Bergerhonore8664
and they highlight the importance of AHR signaling in mediating these responses.
Assess the clinical effects, 3D radiographic results and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) of buccal bone regeneration combined with piezocision.
Ten patients presenting roots prominence with a thin buccal bone thickness or buccal bone dehiscence in the lower front region were enrolled. Patients received orthodontic treatment assisted by piezocison which was combined with a buccal alveolar bone regeneration using a tunneling approach. A comparison between pre- and post-treatment alveolar bone measurements based on CBCT was performed. Periodontal parameters such as recession scores and root resorption were recorded before and after treatment. The PROMs were also investigated.
An overall significant buccal bone gain of 2.7 ± 2.7% was found after the treatment. The apical region reached the highest gain of 8.9 ± 5.5% whereas the most coronal region showed no significant increase of the bone envelope (1.2 ± 2.7%). No adverse event such as the appearance of recession or root resorption were observed.
Previous research employing global positioning satellite (GPS) data and ecological momentary assessment (EMA) has shown a smaller life-space (distance traveled from home) was associated with poorer community functioning and more severe negative symptoms in people with schizophrenia. Momentary emotional experiences may influence how much time is spent outside of the home. We evaluated the associations between emotional experiences in relation to life-space among people with schizophrenia compared to healthy controls (HCs).
105 participants with schizophrenia and 76 HCs completed in-lab assessments of symptoms, cognition, and functioning. Participants completed EMA assessments of location and emotions seven times daily for seven days at stratified random intervals. GPS coordinates were collected 24h a day over the 7-day study period. Analyses were performed at the momentary, day, and full week level using mixed effects models and Spearman correlations.
For HCs, greater happiness was associated with greateial functioning, and life-space may provide a useful outcome for functional rehabilitation interventions in schizophrenia.
Schizophrenia is associated with abnormal levels of blood inflammatory markers, which may be correlated with levels of psychopathology. Few previous studies have explored whether baseline inflammatory marker levels predict longitudinal changes in psychopathology. In the present study, we explored this association in a cohort of patients with schizophrenia.
We investigated inflammatory markers and psychopathology after 3, 6, and 12months of antipsychotic treatment for subjects with baseline and follow-up data from the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) schizophrenia trial. Linear regression models, controlling for multiple potential confounding factors, were used to investigate these associations.
There was a significant decrease in monocyte, ICAM, and adiponectin levels between baseline and 12months. Higher baseline blood interleukin-6 (IL-6) predicted greater reduction in PANSS total and general subscale scores at 3 and 6months, and PANSS negative subscale scores at 3mo more personalized medicine approaches for patients with schizophrenia.
The aim of this study was to analyze the radiological changes and determine the clinical and functional outcomes of proximal row carpectomy (PRC) over the long term.
Radiological changes after PRC occur in every patient while the clinical and functional outcomes remain stable over time.
This was a retrospective single-center study of patients who underwent PRC between January 2004 and December 2014. A clinical assessment (range of motion, grip strength), functional assessment (Mayo Wrist score and QuickDASH) and radiographic assessment (radiocapitate osteoarthritis, radiocapitate congruency) was done in every patient at the longest follow-up.
Thirty-one patients were reviewed with a mean follow-up of 97.9 months. The indications for PRC were SLAC (n=10), SNAC (n=5), Kienböck disease (n=9) and other conditions (n=7). The radiocapitate index, which is the radius of curvature of the tip of the capitate divided by the mean radius of curvature of the lunate fossa, went from 0.68 immediately postoperative to 0.74 at the final assessment (p=0.035). The mean flexion/extension arc was 93°. The mean grip strength was 25kg. The mean QuickDASH was 29 and the mean Mayo Wrist score was 69. Fifteen patients had radiocapitate osteoarthritis. Seven patients (22%) required revision surgery for wrist fusion after a mean of 18.6 months.
Radiological adaptation in the radiocapitate joint after PRC was found in this study. PRC is a reliable solution and yields stable outcomes over time for treating radiocarpal osteoarthritis, except in young adults and manual laborers who had a notable early revision rate.
IV-retrospective study.
IV - retrospective study.
Given their low citation rate, case reports may reduce a journal's impact factor (IF), making a journal less likely to accept them for publication. However, this concept has never been proven in a bibliometric study. This led us to carry out a bibliometric analysis to evaluate (1) the exact number of case reports published in orthopedics over a 2-year period, (2) their citation rate, (3) what the journals' IF would be if they had not published these case reports.
Publishing case reports reduces a journal's IF, bringing into question whether they should be published.
This was a retrospective bibliometric study. We focused on all the articles influencing the year 2017. We looked at all the journals in the "Orthopedics" discipline that had published at least one article in the years n-2 (=2015) or n-1 (=2016).
There were 1925 case reports among the 28,903 articles published in all orthopedics journals in 2015-2016, a 6.7% share of publications. Individually, each case report in 2015-2016 was cited an aves should be published. Indeed, the publication of case reports lowers the IF of scientific journals. However, we should not completely stop publishing case reports since they can be useful to clinicians caring for patients with rare diseases or medical conditions.
IV, systematic retrospective study.
IV, systematic retrospective study.
Cholelithiasis referrals often present with concomitant or isolated atypical symptoms such as reflux, bloating, or epigastric pain. We sought to identify the impact of preoperative symptomatology of atypical or dyspepsia-type biliary colic on operative and non-operative clinical outcomes.
A retrospective review of patients referred for gallstone disease from 2014 to 2018at a single institution in Los Angeles County was performed.
Of 746 patients evaluated for gallstone disease, 87.4% (n=652) underwent cholecystectomy - 90.8% (n=592) had symptom resolution postoperatively whereas 9.2% (n=60) did not. Over half presented with concomitant atypical and/or dyspepsia symptoms (n=411). Heartburn/reflux was significantly associated with unresolved symptoms postoperatively (OR 2.1,1.0-4.4, p=0.04). Overall, 11.1% (n=83) of all 746 patients and 20.2% of patients with atypical and/or dyspepsia symptoms improved with medical management of gastritis or Helicobacter pylori triple therapy pre/post-operatively.
Atypical biliary colic and/or dyspepsia is associated with unresolved symptoms following cholecystectomy. Such patients may benefit from H.pylori testing or PPI trial prior to cholecystectomy.
Atypical biliary colic and/or dyspepsia is associated with unresolved symptoms following cholecystectomy. Such patients may benefit from H. pylori testing or PPI trial prior to cholecystectomy.
Guidance on post-cardiac arrest prognostication is largely based on data from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), despite clear differences between the OHCA and in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) populations. Early prediction of mortality after IHCA would be useful to help make decisions about post-arrest care. We evaluated the ability of lactate and need for vasopressors after IHCA to predict hospital mortality.
Single center retrospective observational study of adult IHCA patients who achieved sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), required mechanical ventilation peri-arrest and had a lactate checked within 2 h after ROSC. We evaluated the association of post-ROSC lactate and need for vasopressors with mortality using multivariate logistic regression.
A total of 364 patients were included. Patients who received vasopressors within 3 h after ROSC had significantly higher mortality compared to patients who did not receive vasopressors (58% vs. 43%, p = 0.03). Elevated lactate level was associated with mortality (44% if lactate <5 mmol/L, 58% if lactate 5-10 mmol/L, and 73% if lactate >10 mmol/L, p < 0.01). A multivariable model with lactate group and post-ROSC vasopressor use as predictors demonstrated moderate discrimination (AUC 0.64 [95%CI0.59-0.70]). Including other variables, the most parsimonious model included lactate, age, body mass index, race, and history of arrhythmia, cancer and/or liver disease (AUC 0.70 [95% CI 0.64-0.75]).
Post-ROSC lactate and need for vasopressors may be helpful in stratifying mortality risk in patients requiring mechanical ventilation after IHCA.
Post-ROSC lactate and need for vasopressors may be helpful in stratifying mortality risk in patients requiring mechanical ventilation after IHCA.
Information about the accuracy of intraoral scannersfor the edentulous maxilla is lacking.
The purpose of this invitro study was to compare the accuracy of 3 different intraoral scanner techniques on a completely edentulous maxilla typodont.
Two completely edentulous maxillary typodonts with (wrinkled typodont) and without (smooth typodont) palatal rugae were used as reference and were scanned by using an industrial metrological machine to obtain 2 digital reference scans in standard tessellation language (STL)format (dWT and dST). Three different scanning techniques were investigated in the buccopalatal technique, the buccal vestibule was scanned with a longitudinal movement ending on the palatal vault with a posteroanterior direction; the S-shaped techniquewas based on an alternate palatobuccal and buccopalatal scan along the ridge; in the palatobuccal technique, the palate was scanned with a circular movement and then with a longitudinal one along the buccal vestibule. Consecutively, 6 types of scanssion than palatobuccal technique only in the wrinkled typodont scenario, while the other scanning approaches did not show significant differences in either tested configuration.
Smooth typodont scans showed better trueness than wrinkled typodont scans. Buccopalatal technique showed better mean values for trueness and precision than palatobuccal technique only in the wrinkled typodont scenario, while the other scanning approaches did not show significant differences in either tested configuration.
Intraoral scannersare promising options for removable prosthodontics. However, analog aids, including occlusion rims, are still used, as a completely digital workflow is challenging and scientific evidence on the topic is scarce.
The purpose of this invitro study was to assess and compare the trueness and precision of scans obtained from a reference typodontof a completely edentulous maxilla by using an intraoral scanner (TRIOS 3 Pod; 3Shape A/S) with scans obtained by using a laboratory scanner (DScan 3; EGS S.R.L.) from both Type IV stone casts and polysulfide impressions.
The polyurethane resin reference typodont was replicated from a clinical cast and was scanned with a metrological machine to obtain a reference scan. Ten digital castswere obtained by applying standardized scanning strategies to the reference typodont with the intraoral scanner. A device was created to make 10 consistent polysulfide impressions, and a scan of each impression was made with the laboratory scanner and then digitally re3.7), digital reversed cast=271.2 (94.6-447.8), and digital extraoral scanner cast=341.4 (175.5-507.3); significant differences were detected between digital intraoral scanner cast and digital reversed cast (P=.003) and between digital intraoral scanner cast and digital extraoral scanner cast (P=.001).
Directly scanning a solid typodont of a completely edentulous maxilla with the intraoral scanner produced better trueness and precision than scanning the polysulfide impressions or the stone casts with a laboratory scanner.
Directly scanning a solid typodont of a completely edentulous maxilla with the intraoral scanner produced better trueness and precision than scanning the polysulfide impressions or the stone casts with a laboratory scanner.Life expectancy has grown tremendously. This incredible achievement for mankind has been obtained mostly thanks to three pillars hygiene, antibiotics and vaccines. They represent one of the most effective forms of medical intervention. From Jenner's work to new vaccines, immunization has reduced the consequences of infectious diseases. In the last years antimicrobial resistance (AMR) as well as emerging infectious diseases have been rated as major threats for our society, as their toll is forecasted to drastically impinge on human health and economies. Indeed, recently, the whole world has experienced such problems because of the new severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the etiological agent of Covid-19. Herein, we propose an excursus through the three main pillars (hygiene, antibiotics and vaccination) that contributed to improving life expectancy, their clinical and economic impact and the role of vaccines to fight AMR-related diseases and emerging infectious diseases like Covid-19.
The increasing emergence and spread of multiresistant microorganisms in hospital wards is a serious concern. Traditional protocols are often not sufficient to protect patients susceptible to serious and life-threatening infections, therefore new strategies for decontaminating hospital environments are crucial to reducing microbial transmission and the spread the nosocomial infections. The adoption of modern technologies is indicated to supplement traditional methods and to improve desired levels of surface disinfection.
This work aims to report the development, implementation, and validation of cleansing and sanitizing procedure for critical clinical settings through the innovative use of disposable cloths pre-impregnated with solutions containing different active formulations and biocidal agents, relating to the areas to be treated (low, moderate, high-risk).
The implementation and validation of the sanitizing system were conducted in different wards of two healthcare structures. The protocol for the study proved to be a highly valuable alternative to the traditional cleaning procedures in healthcare settings for the sanitizing process of all kinds of surfaces. All tools were specifically designed to improve disinfection efficiency and to reduce the problems associated with traditional methods, such as preventing cross-contamination events, limiting the physical efforts of operators, and avoiding incorrect practices. Our findings add support to the knowledge that an effective sanitization procedure is critical in minimizing microorganisms' transmission and cross-contamination.
This work is development of new hydantoin molecules as treatment of potential antibacterial and antifungal activity against clinical pathogens causing infectious disease. Synthesized compounds were evaluated in molecular docking studies, the most effective compound is used to dock against the targets of 1U1Z, and 1AI9 kinases, to evaluate its binding affinity, hoping to rationalize and obtain potent of antibacterial, antifungal agents.
The FTIR,
H &
C NMR, and mass spectra were used to conform new molecules and their evaluation of antimicrobial activity. Gram-negative bacteria of Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ATCC-27853), Klebsiella pneumoniae (recultured) and Escherichia coli (ATCC-25922), and gram-positive bacteria of Enterococcus faecalis (recultured) and Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC-25923) were evaluated for all compounds. The in vitro antifungal activity was evaluated against Cryptococcus neoformans (recultured), Candida albicans (recultured), Aspergillus niger, Microsporum audouinii (recultured) andfloxacin (-8.2 kcal/mol) in 1U1Z protein and the compound 3b was highest binding affinity (-8.8 kcal/mol) than clotrimazole (-6.8 kcal/mol) in 1AI9 protein respectively.
A novel set of imidazolidine-2,4-dione compounds 3a-h have synthesized and characterized successfully. The screening of antimicrobial activity shows that all compounds possess antimicrobial activities. In addition, the objective of the study was succeeded with a few of the promising molecules, which are proving to be a potential treatment of bacterial infection candidates.
A novel set of imidazolidine-2,4-dione compounds 3a-h have synthesized and characterized successfully. The screening of antimicrobial activity shows that all compounds possess antimicrobial activities. In addition, the objective of the study was succeeded with a few of the promising molecules, which are proving to be a potential treatment of bacterial infection candidates.
Respiratory tract infections (RTIs) are important health problems with high incidence and consequent economic costs. The study aimed to analyze trajectories of experienced RTI symptoms and use of healthcare and antibiotics.
The study adopted a cross-sectional design and face-face interview using a structured questionnaire. The questionnaire comprised a) social demographics; b) last episode of symptomatic RTIs; c) responses to the RTIs; d) antibiotics obtained from clinics and medicine shops for the RTIs. The study subjects were residents in randomly selected villages in Anhui, China. The study settings were the residents households. Descriptive analyses were conducted to draw symptoms trajectory and identify relationship between healthcare seeking and symptoms and common sociodemographic variables.
A total 91.1% (1968) of 2160 eligible residents completed the interview who reported 1.83 episodes of RTIs in the pass year on average. Over half (54.8%) of these RTI episodes had led to visit to clinics for r manage shared decision- making around antibiotic treatment.
RTIs incur a large volume of healthcare-seeking and antibiotics use and there is an urgent need for effective education measures on proper service especially antibiotics use. Patients' reported RTI symptoms manifest peculiar trajectories and their retrospective recall of the course of prior RTI episodes and associated actions may guide their future responses to similar infections. Knowledge of these may help inform doctors about patient expectations, enabling them better manage shared decision- making around antibiotic treatment.Prosthetic joint infection (PJI) is a common complication of the knee and hip arthroplasty and represents a huge challenge for physicians. PJI raises serious social, economic and clinical concerns in the public health that need a comprehensive approach to better focus on proven strategies for disease prevention and treatment. History and clinical signs on joint site are useful means for suspecting PJI that need to be confirmed through major and minor diagnostic criteria. The pathogen isolation and the resulting antibiogram are crucial to guide the correct antibiotic strategy and together with surgical treatment (prosthesis revision and spacer implantation) represent the cornerstones to eradicate the infection before attempting a new arthroplasty. External fixator with removal of the spacer may be an option before performing a new arthroplasty when the infection does not heal. Arthrodesis may also be considered if the arthroplasty is contraindicated. Limb amputation is the last chance when pathogen eradication failed and might lead to life-threatening situations.
Primary intestinal lymphomas (PILs) are rare, and this study compared the clinical outcomes of aggressive primary intestinal B-cell lymphomas (aB-PILs) and T/natural killer-cell lymphomas (T/NK-PILs).
The clinical information of patients diagnosed with aggressive PILs at our institution between 1995 and 2015 were retrospectively investigated. Pathological subtypes were confirmed according to the 2016 revision of the World Health Organization classification. The correlation between clinicopathological features and overall survival (OS) was determined using univariate and multivariate analyses.
Cases of T/NK-PILs had higher initial bowel perforation incidence (67% vs. 7%, P<0.001) and lower complete response rate to first-line chemotherapy regimens (22% vs. 69%, P=0.009) than aB-PILs. Patients with aB-PILs had a better 5-year event-free survival rate (55.8% vs. 13.9%, P=0.026) and a 5-year OS rate (74.3% vs. 29.6%, P=0.036) than those with T/NK-cell lymphomas. Multivariate analysis identified that female gender and stage III/IV were unfavorable prognostic factors. Among the 54 patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), those with International Prognostic Index (IPI) scores of 0-2 had a better 5-year OS rate than those with scores of 3-5 (84.2% vs. 46.8%, P=0.002). IPI scores of 3-5 (P=0.026) and tumors located in the large intestine (P=0.015) were poor prognostic factors based on the multivariate analysis.
The prognosis of T/NK-PILs was less favorable than that of aB-PILs. Female gender, stage III/IV disease, DLBCL with IPI scores of 3-5, or tumors in the large intestine were poor prognostic factors.
The prognosis of T/NK-PILs was less favorable than that of aB-PILs. Female gender, stage III/IV disease, DLBCL with IPI scores of 3-5, or tumors in the large intestine were poor prognostic factors.Five years have passed since the Japanese Pediatric Guideline for Food Allergy (JPGFA) was first revised in 2011 from its original version. As many scientific papers related to food allergy have been published during the last 5 years, the second major revision of the JPGFA was carried out in 2016. In this guideline, food allergies are generally classified into four clinical types (1) neonatal and infantile gastrointestinal allergy, (2) infantile atopic dermatitis associated with food allergy, (3) immediate-type of food allergy (urticaria, anaphylaxis, etc.), and (4) special forms of immediate-type of food allergy such as food-dependent exercise-induced anaphylaxis and oral allergy syndrome (OAS). Much of this guideline covers the immediate-type of food allergy that is seen during childhood to adolescence. Infantile atopic dermatitis associated with food allergy type is especially important as the onset of most food allergies occurs during infancy. We have discussed the neonatal and infantile gastrointestinal ible.
The purpose of this study was to examine radiographic and functional outcomes of the shoulder in brachial plexus birth injury (BPBI) patients at long-term follow-up.
Medical records were reviewed at the Shriners Hospital in St. Louis to identify patients older than 18 years with a diagnosis of BPBI. Twenty-five patients were included in this study. Evaluations included radiographic examination, clinical examination, and outcome measures including the Mallet classification, visual analog scale (VAS) for shoulder pain, American Shoulder and Elbow Shoulder score (ASES), quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (QuickDASH), Simple Shoulder Test (SST), and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) domain measures.
The mean age of the patients included was 44 years. Average follow-up was 37 years. No patient had primary nerve reconstruction surgery. Thirteen patients had a history of shoulder surgery at an average age of 6 years. There was a wide spectrum of deformity seen radiographically. Fifty-five percent of patients had evidence of glenoid retroversion, posterior humeraltranslation, or a biconcave glenoid. An additional 20% of patients had complete posterior dislocation of the humeral head. Despite the degenerative changes seen on radiographs, the mean VAS for pain was low, at 2. The mean ASES shoulder score was 54. The mean QuickDASH score was 30. Mean PROMIS Physical Function, Pain Interference, Depression, and Anxiety scores were near the means for the general population, with similar outcomes inpatients treated with shoulder surgery compared with those treated without surgery.
Adult BPBI patients experience minimal shoulder pain despite deformity and degenerative changes on shoulder radiographs. Whereas there are significant deficits in range of motion and function, PROMIS scores in adult BPBI patients are normal.
Therapeutic IV.
Therapeutic IV.
By comparing the outcomes of total hip arthroplasty with hemiarthroplasty in elderly patients with a femoral neck fracture to investigate the one-year mortality, dislocation, infection, reoperation rate, and thromboembolic event.
The PubMed, EMBASE databases, and Cochrane library were systematically searched from the inception dates to April 1, 2020 for relevant randomized controlled trials in English language using the keywords "total hip arthroplasty", "hemiarthroplasty" and "femoral neck fracture" to identify systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Two reviewers independently selected articles, extracted data, assessed the quality evidence and risk bias of included trials using the Cochrane Collaboration' stools, and discussed any disagreements. The third reviewer was consulted for any doubts or uncertainty. We derived risk ratios and 95% confidence intervals. Mortality was defined as the primary outcome. Secondary outcomes were other complications, dislocation, infection, reoperation rate, and thromboembolic event.
This meta-analysis included 10 studies with 1419 patients, which indicated that there were no significant differences between hemiarthroplasty and total hip arthroplasty in reoperation, infection rate, and thromboembolic event. However, there was a lower mortality and dislocation rate association with total hip arthroplasty at the one-year follow-up.
Based on our results, we found that total hip arthroplasty was better than hemiarthroplasty for a hip fracture at one-year follow-up.
Based on our results, we found that total hip arthroplasty was better than hemiarthroplasty for a hip fracture at one-year follow-up.
One of the consequences of trauma-related injuries is disability. There are more than one billion people with disabilities worldwide. Disability in people reduces their quality of life. The goal of this study was to determine the rate of post-trauma stress and disability related to trauma in the population over 15 years old in Kashan during a solar year of 2018-2019.
This is a cross-sectional population-based study. A cluster sampling method was used in the city of Kashan, and 3880 persons were interviewed with individuals randomly selected in each household. If a person had trauma during one year ago, the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 and Post Trauma Stress Disorder (PTSD) Checklist were applied for further interview. Data were analyzed using Chi-square test or t-test.
Among the 3880 participants residing in Kashan, 274 (7.1%) reported a history of traumatic injury during one year ago in 2018-2019. Incidence of all injuries was estimated to be 70.61 (62.60-78.70) per 1000 that psychological complications such as PTSD are as significant as physical symptoms.The ability to control a behavioral task or stimulate neural activity based on animal behavior in real-time is an important tool for experimental neuroscientists. Ideally, such tools are noninvasive, low-latency, and provide interfaces to trigger external hardware based on posture. Recent advances in pose estimation with deep learning allows researchers to train deep neural networks to accurately quantify a wide variety of animal behaviors. Here, we provide a new . Lastly, we benchmarked performance on a wide range of systems so that experimentalists can easily decide what hardware is required for their needs.Some cortical neurons receive highly selective thalamocortical (TC) input, but others do not. Here, we examine connectivity of single thalamic neurons (lateral geniculate nucleus, LGN) onto putative fast-spike inhibitory interneurons in layer 4 of rabbit visual cortex. We show that three 'rules' regulate this connectivity. These rules concern (1) the precision of retinotopic alignment, (2) the amplitude of the postsynaptic local field potential elicited near the interneuron by spikes of the LGN neuron, and (3) the interneuron's response latency to strong, synchronous LGN input. We found that virtually all first-order fast-spike interneurons receive input from nearly all LGN axons that synapse nearby, regardless of their visual response properties. This was not the case for neighboring regular-spiking neurons. We conclude that profuse and highly promiscuous TC inputs to layer-4 fast-spike inhibitory interneurons generate response properties that are well-suited to mediate a fast, sensitive, and broadly tuned feed-forward inhibition of visual cortical excitatory neurons.Analysis of the smallest known arthropod genome reveals a mechanism for genome reduction that appears to be driven by a specialized ecological interaction with plants.The organizational integrity of the adaptive immune system is determined by functionally discrete subsets of CD4+ T cells, but it has remained unclear to what extent lineage choice is influenced by clonotypically expressed T-cell receptors (TCRs). To address this issue, we used a high-throughput approach to profile the αβ TCR repertoires of human naive and effector/memory CD4+ T-cell subsets, irrespective of antigen specificity. Highly conserved physicochemical and recombinatorial features were encoded on a subset-specific basis in the effector/memory compartment. Clonal tracking further identified forbidden and permitted transition pathways, mapping effector/memory subsets related by interconversion or ontogeny. Public sequences were largely confined to particular effector/memory subsets, including regulatory T cells (Tregs), which also displayed hardwired repertoire features in the naive compartment. Accordingly, these cumulative repertoire portraits establish a link between clonotype fate decisions in the complex world of CD4+ T cells and the intrinsic properties of somatically rearranged TCRs.During a study investigating the microbiota of raw milk and its semi-finished products, strains WS 5106T and WS 5096 were isolated from cream and skimmed milk concentrate. They could be assigned to the genus Pseudomonas by their 16S rRNA sequences, but not to any validly named species. In this work, a polyphasic approach was used to characterize the novel strains and to investigate their taxonomic status. Examinations based on the topology of core genome phylogenomy as well as average nucleotide identity (ANIm) comparisons suggested a novel Pseudomonas species within the Pseudomonas fluorescens subgroup. With pairwise ANIm values of 90.1 and 89.8 %, WS 5106T was most closely related to Pseudomonas nabeulensis CECT 9765T and Pseudomonas kairouanensis CECT 9766T. The G+C content of strain WS 5106T was 60.1 mol%. Morphologic analyses revealed Gram-stain-negative, aerobic, catalase and oxidase positive, rod-shaped and motile cells. Proteolysis on skimmed milk agar as well as lipolysis on tributyrin agar occurred at both 28 and 6 °C. Tolerated growth conditions were temperatures between 4 and 34 °C, pH values between 6.0 and 8.0, and salt concentrations of up to 5 %. Fatty acid profiles showed a pattern typical for Pseudomonas, with C16 0 as the dominant component. The major cellular polar lipids were phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol and diphosphatidylglycerol and the dominating quinone was Q-9. Based on these results, it is proposed to classify the strains as a novel species, Pseudomonas cremoris sp. nov., with WS 5106T (=DSM 111143T=LMG 31863T) as type strain and WS 5096 (=DSM 111129=LMG 31864) as an additional strain.Sugarcane Grassy Shoot (SCGS) disease is known to be related to Rice Yellow Dwarf (RYD) phytoplasmas (16SrXI-B group) which are found predominantly in sugarcane growing areas of the Indian subcontinent and South-East Asia. The 16S rRNA gene sequences of SCGS phytoplasma strains belonging to the 16SrXI-B group share 98.07 % similarity with 'Ca. Phytoplasma cynodontis' strain BGWL-C1 followed by 97.65 % similarity with 'Ca. P. oryzae' strain RYD-J. Being placed distinctly away from both the phylogenetically related species, the taxonomic identity of SCGS phytoplasma is unclear and confusing. We attempted to resolve the phylogenetic positions of SCGS phytoplasma based on the phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA gene (>1500 bp), nine housekeeping genes (>3500 aa), core genome phylogeny (>10 000 aa) and OGRI values. The draft genome sequences of SCGS phytoplasma (strain SCGS) and Bermuda Grass White leaf (BGWL) phytoplasma (strain LW01), closely related to 'Ca. P. cynodontis', were obtained. The SCGS genome was comprised of 29 scaffolds corresponding to 505 173 bp while LW01 assembly contained 21 scaffolds corresponding to 483 935 bp with the fold coverages over 330× and completeness over 90 % for both the genomes. The G+C content of SCGS was 19.86 % while that of LW01 was 20.46 %. The orthoANI values for the strain SCGS against strains LW01 was 79.42 %, and dDDH values were 22. Overall analysis reveals that SCGS phytoplasma forms a distant clade in RYD group of phytoplasmas. Based on phylogenetic analyses and OGRI values obtained from the genome sequences, a novel taxon 'Candidatus Phytoplasma sacchari' is proposed.In Australia, Stylosanthes little leaf (StLL) phytoplasma has been detected in Stylosanthes scabra Vogel, Arachis pintoi Krapov, Saccharum officinarum L., Carica papaya L., Medicago sativa L., and Solanum tuberosum L. The 16S rRNA gene sequence of StLL phytoplasma strains from S. scabra, C. papaya, S. officinarum and S. tuberosum were compared and share 99.93-100 % nucleotide sequence identity. Phylogenetic comparisons between the 16S rRNA genes of StLL phytoplasma and other 'Candidatus Phytoplasma' species indicate that StLL represents a distinct phytoplasma lineage. It shares its most recent known ancestry with 'Ca. Phytoplasma luffae' (16SrVIII-A), with which it has 97.17-97.25 % nucleotide identity. In silico RFLP analysis of the 16S rRNA amplicon using iPhyClassifier indicate that StLL phytoplasmas have a unique pattern (similarity coefficient below 0.85) that is most similar to that of 'Ca. Phytoplasma luffae'. The unique in silico RFLP patterns were confirmed in vitro. Nucleotide sequences of genes that are more variable than the 16S rRNA gene, namely tuf (tu-elongation factor), secA (partial translocation gene), and the partial ribosomal protein (rp) gene operon (rps19-rpl22-rps3), produced phylogenetic trees with similar branching patterns to the 16S rRNA gene tree. Sequence comparisons between the StLL 16S rRNA spacer region confirmed previous reports of rrn interoperon sequence heterogeneity for StLL, where the spacer region of rrnB encodes a complete tRNA-Isoleucine gene and the rrnA spacer region does not. Together these results suggest that the Australian phytoplasma, StLL, is unique according to the International Organization for Mycoplasmology (IRPCM) recommendations. The novel taxon 'Ca. Phytoplasma stylosanthis' is proposed, with the most recent strain from a potato crop in Victoria, Australia, serving as the reference strain (deposited in the Victorian Plant Pathology Herbarium as VPRI 43683).A polyphasic taxonomic approach was used to characterize a novel bacterium, designated as strain HDW20T, isolated from the intestine of the dark diving beetle Hydrophilus acuminatus. The isolate was Gram-stain-positive, facultatively anaerobic, non-motile, coccus-shaped, and formed pale orange colonies. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA gene sequences and genome sequences showed that the isolate belonged to the genus Tessaracoccus in the phylum Actinobacteria and was closely related to T. flavescens SST-39T, T. defluvii JCM 17540T, and T. aquimaris NSG39T, with the highest 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity of 98.5 % and a highest average nucleotide identity (ANI) value of 80.6 %. The major cellular fatty acids were C18 1 ω9c and anteiso-C15 0. The main respiratory quinone was MK-9 (H4). The major polar lipid components were phosphatidylglycerol and diphosphatidylglycerol. The genomic DNA G+C content was 69.0 %. The isolate contains ʟʟ-diaminopimelic acid, ʟ-alanine, and ʟ-lysine as amino acid components, and ribose, glucose, and galactose as sugar components of the cell wall peptidoglycan. The results of phylogenetic, phenotypic, chemotaxonomic, and genotypic analyses suggested that strain HDW20T represents a novel species within the genus Tessaracoccus. We propose the name Tessaracoccus coleopterorum sp. nov. The type strain is HDW20T (=KACC 21348T=KCTC 49324T=JCM 33674T).
Establishing a valid communication is not only a basic clinical need to be met but also a relevant ethical commitment.
On the basis of the relevant literature, ethical issues arising from specific, important situations in clinical practice were identified.
The main ethical problems regarding communication about the disorder, both in general and in relation to prodromal stages, were described and discussed together with those regarding communication about voluntary and involuntary treatments, "dual roles" enacted in clinical practice, genetic counseling, and end-of-life conditions; on the basis of what emerged, ethically driven indications and suggestions were provided.
Several situations put the psychiatrist in front of relevant dilemmas and doubts which are no easy to face with; an ethically driven approach based upon the principle of the best interest of patients may support clinicians in their decisions.
Several situations put the psychiatrist in front of relevant dilemmas and doubts which are no easy to face with; an ethically driven approach based upon the principle of the best interest of patients may support clinicians in their decisions.This study examines the possible effects on objective work performance while using two types of dynamic office workstations (DOWs). 20 participants each used one type with three intensities (seated, light, moderate) and completed a task battery assessing cognitive performance and office work with two levels of complexity. Repeated measures MANOVA showed a significant interaction effect for work performance between the type of workstation and intensity for the simple level and a significant main effect for intensity for the complex level. Comparing the types of DOWs to each other, accuracy of text processing differed when working sedentary. Using both devices with light and moderate intensity had a significant detrimental effect on mouse tasks compared to working sedentary, but none comparing the intensities. No further results indicated neither a detrimental nor an enhancing effect of using DOWs on cognitive performance and office-work related tasks, regardless of the intensity of use or the task complexity. Practitioner Summary By using DOWs, light physical activity can be integrated while working at a desk. Results showed that using different types of DOWs with different intensities does have a detrimental effect on tasks requiring a high motor control, but not on cognitive or further office work-related tasks of various complexity. Abbreviations DOW dynamic office workstation; aLT activeLife Trainer; DB deskbike; RPE rated perceived exertion; MANOVA multivariate analysis of variance; ANOVA analysis of variance.Social power predicts numerous important life outcomes and social orientations. Thus far, the research literature has mainly examined how an individual's own power shapes interactions with others, whereas whether a target's power affects social interactions has been relatively neglected. In particular, does a target's power have an effect on the agent's prosocial behavior? Furthermore, could culture along with the power distance dimension alter the effect of a target's power on prosocial behavior? To explore these two research questions, we investigated the effect of a target's power (power unspecified targets vs. powerful targets) on prosocial behavior in both China and the United States. Questionnaires measuring prosocial behavior toward power unspecified or powerful targets were distributed to Chinese and American emerging adults (nin total = 893). According to the results, both Chinese and Americans were less likely to help powerful targets compared with power unspecified targets. Moreover, the Chinese were less prosocial toward both power unspecified and powerful targets in comparison to the Americans. These findings highlight the key roles of a target's power and culture in shaping an individual's prosocial behavior.The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has challenged and changed health care systems around the world. There has been a heterogeneity of disease burden, health care resources, and nonimaging testing availability, both geographically and over time. In parallel, there has been a continued increase in understanding how the disease affects patients, effectiveness of therapeutic options, and factors that modulate transmission risk. In this report, radiology experts in representative countries from around the world share insights gained from local experience. These insights provide a guidepost to help address management challenges as cases continue to rise in many parts of the world and suggest modifications in workflow that are likely to continue after this pandemic subsides.Background Singapore saw an escalation of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases from fewer than 4000 in April 2020 to more than 40 000 in June 2020, with most of these cases attributed to spread within shared facilities housing foreign workers. Appropriate triage and escalation of clinical care are crucial for this patient group managed in community care facilities (CCFs). Purpose To evaluate the imaging guideline recommendations for COVID-19 from the Fleischner Society and to analyze the clinical utility of screening chest radiography for asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic patients with COVID-19. Materials and Methods In this retrospective study, patients with reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction-confirmed COVID-19 who were admitted to a designated CCF for continuation of their treatment during May 3-31, 2020, were identified. Upon admission, patients aged 36 years and older without any baseline chest images underwent chest radiography. All chest radiographs and clinical outcomes of patientrdance with Fleischner Society recommendations, screening chest radiography is not indicated in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 who are aged 17-60 years with mild or no symptoms unless there is risk of clinical deterioration. © RSNA, 2021 See also the editorial by Schaefer-Prokop and Prokop in this issue.Background Hyperpolarized noble gas MRI helps measure lung ventilation, but clinical translation remains limited. Free-breathing proton MRI may help quantify lung function using existing MRI systems without contrast material and may assist in providing information about ventilation not visible to the eye or easily extracted with segmentation methods. Purpose To explore the use of deep convolutional neural networks (DCNNs) to generate synthetic MRI ventilation scans from free-breathing MRI (deep learning [DL] ventilation MRI)-derived specific ventilation maps as a surrogate of noble gas MRI and to validate this approach across a wide range of lung diseases. Materials and Methods In this secondary analysis of prospective trials, 114 paired noble gas MRI and two-dimensional free-breathing MRI scans were obtained in healthy volunteers with no history of chronic or acute respiratory disease and in study participants with a range of different obstructive lung diseases, including asthma, bronchiectasis, chronic obstRI ventilation was 0.91 ± 0.07. The ventilation defect percentage for DL ventilation MRI was highly correlated with 3He MRI ventilation defect percentage (rS = 0.83, P less then .001, mean bias = -2.0% ± 5). Both DL ventilation MRI (rS = -0.51, P less then .001) and 3He MRI (rS = -0.61, P less then .001) ventilation defect percentage were correlated with the forced expiratory volume in 1 second. The DCNN model required approximately 2 hours for training and approximately 1 second to generate a ventilation map. Conclusion In participants with diverse pulmonary pathologic findings, deep convolutional neural networks generated ventilation maps from free-breathing proton MRI trained with a hyperpolarized noble-gas MRI ventilation map data set. The maps showed correlation with noble gas MRI ventilation and pulmonary function measurements. © RSNA, 2020 See also the editorial by Vogel-Claussen in this issue.Background A framework for understanding rapid diffusion changes from 0 to 6 years of age is important in the detection of neurodevelopmental disorders. Purpose To quantify patterns of normal apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) development from 0 to 6 years of age. Materials and Methods Previously constructed age-specific ADC atlases from 201 healthy full-term children (108 male; age range, 0-6 years) with MRI scans acquired from 2006 to 2013 at one large academic hospital were analyzed to quantify four patterns ADC trajectory, rate of ADC change, age of ADC maturation, and hemispheric asymmetries of maturation ages. Patterns were quantified in whole-brain, segmented regional, and voxelwise levels by fitting a two-term exponential model. Hemispheric asymmetries in ADC maturation ages were assessed using t tests with Bonferroni correction. Results The posterior limb of the internal capsule (mean ADC left hemisphere, 1.18 ×103μm2/sec; right hemisphere, 1.17 ×103μm2/sec), anterior limb of the internal capsule (rs ± 0.33), basal ganglia (left, 1.79 years ± 0.31; right, 1.70 years ± 0.37), and hippocampi (left, 1.93 years ± 0.34; right, 1.78 years ± 0.33). Conclusion Normative apparent diffusion coefficient developmental patterns on diffusion-weighted MRI scans were quantified in children aged 0 to 6 years. This work provides knowledge about early brain development and may guide the detection of abnormal patterns of maturation. © RSNA, 2020 Online supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Rollins in this issue.Background Functional MRI improves preoperative planning in patients with brain tumors, but task-correlated signal intensity changes are only 2%-3% above baseline. This makes accurate functional mapping challenging. Marchenko-Pastur principal component analysis (MP-PCA) provides a novel strategy to separate functional MRI signal from noise without requiring user input or prior data representation. Purpose To determine whether MP-PCA denoising improves activation magnitude for task-based functional MRI language mapping in patients with brain tumors. Materials and Methods In this Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act-compliant study, MP-PCA performance was first evaluated by using simulated functional MRI data with a known ground truth. Right-handed, left-language-dominant patients with brain tumors who successfully performed verb generation, sentence completion, and finger tapping functional MRI tasks were retrospectively identified between January 2017 and August 2018. On the group level, for ea± 0.40; P = .90), sentence completion (from -2.3 ± 0.21 to -2.4 ± 0.37; P = .39), or finger tapping (from -2.3 ± 1.20 to -2.7 ± 1.40; P = .07). Individual functional MRI task durations could be truncated by at least 40% after MP-PCA without degradation of clinically relevant correlations between functional cortex and functional MRI tasks. Conclusion Denoising with Marchenko-Pastur principal component analysis led to higher task correlations in relevant cortical regions during functional MRI language mapping in patients with brain tumors. © RSNA, 2020 Online supplemental material is available for this article.Like many fields, bioethics has been constrained to thinking to race in terms of colorblindness, the idea that ideal deliberation would ignore race and hence prevent bias. There are practical and ethically significant problems with colorblind approaches to ethical deliberation, and important reasons why race is ethically relevant. Future discourse needs to understand how and why race is relevant in bioethics.Gut microbial communities of athletes differ from that of sedentary persons in both diversity and the presence of certain taxa. However, it is unclear to what degree elite athletes and non-elite athletes harbor different gut microbial community patterns and if we can effectively monitor the potential of athletes based on microbiota. A team of professional female rowing athletes in China was recruited and 306 fecal samples were collected from 19 individuals, which were separated into three cohorts adult elite athlete's (AE), youth elite athlete's (YE), and youth non-elite athlete's (YN). The differences in gut microbiome among different cohorts were compared, and their associations with dietary factors, physical characteristics, and athletic performance were investigated. The microbial diversities of elite athletes were higher than those of youth non-elite athletes. The taxonomical, functional, and phenotypic compositions of AE, YE and YN were significantly different. Additionally, three enterotypes with clear separation were identified in athlete's fecal samples, with majority of elite athletes stratified into enterotype 3. And this enterotype-dependent gut microbiome is strongly associated with athlete performances. These differences in athlete gut microbiota lead to establishment of a random forest classifier based on taxonomical and functional biomarkers, capable of differentiating elite athletes and non-elite athletes with high accuracy. Finally, these versatilities of athlete microbial communities of athletes were found to be associated with dietary factors and physical characteristics, which can in concert explain 41% of the variability in gut microbiome.In silico studies are attracting considerable interest due to their ability to understand protein-ligand interactions at the atomic level. The main principal tools of this in silico analyses are molecular docking and molecular dynamic (MD) simulation. This paper examines how can natural compounds that are derived from Salviae miltiorrhizae to block Neisseria adhesion A Regulatory protein (NadR). In molecular docking analysis, only four compounds were found in higher binding affinity with NadR among 10 candidates (tanshinol B, tanshinol A, lithospermic acid and tournefolal were -7.61, -7.56, -8.22 and -7.81 kcal/mol, respectively, compared to -7.23 kcal/mol of native ligand). Absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion (ADME) and toxicity properties, medicinal chemistry profile, and physicochemical features were displayed that tournefolal contains good properties to work as a safe and good anti-adhesive drug. Therefore, the complexes of these four ligands with NadR protein were subjected to 100 ns of MD simulation.