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1.
World Dev ; 137: 105208, 2021 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32994662

RESUMO

Several variables and practices affect the evolution and geographic spread of COVID-19. Some of these variables pertain to policy measures such as social distancing, quarantines for specific areas, and testing availability. In this paper, I analyze the effect that lockdown and testing policies had on new contagions in Chile, especially focusing on potential heterogeneity given by population characteristics. Leveraging a natural experiment in the determination of early quarantines, I use an Augmented Synthetic Control Method to build counterfactuals for high and lower-income areas that experienced a lockdown during the first two months of the pandemic. I find substantial differences in the impact that quarantine policies had for different populations: While lockdowns were effective in containing and reducing new cases of COVID-19 in higher-income municipalities, I find no significant effect of this measure for lower-income areas. To further explain these results, I test for difference in mobility during quarantine for high and lower-income municipalities, as well as delays in test results and testing availability. These findings are consistent with previous results, showing that differences in the effectiveness of lockdowns could be partially attributed to heterogeneity in quarantine compliance in terms of mobility, as well as differential testing availability for higher and lower-income areas.

2.
Plant Dis ; 2020 Dec 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33373287

RESUMO

Orobanche laxissima Uhlich & Rätzel (Orobanchaceae) is a polyphagous root parasitic plant distributed in the Caucasus Mountains and Transcaucasia; especially Russia, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, N.E. Turkey (Piwowarczyk et al. 2019). It infects many wild or sometimes cultivated trees and shrubs, such as Betulaceae, Oleaceae, Fagaceae, Aceraceae, Cornaceae, usually Fraxinus L., Fagus L., Carpinus L. (Piwowarczyk et al. 2019, 2020). Punica granatum L. (Lythraceae), commonly known as pomegranate, is native to the Caucasus, the Himalayas in North Pakistan and Northern India, and is widely cultivated, e.g. in USA and throughout the Mediterranean. Pomegranate is one of the first domesticated fruits and have been used in folk medicine or as a food for centuries. Fruit, seed, leaves, flower, root, or barks extracts have extensive medicinal properties (Shaygannia et al. 2015). Field surveys conducted in south-eastern Georgia in May 2019 revealed extensive infestations of O. laxissima on the roots of P. granatum in one locality in Kakheti Province, near Sighnaghi (41°37,4 N, 45°56,3 E, 480 m elevation), in roadside or hills scrub and cultivated areas of pomegranate. The infection was confirmed by verifying the attachment of the Orobanche to the Punica root. The population of the parasite consisted of at least a ca. thousand shoots, sometimes in one clump was ca. 100 individuals. A single plant of pomegranate was parasitized by few to c.a. a hundred of broomrape plants, and 10 to 20% of the ca. 1 ha location was infested. The main botanical features of the O. laxissima are: i) stem simple, (10-)25-40(-100) cm high, with haustoria; ii) inflorescence usually long to short cylindrical or lax, usually many-flowered; iii) calyx-segments entire or bidentate, rarely with 4 teeth; iv) corolla (16-)22-24(-31) mm long, tubular-bell-shaped; purple, pink, rarely dirty yellow, light brown; v) stigma purple, orange, or yellow (Piwowarczyk et al. 2019, 2020). For molecular analysis, total genomic DNA was extracted from the sample and the plastid gene rbcL (rubisco large subunit) was sequenced and amplified as described in Piwowarczyk et al. (2015). The sequence (1231 bp) was deposited in GenBank (MN384886). BLAST search found that it was most similar to (Query Cover 100%, Per Ident. 100%) O. laxissima (KR260928). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a O. laxissima parasitizing P. granatum. O. laxissima appearing in large numbers on singles pomegranate shrubs can weaken the plants, and reduce flowering and fruiting. In the Caucasus region, O. laxissima was observed in mesophilic forests and shrubs, but our report suggests the possibility of a potential spread to neighboring cultivated areas, especially fruit trees and shrubs. Until now, only one report of pathogenic plants was documented for P. granatum, included Phelipanche aegyptiaca (Pers.) Pomel and O. crenata Forssk. in Israel (Dor et al. 2014).

3.
J Alzheimers Dis ; 87(4): 1695-1711, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35491784

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Several epidemiological studies report a negative association between Cancer and Alzheimer's disease (AD). OBJECTIVE: To characterize the trajectories of memory loss in individuals with early amnestic cognitive impairment with and without history of previous cancer. METHODS: Cognitive deterioration was assessed using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) or MoCA-Memory Index Score (MoCA-MIS) biannually in subjects with early amnestic cognitive impairment followed-up retrospectively from 2007 to 2021. History of Cancer was obtained from clinical records. Simple linear regressions of MoCA-MIS scores were calculated for each subject and analyzed with K-means cluster analysis to identify subgroups with different cognitive decline trajectories. χ2 and t tests were used for descriptive categorical and continuous variables and mixed multiple linear regressions to determine cognitive decline covariates. RESULTS: Analysis of the trajectory of cognitive decline in 141 subjects with early amnestic cognitive impairment identified two subgroups: Fast (n = 60) and Slow (n = 81) progressors. At baseline Fast progressors had better MoCA-MIS (p < 0.001) and functionality (CDR p = 0.02, AD8 p = 0.05), took less anti-dementia medications (p = 0.005), and had higher depression rates (p = 0.02). Interestingly, Fast progressors slowed their speed of memory decline (from 1.6 to 1.1 MoCA-MIS points/year) and global cognitive decline (from 2.0 to 1.4 total MoCA points/year) when Cancer history was present. CONCLUSION: Two trajectories of amnestic cognitive decline were identified, possibly derived from different neurophysiopathologies or clinical stages. This study suggests that a history of previous Cancer slows down amnestic cognitive decline, specifically in a subgroup of subjects with depression at baseline and accelerated deterioration at follow-up.


Assuntos
Doença de Alzheimer , Disfunção Cognitiva , Neoplasias , Doença de Alzheimer/psicologia , Disfunção Cognitiva/psicologia , Humanos , Testes de Estado Mental e Demência , Neoplasias/complicações , Testes Neuropsicológicos , Estudos Retrospectivos
4.
PhytoKeys ; 174: 165-194, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33776529

RESUMO

The extensive diversity of the tribe Orobancheae, the most species-rich lineage of holoparasitic Orobanchaceae, is concentrated in the Caucasus and Mediterranean regions of the Old World. This extant diversity has inspired hypotheses that these regions are also centres of origin of its key lineages, however the ability to test hypotheses has been limited by a lack of sampling and phylogenetic information about the species, especially in the Caucasus region. First, we assessed the phylogenetic relationships of several poorly known, problematic, or newly described species and host-races of four genera of Orobancheae occurring in the Caucasus region-Cistanche, Phelypaea, Phelipanche and Orobanche-using nuclear ribosomal (ITS) and plastid (trnL-trnF) sequence data. Then we applied a probablistic dispersal-extinction-cladogenesis model of historical biogeography across a more inclusive clade of holoparasites, to explicitly test hypotheses of Orobancheae diversification and historical biogeography shifts. In sum, we sampled 548 sequences (including 196 newly generated) from 13 genera, 140 species, and 175 taxa across 44 countries. We find that the Western Asia (particularly the Caucasus) and the Mediterranean are the centre of origin for large clades of holoparasitic Orobancheae within the last 6 million years. In the Caucasus, the centres of diversity are composed both of long-branch taxa and shallow, recently diversified clades, while Orobancheae diversity in the Mediterranean appears to represent mainly recent diversification.

5.
Mol Ecol ; 17(2): 678-90, 2008 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18205675

RESUMO

The carnivore community of the altiplano ecosystem of the high Andes, including the Andean mountain cat (Leopardus jacobita) and pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo), is one of the least studied in the world. We determined the origin of 186 carnivore samples (184 faeces and two skulls) collected above 3000 m above sea level in northern Chile, including 33 from the Andean mountain cat and 75 from the pampas cat using diagnostic molecular genetic sequence variation. We determined for the first time food habits, habitat and physiographic associations, and general patterns of molecular genetic variation of the Andean mountain cat and the pampas cat in Chile. Both species had narrow dietary niches dominated by small rodents and there was a wide overlap in diet composition (0.82), suggesting low levels of prey partitioning between species. The mountain viscacha (Lagidium viscacia) made up a large proportion of the biomass of the diet of both species, especially for the Andean mountain cat (93.9% vs. 74.8% for the pampas cat), underscoring the importance of further research and conservation focus on this vanishing prey species. Although the probability of finding Andean mountain cat scats increased with altitude and slope, there was substantial geographical overlap in distribution between species, revealing that the pampas cat distribution includes high-altitude grassland habitats. The Andean mountain cat had relatively low levels of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genetic variation (two mtDNA haplotypes) compared with the pampas cat (17 mtDNA haplotypes), suggestive of a distinct evolutionary history and relatively smaller historic populations. These insights will facilitate and provide tools and hypotheses for much-needed research and conservation efforts on these species and this ecosystem.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Fezes , Felidae/genética , Variação Genética , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Gatos , Chile , DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Evolução Molecular , Felidae/classificação , Genética Populacional , Geografia , Haplótipos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia
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