100 research outputs found

    Effectiveness of natural antifungal compounds in controlling infection by grapevine trunk disease pathogens through pruning wounds

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    [EN] Grapevine trunk fungal pathogens, such as Diplodia seriata and Phaeomoniella chlamydospora, can infect plants through pruning wounds. They cause grapevine trunk diseases and are involved in grapevine decline. Accordingly, the protection of pruning wounds is crucial for the management of grapevine trunk diseases. The efficacy of different natural antifungals in inhibiting the growth of several fungi causing grapevine trunk diseases was evaluated in vitro. The fungi showing greater in vitro efficacy were tested on autoclaved grape wood assays against D. seriata and P. chlamydospora. Based on results from these assays, chitosan oligosaccharide, vanillin, and garlic extract were selected for further evaluation on pruning wounds inoculated with D. seriata and P. chlamydospora in field trials. A significant decrease in plant mortality was observed after 2 years of growth in the plants treated with the different natural antifungals compared to the mortality rate observed in infected plants that were not treated with antifungals. Also, the infection rate for the inoculated pathogens was significantly reduced in plants treated with the selected natural antifungals. Therefore, natural antifungals represent a promising alternative for disease control and could provide significant economic benefits for the grape-growing industrySIThis work was financed by Bodegas Vega Sicilia S.A. (Valbuena de Duero, Valladolid, Spain

    The role of CCR5/CXCR3 expressing CD8+ cells in liver damage and viral control during persistent hepatitis C virus infection

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    20 p.Background/Aims:CXCR3 and CCR5 play a major role in recruiting cytotoxic T cells (Tc) and secreting secondary type 1 cytokines (Tc1) in the liver. HCV could impair their expression as a survival mechanism. The role of these chemokine receptors on CD8+ cells in chronic hepatitis C is analysed. Methods:Serum, chemokines, peripheral blood and intrahepatic lymphocytes from chronic hepatitis C patients were studied. CXCR3 / CCR5 expressing CD8+ cells were quantified by flow-cytometry. Serum chemokines concentration (CXCL10/CCL3) was measured by ELISA. Basal data were correlated with liver inflammation. Longitudinal data were obtained during treatment and correlated with virologic response. Results:CCR5/CXCR3 expressing CD8+ cells were enriched in the liver and correlated with inflammation. Chronic HCV patients presented the same frequency of CCR5high/CXCR3high expressing CD8+ cells in peripheral blood as in healthy controls but higher serum concentration of CXCL10/CCL3. Treatment with PEG-interferon a-2b plus ribavirin increased CCR5high/CXCR3high expressing CD8+ cells frequency in peripheral blood and decreased CXCL10/CCL3 serum concentration. Increase in CXCR3high expressing CD8+ cells after 24 weeks of treatment was correlated with SVR. Conclusions:In chronic hepatitis C, anti-viral treatment induces an increase in CD8+ cells expressing chemokine receptors associated with Tc1 response and a reduction in their ligands. Achievement of viral control is associated with an increase in CXCR3high expressing CD8+ cells during treatmentSchering-Plough-SpainJunta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Manch

    UEVALUA: El uso de las nuevas tecnologías para la evaluación y seguimiento de los estudiantes de Grado en Fisioterapia

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    [EN] Universidad Europea de Madrid has implemented in September 2016 a digital platform to facilitate the management, monitoring and assessment of the clinical education taking place in Hospitals and other clinical sites:UEVALUA. The aim of this qualitative phenomenological study was to describe the experience with this new digital platform among physical therapy students, academic tutors and clinical supervisors making use of the platform in the first quarter of 2016/2017 academic course. Through a theoretical sampling 13 participants were included. Data were collected using focus groups. A qualitative analysis was conducted using Atlas –Ti v6.0. The identified themes included: a) Difficulties in using the platform; b) The early training; c) Advantages of the platform; d) The impact of the platform on the students´performance and assessment; and d) Improvement proposals.[ES] En el curso 2016/2017 el Grado de Fisioterapia de la Universidad Europea de Madrid ha puesto en marcha una plataforma digital para facilitar la gestión, el seguimiento y la evaluación de las asignaturas de prácticas clínicas que se realizan en hospitales o clínicas: UEVALUA. El objetivo de este estudio es conocer la experiencia vivida respecto a esta nueva plataforma por parte de los estudiantes y tutores académicos y clínicos del Grado en Fisioterapia, que han utilizado la nueva plataforma en el primer trimestre del curso 2016/2017. Se ha planteado un diseño cualitativo de tipo fenomenológico descriptivo. Se ha utilizado un muestreo teórico con un tamaño final de la muestra de 13 individuos. La herramienta de recogida de datos utilizada ha sido el Grupo de Discusión. Los datos se han analizado con software Atlas-Ti v6.0. Los temas identificados incluyen : a) Complicaciones con el manejo de la plataforma; b) La formación inicial; c) Ventajas de la plataforma; d) El impacto del uso de una herramienta digital sobre el rendimiento y evaluación de los estudiantes, y d) Propuestas de mejora.Martinez-Pascual, B.; De La Cueva-Reguera, M.; García Mateos, M.; Fernández-Martínez, S.; González-De-Ramos, C.; Blanco-Morales, M. (2017). UEVALUA: El uso de las nuevas tecnologías para la evaluación y seguimiento de los estudiantes de Grado en Fisioterapia. En In-Red 2017. III Congreso Nacional de innovación educativa y de docencia en red. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. 43-58. https://doi.org/10.4995/INRED2017.2017.6739OCS435

    Detection of MET Alterations Using Cell Free DNA and Circulating Tumor Cells from Cancer Patients

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    MET alterations may provide a potential biomarker to evaluate patients who will benefit from treatment with MET inhibitors. Therefore, the purpose of the present study is to investigate the utility of a liquid biopsy-based strategy to assess MET alterations in cancer patients. We analyzed MET amplification in circulating free DNA (cfDNA) from 174 patients with cancer and 49 healthy controls and demonstrated the accuracy of the analysis to detect its alteration in patients. Importantly, a significant correlation between cfDNA concentration and MET copy number (CN) in cancer patients (r = 0.57, p <10−10) was determined. Furthermore, we evaluated two approaches to detect the presence of MET on circulating tumor cells (CTCs), using the CellSearch® and Parsortix systems and monitored patients under anti-EGFR treatment (n = 30) combining both cfDNA and CTCs analyses. This follow-up provides evidence for the potential of MET CN assessment when patients develop resistance to anti-EGFR therapy and a significant association between the presence of CTCs MET+ and the Overall Survival (OS) in head and neck cancer patients (P = 0.05; HR = 6.66). In conclusion, we develop specific and noninvasive assays to monitor MET status in cfDNA/CTCs and demonstrate the utility of plasma MET CN determination as a biomarker for monitoring the appearance of resistance to anti-EGFR therapyThis study was financed by all the donors who participated in the Liquid Biopsy Crowdfunding campaign in 2017. LMR is supported by Asociación Española Contra el Cancer (AECC). ADL is funded by a “Juan Rodés” contract (JR17/00016) from ISCIIIS

    Oncogenic driver mutations predict outcome in a cohort of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients within a clinical trial

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    234 diagnostic formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) blocks from homogeneously treated patients with locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) within a multicentre phase III clinical trial were characterised. The mutational spectrum was examined by next generation sequencing in the 26 most frequent oncogenic drivers in cancer and correlated with treatment response and survival. Human papillomavirus (HPV) status was measured by p16INK4a immunohistochemistry in oropharyngeal tumours. Clinicopathological features and response to treatment were measured and compared with the sequencing results. The results indicated TP53 as the most mutated gene in locally advanced HNSCC. HPV-positive oropharyngeal tumours were less mutated than HPV-negative tumours in TP53 (p<0.01). Mutational and HPV status influences patient survival, being mutated or HPV-negative tumours associated with poor overall survival (p<0.05). No association was found between mutations and clinicopathological features. This study confirmed and expanded previously published genomic characterization data in HNSCC. Survival analysis showed that non-mutated HNSCC tumours associated with better prognosis and lack of mutations can be identified as an important biomarker in HNSCC. Frequent alterations in PI3K pathway in HPV-positive HNSCC could define a promising pathway for pharmacological intervention in this group of tumours

    Cortical thinning over two years after first-episode psychosis depends on age of onset

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    First-episode psychosis (FEP) patients show structural brain abnormalities at the first episode. Whether the cortical changes that follow a FEP are progressive and whether age at onset modulates these changes remains unclear. This is a multicenter MRI study in a deeply phenotyped sample of 74 FEP patients with a wide age range at onset (15-35 years) and 64 neurotypical healthy controls (HC). All participants underwent two MRI scans with a 2-year follow-up interval. We computed the longitudinal percentage of change (PC) for cortical thickness (CT), surface area (CSA) and volume (CV) for frontal, temporal, parietal and occipital lobes. We used general linear models to assess group differences in PC as a function of age at FEP. We conducted post-hoc analyses for metrics where PC differed as a function of age at onset. We found a significant age-by-diagnosis interaction effect for PC of temporal lobe CT (d = 0.54; p = 002). In a post-hoc-analysis, adolescent-onset (≤19 y) FEP showed more severe longitudinal cortical thinning in the temporal lobe than adolescent HC. We did not find this difference in adult-onset FEP compared to adult HC. Our study suggests that, in individuals with psychosis, CT changes that follow the FEP are dependent on the age at first episode, with those with an earlier onset showing more pronounced cortical thinning in the temporal lobe

    SNP-based mapping arrays reveal high genomic complexity in monoclonal gammopathies: from MGUS to myeloma status

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    Trabajo presentado al 53rd ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition celebrado en San Diego (US) del 10 al 13 de diciembre de 2011.-- et al.Peer reviewe

    The effect of family environment and psychiatric family history on psychosocial functioning in first-episode psychosis at baseline and after 2 years

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    Abstract The aim of the present study was to evaluate the contribution of family environment styles and psychiatric family history on functioning of patients presenting first-episode psychosis (FEP). Patients with FEP and healthy controls (HC) were assessed at baseline and after 2 years. The Functional Assessment Short Test (FAST) was used to assess functional outcome and the Family Environment Scale (FES) to evaluate family environment. Linear regressions evaluated the effect that family environment exerts on functioning at baseline and at 2-year follow-up, when FEP patients were diagnosed according to non-affective (NA-PSYCH) or affective psychoses (APSYCH). The influence of a positive parents' psychiatric history on functioning was evaluated through one-way between-groups analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) models, after controlling for family environmental styles. At baseline, FEP patients presented moderate functioning impairment, significantly worse than HC (28.65±16.17 versus 3.25±7.92; p<0.001, g = 1.91). At 2-year follow-up, the functioning of NA-PSYCH patients was significantly worse than in A-PSYCH (19.92±14.83 versus 12.46±14.86; p = 0.020, g = 0.50). No specific family environment style was associated with functioning in FEP patients and HC. On the contrary, a positive psychiatric father's history influenced functioning of FEP patients. After 2 years, worse functioning in NA-PSYCH patients was associated with lower rates of active-recreational and achievement orientated family environment and with higher rates of moral-religious emphasis and control. In A-PSYCH, worse functioning was associated with higher rates of conflict in the family. Both family environment and psychiatric history influence psychosocial functioning, with important implications for early interventions, that should involve both patients and caregivers

    A Methodology to Detect and Update Active Deformation Areas Based on Sentinel-1 SAR Images

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    This work is focused on deformation activity mapping and monitoring using Sentinel-1 (S 1) data and the DInSAR (Differential Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar) technique. The main goal is to present a procedure to periodically update and assess the geohazard activity (volcanic activity, landslides and ground-subsidence) of a given area by exploiting the wide area coverage and the high coherence and temporal sampling (revisit time up to six days) provided by the S-1 satellites. The main products of the procedure are two updatable maps: the deformation activity map and the active deformation areas map. These maps present two different levels of information aimed at different levels of geohazard risk management, from a very simplified level of information to the classical deformation map based on SAR interferometry. The methodology has been successfully applied to La Gomera, Tenerife and Gran Canaria Islands (Canary Island archipelago). The main obtained results are discussed.Geomatics Division, Centre Tecnològic de Telecomunicacions de Catalunya, EspañaEarth Sciences Department, University of Firenze, ItalyGeohazards InSAR laboratory and Modelling Group, Instituto Geológico y Minero de España, EspañaCentro Nacional de Información Geográfica, Instituto Geográfico Nacional, EspañaUnidad de Granada, Instituto Geológico y Minero de España, Españ

    Cognitive clusters in first-episode psychosis

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    Impairments in a broad range of cognitive domains have been consistently reported in some individuals with first-episode psychosis (FEP). Cognitive deficits can be observed during the prodromal stage. However, the course of cognitive deficits is still unclear. The aim of this study was to identify cognitive subgroups over time and to compare their sociodemographic, clinical and functional profiles. A total of 114 patients with Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders were included in the present study. We assessed subjects through psychiatric scales and eight neuropsychological tests at baseline and at two-year follow-up visit. We performed the Partition Around Medoids algorithm with all cognitive variables. Furthermore, we performed a logistic regression to identify the predictors related to the different cognitive clusters at follow-up. Two distinct subgroups were found: the first cluster characterized by cognitive impairment and a second cluster had relatively intact cognition in comparison with norms. Up to 54.7% of patients with cognitive deficits at baseline tended to improve during the first two years of treatment. Patients with intact cognition at follow-up had a higher socioeconomic status, later age of onset, lower negative symptoms and a higher cognitive reserve (CR) at baseline. CR and age of onset were the baseline variables that predicted cognitive impairment. This research allows us to obtain a better understanding of the heterogeneous profile of psychotic disorders. Identifying the characteristics of patients who wil
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