283 research outputs found
Quality of life of pediatric and adult individuals with osteogenesis imperfecta: a meta-analysis
Background
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a group of rare inheritable disorders of connective tissue. The cardinal manifestations of OI are low bone mass and reduced bone mineral strength, leading to increased bone fragility and deformity that may lead to significant impairment in daily life. The phenotypic manifestations show a broad range of severity, ranging from mild or moderate to severe and lethal. The here presented meta-analysis aimed to analyze existing findings on quality of life (QoL) in children and adults with OI.
Methods
Nine databases were searched with predefined key words. The selection process was executed by two independent reviewers and was based on predetermined exclusion and inclusion criteria. The quality of each study was assessed using a risk of bias tool. Effect sizes were calculated as standardized mean differences. Between-study heterogeneity was calculated with the I statistic.
Results
Among the studies included two featured children and adolescents (Nâ=â189), and four adults (Nâ=â760). Children with OI had significantly lower QoL on the Pediatric quality of life inventory (PedsQL) with regards to the total score, emotional, school, and social functioning compared to controls and norms. The data was not sufficient to calculate differences regarding OI-subtypes. In the adult sample assessed with Short Form Health Survey Questionnaire, 12 (SF-12) and 36 items (SF-36), all OI types showed significantly lower QoL levels across all physical component subscales compared to norms. The same pattern was found for the mental component subscales namely vitality, social functioning, and emotional role functioning. The mental health subscale was significantly lower for OI type I, but not for type III and IV. All of the included studies exhibited a low risk of bias.
Conclusions
QoL was significantly lower in children and adults with OI compared to norms and controls. Studies in adults comparing OI subtypes showed that the clinical severity of the phenotype is not related to worse mental health QoL. Future research is needed to examine QoL in children and adolescents in more sophisticated ways and to better understand the association between clinical severity of an OI-phenotype/severity and mental health in adults
Long-term growth driven by a sequence of general purpose technologies
We present a Schumpterian model of endogenous growth with General Purpose Technologies (GPTs) that captures two important historical stylized facts: First, from the beginning of mankind until today GPTs are arriving at an increasing frequency and, second, all GPTs heavily depended on previous technologies. In our model, the arrival of GPTs is endogenous and arises stochastically depending on the currently available applied knowledge stock. This way of endogenizing the arrival of new GPTs allows for a model which is more in tune with the historical reality than the existing GPT models
Male depression risk, psychological distress, and psychotherapy uptake: Validation of the German version of the male depression risk scale
Background
Screening for depressive disorders in men may be complicated by traditional male role norms. The Male Depression Risk Scale (MDRS) was developed to aid screening for depression in men adhering to traditional male role norms and to facilitate identification of depression in men in general and to promote treatment uptake.
Aims
Validation of a German version of the MDRS and examination of its potential to predict clinical characteristics.
Methods
In an anonymous online survey comprising of 1605 participants (male: N = 671; 42%), information was obtained on psychological distress, diagnosed psychological disorders, psychotherapy and psychopharmacological treatment. Additional measures included a German version of the MDRS as further mental-health-related constructs.
Results
The German version of the MDRS showed good validity and reliability. The previously identified 6-factor structure could be replicated for the German version. Compared to the Patient Health Questionnaire 9, the MDRS showed similar detection performance in identifying men who self-reported psychological distress, psychological disorders, depression, psychotherapy usage, or usage of psychopharmacological therapy.
Conclusions
The German version of the MDRS shows good psychometric validity and represents a valid screening instrument for the identification of psychological distress specifically in men
Cross-Kingdom RNAi of Pathogen Effectors Leads to Quantitative Adult Plant Resistance in Wheat
Cross-kingdom RNA interference (RNAi) is a biological process allowing plants to transfer small regulatory RNAs to invading pathogens to trigger the silencing of target virulence genes. Transient assays in cereal powdery mildews suggest that silencing of one or two effectors could lead to near loss of virulence, but evidence from stable RNAi lines is lacking. We established transient host-induced gene silencing (HIGS) in wheat, and demonstrate that targeting an essential housekeeping gene in the wheat powdery mildew pathogen (Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici) results in significant reduction of virulence at an early stage of infection. We generated stable transgenic RNAi wheat lines encoding a HIGS construct simultaneously silencing three B.g. tritici effectors including SvrPm3(a1/f1), a virulence factor involved in the suppression of the Pm3 powdery mildew resistance gene. We show that all targeted effectors are effectively downregulated by HIGS, resulting in reduced fungal virulence on adult wheat plants. Our findings demonstrate that stable HIGS of effector genes can lead to quantitative gain of resistance without major pleiotropic effects in wheat
Crystal Structures and Electronic Properties of Haloform-Intercalated C60
Using density functional methods we calculated structural and electronic
properties of bulk chloroform and bromoform intercalated C60, C60 2CHX3
(X=Cl,Br). Both compounds are narrow band insulator materials with a gap
between valence and conduction bands larger than 1 eV. The calculated widths of
the valence and conduction bands are 0.4-0.6 eV and 0.3-0.4 eV, respectively.
The orbitals of the haloform molecules overlap with the orbitals of the
fullerene molecules and the p-type orbitals of halogen atoms significantly
contribute to the valence and conduction bands of C60 2CHX3. Charging with
electrons and holes turns the systems to metals. Contrary to expectation, 10 to
20 % of the charge is on the haloform molecules and is thus not completely
localized on the fullerene molecules. Calculations on different crystal
structures of C60 2CHCl3 and C60 2CHBr3 revealed that the density of states at
the Fermi energy are sensitive to the orientation of the haloform and C60
molecules. At a charging of three holes, which corresponds to the
superconducting phase of pure C60 and C60 2CHX3, the calculated density of
states (DOS) at the Fermi energy increases in the sequence DOS(C60) < DOS(C60
2CHCl3) < DOS(C60 2CHBr3).Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 4 table
Shaping the scientific future of environmental sciences in times of multiple crises: a summary of the 12th SETAC Young Environmental Scientists Meeting in Landau in der Pfalz 2023 -
SETAC has a longâstanding history of supporting students and early career scientists in the fields of ecotoxicolâ
ogy and environmental chemistry. The Student Advisory Council (SAC) advocates for the diverse interests of young
SETAC members offering guidance to peers and serving as a resounding voice for aspiring scientists in dialogues
with the SETAC Europe Council.
Founded and shaped by a rewarding liaison between SETAC Europe and its German Language Branch, the SAC now
has a strong international representation, with its members being distributed all over Europe. With this publication,
we want to build upon the relationship between the SETAC Europe students and the SETAC German Language
Branch.
The Young Environmental Scientists (YES) Meeting, which was first held as a regular conference 14 years ago, is a keyâ
stone event organized by the students of SETAC and the SAC. This year, in 2023, the 12th YES meeting took place
in Landau in der Pfalz, Germany.
Not only has it been the first European in-person YES Meeting since the COVIDâ19 pandemic, but with this yearâs
iteration, the YES meeting returned to its roots in Landau, where 2009 the very first YES meeting was hosted. From
August 28th to September 1st, 107 participants from 37 countries and five continents had the opportunity to showâ
case their research in seven thematic sessions, engage in four workshops, listen to six expert/career talks, and two
keynotes from established scientists. In reference to the meetingâmotto science through crises, this comment pays
special emphasis on topical program points in touching the ongoing multiple crises. We are convinced that sharing
our experience from hosting this conference will underline the importance of continuing this unique meeting format
and hopefully inspire future scientific events organized by students for students
Smoking trends and health equity in Switzerland between 1992 and 2017: dependence of smoking prevalence on educational level and social determinants
BackgroundSwitzerland ranks among the top three healthcare systems in the world with regards to healthcare access, suggesting a high degree of health equity. However, Switzerland has few preventive strategies against smoking abuse. The aim of this study is to clarify whether educational level and citizenship status have an influence on the prevalence of smoking in Switzerland and whether there is health inequity related to a lack of preventive strategies.MethodsWe based our analysis on publicly available health data published in the Swiss government's Swiss health survey (1992â2017). We compared the prevalence of smoking across the years and correlated these data with levels of educational attainment, citizenship status and age.ResultsA continuous significant decline in smokers is observed in the highest education group (TERT). Over time, prevalence was reduced from 29% in 1992 to 23% in 2017 (p < 0.001). The intermediate-level educational group (SEK 2) showed smaller but also significant decline on a 0.05 sigificance level over the same period, from 31% to 29% (p = 0.003). The lowest educational group showed a nonsignificant decline from 28% to 27% (p = 0.6). The population who holds Swiss citizenship showed a decrease in smoking from 28% to 26% within the time frame (p < 0.001). People without Swiss citizenship had a much higher prevalence of smokers, at 38% in 1992 and declining to 32% in 2017 (p < 0.001). All cohorts from age 15 to age 64 have a far higher prevalence of smokers than cohorts at an older age, with the highest prevalence in the 25â34 age group.ConclusionIn Switzerland, individuals with lower levels of education and non-Swiss populations are more susceptible to health risk of smoking. This is despite the existence of a high-quality healthcare system that has nevertheless failed to negated health inequities
A chromosome-scale genome assembly reveals a highly dynamic effector repertoire of wheat powdery mildew
Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici (B.g. tritici) is the causal agent of the wheat powdery mildew disease. The highly fragmented B.g. tritici genome available so far has prevented a systematic analysis of effector genes that are known to be involved in host adaptation. To study the diversity and evolution of effector genes we produced a chromosomeâscale assembly of the B.g. tritici genome. The genome assembly and annotation was achieved by combining longâread sequencing with highâdensity genetic mapping, bacterial artificial chromosome fingerprinting and transcriptomics. We found that the 166.6 Mb B.g. tritici genome encodes 844 candidate effector genes, over 40% more than previously reported. Candidate effector genes have characteristic local genomic organization such as gene clustering and enrichment for recombinationâactive regions and certain transposable element families. A large group of 412 candidate effector genes shows high plasticity in terms of copy number variation in a global set of 36 isolates and of transcription levels. Our data suggest that copy number variation and transcriptional flexibility are the main drivers for adaptation in B.g. tritici. The high repeat content may play a role in providing a genomic environment that allows rapid evolution of effector genes with selection as the driving force
Search for supersymmetry in events with b-quark jets and missing transverse energy in pp collisions at 7 TeV
Results are presented from a search for physics beyond the standard model
based on events with large missing transverse energy, at least three jets, and
at least one, two, or three b-quark jets. The study is performed using a sample
of proton-proton collision data collected at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV with the CMS
detector at the LHC in 2011. The integrated luminosity of the sample is 4.98
inverse femtobarns. The observed number of events is found to be consistent
with the standard model expectation, which is evaluated using control samples
in the data. The results are used to constrain cross sections for the
production of supersymmetric particles decaying to b-quark-enriched final
states in the context of simplified model spectra.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review
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