effective communication, shared decision-making and informed consent; and (iii)Â the barriers to and facilitators of implementation and sustainability. From women's feedback, we learned of the urgent need to recognize labour, childbirth and postpartum experiences as inherently physiological and dignified human processes, in which interventions should only be implemented if necessary. The promotion and/or reintroduction of assisted vaginal birth in low-resource settings requires governments, policy-makers and hospital administrators to support skilled health-care providers who can, in turn, respectfully support women in labour and childbirth
Inferring causal molecular networks: empirical assessment through a community-based effort
Inferring molecular networks is a central challenge in computational biology. However, it has remained unclear whether causal, rather than merely correlational, relationships can be effectively inferred in complex biological settings. Here we describe the HPN-DREAM network inference challenge that focused on learning causal influences in signaling networks. We used phosphoprotein data from cancer cell lines as well as in silico data from a nonlinear dynamical model. Using the phosphoprotein data, we scored more than 2,000 networks submitted by challenge participants. The networks spanned 32 biological contexts and were scored in terms of causal validity with respect to unseen interventional data. A number of approaches were effective and incorporating known biology was generally advantageous. Additional sub-challenges considered time-course prediction and visualization. Our results constitute the most comprehensive assessment of causal network inference in a mammalian setting carried out to date and suggest that learning causal relationships may be feasible in complex settings such as disease states. Furthermore, our scoring approach provides a practical way to empirically assess the causal validity of inferred molecular networks
Inferring causal molecular networks: empirical assessment through a community-based effort
It remains unclear whether causal, rather than merely correlational, relationships in molecular networks can be inferred in complex biological settings. Here we describe the HPN-DREAM network inference challenge, which focused on learning causal influences in signaling networks. We used phosphoprotein data from cancer cell lines as well as in silico data from a nonlinear dynamical model. Using the phosphoprotein data, we scored more than 2,000 networks submitted by challenge participants. The networks spanned 32 biological contexts and were scored in terms of causal validity with respect to unseen interventional data. A number of approaches were effective, and incorporating known biology was generally advantageous. Additional sub-challenges considered time-course prediction and visualization. Our results suggest that learning causal relationships may be feasible in complex settings such as disease states. Furthermore, our scoring approach provides a practical way to empirically assess inferred molecular networks in a causal sense
Nanotechnology advances towards development of targeted-treatment for obesity
Obesity through its association with type 2 diabetes (T2D), cancer and cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), poses a serious health threat, as these diseases contribute to high mortality rates. Pharmacotherapy alone or in combination with either lifestyle modifcation or surgery, is reliable in maintaining a healthy body weight, and preventing progression to obesity-induced diseases. However, the anti-obesity drugs are limited by non-specifcity and unsustainable weight loss efects. As such, novel and improved approaches for treatment of obesity are urgently needed. Nanotechnology-based therapies are investigated as an alternative strategy that can treat obesity and be able to overcome the
drawbacks associated with conventional therapies. The review presents three nanotechnology-based anti-obesity strategies that target the white adipose tissues (WATs) and its vasculature for the reversal of obesity. These include inhibition of angiogenesis in the WATs, transformation of WATs to brown adipose tissues (BATs), and photothermal lipolysis of WATs. Compared to conventional therapy, the targeted-nanosystems have high tolerability, reduced side efects, and enhanced efcacy. These efects are reproducible using various nanocarriers (liposomes, polymeric and gold nanoparticles), thus providing a proof of concept that targeted nanotherapy can be a feasible strategy that can combat obesity and prevent its comorbiditie
Crowdsourced assessment of common genetic contribution to predicting anti-TNF treatment response in rheumatoid arthritis
Correction: vol 7, 13205, 2016, doi:10.1038/ncomms13205Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) affects millions world-wide. While anti-TNF treatment is widely used to reduce disease progression, treatment fails in Bone-third of patients. No biomarker currently exists that identifies non-responders before treatment. A rigorous community-based assessment of the utility of SNP data for predicting anti-TNF treatment efficacy in RA patients was performed in the context of a DREAM Challenge (http://www.synapse.org/RA_Challenge). An open challenge framework enabled the comparative evaluation of predictions developed by 73 research groups using the most comprehensive available data and covering a wide range of state-of-the-art modelling methodologies. Despite a significant genetic heritability estimate of treatment non-response trait (h(2) = 0.18, P value = 0.02), no significant genetic contribution to prediction accuracy is observed. Results formally confirm the expectations of the rheumatology community that SNP information does not significantly improve predictive performance relative to standard clinical traits, thereby justifying a refocusing of future efforts on collection of other data.Peer reviewe
Evaluation of a simple polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)-based membrane for blood-feeding of malaria and dengue fever vectors in the laboratory
BACKGROUND: Controlled blood-feeding is essential for
maintaining laboratory colonies of disease-transmitting
mosquitoes and investigating pathogen transmission. We evaluated
a low-cost artificial feeding (AF) method, as an alternative to
direct human feeding (DHF), commonly used in mosquito
laboratories. METHODS: We applied thinly-stretched pieces of
polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membranes cut from locally
available seal tape (i.e. plumbers tape, commonly used for
sealing pipe threads in gasworks or waterworks). Approximately 4
ml of bovine blood was placed on the bottom surfaces of inverted
Styrofoam cups and then the PTFE membranes were thinly stretched
over the surfaces. The cups were filled with boiled water to
keep the blood warm (~37 degrees C), and held over netting cages
containing 3-4 day-old inseminated adults of female Aedes
aegypti, Anopheles gambiae (s.s.) or Anopheles arabiensis.
Blood-feeding success, fecundity and survival of mosquitoes
maintained by this system were compared against DHF. RESULTS:
Aedes aegypti achieved 100% feeding success on both AF and DHF,
and also similar fecundity rates (13.1 +/- 1.7 and 12.8 +/- 1.0
eggs/mosquito respectively; P > 0.05). An. arabiensis had
slightly lower feeding success on AF (85.83 +/- 16.28%) than DHF
(98.83 +/- 2.29%) though these were not statistically different
(P > 0.05), and also comparable fecundity between AF (8.82
+/- 7.02) and DHF (8.02 +/- 5.81). Similarly, for An. gambiae
(s.s.), we observed a marginal difference in feeding success
between AF (86.00 +/- 10.86%) and DHF (98.92 +/- 2.65%), but
similar fecundity by either method. Compared to DHF, mosquitoes
fed using AF survived a similar number of days [Hazard Ratios
(HR) for Ae. aegypti = 0.99 (0.75-1.34), P > 0.05; An.
arabiensis = 0.96 (0.75-1.22), P > 0.05; and An. gambiae
(s.s.) = 1.03 (0.79-1.35), P > 0.05]. CONCLUSIONS: Mosquitoes
fed via this simple AF method had similar feeding success,
fecundity and longevity. The method could potentially be used
for laboratory colonization of mosquitoes, where DHF is
unfeasible. If improved (e.g. minimizing temperature
fluctuations), the approach could possibly also support studies
where vectors are artificially infected with blood-borne
pathogens