ABSTRACT
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted the nursing profession and its existence in terms of preventing infection from spreading at the levels of patient care and management. Vigilance is essential in combating potential re-emerging diseases in the future. Hence, exploring a new framework, biodefense, is the best way to reframe nursing preparedness for new biological threats or new pandemics at any level of nursing care.
ABSTRACT
Mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy (MNGIE) is a rare autosomal recessive disease due to mutations in the thymidine phosphorylase gene, leading to mitochondrial alterations and dysfunctions in oxidative phosphorylation. MNGIE is a multisystem disorder with gastrointestinal symptoms arising in large part from gut dysmotility and neurological manifestations including peripheral neuropathy. We discuss a patient with chronic vomiting, diarrhea, and weight loss with a prior unrevealing extensive workup who was hospitalized for severe protein-calorie malnutrition. The patient was found to have gastrointestinal dysmotility on a gastric emptying scan and persistently elevated lactate levels and was subsequently diagnosed with MNGIE after confirmatory testing.
ABSTRACT
The exact timing, route, and process of the initial peopling of the Americas remains uncertain despite much research. Archaeological evidence indicates the presence of humans as far as southern Chile by 14.6 thousand years ago (ka), shortly after the Pleistocene ice sheets blocking access from eastern Beringia began to retreat. Genetic estimates of the timing and route of entry have been constrained by the lack of suitable calibration points and low genetic diversity of Native Americans. We sequenced 92 whole mitochondrial genomes from pre-Columbian South American skeletons dating from 8.6 to 0.5 ka, allowing a detailed, temporally calibrated reconstruction of the peopling of the Americas in a Bayesian coalescent analysis. The data suggest that a small population entered the Americas via a coastal route around 16.0 ka, following previous isolation in eastern Beringia for ~2.4 to 9 thousand years after separation from eastern Siberian populations. Following a rapid movement throughout the Americas, limited gene flow in South America resulted in a marked phylogeographic structure of populations, which persisted through time. All of the ancient mitochondrial lineages detected in this study were absent from modern data sets, suggesting a high extinction rate. To investigate this further, we applied a novel principal components multiple logistic regression test to Bayesian serial coalescent simulations. The analysis supported a scenario in which European colonization caused a substantial loss of pre-Columbian lineages.
Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Genetic Variation , Genetics, Population , Phylogeny , Americas , Archaeology , Bayes Theorem , Chile , DNA, Ancient , Emigration and Immigration , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Haplotypes/genetics , Humans , Indians, North American/genetics , South AmericaABSTRACT
A 33-year-old woman with a history of intravenous cocaine abuse presented with fatigue, nausea, and jaundice. Serologic testing revealed a positive hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody and HCV RNA. Ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging/magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography showed a partially obstructing lesion in the common hepatic duct, which was confirmed by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. Surgical excision revealed a granular cell tumor of the common hepatic duct, with immunohistochemical staining of tumor cells positive for S-100.
ABSTRACT
We have developed the first immature large animal translational treatment trial of a pharmacologic intervention for traumatic brain injury (TBI) in children. The preclinical trial design includes multiple doses of the intervention in two different injury types (focal and diffuse) to bracket the range seen in clinical injury and uses two post-TBI delays to drug administration. Cyclosporin A (CsA) was used as a case study in our first implementation of the platform because of its success in multiple preclinical adult rodent TBI models and its current use in children for other indications. Tier 1 of the therapy development platform assessed the short-term treatment efficacy after 24 h of agent administration. Positive responses to treatment were compared with injured controls using an objective effect threshold established prior to the study. Effective CsA doses were identified to study in Tier 2. In the Tier 2 paradigm, agent is administered in a porcine intensive care unit utilizing neurological monitoring and clinically relevant management strategies, and intervention efficacy is defined as improvement in longer term behavioral endpoints above untreated injured animals. In summary, this innovative large animal preclinical study design can be applied to future evaluations of other agents that promote recovery or repair after TBI.
Subject(s)
Brain Injuries/drug therapy , Cyclosporine/therapeutic use , Disease Models, Animal , Neuroprotective Agents/therapeutic use , Translational Research, Biomedical , Animals , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Female , Mitochondria/drug effects , Mitochondria/pathology , Neurologic Examination , Swine , Time Factors , Treatment OutcomeABSTRACT
Isotopic and molecular analysis on human, fauna and pottery remains can provide valuable new insights into the diets and subsistence practices of prehistoric populations. These are crucial to elucidate the resilience of social-ecological systems to cultural and environmental change. Bulk collagen carbon and nitrogen isotopic analysis of 82 human individuals from mid to late Holocene Brazilian archaeological sites (â¼6,700 to â¼1,000 cal BP) reveal an adequate protein incorporation and, on the coast, the continuation in subsistence strategies based on the exploitation of aquatic resources despite the introduction of pottery and domesticated plant foods. These results are supported by carbon isotope analysis of single amino acid extracted from bone collagen. Chemical and isotopic analysis also shows that pottery technology was used to process marine foods and therefore assimilated into the existing subsistence strategy. Our multidisciplinary results demonstrate the resilient character of the coastal economy to cultural change during the late Holocene in southern Brazil.