597 research outputs found
Temperate agroforestry: yield of five key arable crops near tree rows of Populus X Canadensis
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Gradients in abundance and diversity of ground-dwelling arthropods in temperate silvoarable fields
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Evidence of a high incidence of subclinically affected calves in a herd of cattle with fatal cases of Bovine Neonatal Pancytopenia (BNP).
BACKGROUND: Bovine Neonatal Pancytopenia (BNP) is a disease of calves characterised by bone marrow trilineage hypoplasia, mediated by ingestion of alloantibodies in colostrum. Suspected subclinical forms of BNP have been reported, suggesting that observed clinical cases may not represent the full extent of the disease. However to date there are no objective data available on the incidence of subclinical disease or its temporal distribution. This study aimed to 1) ascertain whether subclinical BNP occurs and, if so, to determine the incidence on an affected farm and 2) determine whether there is evidence of temporal clustering of BNP cases on this farm. To achieve these aims, haematological screening of calves born on the farm during one calving season was carried out, utilising blood samples collected at defined ages. These data were then analysed in comparison to data from both known BNP-free control animals and histopathologically confirmed BNP cases. An ordinal logistic regression model was used to create a composite haematology score to predict the probabilities of calves being normal, based on their haematology measurements at 10–14 days old. RESULTS: This study revealed that 15% (21 of 139) of the clinically normal calves on this farm had profoundly abnormal haematology (<5% chance of being normal) and could be defined as affected by subclinical BNP. Together with clinical BNP cases, this gave the study farm a BNP incidence of 18%. Calves with BNP were found to be distributed throughout the calving period, with no clustering, and no significant differences in the date of birth of cases or subclinical cases were found compared to the rest of the calves. This study did not find any evidence of increased mortality or increased time from birth to sale in subclinical BNP calves but, as the study only involved a single farm and adverse effects may be determined by other inter-current diseases it remains possible that subclinical BNP has a detrimental impact on the health and productivity of calves under certain circumstances. CONCLUSIONS: Subclinical BNP was found to occur at a high incidence in a herd of cattle with fatal cases of BNP
A specific nanobody prevents amyloidogenesis of D76N \u3b22-microglobulin in vitro and modifies its tissue distribution in vivo
Systemic amyloidosis is caused by misfolding and aggregation of globular proteins in vivo for which
effective treatments are urgently needed. Inhibition of protein self-aggregation represents an attractive
therapeutic strategy. Studies on the amyloidogenic variant of \u3b22-microglobulin, D76N, causing
hereditary systemic amyloidosis, have become particularly relevant since fibrils are formed in vitro in
physiologically relevant conditions. Here we compare the potency of two previously described inhibitors
of wild type \u3b22-microglobulin fibrillogenesis, doxycycline and single domain antibodies (nanobodies).
The \u3b22-microglobulin -binding nanobody, Nb24, more potently inhibits D76N \u3b22-microglobulin
fibrillogenesis than doxycycline with complete abrogation of fibril formation. In \u3b22-microglobulin knock
out mice, the D76N \u3b22-microglobulin/ Nb24 pre-formed complex, is cleared from the circulation at the
same rate as the uncomplexed protein; however, the analysis of tissue distribution reveals that the
interaction with the antibody reduces the concentration of the variant protein in the heart but does
not modify the tissue distribution of wild type \u3b22-microglobulin. These findings strongly support the
potential therapeutic use of this antibody in the treatment of systemic amyloidosis
Validation of the Consensus-Definition for Cancer Cachexia and evaluation of a classification model—a study based on data from an international multicentre project (EPCRC-CSA)
A cancer cachexia classification into stages is warranted in order to guide treatment decisions and clinical trial inclusion. Weight loss and BMI clearly discriminate between non-cachectic and cachectic patients both with regards to all the domains (Intake, Catabolism and Function) and survival. The precachexia stage might be better defined by additional factors in order to be discriminativ
Electrons in High-Tc Compounds: Ab-Initio Correlation Results
Electronic correlations in the ground state of an idealized infinite-layer
high-Tc compound are computed using the ab-initio method of local ansatz.
Comparisons are made with the local-density approximation (LDA) results, and
the correlation functions are analyzed in detail. These correlation functions
are used to determine the effective atomic-interaction parameters for model
Hamiltonians. On the resulting model, doping dependencies of the relevant
correlations are investigated. Aside from the expected strong atomic
correlations, particular spin correlations arise. The dominating contribution
is a strong nearest neighbor correlation that is Stoner-enhanced due to the
closeness of the ground state to the magnetic phase. This feature depends
moderately on doping, and is absent in a single-band Hubbard model. Our
calculated spin correlation function is in good qualitative agreement with that
determined from the neutron scattering experiments for a metal.Comment: 21pp, 5fig, Phys. Rev. B (Oct. 98
Sergey Ivanovitch Tyulpanov: The 115 anniversary of birthday
Sergej Ivanovitch Tjulpanov — the outstanding scientist, citizen, diplomat, warrior, born at the beginning of the twentieth century, a man of amazing destiny that was shaped and defined by the time and country he lived in. The paper is a result of collaboration between N. P. Kuznetsova — one the last S. I. Tyulpanov’s post-graduate student and Ingeborg and Michael Pardon — German authors of the «Sergej Tjulpanov — the political portrait» project (and future book) based on enormous volume of archive materials collected in Russia and Germany. German colleagues particularly dwell on the Tyulpanov’s activities in the post-war Germany in the Department of Information (SMAD). After the World War II he happened to be one of the founders of the Russian-German friendship and cooperation, who has become a legend of Eastern and Western Germany. The essential part of the paper is dedicated to Tjulpanov as the Teacher and distinguished scientist-ideologist, the founder of the Modern Capitalism Economy Department. Studying social science including economics, history, philosophy, etc. he was committed to what was called “Marxist-Leninist theory of social development”, trying to get reed of frozen ideological norms and in this format to offload from dogmatism educating students, who took his example in the invisible moral status “overflow” into the professional activity and vice versa.
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Inoculation effects of two South African cyanobacteria strains on aggregate stability of a silt loam soil
Two South African cyanobacteria strains (coded 3g and 7e) of the genus Nostoc were evaluated for improvement of the aggregate stability of a silty loam soil with low organic C content and compared with Nostoc strain 9v isolated from a Tanzanian soil. The soil was either cropped with maize or non-cropped and inoculated with the three strains in a glasshouse. After 42 days, the aggregate stability based on mean weight diameter (MWD) and fragment size distribution were determined by fast wetting, wet stirring and slow wetting methods. Inoculation of the soil with strains 3g and 7e improved the soil’s MWD and increased its proportion of large aggregates, particularly in the cropped soil. The opposite was the case for aggregates in soils inoculated with the reference strain 9v. Strain 3g resulted in greater improvement of MWD estimated by fast wetting, while strains 7e and 9v improved aggregate stability estimated by wet stirring. Improvement of aggregate stability was more related to exocellular polysaccharide (EPS) content than organic C. The results suggest that indigenous strains with high potential for EPS production could improve the soil structural stability of degraded soils in South Africa.Key words: Aggregate stability, exocellular polysaccharides, indigenous cyanobacteria, mean weight diameter
Characteristics of the case mix, organisation and delivery in cancer palliative care: a challenge for good-quality research
Objectives: Palliative care (PC) services and patients differ across countries. Data on PC delivery paired with medical and self-reported data are seldom reported. Aims were to describe (1) PC organisation and services in participating centres and (2) characteristics of patients in PC programmes.
Methods: This was an international prospective multicentre study with a single web-based survey on PC organisation, services and academics and patients' self-reported symptoms collected at baseline and monthly thereafter, with concurrent registrations of medical data by healthcare providers. Participants were patients ≥18 enrolled in a PC programme.
Results: 30 centres in 12 countries participated; 24 hospitals, 4 hospices, 1 nursing home, 1 home-care service. 22 centres (73%) had PC in-house teams and inpatient and outpatient services. 20 centres (67%) had integral chemotherapy/radiotherapy services, and most (28/30) had access to general medical or oncology inpatient units. Physicians or nurses were present 24 hours/7 days in 50% and 60% of centres, respectively. 50 centres (50%) had professorships, and 12 centres (40%) had full-time/part-time research staff. Data were available on 1698 patients: 50% females; median age 66 (range 21–97); median Karnofsky score 70 (10–100); 1409 patients (83%) had metastatic/disseminated disease; tiredness and pain in the past 24 hours were most prominent. During follow-up, 1060 patients (62%) died; 450 (44%) <3 months from inclusion and 701 (68%) within 6 months. ANOVA and χ2 tests showed that hospice/nursing home patients were significantly older, had poorer performance status and had shorter survival compared with hospital-patients (p<.0.001).
Conclusions: There is a wide variation in PC services and patients across Europe. Detailed characterisation is the first step in improving PC services and research.
Trial registration number: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01362816
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