671 research outputs found
Food intake of European adolescents in the light of different food-based dietary guidelines : results of the HELENA (Healthy Lifestyle in Europe by Nutrition in Adolescence) study
Objective: Since inadequate food consumption patterns during adolescence are not only linked with the occurrence of obesity in youth but also with the subsequent risk of developing diseases in adulthood, the establishment and maintenance of a healthy diet early in life is of great public health importance. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to describe and evaluate the food consumption of a well-characterized sample of European adolescents against food-based dietary guidelines for the first time.
Design: The HELENA (Healthy Lifestyle in Europe by Nutrition in Adolescence) Study is a cross-sectional study, whose main objective was to obtain comparable data on a variety of nutritional and health-related parameters in adolescents aged 12.5-17.5 years.
Setting: Ten cities in Europe.
Subjects: The initial sample consisted of more than 3000 European adolescents. Among these, 1593 adolescents (54% female) had sufficient and plausible dietary data on energy and food intakes from two 24 h recalls using the HELENA-DIAT software.
Results: Food intake of adolescents in Europe is not optimal compared with the two food-based dietary guidelines, Optimized Mixed Diet and Food Guide Pyramid, examined in this study. Adolescents eat half of the recommended amount of fruit and vegetables and less than two-thirds of the recommended amount of milk (and milk products), but consume much more meat (and meat products), fats and sweets than recommended. However, median total energy intake may be estimated to be nearly in line with the recommendations.
Conclusion: The results urge the need to improve the dietary habits of adolescents in order to maintain health in later life
Hydrothermal activity along the slow-spreading Lucky Strike ridge segment (Mid-Atlantic Ridge) : distribution, heatflux, and geological controls
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2015. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters 431 (2015): 1730185, doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2015.09.025.We have reviewed available visual information from the seafloor, and recently acquired
microbathymetry for several traverses across the Lucky Strike segment, to evaluate the
distribution of hydrothermal activity. We have identified a new on-axis site with diffuse
flow, Ewan, and anactive vent structure ~1.2 km from the axis, Capelinhos. These sites
are minor relative to the Main field, and our total heatflux estimate for all active sites
(200-1200 MW) is only slightly higher than previously published estimates. We also
identify fossil sites W of the main Lucky Strike field. A circular feature ~200 m in
diameter located on the flanks of a rifted off-axis central volcano, is likely a large and
inactive hydrothermal edifice, named Grunnus. We find no indicator of focused
hydrothermal activity elsewhere along the segment, suggesting that the enhanced melt
supply and the associated melt lenses, required to form central volcanoes, also sustain
hydrothermal circulation to form and maintain large and long-lived hydrothermal fields.
Hydrothermal discharge to the seafloor occurs along fault traces, suggesting focusing of
hydrothermal circulation in the shallow crust along permeable fault zones.This work has been partly financed by ANR (France) Mothseim
Project NT05-3 42213 toJE, and by EU-RTN-MOMARNET to MC. The French Ministry of
Research financed ship, ROV and AUV time (Graviluck’06, MOMAR’08, Bathyluck’09,
MOMARSAT cruises in 2010-2015
Loss of Function of TET2 Cooperates with Constitutively Active KIT in Murine and Human Models of Mastocytosis
Systemic Mastocytosis (SM) is a clonal disease characterized by abnormal accumulation of mast cells in multiple organs. Clinical presentations of the disease vary widely from indolent to aggressive forms, and to the exceedingly rare mast cell leukemia. Current treatment of aggressive SM and mast cell leukemia is unsatisfactory. An imatinib-resistant activating mutation of the receptor tyrosine kinase KIT (KIT D816V) is most frequently present in transformed mast cells and is associated with all clinical forms of the disease. Thus the etiology of the variable clinical aggressiveness of abnormal mast cells in SM is unclear. TET2 appears to be mutated in primary human samples in aggressive types of SM, suggesting a possible role in disease modification. In this report, we demonstrate the cooperation between KIT D816V and loss of function of TET2 in mast cell transformation and demonstrate a more aggressive phenotype in a murine model of SM when both mutations are present in progenitor cells. We exploit these findings to validate a combination treatment strategy targeting the epigenetic deregulation caused by loss of TET2 and the constitutively active KIT receptor for the treatment of patients with aggressive SM
6. Innover en s’inspirant de l’ailleurs ?
CRÉER LES CONDITIONS FAVORABLES À L’INNOVATION QU’EST-CE QUE L’ESPRIT D’INNOVATION ? Innover ne signifie pas tout révolutionner, cela consiste le plus souvent à s’inspirer de ce qui existe déjà, à en tirer matière à réflexion, à en emprunter des éléments pour réaliser une création unique, adaptée à un contexte spécifique, afin d’être le plus « en phase » possible avec celui-ci. C’est le propos de ce chapitre : montrer comment on peut innover en s’inspirant de l’exemplarité de certaines biblio..
A primal-dual data-driven method for computational optical imaging with a photonic lantern
Optical fibres aim to image in-vivo biological processes. In this context,
high spatial resolution and stability to fibre movements are key to enable
decision-making processes (e.g., for microendoscopy). Recently, a single-pixel
imaging technique based on a multicore fibre photonic lantern has been
designed, named computational optical imaging using a lantern (COIL). A
proximal algorithm based on a sparsity prior, dubbed SARA-COIL, has been
further proposed to enable image reconstructions for high resolution COIL
microendoscopy. In this work, we develop a data-driven approach for COIL. We
replace the sparsity prior in the proximal algorithm by a learned denoiser,
leading to a plug-and-play (PnP) algorithm. We use recent results in learning
theory to train a network with desirable Lipschitz properties. We show that the
resulting primal-dual PnP algorithm converges to a solution to a monotone
inclusion problem. Our simulations highlight that the proposed data-driven
approach improves the reconstruction quality over variational SARA-COIL method
on both simulated and real data
Quantifying diffuse and discrete venting at the Tour Eiffel vent site, Lucky Strike hydrothermal field
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2012. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 13 (2012): Q04008, doi:10.1029/2011GC003991.The relative heat carried by diffuse versus discrete venting of hydrothermal fluids at mid-ocean ridges is poorly constrained and likely varies among vent sites. Estimates of the proportion of heat carried by diffuse flow range from 0% to 100% of the total axial heat flux. Here, we present an approach that integrates imagery, video, and temperature measurements to accurately estimate this partitioning at a single vent site, Tour Eiffel in the Lucky Strike hydrothermal field along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Fluid temperatures, photographic mosaics of the vent site, and video sequences of fluid flow were acquired during the Bathyluck'09 cruise (Fall, 2009) and the Momarsat'10 cruise (Summer, 2010) to the Lucky Strike hydrothermal field by the ROV Victor6000 aboard the French research vessel the “Pourquoi Pas”? (IFREMER, France). We use two optical methods to calculate the velocities of imaged hydrothermal fluids: (1) for diffuse venting, Diffuse Flow Velocimetry tracks the displacement of refractive index anomalies through time, and (2) for discrete jets, Particle Image Velocimetry tracks eddies by cross-correlation of pixel intensities between subsequent images. To circumvent video blurring associated with rapid velocities at vent orifices, exit velocities at discrete vents are calculated from the best fit of the observed velocity field to a model of a steady state turbulent plume where we vary the model vent radius and fluid exit velocity. Our results yield vertical velocities of diffuse effluent between 0.9 cm s−1 and 11.1 cm s−1 for fluid temperatures between 3°C and 33.5°C above that of ambient seawater, and exit velocities of discrete jets between 22 cm s−1 and 119 cm s−1 for fluid temperatures between 200°C and 301°C above ambient seawater. Using the calculated fluid velocities, temperature measurements, and photo mosaics of the actively venting areas, we calculate a heat flux due to diffuse venting from thin fractures of 3.15 ± 2.22 MW, discrete venting of 1.07 ± 0.66 MW, and, by incorporating previous estimates of diffuse heat flux density from Tour Eiffel, diffuse flux from the main sulfide mound of ∼15.6 MW. We estimate that the total integrated heat flux from the Tour Eiffel site is 19.82 ± 2.88 MW and that the ratio of diffuse to discrete heat flux is ∼18. We discuss the implication of these results for the characterization of different vent sites within Lucky Strike and in the context of a compilation of all available measurements of the ratio of diffuse to discrete heat flux.E. Mittelstaedt was supported
by the International Research Fellowship Program of the U.S.
National Science Foundation (OISE-0757920). Funding for the
2006, 2008, 2009, and 2010 cruises was provided by CNRS/
IFREMER through the MoMAR program (France), by ANR
(France), the Mothseim Project NT05–3 42213 to J. Escartín
and by grant CTM2010–15216/MAR from the Spanish Ministry
of Science to R. Garcia and J. Escartín. T. Barreyre was supported
by University Paris Diderot (Paris 7 – France) and
Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris (IPGP, France).2012-10-1
Partial restoration of brain dystrophin by tricyclo-DNA antisense oligonucleotides alleviates emotional deficits in mdx52 mice
The mdx52 mouse model recapitulates a frequent mutation profile associated with brain involvement in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Deletion of exon 52 impedes expression of two dystrophins (Dp427, Dp140) expressed in brain, and is eligible for therapeutic exon-skipping strategies. We previously showed that mdx52 mice display enhanced anxiety and fearfulness, and impaired associative fear learning. In this study, we examined the reversibility of these phenotypes using exon 51 skipping to restore exclusively Dp427 expression in the brain of mdx52 mice. We first show that a single intracerebroventricular administration of tricyclo-DNA antisense oligonucleotides targeting exon 51 restores 5%-15% of dystrophin protein expression in the hippocampus, cerebellum, and cortex, at stable levels between 7 and 11 week after injection. Anxiety and unconditioned fear were significantly reduced in treated mdx52 mice and acquisition of fear conditioning appeared fully rescued, while fear memory tested 24 h later was only partially improved. Additional restoration of Dp427 in skeletal and cardiac muscles by systemic treatment did not further improve the unconditioned fear response, confirming the central origin of this phenotype. These findings indicate that some emotional and cognitive deficits associated with dystrophin deficiency may be reversible or at least improved by partial postnatal dystrophin rescue
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