563 research outputs found

    Avaliação funcional em pacientes com sequela pulmonar de tuberculose

    Get PDF
    ResumoIntroduçãoNa tuberculose pulmonar, a presença de lesões pulmonares residuais extensas pode ser um fator preditor de invalidez permanente por conta de insuficiência respiratória.ObjetivoComparar as alterações respiratórias e funcionais em pacientes com sequela pulmonar de tuberculose que finalizaram o tratamento.MétodoO estudo foi realizado no Ambulatório de Tisiologia do Hospital Sanatório Partenon. Foram incluídos no estudo pacientes que finalizaram único tratamento com 6 meses de duração (grupo I) e pacientes com tuberculose pulmonar multirresistente que finalizaram tratamento de maior duração após falência aos tratamentos iniciais (grupo II). Foram avaliadas a função pulmonar através da espirometria (ML 3500 Microlab, Microlab, EUA), a força dos músculos respiratórios através da manovacuometria e a distância percorrida no teste da caminhada dos 6 minutos (TC6M). Os dados foram analisados no programa SPSS versão 13.0, sendo utilizado o teste de qui-quadrado e o t para amostras independentes. O nível de significância adotado foi de 5%.ResultadosForam incluídos 27 pacientes sendo que 12 pertenciam ao grupo de tuberculose multirresistente. O distúrbio ventilatório mais prevalente no grupo de múltiplos tratamentos foi a obstrução grave, presente em 9 pacientes. O grupo que realizou múltiplos tratamentos (grupo II) apresentou redução significativa quando comparado ao grupo I nas variáveis CVF (72,06±14,95 vs. 43,58±16,03% predito), VEF1 (66,13±19,87 vs. 33,08±15,64% predito), PImax (68,40±22,78 vs. 49,58±12,55 cmH2O), PEmax (87,20±27,30 vs. 59,08±12,23 cmH2O) e distância percorrida no TC6M (484,21±74,01 vs. 334,75±104,07 metros).ConclusãoPacientes com tuberculose pulmonar multirresistente que realizaram múltiplos tratamentos apresentam comprometimentos respiratórios e funcionais maiores do que pacientes que realizaram único tratamento.AbstractIntroductionIn pulmonary tuberculosis, the presence of extensive residual lung lesions can be a predictor of permanent disability due to respiratory failure.ObjectiveTo compare functional and respiratory changes in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis sequel who have completed treatment.MethodThe study included patients who completed treatment within a period of 6 months (group I) and multidrug-resistant pulmonary tuberculosis patients who completed treatments of longer duration after the failure of the initial treatment (group II). We evaluated lung function by spirometry (Microlab ML 3500), the strength of respiratory muscles through the manovacuometry (MEP-maximal expiratory pressure and MIP- maximal inspiratory pressure) and the distance walked during the 6-minute walk (6MWT).Results27 patients were included, 12 of whom belonged to group II, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDRTB). Severe combined respiratory disorder was the most prevalent problem in group II of MDRTB; it was present in 9 patients. The MDRTB group (group II) showed significantly lower values when compared to Group I in FVC (72.06±14.95 vs 43.58±16.03% predicted), FEV1 (66.13±19.87 vs 33.08±15.64% predicted), MIP (68.40±22.78 vs 49.58±12.55 cmH2O), MEP (87.20±27.30 vs 59.08±12.23 cmH2O) and distance covered in 6MWT (484.21±74.01 vs 334.75±104.07 meters).ConclusionPatients with multidrug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis who have undergone multiple treatments have more severe respiratory and functional impairment than patients who have had just a single treatment

    Preparação de blends tendo por base azeites virgem extra monovarietais das Cvs Cobrançosa e Arbequina

    Get PDF
    O azeite é a principal fonte de gordura vegetal na dieta Mediterrânea. Os seus atributos sensoriais e composição química fazem com que seja muito apreciado. Após extração do azeite, a constituição de lotes/blends com características sensoriais, que sejam apreciadas pelos consumidores, e que simultaneamente apresentem boas características químicas e que sejam estáveis no tempo é um dos grandes desafios com que se deparam as indústrias. Este trabalho teve como objetivo, estudar a preparação de lotes/blends para entrada imediata no mercado, a partir de azeites monovarietais das Cvs. Cobrançosa e Arbequina. Foram preparados lotes, com percentagens crescentes de 10%, dos 0% aos 100%, de mistura de azeite de ambas as cultivares. Ao fim de 45 dias de armazenamento, procedeu-se à determinação dos parâmetros de qualidade, teor em fenóis totais, inibição do radical DPPH, estabilidade oxidativa e avaliação sensorial. Nos diferentes lotes preparados, verificou-se que os que tinham maiores proporções de Arbequina, eram mais doces, menos amargos e picantes, o que permitia uma entrada mais rápida no mercado, enquanto os que tinham maiores quantidades de Cobrançosa apresentavam-se mais verdes, amargos e picantes persistentes o que indica não serem aceites tão facilmente pelos consumidores. O loteamento dos azeites apresenta alterações ao nível do K232 e K270 com valores inferiores para os lotes constituídos maioritariamente pela Cv. Arbequina, não havendo alterações no ΔK. Também ao nível da acidez e índice de peróxidos se registaram algumas alterações, devidas sobretudo aos lotes usados como base. Foi observado um aumento gradual da extensão da degradação oxidativa com o aumento da Cv. Arbequina, verificado através do aumento do índice de peróxido na mesma. No que respeita à resistência à oxidação verificou-se diferenças estatísticas significativas (P < 0,001), com efeito protetor superior nos azeites com maior presença da Cv. Cobraçosa. Para a atividade antioxidante, com o aumento da presença da Cv. Arbequina na mistura, uma redução gradual de até 22% na capacidade em sequestrar o radical DPPH foi observada.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Optimization of Whey Protein-Based Films Incorporating Foeniculum vulgare Mill: Essential Oil

    Get PDF
    Petroleum-based plastics used in food packaging are not biodegradable. They accumulate in the environment in large amounts, causing a decrease in soil fertility, jeopardizing marine habitats, and causing serious problems to human health. Whey protein has been studied for applications in food packaging, either because of its abundant availability or because it confers transparency, flexibility, and good barrier properties to packaging materials. Taking advantage of whey protein to produce new food packaging materials is a clear example of the so-called circular economy. The present work focuses on optimizing the formulation of whey protein concentrate-based films to enhance their general mechanical properties applying the Box–Behnken experimental design. Foeniculum vulgare Mill. (fennel) essential oil (EO) was incorporated into the optimized films, which were then further characterized. The incorporation of fennel EO in the films leads to a significant increase (p 90%). The results of the bioactive activities of the optimized films showed their ability to be applied as active materials for food packaging to improve the shelf-life of food products and also to prevent foodborne diseases associated with the growth of pathogenic microorganisms.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    The effects of cannabinoids on glioblastoma growth: A systematic review with meta-analysis of animal model studies

    Get PDF
    Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most frequent and aggressive malignant brain tumour, with a poor prognosis despite available surgical and radio-chemotherapy, rising the necessity for searching alternative therapies. Several preclinical studies evaluating the efficacy of cannabinoids in animal models of GBM have been described, but the diversity of experimental conditions and of outcomes hindered definitive conclusions about cannabinoids efficacy. A search in different databases (Pubmed, Web of Science, Scopus and SciELO) was conducted during June 2019 to systematically identify publications evaluating the effects of cannabinoids in murine xenografts models of GBM. The tumour volume and number of animals were extracted, and a random effects meta-analysis of these results was performed to estimate the efficacy of cannabinoids. The impact of different experimental factors and publication bias on the efficacy of cannabinoids was also assessed. Nine publications, which satisfied the inclusion criteria, were identified and subdivided in 22 studies involving 301 animals. Overall, cannabinoid therapy reduced the fold of increase in tumour volume in animal models of GBM, when compared with untreated controls. The overall weighted standardized difference in means (WSDM) for the effect of cannabinoids was -1.399 (95% CI: -1.900 to -0.898; P-value<0.0001). Furthermore, treatment efficacy was observed for different types of cannabinoids, alone or in combination, and for different treatment durations. Cannabinoid therapy was still effective after correcting for publication bias. The results indicate that cannabinoids reduce the tumour growth in animal models of GBM, even after accounting for publication bias.Operação Centro-01-0145-FEDER-000019-C4-Centro de Competências em Cloud Computinginfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    The Prevalence of Arcobacteraceae in Aquatic Environments: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

    Get PDF
    Members of the family Arcobacteraceae are distributed widely in aquatic environments, and some of its species have been associated with human and animal illness. However, information about the diversity and distribution of Arcobacteraceae in different water bodies is still limited. In order to better characterize the health risk posed by members in the family Arcobacteraceae, a systematic review and meta-analysis-based method was used to investigate the prevalence of Arcobacteraceae species in aquatic environments based on available data published worldwide. The database search was performed using related keywords and considering studies up to February 2021. The pooled prevalence in aquatic environments was 69.2%, ranging from 0.6 to 99.9%. These bacteria have a wide geographical distribution, being found in diverse aquatic environments with the highest prevalence found in raw sewage and wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), followed by seawater, surface water, ground water, processing water from food processing plants and water for human consumption. Assessing the effectiveness of treatments in WWTP in eliminating this contamination, it was found that the wastewater treatment may not be efficient in the removal of Arcobacteraceae. Among the analyzed Arcobacteraceae species, Al. butzleri was the most frequently found species. These results highlight the high prevalence and distribution of Arcobacteraceae in different aquatic environments, suggesting a risk to human health. Further, it exposes the importance of identifying and managing the sources of contamination and taking preventive actions to reduce the burden of members of the Arcobacteraceae family.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Overall Picture Of Expressed Heat Shock Factors In Glycine Max, Lotus Japonicusand Medicago Truncatula

    Get PDF
    Heat shock (HS) leads to the activation of molecular mechanisms, known as HS-response, that prevent damage and enhance survival under stress. Plants have a flexible and specialized network of Heat Shock Factors (HSFs), which are transcription factors that induce the expression of heat shock proteins. The present work aimed to identify and characterize the Glycine maxHSF repertory in the Soybean Genome Project (GENOSOJA platform), comparing them with other legumes (Medicago truncatulaand Lotus japonicus) in view of current knowledge of Arabidopsis thaliana. The HSF characterization in leguminous plants led to the identification of 25, 19 and 21 candidate ESTs in soybean, Lotusand Medicago, respectively. A search in the SuperSAGE libraries revealed 68 tags distributed in seven HSF gene types. From the total number of obtained tags, more than 70% were related to root tissues (water deficit stress libraries vs.controls), indicating their role in abiotic stress responses, since the root is the first tissue to sense and respond to abiotic stress. Moreover, as heat stress is related to the pressure of dryness, a higher HSF expression was expected at the water deficit libraries. On the other hand, expressive HSF candidates were obtained from the library inoculated with Asian Soybean Rust, inferring crosstalk among genes associated with abiotic and biotic stresses. Evolutionary relationships among sequences were consistent with different HSF classes and subclasses. Expression profiling indicated that regulation of specific genes is associated with the stage of plant development and also with stimuli from other abiotic stresses pointing to the maintenance of HSF expression at a basal level in soybean, favoring its activation under heat-stress conditions. © 2012, Sociedade Brasileira de Genética.35SUPPL.1247259Altschul, S.F., Gish, W., Miller, W., Myers, E.W., Lipman, D.J., Basic local alignment search tool (1990) J Mol Biol, 215, pp. 403-410Baniwal, S.K., Chan, K.Y., Scharf, K.-D., Nover, L., Role of heat stress transcription factor HsfA5 as specific repressor of HsfA4* (2007) J Biol Chem, 282, pp. 3605-3613Bharti, K., Schimidt, E., Lyck, R., Bublak, D., Scharf, K.-D., Isolation and characterization of HsfA3, a new heat stress transcription factor of Lycopersicon peruvianum (2000) Plant J, 22, pp. 355-365Bharti, K., von Koskull-Döring, P., Bharti, S., Kumar, P., Tintschl-Körbitzer, A., Treuter, E., Nover, L., Tomato heat stress transcription factor HsfB1 represents a novel type of general transcription coactivator with a histone-like motif interacting with HAC1/CBP (2004) Plant Cell, 16, pp. 1521-1535Efeoglu, B., Heat shock proteins and heat shock response in plants (2009) G U J Sci, 22, pp. 67-75Eisen, M.B., Spellman, P.T., Brown, P.O., Botstein, D., Cluster analysis and display of genome-wide expression patterns (1998) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 95, pp. 14863-14868Fehr, W.R., Caviness, C.E., Burmood, D.T., Pennington, I.S., Stage of development descriptions for soybeans, Glycine max (L.) Merrill (1971) Crop Sci, 11, pp. 929-931Fehr, W.R., Caviness, C.E., (1977) Stage of Soybean Development, p. 12. , Special Report n. 80. Ames, Iowa State University of Science and Technology, IowaGlombitza, S., Dubuis, P.-H., Thulke, O., Welzl, G., Bovet, L., Götz, M., Affenzeller, M., Asnaghi, C., Crosstalk and differential response to abiotic and biotic stressors reflected at the transcriptional level of effector genes from secondary metabolism (2004) Plant Mol Biol, 54, pp. 817-835Heerklotz, D., Doring, P., Bonzelius, F., Winkelhaus, S., Nover, L., The balance of nuclear import and export determines the intracellular distribution and function of tomato heat stress transcription factor HsfA2 (2001) Mol Cell Biol, 21, pp. 1759-1768Hoagland, D., Arnon, D.I., The water culture method for growing plants without soil (1950) Calif Agric Exp Stn Circ, 347, pp. 1-32Hsu, S.-F., Lai, H.-C., Jinn, T.-L., Cytosol-localized heat shock factor-binding protein, AtHSBP, functions as a negative regulator of heat shock response by translocation to the nucleus and is required for seed development in Arabidopsis (2010) Plant Physiol, 153, pp. 773-784Hu, W., Hu, G., Han, B., Genome-wide survey and expression profiling of heat shock proteins and heat shock factors revealed overlapped and stress specific response under abiotic stresses in rice (2009) Plant Sci, 176, pp. 583-590Kido, E.A., Barbosa, P.K., Ferreira Neto, J.C.R., Pandolfi, V., Houllou-Kido, L.M., Crovella, S., Benko-Iseppon, A.M., Identification of plant protein kinases in response to abiotic and biotic stresses using SuperSAGE (2011) Curr Prot Pept Sci, 12, pp. 643-656Kotak, S., Port, M., Ganguli, A., Bicker, F., von Koskull-Doring, P., Characterization of C-terminal domains of Arabidopsis heat stress transcription factors (Hsfs) and identification of a new signature combination of plant class a Hsfs with AHA and NES motifs essential for activator function and intracellular localization (2004) Plant J, 39, pp. 98-112Kotak, S., Larkindale, J., Lee, U., von Koskull-Doring, P., Vierling, E., Scharf, K.D., Complexity of the heat stress response in plants (2007) Curr Opin Plant Biol, 10, pp. 310-316Li, H.-Y., Chang, C.-S., Lu, L.-S., Liu, C.-A., Chan, M.-T., Charng, Y.-Y., Over-expression of Arabidopsis thaliana heat shock factor gene (AtHsfA1b) enhances chilling tolerance in transgenic tomato (2004) Bot Bull Acad Sin, 44, pp. 129-140Li, M., Berendzen, K.W., Schoffl, F., Promoter specificity and interactions between early and late Arabidopsis heat shock factors (2010) Plant Mol Biol, 73, pp. 559-567McClean, P.E., Mamidi, S., McConnell, M., Chikara, S., Lee, R., Synteny mapping between common bean and soybean reveals extensive blocks of shared loci (2010) BMC Genomics, 11, pp. e184Miller, G., Mittler, R., Could heat shock transcription factors function as hydrogen peroxide sensors in plant? (2006) Ann Bot, 98, pp. 279-288Mittal, D., Chakrabarti, S., Sarkar, A., Singh, A., Grover, A., Heat shock factor gene family in rice: Genomic organization and transcript expression profiling in response to high temperature, low temperature and oxidative stresses (2009) Plant Physiol Biochem, 47, pp. 785-795Mochida, K., Yoshida, T., Sakurai, T., Yamaguchi-Shinozaki, K., Shinozaki, K., Tran, L.-S.P., In silico analysis of transcription factor repertoire and prediction of stress responsive transcription factors in soybean (2009) DNA Res, 16, pp. 353-369Mochida, K., Yoshida, T., Sakurai, T., Yamaguchi-Shinozaki, K., Shinozaki, K., Tran, L.-S.P., LegumeTFDB: An in-tegrative database of Glycine max, Lotus japonicus and Medicago truncatula transcription factors (2009) Bioinformatics, 26, pp. 290-291Nascimento, L.C., Costa, G.G.L., Binneck, E., Pereira, G.A.G., Caraz-Zolle, M.F., A web-based bioinformatics interface applied to Genosoja Project: Databases and pipelines (2012) Genet Mol Biol, 35 (SUPPL. 1), pp. 203-211Nover, L., Bharti, K., Doring, P., Mishra, S.K., Ganguli, A., Scharf, K.-D., Arabidopsis and the heat stress transcription factor world: How many heat stress transcription factors do we need? (2001) Cell Stress Chap, 6, pp. 177-189Pirkkala, L., Nykanen, I., Sistonen, L., Roles of the heat shock transcription factors in regulation of the heat shock response and beyond (2001) FASEB J, 15, pp. 1118-1131Ruelland, E., Zachowski, A., How plants sense temperature (2010) Environ Exp Bot, 69, pp. 225-232Sato, Y., Yokoya, S., Enhanced tolerance to drought stress in transgenic rice plants overexpressing a small heat-shock protein, sHSP17.7 (2008) Plant Cell Rep, 27, pp. 329-334Scharf, K.-D., Rose, S., Thierfelder, J., Nover, L., Two cDNAs for tomato heat stress transcription factors (1993) Plant Physiol, 102, pp. 1355-1356Scharf, K.-D., Rose, S., Zott, W., Schoffl, F., Nover, L., Three tomato genes code for heat stress transcription factors with a regionofremarkable homology to the DNA-binding domain of the yeast HSF (1990) EMBO J, 9, pp. 4495-4501Schöff, F., Prändl, R., Reindl, A., Regulation of the heat-shock response (1998) Plant Physiol, 117, pp. 1135-1141Sung, D.-Y., Kaplan, F., Lee, K.-J., Guy, C.L., Acquired tolerance to temperature extremes (2003) Trends Plant Sci, 8, pp. 179-187Swindell, W.R., Huebner, M., Weber, A.P., Transcriptional profiling of Arabidopsis heat shock proteins and transcription factors reveals extensive overlap between heat and non-heat stress response pathways (2007) BMC Genomics, 8, pp. e125Tamura, K., Peterson, D., Peterson, N., Stecher, G., Nei, M., Kumar, S., MEGA5: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis using maximum likelihood, evolutionary distance, and maximum parsimony methods (2011) Mol Biol Evol, 28, pp. 2731-2739Treshow, M., (1970) Environment and Plant Response, p. 421. , McGraw-Hill Company, New YorkTreuter, E., Nover, L., Ohme, K., Scharf, K.-D., Promoter specificity and deletion analysis of three tomato heat stress transcription factors (1993) Mol Gen Genet, 240, pp. 113-125Yamada, K., Fukao, Y., Hayashi, M., Fukazawa, M., Suzuki, I., Nishimura, M., Cytosolic HSP90 regulated the heat shock response that is responsible for heat acclimation in Arabidopsis thaliana (2007) J Biol Chem, 282, pp. 37794-3780

    Physiological and biochemical responses to low non-freezing temperature of two Eucalyptus globulus clones differing in drought resistance

    Get PDF
    Abstract – We have compared the metabolic responses of leaves and roots of two Eucalyptus globulus L. clones CN5 and ST51 that differ in their sensitivity to water deficits (ST51 is more drought sensitive), with regard to the effect of chilling (10/5 ◦C, day/night). We studied changes in growth, osmotic potential and osmotically active compounds, soluble proteins, leaf pigments, and membrane lipid composition. Our data showed that both clones have the ability to acclimatize to chilling temperatures. As a result of 10 days of acclimation, an increase of soluble sugars in leaves of treated plants of both clones was observed that disappeared later on. Differences between clones were observed in the photosynthetic pigments and soluble protein content which were more stable in CN5 under chilling. It also was apparent that CN5 presented a less negative predawn water potential (ψpd) and a higher leaf turgor than ST51 throughout the chilling treatment. In the case of the CN5, increased total lipids (TFA) and concomitant increase of linolenic acid (C18:3) in leaves after acclimatization may be related to a better clone performance under chilling temperatures. Moreover, a higher constitutive investment in roots in the case of CN5 as compared to ST51 may benefit new root regeneration under low temperatures favoring growth after cold Mediterranean winter

    Miocene Mammals from the Décio Thadeu Museum of the Azambujeira and Quinta do Marmelal deposits on the right bank of the Tagus river

    Get PDF
    RESUMO: Apresenta-se a revisão do acervo fóssil de mamíferos Miocénicos das jazidas da Azambujeira e da Quinta do Marmelal localizadas na margem direita do rio Tejo, distrito de Santarém, depositados no Museu Décio Thadeu, do Instituto Superior Técnico, da Universidade de Lisboa. Este acervo fóssil foi depositado em 1921, nunca tendo sido propriamente inventariado desde a sua incorporação. Neste estudo, criou-se um registo para todo o acervo aqui apresentado, com termos que foram uniformizados, e da revisão resultou a atualização da lista da fauna já descrita e à guarda do referido museu. Complementou-se o trabalho com um enquadramento histórico do museu e dos intervenientes que levaram à incorporação e estudo original da coleção objeto deste trabalho.ABSTRACT: We present a review of the fossil collection of Miocene mammals from the Azambujeira and Quinta do Marmelal deposits, located on the right bank of the Tagus river, Santarém district, deposited at the Décio Thadeu Museum, of the Instituto Superior Técnico, from University of Lisbon. This fossil collection was housed in 1921, and it has never been properly inventoried since then. A catalog was created for the entire collection presented here, with terms that were standardized, and the revision resulted in the updating of the list of fauna already described and in the custody of the aforementioned museum. The work was complemented with the museum historical framework and the main actors that led to the incorporation and original study of the collection object of the present work.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
    corecore