101 resultados para Governo Local
Resumo:
We conducted a molecular study of MRSA isolated in Swiss hospitals, including the first five consecutive isolates recovered from blood cultures and the first ten isolates recovered from other sites in newly identified carriers. Among 73 MRSA isolates, 44 different double locus sequence typing (DLST) types and 32 spa types were observed. Most isolates belonged to the NewYork/Japan, the UK-EMRSA-15, the South German and the Berlin clones. In a country with a low to moderate MRSA incidence, inclusion of non-invasive isolates allowed a more accurate description of the diversity.
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Aims: To assess the potential distribution of an obligate seeder and active pyrophyte, Cistus salviifolius, a vulnerable species in the Swiss Red List; to derive scenarios by changing the fire return interval; and to discuss the results from a conservation perspective. A more general aim is to assess the impact of fire as a natural factor influencing the vegetation of the southern slopes of the Alps. Locations: Alps, southern Switzerland. Methods: Presence-absence data to fit the model were obtained from the most recent field mapping of C. salviifolius. The quantitative environmental predictors used in this study include topographic, climatic and disturbance (fire) predictors. Models were fitted by logistic regression and evaluated by jackknife and bootstrap approaches. Changes in fire regime were simulated by increasing the time-return interval of fire (simulating longer periods without fire). Two scenarios were considered: no fire in the past 15 years; or in the past 35 years. Results: Rock cover, slope, topographic position, potential evapotranspiration and time elapsed since the last fire were selected in the final model. The Nagelkerke R-2 of the model for C. salviifolius was 0.57 and the Jackknife area under the curve evaluation was 0.89. The bootstrap evaluation revealed model robustness. By increasing the return interval of fire by either up to 15 years, or 35 years, the modelled C. salviifolius population declined by 30-40%, respectively. Main conclusions: Although fire plays a significant role, topography and rock cover appear to be the most important predictors, suggesting that the distribution of C. salviifolius in the southern Swiss Alps is closely related to the availability of supposedly competition-free sites, such as emerging bedrock, ridge locations or steep slopes. Fire is more likely to play a secondary role in allowing C. salviifolius to extend its occurrence temporarily, by increasing germination rates and reducing the competition from surrounding vegetation. To maintain a viable dormant seed bank for C. salviifolius, conservation managers should consider carrying out vegetation clearing and managing wild fire propagation to reduce competition and ensure sufficient recruitment for this species.
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Cortical folding (gyrification) is determined during the first months of life, so that adverse events occurring during this period leave traces that will be identifiable at any age. As recently reviewed by Mangin and colleagues(2), several methods exist to quantify different characteristics of gyrification. For instance, sulcal morphometry can be used to measure shape descriptors such as the depth, length or indices of inter-hemispheric asymmetry(3). These geometrical properties have the advantage of being easy to interpret. However, sulcal morphometry tightly relies on the accurate identification of a given set of sulci and hence provides a fragmented description of gyrification. A more fine-grained quantification of gyrification can be achieved with curvature-based measurements, where smoothed absolute mean curvature is typically computed at thousands of points over the cortical surface(4). The curvature is however not straightforward to comprehend, as it remains unclear if there is any direct relationship between the curvedness and a biologically meaningful correlate such as cortical volume or surface. To address the diverse issues raised by the measurement of cortical folding, we previously developed an algorithm to quantify local gyrification with an exquisite spatial resolution and of simple interpretation. Our method is inspired of the Gyrification Index(5), a method originally used in comparative neuroanatomy to evaluate the cortical folding differences across species. In our implementation, which we name local Gyrification Index (lGI(1)), we measure the amount of cortex buried within the sulcal folds as compared with the amount of visible cortex in circular regions of interest. Given that the cortex grows primarily through radial expansion(6), our method was specifically designed to identify early defects of cortical development. In this article, we detail the computation of local Gyrification Index, which is now freely distributed as a part of the FreeSurfer Software (http://surfer.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/, Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital). FreeSurfer provides a set of automated reconstruction tools of the brain's cortical surface from structural MRI data. The cortical surface extracted in the native space of the images with sub-millimeter accuracy is then further used for the creation of an outer surface, which will serve as a basis for the lGI calculation. A circular region of interest is then delineated on the outer surface, and its corresponding region of interest on the cortical surface is identified using a matching algorithm as described in our validation study(1). This process is repeatedly iterated with largely overlapping regions of interest, resulting in cortical maps of gyrification for subsequent statistical comparisons (Fig. 1). Of note, another measurement of local gyrification with a similar inspiration was proposed by Toro and colleagues(7), where the folding index at each point is computed as the ratio of the cortical area contained in a sphere divided by the area of a disc with the same radius. The two implementations differ in that the one by Toro et al. is based on Euclidian distances and thus considers discontinuous patches of cortical area, whereas ours uses a strict geodesic algorithm and include only the continuous patch of cortical area opening at the brain surface in a circular region of interest.
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Laudisa (Found. Phys. 38:1110-1132, 2008) claims that experimental research on the class of non-local hidden-variable theories introduced by Leggett is misguided, because these theories are irrelevant for the foundations of quantum mechanics. I show that Laudisa's arguments fail to establish the pessimistic conclusion he draws from them. In particular, it is not the case that Leggett-inspired research is based on a mistaken understanding of Bell's theorem, nor that previous no-hidden-variable theorems already exclude Leggett's models. Finally, I argue that the framework of Bohmian mechanics brings out the importance of Leggett tests, rather than proving their irrelevance, as Laudisa supposes.
Les groupes d'intérêt vus du local. Les promoteurs immobiliers dans le secteur du logement en France
Resumo:
Patients with rectal cancer are at high risk of disease recurrence despite neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy with 5-Fluorouracil (5FU), a regimen that is now widely applied. In order to develop a regimen with increased antitumour activity, we previously established the recommended dose of neoadjuvant CPT-11 (three times weekly 90 mg m(-2)) concomitant to hyperfractionated accelerated radiotherapy (HART) followed by surgery within 1 week. Thirty-three patients (20 men) with a locally advanced adenocarcinoma of the rectum were enrolled in this prospective phase II trial (1 cT2, 29 cT3, 3 cT4 and 21 cN+). Median age was 60 years (range 43-75 years). All patients received all three injections of CPT-11 and all but two patients completed radiotherapy as planned. Surgery with total mesorectal excision (TME) was performed within 1 week (range 2-15 days). The preoperative chemoradiotherapy was overall well tolerated, 24% of the patients experienced grade 3 diarrhoea that was easily manageable. At a median follow-up of 2 years no local recurrence occurred, however, nine patients developed distant metastases. The 2-year disease-free survival was 66% (95% confidence interval 0.48-0.83). Neoadjuvant CPT-11 and HART allow for excellent local control; however, distant relapse remains a concern in this patient population.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: MR tissue tagging allows the noninvasive assessment of the locally and temporally resolved motion pattern of the left ventricle. Alterations in cardiac torsion and diastolic relaxation of the left ventricle were studied in patients with aortic stenosis and were compared with those of healthy control subjects and championship rowers with physiological volume-overload hypertrophy. METHODS AND RESULTS: Twelve aortic stenosis patients, 11 healthy control subjects with normal left ventricular function, and 11 world-championship rowers were investigated for systolic and diastolic heart wall motion on a basal and an apical level of the myocardium. Systolic torsion and untwisting during diastole were examined by use of a novel tagging technique (CSPAMM) that provides access to systolic and diastolic motion data. In the healthy heart, the left ventricle performs a systolic wringing motion, with a counterclockwise rotation at the apex and a clockwise rotation at the base. Apical untwisting precedes diastolic filling. In the athlete's heart, torsion and untwisting remain unchanged compared with those of the control subjects. In aortic stenosis patients, torsion is significantly increased and diastolic apical untwisting is prolonged compared with those of control subjects or athletes. CONCLUSIONS: Torsional behavior as observed in pressure- and volume-overloaded hearts is consistent with current theoretical findings. A delayed diastolic untwisting in the pressure-overloaded hearts of the patients may contribute to a tendency toward diastolic dysfunction.
Resumo:
Après la compression du nerf médian au niveau du tunnel carpien, la compression du nerf ulnaire au niveau du coude est le deuxième syndrome compressif le plus fréquent des nerfs périphériques. La chirurgie des nerfs périphériques consiste dans une décompression nerveuse et est caractérisée par un suivi post¬opératoire parfois très douloureux avec des douleurs qui peuvent chroniciser si insuffisamment traitées. Le traitement chirurgical de décompression nerveuse se fait traditionnellement sous anesthésie générale ou régionale. Une analgésie post-opératoire plus efficace et durable avec moindre risque de chronicisation avait justifié ce choix jusqu'à ce jour. Grâce au développement de la chirurgie ambulatoire ces dernières années, un grand nombre d'interventions chirurgicales au niveau de la main sont effectués sous anesthésie locale. Au vu d'une meilleure connaissance de cette technique d'anesthésie, son rôle dans la chirurgie des nerfs périphériques a été remis en question. Alors que plusieurs études ont démontré que l'anesthésie locale est aussi efficace que l'anesthésie générale et régionale au sujet de la chirurgie du tunnel carpien, son utilisation pour la chirurgie du nerf ulnaire reste peu connue. La raison de l'hésitation à l'utilisation de l'anesthésie locale pour le traitement du tunnel ulnaire est due au fait que dans plus de la moitié des cas, une simple décompression n'est pas suffisante et qu'il est souvent nécessaire de transposer le nerf ulnaire devant l'épicondyle ulnaire. La seule publication disponible au sujet de l'utilisation de l'anesthésie locale dans le traitement du tunnel ulnaire considère comme irréalisable d'utiliser cette méthode dans le cas d'une transposition. Malgré cette mise en garde, nous avons, depuis plusieurs années, des excellents résultats avec la transposition du nerf ulnaire sous anesthésie locale. Avec le but d'objectiver notre expérience dans ce domaine nous avons souhaité analyser nos résultats de façon rétrospective avec particulière attention aux douleurs post-opératoires et à la satisfaction des patients. Les dossiers de cinquante patients Consécutifs (26F, 24M) opérés par le même chirurgien dans notre service de 2002 à 2012 ont été analysés rétrospectivement. Les critères suivants ont été récoltés: l'âge du patient, la profession, la main dominante, les détails des techniques opératoires utilisées, le type d'anesthésie, l'intensité du suivi ainsi que les complications, le niveau de douleur dans l'immédiat post-opératorie ainsi que à une année de l'intervention. Les patients ont été divisés en 4 groupes: les opérés sous anesthésie générale avec transposition du nerf (n=17) ou sans transposition (n=10) et les opérés sous anesthésie locale avec transposition (n=12) ou sans transposition (n=11). Au premier jour la douleur était comparable dans tous les groupes. A une semaine, elle était deux fois plus importante lorsque la transposition avait été réalisée sous anesthésie générale par rapport à si une anesthésie locale avait été effectuée (p=0.03). La satisfaction s'est révélée plus élevée mais non significative chez les patients opérés sous anesthésie locale. Ces derniers étaient significativement plus enclins à répéter la chirurgie comparé a ceux opérés sous anesthésie générale (p=0.04). En conclusion, les résultats de cette étude suggèrent que l'anesthésie locale est au moins autant efficace que l'anesthésie générale en termes de complications et de douleurs post-opératoires indépendamment du fait qu'une transposition nerveuse soit effectuée ou pas. Un meilleur contrôle des douleurs à une semaine post-opératoire a contribué à une haute satisfaction des patients de notre étude.