7 resultados para Infantile cultures
em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center
Resumo:
Diverse belief systems exist among dental and medical patients related to health, healing and wellness. Culturally competent health care may be defined as the ability to provide care to patients with diverse values, beliefs and behaviors, including modifying delivery of care to meet patients’ social and cultural needs. [See PDF for complete abstract]
Resumo:
Experience with anidulafungin against Candida krusei is limited. Immunosuppressed mice were injected with 1.3 x 10(7) to 1.5 x 10(7) CFU of C. krusei. Animals were treated with saline, 40 mg/kg fluconazole, 1 mg/kg amphotericin B, or 10 and 20 mg/kg anidulafungin for 5 days. Anidulafungin improved survival and significantly reduced the number of CFU/g in kidneys and serum beta-glucan levels.
Resumo:
Despite rapid to-and-fro motion of the retinal image that results from their incessant involuntary eye movements, persons with infantile nystagmus (IN) rarely report the perception of motion smear. We performed two experiments to determine if the reduction of perceived motion smear in persons with IN is associated with an increase in the speed of the temporal impulse response. In Experiment 1, increment thresholds were determined for pairs of successively presented flashes of a long horizontal line, presented on a 65-cd/m2 background field. The stimulus-onset asynchrony (SOA) between the first and second flash varied from 5.9 to 234 ms. In experiment 2, temporal contrast sensitivity functions were determined for a 3-cpd horizontal square-wave grating that underwent counterphase flicker at temporal frequencies between 1 and 40 Hz. Data were obtained for 2 subjects with predominantly pendular IN and 8 normal observers in Experiment 1 and for 3 subjects with IN and 4 normal observers in Experiment 2. Temporal impulse response functions (TIRFs) were estimated as the impulse response of a linear second-order system that provided the best fit to the increment threshold data in Experiment 1 and to the temporal contrast sensitivity functions in Experiment 2. Estimated TIRFs of the subjects with pendular IN have natural temporal frequencies that are significantly faster than those of normal observers (ca. 13 vs. 9 Hz), indicating an accelerated temporal response to visual stimuli. This increase in response speed is too small to account by itself for the virtual absence of perceived motion smear in subjects with IN, and additional neural mechanisms are considered.
Resumo:
The cause of infection of about a third of all travelers' diarrhea patients studied is not identified. Stools of these diarrhea patients tested for known enteric pathogens are shown to be negative, and identified as pathogen negative stools. We proposed that the third of these diarrhea patients might not only include at present unknown pathogens, but also known pathogens that go undetected. Conventionally, a probability sample of five E. coli colonies are used detect enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) and other diarrhea-producing E. coli from stool cultures. We compared this conventional method of using five E. coli colonies, to the use of up to twenty E. coli colonies. Testing for up to fifteen E. coli colonies detected about twice as many ETEC when compared to the detection of ETEC, testing for five E. coli colonies. When the number of E. coli colonies tested was increased from 5 to 15, the detection of ETEC increased from 19.0% to 38.8%. The sensitivity of the assay with 5 E. coli colonies was statistically significantly different to the sensitivity of the assay with 10 E. coli colonies, suggesting that for the detection of ETEC at least 10 colonies of E. coli should be tested.^
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE. To determine the effectiveness of active surveillance cultures and associated infection control practices on the incidence of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in the acute care setting. DESIGN. A historical analysis of existing clinical data utilizing an interrupted time series design. ^ SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS. Patients admitted to a 260-bed tertiary care facility in Houston, TX between January 2005 through December 2010. ^ INTERVENTION. Infection control practices, including enhanced barrier precautions, compulsive hand hygiene, disinfection and environmental cleaning, and executive ownership and education, were simultaneously introduced during a 5-month intervention implementation period culminating with the implementation of active surveillance screening. Beginning June 2007, all high risk patients were cultured for MRSA nasal carriage within 48 hours of admission. Segmented Poisson regression was used to test the significance of the difference in incidence of healthcare-associated MRSA during the 29-month pre-intervention period compared to the 43-month post-intervention period. ^ RESULTS. A total of 9,957 of 11,095 high-risk patients (89.7%) were screened for MRSA carriage during the intervention period. Active surveillance cultures identified 1,330 MRSA-positive patients (13.4%) contributing to an admission prevalence of 17.5% in high-risk patients. The mean rate of healthcare-associated MRSA infection and colonization decreased from 1.1 per 1,000 patient-days in the pre-intervention period to 0.36 per 1,000 patient-days in the post-intervention period (P<0.001). The effect of the intervention in association with the percentage of S. aureus isolates susceptible to oxicillin were shown to be statistically significantly associated with the incidence of MRSA infection and colonization (IRR = 0.50, 95% CI = 0.31-0.80 and IRR = 0.004, 95% CI = 0.00003-0.40, respectively). ^ CONCLUSIONS. It can be concluded that aggressively targeting patients at high risk for colonization of MRSA with active surveillance cultures and associated infection control practices as part of a multifaceted, hospital-wide intervention is effective in reducing the incidence of healthcare-associated MRSA.^
Resumo:
Researchers have historically emphasized the contribution of caspase-3 to apoptotic but not necrotic cell death, while calpain has been implicated primarily in necrosis and, to a lesser extent, in apoptosis. Activation of these proteases occurs in vivo following various CNS insults including ischemia. In addition, both necrotic and apoptotic cell death phenotypes are detected following ischemia. However, the contributions of calpain and caspase-3 to apoptotic and necrotic cell death phenotypes following CNS insults are relatively unexplored. To date, no study has examined the concurrent activation of calpain and caspase-3 in necrotic and apoptotic cell death phenotypes following any CNS insult. The present study employed oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) to determine the relative contributions of caspase-3 and calpain to apoptotic and necrotic cell death following OGD. Experiments characterized a model of OGD by evaluating cell viability and characterizing the cell death phenotypes following OGD in primary septo-hippocampal co-cultures. Furthermore, cell markers (NeuN and MAP2 or GFAP) assessed the effects of OGD on neuronal and astroglial viability, respectively. In addition, calpain and caspase-3 mediated proteolysis of α-spectrin was examined using Western blot techniques. Activation of these proteases in individual cells phenotypically characterized as apoptotic and necrotic was also evaluated by using antibodies specific for calpain or caspase-3 mediated breakdown products to α-spectrin. Administration of appropriate caspase-3 and calpain inhibitors also examined the effects of protease inhibition on cell death. OGD produced prominent expression of apoptotic cell death phenotypes primarily in neurons, with relatively little damage to astroglia. Although Western blot data suggested greater proteolysis of α-spectrin by calpain than caspase-3, co-activation of both proteases was usually detected in cells exhibiting apoptotic or necrotic cell death phenotypes. While inhibition of calpain and caspase-3 activity decreased LDH release following OGD, it was not clear whether this effect was also associated with a decrease in cell death and the appearance of apoptotic cell death phenotypes. These data demonstrate that both calpain and caspase-3 contribute to the expression of apoptotic cell death phenotypes following OGD, and that calpain could potentially have a larger role in the expression of apoptotic cell death than previously thought. ^