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1.
Nature ; 630(8016): 447-456, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38839969

RESUMEN

Increasing rates of autoimmune and inflammatory disease present a burgeoning threat to human health1. This is compounded by the limited efficacy of available treatments1 and high failure rates during drug development2, highlighting an urgent need to better understand disease mechanisms. Here we show how functional genomics could address this challenge. By investigating an intergenic haplotype on chr21q22-which has been independently linked to inflammatory bowel disease, ankylosing spondylitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis and Takayasu's arteritis3-6-we identify that the causal gene, ETS2, is a central regulator of human inflammatory macrophages and delineate the shared disease mechanism that amplifies ETS2 expression. Genes regulated by ETS2 were prominently expressed in diseased tissues and more enriched for inflammatory bowel disease GWAS hits than most previously described pathways. Overexpressing ETS2 in resting macrophages reproduced the inflammatory state observed in chr21q22-associated diseases, with upregulation of multiple drug targets, including TNF and IL-23. Using a database of cellular signatures7, we identified drugs that might modulate this pathway and validated the potent anti-inflammatory activity of one class of small molecules in vitro and ex vivo. Together, this illustrates the power of functional genomics, applied directly in primary human cells, to identify immune-mediated disease mechanisms and potential therapeutic opportunities.


Asunto(s)
Inflamación , Macrófagos , Proteína Proto-Oncogénica c-ets-2 , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Antiinflamatorios/farmacología , Antiinflamatorios/uso terapéutico , Células Cultivadas , Cromosomas Humanos Par 21/genética , Bases de Datos Factuales , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo , Genómica , Haplotipos/genética , Inflamación/genética , Enfermedades Inflamatorias del Intestino/genética , Macrófagos/inmunología , Macrófagos/metabolismo , Macrófagos/patología , Proteína Proto-Oncogénica c-ets-2/genética , Proteína Proto-Oncogénica c-ets-2/metabolismo , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Factores de Necrosis Tumoral/metabolismo , Interleucina-23/metabolismo
2.
Nature ; 623(7989): 932-937, 2023 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38030780

RESUMEN

Planets with radii between that of the Earth and Neptune (hereafter referred to as 'sub-Neptunes') are found in close-in orbits around more than half of all Sun-like stars1,2. However, their composition, formation and evolution remain poorly understood3. The study of multiplanetary systems offers an opportunity to investigate the outcomes of planet formation and evolution while controlling for initial conditions and environment. Those in resonance (with their orbital periods related by a ratio of small integers) are particularly valuable because they imply a system architecture practically unchanged since its birth. Here we present the observations of six transiting planets around the bright nearby star HD 110067. We find that the planets follow a chain of resonant orbits. A dynamical study of the innermost planet triplet allowed the prediction and later confirmation of the orbits of the rest of the planets in the system. The six planets are found to be sub-Neptunes with radii ranging from 1.94R⊕ to 2.85R⊕. Three of the planets have measured masses, yielding low bulk densities that suggest the presence of large hydrogen-dominated atmospheres.

3.
Nature ; 614(7947): 239-243, 2023 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36755175

RESUMEN

Planetary rings are observed not only around giant planets1, but also around small bodies such as the Centaur Chariklo2 and the dwarf planet Haumea3. Up to now, all known dense rings were located close enough to their parent bodies, being inside the Roche limit, where tidal forces prevent material with reasonable densities from aggregating into a satellite. Here we report observations of an inhomogeneous ring around the trans-Neptunian body (50000) Quaoar. This trans-Neptunian object has an estimated radius4 of 555 km and possesses a roughly 80-km satellite5 (Weywot) that orbits at 24 Quaoar radii6,7. The detected ring orbits at 7.4 radii from the central body, which is well outside Quaoar's classical Roche limit, thus indicating that this limit does not always determine where ring material can survive. Our local collisional simulations show that elastic collisions, based on laboratory experiments8, can maintain a ring far away from the body. Moreover, Quaoar's ring orbits close to the 1/3 spin-orbit resonance9 with Quaoar, a property shared by Chariklo's2,10,11 and Haumea's3 rings, suggesting that this resonance plays a key role in ring confinement for small bodies.

4.
Nature ; 602(7897): 393-402, 2022 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35173338

RESUMEN

Autonomous robots comprise actuation, energy, sensory and control systems built from materials and structures that are not necessarily designed and integrated for multifunctionality. Yet, animals and other organisms that robots strive to emulate contain highly sophisticated and interconnected systems at all organizational levels, which allow multiple functions to be performed simultaneously. Herein, we examine how system integration and multifunctionality in nature inspires a new paradigm for autonomous robots that we call Embodied Energy. Whereas most untethered robots use batteries to store energy and power their operation, recent advancements in energy-storage techniques enable chemical or electrical energy sources to be embodied directly within the structures and materials used to create robots, rather than requiring separate battery packs. This perspective highlights emerging examples of Embodied Energy in the context of developing autonomous robots.

5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(25): e2210704120, 2023 06 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37307478

RESUMEN

Group-based educational disparities are smaller in classrooms where teachers express a belief that students can improve their abilities. However, a scalable method for motivating teachers to adopt such growth mindset-supportive teaching practices has remained elusive. In part, this is because teachers often already face overwhelming demands on their time and attention and have reason to be skeptical of the professional development advice they receive from researchers and other experts. We designed an intervention that overcame these obstacles and successfully motivated high-school teachers to adopt specific practices that support students' growth mindsets. The intervention used the values-alignment approach. This approach motivates behavioral change by framing a desired behavior as aligned with a core value-one that is an important criterion for status and admiration in the relevant social reference group. First, using qualitative interviews and a nationally representative survey of teachers, we identified a relevant core value: inspiring students' enthusiastic engagement with learning. Next, we designed a ~45-min, self-administered, online intervention that persuaded teachers to view growth mindset-supportive practices as a way to foster such student engagement and thus live up to that value. We randomly assigned 155 teachers (5,393 students) to receive the intervention and 164 teachers (6,167 students) to receive a control module. The growth mindset-supportive teaching intervention successfully promoted teachers' adoption of the suggested practices, overcoming major barriers to changing teachers' classroom practices that other scalable approaches have failed to surmount. The intervention also substantially improved student achievement in socioeconomically disadvantaged classes, reducing inequality in educational outcomes.


Asunto(s)
Éxito Académico , Intervención basada en la Internet , Humanos , Escolaridad , Estudiantes , Aprendizaje
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(1): e2216315120, 2023 01 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36577065

RESUMEN

Behavioral science interventions have the potential to address longstanding policy problems, but their effects are typically heterogeneous across contexts (e.g., teachers, schools, and geographic regions). This contextual heterogeneity is poorly understood, however, which reduces the field's impact and its understanding of mechanisms. Here, we present an efficient way to interrogate heterogeneity and address these gaps in knowledge. This method a) presents scenarios that vividly represent different moderating contexts, b) measures a short-term behavioral outcome (e.g., an academic choice) that is known to relate to typical intervention outcomes (e.g., academic achievement), and c) assesses the causal effect of the moderating context on the link between the psychological variable typically targeted by interventions and this short-term outcome. We illustrated the utility of this approach across four experiments (total n = 3,235) that directly tested contextual moderators of the links between growth mindset, which is the belief that ability can be developed, and students' academic choices. The present results showed that teachers' growth mindset-supportive messages and the structural opportunities they provide moderated the link between students' mindsets and their choices (studies 1 to 3). This pattern was replicated in a nationally representative sample of adolescents and did not vary across demographic subgroups (study 2), nor was this pattern the result of several possible confounds (studies 3 to 4). Discussion centers on how this method of interrogating contextual heterogeneity can be applied to other behavioral science interventions and broaden their impact in other policy domains.


Asunto(s)
Éxito Académico , Estudiantes , Adolescente , Humanos , Estudiantes/psicología , Instituciones Académicas , Escolaridad
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(19): e2300463120, 2023 05 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37126675

RESUMEN

We tested the long-term effects of a utility-value intervention administered in a gateway chemistry course, with the goal of promoting persistence and diversity in STEM. In a randomized controlled trial (N = 2,505), students wrote three essays about course content and its personal relevance or three control essays. The intervention significantly improved STEM persistence overall (74% vs. 70% were STEM majors 2.5 y later). Effects were larger for students from marginalized and underrepresented racial/ethnic groups, who were 14 percentage points more likely to persist in STEM fields in the intervention condition (69% vs. 55%). Mediation analysis suggests that the intervention promoted persistence for these students by bolstering their motivation to attain a STEM degree and by promoting engagement with course assignments. This theory-informed curricular intervention is a promising tool for educators committed to retaining students in STEM.


Asunto(s)
Motivación , Estudiantes , Humanos , Grupos Raciales
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(39): e2309822120, 2023 09 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37725651

RESUMEN

External control of chemical reactions in biological settings with spatial and temporal precision is a grand challenge for noninvasive diagnostic and therapeutic applications. While light is a conventional stimulus for remote chemical activation, its penetration is severely attenuated in tissues, which limits biological applicability. On the other hand, ultrasound is a biocompatible remote energy source that is highly penetrant and offers a wide range of functional tunability. Coupling ultrasound to the activation of specific chemical reactions under physiological conditions, however, remains a challenge. Here, we describe a synergistic platform that couples the selective mechanochemical activation of mechanophore-functionalized polymers with biocompatible focused ultrasound (FUS) by leveraging pressure-sensitive gas vesicles (GVs) as acousto-mechanical transducers. The power of this approach is illustrated through the mechanically triggered release of covalently bound fluorogenic and therapeutic cargo molecules from polymers containing a masked 2-furylcarbinol mechanophore. Molecular release occurs selectively in the presence of GVs upon exposure to FUS under physiological conditions. These results showcase the viability of this system for enabling remote control of specific mechanochemical reactions with spatiotemporal precision in biologically relevant settings and demonstrate the translational potential of polymer mechanochemistry.


Asunto(s)
Fuentes Generadoras de Energía , Polímeros , Transductores , Extremidad Superior
9.
Nature ; 571(7763): 51-57, 2019 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31217583

RESUMEN

Modern robots lack the multifunctional interconnected systems found in living organisms and are consequently unable to reproduce their efficiency and autonomy. Energy-storage systems are among the most crucial limitations to robot autonomy, but their size, weight, material and design constraints can be re-examined in the context of multifunctional, bio-inspired applications. Here we present a synthetic energy-dense circulatory system embedded in an untethered, aquatic soft robot. Modelled after redox flow batteries, this synthetic vascular system combines the functions of hydraulic force transmission, actuation and energy storage into a single integrated design that geometrically increases the energy density of the robot to enable operation for long durations (up to 36 hours). The fabrication techniques and flexible materials used in its construction enable the vascular system to be created with complex form factors that continuously deform with the robot's movement. This use of electrochemical energy storage in hydraulic fluids could facilitate increased energy density, autonomy, efficiency and multifunctionality in future robot designs.

11.
J Infect Dis ; 229(Supplement_2): S219-S228, 2024 Mar 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38243606

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Pathology and Monkeypox virus (MPXV) tissue tropism in severe and fatal human mpox is not thoroughly described but can help elucidate the disease pathogenesis and the role of coinfections in immunocompromised patients. METHODS: We analyzed biopsy and autopsy tissues from 22 patients with severe or fatal outcomes to characterize pathology and viral antigen and DNA distribution in tissues by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization. Tissue-based testing for coinfections was also performed. RESULTS: Mucocutaneous lesions showed necrotizing and proliferative epithelial changes. Deceased patients with autopsy tissues evaluated had digestive tract lesions, and half had systemic tissue necrosis with thrombotic vasculopathy in lymphoid tissues, lung, or other solid organs. Half also had bronchopneumonia, and one-third had acute lung injury. All cases had MPXV antigen and DNA detected in tissues. Coinfections were identified in 5 of 16 (31%) biopsy and 4 of 6 (67%) autopsy cases. CONCLUSIONS: Severe mpox in immunocompromised patients is characterized by extensive viral infection of tissues and viremic dissemination that can progress despite available therapeutics. Digestive tract and lung involvement are common and associated with prominent histopathological and clinical manifestations. Coinfections may complicate mpox diagnosis and treatment. Significant viral DNA (likely correlating to infectious virus) in tissues necessitates enhanced biosafety measures in healthcare and autopsy settings.


Asunto(s)
Coinfección , Mpox , Humanos , Monkeypox virus , Huésped Inmunocomprometido , Antígenos Virales , ADN Viral
12.
Breast Cancer Res ; 26(1): 35, 2024 03 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38429789

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive breast cancer subtype with a poor prognosis. Doxorubicin is part of standard curative therapy for TNBC, but chemotherapy resistance remains an important clinical challenge. Bocodepsin (OKI-179) is a small molecule class I histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor that promotes apoptosis in TNBC preclinical models. The purpose of this study was to investigate the combination of bocodepsin and doxorubicin in preclinical TNBC models and evaluate the impact on terminal cell fate, including apoptosis and senescence. METHODS: TNBC cell lines were treated with doxorubicin and CellTiter-Glo was used to assess proliferation and determine doxorubicin sensitivity. Select cell lines were treated with OKI-005 (in vitro version of bocodepsin) and doxorubicin and assessed for proliferation, apoptosis as measured by Annexin V/PI, and cell cycle by flow cytometry. Immunoblotting was used to assess changes in mediators of apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, and senescence. Senescence was measured by the senescence-associated ß-galactosidase assay. An MDA-MB-231 xenograft in vivo model was treated with bocodepsin, doxorubicin, or the combination and assessed for inhibition of tumor growth. shRNA knockdown of p53 was performed in the CAL-51 cell line and proliferation, apoptosis and senescence were assessed in response to combination treatment. RESULTS: OKI-005 and doxorubicin resulted in synergistic antiproliferative activity in TNBC cells lines regardless of p53 mutation status. The combination led to increased apoptosis and decreased senescence. In vivo, the combination resulted in increased tumor growth inhibition compared to either single agent. shRNA knock-down of p53 led to increased doxorubicin-induced senescence that was decreased with the addition of OKI-005 in vitro. CONCLUSION: The addition of bocodepsin to doxorubicin resulted in synergistic antiproliferative activity in vitro, improved tumor growth inhibition in vivo, and promotion of apoptosis which makes this a promising combination to overcome doxorubicin resistance in TNBC. Bocodepsin is currently in clinical development and has a favorable toxicity profile compared to other HDAC inhibitors supporting the feasibility of evaluating this combination in patients with TNBC.


Asunto(s)
Inhibidores de Histona Desacetilasas , Neoplasias de la Mama Triple Negativas , Humanos , Inhibidores de Histona Desacetilasas/farmacología , Inhibidores de Histona Desacetilasas/uso terapéutico , Neoplasias de la Mama Triple Negativas/tratamiento farmacológico , Neoplasias de la Mama Triple Negativas/genética , Neoplasias de la Mama Triple Negativas/metabolismo , Proteína p53 Supresora de Tumor/genética , Doxorrubicina/farmacología , Doxorrubicina/uso terapéutico , Apoptosis , ARN Interferente Pequeño
13.
Am J Public Health ; 114(1): 38-41, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37921443

RESUMEN

The province of Ontario, Canada, implemented mandatory day-long training for construction workers required to use fall-protection equipment. More than 400 000 training sessions were completed by 2017 when the requirement took full effect. The lost-time workers' compensation claim incidence rate attributable to falls targeted by the training was 19% lower in 2017-2019 than in 2012-2014. Rates for two comparator injuries increased or stayed the same. The decline in targeted fall claim incidence rate of the other Canadian provinces was 6%. (Am J Public Health. 2024;114(1):38-41. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2023.307440).


Asunto(s)
Indemnización para Trabajadores , Humanos , Ontario/epidemiología
14.
Eur Radiol ; 34(4): 2416-2425, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37798408

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: The most accurate method for estimating patient effective dose (a principal metric for tracking patient radiation exposure) from computed tomography (CT) requires time-intensive Monte Carlo simulation. A simpler method multiplies a scalar coefficient by the widely available scanner-reported dose length product (DLP) to estimate effective dose. We developed new adult effective dose coefficients using actual patient scans and assessed their agreement with Monte Carlo simulation. METHODS: A multicenter sample of 216,906 adult CT scans was prospectively assembled in 2015-2020 from the University of California San Francisco International CT Dose Registry and the University of Florida library of computational phantoms. We generated effective dose coefficients for eight body regions, stratified by patient sex, diameter, and scanner manufacturer. We applied the new coefficients to DLPs to calculate effective doses and assess their correlations with Monte Carlo radiation transport-generated effective dose. RESULTS: Effective dose coefficients varied by body region and decreased in magnitude with increasing patient diameter. Coefficients were approximately twofold higher for torso scans in smallest compared with largest diameter categories. For example, abdomen and pelvis coefficients decreased from 0.027 to 0.013 mSv/mGy-cm between the 16-20 cm and 41+ cm categories. There were modest but consistent differences by sex and manufacturer. Diameter-based coefficients used to estimate effective dose produced strong correlations with the reference standard (Pearson correlations 0.77-0.86). The reported conversion coefficients differ from previous studies, particularly in neck CT. CONCLUSIONS: New effective dose coefficients derived from empirical clinical scans can be used to easily estimate effective dose using scanner-reported DLP. CLINICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT: Scalar coefficients multiplied by DLP offer a simple approximation to effective dose, a key radiation dose metric. New effective dose coefficients from this study strongly correlate with gold standard, Monte Carlo-generated effective dose, and differ somewhat from previous studies. KEY POINTS: • Previous effective dose coefficients were derived from theoretical models rather than real patient data. • The new coefficients (from a large registry/phantom library) differ from previous studies. • The new coefficients offer reasonably reliable values for estimating effective dose.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Teóricos , Radiometría , Adulto , Humanos , Simulación por Computador , Método de Montecarlo , Fantasmas de Imagen , Dosis de Radiación , Radiometría/métodos , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X/métodos , Masculino , Femenino
15.
Inorg Chem ; 63(20): 9184-9194, 2024 May 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38722234

RESUMEN

We report a new nickel hydroxyfluoride diaspore Ni(OH)F prepared using hydrothermal synthesis from NiCl2·6H2O and NaF. Magnetic characterization reveals that, contrary to other reported transition-metal hydroxyfluoride diaspores, Ni(OH)F displays weak ferromagnetism below the magnetic ordering temperature. To understand this difference, neutron diffraction is used to determine the long-range magnetic structure. The magnetic structure is found to be distinct from those reported for other hydroxyfluoride diaspores and shows an antiferromagnetic spin ordering in which ferromagnetic canting is allowed by symmetry. Furthermore, neutron powder diffraction on a deuterated sample, Ni(OD)F, reveals partial anion ordering that is distinctive to what has previously been reported for Co(OH)F and Fe(OH)F. Density functional theory calculations show that OH/F ordering can have a directing influence on the lowest energy magnetic ground state. Our results point toward a subtle interplay between the sign of magnetic exchange interactions, the electronic configuration, and anion disordering.

16.
Cell ; 137(2): 235-46, 2009 Apr 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19379691

RESUMEN

X-linked myopathy with excessive autophagy (XMEA) is a childhood-onset disease characterized by progressive vacuolation and atrophy of skeletal muscle. We show that XMEA is caused by hypomorphic alleles of the VMA21 gene, that VMA21 is the diverged human ortholog of the yeast Vma21p protein, and that like Vma21p it is an essential assembly chaperone of the V-ATPase, the principal mammalian proton pump complex. Decreased VMA21 raises lysosomal pH, which reduces lysosomal degradative ability and blocks autophagy. This reduces cellular free amino acids, which upregulates the mTOR pathway and mTOR-dependent macroautophagy, resulting in proliferation of large and ineffective autolysosomes that engulf sections of cytoplasm, merge together, and vacuolate the cell. Our results uncover macroautophagic overcompensation leading to cell vacuolation and tissue atrophy as a mechanism of disease.


Asunto(s)
Genes Ligados a X , Enfermedades Musculares/genética , ATPasas de Translocación de Protón Vacuolares/metabolismo , Autofagia , Humanos , Lisosomas/metabolismo , Proteínas de la Membrana/metabolismo , ARN Mensajero/metabolismo , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , ATPasas de Translocación de Protón Vacuolares/genética
17.
Prehosp Emerg Care ; : 1-5, 2024 Jul 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38832842

RESUMEN

We present a case of an adolescent patient with a penetrating gunshot wound to the mouth requiring endotracheal intubation via rapid sequence intubation in the prehospital setting. The team used video laryngoscopy (VL) to secure the airway; however, continuous bloody secretions increased the complexity of the procedure and required the application of the Suction-Assisted Laryngoscopy and Airway Decontamination (SALAD) method to facilitate intubation. By utilizing the SALAD procedure, the field of view on the VL camera remained unobscured, and the patient's airway remained clear, allowing for an uneventful intubation procedure. No episodes of hypoxia, hypotension, bradycardia, or obvious clinical signs of pulmonary aspiration occurred during the procedure. The patient was transported to a local Pediatric Level I trauma center, where he underwent emergent surgery to repair an esophageal laceration and was discharged to home 40 days later. This case highlights the importance of deliberate and proactive management of the contaminated airway in the prehospital setting. The SALAD technique replaces the Yankauer suction catheter with a larger bore suction catheter in conjunction with VL to perform gross decontamination of the mouth and airway before attempting intubation. This is followed by permanently placing the large bore suction catheter under constant suction in the posterior pharynx or esophagus to keep the VL camera unobscured by vomit or blood to facilitate intubation. After the intubation, the suction catheter may be removed unless ongoing suction is required. Keeping the VL camera unobscured during the procedure may improve first-pass intubation success rate.

18.
Am J Ind Med ; 67(7): 646-656, 2024 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38751170

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: Traumatic injury surveillance can be enhanced by describing injury severity trends. This study reports trends in work-related injury severity for males and females over the period 2004-2017 in Ontario, Canada. METHODS: A weighted measure of workers' compensation benefit expenditures was used to define injury severity, obtained from the linkage of workers' compensation claims to emergency department (ED) records where the main injury or illness was attributed to work. Denominator counts were obtained from Statistics Canada's Labor Force Survey. Trends in the annual incidence of injury, classified as low, moderate, or high severity, were examined using regression modeling, stratified by age and sex. RESULTS: Over a 14-year observation period, there were 1,636,866 ED records included in the analyses. Overall, 57.6% of occupational injury records were classified as low severity, 29.5% as moderate severity, and 12.8% as high severity conditions. There was an increase in the incidence of high severity injuries among females (annual percent change (APC): 1.52%; 95% CI: 0.77, 2.28), while the incidence of low and moderate severity injuries generally declined for males and females. Among females, injuries attributed to animate mechanical forces and assault increased as causes of low, moderate, and high severity injuries. The incidence of concussion increased for both males (APC: 10.51%; 95% CI: 8.18, 12.88) and females (APC: 16.37%; 95% CI: 13.37, 19.45). CONCLUSION: The incidence of severe work-related injuries increased among females in Ontario between 2004 and 2017. The methods applied in this surveillance study of traumatic injury severity are plausibly generalizable to applications in other jurisdictions.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades Musculoesqueléticas , Traumatismos Ocupacionales , Indemnización para Trabajadores , Humanos , Ontario/epidemiología , Masculino , Femenino , Traumatismos Ocupacionales/epidemiología , Adulto , Persona de Mediana Edad , Indemnización para Trabajadores/estadística & datos numéricos , Incidencia , Enfermedades Musculoesqueléticas/epidemiología , Enfermedades Musculoesqueléticas/etiología , Adulto Joven , Adolescente , Servicio de Urgencia en Hospital/estadística & datos numéricos , Puntaje de Gravedad del Traumatismo
19.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(39)2021 09 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34556574

RESUMEN

Existing tactile stimulation technologies powered by small actuators offer low-resolution stimuli compared to the enormous mechanoreceptor density of human skin. Arrays of soft pneumatic actuators initially show promise as small-resolution (1- to 3-mm diameter), highly conformable tactile display strategies yet ultimately fail because of their need for valves bulkier than the actuators themselves. In this paper, we demonstrate an array of individually addressable, soft fluidic actuators that operate without electromechanical valves. We achieve this by using microscale combustion and localized thermal flame quenching. Precisely, liquid metal electrodes produce sparks to ignite fuel lean methane-oxygen mixtures in a 5-mm diameter, 2-mm tall silicone cylinder. The exothermic reaction quickly pressurizes the cylinder, displacing a silicone membrane up to 6 mm in under 1 ms. This device has an estimated free-inflation instantaneous stroke power of 3 W. The maximum reported operational frequency of these cylinders is 1.2 kHz with average displacements of ∼100 µm. We demonstrate that, at these small scales, the wall-quenching flame behavior also allows operation of a 3 × 3 array of 3-mm diameter cylinders with 4-mm pitch. Though we primarily present our device as a tactile display technology, it is a platform microactuator technology with application beyond this one.

20.
Prostaglandins Other Lipid Mediat ; 169: 106769, 2023 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37625781

RESUMEN

Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease (CMT) is a commonly inherited peripheral polyneuropathy. Clinical manifestations for this disease include symmetrical distal polyneuropathy, altered deep tendon reflexes, distal sensory loss, foot deformities, and gait abnormalities. Genetic mutations in heat shock proteins have been linked to CMT2. Specifically, mutations in the heat shock protein B1 (HSPB1) gene encoding for heat shock protein 27 (Hsp27) have been linked to CMT2F and distal hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type 2B (dHMSN2B) subtype. The goal of the study was to examine the role of an endogenous mutation in HSPB1 in vivo and to define the effects of this mutation on motor function and pathology in a novel animal model. As sphingolipids have been implicated in hereditary and sensory neuropathies, we examined sphingolipid metabolism in central and peripheral nervous tissues in 3-month-old HspS139F mice. Though sphingolipid levels were not altered in sciatic nerves from HspS139F mice, ceramides and deoxyceramides, as well as sphingomyelins (SMs) were elevated in brain tissues from HspS139F mice. Histology was utilized to further characterize HspS139F mice. HspS139F mice exhibited no alterations to the expression and phosphorylation of neurofilaments, or in the expression of acetylated α-tubulin in the brain or sciatic nerve. Interestingly, HspS139F mice demonstrated cerebellar demyelination. Locomotor function, grip strength and gait were examined to define the role of HspS139F in the clinical phenotypes associated with CMT2F. Gait analysis revealed no differences between HspWT and HspS139F mice. However, both coordination and grip strength were decreased in 3-month-old HspS139F mice. Together these data suggest that the endogenous S139F mutation in HSPB1 may serve as a mouse model for hereditary and sensory neuropathies such as CMT2F.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad de Charcot-Marie-Tooth , Ratones , Animales , Enfermedad de Charcot-Marie-Tooth/genética , Enfermedad de Charcot-Marie-Tooth/patología , Proteínas de Choque Térmico/genética , Mutación/genética , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Esfingolípidos
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