11 research outputs found
CrĂŽnica de uma praga anunciada epidemias agrĂcolas e histĂłria ambiental do cafĂ© nas AmĂ©ricas Chronicle of a plague foretold crop epidemics and the environmental history of coffee in the Americas
As epidemias agrĂcolas fornecem um ponto de vista privilegiado para a histĂłria ambiental global e transnacional de commodities. A epidemia da ferrugem, causada pelo fungo Hemileia nastatrix, Ă© uma das mais sĂ©rias doenças que tĂȘm atingido a indĂșstria global de cafĂ©. No sĂ©culo XIX, ela devastou as plantaçÔes de cafĂ© no Velho Mundo. TambĂ©m reduziu agudamente a produção de cafĂ© do tipo arĂĄbica na Ăfrica, Ăsia e no PacĂfico. Esse foi um dos fatores que permitiu aos paĂses da AmĂ©ricas dominarem a produção global no sĂ©culo XX. Essa epidemia foi detectada nas AmĂ©ricas pela primeira vez na dĂ©cada de 1970. A sua histĂłria nas AmĂ©ricas, e as tentativas de seu controle lançam luzes sobre dois paradigmas maiores que moldaram a histĂłria ambiental do cafĂ© no final do sĂ©culo XX. SĂŁo eles: o paradigma tecnicista, dominante entre meados do sĂ©culo XX atĂ© o inĂcio dos anos 1990; e o paradigma da sustentabilidade, cujo domĂnio emergiu em meados dos anos 1980 e se mantĂ©m atĂ© o presente.<br>Crop epidemics provide a portal into the global and transnational environmental history of commodities. The coffee rust epidemic, caused by the fungus Hemileia vastatrix, is one of the most serious diseases to have afflicted the global coffee industry. In the nineteenth century, it devastated the coffee plantations in the Old World. It sharply curtailed arabica coffee production in Africa, Asia, and the Pacific. This was one of the factors that allowed the Americas do dominate global coffee production in the twentieth century. The coffee rust epidemic was first detected in the Americas in the 1970s. The history of the rust epidemic in the Americas, and attempts to control it, shed light on two major paradigms that shaped the environmental history of coffee in the late twentieth century. The paradigm of technification, which dominated from the mid-20th century to the early 1990s; and the paradigm of sustainability, which dominated emerged in the mid-1980s and continues to the present
New developments in small molecular compounds for anti-hepatitis C virus (HCV) therapy*
Infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) affects approximately 170 million people worldwide. However, no vaccine or immunoglobulin is currently available for the prevention of HCV infection. The standard of care (SOC) involving pegylated interferon-α (PEG-IFN α) plus ribavirin (RBV) for 48 weeks results in a sustained virologic response in less than 50% of patients with chronic hepatitis C genotype 1, the most prevalent type of HCV in North America and Europe. Recently, reliable in vitro culture systems have been developed for accelerating antiviral therapy research, and many new specifically targeted antiviral therapies for hepatitis C (STAT-C) and treatment strategies are being evaluated in clinical trials. These new antiviral agents are expected to improve present treatment significantly and may potentially shorten treatment duration. The aim of this review is to summarize the current developments in new anti-HCV drugs