226 research outputs found

    Müller cyst: report of a case in pregnancy

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    Müller cysts are alterations in the development of sexual cords and remain as malformations associated with them. They can occur in many morphological varieties. In the case of pregnancy, vaginal tumors can complicate labor because they cause obstruc-tion of the canal. During labor, these alterations can complicate the diagnosis and proper management of pregnancy. A 22-year-old female, who came to the hospital at 30.1 weeks of gestation for the first time, due to obstetric pain, vaginal tumor was detected, the patient triggered preterm labor, which did not address medical management based on oral and intravenous uteroinhibitors, so a cesarean is decided, later in the puerperium magnetic resonance was performed finding a defect in the vaginal wall, compatible with probable Müller's cyst. Due to its low frequency but high impact on pregnancy, vaginal tumors are a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge, due to their embryological origin should be detected and advise on the consequences of them. As a result, some other alterations may coexist, which is why complementary studies are essential. In the pregnancy protocol, the proper location of the cysts guides us to a specific embryological origin, as well as a preventive intervention can be planned in cases like this. If these patients are asymptomatic, surgical intervention is not required, much less during pregnancy unless an obstetric indication for interruption is determined

    Correlation of the HPV genotype with the degree of dysplasia in patients with cervicouter cancer in the General Hospital Naval of high specialty

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    Background: Cervical-uterine cancer (CaCu) is the second leading cause of death in women worldwide and the first in developing countries. It has been correlated to human papillomavirus (HPV) genotype with cancerous lesions reported in histopathological studies, which tells us about the prognosis of the patients. Objective of present study was to correlate the genotype of HPV to the histopathological result evaluated in these patients at the Naval Hospital of High Specialty.Methods: A total of 316 women attended at the Naval General High Marine Hospital from 2015 to 2016 with HPV diagnosis were included, the histopathological report was correlated with the HPV genotype determined by the chain reaction of the polymerase (PCR). Statistical tests were applied for Smirnov and Kolmogorov, Chi square, OR, Anova-Kruskal Wallis. Data were processed using the SPSS software version 19 and a P <0.05 was taken as statistical significance.Results: The mean age was 36.0±10.2. The detection of cervical cancer was reported in 3.8% and stage CIN III 2.5%; the highest proportion of patients were in the CIN I stage (51.3%), while the CIN II was 9.2%, and up to 30.7% were classified as HPV infection; only 2.5% were normal. The types of HPV prevalent by PCR were those at high risk different from 16 and 18 with a rate of 34.8%, then 16 at 5.1% and 18 at 0.3%. More than half of the cases (54.4%) were negative for the serotypes analyzed. In general terms, CaCu and CIN III were observed in 15% of the type 16, 0% in type 18, 25% in other high risk and 60% in negative PCR.Conclusions: In this study, we obtained essential data that tells us that this population could be treated with low-risk HPV types associated with CaCu

    Prevalence of anti-sperm antibodies, risk factors associated and their impact on spermatobioscopy in infertile men

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    Background: The first immunological correlation with male infertility was reported in 1954 by Wilson and Rumke with the identification of anti-sperm antibodies. The prevalence of anti-sperm antibodies in infertile men varies from 9%-36%, the main cause being the loss of the blood-testicular barrier and otherwise the association with chronic inflammation. It has been shown that immune infertility is found in 15% of patients with varicocele.Methods: A transversal comparative study was carried out with 360 infertile men who were tested for anti-sperm antibodies between January 2011 and July 2018. Two groups were integrated; Group 1, infertile men with positive anti-sperm antibodies >50%, group 2, infertile men with negative anti-sperm <50%. Seminogram parameters were evaluated according to the WHO 5th edition and associated risk factors with anti-sperm antibodies.Results: 360 infertile men were evaluated during the study, 42 were excluded because they did not meet the inclusion criteria, the prevalence of anti-sperm antibodies was 14.5%. Group 1; n=46 (14.5%) and group 2, n=272 (85.5%), the clinical characteristics and the hormonal profile were compared at study admission without significant difference. There was a significant decrease in progressive motility in group 1 (38.7±23.8) vs group 2 (50.1±18.9) p=0.03. Analyzing the risk factors, varicocele was found to be significant 23.7%, OR 2.14 (1.27-3.61) p=0.004 as well as retractable testicle 26.4%, OR 2.13 (1.23-3.70) p= 0.008.Conclusions: The affectation of motility was confirmed, which leads to the suspect varicocele and retractable testicle as risk factors

    A simulation environment for studying transcutaneous electrotactile stimulation

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    Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) allows the artificial excitation of nerve fibres by applying electric-current pulses through electrodes on the skin's surface. This work involves the development of a simulation environment that can be used for studying transcutaneous electrotactile stimulation and its dependence on electrode layout and excitation patterns. Using an eight-electrode array implementation, it is shown how nerves located at different depths and with different orientations respond to specific injected currents, allowing the replication of already reported experimental findings and the creation of new hypotheses about the tactile sensations associated with certain stimulation patterns. The simulation consists of a finite element model of a human finger used to calculate the distribution of the electric potential in the finger tissues neglecting capacitive effects, and a cable model to calculate the excitation/inhibition of action potentials in each nerve

    Systematic and Realistic Testing in Simulation of Control Code for Robots in Collaborative Human-Robot Interactions

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    © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016. Industries such as flexible manufacturing and home care will be transformed by the presence of robotic assistants. Assurance of safety and functional soundness for these robotic systems will require rigorous verification and validation. We propose testing in simulation using Coverage-Driven Verification (CDV) to guide the testing process in an automatic and systematic way. We use a two-tiered test generation approach, where abstract test sequences are computed first and then concretized (e.g., data and variables are instantiated), to reduce the complexity of the test generation problem. To demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach, we developed a testbench for robotic code, running in ROS-Gazebo, that implements an object handover as part of a humanrobot interaction (HRI) task. Tests are generated to stimulate the robot’s code in a realistic manner, through stimulating the human, environment, sensors, and actuators in simulation. We compare the merits of unconstrained, constrained and model-based test generation in achieving thorough exploration of the code under test, and interesting combinations of human-robot interactions. Our results show that CDV combined with systematic test generation achieves a very high degree of automation in simulation-based verification of control code for robots in HRI

    SOXS: a wide band spectrograph to follow up transients

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    SOXS (Son Of X-Shooter) will be a spectrograph for the ESO NTT telescope capable to cover the optical and NIR bands, based on the heritage of the X-Shooter at the ESO-VLT. SOXS will be built and run by an international consortium, carrying out rapid and longer term Target of Opportunity requests on a variety of astronomical objects. SOXS will observe all kind of transient and variable sources from different surveys. These will be a mixture of fast alerts (e.g. gamma-ray bursts, gravitational waves, neutrino events), mid-term alerts (e.g. supernovae, X-ray transients), fixed time events (e.g. close-by passage of minor bodies). While the focus is on transients and variables, still there is a wide range of other astrophysical targets and science topics that will benefit from SOXS. The design foresees a spectrograph with a Resolution-Slit product ~ 4500, capable of simultaneously observing over the entire band the complete spectral range from the U- to the H-band. The limiting magnitude of R~20 (1 hr at S/N~10) is suited to study transients identified from on-going imaging surveys. Light imaging capabilities in the optical band (grizy) are also envisaged to allow for multi-band photometry of the faintest transients. This paper outlines the status of the project, now in Final Design Phase.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, to be published in SPIE Proceedings 1070

    PseudoBase++: an extension of PseudoBase for easy searching, formatting and visualization of pseudoknots

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    Pseudoknots have been recognized to be an important type of RNA secondary structures responsible for many biological functions. PseudoBase, a widely used database of pseudoknot secondary structures developed at Leiden University, contains over 250 records of pseudoknots obtained in the past 25 years through crystallography, NMR, mutational experiments and sequence comparisons. To promptly address the growing analysis requests of the researchers on RNA structures and bring together information from multiple sources across the Internet to a single platform, we designed and implemented PseudoBase++, an extension of PseudoBase for easy searching, formatting and visualization of pseudoknots. PseudoBase++ (http://pseudobaseplusplus.utep.edu) maps the PseudoBase dataset into a searchable relational database including additional functionalities such as pseudoknot type. PseudoBase++ links each pseudoknot in PseudoBase to the GenBank record of the corresponding nucleotide sequence and allows scientists to automatically visualize RNA secondary structures with PseudoViewer. It also includes the capabilities of fine-grained reference searching and collecting new pseudoknot information

    Monitoreo de la actividad enzimática de las lipasas intracelulares de Ustilago maydis expresada durante el crecimiento en limitación de nitrógeno y su correlación en reacciones lipolíticas

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    Under nitrogen starvation, Ustilago maydis forms lipid droplets (LDs). Although the dynamics of these organelles are known in the literature, the identity of the lipases implicated in their degradation is unknown. We determined lipase activity and identified the intracellular lipases expressed during growth under nitrogen starvation and YPD media by zymograms. The results showed that cytosolic extracts exhibited higher lipase activity when cells were grown in YPD. Under nitrogen starvation, lipase activity was not detected after 24 h of culture, resulting in lipid accumulation in LDs. This suggests that these lipases could be implicated in LD degradation. In the zymogram, two bands, one of 25 and the other of 37 kDa, presented lipase activity. The YPD extracts showed lipase activity in olive and almond oils, which contain triacylglycerols with mono and polyunsaturated fatty acids. This is the first report about U. maydis cytosolic lipases involved in LD degradation.En ausencia de nitrógeno, Ustilago maydis forma cuerpos lipídicos (LDs). Aunque se conoce la dinámica de estos organelos, se desconoce la identidad de las lipasas implicadas en su degradación. En este estudio se determinó la actividad de lipasa, y se identificaron las lipasas intracelulares expresadas durante el crecimiento sin nitrógeno y en YPD mediante zimogramas. Los extractos citosólicos de células en YPD exhibieron mayor actividad de lipasa. En medio sin nitrógeno no se detectó actividad de lipasa después de 24 h de cultivo, presentándose acumulación de lípidos en los LDs. Esto sugiere que estas lipasas podrían implicarse en la degradación de los LDs. En el zimograma bandas de 25 y 37 kDa, presentaron actividad de lipasa. Los extractos de células cultivadas en YPD hidrolizaron triacilgliceroles compuestos de ácidos grasos mono y poliinsaturados. Este es el primer reporte sobre lipasas citosólicas de U. maydis implicadas en la degradación de LDs
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