515 research outputs found
Parasite specific energy in human filariasis; insights after analysis of parasite antigen-driven lymphokine production
The antigen-specific immune unresponsiveness seen in bancroftian
filariasis was studied by examining lymphokine production
in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) or PBMC subpopulations
from 10 patients with asymptomatic microfilaremia,
13 patients with elephantiasis and 6 normal North Americans.
In each group of patients, the kinetics of the lymphokine response
and the response to mitogens and nonparasite antigens
did not differ significantly. In marked contrast, when antigeninduced
lymphokine production was examined, most patients with
microfilaremia were unable to produce either interleukin 2 (IL-
2) or y-interferon (i.e., were nonresponders), and the few who
could (hyporesponders, generally with quite low microfilaremia
levels) did so at levels significantly less than those of patients
with elephantiasis, all of whom showed strong responses to parasite
antigen. Removal of neither adherent cells or T8+ cells
affected the parasite-specific anergy seen in those with microfilaremia,
suggesting a state of T cell tolerance to the parasite in
patients with this most common clinical manifestation of bancroftian
filariasis
Intention to Change Dietary Habits, and Weight Loss Among Norwegian-Pakistani Women Participating in a Culturally Adapted Intervention
The aim was to explore the relationships between degree of participation in a culturally adapted lifestyle intervention and stages of change for healthy eating and weight loss among Pakistani immigrant women in Norway. The intervention lasted 7 months and included 198 women, randomized into control and intervention groups. The odds of losing weight from baseline to follow-up, and being in action stages of change (compared to pre-action stages) with regard to intake of amount and type of fat, sugar and white flour at follow-up, increased significantly with number of group sessions attended. Those in action stage of reducing intake of fat and increasing intake of vegetables, as well as of reducing weight, were significantly more likely than others to have experienced weight loss at follow-up. Participation in the culturally adapted intervention was related to increase in intentions to change dietary behaviours and to weight loss
Acute tropical pulmonary eosinophilia: characterization of the lower respiratory tract inflammation and its response to therapy
Although acute tropical pulmonary eosinophilia (TPE) is well
recognized as a manifestation of filarial infection, the processes
that mediate the abnormalities of the lung in TPE are unknown.
To evaluate the hypothesis that the derangements of the lower
respiratory tract in this disorder are mediated by inflammatory
cells in the local milieu we utilized bronchoalveolar lavage to
evaluate affected individuals before and after therapy. Inflaminatory
cells recovered from the lower respiratory tract of individuals
with acute, untreated TPE (a = 8) revealed a striking
eosinophilic alveolitis, with marked elevations in both the proportion
of eosinophils (TPE 54±5%; normal 2±5%; P < 0.001)
and the concentration of eosinophils in the recovered epithelial
lining fluid (ELF) (TPE 63±20 X 103/Al; normal 03±0.1
X 103/jl; P < 0.01). Importantly, when individuals (a = 5) with
acute TPE were treated with diethylcarbamazine (DEC), there
was a marked decrease of the lung eosinophils and concomitant
increase in lung function. These observations are consistent with
the concept that at least some of the abnormalities found in the
lung in acute TPE are mediated by an eosinophil-dominated inflammatory
process in the lower respiratory tract
A controlled trial of ivermectin and diethylcarbamazine in lymphatic filariasis
Ivermectin is a new antifilarial drug that can be given in a single oral dose. To compare the efficacy and side effects of ivermectin with those of diethylcarbamazine, the standard antifilarial treatment, we conducted a randomized, double-blind trial in 40 south Indian men with lymphatic filariasis caused by Wuchereria bancrofti. Patients were randomly assigned to one of three treatments: a single low dose of ivermectin (mean [+ SE], 21.3+0.7 g per kilogram of body weight; n = 13) followed by placebo for 12 days; a single high dose of ivermectin (mean, 126.2+3.7 g per kilogram; n = 13) followed by placebo for 12 days; or diethylcarbamazine for 13 days (6 mg per kilogram per day for 12 days preceded by 3 mg per kilogram for 1 day; n = 14). Eleven patients were initially assigned to receive placebo and after five days were re-assigned to one of the three treatment groups.
At day 12 there was complete clearance of microfilariae from the blood in all 26 men who took ivermectin and in 11 of the 14 men who took diethylcarbamazine. At six months the numbers of detectable microfilariae (as a percentage of the pretreatment values) were 18.3 percent after low-dose ivermectin and 19.5 percent after high-dose ivermectin, as compared with 6.0 percent after diethylcarbamazine (P<0.05). The side effects were confined to the first five days and were similar in the three treatment groups.
We conclude that in lymphatic filariasis, the clinical response to a single dose of ivermectin compares favourably with that after the standard 12-day course of diethylcarbamazine. Given the practical advantages of single-dose administration, ivermectin should become a useful medication for the control of bancroftian filariasis
Effect of virtual reality training on laparoscopic surgery: randomised controlled trial
Objective To assess the effect of virtual reality training on an actual
laparoscopic operation
Applications of Canonical Transformations
Canonical transformations are defined and discussed along with the
exponential, the coherent and the ultracoherent vectors. It is shown that the
single-mode and the -mode squeezing operators are elements of the group of
canonical transformations. An application of canonical transformations is made,
in the context of open quantum systems, by studying the effect of squeezing of
the bath on the decoherence properties of the system. Two cases are analyzed.
In the first case the bath consists of a massless bosonic field with the bath
reference states being the squeezed vacuum states and squeezed thermal states
while in the second case a system consisting of a harmonic oscillator
interacting with a bath of harmonic oscillators is analyzed with the bath being
initially in a squeezed thermal state.Comment: 14 page
Relationship between spermatozoa motility parameters, sperm/egg ratio, and fertilization and hatching rates in pufferfish (Takifugu niphobles)
[EN] The use of high quality gametes from both males and females during in vitro fertilization (IVF) trials is an essential step in order to achieve high fertilization and hatching rates. Although aquaculture hatcheries have focused more on egg rather than spermatozoa quality, some studies have demonstrated that sperm quantity and quality have a great influence both on fertilization/hatching success and the subsequent development of the embryo and larvae.
In this study we have demonstrated that sperm/egg ratio and sperm quality are factors strongly related to each other in the pufferfish (Takifugu niphobles). Our results suggest that both factors should be taken into account as unique interrelated elements, making possible to obtain high fertilization rates using a successful combination of small amount of high quality sperm or high amount of low quality sperm.
In addition, coefficients of correlation and determination among all the sperm motion parameters provided by a CASA system and fertilization/hatching rates were estimated for the first time in a marine species. Positive significant correlations were found in some parameters such as total and progressive motility (0.68 and 0.7 respectively). However, curvilinear velocity (VCL), straight line velocity (VSL) and average velocity (VAP) showed the highest coefficients of correlation (0.82, 0.8, and 0.81, respectively). In this respect, spermatozoa velocity appears to be a key factor in the fertilization process, especially when the number of spermatozoa per egg is limited in the aqueous environment. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO; AGL2010-16009). Victor Gallego has a predoctoral grant (MINECO; BES-2009-020310) and has been granted a fellowship (EEBB-I-12-05858) of the MINECO's Spanish Personnel Research Training Programme to carry out this research in the Misaki Marine Biological Station (Miura, Japan). We would like to thank to Dr. Kurokawa for the help and knowledge supplied during this study.Gallego Albiach, V.; Pérez Igualada, LM.; Asturiano Nemesio, JF.; Yoshida, M. (2013). Relationship between spermatozoa motility parameters, sperm/egg ratio, and fertilization and hatching rates in pufferfish (Takifugu niphobles). Aquaculture. 416:238-243. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2013.08.035S23824341
Centralised and Distributed Optimization for Aggregated Flexibility Services Provision
The recent deployment of distributed battery units in prosumer premises offer
new opportunities for providing aggregated flexibility services to both
distribution system operators and balance responsible parties. The optimization
problem presented in this paper is formulated with an objective of cost
minimization which includes energy and battery degradation cost to provide
flexibility services. A decomposed solution approach with the alternating
direction method of multipliers (ADMM) is used instead of commonly adopted
centralised optimization to reduce the computational burden and time, and then
reduce scalability limitations. In this work we apply a modified version of
ADMM that includes two new features with respect to the original algorithm:
first, the primal variables are updated concurrently, which reduces
significantly the computational cost when we have a large number of involved
prosumers; second, it includes a regularization term named Proximal Jacobian
(PJ) that ensures the stability of the solution. A case study is presented for
optimal battery operation of 100 prosumer sites with real-life data. The
proposed method finds a solution which is equivalent to the centralised
optimization problem and is computed between 5 and 12 times faster. Thus,
aggregators or large-scale energy communities can use this scalable algorithm
to provide flexibility services.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
A Community-Based Study of Factors Associated with Continuing Transmission of Lymphatic Filariasis in Leogane, Haiti
Seven rounds of mass drug administration (MDA) have been administered in Leogane, Haiti, an area hyperendemic for lymphatic filariasis (LF). Sentinel site surveys showed that the prevalence of microfilaremia was reduced to <1% from levels as high as 15.5%, suggesting that transmission had been reduced. A separate 30-cluster survey of 2- to 4-year-old children was conducted to determine if MDA interrupted transmission. Antigen and antifilarial antibody prevalence were 14.3% and 19.7%, respectively. Follow-up surveys were done in 6 villages, including those selected for the cluster survey, to assess risk factors related to continued LF transmission and to pinpoint hotspots of transmission. One hundred houses were mapped in each village using GPS-enabled PDAs, and then 30 houses and 10 alternates were chosen for testing. All individuals in selected houses were asked to participate in a short survey about participation in MDA, history of residence in Leogane and general knowledge of LF. Survey teams returned to the houses at night to collect blood for antigen testing, microfilaremia and Bm14 antibody testing and collected mosquitoes from these communities in parallel. Antigen prevalence was highly variable among the 6 villages, with the highest being 38.2% (Dampus) and the lowest being 2.9% (Corail Lemaire); overall antigen prevalence was 18.5%. Initial cluster surveys of 2- to 4-year-old children were not related to community antigen prevalence. Nearest neighbor analysis found evidence of clustering of infection suggesting that LF infection was focal in distribution. Antigen prevalence among individuals who were systematically noncompliant with the MDAs, i.e. they had never participated, was significantly higher than among compliant individuals (p<0.05). A logistic regression model found that of the factors examined for association with infection, only noncompliance was significantly associated with infection. Thus, continuing transmission of LF seems to be linked to rates of systematic noncompliance
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