455 research outputs found
Impact of Obesity on Mortality in Hospitalized Patients with Pneumonia Due to 2009 H1N1 Influenza A Virus Versus Other Etiologies
Background: Reports from the 2009 H1N1 influenza A virus (2009 H1N1) pandemic indicate increased mortality in obese patients hospitalized with pneumonia. However, articles published prior to the pandemic have suggested that obesity may be a protective factor for mortality in these patients. The objective of this study was to compare the impact of obesity on mortality in hospitalized patients with pneumonia due to the 2009 H1N1 versus pneumonia due to other etiologies.
Methods: This was a secondary analysis of the CAPO international cohort study. Study groups were defined as follows: Group One, pneumonia due to 2009 H1N1: Patients hospitalized with pneumonia after March 2009 with a positive RT-PCR for 2009 H1N1 and Group Two, pneumonia due to other etiologies: Patients hospitalized with pneumonia before March 2009. Body Mass Index (BMI) was used to predict the influence of obesity on mortality. The effect of BMI on mortality was analyzed using a propensity-adjusted logistic regression model.
Results: From the total of 897 patients, 215 (24%) had pneumonia due to 2009 H1N1. After adjustment, increased BMI was associated with increased mortality in patients with pneumonia due to 2009 H1N1 and with decreased mortality in patients with pneumonia due to other etiologies.
Conclusions: Obesity is associated with poor outcomes in patients with pneumonia due to 2009 H1N1 but is protective in patients with pneumonia due to other etiologies. Defining the molecular mechanisms by which obesity influences outcomes in patients with pneumonia may help to develop novel therapeutic strategies.
Funding: US Department of Homeland Security
Thermal alterations in patients with inflammatory diseases: a comparison between psoriatic and rheumatoid arthritis
Functional infrared imaging (fIRI) is used to provide information on circulation, thermal properties and thermoregulatory function of the cutaneous tissue in several clinical settings. This study aims to evaluate the application of fIRI in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) assessment, evaluating the thermoregulatory alterations due to joint inflammation in RA patients both in basal conditions and after a mild functional (isometric) exercise, using the same protocol we projected in our recent work on psoriatic arthritis (PsA); fIRI outcomes were compared with those provided by power-Doppler ultrasonography. Ten patients with RA and 11 healthy controls were enrolled in the study. The cutaneous temperature dynamics of 20 regions of interest located on the dominant hand were recorded by means of high-resolution thermal imaging at baseline and after a functional exercise. RA patients showed lower thermal parameters compared to healthy controls, suggesting that the RA-related inflammatory state alters the normal thermal properties of the skin overlying inflamed joints. These results are different from PsA data observed in the previous study. fIRI applied to the study of the response to a functional stimulus may represent an innovative, non-invasive, and operator-independent method for the assessment of early R
Ouidah et son patrimoine
L'étude sur Ouidah, petite ville de la côte du Bénin, se divise en trois parties. La première présente l'histoire de la cité du 18ème au début du 20ème siècle, les cultes vodouns qui s'y sont développés et le processus d'urbanisation. La 2ème partie inventorie les lieux patrimoniaux qui renvoient à cette histoire et aux traits culturels de cette société. La 3ème dresse un diagnostic des actions et des acteurs dans la ville, rappelle les caractéristiques du patrimoine bâti et propose des mesures pour sa conservation et sa valorisatio
Enhancement of Brassica napus Tolerance to High Saline Conditions by Seed Priming.
Plants grown in saline soils undergo osmotic and oxidative stresses, affecting growth and
photosynthesis and, consequently, the yield. Therefore, the increase in soil salinity is a major threat
to crop productivity worldwide. Plant’s tolerance can be ameliorated by applying simple methods
that induce them to adopt morphological and physiological adjustments to counteract stress. In this
work, we evaluated the effects of seed priming on salt stress response in three cultivars of rapeseed
(Brassica napus L.) that had different tolerance levels. Seed chemical priming was performed with
2.5 mM spermine (SPM), 5 mM spermidine (SPD), 40 mM NaCl and 2.5 mM Ca (NO3
)2
. Primed
and not primed seeds were sown on saline and not saline (controls) media, and morphological and
physiological parameters were determined. Since SPD treatment was effective in reducing salinity
negative effects on growth, membrane integrity and photosynthetic pigments, we selected this
priming to further investigate plant salt stress response. The positive effects of this seed treatment on
growth and physiological responses were evident when primed plants were compared to not primed
ones, grown under the same saline conditions. SPD priming ameliorated the tolerance towards saline
stress, in a genotype-independent manner, by increasing photosynthetic pigments, proline amounts
and antioxidant responses in all cultivars exposed to salt. These results may open new perspectives
for crop productivity in the struggle against soil salinization
Point-of-Care Ultrasound for Tuberculosis Management in Sub-Saharan Africa-A Balanced SWOT Analysis.
Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is an increasingly accessible skill, allowing for the decentralization of its use to non-specialist healthcare workers to guide routine clinical decision making. The advent of ultrasound-on-a-chip has transformed the technology into a portable mobile health device. Due to its high sensitivity to detect small consolidations, pleural effusions and sub pleural nodules, POCUS has recently been proposed as a sputum-free likely triage tool for tuberculosis (TB). To make an objective assessment of the potential and limitations of POCUS in routine TB management, we present a Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities & Threats (SWOT) analysis based on a review of the relevant literature and focusing on Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). We idenitified numerous strengths and opportunities of POCUS for TB management e.g.; accessible, affordable, easy to use & maintain, expedited diagnosis, extra-pulmonary TB detection, safer pleural/pericardial puncture, use in children/pregnant women/PLHIV, targeted screening of TB contacts, monitoring TB sequelae, and creating AI decision support. Weaknesses and external threats such as operator dependency, lack of visualization of central lung pathology, poor specificity, lack of impact assessments and data from Sub-Saharan Africa must be taken into consideration to ensure that the potential of the technology can be fully realized in research as in practice
Isotopic evidence of enhanced carbonate dissolution at a coal mine drainage site in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA
18 O SO4 isotopic signatures of the mine drainage and the presence of presumptive SO 4 -reducing bacteria suggest that SO 4 reduction activity also contributes C depleted in 13 C isotope to the total DIC pool. With distance downstream from the mine portal, C isotope signatures in the drainage increased , accompanied by decreased total DIC concentrations and increased pH. These data are consistent with H 2 SO 4 dissolution of carbonate rocks, enhanced by cation exchange, and C release to the atmosphere via CO 2 outgassing
Isotopic evidence of enhanced carbonate dissolution at a coal mine drainage site in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA
18 O SO4 isotopic signatures of the mine drainage and the presence of presumptive SO 4 -reducing bacteria suggest that SO 4 reduction activity also contributes C depleted in 13 C isotope to the total DIC pool. With distance downstream from the mine portal, C isotope signatures in the drainage increased , accompanied by decreased total DIC concentrations and increased pH. These data are consistent with H 2 SO 4 dissolution of carbonate rocks, enhanced by cation exchange, and C release to the atmosphere via CO 2 outgassing
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