3,316 research outputs found
Evidence for antibiotic induced Clostridium perfringens diarrhoea
Clostridium difficile is a well documented
cause of antibiotic associated diarrhoea in
hospitalised patients, but may account for
only approximately 20% of all cases. This
leader reviews the current knowledge and
understanding of the pathogenesis, epidemiology,
and diagnosis of non-food borne
Clostridium perfringens diarrhoea. Although
enterotoxigenic C perfringens has
been implicated in some C difficile negative
cases of antibiotic associated diarrhoea,
C perfringens enterotoxin detection
methods are not part of the routine
laboratory investigation of such cases.
Testing for C perfringens enterotoxin in
faecal samples from patients with antibiotic
associated diarrhoea and sporadic
diarrhoea on a routine basis would have
considerable resource implications.
Therefore, criteria for initiating investigations
and optimum laboratory tests need
to be established. In addition, establishing
the true burden of C perfringens antibiotic
associated diarrhoea is important
before optimum control and treatment
measures can be defined
Biodiversity Conservation Through Urban Green Spaces: A Case Study of Gujarat University Campus in Ahmedabad
The present study deals with the phytodiversity of Gujarat University campus and the surrounding region which forms an important green space in the urban environment of Ahmedabad city in Gujarat state, India. The extensive field surveys were carried out in the vast study area during 2004 to 2006 covering four different seasons viz. summer, winter, monsoon and spring to cover annual, biennial and perennial plants. A total of 451 species of flowering plants belonging to 338 genera and 101 families were recorded in the study area. Along with these three pteridophytes, two gymnosperms and the algae and fungi group appearing mostly in the monsoon season were also recorded in the study. Among the flowering plants, the herbs were found to be dominant, indicating they favored the climatic factors like less rainfall and high temperature in the study area. Raunkier’s biological life forms revealed the dominance of therophytes and phanerophytes, indicating ‘Thero-Phanerophytic’ phytoclimate in the region. The urban green spaces with such rich plant diversity need to be conserved, especially with the help of the local population, in order to maintain a good environment and biodiversity, thereby improving the overall quality of life
General anesthesia reduces complexity and temporal asymmetry of the informational structures derived from neural recordings in Drosophila
We apply techniques from the field of computational mechanics to evaluate the
statistical complexity of neural recording data from fruit flies. First, we
connect statistical complexity to the flies' level of conscious arousal, which
is manipulated by general anesthesia (isoflurane). We show that the complexity
of even single channel time series data decreases under anesthesia. The
observed difference in complexity between the two states of conscious arousal
increases as higher orders of temporal correlations are taken into account. We
then go on to show that, in addition to reducing complexity, anesthesia also
modulates the informational structure between the forward- and reverse-time
neural signals. Specifically, using three distinct notions of temporal
asymmetry we show that anesthesia reduces temporal asymmetry on
information-theoretic and information-geometric grounds. In contrast to prior
work, our results show that: (1) Complexity differences can emerge at very
short timescales and across broad regions of the fly brain, thus heralding the
macroscopic state of anesthesia in a previously unforeseen manner, and (2) that
general anesthesia also modulates the temporal asymmetry of neural signals.
Together, our results demonstrate that anesthetized brains become both less
structured and more reversible.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures. Comments welcome; Added time-reversal analysis,
updated discussion, new figures (Fig. 5 & Fig. 6) and Tables (Tab. 1
Impact of managed clinical networks on neonatal care in England : a population-based study
Objective: To assess the impact of reorganisation of neonatal specialist care services in England after a UK Department of Health report in 2003.
Design: A population-wide observational comparison of outcomes over two epochs, before and after the establishment of managed clinical neonatal networks.
Setting: Epoch one: 294 maternity and neonatal units in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, 1 September 1998 to 31 August 2000, as reported by the Confidential Enquiry into Stillbirths and Sudden Deaths in Infancy Project 27/28. Epoch two: 146 neonatal units in England contributing data to the National Neonatal Research Database at the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit, 1 January 2009 to 31 December 2010.
Participants: Babies born at a gestational age of 27+0-28+6 (weeks+days): 3522 live births in epoch one; 2919 babies admitted to a neonatal unit within 28 days of birth in epoch two.
Intervention: The national reorganisation of neonatal services into managed clinical networks.
Main outcome measures: The proportion of babies born at hospitals providing the highest volume of neonatal specialist care (≥2000 neonatal intensive care days annually), having an acute transfer (within the first 24 hours after birth) and/or a late transfer (between 24 hours and 28 days after birth) to another hospital, assessed by change in distribution of transfer category (“none,” “acute,” “late”), and babies from multiple births separated by transfer. For acute transfers in epoch two, the level of specialist neonatal care provided at the destination hospital (British Association of Perinatal Medicine criteria).
Results: After reorganisation, there were increases in the proportions of babies born at 27-28 weeks’ gestation in hospitals providing the highest volume of neonatal specialist care (18% (631/3495) v 49% (1325/2724); odds ratio 4.30, 95% confidence interval 3.83 to 4.82; P<0.001) and in acute and late postnatal transfers (7% (235) v 12% (360) and 18% (579) v 22% (640), respectively; P<0.001). There was no significant change in the proportion of babies from multiple births separated by transfer (33% (39) v 29% (38); 0.86, 0.50 to 1.46; P=0.57). In epoch two, 32% of acute transfers were to a neonatal unit providing either an equivalent (n=87) or lower (n=26) level of specialist care.
Conclusions: There is evidence of some improvement in the delivery of neonatal specialist care after reorganisation. The increase in acute transfers in epoch two, in conjunction with the high proportion transferred to a neonatal unit providing an equivalent or lower level of specialist care, and the continued separation of babies from multiple births, are indicative of poor coordination between maternity and neonatal services to facilitate in utero transfer before delivery, and continuing inadequacies in capacity of intensive care cots. Historical data representing epoch one are available only in aggregate form, preventing examination of temporal trends or confounding factors. This limits the extent to which differences between epochs can be attributed to reorganisation and highlights the importance of routine, prospective data collection for evaluation of future health service reorganisations
Dissipative dynamics of quantum discord under quantum chaotic environment
We investigate the dissipative dynamics of quantum discord in a decoherence
model with two initially entangled qubits in addition to a quantum kicked top.
The two qubits are uncoupled during the period of our study and one of them
interacts with the quantum kicked top. We find that the long time behavior of
quantum discord could be well described by the fidelity decay of the quantum
kicked top; for short time behavior, however, the phase of the amplitude of the
fidelity decay is necessary to provide more specific information about the
system. We have made comparison between the quantum kicked top and multi-mode
oscillator system in describing environment, and also compared the dynamics of
the entanglement with that of quantum discord.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, and Accepted by Europhysics Letter
Preterm nutritional intake and MRI phenotype at term age: a prospective observational study
Objective: To describe (1) the relationship between nutrition and the preterm-at-term infant phenotype, (2) phenotypic differences between preterm-at-term infants and healthy term born infants and (3) relationships between somatic and brain MRI outcomes.
Design: Prospective observational study.
Setting: UK tertiary neonatal unit.
Participants: Preterm infants (<32 weeks gestation) (n=22) and healthy term infants (n=39)
Main outcome measures: Preterm nutrient intake; total and regional adipose tissue (AT) depot volumes; brain volume and proximal cerebral arterial vessel tortuosity (CAVT) in preterm infants and in term infants.
Results: Preterm nutrition was deficient in protein and high in carbohydrate and fat. Preterm nutrition was not related to AT volumes, brain volume or proximal CAVT score; a positive association was noted between human milk intake and proximal CAVT score (r=0.44, p=0.05). In comparison to term infants, preterm infants had increased total adiposity, comparable brain volumes and reduced proximal CAVT scores. There was a significant negative correlation between deep subcutaneous abdominal AT volume and brain volume in preterm infants (r=−0.58, p=0.01).
Conclusions: Though there are significant phenotypic differences between preterm infants at term and term infants, preterm macronutrient intake does not appear to be a determinant. Our preliminary data suggest that (1) human milk may exert a beneficial effect on cerebral arterial vessel tortuosity and (2) there is a negative correlation between adiposity and brain volume in preterm infants at term. Further work is warranted to see if our findings can be replicated and to understand the causal mechanisms
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