41 research outputs found

    The emergence of rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus: will a non-pathogenic strain protect the UK?

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    Rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus emerged in China in 1984, and has killed hundreds of millions of wild rabbits in Australia and Europe. In the UK there appears to be an endemic non-pathogenic strain, with high levels of seroprevalence being recorded, in the absence of associated mortality. Using a seasonal, age-structured model we examine the hypothesis that differences in rabbit population demography differentially affect the basic reproductive rates (R(0)) of the pathogenic and non-pathogenic strains, leading to each dominating in some populations and not others. The strain with the higher R(0) excluded the other, with the dynamics depending upon the ratio of the two R(0) values. When the non-pathogenic strain dominated, the pathogenic strain caused only transient mortality, although this could be significant when the two R(0) values were similar. When the pathogenic strain dominated, repeated epidemics led to host eradication. Seroprevalence data suggest that the non-pathogenic strain may be protecting some, but not all UK populations, with half being 'at risk' from invasion by the pathogenic strain and a fifth prone to significant transient mortality. We identify key questions for empirical research to test this prediction

    High resolution HLA matching associated with decreased mortality after unrelated bone marrow transplantation

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    As compared with related HLA-identical sibling donors, bone marrow transplantation (BMT) with phenotypically HLA ABDR-compatible unrelated donors is associated with increased mortality. This may be due to hidden HLA incompatibilities not detected by conventional typing. We have analyzed 44 unrelated patient-donor pairs who were matched for HLA-A, -B, and -DR by routine tissue typing. Our comprehensive HLA typing approach consisted of serology, cytotoxic T-cell precursor (CTLp) tests, T-cell cloning, oligotyping, and DNA sequencing. Using these techniques, we identified numerous HLA allele mismatches not detected by the previously applied routine typing. Twenty-four patient-donor pairs were highly matched and had a low CTLp frequency, whereas the remaining 20 pairs were allele-mismatched for HLA-A, -B, -C, -DR, -DQ antigens and/or had a positive result of the CTLp test. Patient and donor age, diagnosis, and treatment did not differ significantly between the matched and mismatched transplants. The probability for severe acute graft-versus-host disease grades III-IV was 21% in the matched and 47% in the mismatched patients (P = .0464). Transplant-related mortality was 21% and 57% (P = .0072) and actuarial patient survival rates at 3 years were 61% and 13% (P = .0005). We conclude that both HLA class I and class II allele mismatches between unrelated phenotypically ABDR-compatible patient-donor pairs are frequent and associated with increased incidence of posttransplant complications

    Potato Peel Waste: Stability and Antioxidant Activity of a Freeze-Dried Extract

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    Aqueous extracts of potato peel waste were freeze-dried. High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) of the freeze-dried extracts revealed that chlorogenic (50.31%), gallic (41.67%), protocatechuic (7.81%), and caffeic (0.21%) acids were the major phenolics. During 15 days storage of the freeze-dried extract, no degradation of phenolics occurred. After 4 days storage at 63°C, 5.00g of sunflower oil containing either the freeze-dried extract (200 ppm) or butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) (200 ppm) reached peroxide values (PV) of 37.38 and 37.47 meq kg-1 respectively. L-ascorbic acid-6-palmitate was the best antioxidant (PV= 10.65 meq kg-1) but the freeze-dried extract was as good as BHA
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