508 research outputs found

    Participatory Approach to Common Use Grazing Management in Dry Area Developing Countries

    Get PDF
    Key points 1. Range restoration technology is available but useless when not followed by management. 2. Institutional mechanisms for grazing management are needed for communal range. 3. Community participatory approaches help pastoralists better manage rangeland grazing

    Persistent detection of Plasmodium falciparum, P. malariae, P. ovale curtisi and P. ovale wallikeri after ACT treatment of asymptomatic Ghanaian school-children

    Get PDF
    Two hundred and seventy four asymptomatic Ghanaian school-children aged 5 to 17 years were screened for malaria parasites by examination of blood films. One hundred and fifty five microscopically-positive individuals were treated with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine and followed for 3 weeks. Retrospective species-specific PCR of all 274 screened samples identified an additional 60 children with sub-patent parasitaemia, and a substantial proportion of co-infections with Plasmodium malariae, Plasmodium ovale curtisi and Plasmodium ovale wallikeri. One hundred individuals harboured at least one non-falciparum parasite species. Using standard double-read microscopy, the 21-day efficacy of treatment against Plasmodium falciparum was 91.4% among the 117 children seen at all 5 visits. Using nested PCR to test 152 visit 5 blood samples, 22 were found to be parasite-positive. Twenty individuals harboured P. falciparum, four harboured P. ovale spp. and two P. malariae, with four of these 22 isolates being mixed species infections. The persistent detection of low density Plasmodium sp. infections following antimalarial treatment suggests these may be a hitherto unrecognised obstacle to malaria elimination. (C) 2013 Australian Society for Parasitology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Persistent detection of Plasmodium falciparum, P. malariae, P. ovale curtisi and P. ovale wallikeri after ACT treatment of asymptomatic Ghanaian school-children.

    Get PDF
    Two hundred and seventy four asymptomatic Ghanaian school-children aged 5 to 17 years were screened for malaria parasites by examination of blood films. One hundred and fifty five microscopically-positive individuals were treated with dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine and followed for 3 weeks. Retrospective species-specific PCR of all 274 screened samples identified an additional 60 children with sub-patent parasitaemia, and a substantial proportion of co-infections with Plasmodium malariae, Plasmodium ovale curtisi and Plasmodium ovale wallikeri. One hundred individuals harboured at least one non-falciparum parasite species. Using standard double-read microscopy, the 21-day efficacy of treatment against Plasmodium falciparum was 91.4% among the 117 children seen at all 5 visits. Using nested PCR to test 152 visit 5 blood samples, 22 were found to be parasite-positive. Twenty individuals harboured P. falciparum, four harboured P. ovale spp. and two P. malariae, with four of these 22 isolates being mixed species infections. The persistent detection of low density Plasmodium sp. infections following antimalarial treatment suggests these may be a hitherto unrecognised obstacle to malaria elimination

    The Politics of Service Delivery Reform

    Get PDF
    This article identifies the leaders, the supporters and the resisters of public service reform. It adopts a principal–agent framework, comparing reality with an ‘ideal’ situation in which citizens are the principals over political policy-makers as their agents, and policy-makers are the principals over public service officials as their agents. Reform in most developing countries is complicated by an additional set of external actors — international financial institutions and donors. In practice, international agencies and core government officials usually act as the ‘principals’ in the determination of reforms. The analysis identifies the interests involved in reform, indicating how the balance between them is affected by institutional and sectoral factors. Organizational reforms, particularly in the social sectors, present greater difficulties than first generation economic policy reforms

    Role of persistent CMV infection in configuring T cell immunity in the elderly

    Get PDF
    Ageing is associated with declines in many physiological parameters, including multiple immune system functions. The rate of acceleration of the frequency of death due to cardiovascular disease or cancer seems to increase with age from middle age up to around 80 years, plateauing thereafter. Mortality due to infectious disease, however, does not plateau, but continues to accelerate indefinitely. The elderly commonly possess oligoclonal expansions of T cells, especially of CD8 cells, which, surprisingly, are often associated with cytomegalovirus (CMV) seropositivity. This in turn is associated with many of the same phenotypic and functional alterations to T cell immunity that have been suggested as biomarkers of immune system aging. Thus, the manner in which CMV and the host immune system interact is critical in determining the "age" of specific immunity. We may therefore consider immunosenescence in some respects as an infectious state. This implies that interventions aimed at the pathogen may improve the organ system affected. Hence, CMV-directed anti-virals or vaccination may have beneficial effects on immunity in later life

    Targeting Impaired Antimicrobial Immunity in the Brain for the Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease

    Get PDF
    Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia and aging is the most common risk factor for developing the disease. The etiology of AD is not known but AD may be considered as a clinical syndrome with multiple causal pathways contributing to it. The amyloid cascade hypothesis, claiming that excess production or reduced clearance of amyloid-beta (AÎČ) and its aggregation into amyloid plaques, was accepted for a long time as the main cause of AD. However, many studies showed that AÎČ is a frequent consequence of many challenges/pathologic processes occurring in the brain for decades. A key factor, sustained by experimental data, is that low-grade infection leading to production and deposition of AÎČ, which has antimicrobial activity, precedes the development of clinically apparent AD. This infection is chronic, low grade, largely clinically silent for decades because of a nearly efficient antimicrobial immune response in the brain. A chronic inflammatory state is induced that results in neurodegeneration. Interventions that appear to prevent, retard or mitigate the devel- opment of AD also appear to modify the disease. In this review, we conceptualize further that the changes in the brain antimicrobial immune response during aging and especially in AD sufferers serve as a foundation that could lead to improved treatment strategies for preventing or decreasing the progression of AD in a disease-modifying treatment

    Electrochemical Boron-Doped Diamond Film Microcells Micromachined with Femtosecond Laser: Application to the Determination of Water Framework Directive Metals

    No full text
    Planar electrochemical microcells were micromachined in a microcrystalline boron-doped diamond (BDD) thin layer using a femtosecond laser (Photo 1). The electrochemical performances of the new laser-machined BDD microcell were assessed by differential pulse anodic stripping voltammetry (DPASV) determinations, at nM level, of the four heavy metal ions of the European Water Framework Directive (WFD): Cd(II), Ni(II), Pb(II), Hg(II). The results are compared with those of previously published BDD electrodes [1]. The calculated detection limits are 0.4 nM, 6.8 nM and 5.5 nm 2.3 nM, and the linearities go up to 35nM, 97nM, 48nM and 5nM for respectively Cd(II), Ni(II) Pb(II) and Hg(II). The detection limits meet with the environmental quality standard of the WFD for three of the four metals. It was shown that the four heavy metals could be detected simultaneously, in the concentration ratio usually measured in sewage or runoff waters

    Targeting Infectious Agents as a Therapeutic Strategy in Alzheimer’s Disease

    Get PDF
    Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most prevalent dementia in the world. Its cause(s) are presently largely unknown. The most common explanation for AD, now, is the amyloid cascade hypothesis, which states that the cause of AD is senile plaque forma- tion by the amyloid ÎČ peptide, and the formation of neurofibrillary tangles by hyperphosphorylated tau. A second, burgeoning theory by which to explain AD is based on the infection hypothesis. Much experimental and epidemiological data support the involvement of infections in the development of dementia. According to this mechanism, the infection either directly or via microbial virulence factors precedes the formation of amyloid ÎČ plaques. The amyloid ÎČ peptide, possessing antimicrobial properties, may be beneficial at an early stage of AD, but becomes detrimental with the progression of the disease, concomi- tantly with alterations to the innate immune system at both the peripheral and central levels. Infection results in neuroinflam- mation, leading to, and sustained by, systemic inflammation, causing eventual neurodegeneration, and the senescence of the immune cells. The sources of AD-involved microbes are various body microbiome communities from the gut, mouth, nose, and skin. The infection hypothesis of AD opens a vista to new therapeutic approaches, either by treating the infection itself or modulating the immune system, its senescence, or the body’s metabolism, either separately, in parallel, or in a multi-step way.Basque Government under the grant “Artificial Intelligence in BCAM number EXP. 2019/00432
    • 

    corecore