154 research outputs found

    Prevalencia de obesidad y otros factores de riesgo cardiovascular en una población rural del Paraguay(1)

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    OBJETIVO: Determinar la prevalencia de obesidady su relación con otros factores de riesgo cardiovasculares(FRC): antecedente familiar, HTA, DM, Dislipemia; enuna población rural del Paraguay.MATERIAL Y METODO: estudio observacional,descriptivo con componente analítico, de residentes enBella Vista Norte, realizado de enero a marzo de 2004.Muestreo aleatorio simple con visitas casa por casa, fueronincluidos individuos de 15 a 60 años de ambos sexos.Las variables fueron: peso, talla, IMC, circunferencia decintura y factores de riesgo cardiovasculares. Se analizó laasociación existente entre obesidad y otros FRC mediantela prueba chi2, se tomó la razón de riesgo (RR) y los valoresde p para el análisis de los resultados.RESULTADOS: de los 216 sujetos evaluados, 140(64,8%) eran de sexo femenino, con una media de edad:40±13 años. Se encontró sobrepeso/obesidad en 52,3%,(33,8% con sobrepeso y 18,5% obesos), en 44/76 (57,9%)varones y en 69/140 (49,6%). La mayor tasa de sobrepesofue observada entre 45 y 55años (37%) y obesidad entre35 y 54 años (63%). Los antecedentes familiares de losque presentaban sobrepeso/obesidad es la siguiente: HTA:52,2%, Dislipidemia 40,7%, DM 30,1%, ACV 9,7% eIAM 8,8%. Hubo asociación entre sobrepeso/obesidadcon: Dislipidemia en 59% (RR=2,11; IC95% 1,5–3;p<10!5); con HTA en 52,2% (RR=2,34; IC95% 1,6–3;p<10–5); con tolerancia anormal a la glucosa un 7,1%(RR=3,65; IC95% 0,8–16,8; p=NS). Se encontró obesidadabdominal en 63 (29,2%). Estos presentaron asociacióncon HTA en el 54% (RR=1,72; IC95%1,24-2,4; p<10!2),con dislipidemia 65,1% (RR=1,8; IC95% 1,4–2,4; p<10–4); con DM en 9,5% (RR=3,64; IC95% 1,06-12,4; p=NS).Hubo correlación lineal estadísticamente significativaentre los valores de IMC con los de: la presión arterial(estad f=24, r2=0,10, p<10Ñ6), con los del colesterol (estadf=19, r2=0,08, p<10Ñ6), y los de triglicéridos (estad f=16,r2=0,07, p<10Ñ4); y entre los valores de cintura con losde: presión arterial (estad f=30, r2=0,12, p<10Ñ6), con losdel colesterol (estad f=24, r2=0,10, p<10Ñ3), y los de triglicéridos(estad f=33, r2=0,14, p<10Ñ3). Las asociacionesmostraron además ser estadísticamente significativas conlos test de comparación de medias.CONCLUSIÓN: Poco más de la mitad de la poblaciónrural estudiada presentó sobrepeso/obesidad, asociándoseéste parámetro con la hipertensión arterial y la dislipidemiaen forma estadísticamente significativa

    Win-Win for Wind and Wildlife: A Vision to Facilitate Sustainable Development

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    Wind energy offers the potential to reduce carbon emissions while increasing energy independence and bolstering economic development. However, wind energy has a larger land footprint per Gigawatt (GW) than most other forms of energy production, making appropriate siting and mitigation particularly important. Species that require large unfragmented habitats and those known to avoid vertical structures are particularly at risk from wind development. Developing energy on disturbed lands rather than placing new developments within large and intact habitats would reduce cumulative impacts to wildlife. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that it will take 241 GW of terrestrial based wind development on approximately 5 million hectares to reach 20% electricity production for the U.S. by 2030. We estimate there are ∼7,700 GW of potential wind energy available across the U.S., with ∼3,500 GW on disturbed lands. In addition, a disturbance-focused development strategy would avert the development of ∼2.3 million hectares of undisturbed lands while generating the same amount of energy as development based solely on maximizing wind potential. Wind subsidies targeted at favoring low-impact developments and creating avoidance and mitigation requirements that raise the costs for projects impacting sensitive lands could improve public value for both wind energy and biodiversity conservation

    Selection of the appropriate method for the assessment of insulin resistance

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    Insulin resistance is one of the major aggravating factors for metabolic syndrome. There are many methods available for estimation of insulin resistance which range from complex techniques down to simple indices. For all methods of assessing insulin resistance it is essential that their validity and reliability is established before using them as investigations. The reference techniques of hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp and its alternative the frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test are the most reliable methods available for estimating insulin resistance. However, many simple methods, from which indices can be derived, have been assessed and validated e.g. homeostasis model assessment (HOMA), quantitative insulin sensitivity check index (QUICKI). Given the increasing number of simple indices of IR it may be difficult for clinicians and researchers to select the most appropriate index for their studies. This review therefore provides guidelines and advices which must be considered before proceeding with a study

    The molecular phylogeny of eph receptors and ephrin ligands

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The tissue distributions and functions of Eph receptors and their ephrin ligands have been well studied, however less is known about their evolutionary history. We have undertaken a phylogenetic analysis of Eph receptors and ephrins from a number of invertebrate and vertebrate species.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our findings indicate that Eph receptors form three major clades: one comprised of non-chordate and cephalochordate Eph receptors, a second comprised of urochordate Eph receptors, and a third comprised of vertebrate Eph receptors. Ephrins, on the other hand, fall into either a clade made up of the non-chordate and cephalochordate ephrins plus the urochordate and vertebrate ephrin-Bs or a clade made up of the urochordate and vertebrate ephrin-As.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We have concluded that Eph receptors and ephrins diverged into A and B-types at different points in their evolutionary history, such that primitive chordates likely possessed an ancestral ephrin-A and an ancestral ephrin-B, but only a single Eph receptor. Furthermore, ephrin-As appear to have arisen in the common ancestor of urochordates and vertebrates, whereas ephrin-Bs have a more ancient bilaterian origin. Ancestral ephrin-B-like ligands had transmembrane domains; as GPI anchors appear to have arisen or been lost at least 3 times.</p

    The biology of sexual development of Plasmodium: the design and implementation of transmission-blocking strategies

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    A meeting to discuss the latest developments in the biology of sexual development of Plasmodium and transmission-control was held April 5-6, 2011, in Bethesda, MD. The meeting was sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIH/NIAID) in response to the challenge issued at the Malaria Forum in October 2007 that the malaria community should re-engage with the objective of global eradication. The consequent rebalancing of research priorities has brought to the forefront of the research agenda the essential need to reduce parasite transmission. A key component of any transmission reduction strategy must be methods to attack the parasite as it passes from man to the mosquito (and vice versa). Such methods must be rationally based on a secure understanding of transmission from the molecular-, cellular-, population- to the evolutionary-levels. The meeting represented a first attempt to draw together scientists with expertise in these multiple layers of understanding to discuss the scientific foundations and resources that will be required to provide secure progress toward the design and successful implementation of effective interventions

    Unravelling Soil Fungal Communities from Different Mediterranean Land-Use Backgrounds

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    Fungi strongly influence ecosystem structure and functioning, playing a key role in many ecological services as decomposers, plant mutualists and pathogens. The Mediterranean area is a biodiversity hotspot that is increasingly threatened by intense land use. Therefore, to achieve a balance between conservation and human development, a better understanding of the impact of land use on the underlying fungal communities is needed.We used parallel pyrosequencing of the nuclear ribosomal ITS regions to characterize the fungal communities in five soils subjected to different anthropogenic impact in a typical Mediterranean landscape: a natural cork-oak forest, a pasture, a managed meadow, and two vineyards. Marked differences in the distribution of taxon assemblages among the different sites and communities were found. Data analyses consistently indicated a sharp distinction of the fungal community of the cork oak forest soil from those described in the other soils. Each soil showed features of the fungal assemblages retrieved which can be easily related to the above-ground settings: ectomycorrhizal phylotypes were numerous in natural sites covered by trees, but were nearly completely missing from the anthropogenic and grass-covered sites; similarly, coprophilous fungi were common in grazed sites.Data suggest that investigation on the below-ground fungal community may provide useful elements on the above-ground features such as vegetation coverage and agronomic procedures, allowing to assess the cost of anthropogenic land use to hidden diversity in soil. Datasets provided in this study may contribute to future searches for fungal bio-indicators as biodiversity markers of a specific site or a land-use degree

    Epidemiological and economic burden of metabolic syndrome and its consequences in patients with hypertension in Germany, Spain and Italy; a prevalence-based model

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The presence of metabolic syndrome in patients with hypertension significantly increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes and mortality. Our aim is to estimate the epidemiological and economic burden to the health service of metabolic syndrome in patients with hypertension in three European countries in 2008 and 2020.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>An age, sex and risk group structured prevalence based cost of illness model was developed using the United States Adult Treatment Panel III of the National Cholesterol Education Program criteria to define metabolic syndrome. Data sources included published information and public use databases on disease prevalence, incidence of cardiovascular events, prevalence of type 2 diabetes, treatment patterns and cost of management in Germany, Spain and Italy.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The prevalence of hypertension with metabolic syndrome in the general population of Germany, Spain and Italy was 36%, 11% and 10% respectively. In subjects with hypertension 61%, 22% and 21% also had metabolic syndrome. Incident cardiovascular events and attributable mortality were around two fold higher in subjects with metabolic syndrome and prevalence of type 2 diabetes was around six-fold higher. The economic burden to the health service of metabolic syndrome in patients with hypertension was been estimated at €24,427, €1,900 and €4,877 million in Germany, Spain and Italy and forecast to rise by 59%, 179% and 157% respectively by 2020. The largest components of costs included the management of prevalent type 2 diabetes and incident cardiovascular events. Mean annual costs per hypertensive patient were around three-fold higher in subjects with metabolic syndrome compared to those without and rose incrementally with the additional number of metabolic syndrome components present.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The presence of metabolic syndrome in patients with hypertension significantly inflates economic burden and costs are likely to increase in the future due to an aging population and an increase in the prevalence of components of metabolic syndrome.</p
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