688 research outputs found

    Campionamento biologico delle catture commerciali Sezione III.C - Variabili biologiche relative al mestiere e dei parametri biologici Sezione III.E - Variabili biologiche relative agli stock del Programma Nazionale Sub-area Geografica (GSA16) – Stretto di Sicilia Anno 2015

    Get PDF
    Il campionamento biologico delle catture/sbarcati commerciali, sezione C – Relative al mestiere ed E – Relative agli stock, nell’ambito del Programma Nazionale per la Raccolta Dati Alieutici (PNRDA) (Reg. Ce. N°199/2008; N°665/2008 e decisione della commissione N°949/2008), ha l’obiettivo di valutare la composizione in taglia e/o età del pescato ed ottenere altre informazioni sulla biologia delle specie bersaglio, quali le chiavi età/lunghezza, la relazione lunghezza/peso, i parametri di crescita, la composizione in sesso e le condizioni di maturità sessuale. Il campionamento delle catture/sbarchi commerciali (campionamento biologico - CAMPBIOL) risulta di grande importanza per conoscere come agisce il prelievo dei diversi ”metiers” sulle diverse specie, in termini di variazioni dell’abbondanza e struttura demografica delle risorse da pesca. Il campionamento biologico risponde, quindi, principalmente alle seguenti esigenze: 1. Ricostruire il pattern di sfruttamento dei diversi ”métiers” per le diverse specie. 2. Ricostruire la struttura demografica delle catture commerciali/sbarchi di ogni specie (in taglia/età), considerando tutti i ”métiers” che incidono significativamente sull’ammontare globale delle catture. 3. Consentire lo studio dei fenomeni biologici rilevanti, quali la crescita ed il ciclo sessuale, che variano nel corso dell’anno. 4. Acquisire informazioni sulla struttura demografica con specifico riferimento allo stadio di maturazione gonadica (maturità/taglia-età) ed alla relazione fra lunghezza e peso corporeo (taglia-peso/età). Il Programma Nazionale prevede il rilievo dei parametri significativi ai fini della caratterizzazione biologica del prodotto della pesca, principalmente nell’ambito di due differenti moduli: Modulo di valutazione del settore della pesca Sezione C – “Variabili biologiche relative al mestiere” Sezione E – “Variabili biologiche relative agli stock

    Campionamento biologico delle catture commerciali Sezione III.C - Variabili biologiche relative al mestiere e dei parametri biologici Sezione III.E - Variabili biologiche relative agli stock del Programma Nazionale

    Get PDF
    Il campionamento biologico delle catture/sbarcati commerciali, sezione C – Relative al mestiere ed E – Relative agli stock (Campbiol), nell’ambito del Programma Nazionale per la Raccolta Dati Alieutici (PNRDA) (Reg. Ce. N°199/2008; N°665/2008 e decisione della commissione N°949/2008) risulta di grande importanza per conoscere come agisce il prelievo dei diversi ”metiers” sulle diverse specie, in termini di variazioni dell’abbondanza e struttura demografica delle risorse da pesca. Il campionamento biologico risponde, quindi, principalmente alle seguenti esigenze: 1. Ricostruire la struttura demografica delle catture commerciali/sbarchi di ogni specie (in taglia/età), considerando tutti i ”métiers” che incidono significativamente sull’ammontare globale delle catture. 2. Ricostruire il pattern di sfruttamento dei diversi ”métiers” per le diverse specie. 3. Consentire lo studio dei fenomeni biologici rilevanti, quali la crescita ed il ciclo sessuale, che variano nel corso dell’anno. 4. Acquisire informazioni sulla struttura demografica con specifico riferimento allo stadio di maturazione gonadica (maturità/taglia-età) ed alla relazione fra lunghezza e peso corporeo (taglia-peso/età). Il Programma Nazionale prevede il rilievo dei parametri significativi ai fini della caratterizzazione biologica del prodotto della pesca, principalmente nell’ambito di due differenti moduli: Modulo di valutazione del settore della pesca Sezione C – “Variabili biologiche relative al mestiere” Sezione E – “Variabili biologiche relative agli stock

    Are All Placebo Effects Equal? Placebo Pills, Sham Acupuncture, Cue Conditioning and Their Association

    Get PDF
    Placebo treatments and healing rituals have been used to treat pain throughout history. The present within-subject crossover study examines the variability in individual responses to placebo treatment with verbal suggestion and visual cue conditioning by investigating whether responses to different types of placebo treatment, as well as conditioning responses, correlate with one another. Secondarily, this study also examines whether responses to sham acupuncture correlate with responses to genuine acupuncture. Healthy subjects were recruited to participate in two sequential experiments. Experiment one is a five-session crossover study. In each session, subjects received one of four treatments: placebo pills (described as Tylenol), sham acupuncture, genuine acupuncture, or no treatment rest control condition. Before and after each treatment, paired with a verbal suggestion of positive effect, each subject's pain threshold, pain tolerance, and pain ratings to calibrated heat pain were measured. At least 14 days after completing experiment one, all subjects were invited to participate in experiment two, during which their analgesic responses to conditioned visual cues were tested. Forty-eight healthy subjects completed experiment one, and 45 completed experiment two. The results showed significantly different effects of genuine acupuncture, placebo pill and rest control on pain threshold. There was no significant association between placebo pills, sham acupuncture and cue conditioning effects, indicating that individuals may respond to unique healing rituals in different ways. This outcome suggests that placebo response may be a complex behavioral phenomenon that has properties that comprise a state, rather than a trait characteristic. This could explain the difficulty of detecting a signature for “placebo responders.” However, a significant association was found between the genuine and sham acupuncture treatments, implying that the non-specific effects of acupuncture may contribute to the analgesic effect observed in genuine acupuncture analgesia.National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (U.S.) (R01AT005280

    How Experiences Become Data: The Process of Eliciting Adverse Event, Medical History and Concomitant Medication Reports in Antimalarial and Antiretroviral Interaction Trials.

    Get PDF
    Accurately characterizing a drug's safety profile is essential. Trial harm and tolerability assessments rely, in part, on participants' reports of medical histories, adverse events (AEs), and concomitant medications. Optimal methods for questioning participants are unclear, but different methods giving different results can undermine meta-analyses. This study compared methods for eliciting such data and explored reasons for dissimilar participant responses. Participants from open-label antimalarial and antiretroviral interaction trials in two distinct sites (South Africa, n = 18 [all HIV positive]; Tanzania, n = 80 [86% HIV positive]) were asked about ill health and treatment use by sequential use of (1) general enquiries without reference to particular conditions, body systems or treatments, (2) checklists of potential health issues and treatments, (3) in-depth interviews. Participants' experiences of illness and treatment and their reporting behaviour were explored qualitatively, as were trial clinicians' experiences with obtaining participant reports. Outcomes were the number and nature of data by questioning method, themes from qualitative analyses and a theoretical interpretation of participants' experiences. There was an overall cumulative increase in the number of reports from general enquiry through checklists to in-depth interview; in South Africa, an additional 12 medical histories, 21 AEs and 27 medications; in Tanzania an additional 260 medical histories, 1 AE and 11 medications. Checklists and interviews facilitated recognition of health issues and treatments, and consideration of what to report. Information was sometimes not reported because participants forgot, it was considered irrelevant or insignificant, or they feared reporting. Some medicine names were not known and answers to questions were considered inferior to blood tests for detecting ill health. South African inpatient volunteers exhibited a "trial citizenship", working to achieve researchers' goals, while Tanzanian outpatients sometimes deferred responsibility for identifying items to report to trial clinicians. Questioning methods and trial contexts influence the detection of adverse events, medical histories and concomitant medications. There should be further methodological work to investigate these influences and find appropriate questioning methods

    Increased multiaxial lumbar motion responses during multiple-impulse mechanical force manually assisted spinal manipulation

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Spinal manipulation has been found to create demonstrable segmental and intersegmental spinal motions thought to be biomechanically related to its mechanisms. In the case of impulsive-type instrument device comparisons, significant differences in the force-time characteristics and concomitant motion responses of spinal manipulative instruments have been reported, but studies investigating the response to multiple thrusts (multiple impulse trains) have not been conducted. The purpose of this study was to determine multi-axial segmental and intersegmental motion responses of ovine lumbar vertebrae to single impulse and multiple impulse spinal manipulative thrusts (SMTs). METHODS: Fifteen adolescent Merino sheep were examined. Tri-axial accelerometers were attached to intraosseous pins rigidly fixed to the L1 and L2 lumbar spinous processes under fluoroscopic guidance while the animals were anesthetized. A hand-held electromechanical chiropractic adjusting instrument (Impulse) was used to apply single and repeated force impulses (13 total over a 2.5 second time interval) at three different force settings (low, medium, and high) along the posteroanterior axis of the T12 spinous process. Axial (AX), posteroanterior (PA), and medial-lateral (ML) acceleration responses in adjacent segments (L1, L2) were recorded at a rate of 5000 samples per second. Peak-peak segmental accelerations (L1, L2) and intersegmental acceleration transfer (L1–L2) for each axis and each force setting were computed from the acceleration-time recordings. The initial acceleration response for a single thrust and the maximum acceleration response observed during the 12 multiple impulse trains were compared using a paired observations t-test (POTT, alpha = .05). RESULTS: Segmental and intersegmental acceleration responses mirrored the peak force magnitude produced by the Impulse Adjusting Instrument. Accelerations were greatest for AX and PA measurement axes. Compared to the initial impulse acceleration response, subsequent multiple SMT impulses were found to produce significantly greater (3% to 25%, P < 0.005) AX, PA and ML segmental and intersegmental acceleration responses. Increases in segmental motion responses were greatest for the low force setting (18%–26%), followed by the medium (5%–26%) and high (3%–26%) settings. Adjacent segment (L1) motion responses were maximized following the application of several multiple SMT impulses. CONCLUSION: Knowledge of the vertebral motion responses produced by impulse-type, instrument-based adjusting instruments provide biomechanical benchmarks that support the clinical rationale for patient treatment. Our results indicate that impulse-type adjusting instruments that deliver multiple impulse SMTs significantly increase multi-axial spinal motion

    The clinical course of low back pain: a meta-analysis comparing outcomes in randomised clinical trials (RCTs) and observational studies.

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Evidence suggests that the course of low back pain (LBP) symptoms in randomised clinical trials (RCTs) follows a pattern of large improvement regardless of the type of treatment. A similar pattern was independently observed in observational studies. However, there is an assumption that the clinical course of symptoms is particularly influenced in RCTs by mere participation in the trials. To test this assumption, the aim of our study was to compare the course of LBP in RCTs and observational studies. METHODS: Source of studies CENTRAL database for RCTs and MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE and hand search of systematic reviews for cohort studies. Studies include individuals aged 18 or over, and concern non-specific LBP. Trials had to concern primary care treatments. Data were extracted on pain intensity. Meta-regression analysis was used to compare the pooled within-group change in pain in RCTs with that in cohort studies calculated as the standardised mean change (SMC). RESULTS: 70 RCTs and 19 cohort studies were included, out of 1134 and 653 identified respectively. LBP symptoms followed a similar course in RCTs and cohort studies: a rapid improvement in the first 6 weeks followed by a smaller further improvement until 52 weeks. There was no statistically significant difference in pooled SMC between RCTs and cohort studies at any time point:- 6 weeks: RCTs: SMC 1.0 (95% CI 0.9 to 1.0) and cohorts 1.2 (0.7to 1.7); 13 weeks: RCTs 1.2 (1.1 to 1.3) and cohorts 1.0 (0.8 to 1.3); 27 weeks: RCTs 1.1 (1.0 to 1.2) and cohorts 1.2 (0.8 to 1.7); 52 weeks: RCTs 0.9 (0.8 to 1.0) and cohorts 1.1 (0.8 to 1.6). CONCLUSIONS: The clinical course of LBP symptoms followed a pattern that was similar in RCTs and cohort observational studies. In addition to a shared 'natural history', enrolment of LBP patients in clinical studies is likely to provoke responses that reflect the nonspecific effects of seeking and receiving care, independent of the study design

    Species diversity, taxonomy and distribution of Chondrichthyes in the Mediterranean and Black Sea

    Get PDF
    Species diversity assessments are an important step to evaluate the conservation status of a community, both in marine and terrestrial ecosystems. These assessments are pivotal if related to both, the constant increase of human pressure on ecosystems and the anthropogenic climate change occurring nowadays. Sharks and rays are globally threatened, and the situation is particularly alarming in the Mediterranean Sea where more than 50% of species are listed at risk of extinction by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). In this paper, we revise and discuss the chondrichthyan species richness of the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. Through an accurate review of published taxonomic studies, historical data on species occurrence, analyses of scientific survey data and biodiversity databases and other scientific papers, we produced a revised list of species whose presence in the Mediterranean Sea is confirmed or highly probable and discussed on current taxonomic and occurrence disputes on the species that are instead rarer or claimed to be locally extinct. We listed a total of 88 species, representing 30 families and 48 genera that are currently present in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. This number includes 48 shark species, 38 batoids, and 2 chimaeras. The review represents a reference for future conservation assessments of cartilaginous fish in the region and a guide for decision-makers when promoting the sustainable exploitation of fisheries resource within an ecosystem-based framework. This paper can help to set a baseline of the Mediterranean species and thus resolve some uncertainties regarding their conservation status, explaining the reasons for their prolonged absence in the reports. Indeed, failure to record over time may not be due to grubbing up, but because after careful review this species was not really part of the Mediterranean fauna

    Site-specific integration mediated by a hybrid adenovirus/adeno-associated virus vector

    Get PDF
    Adenovirus (Ad) and adeno-associated virus(AAV) have attractive and complementary properties that canbe exploited for gene transfer purposes. Ad vectors are probablythe most efficient vehicles to deliver foreign genes both invitro and in vivo. AAV exhibits the unique ability to establishlatency by efficiently integrating at a specific locus of humanchromosome 19 (AAVS1). Two viral elements are necessaryfor the integration at AAVS1: Rep68y78 and the invertedterminal repeats (AAV-ITRs). In this study, we report thedevelopment of two helper-dependent adenoviral (HD) vectors,one carrying the Rep78 gene, the other an AAV-ITRflankedtransgene. Although Rep proteins have been demonstratedto interfere with Ad replication, HD Rep78 vector wassuccessfully amplified on serial passages in 293CRE4 cellswith a yield of 50–100 transducing units per cell. DNAintegration at the AAVS1 site also was demonstrated inhepatoma cells coinfected with the HD-expressing Rep78 andwith the second HD vector carrying a transgene flanked byAAV-ITRs. The high transduction efficiency, large cloningcapacity, and high titer of the HD, combined with the sitespecificintegration machinery provided by AAV-derived components,make the AdyAAV hybrid viruses a promising vehiclefor gene therap
    corecore