4,336 research outputs found
Rumen fluke in Irish sheep: prevalence, risk factors and molecular identification of two paramphistome species
peer-reviewedBackground
Rumen flukes are trematode parasites found globally; in tropical and sub-tropical climates, infection can result in paramphistomosis, which can have a deleterious impact on livestock. In Europe, rumen fluke is not regarded as a clinically significant parasite, recently however, the prevalence of rumen fluke has sharply increased and several outbreaks of clinical paramphistomosis have been reported. Gaining a better understanding of rumen fluke transmission and identification of risk factors is crucial to improve the control of this parasitic disease. In this regard, a national prevalence study of rumen fluke infection and an investigation of associated risk factors were conducted in Irish sheep flocks between November 2014 and January 2015. In addition, a molecular identification of the rumen fluke species present in Ireland was carried out using an isolation method of individual eggs from faecal material coupled with a PCR. After the DNA extraction of 54 individual eggs, the nuclear fragment ITS-2 was amplified and sequenced using the same primers.
Results
An apparent herd prevalence of 77.3 % was determined. Several risk factors were identified including type of pasture grazed, regional variation, and sharing of the paddocks with other livestock species. A novel relationship between the Suffolk breed and higher FEC was reported for the first time. The predominant rumen fluke species found was C. daubneyi. Nevertheless, P. leydeni was unexpectedly identified infecting sheep in Ireland for the first time.
Conclusions
An exceptionally high prevalence of rumen fluke among Irish sheep flocks has been highlighted in this study and a more thorough investigation is necessary to analyse its economic impact. The isolation of individual eggs coupled with the PCR technique used here has proven a reliable tool for discrimination of Paramphistomum spp. This technique may facilitate forthcoming studies of the effects of paramphistomosis on livestock production. The most noteworthy finding was the identification of P. leydeni affecting sheep in Ireland, however further studies are required to clarify its implications. Also, a significant relationship between Suffolk breed and a heavier infection was found, which can be used as a starting point for future research on control strategies of rumen fluke infection.This study was funded by Irish Department of Agriculture, Food and the
Marine research stimulus funding; project reference 13/ S/405
Prevalence of BoHV-1 seropositive and BVD virus positive bulls on Irish dairy farms and associations between bull purchase and herd status
peer-reviewedBackground
BVD and IBR are contagious viral diseases highly prevalent in Irish cattle. Despite their significant reproductive and economic impact very little is known about the BVD and IBR status of stock bulls (a bull used for breeding purposes). There are still a high proportion of dairy farms in Ireland that rely on the use of a bull for breeding cattle and ensuring the fertility of the bulls is of paramount importance for the efficiency of the farms. The prevalence of BoHV-1 and BVD in stock bulls in Irish dairy herds has never been investigated. The objectives of this study therefore were: (i) to provide descriptive, observational data on the use of stock bulls on Irish dairy farms; (ii) to investigate the BVD and BoHV1 status of a sub-set of stock bulls; (iii) to investigate factors associated with BVD and BoHV1 status of stock bulls and (iv) to investigate factors associated with dairy herd status for BVD and BoHV1, including any associations with the use of stock bull.
A total of 529 blood samples from bulls involved in the dairy breeding process were analysed for BVD virus using RT-PCR, and BoHV-1 antibodies by ELISA test. A total of 305 different dairy herds took part in the study and the overall BVD and BoHV-1 herd status was determined by ELISA using four bulk tank milk samples over the 2009 lactation. Logistic regression was used to investigate the associations between the stock bulls and BVD and BoHV-1 herd and individual status.
Results
Of the 305 total participating farms, 235 farms (77 %) had at least one bull and 167 farms had purchased bulls. Two bulls (0.4 %) out of 529 tested were found positive for BVD virus and 87 (16.7 %) tested seropositive for BoHV-1. Some significant associations were identified between the purchase of bulls and both viral diseases. Purchased bulls were three times more likely to be seropositive for BoHV-1 than homebred bulls. In the same way, herds with purchased bulls were three times more likely to be classified as seropositive for BVD and four times more likely to have evidence of recent BoHV-1 circulation than farms where all the bulls were homebred.
Conclusions
The prevalence of BoHV-1 and BVD in stock bulls in Irish dairy herds has never been investigated. This study highlights the widespread use of stock bulls in Irish dairy herds, as well as the high rate of exchange of bulls between farms. Significant associations were found between the origin of the bull and their serological BoHV-1 status. In keeping with these results, bulls with higher number movements between farms were more likely to be seropositive for BoHV-1
Investigation of Graded La2NiO4+ Cathodes to Improve SOFC Electrochemical Performance
Mixed ionic and electronic conducting MIEC oxides are promising materials for use as cathodes in solid oxide fuel cells SOFCs due to their enhanced electrocatalytic activity compared with electronic conducting oxides. In this paper, the MIEC oxide La2NiO4+ was prepared by the sol-gel route. Graded cathodes were deposited onto yttria-stabilized zirconia YSZ pellets by dip-coating, and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy studies were performed to characterize the symmetrical cell performance. By adapting the slurries, cathode layers with different porosities and thicknesses were obtained. A ceria gadolinium oxide CGO barrier layer was introduced, avoiding insulating La2Zr2O7 phase formation and thus reducing resistance polarization of the cathode. A systematic correlation between microstructure, composition, and electrochemical performance of these cathodes has been performed. An improvement of the electrochemical performance has been demonstrated, and a reduction in the area specific resistance ASR by a factor of 4.5 has been achieved with a compact interlayer of La2NiO4+ between the dense electrolyte and the porous La2NiO4+ cathode layer. The lowest observed ASR of 0.11 cm2 at 800°C was obtained from a symmetrical cell composed of a YSZ electrolyte, a CGO interlayer, an intermediate compact La2NiO4+ layer, a porous La2NiO4+ electrode layer, and a current collection layer of platinum paste
Use of whole genome sequencing of commensal Escherichia coli in pigs for antimicrobial resistance surveillance, United Kingdom, 2018
BackgroundSurveillance of commensal Escherichia coli, a possible reservoir of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes, is important as they pose a risk to human and animal health. Most surveillance activities rely on phenotypic characterisation, but whole genome sequencing (WGS) presents an alternative.AimIn this retrospective study, we tested 515 E. coli isolated from pigs to evaluate the use of WGS to predict resistance phenotype.MethodsMinimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was determined for nine antimicrobials of clinical and veterinary importance. Deviation from wild-type, fully-susceptible MIC was assessed using European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) epidemiological cut-off (ECOFF) values. Presence of AMR genes and mutations were determined using APHA SeqFinder. Statistical two-by-two table analysis and Cohen's kappa (k) test were applied to assess genotype and phenotype concordance.ResultsOverall, correlation of WGS with susceptibility to the nine antimicrobials was 98.9% for test specificity, and 97.5% for the positive predictive value of a test. The overall kappa score (k = 0.914) indicated AMR gene presence was highly predictive of reduced susceptibility and showed excellent correlation with MIC. However, there was variation for each antimicrobial; five showed excellent correlation; four very good and one moderate. Suggested ECOFF adjustments increased concordance between genotypic data and kappa values for four antimicrobials.ConclusionWGS is a powerful tool for accurately predicting AMR that can be used for national surveillance purposes. Additionally, it can detect resistance genes from a wider panel of antimicrobials whose phenotypes are currently not monitored but may be of importance in the future
Nurse educators in Australia: High job satisfaction despite role ambiguity
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to describe the nurse educator role in Australian hospitals, including their practice and performance standards. Methods: A cross-sectional, online survey of nurse educators employed in acute care hospitals in Australia was administered over a three-month period. The survey comprised established and researcher-developed scales, and a single open-ended question. Quantitative data was analysed using descriptive statistics. Qualitative data was analysed using a general inductive approach. Results: Nurse educators who were more likely to fulfill nurse educator competency practice domains had master’s degrees in education, defined professional development needs, and met regularly with their managers. These educators also had higher levels of job satisfaction. Participants identified that role ambiguity and role confusion adversely impacted nurse educator role expectations, responsibilities, and job satisfaction. Despite this, the majority of educators intended to stay in their role for the foreseeable future. Conclusions: Role ambiguity influenced professional identity and job satisfaction, highlighting the need for clarification of nurse educator roles. These findings suggest the need for review of the nurse educator role and incorporation of professional and educational requirements and practice competencies. Ongoing role monitoring is recommended to identify the effects of role change
A Comparison and Joint Analysis of Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect Measurements from Planck and Bolocam for a set of 47 Massive Galaxy Clusters
We measure the SZ signal toward a set of 47 clusters with a median mass of
M and a median redshift of 0.40 using data from
Planck and the ground-based Bolocam receiver. When Planck XMM-like masses are
used to set the scale radius , we find consistency between
the integrated SZ signal, , derived from Bolocam and Planck
based on gNFW model fits using A10 shape parameters, with an average ratio of
(allowing for the % Bolocam flux calibration
uncertainty). We also perform a joint fit to the Bolocam and Planck data using
a modified A10 model with the outer logarithmic slope allowed to vary,
finding (measurement error followed by
intrinsic scatter). In addition, we find that the value of scales with
mass and redshift according to . This mass scaling is in good agreement with recent
simulations. We do not observe the strong trend of with redshift seen
in simulations, though we conclude that this is most likely due to our sample
selection. Finally, we use Bolocam measurements of to test the
accuracy of the Planck completeness estimate. We find consistency, with the
actual number of Planck detections falling approximately below the
expectation from Bolocam. We translate this small difference into a constraint
on the the effective mass bias for the Planck cluster cosmology results, with
.Comment: Updated to include one additional co-author. Also some minor changes
to the text based on initial feedbac
The nurse educator role in the acute care setting in Australia: Important but poorly described
Objective The purpose of this paper is to describe the nurse educator role in the acute care setting in Australia. Method A literature review using Ganong's (1987) method of analysis was undertaken. Computerised databases were searched for articles published in English between 2000 and 2008 using the key words: 'education', 'nursing', 'nurse-educator', 'teaching methods', 'clinical', 'outcomes health care' and 'Australia'. Information was summarised to identify issues impacting on the nurse educator role using a standardised data extraction tool. Results The search strategies generated 152 articles and reports. The review identified that the nurse educator role is fundamental in supporting clinical practice and integral to developing a skilled and competent health workforce. Conclusion Confusion in nursing roles and role ambiguity contribute to the challenges for nurse educators in acute care. The absence of a national, standardised approach to role description and scope of practice in Australia may adversely impact role enactment. Further discussion and debate of the nurse educator role in Australia is warranted
A Multi-wavelength Study of the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect in the Triple-Merger Cluster MACS J0717.5+3745 with MUSTANG and Bolocam
We present 90, 140, and 268GHz sub-arcminute resolution imaging of the
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZE) in MACSJ0717.5+3745. Our 90GHz SZE data result
in a sensitive, 34uJy/bm map at 13" resolution using MUSTANG. Our 140 and
268GHz SZE imaging, with resolutions of 58" and 31" and sensitivities of 1.8
and 3.3mJy/beam respectively, was obtained using Bolocam. We compare these maps
to a 2-dimensional pressure map derived from Chandra X-ray observations. Our
MUSTANG data confirm previous indications from Chandra of a pressure
enhancement due to shock-heated, >20keV gas immediately adjacent to extended
radio emission seen in low-frequency radio maps. The MUSTANG data also detect
pressure substructure that is not well-constrained by the X-ray data in the
remnant core of a merging subcluster. We find that the small-scale pressure
enhancements in the MUSTANG data amount to ~2% of the total pressure measured
in the 140GHz Bolocam observations. The X-ray template also fails on larger
scales to accurately describe the Bolocam data, particularly at the location of
a subcluster known to have a high line of sight optical velocity (~3200km/s).
Our Bolocam data are adequately described when we add an additional component -
not described by a thermal SZE spectrum - coincident with this subcluster.
Using flux densities extracted from our model fits, and marginalizing over the
temperature constraints for the region, we fit a thermal+kinetic SZE spectrum
to our data and find the subcluster has a best-fit line of sight proper
velocity of 3600+3440/-2160km/s. This agrees with the optical velocity
estimates for the subcluster. The probability of velocity<0 given our
measurements is 2.1%. Repeating this analysis using flux densities measured
non-parametrically results in a 3.4% probability of a velocity<=0. We note that
this tantalizing result for the kinetic SZE is on resolved, subcluster scales.Comment: 10 Figures, 18 pages. this version corrects issues with the previous
arXiv versio
Submillimeter Follow-up of WISE-Selected Hyperluminous Galaxies
We have used the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO) to follow-up a
sample of WISE-selected, hyperluminous galaxies, so called W1W2-dropout
galaxies. This is a rare (~ 1000 all-sky) population of galaxies at high
redshift (peaks at z=2-3), that are faint or undetected by WISE at 3.4 and 4.6
um, yet are clearly detected at 12 and 22 um. The optical spectra of most of
these galaxies show significant AGN activity. We observed 14 high-redshift (z >
1.7) W1W2-dropout galaxies with SHARC-II at 350 to 850 um, with 9 detections;
and observed 18 with Bolocam at 1.1 mm, with five detections. Warm Spitzer
follow-up of 25 targets at 3.6 and 4.5 um, as well as optical spectra of 12
targets are also presented in the paper. Combining WISE data with observations
from warm Spitzer and CSO, we constructed their mid-IR to millimeter spectral
energy distributions (SEDs). These SEDs have a consistent shape, showing
significantly higher mid-IR to submm ratios than other galaxy templates,
suggesting a hotter dust temperature. We estimate their dust temperatures to be
60-120 K using a single-temperature model. Their infrared luminosities are well
over 10^{13} Lsun. These SEDs are not well fitted with existing galaxy
templates, suggesting they are a new population with very high luminosity and
hot dust. They are likely among the most luminous galaxies in the Universe. We
argue that they are extreme cases of luminous, hot dust-obscured galaxies
(DOGs), possibly representing a short evolutionary phase during galaxy merging
and evolution. A better understanding of their long-wavelength properties needs
ALMA as well as Herschel data.Comment: Will be Published on Sep 1, 2012 by Ap
Anti-proliferative but not anti-angiogenic tyrosine kinase inhibitors enrich for cancer stem cells in soft tissue sarcoma.
BackgroundIncreasing studies implicate cancer stem cells (CSCs) as the source of resistance and relapse following conventional cytotoxic therapies. Few studies have examined the response of CSCs to targeted therapies, such as tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). We hypothesized that TKIs would have differential effects on CSC populations depending on their mechanism of action (anti-proliferative vs. anti-angiogenic).MethodsWe exposed human sarcoma cell lines to sorafenib, regorafenib, and pazopanib and assessed cell viability and expression of CSC markers (ALDH, CD24, CD44, and CD133). We evaluated survival and CSC phenotype in mice harboring sarcoma metastases after TKI therapy. We exposed dissociated primary sarcoma tumors to sorafenib, regorafenib, and pazopanib, and we used tissue microarray (TMA) and primary sarcoma samples to evaluate the frequency and intensity of CSC markers after neoadjuvant therapy with sorafenib and pazopanib. Parametric and non-parametric statistical analyses were performed as appropriate.ResultsAfter functionally validating the CSC phenotype of ALDHbright sarcoma cells, we observed that sorafenib and regorafenib were cytotoxic to sarcoma cell lines (P < 0.05), with a corresponding 1.4 - 2.8 fold increase in ALDHbright cells from baseline (P < 0.05). In contrast, we observed negligible effects on viability and CSC sub-populations with pazopanib. At low doses, there was progressive CSC enrichment in vitro after longer term exposure to sorafenib although the anti-proliferative effects were attenuated. In vivo, sorafenib improved median survival by 11 days (P < 0.05), but enriched ALDHbright cells 2.5 - 2.8 fold (P < 0.05). Analysis of primary human sarcoma samples revealed direct cytotoxicity following exposure to sorafenib and regorafenib with a corresponding increase in ALDHbright cells (P < 0.05). Again, negligible effects from pazopanib were observed. TMA analysis of archived specimens from sarcoma patients treated with sorafenib demonstrated significant enrichment for ALDHbright cells in the post-treatment resection specimen (P < 0.05), whereas clinical specimens obtained longitudinally from a patient treated with pazopanib showed no enrichment for ALDHbright cells (P > 0.05).ConclusionsAnti-proliferative TKIs appear to enrich for sarcoma CSCs while anti-angiogenic TKIs do not. The rational selection of targeted therapies for sarcoma patients may benefit from an awareness of the differential impact of TKIs on CSC populations
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