183 research outputs found
Gender in agricultural mechanization: Key guiding questions
This tool describes case studies of gender implications in mechanization in RTB crops, illustrating both positive and negative outcomes. GENNOVATE research has shown that the beneficiaries of mechanization tend to be the wealthier rather than the poorer farmers and more often men than women. However, results also reveal that women have strong interest in mechanization as a way to improve their own circumstances
Replant problems in South Tyrol: role of fungal pathogens and microbial populations in conventional and organic apple orchards
South Tyrol, the main Italian apple growing area, is characterised by an highly intensive soil cultivation. Previous investigations shows the existence of replant disorders although it has not been evaluated which are the main causes. A survey has been carried out in this area with two main aims I) to evaluate the role of soil borne pathogens in apple replant disease and II) to evaluate the effect of soil management toward soil borne pathogens causing replant diseases. The experimental sites were chosen in order to obtain three couples of contiguous conventional and organic apple orchards.
Soil sickness test with young apple plants gave a significant growth reduction in all soil samples if compared to a peat control. Among all root colonising fungi (Fusarium oxysporum, F. solani, Aphanomyces sp., Cy/incrocarpon sp., Rhizoctonia sp. and Pythium sp.) some Rhizoctonia solani strains and all Pythium spp. were the most pathogenic. In all cases organic management seems to reduce the soil sickness severity caused by root rot fungal pathogens
La tecnología no es neutral: factores que influyen en la potencial adopción de tecnología agrícola por hombres y mujeres.
Technology is not gender neutral: factors that influence the potential adoption of agricultural technology by men and women.
Pasta consumption and connected dietary habits: Associations with glucose control, adiposity measures, and cardiovascular risk factors in people with type 2 diabetes—TOSCA.IT study
Background: Pasta is a refined carbohydrate with a low glycemic index. Whether pasta shares the metabolic advantages of other low glycemic index foods has not really been investigated. The aim of this study is to document, in people with type-2 diabetes, the consumption of pasta, the connected dietary habits, and the association with glucose control, measures of adiposity, and major cardiovascular risk factors. Methods: We studied 2562 participants. The dietary habits were assessed with the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) questionnaire. Sex-specific quartiles of pasta consumption were created in order to explore the study aims. Results: A higher pasta consumption was associated with a lower intake of proteins, total and saturated fat, cholesterol, added sugar, and fiber. Glucose control, body mass index, prevalence of obesity, and visceral obesity were not significantly different across the quartiles of pasta intake. No relation was found with LDL cholesterol and triglycerides, but there was an inverse relation with HDL-cholesterol. Systolic blood pressure increased with pasta consumption; but this relation was not confirmed after correction for confounders. Conclusions: In people with type-2 diabetes, the consumption of pasta, within the limits recommended for total carbohydrates intake, is not associated with worsening of glucose control, measures of adiposity, and major cardiovascular risk factors
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Gender in Agricultural Mechanization: Key Guiding Questions
A resource for scientists and research teams on how to integrate gender into agricultural mechanization interventions. The resource includes key questions for project teams to consider for their interventions along with illustrative case studies
"Dangerous to Themselves and Others, and of Public Scandal": The Internment Procedure
Abstract
Through G.'s admission and medical files, this chapter illustrates internment laws and procedures, highlighting how Fascism pushed pre-existing legislation to its extreme consequences. In reconstructing internment's bureaucratic and legal practices, the chapter emphasises how the law could be bent to accommodate the regime's need to isolate those perceived as "different" and how psychiatry acquiesced in offering to "correct" individuals considered "non-conforming", "amoral", "immoral", "deviant", rebellious and, among them, homosexuals, in exchange for an increase of power and status
Hormone replacement therapy enhances IGF-1 signaling in skeletal muscle by diminishing miR-182 and miR-223 expressions: a study on postmenopausal monozygotic twin pairs
MiRNAs are fine-tuning modifiers of skeletal muscle regulation, but knowledge of
their hormonal control is lacking. We used a co-twin case-control study design,
that is, monozygotic postmenopausal twin pairs discordant for estrogen-based
hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to explore estrogen-dependent skeletal muscle
regulation via miRNAs. MiRNA profiles were determined from vastus lateralis
muscle of nine healthy 54-62-years-old monozygotic female twin pairs discordant
for HRT (median 7 years). MCF-7 cells, human myoblast cultures and mouse muscle
experiments were used to confirm estrogen's causal role on the expression of
specific miRNAs, their target mRNAs and proteins and finally the activation of
related signaling pathway. Of the 230 miRNAs expressed at detectable levels in
muscle samples, qPCR confirmed significantly lower miR-182, miR-223 and
miR-142-3p expressions in HRT using than in their nonusing co-twins.
Insulin/IGF-1 signaling emerged one common pathway targeted by these miRNAs.
IGF-1R and FOXO3A mRNA and protein were more abundantly expressed in muscle
samples of HRT users than nonusers. In vitro assays confirmed effective targeting
of miR-182 and miR-223 on IGF-1R and FOXO3A mRNA as well as a dose-dependent
miR-182 and miR-223 down-regulations concomitantly with up-regulation of FOXO3A
and IGF-1R expression. Novel finding is the postmenopausal HRT-reduced miRs-182,
miR-223 and miR-142-3p expression in female skeletal muscle. The observed
miRNA-mediated enhancement of the target genes' IGF-1R and FOXO3A expression as
well as the activation of insulin/IGF-1 pathway signaling via phosphorylation of
AKT and mTOR is an important mechanism for positive estrogen impact on skeletal
muscle of postmenopausal women
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