981 research outputs found
Tuberculosis hepática pseudotumoral: a propósito de un caso
La tuberculosis hepática focal aislada, en ausencia de afectación activa pulmonar, es una forma rara de presentación de dicha enfermedad. Presentamos un caso de forma pseudotumoral de tuberculosis hepática en un niño de 3años 9 meses de edad, destacando la dificultad diagnóstica de esta entidad, por su semejanza radiológica con el cáncer de hígado primario y metastásico. La punción biopsia dirigida por ecografía o TAC constituye un buen método diagnóstico, alternativo. El examen histológico revela una lesión granulomatosa tuberculoide, con buena respuesta al tratamiento tuberculostático
Culture: Not just Burns – what about the poet Robert Fergusson?
No abstract available
La enseñanza de las ciencias mediante proyectos didácticos en la Universidad de los Andes - Venezuela
Los paradigmas de la pedagogía científica incorporan estrategias activas, pero, en el trabajo de aula sigue prevaleciendo el modelo pasivo. En contraposición a esto, el presente ensayo describe la experiencia que hemos acumulado desde 1999 con el desarrollo de una metodología denominada Proyectos Didácticos para la Enseñanza de la Ciencia que tiene por finalidad principal aportar diferentes propuestas metodológicas para abordar el trabajo de aula y fuera de ésta, para el caso especial de la enseñanza de las ciencias. Esta estrategia implica la participación activa del estudiante diseñando propuestas prácticas o juegos para el desarrollo de diversos contenidos típicos de la ciencia en el contexto de la formación inicial de docentes en la Universidad de Los Andes
Uses of Native Plant Species of a Communal Rangeland within ‘Sierra de Huautla’ Protected Area, México
Sustainability of communal rangelands has become a major concern at national and international levels because land use conflicts and associated social conflicts allows for over-utilization of selected species making a high pressure on them and given away their places to species with no use at all becoming lands degraded and unproductive. The objective of the study was to determine floristic composition and native plant uses by local peasants. The range surface is of 4262 ha, belongs to the communal land ‘El Limon’, in Tepalcingo, Morelos, Mexico, and it is within the Natural Reserve Area “Sierra de Huautla”. Native vegetation is mainly of deciduous shrubs, high temperatures year round and a rainy season of 4 months. Local peasants were surveyed on uses of the collected and previously identified plants. Number of species was 456, distributed in 266 and 76 botanical genders and families, respectively. Of the species identified 66, 22 and 12% had one, two or more than two uses according to local peasants. Among uses: 59% of the species were used as forage, 8% eatable, 7% firewood or ornamental, 6% medical herb, lumber or other use 4 %, construction material 3 % and for resin or handcraft 1%. The range showed a very high plant biodiversity, this feature allows for a high resiliency toward human activities
Working memory of emotional stimuli: electrophysiological characterization
Memorizing emotional stimuli in a preferential way seems to be one of the adaptive strategies brought on
by evolution for supporting survival. However, there is a lack of electrophysiological evidence on this bias
in working memory. The present study analyzed the influence of emotion on the updating component of
working memory. Behavioral and electrophysiological indices were measured from a 3-back task using
negative, neutral, and positive faces. Electrophysiological data evidenced an emotional influence on the
working memory sensitive P3 component, which presented larger amplitudes for negative matching
faces compared to neutral ones. This effect originated in the superior parietal cortex, previously reported
to be involved in N-back tasks. Additionally, P3 results showed a correlation with reaction times, where
higher amplitudes were associated with faster responses for negative matching faces. These findings
indicate that electrophysiological measures seem to be very suitable indices of the emotional influence
on working memory
Reappraisal of the outcome of healthcare-associated and community-acquired bacteramia: a prospective cohort study
Background: Healthcare-associated (HCA) bloodstream infections (BSI) have been associated with worse outcomes,
in terms of higher frequencies of antibiotic-resistant microorganisms and inappropriate therapy than strict
community-acquired (CA) BSI. Recent changes in the epidemiology of community (CO)-BSI and treatment protocols
may have modified this association. The objective of this study was to analyse the etiology, therapy and outcomes
for CA and HCA BSI in our area.
Methods: A prospective multicentre cohort including all CO-BSI episodes in adult patients was performed over a
3-month period in 2006–2007. Outcome variables were mortality and inappropriate empirical therapy. Adjusted
analyses were performed by logistic regression.
Results: 341 episodes of CO-BSI were included in the study. Acquisition was HCA in 56% (192 episodes) of them.
Inappropriate empirical therapy was administered in 16.7% (57 episodes). All-cause mortality was 16.4% (56 patients)
at day 14 and 20% (71 patients) at day 30. After controlling for age, Charlson index, source, etiology, presentation
with severe sepsis or shock and inappropriate empirical treatment, acquisition type was not associated with an
increase in 14-day or 30-day mortality. Only an stratified analysis of 14th-day mortality for Gram negatives BSI
showed a statically significant difference (7% in CA vs 17% in HCA, p = 0,05). Factors independently related to
inadequate empirical treatment in the community were: catheter source, cancer, and previous antimicrobial use; no
association with HCA acquisition was found.
Conclusion: HCA acquisition in our cohort was not a predictor for either inappropriate empirical treatment or
increased mortality. These results might reflect recent changes in therapeutic protocols and epidemiological
changes in community pathogens. Further studies should focus on recognising CA BSI due to resistant organisms
facilitating an early and adequate treatment in patients with CA resistant BSI
Non-Specific Antibodies Induce Lysosomal Activation in Atlantic Salmon Macrophages Infected by Piscirickettsia salmonis
Piscirickettsia salmonis, an aggressive intracellular pathogen, is the etiological agent of salmonid rickettsial septicemia (SRS). This is a chronic multisystemic disease that generates high mortalities and large losses in Chilean salmon farming, threatening the sustainability of the salmon industry. Previous reports suggest that P. salmonis is able to survive and replicate in salmonid macrophages, inducing an anti-inflammatory environment and a limited lysosomal response that may be associated with host immune evasion mechanisms favoring bacterial survival. Current control and prophylaxis strategies against P. salmonis (based on the use of antibiotics and vaccines) have not had the expected success against infection. This makes it urgent to unravel the host-pathogen interaction to develop more effective therapeutic strategies. In this study, we evaluated the effect of treatment with IgM-beads on lysosomal activity in Atlantic salmon macrophage-enriched cell cultures infected with P. salmonis by analyzing the lysosomal pH and proteolytic ability through confocal microscopy. The impact of IgM-beads on cytotoxicity induced by P. salmonis in infected cells was evaluated by quantification of cell lysis through release of Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) activity. Bacterial load was determined by quantification of 16S rDNA copy number by qPCR, and counting of colony-forming units (CFU) present in the extracellular and intracellular environment. Our results suggest that stimulation with antibodies promotes lysosomal activity by lowering lysosomal pH and increasing the proteolytic activity within this organelle. Additionally, incubation with IgM-beads elicits a decrease in bacterial-induced cytotoxicity in infected Atlantic salmon macrophages and reduces the bacterial load. Overall, our results suggest that stimulation of cells infected by P. salmonis with IgM-beads reverses the modulation of the lysosomal activity induced by bacterial infection, promoting macrophage survival and bacterial elimination. This work represents a new important evidence to understand the bacterial evasion mechanisms established by P. salmonis and contribute to the development of new effective therapeutic strategies against SRS
Oncogenic Role of Secreted Engrailed Homeobox 2 (EN2) in Prostate Cancer
Engrailed variant-2 (EN2) has been suggested as a potential diagnostic biomarker; however, its presence and functional role in prostate cancer (PCa) cells is still controversial or unknown. Here, we analyzed 1) the expression/secretion profile of EN2 in five independent samples cohorts from PCa patients and controls (prostate tissues and/or urine) to determine its utility as a PCa biomarker; and 2) the functional role of EN2 in normal (RWPE1) and tumor (LNCaP/22Rv1/PC3) prostate cells to explore its potential value as therapeutic target. EN2 was overexpressed in our two cohorts of PCa tissues compared to control and in tumor cell lines compared with normal-like prostate cells. This profile was corroborated in silico in three independent data sets [The Cancer Genome Atlas(TCGA)/Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC)/Grasso]. Consistently, urine EN2 levels were elevated and enabled discrimination between PCa and control patients. EN2 treatment increased cell proliferation in LNCaP/22Rv1/PC3 cells, migration in RWPE1/PC3 cells, and PSA secretion in LNCaP cells. These effects were associated, at least in the androgen-sensitive LNCaP cells, with increased AKT and androgen-receptor phosphorylation levels and with modulation of key cancer-associated genes. Consistently, EN2 treatment also regulated androgen-receptor activity (full-length and splicing variants) in androgen-sensitive 22Rv1 cells. Altogether, this study demonstrates the potential utility of EN2 as a non-invasive diagnostic biomarker for PCa and provides novel and valuable information to further investigate its putative utility to develop new therapeutic tools in PCa
Two serological approaches for detection of antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 in different scenarios: a screening tool and a point-of-care test
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has infected more than 8 million people worldwide, becoming a pandemic. Detecting antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 is of utmost importance and a good indicator of exposure and circulation of the virus within the general population. Two serological tools based on a double recognition assay [enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (DR-ELISA) and lateral flow assay (DR-LFA)] to detect total antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 have been developed based on the recombinant nucleocapsid protein. A total of 1065 serum samples, including positive for COVID-19 and negative samples from healthy donors or infected with other respiratory pathogens, were analyzed. The results showed values of sensitivity between 91.2% and 100%, and specificity of 100% and 98.2% for DR-LFA and DR-ELISA, respectively. No cross-reactivity against seasonal coronavirus (HCoV-NL63, HCoV-229E, HCoV-HKU1, HCoV-OC43) was found. These results demonstrate the importance of serology as a complementary tool to polymerase chain reaction for follow-up of recovered patients and identification of asymptomatic individuals
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