97 research outputs found

    Cutis Laxa

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    Introdução:A cutis laxa é uma doença rara do tecido conjuntivo provocada por alterações da elastina. Caracteriza-se por pele sem elasticidade, flácida, mole e enrugada, dando aos doentes um aspecto envelhecido; o envolvimento sistémico é variável. Existem formas hereditárias e adquiridas. Relato de Caso: Lactente do sexo masculino, de seis meses de idade, no qual na sequência de internamento por bronquiolite é notado fenótipo muito sugestivo de cutis laxa, tendo o exame histopatológico cutâneo confirmado o diagnóstico. Discussão Clínica: O caso parece relevante, pela raridade da doença e por apresentar fenótipo sugestivo de cutis laxa do tipo autossómico recessivo, mas com evolução clínica mais característica da forma dominante, com melhor prognóstico

    An adaptive management proposal for optimizing the performance of a virtualized computing environment

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    The number of virtualized servers is overtaking, by a large amount, the number of physical servers. One of the drawbacks of this new scenario is a much more complex computing infrastructure to manage. In this way, the current paper proposes a adaptive management prototype that controls a virtualized environment. This prototype guarantees an adaptive and automatic solution that efficiently supervises and controls any virtualized environment, without almost any human intervention. In addition, it manages the relevant physical computing resources allocated to each virtual machine, like memory and processing power. The results from our prototype suggest that it is possible to balance memory among various machines and perform an effective control of each machine's workload, with a simple and low cost solution for our initial problem.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio

    Época de preparo de área e plantio de milho no sistema de corte e trituração no município de Igarapé-Açu, Pará.

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    bitstream/item/27976/1/com.tec.64.pd

    Genótipos de milho para plantio em sistema de corte e trituração.

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    bitstream/item/27998/1/com.tec.65.pd

    A Unique Cellular Organization of Human Distal Airways and Its Disarray in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

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    Rationale: Remodeling and loss of distal conducting airways, including preterminal and terminal bronchioles (pre-TBs/TBs), underlie progressive airflow limitation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The cellular basis of these structural changes remains unknown. Objectives: To identify biological changes in pre-TBs/TBs in COPD at single-cell resolution and determine their cellular origin. Methods: We established a novel method of distal airway dissection and performed single-cell transcriptomic profiling of 111,412 cells isolated from different airway regions of 12 healthy lung donors and pre-TBs of 5 patients with COPD. Imaging CyTOF and immunofluorescence analysis of pre-TBs/TBs from 24 healthy lung donors and 11 subjects with COPD were performed to characterize cellular phenotypes at a tissue level. Region-specific differentiation of basal cells isolated from proximal and distal airways was studied using an air-liquid interface model. Measurements and Main Results: The atlas of cellular heterogeneity along the proximal-distal axis of the human lung was assembled and identified region-specific cellular states, including SCGB3A2+ SFTPB+ terminal airway-enriched secretory cells (TASCs) unique to distal airways. TASCs were lost in COPD pre-TBs/TBs, paralleled by loss of region-specific endothelial capillary cells, increased frequency of CD8+ T cells normally enriched in proximal airways, and augmented IFN-γ signaling. Basal cells residing in pre-TBs/TBs were identified as a cellular origin of TASCs. Regeneration of TASCs by these progenitors was suppressed by IFN-γ. Conclusions: Altered maintenance of the unique cellular organization of pre-TBs/TBs, including loss of the region-specific epithelial differentiation in these bronchioles, represents the cellular manifestation and likely the cellular basis of distal airway remodeling in COPD

    The rs5743836 polymorphism in TLR9 confers a population-based increased risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma

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    We are grateful to Paulo Vieira, Cecília Leão, Manuel T. Silva, Nuno Sousa, Jorge Correia- Pinto, Joana Palha, Margarida Correia-Neves, Margarida Lima and Matthew Berry for all their input throughout these studies and critical reading of the manuscript. We are grateful to the patients who joint this study as well as to all members of the Life and Health Sciences Research Institute and School of Health Sciences, University of Minho, who contributed in any way to the development of this workNon-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) has been associated with immunological defects, chronic inflammatory and autoimmune conditions. Given the link between immune dysfunction and NHL, genetic variants in toll-like receptors (TLRs) have been regarded as potential predictive factors of susceptibility to NHL. Adequate anti-tumoral responses are known to depend on TLR9 function, such that the use of its synthetic ligand is being targeted as a therapeutic strategy. We investigated the association between the functional rs5743836 polymorphism in the TLR9 promoter and risk for B-cell NHL and its major subtypes in three independent case-control association studies from Portugal (1160 controls, 797 patients), Italy (468 controls, 494 patients) and the US (972 controls, 868 patients). We found that the rs5743836 polymorphism was significantly overtransmitted in both Portuguese (odds ratio (OR), 1.85; P=7.3E-9) and Italian (OR, 1.84; P=6.0E-5) and not in the US cohort of NHL patients. Moreover, the increased transcriptional activity of TLR9 in mononuclear cells from patients harboring rs5743836 further supports a functional effect of this polymorphism on NHL susceptibility in a population-dependent manner.AC, NSO, MTC, and AJA were financially supported by a fellowship from Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, Portugal. MS is a Ciência 2007 fellow. This study was supported by Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, Portugal (PIC/IC/83313/2007) and by Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Serviço de Saúde e Desenvolvimento Humano, Portugal (Grant Number:Proc/60666-MM/734). CFS, PB and LC were supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants CA122663 and CA104682, and PB also by NIH grants CA45614 and CA89745
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