11 research outputs found

    Estudio de homicidas en masa con datos empíricos

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    Introducción: on el fin de conocer más sobre homicidas en masa, la presente investigación buscará detectar las características psicosociales relevantes de los homicidas en masa y examinar las explicaciones que dan los investigadores en relación a la causa de la comisión del delito. Método: se trata de un estudio teórico de revisión que tiene como objetivo conocer las investigaciones en relación a los asesinos en masa existentes desde 2005 hasta la actualidad que aportan datos empíricos sobre las variables psicológicas investigadas en estos casos. La búsqueda de información se realizó en Septiembre (recolección de artículos teóricos) y Diciembre (artículos de revisión y casuística) de 2015. Se exploraron bases de datos electrónicas tales como EBSCO, Science Direct, Scielo, SCOPUS y Scholar Google. Resultados: en relación al primer objetivo, analizando las variables psicosociales, se obtuvo en su mayoría hombres, blancos, con edades que rondan los 30 en adultos y entre 9 y 11 años para adolescentes. No poseen pareja estable ni empleo al momento del hecho y algunos son inmigrantes en el lugar donde cometen el homicidio. Las características de personalidad abarcan desde síntomas depresivos, ansiedad, impulsividad, conductas violentas, dificultad para adaptarse al medio social, una visión del mundo pesimista y menosprecio sobre su imagen y su propia capacidad. Desde la psicopatología poseen características principalmente de tres trastornos de la personalidad: paranoide en su mayoría, pero también límite y narcisista. Respondiendo al segundo objetivo las causas son variadas, multicausales en su mayoría y dependen del subtipo de homicida en masa. Van de la culpa que general el suicidio, la búsqueda de reminiscencia, la humillación, la venganza, hasta la violencia combinada con sentimientos de ser rechazado y desvalorizado. La humillación, victimización e intimidación, asociada más a los casos de mass shooting. O en los casos de familicidio, no pueden ver otra salida.Introduction: with the purpose of knowing more about mass murderers, this work will seek to detect the relevant psychosocial characteristics of mass murderers and to examine how investigators explain the causes that lead them to the perpetration of the crime. Method this theoretical study aims to analyze mass murderers’ investigations conducted since 2005, which provide empirical data on the psychological variables explored in these cases. Information was collected in September (theoretical articles) and in December (analysis articles and casuistry), 2015. Electronic databases such as EBSCO, Science Direct, Scielo, SCOPUS and Google Scholar were explored. Results: as for the first goal, the analysis of psychosocial variables showed that mass murderers are mainly white men whose ages vary from 30 years old if adults to 9 to 11 years old if adolescents. They generally have neither a steady relationship nor job when perpetrating the crime. Some are immigrants in the country where they commit the crime. As regards personality characteristics, they range from depression and anxiety to impulsiveness, violent behavior, difficult to adapt to the social world, pessimism, and extremely low self-esteem. From the standpoint of psychopathology, mass murderers are characterized by three types of personality disorders: Paranoid (mainly), borderline and narcissistic personality disorder. As for the second goal, the causes for carrying out the crime are various and most mass murderers are driven to it by multiple causes, depending on the subtype of murderer. Such causes vary from guilt, which may lead to suicide, search for reminiscence, humiliation, revenge, and violence combined with feelings of rejection and devaluation. Humiliation, victimization and intimidation are mainly associated with mass shooting. In the case of family mass murderers, they see the crime as their only way out and believe to be doing the best for their families.Fil: Ventura Cámus, Agostina Fernand

    Ricerca di HPV-DNA e tipizzazione virale nella diagnostica di prevenzione del carcinoma della cervice uterina

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    Papillomaviruses are relatively ubiquitous and have been described as causative agents for epithelial lesions in a wide variety of animals as well as in humans. Approximately 30 HPV types have been isolated from anogenital epithelium (cervix, vagina, vulva, rectum and penis). HPVs induce a variety of proliferative lesions, but only the “high-risk” types are associated with anogenital cancers. “Low-risk” viral types include HPV-6 and HPV-11; “high-risk” types include HPV-16, 18, 31 and 56. HPVs “high-risk” types are more strongly associated with high-grade lesions (HSIL) than they are with low-grade lesions (LSIL). The traditional process for cervical cancer screening programs (PAP test) is vulnerable to air drying artifacts and has limits to sensitivity, since as many as 90 percent of collectet cells can be discarted with collection device. The present study was undertaken to assess the screening performance of HPV-DNA typing in a sample of 142 women drawn from a routine screening for the prevention of cervical cancer. The results indicate that HPV-DNA screening and typing, used together with PAP test, can improve the detection of patients with cervical disease and can serve as a quality assurance indicator in cervical cancer screening programs

    Efficacy of a new technique - INtubate-RECruit-SURfactant-Extubate - "IN-REC-SUR-E" - in preterm neonates with respiratory distress syndrome: Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

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    Background: Although beneficial in clinical practice, the INtubate-SURfactant-Extubate (IN-SUR-E) method is not successful in all preterm neonates with respiratory distress syndrome, with a reported failure rate ranging from 19 to 69 %. One of the possible mechanisms responsible for the unsuccessful IN-SUR-E method, requiring subsequent re-intubation and mechanical ventilation, is the inability of the preterm lung to achieve and maintain an "optimal" functional residual capacity. The importance of lung recruitment before surfactant administration has been demonstrated in animal studies showing that recruitment leads to a more homogeneous surfactant distribution within the lungs. Therefore, the aim of this study is to compare the application of a recruitment maneuver using the high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) modality just before the surfactant administration followed by rapid extubation (INtubate-RECruit-SURfactant-Extubate: IN-REC-SUR-E) with IN-SUR-E alone in spontaneously breathing preterm infants requiring nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) as initial respiratory support and reaching pre-defined CPAP failure criteria. Methods/design: In this study, 206 spontaneously breathing infants born at 24+0-27+6 weeks' gestation and failing nCPAP during the first 24 h of life, will be randomized to receive an HFOV recruitment maneuver (IN-REC-SUR-E) or no recruitment maneuver (IN-SUR-E) just prior to surfactant administration followed by prompt extubation. The primary outcome is the need for mechanical ventilation within the first 3 days of life. Infants in both groups will be considered to have reached the primary outcome when they are not extubated within 30 min after surfactant administration or when they meet the nCPAP failure criteria after extubation. Discussion: From all available data no definitive evidence exists about a positive effect of recruitment before surfactant instillation, but a rationale exists for testing the following hypothesis: a lung recruitment maneuver performed with a step-by-step Continuous Distending Pressure increase during High-Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation (and not with a sustained inflation) could have a positive effects in terms of improved surfactant distribution and consequent its major efficacy in preterm newborns with respiratory distress syndrome. This represents our challenge. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02482766. Registered on 1 June 2015

    Valutazione del ruolo dell’HPV-DNA test nei programmi di prevenzione del cancro cervicale

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    Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection is the main cause of cervical cancer and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) worldwide. Consequently, it would be useful to evaluate HPV testing to screen for cervical cancer. Recently several molecular biological tests able to detect different HPV types and to divide into high and lowrisk group have been developed. In this study we examined HPV prevalence and genotype distribution in a group of 446 women and evaluated the role of HPV-DNA testing in cervical screening programs. HPV detection and genotyping were done using a polymerase chain reaction based assay (HPV Typing test). One hundred and fiftythree of those women had HPV infection (34.5% of the patients); 23 (15%) had low cancerrisk HPV DNA (LR); 116 (75.8%) had hight-risk HPV types (HR) and 14 (9%) from both groups. 130 women (85%) in this HPV-infected group had at least one high risk HPV type, and were therefore considered to be at high risk for cancer. PCR results were not completely comparable with cytological diagnosis. We conclude that a combination of HPV DNA and cytologic testing has almost 100% sensitivity and negative predictive value. The specificity of the combined test is slightly lower than the specificity of the Pap-test alone but this decrease could potentially be offset by a greater protection from neoplastic progression and cost savings available by extended screening intervals

    Discordances with HIV-1 RNA quantitative determinations by three commercial assays in Pointe Noire, Republic of Congo

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    Accurate HIV-1 RNA quantitation is required to support the scale up of antiretroviral therapy in African countries. Extreme HIV-1 genetic variability in Africa may affect the ability of commercially available assays to detect and quantify HIV-1 RNA accurately. The aim of this study was to compare three real-time PCR assays for quantitation of plasma HIV-1 RNA levels in patients from the Republic of Congo, an area with highly diversified HIV-1 subtypes and recombinants. The Abbott RealTime HIV-1, BioMérieux HIV-1 EasyQ test 1.2 and Cobas AmpliPrep/Cobas TaqMan HIV-1 1.0 were compared for quantitation of HIV-1 RNA in 37 HIV-1 seropositive pregnant women enrolled in the Kento-Mwana project for prevention of mother-to-child transmission in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo. The sample panel included a variety of HIV-1 subtypes with as many as 21 (56.8%) putative unique recombinant forms. Qualitative detection of HIV-1 RNA was concordant by all three assays in 33/37 (89.2%) samples. Of the remaining 4 (10.8%) samples, all were positive by Roche, three by Abbott and none by BioMérieux. Differences exceeding 1Log in positive samples were found in 4/31 (12.9%), 10/31 (32.3%) and 5/31 (16.1%) cases between Abbott and BioMérieux, Roche and BioMérieux, and Abbott and Roche, respectively. In this sample panel representative of highly polymorphic HIV-1 in Congo, the agreement among the three assays was moderate in terms of HIV-1 RNA detectability and rather inconsistent in terms of quantitation

    Systemic Sclerosis-Endothelial Cell Antiangiogenic Pentraxin 3 and Matrix Metalloprotease 12 Control Human Breast Cancer Tumor Vascularization and Development in Mice

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    We have previously shown that endothelial cell matrix metalloprotease 12 (MMP12) and pentraxin 3 (PTX3) overproduction is the main alteration accounting for reduced proneness to angiogenesis in systemic sclerosis (SSc). On this basis, we stably transfected MMP12 and PTX3 in two breast cancer cell lines expressing very low amounts of the target molecules when compared with normal breast epithelial cells, relying on the hypothesis that antiangiogenic molecules released by cancer cells could confer an SSc-like antiangiogenic pattern on target endothelial cells. In Matrigel Boyden chamber invasion and capillary morphogenesis studies, transfected clones reduced endothelial cell invasion and capillary tube formation, which were abolished by tumor cell populations expressing both molecules. The Matrigel sponge assay, performed in vivo in C57/BL6 mice by injecting aliquots of lyophilized culture medium of transfected clones, indicated a similar reduction in angiogenesis. Functional studies have shown that endothelial cells treated with a culture medium of MMP12-expressing clones underwent cleavage of urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor domain 1 which is indispensable to angiogenesis. We did not observe angiostatin production from plasminogen under the same experimental conditions. PTX3-overexpressing clones showed a powerful anti-fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2) activity in FGF2-dependent capillary morphogenesis. We have injected control and transfected clones into nude nu/nu (CD-1) BR mice to study the differential tumor growth pattern. We observed a reduction of tumor growth in transfected clones, which was basically complete when clones expressing both molecules were simultaneously injected. The extent of tumor necrosis suggested an antiangiogenesis-dependent inhibition of tumor development

    SARS-CoV-2 perinatal transmission and neonatal outcomes across four different waves of COVID-19 pandemic: A nationwide prospective cohort study from the Italian Society of Neonatology

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    Objectives: To describe how SARS-CoV-2 infection at the time of delivery affected maternal and neonatal outcomes across four major waves of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy. Methods: This is a large, prospective, nationwide cohort study collecting maternal and neonatal data in case of maternal peripartum SARS-CoV-2 infection between February 2020 and March 2022. Data were stratified across the four observed pandemic waves. Results: Among 5201 COVID-19-positive mothers, the risk of being symptomatic at delivery was significantly higher in the first and third waves (20.8-20.8%) than in the second and fourth (13.2-12.2%). Among their 5284 neonates, the risk of prematurity (gestational age <37 weeks) was significantly higher in the first and third waves (15.6-12.5%). The risk of intrauterine transmission was always very low, while the risk of postnatal transmission during rooming-in was higher and peaked at 4.5% during the fourth wave. A total of 80% of positive neonates were asymptomatic. Conclusion: The risk of adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes was significantly higher during the first and third waves, dominated by unsequenced variants and the Delta variant, respectively. Postnatal transmission accounted for most neonatal infections and was more frequent during the Omicron period. However, the paucity of symptoms in infected neonates should lead us not to separate the dyad

    Lung recruitment before surfactant administration in extremely preterm neonates with respiratory distress syndrome (IN-REC-SUR-E): a randomised, unblinded, controlled trial

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    Background: The importance of lung recruitment before surfactant administration has been shown in animal studies. Well designed trials in preterm infants are absent. We aimed to examine whether the application of a recruitment manoeuvre just before surfactant administration, followed by rapid extubation (intubate-recruit-surfactant-extubate [IN-REC-SUR-E]), decreased the need for mechanical ventilation during the first 72 h of life compared with no recruitment manoeuvre (ie, intubate-surfactant-extubate [IN-SUR-E]). Methods: We did a randomised, unblinded, controlled trial in 35 tertiary neonatal intensive care units in Italy. Spontaneously breathing extremely preterm neonates (24 + 0 to 27 + 6 weeks' gestation) reaching failure criteria for continuous positive airway pressure within the first 24 h of life were randomly assigned (1:1) with a minimisation algorithm to IN-REC-SUR-E or IN-SUR-E using an interactive web-based electronic system, stratified by clinical site and gestational age. The primary outcome was the need for mechanical ventilation in the first 72 h of life. Analyses were done in intention-to-treat and per-protocol populations, with a log-binomial regression model correcting for stratification factors to estimate adjusted relative risk (RR). This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02482766. Findings: Of 556 infants assessed for eligibility, 218 infants were recruited from Nov 12, 2015, to Sept 23, 2018, and included in the intention-to-treat analysis. The requirement for mechanical ventilation during the first 72 h of life was reduced in the IN-REC-SUR-E group (43 [40%] of 107) compared with the IN-SUR-E group (60 [54%] of 111; adjusted RR 0·75, 95% CI 0·57–0·98; p=0·037), with a number needed to treat of 7·2 (95% CI 3·7–135·0). The addition of the recruitment manoeuvre did not adversely affect the safety outcomes of in-hospital mortality (19 [19%] of 101 in the IN-REC-SUR-E group vs 37 [33%] of 111 in the IN-SUR-E group), pneumothorax (four [4%] of 101 vs seven [6%] of 111), or grade 3 or worse intraventricular haemorrhage (12 [12%] of 101 vs 17 [15%] of 111). Interpretation: A lung recruitment manoeuvre just before surfactant administration improved the efficacy of surfactant treatment in extremely preterm neonates compared with the standard IN-SUR-E technique, without increasing the risk of adverse neonatal outcomes. The reduced need for mechanical ventilation during the first 72 h of life might facilitate implementation of a non-invasive respiratory support strategy. Funding: None
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