875 resultados para influenza A (H1N1)
Resumo:
Risks of the introduction of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 through migratory birds to the main wintering site for wild birds in southern Brazil and its consequences were assessed. Likelihoods were estimated by a qualitative scale ranging from negligible to high. Northern migrants that breed in Alaska and regularly migrate to South America (primary Charadriiformes) can have contact with birds from affected areas in Asia. The likelihood of the introduction of HPAI H5N1 through migratory birds was found to be very low as it is a probability conditioned to successful transmission in breeding areas and the probabilities of an infected bird migrating and shedding the virus as far as southern Brazil. The probability of wild species becoming exposed to H5N1-infected birds is high as they nest with northern migrants from Alaska, whereas for backyard poultry it is moderate to high depending on proximity to wetlands and the presence of species that could increase the likelihood of contact with wild birds such as domestic duck. The magnitude of the biological and economic consequences of successful transmission to poultry or wild birds would be low to severe depending on the probability of the occurrence of outbreak scenarios described. As a result, the risk estimate is greater than negligible, and HPAI H5N1 prevention strategy in the region should always be carefully considered by the veterinary services in Brazil.
Resumo:
Introduction: The flu, a condition that can affect the elderly by increasing the risk of serious complications can be prevented through vaccination. Estimate the prevalence of signs and symptoms suggestive of influenza in a group of elderly either vaccinated or unvaccinated against influenza was the objective this study. Methods: This is a cross-sectional study performed in a Brazilian City. A structured questionnaire was employed to identify the presence of signs and symptoms of influenza in individuals aged 60 years or over. For analysis of associations between variables the prevalence ratio (PR) and its 95% confidence interval (95% CI) were used. Results: One hundred ninety-six participants were interviewed, of whom 57.7% were female. The average age was 69.7 years. About 25% of the vaccinated and 20% of the unvaccinated in 2009, and 25% of the vaccinated and 22.5% of the unvaccinated in 2010 reported having the flu. Among the vaccinated and unvaccinated in 2009 and 2010, there was no verified association between vaccination and influenza (PR=1.24; [95% CI: 0.63-2.43] and PR=1.11; [95% CI: 0.59-2.09], respectively). Conclusions: This study suggests that, among the elderly selected, the vaccination coverage for influenza is below the ideal, even with projection of the best indices for 2011 ((similar to)84%). The data on vaccination and disease protection needs further research; however, the results point to the need for measures to better clarify to this population about the disease, its complications and the benefits of vaccination, in addition to combatting the stigma related to low adherence.
Resumo:
The compliance with influenza vaccination is poor among health care workers (HCWs) due to misconceptions about safety and effectiveness of influenza vaccine. We proposed an educational prospective study to demonstrate to HCWs that influenza vaccine is safe and that other respiratory viruses (RV) are the cause of respiratory symptoms in the months following influenza vaccination. 398 HCWs were surveyed for adverse events (AE) occurring within 48 h of vaccination. AE were reported by 30% of the HCWs. No severe AE was observed. A subset of 337 HCWs was followed up during four months, twice a week, for the detection of respiratory symptoms. RV was diagnosed by direct immunofluorescent assay (DFA) and real time PCR in symptomatic HCWs. Influenza A was detected in five episodes of respiratory symptoms (5.3%) and other RV in 26 (27.9%) episodes. The incidence density of influenza and other RV was 4.3 and 10.8 episodes per 100 HCW-month, respectively. The educational nature of the present study may persuade HCWs to develop a more positive attitude to influenza vaccination.
Resumo:
Heterogeneity in the transmission rates of pathogens across hosts or environments may produce disease hotspots, which are defined as specific sites, times or species associations in which the infection rate is consistently elevated. Hotspots for avian influenza virus (AIV) in wild birds are largely unstudied and poorly understood. A striking feature is the existence of a unique but consistent AIV hotspot in shorebirds (Charadriiformes) associated with a single species at a specific location and time (ruddy turnstone Arenaria interpres at Delaware Bay, USA, in May). This unique case, though a valuable reference, limits our capacity to explore and understand the general properties of AIV hotspots in shorebirds. Unfortunately, relatively few shorebirds have been sampled outside Delaware Bay and they belong to only a few shorebird families; there also has been a lack of consistent oropharyngeal sampling as a complement to cloacal sampling. In this study we looked for AIV hotspots associated with other shorebird species and/or with some of the larger congregation sites of shorebirds in the old world. We assembled and analysed a regionally extensive dataset of AIV prevalence from 69 shorebird species sampled in 25 countries across Africa and Western Eurasia. Despite this diverse and extensive coverage we did not detect any new shorebird AIV hotspots. Neither large shorebird congregation sites nor the ruddy turnstone were consistently associated with AIV hotspots. We did, however, find a low but widespread circulation of AIV in shorebirds that contrast with the absence of AIV previously reported in shorebirds in Europe. A very high AIV antibody prevalence coupled to a low infection rate was found in both first-year and adult birds of two migratory sandpiper species, suggesting the potential existence of an AIV hotspot along their migratory flyway that is yet to be discovered.
Resumo:
Since 1999, Brazil has undertaken annual influenza vaccine campaigns, free of charge, targeting the elderly population, health professionals, and immune-deficient patients. We conducted a systematic review of literature in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the initiative. We used the keywords influenza, vaccine, Brazil and effectiveness to search the main databases. Thirty-one studies matched our inclusion and exclusion criteria. Influenza vaccine coverage among the elderly is high, though not as high as suggested by the official figures. Estimates on effectiveness are scarce. The majority come from ecological studies that show a modest reduction in mortality and hospital admissions due to influenza-related causes. Such reduction is not evident in the North and Northeastern states of Brazil, a finding that is probably related to the different seasonal pattern of influenza in equatorial and tropical regions. Brazilian epidemiologists still owe society better-designed studies addressing the effectiveness of influenza vaccine campaigns.
Influenza dei termini del II ordine sul comportamento meccanico di solidi eccitati ad alta frequenza
Resumo:
La tesi ha per obiettivo di quantificare gli effetti che la variabilità spaziale del mezzo poroso ha sull'evoluzione di un sistema geochimico. Le reazioni di dissoluzione o precipiazione di minerali modificano la struttura microscopica del mezzo, e con essa le proprietà idrodinamiche del sistema, la permeabilità in modo particolare. La variabilità spaziale iniziale del mezzo può essere causa della formazione di digitazioni o canalizzazioni? La prima parte della tesi tratta il cambiamento di scala, necessario per passare da una simulazione geostatistica su griglia fine al calcolo di trasporto su una tessellazione più grossolana. Nel caso del codice di calcolo Hytec, che implementa uno schema ai volumi finiti basato su discretizzazione in poligoni di Voronoï, sono stati confrontati diversi metodi di calcolo della permeabilità equivalente, seguendo differenti criteri. La seconda parte riguarda i calcoli di trasporto reattivo condotti su famiglie di simulazioni geostatistiche del mezzo; l'influenza della variabilità spaziale iniziale sull'evoluzione dei sistemi viene quantificata grazie ad opportune grandezze osservabili. Sono state studiate due reazioni distinte: un caso di dissoluzione, in maniera più approfondita, e più rapidamente un caso di precipitazione, il cui effetto complessivo è quello di riequilibrare il sistema.
Resumo:
Background: It is well known, since the pioneristic observation by Jenkins and Dallenbach (Am J Psychol 1924;35:605-12), that a period of sleep provides a specific advantage for the consolidation of newly acquired informations. Recent research about the possible enhancing effect of sleep on memory consolidation has focused on procedural memory (part of non-declarative memory system, according to Squire’s taxonomy), as it appears the memory sub-system for which the available data are more consistent. The acquisition of a procedural skill follows a typical time course, consisting in a substantial practice-dependent learning followed by a slow, off-line improvement. Sleep seems to play a critical role in promoting the process of slow learning, by consolidating memory traces and making them more stable and resistant to interferences. If sleep is critical for the consolidation of a procedural skill, then an alteration of the organization of sleep should result in a less effective consolidation, and therefore in a reduced memory performance. Such alteration can be experimentally induced, as in a deprivation protocol, or it can be naturally observed in some sleep disorders as, for example, in narcolepsy. In this research, a group of narcoleptic patients, and a group of matched healthy controls, were tested in two different procedural abilities, in order to better define the size and time course of sleep contribution to memory consolidation. Experimental Procedure: A Texture Discrimination Task (Karni & Sagi, Nature 1993;365:250-2) and a Finger Tapping Task (Walker et al., Neuron 2002;35:205-11) were administered to two indipendent samples of drug-naive patients with first-diagnosed narcolepsy with cataplexy (International Classification of Sleep Disorder 2nd ed., 2005), and two samples of matched healthy controls. In the Texture Discrimination task, subjects (n=22) had to learn to recognize a complex visual array on the screen of a personal computer, while in the Finger Tapping task (n=14) they had to press a numeric sequence on a standard keyboard, as quickly and accurately as possible. Three subsequent experimental sessions were scheduled for each partecipant, namely a training session, a first retrieval session the next day, and a second retrieval session one week later. To test for possible circadian effects on learning, half of the subjects performed the training session at 11 a.m. and half at 17 p.m. Performance at training session was taken as a measure of the practice-dependent learning, while performance of subsequent sessions were taken as a measure of the consolidation level achieved respectively after one and seven nights of sleep. Between training and first retrieval session, all participants spent a night in a sleep laboratory and underwent a polygraphic recording. Results and Discussion: In both experimental tasks, while healthy controls improved their performance after one night of undisturbed sleep, narcoleptic patients showed a non statistically significant learning. Despite this, at the second retrieval session either healthy controls and narcoleptics improved their skills. Narcoleptics improved relatively more than controls between first and second retrieval session in the texture discrimination ability, while their performance remained largely lower in the motor (FTT) ability. Sleep parameters showed a grater fragmentation in the sleep of the pathological group, and a different distribution of Stage 1 and 2 NREM sleep in the two groups, being thus consistent with the hypothesis of a lower consolidation power of sleep in narcoleptic patients. Moreover, REM density of the first part of the night of healthy subjects showed a significant correlation with the amount of improvement achieved at the first retrieval session in TDT task, supporting the hypothesis that REM sleep plays an important role in the consolidation of visuo-perceptual skills. Taken together, these results speak in favor of a slower, rather than lower consolidation of procedural skills in narcoleptic patients. Finally, an explanation of the results, based on the possible role of sleep in contrasting the interference provided by task repetition is proposed.
Resumo:
La conoscenza delle esigenze luminose (intensità, spettro, durata minima, massima ed ottimale del fotoperiodo di illuminazione) e della tolleranza alle condizioni degli interni delle piante ad uso decorativo, è di fondamentale importanza per una giusta tecnica di progettazione (dimensionamento e dislocazione dei punti luce) dell’indoor plantscaping. Il lungo periodo di condizionamento al quale queste piante vengono sottoposte, caratterizzato principalmente dalla scarsa disponibilità di luce naturale e dagli alti livelli di concentrazione di CO2 determina una forte influenza sui processi morfo-fisiologici. Il presente studio analizza il fattore luminoso ed è articolato su più punti quali; • caratterizzazione della riposta fotosintetica all’intensità luminosa di 21 delle principali specie a fogliame decorativo comunemente utilizzate nella realizzazione degli spazi verdi indoor, per stabilire quali siano i minimi ed ottimali livelli di PAR tali da garantire una fotosintesi netta positiva e nel complesso le condizioni di maggior benessere per le piante; • quantificazione dell’incremento fotosintetico netto dovuto ad una maggior concentrazione di CO2 negli interni rispetto alla concentrazione CO2 atmosferica esterna, all’aumentare dell’ intensità luminosa artificiale sulle precedenti specie; • monitoraggio dell’andamento delle attività fotosintetiche durante il periodo di illuminazione di 8 ore comunemente utilizzato in un interno ad uso lavorativo, a PAR costante e variabile in Ficus elastica e Dieffenbachia picta, al fine di stabilire quali possano essere le durate e le modalità di somministrazione della luce per rendere massima la fotosintesi netta riducendo al minimo i consumi energetici dovuti all’accensione delle lampade; • valutazione della risposta morfo-fisiologica e fotosintetica a modificazioni dello spettro luminoso mediante l’uso di LED monocromatici colorati ad emissione nel bianco, blu e rosso in Ficus benjamina e Iresine herbistii al fine di stabilire se questo tipo di lampade possano essere utilizzate come fonte integrativa e/o sostitutiva nella realizzazione degli spazi verdi interni. Vengono analizzati il punto si compensazione alla luce (g), il punto di saturazione alla luce (s), l’efficienza quantica (AQE), il punto di respirazione al buio (Rd) e la fotosintesi netta massima (A max) per (Aglaonema commutatum, Asplenium nidus, Anthurium andreanum, Begonia rex, Calathea luoise, Calathea veitchiana, Calathea rufibarba, Calathea zebrina, Codiaeum variegatum, Cthenanthe oppenheimiana, Dieffenbakia picta, Ficus benjamina, Ficus elatica, Ficus longifolia, Fittonia verschaffeltii, Iresine herbistii, Philodendron erubescens, Philodendron pertusum, Potos aureus, Spathiphillum wallisi, Syngonium podophillum ) e classificate le specie in funzione di Amax in quattro categorie; A max < 2 µmol CO2 m-2 s-1, A max compresa tra 2 e 4 µmol CO2 m-2 s-1, Amax cpmpresa tra 4 e 6 µmol CO2 m-2 s-1, Amax > 6 µmol CO2 m-2 s-1, al fine di mettere in risalto la potenzialità fotosintetiche di ogni singola specie. I valori di PAR compresi tra (g) ed (s) forniscono le indicazioni sulle quali basarsi per scegliere una giusta lampada o dimensionare un punto luce per ogni singola specie e/o composizione. È stimata l’influenza di due livelli di concentrazione di CO2 ambientale (400 e 800 ppm) all’incrementare dell’intensità luminosa sul processo fotosintetico delle specie precedenti. Per quasi tutte le specie 800 ppm di CO2 non favoriscono nessun incremento all’attività fotosintetica ad eccezione di Ficus benjamina, Ficus elatica e Syngonium podophillum se non accompagnati da una disponibilità luminosa superiore alle 10 µmol m-2 s-1. Viene monitorato l’andamento dell’attività fotosintetica a PAR costante e variabile (intervallando periodi di 8 minuti a PAR 40 e 80) durante 8 ore di illuminazione su Ficus elastica e Dieffenbachia picta al fine di stabilire la miglior modalità di somministrazione della luce. La fotosintesi netta cumulativa per l’intera durata di illuminazione a PAR costante mostra un calo dopo alcune ore dall’attivazione in Dieffenbackia, e un andamento oscillatorio in Ficus. L’illuminazione alternata consente di raggiungere i quantitativi di CO2 organicata a 80 µmol m-2 s-1 di PAR, dopo 5 ore e mezza sia in Ficus che Dieffenbackia sebbene le potenzialità fotosintetiche delle due piante siano molto differenti. È stato valutato l’effetto dell’illuminazione artificiale mediante LED (15W) a luce bianca, blu e rossa monocromatica in rapporto alla luce neon(36W) bianca tradizionale (con differenti abbinamenti tra le lampade) sui principali parametri morfologici e fisiologici, in Ficus benjamin ‘Variegata’ e Iresine herbistii per verificare se tali fonti possono rappresentare una valida alternativa nella sostituzione o integrazione di altre lampade per gli spazi verdi indoor. Tutte le combinazioni LED indagate possono rappresentare un’alternativa di sostituzione alla coltivazione con neon ed un risparmio energetico di oltre il 50%. Una PAR di 20,6 µmol m-2 s-1 della singola lampada LED bianco è sufficiente per mantenere la pianta in condizioni di sopravvivenza con un consumo di 15W a fronte dei 36W necessari per il funzionamento di ogni neon. La combinazione LED bianco + LED blu monocromatico favorisce il contenimento della taglia della pianta, caratteristica gradita nella fase di utilizzo indoor, una maggior produzione di sostanza secca e un’attività fotosintetica più elevata.
Resumo:
During the wake sleep (W-S) cycle in mammals, the alternation of the different states, wake, NREM sleep (NREMS) and REM sleep (REMS), is associated not only with electroencephalographic or behavioural changes, but also with modifications in the physiological regulations of the organism. The most evident change is the existence of a suspension of the somatic and autonomic thermoregulatory responses during REMS. Since thermoregulation is prevalently controlled by the Preoptic Area-Anterior Hypothalamus (PO-AH), its suspension during REM sleep has been taken as a sign of an impairment of the hypothalamic integrative activity that could explain the modifications in physiological regulation observed in this sleep stage. The recent finding from our laboratory that the secretion of the antidiuretic hormone arginine-vasopressin (AVP) in response to a central osmotic stimulation is quantitatively the same throughout the different stages of the W-S cycle, has shown that hypothalamic osmoregulation is not suspended during REMS. In order to clarify the extent of the hypothalamic involvement in the regulation of the W-S cycle, we have studied the effects of three days of water deprivation and of two days of recovery during which animals were allowed a free access to water, on the architecture of the W-S cycle. The condition of water deprivation represents a severe challenge involving neuroendocrine and autonomic hypothalamic regulations. In contradiction with thermoregulatory studies, in which it has been clearly demonstrated that a thermal challenge selectively reduces REMS occurrence, the results of this study show that REMS occurrence is mildly reduced only in the third day of water deprivation. The most striking effects produced by water deprivation appear to concern NREMS, which shows a selective and significant reduction in its slow EEG activity (delta-power) but not in its duration. The recovery period is mainly characterized by a disruption of the normal circadian rhythm of REMS occurrence and by a rebound of the delta power in NREMS. Thus, an autonomic challenge different from those related to thermoregulation and an endocrine challenge as the continuous secretion of AVP show to exert different effects on the stages of the wake-sleep cycle. Also, this study demonstrates that the impairment of the hypothalamic integrative activity thought to characterize the occurrence of REMS only involves thermoregulatory structures.