958 resultados para Type II Diabete
Resumo:
This study aimed to characterize astrocytic and microglial response in the central nervous system (CNS) of equines experimentally infected with T. evansi. The experimental group comprised males and females with various degrees of crossbreeding, ages between four and seven years. The animals were inoculated intravenously with 10(6) trypomastigotes of T. evansi originally isolated from a naturally infected dog. All equines inoculated with T. evansi were observed until they presented symptoms of CNS disturbance, characterized by motor incoordination of the pelvic limbs, which occurred 67 days after inoculation (DAI) and 124 DAI. The animals in the control group did not present any clinical symptom and were observed up to the 125th DAI. For this purpose the HE histochemical stain and the avidin biotin peroxidase method was used. Lesions in the CNS of experimentally infected horses were those of a wide spread non suppurative meningoencephalomyelitis.The severity of lesions varied in different parts of the nervous system, reflecting an irregular distribution of inflammatory vascular changes. The infiltration of mononuclear cells was associated with anisomorphic gliosis and reactive microglia was identified. The intensity of the astrocytic response in the CNS of the equines infected by T. evansi characterizes the importance of the performance of these cells in this trypanosomiasis. The characteristic gliosis observed in the animals in this experiment suggests the ability of these cells as mediators of immune response. The parasite, T. evansi, was not identified in the nervous tissues.
Resumo:
Objectives: Chorionic Vilus Sampling (CVS) has several advantages over amniocentesis: it may be performed at an earlier gestational age, the results are quicker to obtain and there’s a lower miscarriage risk – 1%. However, the higher prevalence of discrepant fetal and vilus sampling material’s karyotype findings is a disadvantage of this technique – 0.5%. This is caused, amongst other causes, by placental mosaicism which consists of two genetically different cell lines. There are three types of placental mosaicism according to the abnormal cell line location: Type I – in the cytotrophoblast; Type II – in the vilus’ stroma; Type III – in both the above locations. Material and Methods: We present a case report about a 36-year-old pregnant woman going through our Department’s 1st trimester combined screening program; a CVS was performed, which showed Confined Placental Mosaicism (CPM). Results and Conclusion: Although the pregnant woman was in the low-risk group for aneuploidy, the patient wanted the cytogenetic study to be performed in order to reduce maternal anxiety. CVS was performed at the gestational age of 12 weeks + 5 days and the karyotype was 47XY+2/46XY. For the correct interpretation of this data an amniocentesis was performed at the gestational age of 15 weeks + 6 days, which showed a 46XY karyotype. We therefore conclude that the cytogenetic analysis of the CVS was the result of a CPM. A careful follow-up including fetal echocardiogram and seriated ultrasonographic monitoring was used to safely exclude malformations and fetal growth restriction. We verified no occurences throughout pregnancy, delivery and perinatal period. CVS practice was recently implemented in our country and has many advantages over amniocentesis. Besides the fact that an earlier gestational age usually means less affective bonding to the fetus and therefore makes medical termination of pregnancy somewhat less difficult, one should consider specific situations like the one reported in which CPM may be diagnosed. This condition is associated with increased risk of fetal growth restriction, so the clinician should be aware of the need for a more careful follow-up, since perinatal complications, which should be anticipated and treated, can be expected in 16-21% of these cases.
Resumo:
Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Bioquímica – Ramo Bioquímica Estrutural
Resumo:
Combined pituitary hormone deficiency (CPHD) has an incidence of approximately 1 in 8000 births. Although the proportion of familial CPHD cases is unknown, about 10% have an affected first degree relative. We have recently reported three mutations in the PROP1 gene that cause CPHD in human subjects. We report here the frequency of one of these mutations, a 301-302delAG deletion in exon 2 of PROP1, in 10 independently ascertained CPHD kindreds and 21 sporadic cases of CPHD from 8 different countries. Our results show that 55% (11 of 20) of PROP1 alleles have the 301-302delAG deletion in familial CPHD cases. Interestingly, although only 12% (5 of 42) of the PROP1 alleles of our 21 sporadic cases were 301-302delAG, the frequency of this allele (in 20 of 21 of the sporadic subjects given TRH stimulation tests) was 50% (3 of 6) and 0% (0 of 34) in the CPHD cases with pituitary and hypothalamic defects, respectively. Using whole genome radiation hybrid analysis, we localized the PROP1 gene to the distal end of chromosome 5q and identified a tightly linked polymorphic marker, D5S408, which can be used in segregation studies. Analysis of this marker in affected subjects with the 301-302delAG deletion suggests that rather than being inherited from a common founder, the 301-302delAG may be a recurring mutation.
Resumo:
Dissertação apresentada para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Biologia, na especialidade de Genética Molecular, pela Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia
Resumo:
RESUMO: Os doentes que vão à consulta com sintomas físicos para os quais o médico não encontra uma causa orgânica, são frequentes na Medicina Geral e Familiar, embora não sejam específicos, e são o objecto de estudo do presente trabalho. Não deixar uma doença por diagnosticar (erro de tipo II) sem contudo rotular pessoas saudáveis como doentes (erro de tipo I) é um dos mais difíceis problemas da prática clínica diária e para o qual não existe uma orientação infalível e não é previsível que alguma vez venha a existir. Mas se o diagnóstico de doença ou não-doença é difícil, o tratamento dos que não tem doença, embora com sofrimento, também não é mais fácil, sobretudo, se estivermos conscientes do sofrimento que determina a medicalização e a iatrogenia. O presente trabalho está estruturado em 3 partes. Na primeira parte descrevemos a nossa visão integrada do que apreendemos da leitura da literatura publicada e à qual tivemos acesso. À semelhança do que se verifica na maioria das áreas da Medicina esta é também uma em que o conhecimento cresce a ritmo exponencial. No entanto, à falta de conceitos precisos e de definições consensuais sucede um conhecimento, por vezes, pouco consistente, tanto mais que estamos na fronteira entre a cultura leiga e a cultura erudita médica em que os significados devem, a todo o momento, ser validados. Fizemos uma revisão sobre as definições do que está em questão, sobre o que se sabe sobre a frequência dos sintomas físicos na população, quantos recorrem aos serviços de saúde e o que lhes é feito. Passámos por uma revisão da fisiologia destes sintomas e algumas explicações fisiopatológicas para terminarmos sobre o que os doentes pensam sobre os seus sintomas e os cuidados que recebem e o que os profissionais pensam sobre estes doentes. Esta parte termina com uma revisão das propostas de abordagem para este tipo de doentes. Na segunda parte, descrevemos os estudos empíricos focados no problema dos pacientes com sintomas físicos mas sem evidência de doença orgânica. Começa por uma apresentação dos aspectos processuais e metodológicos dos estudos realizados, mais especificamente, de dois estudos quantitativos e um qualitativo. No primeiro estudo pretendeu-se avaliar quais são os sintomas físicos e a sua frequência na população em geral e a frequência de pacientes que procuram (ou não) os serviços de saúde tendo como motivo este tipo de sintomas. O objectivo deste estudo é contribuir para a demonstração que este tipo de sintomas faz parte da vida do dia-a-dia e que, na maioria das vezes, só por si não significa doença, sem contudo negar que representa sofrimento, por vezes até maior do que quando há patologia orgânica. Se no primeiro estudo era demonstrar que os sintomas físicos são frequentes na população, no segundo estudo o objectivo é demonstrar que pacientes com este tipo de sintomas são igualmente frequentes e que o tipo de sintomas apresentados na consulta não difere dos referidos pela população em geral. Pretendia-se ainda saber o que é feito ou proposto pelo médico a estes doentes e se estes doentes traziam ou não, junto com os sintomas, ideias explicativas para os mesmos. Finalmente e não menos importante, é avaliar o grau de fidedignidade do diagnóstico de sintoma somatoforme, chamando assim ao sintoma físico que foi “levado” à consulta e que o médico diagnosticou como não tendo causa orgânica. O terceiro estudo parte do conhecimento adquirido que a Medicina tem muitas respostas para este problema, mas poucas que se possam considerar satisfatórias se usadas isoladamente. Que a maioria das soluções é procurada entre a cultura médica e num paradigma reducionista de separação mente-corpo. Contudo, se o sintoma é “construído” pelo doente, se o principal problema não está no sintoma mas na forma como o paciente o vê, então pareceu-nos lógico que a solução também tem que passar por integrarmos no plano de abordagem o que o doente entende ser melhor para si. Nesta sequência, entrevistaram-se alguns doentes cujo diagnóstico de sintomas somatoformes estava demonstrado pelo teste do tempo. Por isso, entrevistaram-se doentes que já tinham ido à consulta de MGF há mais de 6 meses por sintomas somatoformes e, na data da entrevista, o diagnóstico se mantinha inalterado, independentemente da sua evolução. As entrevistas visaram conhecer as ideias dos doentes sobre o que as motivou a procurarem a consulta, o que pensavam da forma como foram cuidados e que ideias tinham sobre o que os profissionais de saúde devem fazer para os ajudar a restabelecer o equilíbrio com o seu ambiente evitando a medicalização, a iatrogenia e a evolução para a cronicidade. Na terceira parte, discutem-se e integram-se os resultados encontrados no conhecimento previamente existente. Tenta-se teorizar, fazer doutrina sobre o tema e contribuir para abordagens terapêuticas mais personalizadas, abrangentes, variadas e multimodais, baseadas sempre no método clínico centrado no paciente, ou de modo menos correcto mas enfático, baseadas no método centrado na relação. Apresentam-se algumas hipóteses de trabalhos futuros sobre o tema e, sobretudo, esperamos ter contribuído para o reconhecimento da necessidade de a comunicação médico-doente ser uma aprendizagem transversal a todos os profissionais de saúde e ao longo da vida, com a ideia que é sempre possível fazer melhor, caso contrário tenderemos, inexoravelmente, a fazer cada vez pior.-----------ABSTRACT: Patients who go to consultation with physical symptoms, for which the doctor does not find an organic cause, are the subject of the present study. They are common in family medicine, although not specific. Do not let an undiagnosed disease (type II error), but without labeling healthy people as patients with disease (type I error) is one of the most difficult problems in clinical practice and for which doesn’t exist an infallible guide and it is unlikely that any since coming into existence. But, if the diagnosis of disease or non-disease is difficult, the treatment of those who do not have the disease, though suffering, it is not easy, especially if we are aware of the suffering that medicalization and iatrogenic determines. This work is structured in three parts. In the first part we describe our integrated view of what we grasp from reading the published literature and to which we had access. Similar to that found in most areas of medicine, this is also one in which knowledge grows exponentially. However, the absence of precise concepts and consensual definitions determines an inconsistent knowledge, especially because we're on the border between secular culture and medical culture where, at all times, the meaning must be validated. We did a review on the definitions of what is at issue, what is known about the frequency of physical symptoms in the population, how many use the services of health and what they receive as care. We went through a review of the physiology of these symptoms and some pathophysiological explanations, to finish on what patients think about their symptoms and how they perceived the care they received and, finally, what professionals think about these patients. This part ends with a review of the approaches proposed for such patients. In the second part, we describe the empirical studies focused on the problem of patients with physical symptoms but no evidence of organic disease. Begins with a presentation of the procedural and methodological aspects of studies, more specifically, two quantitative and one qualitative. The first study sought to assess which are the physical symptoms, their incidence in the general population and the frequency they seek (or not) health services on behalf of those symptoms. The aim behind this study was to contribute to the demonstration that this type of symptoms is part of life's day-to-day and that, in most cases, does not represent disease by itself, without denying that they represent suffering, sometimes even greater than when there are organic disease. The first study endeavor to demonstrate that the physical symptoms are common in the population. The second study aspires to demonstrate that patients with such symptoms are also common and that the type of symptoms presented in the consultation does not differ from those in the general population. The aim was also to know what is done or proposed by the physician for these patients and if these patients brought or not, along with the symptoms, explanatory ideas for them. Finally and not least, it would try to assess the degree of reliability of diagnosis of somatoform symptoms, thus drawing the physical symptom that patient presents in the consultation and that the doctor diagnosed as having no organic cause. The third study starts from the acquired knowledge that medicine has many answers to this problem, but few can be considered satisfactory if used in isolation. The most solutions are sought in the medical culture and based on a reductionist paradigm of mind-body. However, if the symptom is "built" by the patient, if the main problem is not the symptom but the way the patient sees it, then it seemed logical to us that the solution must integrate the approaches that patients believes are best for them. Subsequently, a few patients, whose diagnosis of somatoform symptoms was demonstrated by the test of time, were interviewed. Therefore, patients who were interviewed had gone to the consultation of family medicine more than 6 months before for somatoform symptoms and. at the moment of the interview, the diagnosis remained unchanged, regardless of their evolution. The interviews aimed to ascertain the patients' ideas about what motivated them to seek consultation, what they thought about the care they got and which ideas they have about what health professionals should do to help these patients to re-establish equilibrium with its environment avoiding medicalization, iatrogenic effects and the evolution to chronicity. In the third section, we discuss and integrate the results found in previously existing knowledge. Attempts to theorize on the subject and contribute to more personalized treatment, comprehensive, varied and multi-modal approaches, always based on patient-centered clinical method, with emphasis on the relationship. We presents some hypotheses for future work on the subject and,above all, defend the recognition of the importance of lifelong learning communication skills for all health professionals, with the idea that we can always do better, otherwise we tend inexorably to do worse.
Resumo:
With the objective of establishing biological and biochemical characteristics of a significant number of Trypanosoma cruzi strains from different geographical areas, 138 strains isolated from naturally infected humans, triatomine or vertebrate hosts were studied; 120 were isolated from different areas of Brazil and 18 from other South and Central American countries. Inocula from triatomine or culture forms were injected into suckling Swiss mice, followed by passages into mice 10 to 12 g. Biological characters and histopathological study permitted the inclusion of the strains into three Types or biodemes: I, II, III. Isoenzymic analysis confirmed a correspondence between the biodemes and zymodemes : Type I and Z2b, Type II and Z2, Type III and Z1. Results showed the ubiquitary distribution of the several types of strains. The predominance of the same Type and zymodeme in one geographical area was confirmed : Type II strains among the human cases from eastern Bahia and east of Goiás; Type III strains from humans of north Brazil and Central America and from silvatic vectors or vertebrates from other geographical areas. The biological types of strains correlate with different histopathological lesions considering cardiac involvement and neuronal lesions. These findings suggest that the biological behavior together with isoenzymes patterns and pathological pictures in the vertebrate host can be an important tool for establishing correlations between strains behavior and clinico-pathological manifestations of Chagas' disease in different geographical areas.
Resumo:
The human lymphotropic viruses type I (HTLV-I) and type II (HTLV-II) are members of a group of mammalian retroviruses with similar biological properties, and blood transfusion is an important route of transmission. HTLV-I is endemic in a number of different geographical areas and is associated with several clinical disorders. HTLV-II is endemic in several Indian groups of the Americas and intravenous drug abusers in North and South America, Europe and Southeast Asia. During the year of 1995, all blood donors tested positive to HTLV-I/II in the State Blood Bank (HEMOPA), were directed to a physician and to the Virus Laboratory at the Universidade Federal do Pará for counselling and laboratory diagnosis confirmation. Thirty-five sera were tested by an enzyme immune assay, and a Western blot that discriminates HTLV-I and HTLV-II infection. Two HTLV-II positive samples were submitted to PCR analysis of pX and env genomic region, and confirmed to be of subtype IIa. This is the first detection in Belém of the presence of HTLV-IIa infection among blood donors. This result emphasizes that HTLV-II is also present in urban areas of the Amazon region of Brazil and highlights the need to include screening tests that are capable to detect antibodies for both types of HTLV.
Resumo:
Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Mestre em Biotecnologia
Energy-efficient diversity combining for different access schemes in a multi-path dispersive channel
Resumo:
Dissertação para obtenção do Grau de Doutor em Engenharia Electrotécnica e Computadores
Resumo:
Reinfections with Trypanosoma cruzi in patients from endemic areas have been claimed to be an aggravation factor of cardiac manifestations in Chagas' disease. In the present study, the influence of triple infections with strains of different biodemes, on cardiac and skeletal muscle lesions was experimentally tested. Fifty eight mice chronically infected with the Colombian strain (Biodeme Type III) were successively reinfected as follows: 1st group - reinfected with 21 SF strain (Type II) followed by Y strain (Type I ); 2nd - group reinfections with Y strain followed by 21SF strain. Isoenzyme analysis of parasites from hemocultures obtained from triple infected mice, revealed the patterns of three distinct zymodemes in the same animal. Each Trypanosoma cruzi strain was reisolated after four passages in mice on either the 7th, 14th or 30th day after inoculation with the blood of triple infected mice. Histopathology results demonstrated a significant exacerbation of cardiac and skeletal muscle inflammatory lesions, confirmed by morphometric evaluation, in mice with triple infection. No aggravation of parasitism was detected. The possibility of an enhancement of cellular response in the triple infected mice is suggested.
Resumo:
Traditional approaches to evaluate performance in hotels, have mainly used financial measures. Building on Speckbacher et al. (2003), this Work Project aims to design and propose a Balanced Scorecard Type II as a performance measurement/management system for the hospitality industry based on data collected at the Luxury Brand Hotels of Pestana Group. The main contribution is to better align the vision, strategy and financial and non-financial performance measures in this category of hotels, in particular those of Pestana Group, and by doing so, lead their managers to focus on what is really critical and, consequently improve the overall performance.
Resumo:
Wharton's jelly stem cells (WJSCs) are a potential source of transplantable stem cells in cartilage-regenerative strategies, due to their highly proliferative and multilineage differentiation capacity. We hypothesized that a non-direct co-culture system with human articular chondrocytes (hACs) could enhance the potential chondrogenic phenotype of hWJSCs during the expansion phase compared to those expanded in monoculture conditions. Primary hWJSCs were cultured in the bottom of a multiwell plate separated by a porous transwell membrane insert seeded with hACs. No statistically significant differences in hWJSCs duplication number were observed under either of the culture conditions during the expansion phase. hWJSCs under co-culture conditions show upregulations of collagen type I and II, COMP, TGFβ1 and aggrecan, as well as of the main cartilage transcription factor, SOX9, when compared to those cultured in the absence of chondrocytes. Chondrogenic differentiation of hWJSCs, previously expanded in co-culture and monoculture conditions, was evaluated for each cellular passage using the micromass culture model. Cells expanded in co-culture showed higher accumulation of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) compared to cells in monoculture, and immunohistochemistry for localization of collagen type I revealed a strong detection signal when hWJSCs were expanded under monoculture conditions. In contrast, type II collagen was detected when cells were expanded under co-culture conditions, where numerous round-shaped cell clusters were observed. Using a micromass differentiation model, hWJSCs, previously exposed to soluble factors secreted by hACs, were able to express higher levels of chondrogenic genes with deposition of cartilage extracellular matrix components, suggesting their use as an alternative cell source for treating degenerated cartilage.
Resumo:
Tese de Doutoramento em Ciências da Saúde