Asthma is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in children worldwide, but many cases may remain undiagnosed. Community health worker (CHW) programs have improved detection of other diseases such as childhood pneumonia, but none have been validated for detection of asthma in resource-poor settings. We hypothesized that a CHW administered questionnaire would be effective in case-detection of asthma in a poor Nicaraguan community.
We enrolled children aged 2-17 from a small semiurban Nicaraguan community. A trained CHW administered a questionnaire based on a previously validated school-based screening questionnaire, which was compared to pediatric pulmonologist evaluation as a reference standard. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/pj34-hcl.html We determined the questionnaire's sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative likelihood ratios at different score cut-points.
A total of 199 out of 218 eligible children were enrolled. Total asthma prevalence based on physician diagnosis was 33%. Mean scores on the CHW questionnaire were 3.6 points oue could greatly increase the detection of asthma, allowing for education and referral for ongoing care.
Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have a higher risk of falls and fractures due to muscle weakness and painful joints of the lower extremities. Evaluation of muscle functions is important to predict falls and fractures. The aim was to investigate the relationships of muscle functions with falls and fractures in RA patients.
Stand-up muscle power, speed, and stabilizing time were evaluated by a muscle function analyzer in 90 RA patients in the CHIKARA study (UMIN000023744). The relationships of the muscle functions with falls, fractures, body composition, Disease Activity Score of 28 joints - erythrocyte sedimentation rate (DAS28-ESR), modified Health Assessment Questionnaire (mHAQ) scores, Steinbrocker class, stage, sarcopenia, and frailty were investigated in a cross-sectional study.
Each parameter of muscle function was related to age, falls, frailty, and the leg muscle score. However, only stabilizing time was related with fractures (r=.217, P=.04). When stabilizing time was≥1.13 and ≥1.36seconds, the odds ratios for falls and fractures were increased 6.2-fold compared to<1.13seconds (95% CI 1.2-20.1, P=.002) and 11.4-fold compared to <1.36seconds (95% CI 1.7-92.5, P=.071), respectively. Sarcopenia and skeletal muscle mass were not significantly related to each muscle function. There was a negative correlation between DAS28-ESR and power. Steinbrocker class and mHAQ had negative correlations with power and speed.
Sarcopenia and skeletal muscle mass were not adequate indicators of muscle functions in RA patients. Analyzing muscle functions is helpful to predict falls and fractures. Patients with extended stabilizing times should recognize the increased risk of falls and fractures.
Sarcopenia and skeletal muscle mass were not adequate indicators of muscle functions in RA patients. Analyzing muscle functions is helpful to predict falls and fractures. Patients with extended stabilizing times should recognize the increased risk of falls and fractures.
The lung clearance index (LCI) derived from the multiple breath washout test (MBW), is both feasible and sensitive to early lung disease detection in young children with cystic fibrosis and asthma. The utility of LCI has not been studied in children with sickle cell disease (SCD). We hypothesized that children with SCD, with or without asthma or airway hyperreactivity (AHR), would have an elevated LCI compared to healthy controls.
Children with SCD from a single center between the ages of 6 and 18 years were studied at baseline health and completed MBW, spirometry, plethysmography and blood was drawn for serum markers. Results were compared to healthy controls of similar race, age, and gender.
Healthy controls (n = 35) had a significantly higher daytime oxygen saturation level, weight and body mass index but not height compared to participants with SCD (n = 34). Total lung capacity (TLC) z-scores were significantly higher in the healthy controls compared to those with SCD (0.87 [1.13] vs. 0.02 [1.27]; p = .005) while differences in forced expiratory volume in 1 s z-scores approached significance (0.26 [0.97] vs. -0.22 [1.09]; p = .055). There was no significant difference in LCI between the healthy controls compared to participants with SCD (7.29 [0.72] vs. 7.40 [0.69]; p = .514).
LCI did not differentiate SCD from healthy controls in children between the ages of 6 and 18 years at baseline health. link2 TLC may be an important pulmonary function measure to follow longitudinally in the pediatric SCD population.
LCI did not differentiate SCD from healthy controls in children between the ages of 6 and 18 years at baseline health. TLC may be an important pulmonary function measure to follow longitudinally in the pediatric SCD population.Homestead food production (HFP) programmes improve the availability of vegetables by providing training in growing nutrient-dense crops. In rural Tanzania, most foods consumed are carbohydrate-rich staples with low micronutrient concentrations. This cluster-randomized controlled trial investigated whether women growing home gardens have higher dietary diversity, household food security or probability of consuming nutrient-rich food groups than women in a control group. We enrolled 1,006 women of reproductive age in 10 villages in Pwani Region in eastern Tanzania, split between intervention (INT) and control (CON) groups. INT received (a) agricultural training and inputs to promote HFP and dietary diversity and (b) nutrition and public health counselling from agricultural extension workers and community health workers. CON received standard services provided by agriculture and health workers. Results were analysed using linear regression models with propensity weighting adjusting for individual-level confounders and differential loss to follow up. Women in INT consumed 0.50 (95% CI [0.20, 0.80], p = 0.001) more food groups per day than women in CON. Women in INT were also 14 percentage points (95% CI [6, 22], p = 0.001) more likely to consume at least five food groups per day, and INT households were 6 percentage points (95% CI [-13, 0], p = 0.059) less likely to experience moderate-to-severe food insecurity compared with CON. This home gardening intervention had positive effects on diet quality and food security after 1 year. Future research should explore whether impact is sustained over time as well as the effects of home garden interventions on additional measures of nutritional status.Pyralid moths, Ephestia kuehniella and Plodia interpunctella, are prevalent stored product pests. The insecticides are the main tool to control these moths in the stores. The data describing the response of these moths to insecticides are scarce. The lethal effect of the organophosphate, pyrethroid, and halogenated-pyrrole on moths larvae were compared in laboratory test. The hypothesis was that the very polyphagous P. interpunctella would have generally higher insecticide tolerance than that of the stenophagous E. kuehniella. Different insecticide concentrations were applied onto the inner surface of glass tube vials. Ten larvae of 14 or 21 d old of E. kuehniella and 7 or 14 d old of P. interpunctella were used by treatment. The larval mortality was checked after 24 h of exposure. The mortality was significantly influenced by age of larvae and the groups of chemicals. No differences among the efficacies of the tested formulations with identical active compounds were found, except significant different mortality of E. kuehniella on deltamethrin formulations. A comparison of analytical standards showed that P. interpunctella was less susceptible to the active ingredient pirimiphos-methyl than E. kuehniella, while E. kuehniella was less susceptible to deltamethrin than P. interpunctella. No differences between the two species were observed for chlorfenapyr. We therefore rejected the hypothesis that polyphagy/stenophagy can be a general predictor of insecticide tolerance in the two tested storage moths. The most important finding for effective use was that the young larvae of both species were more susceptible to tested insecticides than older larvae.Zinc oxide thin films are fabricated by controlled oxidation of sputtered zinc metal films on a hotplate in air at temperatures between 250 and 450 °C. The nanocrystalline films possess high relative densities and show preferential growth in (100) orientation. Integration in thin-film transistors reveals moderate charge carrier mobilities as high as 0.2 cm2 V-1 s-1 . The semiconducting properties depend on the calcination temperature, whereby the best performance is achieved at 450 °C. The defect structure of the thin ZnO film can be tracked by Doppler-broadening positron annihilation spectroscopy as well as positron lifetime studies. Comparably long positron lifetimes suggest interaction of zinc vacancies (VZn ) with one or more oxygen vacancies (VO ) in larger structural entities. Such VO -VZn defect clusters act as shallow acceptors, and thus, reduce the overall electron conductivity of the film. The concentration of these defect clusters decreases at higher calcination temperatures as indicated by changes in the S and W parameters. Such zinc oxide films obtained by conversion of metallic zinc can also be used as seed layers for solution deposition of zinc oxide nanowires employing a mild microwave-assisted process. The functionality of the obtained nanowire arrays is tested in a UV sensor device. The best results with respect to sensor sensitivity are achieved with thinner seed layers for device construction.Azetidinones and β-amino acids serve as useful building blocks in synthetic organic chemistry and their structural motifs are often found in biologically active compounds. Due to the importance of these compounds, several synthetic strategies have been developed and availability of new synthetic approaches is highly desirable. In this account, we describe the development of an original method that allows the preparation of β-lactam and β-homoproline derivatives not easily accessible through traditional processes. The serendipitous discovery made in our lab in 2000 involved the formation of a β-lactam by heating a mixture of an alkylidenecyclopropane tethered to a formyl group with N-methylhydroxylamine hydrochloride. Investigation of the process resulted in disclosing an alternative synthetic method of azetidinones based on an acid induced fragmentative rearrangement of cycloadducts of nitrones with suitable methylenecyclopropane derivatives. Herein, the scope of this process is reviewed. In addition, both experimental and computational studies of the mechanism for this peculiar fragmentative rearrangement are presented.Genomic full-length sequence of HLA-A*24233 was identified by group-specific sequencing in a Chinese individual.Characterization of two novel HLA-A alleles in two Greek individuals of Cretan origin.Class III peroxidases (CIII Prxs) play critical roles in plant immunity by scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS). link3 However, the functions of CIII Prxs in rice (Oryza sativa L.) immunity are largely unexplored. Here, we report a Prx precursor, OsPrx30, that is responsive to the bacterial blight Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo). OsPrx30 was primarily expressed in rice roots, leaves, and stems, and its protein product was mainly localized at the endoplasmic reticulum. Overexpression of OsPrx30 enhanced the plant's susceptibility to Xoo by maintaining a high level of peroxidase (POD) activity and reducing the content of H2 O2 , whereas depletion of OsPrx30 had the opposite effects. Furthermore, we identified an AT-hook transcription factor, OsATH1, that is specifically bound to the OsPrx30 promoter. As observed in plants overexpressing OsPrx30, depletion of OsATH1 enhanced susceptibility to Xoo. Finally, we demonstrated that depletion of OsATH1 increased histone H3 acetylation at the AT-rich region of the OsPrx30 promoter.