265 research outputs found
Holographic optical elements: Fabrication and testing
The basic properties and use of holographic optical elements were investigated to design and construct wide-angle, Fourier-transform holographic optical systems for use in a Bragg-effect optical memory. The performance characteristics are described along with the construction of the holographic system
Neighbourhood crime and smoking: the role of objective and perceived crime measures.
BACKGROUND: Smoking is a major public health problem worldwide. Research has shown that neighbourhood of residence is independently associated with the likelihood of individuals' smoking. However, a fine comprehension of which neighbourhood characteristics are involved and how remains limited. In this study we examine the relative contribution of objective (police-recorded) and subjective (resident-perceived) measures of neighbourhood crime on residents' smoking behaviours. METHODS: Data from 2,418 men and women participating in the 2007/8 sweep of the West of Scotland Twenty-07 Study were analyzed. Smoking status and perceived crime were collected through face-to-face interviews with participants. Police-recorded crime rates were obtained from the Scottish Neighbourhood Statistics website at the datazone scale. Adjusted odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were estimated for the likelihood of current smoking using logistic regression models. Adjusted mean daily amount smoked and F statistics were calculated using general linear models. Analyses were conducted for all respondents and stratified by sex and age cohort. RESULTS: Compared to individuals living in low crime areas, those residing in an area characterized by high police-recorded crime rates or those perceiving high crime in their neighbourhood were more likely to be current smokers, after controlling for individual characteristics. The association with smoking was somewhat stronger for police-recorded crime than for perceived crime. Associations were only slightly attenuated when adjusting for either the objective or subjective crime measures, suggesting that these indicators may exert an independent influence on the risk of smoking. Stronger effects were observed for women compared to men. Police-recorded crime rates were more strongly related to smoking status among older respondents than among the younger cohort, whereas the strongest effect for perceived crime was observed among younger participants. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings highlight the relevance of paying attention to both objective and perceived neighbourhood crime measures when aiming to prevent smoking
Examining the spatial congruence between data obtained with a novel activity location questionnaire, continuous GPS tracking, and prompted recall surveys.
BACKGROUND: Place and health researchers are increasingly interested in integrating individuals' mobility and the experience they have with multiple settings in their studies. In practice, however, few tools exist which allow for rapid and accurate gathering of detailed information on the geographic location of places where people regularly undertake activities. We describe the development and validation of a new activity location questionnaire which can be useful in accounting for multiple environmental influences in large population health investigations. METHODS: To develop the questionnaire, we relied on a literature review of similar data collection tools and on results of a pilot study wherein we explored content validity, test-retest reliability, and face validity. To estimate convergent validity, we used data from a study of users of a public bicycle share program conducted in Montreal, Canada in 2011. We examined the spatial congruence between questionnaire data and data from three other sources: 1) one-week GPS tracks; 2) activity locations extracted from the GPS tracks; and 3) a prompted recall survey of locations visited during the day. Proximity and convex hull measures were used to compare questionnaire-derived data and GPS and prompted recall survey data. RESULTS: In the sample, 75% of questionnaire-reported activity locations were located within 400 meters of an activity location recorded on the GPS track or through the prompted recall survey. Results from convex hull analyses suggested questionnaire activity locations were more concentrated in space than GPS or prompted-recall locations. CONCLUSIONS: The new questionnaire has high convergent validity and can be used to accurately collect data on regular activity spaces in terms of locations regularly visited. The methods, measures, and findings presented provide new material to further study mobility in place and health research
Effect of fatty acids on hyphal growth in the pathogenic yeast Candida albicans
Candida albicans est une levure pathogène qui, à l’état commensal, colonise les muqueuses de la cavité orale et du tractus gastro-intestinal. De nature opportuniste, C. albicans cause de nombreuses infections, allant des candidoses superficielles (muguet buccal, vulvo-vaginite) aux candidoses systémiques sévères. C. albicans a la capacité de se développer sous diverses morphologies, telles que les formes levures, pseudohyphes et hyphes. Des stimuli environnementaux mimant les conditions retrouvées chez l’hôte (température de 37°C, pH neutre, présence de sérum) induisent la transition levure-à -hyphe (i.e. morphogenèse ou filamentation). Cette transition morphologique contribue à la pathogénicité de C. albicans, du fait que des souches présentant un défaut de filamentation sont avirulentes. Non seulement la morphogenèse est un facteur de virulence, mais elle constituerait aussi une cible pour le développement d’antifongiques. En effet, il a déjà été démontré que l’inhibition de la transition levure-à -hyphe atténuait la virulence de C. albicans lors d’infections systémiques. Par ailleurs, des études ont démontré que de nombreuses molécules pouvaient moduler la morphogenèse. Parmi ces molécules, certains acides gras, dont l’acide linoléique conjugué (CLA), inhibent la formation d’hyphes. Ainsi, le CLA posséderait des propriétés thérapeutiques, du fait qu’il interfère avec un déterminant de pathogénicité de C. albicans. Par contre, avant d’évaluer son potentiel thérapeutique dans un contexte clinique, il est essentiel d’étudier son mode d’action.
Ce projet vise à caractériser l’activité anti-filamentation des acides gras et du CLA et à déterminer le mécanisme par lequel ces molécules inhibent la morphogenèse chez C. albicans. Des analyses transcriptomiques globales ont été effectuées afin d’obtenir le profil transcriptionnel de la réponse de C. albicans au CLA. L’acide gras a entraîné une baisse des niveaux d’expression de gènes encodant des protéines hyphes-spécifiques et des régulateurs de morphogenèse, dont RAS1. Ce gène code pour la GTPase Ras1p, une protéine membranaire de signalisation qui joue un rôle important dans la transition levure-à -hyphe. Des analyses de PCR quantitatif ont confirmé que le CLA inhibait l’induction de RAS1. De plus, le CLA a non seulement causé une baisse des niveaux cellulaires de Ras1p, mais a aussi entraîné sa délocalisation de la membrane plasmique. En affectant les niveaux et la localisation cellulaire de Ras1p, le CLA nuit à l’activation de la voie de signalisation Ras1p-dépendante, inhibant ainsi la morphogenèse. Il est possible que le CLA altère la structure de la membrane plasmique et affecte indirectement la localisation membranaire de Ras1p. Ces travaux ont permis de mettre en évidence le mode d’action du CLA. Le potentiel thérapeutique du CLA pourrait maintenant être évalué dans un contexte d’infection, permettant ainsi de vérifier qu’une telle approche constitue véritablement une stratégie pour le traitement des candidoses.The yeast Candida albicans is an inhabitant of the oral cavity, the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tracts of humans. Generally encountered as a commensal, it is also an opportunistic pathogen that causes a spectrum of infections, ranging from superficial mycoses (thrush, vulvovaginitis) to severe and life-threatening systemic infections. A striking feature of C. albicans is its ability to grow in different morphological forms, including budding yeasts, pseudohyphae, and hyphae. Environmental cues that mimic host conditions (elevated temperature, neutral or alkaline pH, and serum) induce the yeast-to-hypha transition. Morphogenesis is considered to be an attribute of pathogenesis, as mutants locked as yeasts or filamentous forms are avirulent. Given that the yeast-to-hypha transition is a virulence factor, it may also constitute a target for the development of antifungal drugs. Indeed, evidence has shown that impairing morphogenesis is a means to treat systemic candidiasis. Concurrently, a number of molecules have been reported to modulate morphogenesis in C. albicans. For instance, several fatty acids, including conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), inhibited the yeast-to-hypha transition. By interfering with an important attribute of C. albicans pathogenesis, CLA may harbor antifungal properties. However, before assessing its therapeutic potential in a clinical context, it is mandatory to address CLA’s mode of action.
The present study aims to further characterize the hypha-inhibiting properties of fatty acids and CLA and to elucidate the mechanism by which these molecules inhibit the yeast-to-hypha transition in C. albicans. Gene expression analyses were performed to gain insight into the transcriptional response of cells to CLA on a genome-wide scale and to probe the fatty acid’s mode of action. CLA downregulated the expression of hypha-specific genes and blocked the induction of genes encoding regulators of hyphal growth, including that of RAS1, which encodes the small GTPase Ras1p. A membrane-associated signaling protein, Ras1p plays a major role in morphogenesis. Quantitative PCR analyses showed that CLA prevented the increase in RAS1 mRNA levels which occurred at the onset of the yeast-to-hypha transition. Unexpectedly, CLA reduced the steady-state levels of Ras1p. Additionally, CLA caused the delocalization of GFP-Ras1p from the plasma membrane. These findings indicate that CLA treatment results in suboptimal Ras1p cellular concentrations and localization, which impedes Ras1p signaling and inhibits the yeast-to-hypha transition. CLA may indirectly affect Ras1p localization by altering the structure of the plasma membrane. These studies have provided the mechanism underlying CLA’s hypha-inhibiting properties and may serve as the rationale to examine CLA’s therapeutic potential in the context of a Candida infection. There is a general lack of clinical evidence demonstrating that impairing morphogenesis is a sound approach to treat candidiasis. To remedy this situation, the therapeutic potential of molecules that modulate morphogenesis, such as CLA, should be clinically assessed
Moving beyond the residential neighbourhood to explore social inequalities in exposure to area-level disadvantage: Results from the Interdisciplinary Study on Inequalities in Smoking
The focus, in place and health research, on a single, residential, context overlooks the fact that
individuals are mobile and experience other settings in the course of their daily activities. Socioeconomic
characteristics are associated with activity patterns, as well as with the quality of places
where certain groups conduct activities, i.e. their non-residential activity space. Examining how
measures of exposure to resources, and inequalities thereof, compare between residential and nonresidential
contexts is required. Baseline data from 1,890 young adults (18 to 25 years-old)
participating in the Interdisciplinary Study of Inequalities in Smoking, Montreal, Canada (2011-
2012), were analyzed. Socio-demographic and activity location data were collected using a
validated, self-administered questionnaire. Area-level material deprivation was measured within
500-meter road-network buffer zones around participants’ residential and activity locations.
Deprivation scores in the residential area and non-residential activity space were compared
between social groups. Multivariate linear regression was used to estimate associations between
individual- and area-level characteristics and non-residential activity space deprivation, and to
explore whether these characteristics attenuated the education-deprivation association. Participants
in low educational categories lived and conducted activities in more disadvantaged areas than
university students/graduates. Educational inequalities in exposure to area-level deprivation were
larger in the non-residential activity space than in the residential area for the least educated, but
smaller for the intermediate group. Adjusting for selected covariates such as transportation
resources and residential deprivation did not significantly attenuate the education-deprivation
associations. Results support the existence of social isolation in residential areas and activity
locations, whereby less educated individuals tend to be confined to more disadvantaged areas than
their more educated counterparts. They also highlight the relevance of investigating both residential
and non-residential contexts when studying inequalities in health-relevant exposures
Considering daily mobility in contextual studies of social inequalities in health : conceptual and empirical insights
Les études sur les milieux de vie et la santé ont traditionnellement porté sur le seul quartier de résidence. Des critiques ont été émises à cet égard, soulignant le fait que la mobilité quotidienne des individus n’était pas prise en compte et que l’accent mis sur le quartier de résidence se faisait au détriment d’autres milieux de vie où les individus passent du temps, c’est-à -dire leur espace d’activité. Bien que la mobilité quotidienne fasse l’objet d’un intérêt croissant en santé publique, peu d’études se sont intéressé aux inégalités sociales de santé. Ceci, même en dépit du fait que différents groupes sociaux n’ont pas nécessairement la même capacité à accéder à des milieux favorables pour la santé. Le lien entre les inégalités en matière de mobilité et les inégalités sociales de santé mérite d’être exploré.
Dans cette thèse, je développe d'abord une proposition conceptuelle qui ancre la mobilité quotidienne dans le concept de potentiel de mobilité. Le potentiel de mobilité englobe les opportunités et les lieux que les individus peuvent choisir d’accéder en convertissant leur potentiel en mobilité réalisée. Le potentiel de mobilité est façonné par des caractéristiques individuelles (ex. le revenu) et géographiques (ex. la proximité des transports en commun), ainsi que par des règles régissant l’accès à certaines ressources et à certains lieux (ex. le droit). Ces caractéristiques et règles sont inégalement distribuées entre les groupes sociaux. Des inégalités sociales en matière de mobilité réalisée peuvent donc en découler, autant en termes de l'ampleur de la mobilité spatiale que des expositions contextuelles rencontrées dans l'espace d'activité. Je discute de différents processus par lesquels les inégalités en matière de mobilité réalisée peuvent mener à des inégalités sociales de santé. Par exemple, les groupes défavorisés sont plus susceptibles de vivre et de mener des activités dans des milieux défavorisés, comparativement à leurs homologues plus riches, ce qui pourrait contribuer aux différences de santé entre ces groupes.
Cette proposition conceptuelle est mise à l’épreuve dans deux études empiriques. Les données de la première vague de collecte de l’étude Interdisciplinaire sur les inégalités sociales de santé (ISIS) menée à Montréal, Canada (2011-2012) ont été analysées. Dans cette étude, 2 093 jeunes adultes (18-25 ans) ont rempli un questionnaire et fourni des informations socio-démographiques, sur leur consommation de tabac et sur leurs lieux d’activités. Leur statut socio-économique a été opérationnalisé à l’aide de leur plus haut niveau d'éducation atteint. Les lieux de résidence et d'activité ont servi à créer des zones tampons de 500 mètres à partir du réseau routier. Des mesures de défavorisation et de disponibilité des détaillants de produits du tabac ont été agrégées au sein des ces zones tampons.
Dans une première étude empirique je compare l'exposition à la défavorisation dans le quartier résidentiel et celle dans l'espace d’activité non-résidentiel entre les plus et les moins éduqués. J’identifie également des variables individuelles et du quartier de résidence associées au niveau de défavorisation mesuré dans l’espace d’activité. Les résultats démontrent qu’il y a un gradient social dans l’exposition à la défavorisation résidentielle et dans l’espace d’activité : elle augmente à mesure que le niveau d’éducation diminue. Chez les moins éduqués les écarts dans l’exposition à la défavorisation sont plus marquées dans l’espace d’activité que dans le quartier de résidence, alors que chez les moyennement éduqués, elle diminuent. Un niveau inférieur d'éducation, l'âge croissant, le fait d’être ni aux études, ni à l’emploi, ainsi que la défavorisation résidentielle sont positivement corrélés à la défavorisation dans l’espace d’activité.
Dans la seconde étude empirique j'étudie l'association entre le tabagisme et deux expositions contextuelles (la défavorisation et la disponibilité de détaillants de tabac) mesurées dans le quartier de résidence et dans l’espace d’activité non-résidentiel. J'évalue si les inégalités sociales dans ces expositions contribuent à expliquer les inégalités sociales dans le tabagisme. J’observe que les jeunes dont les activités quotidiennes ont lieu dans des milieux défavorisés sont plus susceptibles de fumer. La présence de détaillants de tabac dans le quartier de résidence et dans l’espace d’activité est aussi associée à la probabilité de fumer, alors que le fait de vivre dans un quartier caractérisé par une forte défavorisation protège du tabagisme. En revanche, aucune des variables contextuelles n’affectent de manière significative l’association entre le niveau d’éducation et le tabagisme.
Les résultats de cette thèse soulignent l’importance de considérer non seulement le quartier de résidence, mais aussi les lieux où les gens mènent leurs activités quotidiennes, pour comprendre le lien entre le contexte et les inégalités sociales de santé. En discussion, j’élabore sur l’idée de reconnaître la mobilité quotidienne comme facteur de différenciation sociale chez les jeunes adultes. En outre, je conclus que l’identification de facteurs favorisant ou contraignant la mobilité quotidienne des individus est nécessaire afin: 1 ) d’acquérir une meilleure compréhension de la façon dont les inégalités sociales en matière de mobilité (potentielle et réalisée) surviennent et influencent la santé et 2) d’identifier des cibles d’intervention en santé publique visant à créer des environnements sains et équitables.In place and health research the exclusive focus on the residential context has been criticized for overlooking individuals’ daily mobility and the activity settings where they work, study or play, i.e. their activity space. While researchers are increasingly considering daily mobility in health studies, few have been concerned with social inequalities in health. This is so despite evidence suggesting that different social groups may not have the same capacity to reach healthy and favourable settings. Whether social inequalities in daily mobility contribute to social inequalities in health remains to be explored.
In this thesis I first develop a conceptual proposition that anchors daily mobility in the concept of mobility potential. Mobility potential encompasses the opportunities and places that individuals can choose to access by converting their potential into realized mobility. Mobility potential is shaped by individual characteristics (e.g. income), geographic circumstances (e.g. proximity to public transit), and rules regulating access to certain places and resources (e.g. rights). All of these have been shown to be socially-patterned. It follows that social inequalities in realized mobility may result, both in terms of the extent of spatial movement and of contextual exposures in the activity space. I discuss various pathways linking inequalities in realized mobility to health inequalities. For example, lower social classes may be more likely to live and conduct activities in disadvantaged areas, compared to their more affluent counterparts, and this may contribute to health differentials between these groups.
This conceptual proposition is then tested in two empirical studies conducted using cross-sectional data from the Interdisciplinary Study on Inequalities in Smoking (ISIS), Montreal, Canada (2011-2012). In this study 2,093 young adults (18-25 years-old) provided socio-demographic, smoking and activity location data in a self-completed questionnaire. Their highest education level attained was used as a proxy for their socio-economic status. Residential and activity locations were used to create 500-meter road-network buffer zones and to derive measures of area-level disadvantage and tobacco retailer availability.
In a first empirical study I compare social inequalities in exposure to area-level disadvantage measured in the residential area and non-residential activity space. I also identify individual- and area-level correlates of non-residential activity space disadvantage. I find that there is a social gradient, across educational categories, in both residential and non-residential activity space disadvantage: the level of disadvantage experienced increases as education level decreases. Social inequalities in exposure to area-level deprivation are slightly larger in the non-residential activity space than in the residential neighbourhood for the least educated, but smaller for the intermediate group. Lower educational attainment, increasing age, not being in education nor in employment, and higher residential disadvantage are correlated with conducting activities in more disadvantaged areas.
In the second empirical study I investigate the association between smoking status and two contextual exposures (area-level disadvantage and tobacco retailer availability) in both the residential neighbourhood and non-residential activity space. I also assess whether inequalities in these exposures help explain inequalities in smoking. I find that smoking is positively associated with conducting activities in the second least deprived areas and with tobacco retailer counts in residential and non-residential areas. Living in the second most deprived areas is protective of smoking. However, none of the contextual variables significantly affect the education-smoking association.
Findings from this thesis advance conceptual reflection and empirical knowledge regarding the importance, in contextual studies of social inequalities in health, of not only considering where people live but also where they conduct daily activities. I discuss daily mobility as a factor of social differentiation among young adults. Furthermore, I conclude that identifying factors enabling or constraining individuals’ daily mobility is required to: 1) gain a better understanding of how social inequalities in mobility (potential and realized) arise and influence health; and 2) identify entry points for public health interventions aimed at creating healthy and equitable environments
Comments on Melis et al. The Effects of the Urban Built Environment on Mental Health: A Cohort Study in a Large Northern Italian City. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health, 2015, 12, 14898-14915.
In a recent paper by Melis and colleagues [1], exposure to certain built environment characteristics-urban density and accessibility to public transit-is found to be related to mental health, even more so among women, the elderly, and the residentially stable (interactions between built environment and individual characteristics in relation to mental health have unfortunately not been tested statistically, which could have strengthened their demonstration).[...]
Consommation alimentaire d’antioxydants et risque de cancer du poumon : une étude cas-témoins montréalaise
Objectif : Examiner l’association entre la consommation alimentaire de caroténoïdes (β-carotène, α-carotène, β-cryptoxanthine, lutéine/zéaxanthine, lycopène) et de vitamine C et le risque de cancer du poumon, selon le sexe, l’intensité de tabagisme et le sous-type histologique de la tumeur. Méthodes : Les données proviennent d’une étude cas-témoins menée à Montréal, Canada. Des entrevues ont été effectuées auprès de 1 105 cas incidents de cancer du poumon et 1 449 témoins issus de la population générale. Leur fréquence de consommation moyenne de 49 fruits et légumes deux ans auparavant a été convertie en apports en antioxydants. Les rapports de cotes (RC) et les intervalles de confiance (IC) à 95% caractérisant l’association entre les antioxydants et le risque de cancer du poumon ont été estimés à l’aide de modèles de régression logistique et polytomée, en tenant compte de facteurs de confusion potentiels. Résultats : Une consommation élevée en antioxydants était généralement associée à une diminution du risque de cancer du poumon de l’ordre de 30%. Un effet protecteur a été observé chez les hommes et les femmes, pour les non fumeurs, les fumeurs quelque soit l’intensité de tabagisme, ainsi que pour les carcinomes à petites cellules, épidermoïde et l’adénocarcinome. Conclusions : Plusieurs antioxydants alimentaires protégeraient du cancer du poumon. Les efforts de prévention bénéficieraient de cibler la promotion de la consommation de fruits et de légumes riches en caroténoïdes et en vitamine C.Objective: To investigate the association between dietary intake of carotenoids (β-carotene, α-carotene, β-cryptoxanthin, lutein/zeaxanthin and lycopene) and vitamin C, and risk of lung cancer according to sex, smoking intensity and tumor histological subtype. Methods: In the course of a case-control study conducted in Montreal, Canada, in-person interviews elicited dietary data from 1,105 incident lung cancer cases and 1,449 population controls. Usual frequency of intake of 49 fruit and vegetables two years prior to diagnosis or interview was estimated and converted to antioxidant intakes. Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) between intake variables and lung cancer were estimated using logistic and polytomous regression models, adjusting for potential confounding factors. Results: High intakes of antioxidants were generally associated with some 30% reduction in lung cancer risk. A protective effect was observed among men and women, among never smokers, smokers regardless of intensity, and for small cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma. Conclusions: Results from this study suggest several dietary antioxidants may protect against lung cancer. Prevention programs should promote increased intakes of fruit and vegetables rich in carotenoids and vitamin C
Expected or completed? Comparing two measures of education and their relationship with social inequalities in health among young adults
Background. Similarly to other age groups, there are significant social inequalities in health among
young adults (YA). Education is thought to be the most appropriate indicator of YA socioeconomic
status (SES), yet it is often in progress at that age and may not be representative of future achievement.
Therefore, scholars have explored YA ‘expected’ education as a proxy of SES. However, no study has
examined how it compares to the more common SES indicator, ‘completed’ education.
Methods. Using data from 1,457 YA surveyed twice over a two year period, we describe associations
between participants’ completed and expected education at baseline and completed education at followup.
We then compare associations between these two measures and three health outcomes – smoking
status, self-rated mental health, and participation in physical activity and sports – at baseline and
follow-up using regression models.
Results. At baseline, half of the participants were imputed a higher ‘expected’ level than that
‘completed’ at that time. In regression models, ‘expected’ and ‘completed’ education were strongly
associated with all outcomes and performed slightly differently in terms of effect size, statistical
significance, and model fit.
Conclusions. ‘Expected’ education offers a good approximation of future achievement. More
importantly, ‘expected’ and ‘completed’ education variables can be conceptualized as complementary
indicators associated with inequalities in health in YA. Using both may help better understand social
inequalities in health in YA
The added value of accounting for activity space when examining the association between tobacco retailer availability and smoking among young adults
Background: Despite a declining prevalence in many countries, smoking rates remain consistently
high among young adults. Targeting contextual influences on smoking, such as the availability of
tobacco retailers, is one promising avenue of intervention. Most studies have focused on residential
or school neighbourhoods without accounting for other settings where individuals spend time, i.e.,
their activity space. We investigated the association between tobacco retailer availability in the
residential neighbourhood and in the activity space and smoking status. Methods: Cross-sectional
baseline data from 1,994 young adults (age 18-25) participating in the Interdisciplinary Study of
Inequalities in Smoking (Montreal, Canada, 2011-2012) were analyzed. Residential and activity
locations served to derive two measures of tobacco retailer availability: counts within 500-meter
buffers and proximity to the nearest retailer. Prevalence ratios for the association between each
tobacco retailer measure and smoking status were estimated using log-binomial regression. Results:
Participants encountering high numbers of tobacco retailers in their residential neighbourhood, and
both medium and high retailer counts in their activity space, were more likely to smoke compared to
those exposed to fewer retailers. While residential proximity was not associated with smoking, we
found 36% and 42% higher smoking prevalences among participants conducting activities within
medium and high proximity to tobacco retailers compared to those conducting activities further
from such outlets. Conclusion: This study adds to the sparse literature on contextual correlates of
smoking among young adults, and illustrates the added value of considering individuals’ activity
space in contextual studies of smoking
- …