55 research outputs found

    Rammed earth walls in Mediterranean climate: material characterization and thermal behaviour

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    Rammed earth is considered a very sustainable construction system due to its low embodied energy, long service life and high recyclability. However, authors found that there is a lack of experimental results at real scale regarding rammed earth thermal behaviour. For this reason, this paper is first focused on the characterization of two different types of earth in order to check the suitability of being used in rammed earth walls. After the characterization, two experimental cubicle-shape buildings were built in Barcelona and Puigverd de Lleida (Spain) in order to test the thermal behaviour of their walls in two different climatic conditions. Temperature profiles inside walls have been monitored using thermocouples and temperature profile of southern walls was analysed in free floating conditions during summer and winter periods of 2013. Results show that thermal amplitude from outside to inside temperatures are decreased by rammed earth walls, achieving constant temperatures in inner surface of southern walls.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Vigilancia del SARS-CoV-2 en aguas residuales: una herramienta de alerta rápida

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    En el Saint Thomas’s Hospital de Londres, la escocesa June Almeida (apellido que obtuvo de su marido venezolano) visualizó por microscopía electrónica en 1964 unos virus con unas estructuras superficiales que sobresalían de una envuelta lipídica y que recordaban el halo de la corona solar. Por eso los bautizó como coronavirus

    Norovirus in Bottled Water Associated with Gastroenteritis Outbreak, Spain, 2016

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    In April 2016, an outbreak of gastrointestinal illness (4,136 cases) occurred in Catalonia, Spain. We detected high levels of norovirus genogroups I and II in office water coolers associated with the outbreak. Infectious viral titer estimates were 33-49 genome copies/L for genogroup I and 327-660 genome copies/L for genogroup II

    Time-evolution of SARS-CoV-2 in wastewater during the first pandemic wave of COVID-19 in the metropolitan area of Barcelona

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    Two large wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), covering around 2.7 M inhabitants, which represents around 85% of the metropolitan area of Barcelona, were sampled before, during and after the implementation of a complete lockdown. Five one-step RT-qPCR assays, targeting the polymerase (IP2 and IP4), the envelope E and the nucleoprotein (N1 and N2) genome regions, were employed for SARS-CoV-2 RNA detection in 24-h composite wastewater samples concentrated by polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation. SARS-CoV-2 was detected in a sewage sample collected 41 days ahead of the declaration of the first COVID-19 case. The evolution of SARS-CoV-2 genome copies in wastewater evidenced the validity of water-based epidemiology to anticipate COVID-19 outbreaks, to evaluate the impact of control measures and even to estimate the burden of shedders, including presymptomatic, asymptomatic, symptomatic and undiagnosed cases. For this latter objective, a model was applied for the estimation of the total number of shedders, evidencing a high proportion of asymptomatic infected individuals. In this way, an infection prevalence of 2.0-6.5% was figured. On the other hand, a proportion of around 0.12% and 0.09% of the total population was determined to be required for positive detection in the two WWTPs. At the end of the lockdown, SARS-CoV-2 RNA apparently disappeared in the WWTPs but could still be detected in grab samples from four urban sewers. Sewer monitoring allowed for location of specific hot spots of COVID-19, enabling the rapid adoption of appropriate mitigation measures

    Lessons learnt from a norovirus outbreak caused by bottled mineral water

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    Podeu consultar el III Workshop anual INSA-UB complet a: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/118993Sessió 1. Pòster 1

    Interacció secundària-universitat en l'àmbit de la nutrició i de la ciència i tecnologia alimentària

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    Presentem un programa pilot dirigit a promoure la interacció entre diferents nivells educatius (batxillerat, CFGS i universitaris) així com per donar a conèixer els graus que es fan al Campus de l'Alimentació de Torribera (UB): Nutrició Humana i Dietètica i Ciència i Tecnologia dels Aliments. El programa es basa en activitats pràctiques per a estudiants de batxillerat i de cicles formatius de grau superior i en activitats adreçades a promoure treballs de recerca en el camp de l'alimentació

    Detection of Norovirus in saliva samples from acute gastroenteritis cases and asymptomatic subjects: association with age and higher shedding in stool

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    Norovirus infections are a leading cause of acute gastroenteritis outbreaks worldwide and across all age groups, with two main genogroups (GI and GII) infecting humans. The aim of our study was to investigate the occurrence of norovirus in saliva samples from individuals involved in outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis in closed and semiclosed institutions, and its relationship with the virus strain, virus shedding in stool, the occurrence of symptoms, age, and the secretor status of the individual. Epidemiological and clinical information was gathered from norovirus outbreaks occurring in Catalonia, Spain during 2017-2018, and stool and saliva samples were collected from affected and exposed resident individuals and workers. A total of 347 saliva specimens from 25 outbreaks were analyzed. Further, 84% of individuals also provided a paired stool sample. For GII infections, norovirus was detected in 17.9% of saliva samples from symptomatic cases and 5.2% of asymptomatic individuals. Positivity in saliva occurred in both secretors and nonsecretors. None of the individuals infected by norovirus GI was positive for the virus in saliva. Saliva positivity did not correlate with any of the studied symptoms but did correlate with age 65 years old. Individuals who were positive in saliva showed higher levels of virus shedding in stool. Mean viral load in positive saliva was 3.16 1.08 log10 genome copies/mL, and the predominance of encapsidated genomes was confirmed by propidium monoazide (PMA)xx-viability RTqPCR assay. The detection of norovirus in saliva raises the possibility of oral-to-oral norovirus transmission during the symptomatic phase and, although to a lesser extent, even in cases of asymptomatic infections

    Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy in Down Syndrome and Sporadic and Autosomal-Dominant Alzheimer\u27s Disease

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    Introduction—We aimed to investigate if cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is more frequent in genetically determined than in sporadic early-onset forms of Alzheimer\u27s disease (AD) (early-onset AD [EOAD]). Methods—Neuroimaging features of CAA, APOE, and cerebrospinal fluid-Aβ40 levels were studied in subjects with Down syndrome (DS, n = 117), autosomal-dominant AD (ADAD, n = 29), sporadic EOAD (n = 42), and healthy controls (n = 68). Results—CAA was present in 31%, 38%, and 12% of cognitively impaired DS, symptomatic ADAD, and sporadic EOAD subjects and in 13% and 4% of cognitively unimpaired DS individuals and healthy controls, respectively. APOE-ε4 genotype was borderline significantly associated with CAA in sporadic EOAD (p = .06) but not with DS or ADAD. There were no differences in Aβ040 levels between groups or between subjects with and without CAA. Discussion—CAA is more frequently found in genetically determined AD than in sporadic EOAD. Cerebrospinal fluid-Aβ40 levels are not a useful biomarker for CAA in AD

    Wastewater based epidemiology beyond SARS-CoV-2: Spanish wastewater reveals the current spread of Monkeypox virus

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    Besides nasopharyngeal swabs, monkeypox virus (MPXV) DNA has been detected in a variety of samples such as saliva, semen, urine and fecal samples. Using the environmental surveillance network previously developed in Spain for the routine wastewater surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 (VATar COVID-19), we have analyzed the presence of MPXV DNA in wastewater from different areas of Spain. Samples (n=312) from 24 different wastewater treatment plants were obtained between May 9 (week 22_19) and August 4 (week 22_31), 2022. Following concentration of viral particles by flocculation, a qPCR procedure allowed us to detect MPXV DNA in 63 wastewater samples collected from May 16 to August 4, 2022, with values ranging between 2.2 per 103 to 8.7 per 104 genome copies (gc)/L. This study shows that MPXV DNA can be reproducibly detected by qPCR in longitudinal samples collected from different Spanish wastewater treatment plants. According to data from the National Epidemiological Surveillance Network (RENAVE) in Spain a total of 6,119 cases have been confirmed as of August 19, 2022. However, and based on the wastewater data, the reported clinical cases seem to be underestimated and asymptomatic infections may be more frequent than expected.his research was supported by the European Commission NextGenerationEU fund, through CSIC's Global Health Platform (PTI Salud Global) and samples were obtained from the COVID-19 wastewater surveillance project (VATar COVID-19) funded by the Spanish Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge and the Spanish Ministry of Health. IGG is recipient of a predoctoral contract from the Generalitat Valenciana (ACIF/2021/181) and AP-C was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship (APOSTD/2021/292). PT is holding a Ramon y Cajal contract from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion and AC is recipient of a predoctoral contract FI-SDUR from the Generalitat de CatalunyaN

    Spanish wastewater reveals the current spread of Monkeypox virus

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    Besides nasopharyngeal swabs, monkeypox virus (MPXV) DNA has been detected in a variety of samples such as saliva, semen, urine and fecal samples. Using the environmental surveillance network previously developed in Spain for the routine wastewater surveillance of SARS-CoV-2 (VATar COVID-19), we have analyzed the presence of MPXV DNA in wastewater from different areas of Spain. Samples (n = 312) from 24 different wastewater treatment plants were obtained between May 9 (week 19 of 2022) and August 4 (week 31 of 2022). Following concentration of viral particles by a validated aluminum adsorption-precipitation method, a qPCR procedure allowed us to detect MPXV DNA in 56 wastewater samples collected from May 16 to August 4, 2022, with values ranging between 2.2 × 103 to 8.7 × 104 genome copies (gc)/L. This study shows that MPXV DNA can be reproducibly detected by qPCR in longitudinal samples collected from different Spanish wastewater treatment plants. According to data from the National Epidemiological Surveillance Network (RENAVE) in Spain a total of 6,119 cases have been confirmed as of August 19, 2022. However, and based on the wastewater data, the reported clinical cases seem to be underestimated and asymptomatic infections may be more frequent than expected.This research was supported by the European Commission NextGenerationEU fund, through CSIC's Global Health Platform (PTI Salud Global), project CEX2021-001189-S MCIN/AEI / 10.13039/501100011033 and Fundación Séneca (Region of Murcia). Samples were obtained from the COVID-19 wastewater surveillance project (VATar COVID-19) funded by the Spanish Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge and the Spanish Ministry of Health.With funding from the Spanish government through the ‘Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence’ accreditation (CEX2021-001189-S).Peer reviewe
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