15 research outputs found
Simon Starling 'At Twilight'
A publication in two parts: one a hard-bound book that includes the script for ‘At Twilight: A play for two actors, three musicians, one dancer, eight masks (and a donkey costume)’ by Graham Eatough and Simon Starling, first performed in Glasgow in 2016; and the other a tabloid-format newspaper that documents the exhibition 'At Twilight' and the live performances at Hollywood House, Glasgow. The publication includes texts by Katrina Brown, Director of The Common Guild, and Yukie Kamiya, Director of The Japan Society Gallery, alongside character biographies written by Simon Starling and source material selected by the artist. Designed by graphic design collective Åbäke to accompany the exhibitions ‘At Twilight' at The Common Guild 2 July – 4 September 2016 and 'At Twilight (After W.B. Yeats’ Noh Reincarnation)' at Japan Society, New York 14 October 2016 – 15 January 2017
Genetic relatedness between Japanese and European isolates of Clostridium difficile originating from piglets and their risk associated with human health
Clostridium difficile colonization in pig intestine has been a public health concern. We analyzed C. difficile prevalence among piglets in Japan to clarify their origin and extent of the associated risk by using molecular and microbiological methods for both swine and human clinical isolates and foreign isolates. C. difficile was isolated from 120 neonatal piglet fecal samples. Toxin gene profile, antimicrobial susceptibilities, PCR ribotype, and multiple-locus variable-number tandem-repeat analysis (MLVA) type of swine isolates were determined and compared with those of human clinical and foreign isolates. One-hundred C. difficile strains were isolated from 69 (57.5%) samples, and 61 isolates (61%) were toxin gene-positive. Some isolates were resistant to antimicrobials, contributing to antibiotic-associated diarrhea by C. difficile. These results suggest that C. difficile, prevalent among Japanese pigs, is a potential risk for antibiotic-associated diarrhea. Furthermore, PCR ribotype 078 (12 isolates), which has been linked to multiple outbreaks worldwide, was the third-most frequently isolated of the 14 PCR ribotypes identified. Moreover, MLVA revealed that all 12 PCR ribotype 078 isolates were genetically related to European PCR ribotype 078 strains found in both humans and pigs. To date, in Japan, many breeding pigs have been imported from European countries. The genetic relatedness of C. difficile isolates of Japanese swine origin to those of European origin suggests that they were introduced into Japan via imported pigs