9 resultados para Rudolph Agricola
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
Plan du travail Nous traiterons de cet aspect historique et contextuel dans la première partie. Les trois premiers chapitres décrivent les fondements antiques et médiévaux de la philosophie naturelle seiziémiste et évoquent l'influence du De animalibus d'Albert le Grand sur les médecins naturalistes. Nous en arriverons alors aux liens qui unissent ces derniers (chapitre IV) et aux conditions matérielles et intellectuelles qui entourent et parfois entravent la parution des ouvrages (chapitre V). Nous nous pencherons ensuite sur l'identité des lecteurs susceptibles d'être intéressés par les traités d'histoire naturelle. Ces lecteurs ont des attentes qui méritent aussi un examen quant à leur origine, car elles conditionnent pour une part variable, mais importante, le contenu des oeuvres (chapitre VI). Confrontés à des critiques, à des obstacles institutionnels parfois séculaires, les médecins naturalistes se défendent pour une part en reprenant les arguments de leurs prédécesseurs médiévaux. Mais nous les verrons mettre en place de nouvelles stratégies, en relation étroite avec le renouveau bien connu de la dialectique et de la rhétorique, qui trouve ses racines en Italie du nord à la fin du XVe siècle. Ce point sera développé dans la seconde partie, qui servira de transition essentielle dans notre exposé. C'est là que nous découvrirons que la rhétorique ne s'impose pas uniquement comme un rituel renouvelé de la dispute médiévale : elle n'entre pas seulement en jeu lorsqu'il s'agit de défendre ses intérêts contre des rivaux ou des adversaires académiques (chapitre VII). Les médecins naturalistes mettent au contraire au point des instruments au service d'un processus heuristique qui s'inspire des nouveaux canons de la rhétorique, dont Rudolph Agricola est un des théoriciens principaux (chapitre VIII). Ces observations nous amèneront à repréciser ce qu'il faut entendre par philosophie naturelle au XVIe siècle, notamment au travers de l'autorité de personnages comme Théodore Gaza (chapitre IX) et à définir les fondements généraux de l'histoire naturelle seiziémiste, en adoptant des points de vue divers : examen des tables des matières d'ouvrages, des réflexions des médecins naturalistes, avec à leur tête Conrad Gesner, ou encore étude de la pénétration de l'histoire naturelle dans quelques récits des voyageurs aux Amériques (chapitre X et XI). Arrivé à ce point de l'exposé, le lecteur aura constaté que la solidité de l'histoire naturelle seiziémiste tient à une stratégie discursive soigneusement élaborée. Le développement détaillé et l'application de ce nouveau processus, qui s'ancre au plus profond du discours descriptif de la nature, seront décrits dans la troisième partie. Nous commencerons par y rappeler quels sont les instruments antiques de la description des particulares, l'accident et la différence, que les médecins naturalistes adaptent à leurs exigences heuristiques (chapitre XII). Nous verrons le rôle de "nota", outil discursif méconnu, qui désigne les éléments décisifs ou arguments par lesquels les médecins naturalistes identifient les espèces décrites par les anciens en les confrontant aux espèces réelles (chapitre XIII). Une fois présenté l'instrument descriptif, se pose la question de son utilisation par les médecins naturalistes et de son évaluation par rapport au fonctionnement de la taxonomie moderne (chapitre XIV). La différence entre les deux regards sur la nature apparaîtra comme fondamentale : les médecins naturalistes assignent à leurs investigations des limites, inhérentes à l'origine sacrée de leur quête, qui relève de la philosophie, elle-même subordonnée à la théologie. Cela se percevra par exemple dans la description des animaux du Nouveau Monde. Les conséquences de cette constatation sont considérables : elles remettent en cause le statut du "savant" du XVIe siècle, qui ne saurait être assimilé à l'observateur extérieur tel que l'érige la science des Lumières. Belon et ses collègues se disent plutôt des "contemplateurs" et des interprètes, ce qui les rapprochent de la figure du poète, avec qui ils entretiennent des rapports ambivalents. C'est la relation même du médecin naturaliste au langage de la nature qui s'en trouve affectée : le savant n'a pas la maîtrise du discours, dans la mesure où les signes qu'il interprète et, dans une certaine mesure, ordonne, du latin : les noms d'espèces, entre autres dans les titres de notices descriptives, pour mieux cerner la relation entre la langue antique et la vernaculaire, ainsi que la notion de langue originelle chez les médecins naturalistes (chapitre XVIII). Les points communs qui émergeront de cette confrontation feront disparaître le clivage anachronique entre langue latine et langue vernaculaire, de même que l'hypothèse de l'insuffisance lexicale de la seconde, dont les médecins naturalistes auraient en vain voulu faire l'instrument de la science moderne (chapitre XIX). Le chapitre XX aura pour but d'établir le lien et l'adéquation entre les caractéristiques du discours descriptif ainsi mises en évidence et les fondements véritables de l'histoire naturelle seiziémiste.
Resumo:
Ophthalmologists typically acquire different image modalities to diagnose eye pathologies. They comprise, e.g., Fundus photography, optical coherence tomography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Yet, these images are often complementary and do express the same pathologies in a different way. Some pathologies are only visible in a particular modality. Thus, it is beneficial for the ophthalmologist to have these modalities fused into a single patient-specific model. The goal of this paper is a fusion of Fundus photography with segmented MRI volumes. This adds information to MRI that was not visible before like vessels and the macula. This paper contributions include automatic detection of the optic disc, the fovea, the optic axis, and an automatic segmentation of the vitreous humor of the eye.
Resumo:
Age at menarche is a marker of timing of puberty in females. It varies widely between individuals, is a heritable trait and is associated with risks for obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, breast cancer and all-cause mortality. Studies of rare human disorders of puberty and animal models point to a complex hypothalamic-pituitary-hormonal regulation, but the mechanisms that determine pubertal timing and underlie its links to disease risk remain unclear. Here, using genome-wide and custom-genotyping arrays in up to 182,416 women of European descent from 57 studies, we found robust evidence (P < 5 × 10(-8)) for 123 signals at 106 genomic loci associated with age at menarche. Many loci were associated with other pubertal traits in both sexes, and there was substantial overlap with genes implicated in body mass index and various diseases, including rare disorders of puberty. Menarche signals were enriched in imprinted regions, with three loci (DLK1-WDR25, MKRN3-MAGEL2 and KCNK9) demonstrating parent-of-origin-specific associations concordant with known parental expression patterns. Pathway analyses implicated nuclear hormone receptors, particularly retinoic acid and γ-aminobutyric acid-B2 receptor signalling, among novel mechanisms that regulate pubertal timing in humans. Our findings suggest a genetic architecture involving at least hundreds of common variants in the coordinated timing of the pubertal transition.
Resumo:
The length of female reproductive lifespan is associated with multiple adverse outcomes, including breast cancer, cardiovascular disease and infertility. The biological processes that govern the timing of the beginning and end of reproductive life are not well understood. Genetic variants are known to contribute to ∼50% of the variation in both age at menarche and menopause, but to date the known genes explain <15% of the genetic component. We have used genome-wide association in a bivariate meta-analysis of both traits to identify genes involved in determining reproductive lifespan. We observed significant genetic correlation between the two traits using genome-wide complex trait analysis. However, we found no robust statistical evidence for individual variants with an effect on both traits. A novel association with age at menopause was detected for a variant rs1800932 in the mismatch repair gene MSH6 (P = 1.9 × 10(-9)), which was also associated with altered expression levels of MSH6 mRNA in multiple tissues. This study contributes to the growing evidence that DNA repair processes play a key role in ovarian ageing and could be an important therapeutic target for infertility.
Resumo:
PURPOSE: Ocular anatomy and radiation-associated toxicities provide unique challenges for external beam radiation therapy. For treatment planning, precise modeling of organs at risk and tumor volume are crucial. Development of a precise eye model and automatic adaptation of this model to patients' anatomy remain problematic because of organ shape variability. This work introduces the application of a 3-dimensional (3D) statistical shape model as a novel method for precise eye modeling for external beam radiation therapy of intraocular tumors. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Manual and automatic segmentations were compared for 17 patients, based on head computed tomography (CT) volume scans. A 3D statistical shape model of the cornea, lens, and sclera as well as of the optic disc position was developed. Furthermore, an active shape model was built to enable automatic fitting of the eye model to CT slice stacks. Cross-validation was performed based on leave-one-out tests for all training shapes by measuring dice coefficients and mean segmentation errors between automatic segmentation and manual segmentation by an expert. RESULTS: Cross-validation revealed a dice similarity of 95% ± 2% for the sclera and cornea and 91% ± 2% for the lens. Overall, mean segmentation error was found to be 0.3 ± 0.1 mm. Average segmentation time was 14 ± 2 s on a standard personal computer. CONCLUSIONS: Our results show that the solution presented outperforms state-of-the-art methods in terms of accuracy, reliability, and robustness. Moreover, the eye model shape as well as its variability is learned from a training set rather than by making shape assumptions (eg, as with the spherical or elliptical model). Therefore, the model appears to be capable of modeling nonspherically and nonelliptically shaped eyes.
Resumo:
Background: Gout patients initiating urate lowering therapy have an increased risk of flares. Inflammation in gouty arthritis is induced by IL-1b. Canakinumab targets and inhibits IL-1b effectively in clinical studies. This study compared different doses of canakinumab vs colchicine in preventing flares in gout patients initiating allopurinol therapy.Methods: In this 24 week double blind study, gout patients (20-79 years) initiating allopurinol were randomized (1:1:1:1:1:1:2) to canakinumab s.c. single doses of 25, 50, 100, 200, 300 mg, or 150 mg divided in doses every 4 weeks (50+50+25+25 mg [q4wk]) or colchicine 0.5 mg p.o. daily for 16 weeks. Primary outcome was to determine the canakinumab dose giving comparable efficacy to colchicine with respect to the number of gout flares occurring during first 16 weeks. Secondary outcomes included number of patients with gout flares and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels during the first 16 weeks.Results: 432 patients were randomized and 391 (91%) completed the study. All canakinumab doses were better than colchicine in preventing flares and therefore, a canakinumab dose comparable to colchicine could not be determined. Based on a negative binomial model, all canakinumab groups, except 25 mg, reduced the flare rate ratio per patient significantly compared to colchicine group (rate ratio estimates 25 mg 0.60, 50 mg 0.34, 100 mg 0.28, 200 mg 0.37, 300 mg 0.29, q4wk 0.38; p<=0.05). The percentage of patients with flares was lower for all canakinumab groups (25 mg 27.3%, 50 mg 16.7%, 100 mg 14.8%, 200 mg 18.5%, 300 mg 15.1%, q4wk 16.7%) compared to colchicine group (44.4%). All patients taking canakinumab were significantly less likely to experience at least one gout flare than patients taking colchicine (odds ratio range [0.22 - 0.47]; p<=0.05 for all). The median baseline CRP levels were 2.86 mg/L for 25 mg, 3.42 mg/L for 50 mg, 1.76 mg/L for 100 mg, 3.66 mg/L for 200 mg, 3.21 mg/L for 300 mg, 3.23 mg/L for q4wk canakinumab groups and 2.69 mg/L for colchicine group. In all canakinumab groups with median CRP levels above the normal range at baseline, median levels declined within 15 days of treatment and were maintained at normal levels (ULN=3 mg/L) throughout the 16 week period. Adverse events (AEs) occurred in 52.7% (25 mg), 55.6% (50 mg), 51.9% (100 mg), 51.9% (200 mg), 54.7% (300 mg), and 58.5% (q4wk) of patients on canakinumab vs 53.7% of patients on colchicine. Serious AEs (SAE) were reported in 2 (3.6%; 25 mg), 2 (3.7%, 50 mg), 3 (5.6%, 100 mg), 3 (5.6%, 200 mg), 3 (5.7%, 300 mg) and 1 (1.9%, q4wk) patients on canakinumab and in 5 (4.6%) patients on colchicine. One fatal SAE (myocardial infarction, not related to study drug) occurred in colchicine group.Conclusion: In this large randomized, double-blind active controlled study of flare prevention in gout patients initiating allopurinol therapy, treatment with canakinumab led to a statistically significant reduction in flares compared with colchicine (standard of care), and was well tolerated.
Resumo:
Ophthalmologists typically acquire different image modalities to diagnose eye pathologies. They comprise, e.g., Fundus photography, optical coherence tomography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Yet, these images are often complementary and do express the same pathologies in a different way. Some pathologies are only visible in a particular modality. Thus, it is beneficial for the ophthalmologist to have these modalities fused into a single patient-specific model. The goal of this paper is a fusion of Fundus photography with segmented MRI volumes. This adds information to MRI that was not visible before like vessels and the macula. This paper contributions include automatic detection of the optic disc, the fovea, the optic axis, and an automatic segmentation of the vitreous humor of the eye.
Resumo:
Menopause timing has a substantial impact on infertility and risk of disease, including breast cancer, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. We report a dual strategy in ∼70,000 women to identify common and low-frequency protein-coding variation associated with age at natural menopause (ANM). We identified 44 regions with common variants, including two regions harboring additional rare missense alleles of large effect. We found enrichment of signals in or near genes involved in delayed puberty, highlighting the first molecular links between the onset and end of reproductive lifespan. Pathway analyses identified major association with DNA damage response (DDR) genes, including the first common coding variant in BRCA1 associated with any complex trait. Mendelian randomization analyses supported a causal effect of later ANM on breast cancer risk (∼6% increase in risk per year; P = 3 × 10(-14)), likely mediated by prolonged sex hormone exposure rather than DDR mechanisms.