首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   48篇
  免费   1篇
  2021年   2篇
  2016年   1篇
  2015年   1篇
  2014年   5篇
  2013年   6篇
  2012年   7篇
  2011年   3篇
  2010年   6篇
  2009年   1篇
  2007年   2篇
  2006年   1篇
  2005年   2篇
  2004年   5篇
  2003年   1篇
  2002年   1篇
  1982年   1篇
  1979年   1篇
  1974年   1篇
  1972年   2篇
排序方式: 共有49条查询结果,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.

Background

Trachoma, caused by ocular Chlamydia trachomatis infection, is the leading infectious cause of blindess, but its prevalence is now falling in many countries. As the prevalence falls, an increasing proportion of individuals with clinical signs of follicular trachoma (TF) is not infected with C. trachomatis. A recent study in Tanzania suggested that other bacteria may play a role in the persistence of these clinical signs.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We examined associations between clinical signs of TF and ocular colonization with four pathogens commonly found in the nasopharnyx, three years after the initiation of mass azithromycin distribution. Children aged 0 to 5 years were randomly selected from 16 Gambian communitites. Both eyes of each child were examined and graded for trachoma according to the World Health Organization (WHO) simplified system. Two swabs were taken from the right eye: one swab was processed for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using the Amplicor test for detection of C. trachomatis DNA and the second swab was processed by routine bacteriology to assay for the presence of viable Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Staphylococcus aureus and Moraxella catarrhalis. Prevalence of TF was 6.2% (96/1538) while prevalence of ocular C. trachomatis infection was 1.0% (16/1538). After adjustment, increased odds of TF were observed in the presence of C. trachomatis (OR = 10.4, 95%CI 1.32–81.2, p = 0.03), S. pneumoniae (OR = 2.14, 95%CI 1.03–4.44, p = 0.04) and H. influenzae (OR = 4.72, 95% CI 1.53–14.5, p = 0.01).

Conclusions/Significance

Clinical signs of TF can persist in communities even when ocular C. trachomatis infection has been controlled through mass azithromycin distribution. In these settings, TF may be associated with ocular colonization with bacteria commonly carried in the nasopharnyx. This may affect the interpretation of impact surveys and the determinations of thresholds for discontinuing mass drug administration.  相似文献   
2.

Background

The World Health Organization recommends at least 3 annual antibiotic mass drug administrations (MDA) where the prevalence of trachoma is >10% in children ages 1–9 years, with coverage at least at 80%. However, the additional value of higher coverage targeted at children with multiple rounds is unknown.

Trial Design

2×2 factorial community randomized, double blind, trial.

Trial methods

32 communities with prevalence of trachoma ≥20% were randomized to: annual MDA aiming for coverage of children between 80%–90% (usual target) versus aiming for coverage>90% (enhanced target); and to: MDA for three years versus a rule of cessation of MDA early if the estimated prevalence of ocular C. trachomatis infection was less than 5%. The primary outcome was the community prevalence of infection with C. trachomatis at 36 months.

Results

Over the trial''s course, no community met the MDA cessation rule, so all communities had the full 3 rounds of MDA. At 36 months, there was no significant difference in the prevalence of infection, 4.0 versus 5.4 (mean adjusted difference = 1.4%, 95% CI = −1.0% to 3.8%), nor in the prevalence of trachoma, 6.1 versus 9.0 (mean adjusted difference = 2.6%, 95% CI = −0.3% to 5.3%) comparing the usual target to the enhanced target group. There was no difference if analyzed using coverage as a continuous variable.

Conclusion

In communities that had pre-treatment prevalence of follicular trachoma of 20% or greater, there is no evidence that MDA can be stopped before 3 annual rounds, even with high coverage. Increasing coverage in children above 90% does not appear to confer additional benefit.  相似文献   
3.
Maltose is exported from the Arabidopsis chloroplast as the main product of starch degradation at night. To investigate its fate in the cytosol, we characterised plants with mutations in a gene encoding a putative glucanotransferase (disproportionating enzyme; DPE2), a protein similar to the maltase Q (MalQ) gene product involved in maltose metabolism in bacteria. Use of a DPE2 antiserum revealed that the DPE2 protein is cytosolic. Four independent mutant lines lacked this protein and displayed a decreased capacity for both starch synthesis and starch degradation in leaves. They contained exceptionally high levels of maltose, and elevated levels of glucose, fructose and other malto-oligosaccharides. Sucrose levels were lower than those in wild-type plants, especially at the start of the dark period. A glucosyltransferase activity, capable of transferring one of the glucosyl units of maltose to glycogen or amylopectin and releasing the other, was identified in leaves of wild-type plants. Its activity was sufficient to account for the rate of starch degradation. This activity was absent from dpe2 mutant plants. Based on these results, we suggest that DPE2 is an essential component of the pathway from starch to sucrose and cellular metabolism in leaves at night. Its role is probably to metabolise maltose exported from the chloroplast. We propose a pathway for the conversion of starch to sucrose in an Arabidopsis leaf.  相似文献   
4.
African trypanosomes have a tightly coordinated cell cycle to effect efficient segregation of their single organelles, the nucleus, flagellum, and kinetoplast. To investigate cell cycle control in trypanosomes, a mitotic cyclin gene (CYC6) has been identified in Trypanosoma brucei. We show that CYC6 forms an active kinase complex with CRK3, the trypanosome CDK1 homologue, in vivo. Using RNA interference, we demonstrate that absence of CYC6 mRNA results in a mitotic block and growth arrest in both the insect procyclic and mammalian bloodstream forms. In the procyclic form, CYC6 RNA interference generates anucleate cells with a single kinetoplast, whereas in bloodstream form trypanosomes, cells with one nucleus and multiple kinetoplasts are observed. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis shows that bloodstream but not procyclic trypanosomes are able to reinitiate nuclear S phase in the absence of mitosis. Taken together, these data show that procyclic trypanosomes can undergo cytokinesis without completion of mitosis, whereas a mitotic block in bloodstream form trypanosomes inhibits cytokinesis but not kinetoplast replication and segregation nor an additional round of nuclear DNA synthesis. This indicates that there are fundamental differences in cell cycle controls between life cycle forms of T. brucei and that key cell cycle checkpoints present in higher eukaryotes are absent from trypanosomes.  相似文献   
5.

Background

Mass drug administration (MDA) treatment of active trachoma with antibiotic is recommended to be initiated in any district where the prevalence of trachoma inflammation, follicular (TF) is ≥10% in children aged 1–9 years, and then to continue for at least three annual rounds before resurvey. In The Gambia the PRET study found that discontinuing MDA based on testing a sample of children for ocular Chlamydia trachomatis(Ct) infection after one MDA round had similar effects to continuing MDA for three rounds. Moreover, one round of MDA reduced disease below the 5% TF threshold. We compared the costs of examining a sample of children for TF, and of testing them for Ct, with those of MDA rounds.

Methods

The implementation unit in PRET The Gambia was a census enumeration area (EA) of 600–800 people. Personnel, fuel, equipment, consumables, data entry and supervision costs were collected for census and treatment of a sample of EAs and for the examination, sampling and testing for Ct infection of 100 individuals within them. Programme costs and resource savings from testing and treatment strategies were inferred for the 102 EAs in the study area, and compared.

Results

Census costs were $103.24 per EA plus initial costs of $108.79. MDA with donated azithromycin cost $227.23 per EA. The mean cost of examining and testing 100 children was $796.90 per EA, with Ct testing kits costing $4.80 per result. A strategy of testing each EA for infection is more expensive than two annual rounds of MDA unless the kit cost is less than $1.38 per result. However stopping or deciding not to initiate treatment in the study area based on testing a sample of EAs for Ct infection (or examining children in a sample of EAs) creates savings relative to further unnecessary treatments.

Conclusion

Resources may be saved by using tests for chlamydial infection or clinical examination to determine that initial or subsequent rounds of MDA for trachoma are unnecessary.  相似文献   
6.
Ribavirin is the only available Lassa fever treatment. The rationale for using ribavirin is based on one clinical study conducted in the early 1980s. However, reanalysis of previous unpublished data reveals that ribavirin may actually be harmful in some Lassa fever patients. An urgent reevaluation of ribavirin is therefore needed.

Fifty years after its discovery, Lassa fever remains uncontrolled, and mortality remains unacceptably high. Since 2015, Nigeria has been experiencing increasingly large outbreaks of Lassa fever, with new peaks reached in 2016, 2017, and 2018. In 1987, McCormick and colleagues reported a case fatality rate (CFR) of 16.5% among 441 patients hospitalized in Sierra Leone [1]. In Nigeria in 2019, 124 deaths were recorded among 554 laboratory-confirmed cases for a CFR of 22% [2].Ribavirin is the only available Lassa fever–specific treatment and has been used routinely for over 25 years. However, intravenous ribavirin is not licensed for Lassa fever. Its mechanism of action is unclear, it is expensive and hard to source, and it has well-known toxicities [3]. Therefore, the evidence for using ribavirin in Lassa fever deserves careful scrutiny. The emergence of potential new therapeutics for Lassa fever, such as favipiravir and monoclonal antibodies, adds further weight to the case for reconsidering the role of ribavirin since the evaluation of new drugs in clinical trials requires a comparison against existing treatments with a known efficacy and safety profile [4,5].The rationale for using ribavirin in Lassa fever is primarily based on one clinical study conducted in Sierra Leone in the late 1970s and early 1980s. McCormick and colleagues [6] reported that in Lassa fever patients with a serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST) level of ≥150 IU/L, the use of intravenous ribavirin within the first 6 days of illness reduced the fatality rate from 61% (11/18) with no ribavirin to 5% (1/20) (p = 0.002). These authors concluded that ribavirin is effective in the treatment of Lassa fever. However, there are long-standing concerns about the methods used in this study. Although randomization was used to assign patients to treatment groups, the comparisons presented were not according to original randomized groups, and we have reconstructed their derivation (Fig 1). Serious limitations to the comparisons presented include the use of historic controls, inclusion of pregnant women in the control group but their exclusion from the ribavirin group (case fatality is around 2-fold higher in pregnant women than nonpregnant patients), and post hoc merging of treatment groups. Despite this and the fact that the results only supported the use of ribavirin in nonpregnant adult patients with AST ≥150 IU/L, this study is the basis upon which ribavirin is now used in all patients with Lassa fever, including children, pregnant women, and people with normal liver function.Open in a separate windowFig 1Reconstruction of the McCormick et al. data.AST, aspartate aminotransferase; PW, pregnant women. † Discrepancy within McCormick et al, with 39 patients reported treated with oral ribavirin but only 38 (14+24) outcomes reported. ‡ Discrepancy within McCormick et al, with table 1 reporting 12/63 but text reporting 13/62.It has been well known among Lassa specialists that the McCormick study reports a subset of a much larger dataset assembled by the Lassa treatment unit in Sierra Leone and that a report on the full dataset was commissioned by the United States Army Medical Research and Development Command. One of us (PH) therefore submitted a freedom of information (FOI) request to access this report. The full report and an accompanying memo are available, and we encourage readers to access and read the materials [7,8]. The memo states that some of the original trial records were unavailable, and the data should be “interpreted with extreme caution.” Nonetheless, the report presents data from 1977 through to 1991 on 807 Lassa fever patients with a known outcome that were assigned to different ribavirin treatment regimens. These newly available data raise important questions about the safety and efficacy of ribavirin for the treatment of Lassa fever.The original data were lost during the civil war in Sierra Leone, but the report contains tables showing the distribution of characteristics of the whole population according to treatment group, an appendix showing individual data for the 405 patients who died, and results of a logistic regression analysis comparing the effect of ribavirin with no treatment for some of the ribavirin regimens, after adjusting for patient characteristics. Based on these data, we derived aggregated datasets containing the number of deaths according to treatment groups and individual characteristics. We combined groups I (“No treatment given”) and X (“Drugs were not available”) as no treatment and all groups in which ribavirin was administered (II, III, and V to IX) as ribavirin. Exhibit III-8 in the FOI report presented case fatality by treatment group and AST, from which we derived crude odds ratios (ORs) comparing ribavirin with no treatment. The logistic regression reported in Exhibit III-9 was restricted to “those treatment groups that yielded the lowest case fatality rates with respect to untreated patients in the high severity patient illness category” (groups II, III, V, and VII). It was adjusted for age, gender, time to admission, time to treatment, length of stay, and log(AST). We also reconstructed analyses by digitizing the data on individuals who died in Appendix D, calculating the number of deaths according to treatment group and AST, and subtracting these numbers from the totals presented in Exhibit III-2. These allowed us to estimate overall mortality ORs before and after adjusting for ribavirin, although the numbers did not entirely match, and so the number of deaths was reduced in some small groups.Estimates of the effect of oral and intravenous ribavirin from the McCormick study and of all ribavirin from the full report are shown in Fig 2. Based on the crude ORs derived from Exhibit III-8, ribavirin reduced mortality only in patients with serum AST ≥150 IU/L, with less benefit (OR 0.48 [95% CI 0.30 to 0.78]) than reported by McCormick and colleagues. However, ribavirin appeared to increase mortality in patients with serum AST <150 IU/L (2.90 [1.42 to 5.95]). In fact, in our analysis, the only stratum in which ribavirin appeared protective (0.38 [0.21 to 0.70]) was serum AST >300 IU/L (Table H in S1 Text). The logistic regression reported in the FOI report suggested a modest reduction in mortality, but the reasons for the choice of treatment groups compared were unclear. In the reconstructed analyses, ribavirin was associated with overall increased mortality (2.12 [1.67, 2.68]), although this was attenuated after adjustment for AST (1.48 [1.05, 2.08]).Open in a separate windowFig 2Forest plot of the OR of death in treatment and risk subgroups.AST, aspartate aminotransferase; FOI, freedom of information; OR, odds ratio.In our view, there is a compelling case to reevaluate the role of ribavirin in the care of patients with Lassa fever. The data suggest that ribavirin treatment may harm Lassa fever patients with AST <150 IU/L. The limitations revealed by the US Army report, such as large amounts of missing data, unclear treatment allocation practices, imbalances in treatment groups, and errors in coding serology results, cast further doubt on the conclusions of the McCormick study. This aligns with 2 recent systematic reviews by Eberhardt and colleagues and Cheng and colleagues, which concluded that the efficacy of ribavirin in Lassa fever was uncertain because of critical risk of bias in existing studies [9,10].Challenging a quarter of century of clinical practice is difficult. The first step is to acknowledge inadequacies in our knowledge and to ensure that treatment recommendations for Lassa fever better reflect the (weak) strength of evidence for ribavirin in different patient populations. Vigorous efforts should be made to engage clinicians and patients in designing a placebo-controlled trial to assess the safety and efficacy of ribavirin treatment in Lassa fever patients, particularly in those with milder disease (as may be indicated by an admission AST <150 IU/L) in whom the available evidence is compatible with ribavirin causing more harm than good.In conclusion, Lassa fever patients are receiving a drug that may lack efficacy or cause harm. It is incumbent on us to ensure that the next 25 years of Lassa fever treatment are built on more solid foundations.  相似文献   
7.
8.
9.
Elucidation of an inhibitory system in the regulation of emesis is presented in this report. Emesis preceded by retching, can be induced in the dog by appropriate electrical stimulation of abdominal vagus nerves at the supradiaphragmatic level. Failure to produce retching or emesis by electrical stimulation of the cervical vagus trunk suggests either that the abdominal vagal emetic afferent does not course in the cervical vagus or that fibers inhibitory to emesis are present. This report presents evidence for afferent fibers inhibitory to retching and emesis in the cervical vagus. Retching and emesis resulting from stimulation of the supradiaphragmatic vagus can be prevented by either transection of the cervical vagus or simultaneous stimulation of the cervical vagus trunk. In addition, retching and emesis occur with stimulation of a fine nerve bundle dissected from the cervical vagus trunk. That the afferent pathway inhibitory to retching and emesis involves pulmonary afferents is suggested by the observation that hyperventilation occurs with stimulation of the cervical vagus trunk.Research supported by U.S.P.H.S. Grant No. FR05339-07  相似文献   
10.

Background

Trachoma has been endemic in The Gambia for decades. National trachoma control activities have been in place since the mid-1980''s, but with no mass antibiotic treatment campaign. We aimed to assess the prevalence of active trachoma and of actual ocular Chlamydia trachomatis infection as measured by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in the two Gambian regions that had had the highest prevalence of trachoma in the last national survey in 1996 prior to planned national mass antibiotic treatment distribution in 2006.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Two stage random sampling survey in 61 randomly selected Enumeration Areas (EAs) in North Bank Region (NBR) and Lower River Region (LRR). Fifty randomly selected children aged under 10 years were examined per EA for clinical signs of trachoma. In LRR, swabs were taken to test for ocular C. trachomatis infection. Unadjusted prevalences of active trachoma were calculated, as would be done in a trachoma control programme. The prevalence of trachomatous inflammation, follicular (TF) in the 2777 children aged 1–9 years was 12.3% (95% CI 8.8%–17.0%) in LRR and 10.0% (95% CI 7.7%–13.0%) in NBR, with significant variation within divisions (p<0.01), and a design effect of 3.474. Infection with C. trachomatis was found in only 0.3% (3/940) of children in LRR.

Conclusions/Significance

This study shows a large discrepancy between the prevalence of trachoma clinical signs and ocular C. trachomatis infection in two Gambian regions. Assessment of trachoma based on clinical signs alone may lead to unnecessary treatment, since the prevalence of active trachoma remains high but C. trachomatis infection has all but disappeared. Assuming that repeated infection is required for progression to blinding sequelae, blinding trachoma is on course for elimination by 2020 in The Gambia.  相似文献   
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号