2,551 research outputs found

    Optimal timing for peripheral IV replacement?

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    Replace peripheral IV catheters as needed, rather than on a routine basis. Stength of recommendation: A: Based on a randomized equivalence trial

    Developing a model for e-prints and open access journal content in UK further and higher education

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    A study carried out for the UK Joint Information Systems Committee examined models for the provision of access to material in institutional and subject-based archives and in open access journals. Their relative merits were considered, addressing not only technical concerns but also how e-print provision (by authors) can be achieved – an essential factor for an effective e-print delivery service (for users). A "harvesting" model is recommended, where the metadata of articles deposited in distributed archives are harvested, stored and enhanced by a national service. This model has major advantages over the alternatives of a national centralized service or a completely decentralized one. Options for the implementation of a service based on the harvesting model are presented

    European cooperation in developing earth building training standards: results of the PIRATE project

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    Earth building in Europe has changed and developed over the past few decades. From a 1970’s non subject to an inspiring highly sustainable building form today many actions were needed across a group of countries. National earth building associations formed, initially discovering what could be achieved by working as a group within a national boundary. Through this, development began of national guidelines, codes and standards for earth building. One standards area was in training, because without training who will apply the guidelines, codes and standards on a building site? Who will have the knowledge, the skills and the competence? The interesting thing about this area was that it sought international co-operation. What is peculiar to training that looked for this co-operation? For whatever reasons the first project was conceived and began in 2001, 8 countries started develop training standards and a range of materials for earth plasters, what became the Learn•Clay project. After Learn•Clay the group had learned of the powerful body of knowledge and experience held in each national association. The next step was training standards for earth structures, a harder area to tackle due to it’s inherent perceived risks. A meeting was called using European mobilities funding (a system learned and understood through Learn•Clay). The initial meeting asked the basic question: is quantifying and codifying a training standard over a multi country area a good idea? Some of the partners were new to the discussion, others had developed their thinking more fully through the plasters project. Some had long experience in training and training structures while others had skills in earth building. This diversity of skills and experience subsequently became a powerful motor to the project. An application was made, 18 organisations from 8 countries mobilised to work together for 3 years in what became the PIRATE project. It was agreed the Units of Learning Outcomes should be for EQF levels 3-6, to capture the knowledge of already experienced workers, managers and designers. At the end of the project, after many hours and days of discussion, deliberation and testing a group of Units was added to the existing plaster units. As with plasters, the strength of working together was that a training standard in one country would be a step forward, a training standard simultaneously across 8 countries has a much broader reach. Before it was completed it had been taken up in the UK as a National Occupational Standard and this route to national certification is certainly a tool for dissemination available to all the other partners having worked on the Units. Working with standards beyond national boundaries within Regional Economic Communities (RECs) like the EU is extremely empowering. It may be used by other countries in the REC, and by other RECs. It may be a model for products and codes, harnessing the co-operation of the national groups and their knowledge and ability to work together. Certainly the experience of doing this work goes beyond the initial goals achieved in the project. By promoting the integration of ECVET learning outcomes into the national vocational training systems and by making the earth building “Learn.Earth” Training and Certification program more visible and available, new organizations around Europe are encouraged to join the network of partners. This is helping the earth family of professionals expand but it is also growing awareness around ECVET accreditation and sustainable building practices using earth throughout Europe

    Deletion of the Zinc Transporter Lipoprotein AdcAII Causes Hyperencapsulation of Streptococcus pneumoniae Associated with Distinct Alleles of the Type I Restriction-Modification System.

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    The capsule is the dominant Streptococcus pneumoniae virulence factor, yet how variation in capsule thickness is regulated is poorly understood. Here, we describe an unexpected relationship between mutation of adcAII, which encodes a zinc uptake lipoprotein, and capsule thickness. Partial deletion of adcAII in three of five capsular serotypes frequently resulted in a mucoid phenotype that biochemical analysis and electron microscopy of the D39 adcAII mutants confirmed was caused by markedly increased capsule thickness. Compared to D39, the hyperencapsulated ΔadcAII mutant strain was more resistant to complement-mediated neutrophil killing and was hypervirulent in mouse models of invasive infection. Transcriptome analysis of D39 and the ΔadcAII mutant identified major differences in transcription of the Sp_0505-0508 locus, which encodes an SpnD39III (ST5556II) type I restriction-modification system and allelic variation of which correlates with capsule thickness. A PCR assay demonstrated close linkage of the SpnD39IIIC and F alleles with the hyperencapsulated ΔadcAII strains. However, transformation of ΔadcAII with fixed SpnD39III alleles associated with normal capsule thickness did not revert the hyperencapsulated phenotype. Half of hyperencapsulated ΔadcAII strains contained the same single nucleotide polymorphism in the capsule locus gene cps2E, which is required for the initiation of capsule synthesis. These results provide further evidence for the importance of the SpnD39III (ST5556II) type I restriction-modification system for modulating capsule thickness and identified an unexpected linkage between capsule thickness and mutation of ΔadcAII Further investigation will be needed to characterize how mutation of adcAII affects SpnD39III (ST5556II) allele dominance and results in the hyperencapsulated phenotype.IMPORTANCE The Streptococcus pneumoniae capsule affects multiple interactions with the host including contributing to colonization and immune evasion. During infection, the capsule thickness varies, but the mechanisms regulating this are poorly understood. We have identified an unsuspected relationship between mutation of adcAII, a gene that encodes a zinc uptake lipoprotein, and capsule thickness. Mutation of adcAII resulted in a striking hyperencapsulated phenotype, increased resistance to complement-mediated neutrophil killing, and increased S. pneumoniae virulence in mouse models of infection. Transcriptome and PCR analysis linked the hyperencapsulated phenotype of the ΔadcAII strain to specific alleles of the SpnD39III (ST5556II) type I restriction-modification system, a system which has previously been shown to affect capsule thickness. Our data provide further evidence for the importance of the SpnD39III (ST5556II) type I restriction-modification system for modulating capsule thickness and identify an unexpected link between capsule thickness and ΔadcAII, further investigation of which could further characterize mechanisms of capsule regulation

    Biological Records Centre Annual Report 2005-2006

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    The period covered by this report is the first year of a new six-year partnership between CEH and JNCC. For this period, there is increased emphasis on targeted survey, on analysis and interpretation and on communications and outreach. These activities were always part of BRC’s work, but they have been given greater prominence as a result of rapid developments in information technology. Data are increasingly reaching BRC in electronic form, so that the effort of data entry and collation is reduced. The data, collected by many volunteers and then collated and analysed at BRC, document the changing status and distribution of plants and animals in Britain. Distribution maps are published in atlases and are available via the internet through the NBN Gateway. The effects of change or loss of habitats, the influence of climate change and the consequences of changing water quality are all examples of the environmental factors that affect our biodiversity and which BRC aims to document and understand. The results are vital for developing environmental policies, to support conservation, and for fundamental ecological research. BRC is funded jointly by JNCC and NERC through a partnership based on a Memorandum of Agreement (MoA). The partnership started in 1973 when the Nature Conservancy was divided to form the successor bodies Nature Conservancy Council (NCC) and Institute of Terrestrial Ecology (ITE). NCC was in turn divided further to form JNCC and three Country Agencies, while ITE was merged with other NERC units to form CEH. Through all these changes, the partnership has been maintained. A six-year memorandum of agreement ended on 31 January 2005 (Hill et al. 2005). The present report covers the first full year, 2005-6, of the new agreement for 2005-2010. Rapid progress in information technology continues to be highly beneficial for BRC, whose data are increasingly used by the UK country conservation agencies, environmental consultants, NGOs, research workers, policy makers and volunteers. It is gratifying to know that, through our ability to display data on the National Biodiversity Network (NBN) Gateway, some of our data suppliers now have immediate access to their own data in a convenient form. The year 2005-6 has been one of steady progress, with new datasets added to BRC, substantial additions to existing data, and improved communication with the NBN Gateway. The most high profile activity of the year has been the Harlequin Ladybird Survey, which has enabled us to observe the early stages of colonization by a mobile insect in greater detail than has been possible in any previous case

    Exercise Increases Neural Stem Cell Number in a GH-Dependent Manner, Augmenting the Regenerative Response in Aged Mice

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    The exercise-induced enhancement of learning and memory, and its ability to slow age-related cognitive decline in humans led us to investigate whether running stimulates periventricular (PVR) neural stem cells (NSCs) in aging mice, thereby augmenting the regenerative capacity of the brain. To establish a benchmark of normal aging on endogenous NSCs, we harvested the PVR from serial vibratome sections through the lateral ventricles of juvenile (6-8 weeks), 6, 12, 18, and 24-month-old mice, culturing the cells in the neural colony forming cell assay. A significant decline in NSC frequency was apparent by 6-months (~40%) ultimately resulting in a ~90% reduction by 24-months. Concurrent with this decline was a progressive loss in regenerative capacity, as reflected by an incomplete repopulation of neurosphere-forming cells following gamma cell irradiation-induced depletion of the PVR. However voluntary exercise (i.e. 21 days of running) significantly increased NSC frequency in mic
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