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Isotype selection for antibody-based cancer therapy
Dietmar Zaiss
Sjef Verbeek

Dietmar Zaiss

and 3 more

August 03, 2020
The clinical application of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) revolutionised the field of cancer therapy as it enabled the successful treatment of previously untreatable types of cancer. Different mechanisms play a role in the anti-tumour effect of mAbs and both target engagement with the Fab arm as well as Fc-mediated effector functions contribute to the efficacy of treatment. Because Ig isotypes differ in their ability to bind to FcRs on immune cells as well as in their ability to activate complement, they differ in the immune responses they activate. Therefore, the choice of antibody isotype for therapeutic mAbs is dictated by its intended mechanism of action. Considering that clinical efficacy of many mAbs is currently achieved only in subsets of patients, optimal isotype selection and Fc optimisation during antibody development may represent an important step towards improved patient outcome. Here, we discuss the current knowledge of the therapeutic effector functions of different isotypes and Fc-engineering strategies to improve mAbs application.
Effects of eliminating the triacylglycerols structure of bulk oils on the antioxidant...
Mohamad Reza  Toorani
Mohammad-Taghi Golmakani

Mohamad Reza Toorani

and 1 more

August 03, 2020
A document by Mohamad Reza Toorani. Click on the document to view its contents.
Genome sequence determination and analysis of YM2019, an Equine herpesvirus 1 Chinese...
Yue Hu
Jianhua Liu

Yue Hu

and 10 more

August 03, 2020
Equine herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) is prevalent in China, and this has had negative consequences for horse breeding. However, this is no date about the genome sequence and genetic characterization of the strains from China. This study aimed to determine the character of the strain that was isolated in China and to serve as a key reference for the development of specific assays for diagnosis and epidemiological research. EHV-1 YM2019 was isolated from the lung tissue of an aborted horse foetus in Xinjiang, China, and the YM2019 genome was sequenced and analysed. The amino acid sequences of 76 EHV-1, EHV-3, EHV-4, EHV-8 and EHV-9 proteins were compared and analysed, and the amino acid sequences of the ORF30 and ORF42 proteins were analysed through bioinformatics. The genome sequence (GenBank accession number: MT063054) is 150, 267 bp in length. It shared the highest similarity with Ab4 strain (92.26% nucleotide identity), which was isolated in the United Kingdom and belonged to the same monophyletic group. Amino acid analysis showed that the YM2019 strain is of the ORF30 A2254/N752 genotype. Multiple sequence alignments of the 76 proteins indicated that the ORF42 protein had the highest sequence identity and the ORF68 protein had the lowest identity. This could facilitate the tracking of EHV-1 in the outbreak situation and allow for the differentiation of the outbreak virus from the other EHV strains. In conclusions, this study provides the genome sequence for EHV-1 YM2019 in China and the strain shared high nucleotide homology with Ab4 strain. In addition, Analysis suggests that EHV-8 and EHV-9 are more closely related to EHV-1 than to EHV-3 and EHV-4, the prevalence of EHV-8 and EHV-9 in China and the potential threat to horse breeding deserve further investigation.
Why is the topic of discrepant twins so challenging? (Mini-commentary on BJOG-20-0625...
Birgit Arabin

Birgit Arabin

August 03, 2020
A document by Birgit Arabin. Click on the document to view its contents.
Almost periodicity in time-dependent and state-dependent delay differential equations
El Hadi Ait Dads
Brahim Es-sebbar

El Hadi Ait Dads

and 2 more

August 03, 2020
We study the response of various linear and nonlinear differential equations to different kinds of forced oscillations, specially the periodic and almost periodic oscillations. A special attention is given to differential equations with time-almost periodic type and state-dependent delays. To the best of our knowledge, there are no results in literature that address this problem.
New fixed point results in extended $b-$metric-like spaces via simulation functions w...
Shimaa Moustafa

Shimaa Moustafa

August 03, 2020
The main ambition proposed in this article is to provide new fixed point results for triangular $\alpha-$orbital admissible contractions via some auxiliary and simulation functions in the frame of extended $b-$metric-like spaces. As an application, we prove the existence of a unique solution for a nonlinear fractional differential equation with exponential weighted integral boundary conditions via the generalized proportional fractional derivative of Caputo type with order $\beta\in (n-1, n]$. Further, we demonstrate the usability of our results through several examples.
Bacillus velezensis tolerance to the induced oxidative stress in root colonization co...
Huihui Zhang
Qin Xiong

Huihui Zhang

and 8 more

August 03, 2020
Efficient root colonization of the plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria is critical for their plant-beneficial functions. However, their strategy to overcome plant immunity in root colonization is not well understood. In particular, how Bacillus strains overcome the plant-derived ROS, which functions as the first barrier of plant defense, is not clear. In the present study, we found that the homologue of flg22 in B. velezensis SQR9 (flg22SQR9) has 78.95% identity to the typical flg22 (flg22P.s.) and could induce significant oxidative burst in cucumber and Arabidopsis. In contrast to pathogenic or beneficial Pseudomonas, living B. velezensis SQR9 induced an oxidative burst in plant. We further found that B. velezensis SQR9 could tolerate higher H2O2 than Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato (Pst) DC3000, the pathogen that harbored the typical flg22, and possesses the ability to suppress the flg22-induced oxidative burst, indicating that B. velezensis SQR9 may exploit a more efficient ROS tolerance system than DC3000. Further experimentation with mutagenesis of bacteria and Arabidopsis showed that the two-component regulatory system sensor ResE in B. velezensis SQR9 was involved in tolerance of plant-derived oxidative stress, thus contributing to root colonization. This study supports the further investigation of interaction between beneficial rhizobacteria and plant immunity.
Symmetry Analysis and Conservation Laws of a Family of Non-linear Viscoelastic Wave E...
Maria Santos Bruzon
Almudena Marquez

Maria Santos Bruzon

and 1 more

August 03, 2020
This work considers a non-linear viscoelastic wave equation with non-linear damping and source terms. We analyse the partial differential equation from the point of view of Lie symmetries. Firstly, we apply Lie's method to obtain new symmetries. Hence, we transform the partial differential equation into an ordinary differential equation, by using the symmetries. Moreover, new solutions are derived from the ordinary differential equations. Finally, by using the direct method of multipliers, we construct low-order conservation laws depending on the form of the damping and source terms
Obstetrics state in non-epizootic area during early epidemic of COVID-19
Chao Ji
Jiongbo Wang

Chao Ji

and 4 more

August 03, 2020
Abstract Objective To study the impacts of obstetric complications and anxiety among pregnant women in non-epizootic area which are caused by COVID-19. Design Retrospective cohort. Setting China. Population or sample the women who delivered in the third trimester of pregnancy in Qingdao Municipal hospital for the year the months March and April, 2019 and 2020. Method This paper is based on the clinical data from This paper makes a detailed analysis of the problems that can arise because of special circumstances related with delivery history, personal physical symptoms, anxiety index, adverse complications as well as neonatal birth weight. Result Comparing with the same period between 2019 and 2020, maternal age(32.12±5.32vs31.01±4.21, P<0.05) and the ratio of macrosomia(12.10%vs2.53%)are increasing steadily. Meanwhile, times of prenatal visits (10.49±2.15vs10.89±1.81, P<0.05) and score of PHQ-9(1.46±2.09vs4.96±1.38, P<0.05)are to fall significantly。 Conclusion It is helpful to relieve the negative emotion of fear and anxiousness for the pregnant women if they can be encouraged and soothed by social support. The leading cause why regular checkups are decreasing is due to the fear of the epidemic and the transport restrictions, which, in return, may result in a lack of effective management in fetal weight. The COVID-19 had no giant effect on the third trimester of pregnant women. Government as well as obstetric practitioners should strengthen the education of fetal weight management during the pregnancy. Keywords Pregnancy; COVID-19; obstetric complications; anxiety Tweetable abstract The COVID-19 had no giant effect on the third trimester of pregnant women in the non-epizootic area China.
A prediction for the possibility of the transboundry import of Peste des petits rumin...
Shan Gao
GuoYong Xu

Shan Gao

and 5 more

August 03, 2020
Peste des petits ruminants (PPR) is a highly infectious transboundary disease of small ruminants caused by peste-des-petits-ruminants virus. It is one of the most destructive diseases in sheep industry in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. In Pamir Plateau, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and other countries bordering Tibet and Xinjiang of China are all PPR epidemic areas. Within this region, there are many big population size wild small ruminants, moving freely across the border. The time-honored transboundary nomadic lifestyle results in transboundary migration of livestock too. China has experienced two national epidemics, which can be sourced back to Tibet and Xinjiang. In order to reach the China National Plan for the Eradication of Peste des Petits Ruminants and construct a national wide free zone without immunization in 2020, effective control of transboundary spreading and imported cases is an unavoidable choice. For the countries in the pan Pamir Plateau, the spatial risk distribution of PPR were predicted by a variety of eco-geographical, anthropoid and meteorological variants first time; by the resistance surface analysis, maximum available transboundary paths for PPR spreading by small ruminants were calculated. Finally, 5 paths were obtained, respectively from Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Pakistan and Kashmir to enter Xinjiang and Tibet of China through different channels. This study not only confirmed the fact of transboundary communication of small ruminants for the first time, but also provided specific objectives for PPR prevention. This research can also provide new methods for the prevention and control of other transboundary infectious diseases.
Temperature stress and Fertility Reversibility in Wild Abortive CMS Lines of Rice for...
Yatetla LongKumar
Sharmila Dutta Deka

Yatetla LongKumar

and 3 more

August 03, 2020
CMS lines are highly sensitive to temperature change for the sterility status. Determination of critical temperature for sterility breakdown in wild abortive cytoplasmic male sterile (WA-CMS) lines under field condition is essential for efficient seed production planning. CMS lines IR58025A and IR68897A were grown at different dates of sowing to give exposure to a series of temperature regime and day length at natural field condition. At panicle initiation stages temperatures below 28.5°C, the CMS lines were sterile and at temperatures below 30°C, the lines became partially sterile. Above 30°C, the CMS line reverted to fertile. The highest pollen sterility was recorded (98.3%) during the long day condition while the lowest was recorded (43.5%) during the short day condition indicating the effect of both temperature and day-length on break down of sterility. Differential expression of floral characters like panicle exertion and stigma was found with variation in temperature. This simple field-driven technique can be successfully employed to work out the functional temperature for fertility reversibility which is of utmost importance for planning seed production and maintenance of genetic purity of the hybrids. The techniques will aid in designing seed production planning for hybrid rice in any rice-growing area in the world
Predominance of Extreme Environmental Conditions at High Altitude in Modulating Human...
Brijbhushan .
Malleswara  Eslavath

Brij Bhushan

and 8 more

August 03, 2020
Human microbial alterations are associated with environmental stress, nutritional, genetic and triggering de-novo variations. Nevertheless, human gut microbiome at extreme altitude (>5800 m) remains unexplored. We aimed to demonstrate the microbial predominance in individuals with same ethnicity and dietary pattern at extreme altitude with unique challenges like cold, hypoxia, radiation etc. Different analysis pipelines were used for fecal whole genome sequencing at 210m, 3500m, 4420m and 5805m, and 16s rRNA V3-V4 regions amplification sequencing of 19 individuals belonging to the same ethnicity and dietary pattern, for presence of taxonomy & functional potential and confirming the prediction upto the strain level within the same cohort. Principal component analysis, revealed distinct microbiome changes at different altitudes, with varied and higher Bacteroides and Prevotella ratio. There was predominance of genus Prevotella at altitudes 4420m & 5805m than at 210m & 3500m. Appearance of species Prevotella copri strain 61740 was increasing significantly at extreme altitudes, whereas co-occurrence of other bacterial strains had different pattern than Prevotella. The extensive strain level analysis indicated alteration in the metabolic pathways. This study under stressful and hypoxic environment of extreme altitudes, associated microbial variation with altered metabolic pathways, reveals influence of extreme environment on human gut microbiota with predominance of Prevotella.
The effect of dwell on thermomechanical fatigue in superaustenitic steel Sanicro 25
Roman Petras
Ivo Šulák

Roman Petras

and 2 more

August 03, 2020
Superaustenitic steel Sanicro 25 has been subjected to in-phase and out-of-phase thermomechanical fatigue cycles in the temperature range from 250°C to 700°C. Both constant strain rate cycling and cycling with 10 minutes dwell at peak temperature were applied. The effect of the dwells on the cyclic response, internal structure and damage mechanism was studied. Cyclic hardening/softening curves, cyclic stress-strain curves and fatigue life curves were evaluated. The transmission electron microscopy was used to find modifications of the internal structure and precipitation of the nanoparticles. 10 min dwell at maximum temperature modified substantially the dislocation arrangement. Various nanoparticles representing the obstacles for dislocation motion were analysed and identified by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy in scanning transmission electron microscope. The damage mechanism operating under specific loading conditions was investigated on the surface as well as in the interior of the cycled specimens. Scanning electron microscopy combined with focused ion beam and electron backscatter diffraction was adopted to reveal the respective mechanisms responsible for crack nucleation and propagation. Effect of dwells on fatigue behaviour, modification of internal structure and damage mechanisms are analysed and discussed.
Atomoxetine Might Be More Effective in Improving Sluggish Cognitive Tempo Symptoms Co...
Akın Tahıllıoğlu
Eyüp Ercan

Akın Tahıllıoğlu

and 1 more

August 03, 2020
We report the differential diagnostic procedure and pharmacological treatment process of a case with Sluggish Cognitive Tempo (SCT) and subthreshold ADHD. The case had much more benefit from atomoxetine in terms of SCT symptoms compared to methylphenidate.
Speckle Tracking Echocardiography Can Predict Subclinical Myocardial Involvement in P...
Kirolos Barssoum
Ahmed Altibi

Kirolos Barssoum

and 15 more

August 03, 2020
Background This meta-analysis aims to evaluate the utility of speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) as a tool to evaluate for cardiac sarcoidosis (CS) early in its course. Electrocardiography and echocardiography have limited sensitivity in this role, while advanced imaging modalities such as cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) and 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose–Positron Emission Tomography (FDG-PET) are limited by cost and availability. Methods We compiled English language articles that reported left ventricular global longitudinal strain (LVGLS) or global circumferential strain (GCS) in patients with confirmed extra-cardiac sarcoidosis versus healthy controls. Studies that exclusively included patients with probable or definite CS were excluded. Continuous data were pooled as a standard mean difference (SMD) between the sarcoidosis group and controls. A random effect model was adopted in all analyses. Heterogeneity was assessed using Q and I2 statistics. Results Nine studies with 967 patients were included in our analysis. LVGLS was significantly lower in the extra-cardiac sarcoidosis group as compared to controls, SMD -3.98, 95% confidence interval (CI): -5.32, -2.64, p< 0.001, also was significantly lower in patients who suffered Major Cardiac Events(MCE), -3.89, 95% CI -6.14, -1.64, p< 0.001 . GCS was significantly lower in the extra-cardiac sarcoidosis group as compared to controls, SMD: -3.33, 95% CI -4.71, -1.95, p< 0.001 Conclusion LVGLS and GCS were significantly lower in extra-cardiac sarcoidosis patients despite not exhibiting any cardiac symptoms. LVGLS correlates with MCEs in CS. Further studies are required to investigate the role of STE in the early screening of CS.
Combined comparative genomics and molecular biology approaches provide insights into...
Isabel Vicente
Riccardo Baroncelli

Isabel Vicente

and 8 more

August 03, 2020
Trichoderma is a fungal genus comprising species used as biocontrol agents in crop plant protection and with high value for industry. The beneficial effects of these species are supported by the secondary metabolites they produced. Terpenoid compounds are key players in the interaction of Trichoderma spp. with the environment and with their fungal and plant hosts, however most of the terpene synthase (TS) genes involved in their biosynthesis have yet not been characterized. Here, we combined comparative genomics of TSs of 21 strains belonging to 17 Trichoderma spp., and gene expression studies on TSs using T. gamsii T6085 as a model. An overview of the diversity within the TS-gene family and the regulation of TS genes is provided. We identified 15 groups of TSs, and the presence of clade-specific enzymes revealed a variety of terpenoid chemotypes evolved to cover different ecological demands. We propose that functional differentiation of gene family members is the driver for the high number of TS genes found in the genomes of Trichoderma. Expression studies provide a picture in which different TS genes are regulated in many ways, a strong indication of different biological functions.
High-doses vitamin C improves cardiac injury through preventing hyper-inflammatory re...
Guozhi Xia
Di Fan

Guozhi Xia

and 6 more

August 03, 2020
Aim: To assess effect of high-dose vitamin C on cardiac injury in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Methods: The study was designed based on the severe and critically ill COVID-19 with cardiac injury. Demographics and baseline clinical characteristics were collected and analyzed in addition to laboratory examinations including inflammatory markers on admission and at 14 days after treatment from the electronic medical records. Participants were followed-up for 14 days after treatment with high-dose vitamin C in addition to conventional therapy. Result: The patients (n = 113) were categorized into the improved cardiac injury (ICI) group (n = 70) and the non-improved cardiac injury (NICI) group (n = 43). Overall, 51 (45.1%) patients were administrated with high-dose vitamin C, the percentages of patients treated with high-dose vitamin C were higher in the ICI group than that in the NICI group (52.8% vs 32.5%, P = 0.035). Further analysis showed that concentrations of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R), IL-6 and IL-8 significantly decreased at 14 days after treatment in patients treated with high-dose vitamin C compared with those in patients administrated without high-dose vitamin C. Meanwhile, similar results were also observed regarding changes in inflammatory markers from baseline to 14 days after treatment in patients receiving high-dose vitamin C. Conclusion: High-dose vitamin C can improve cardiac injury through preventing hyper-inflammatory response in severe and critically ill COVID-19.
Clinical Features and Illness Severity in Children with COVID-19: A Systematic Review...
Lizeth Gutiérrez-Canales
José Vázquez-Cobá

Lizeth Gutiérrez-Canales

and 7 more

August 03, 2020
Background Pediatric patients represent approximately 2% of overall confirmed cases of COVID-19. Illness severity and symptoms differ from adults. Most cases in children are mild but various studies have reported severe and critical cases as well as fatal outcomes. Methods A systematic review and meta-analysis of the available literature was performed. Frequencies were used for reporting categorical variables. Meta-analyses were performed using the binary random effects model for symptoms frequencies in children and illness severity. Results We found 44 studies (n=6026), 38 were used for quantitative synthesis to estimate the frequency of symptoms in the pediatric population with Covid-19 and illness severity, 44 were used for qualitative synthesis. The most common symptoms were fever 64% (CI 95% 54-72%), cough 42% (CI 95% 37-48%) and gastrointestinal symptoms like vomit 31% (CI 95% 17-47%) and diarrhea 28% (CI 95% 17-40%). For illness severity 2% (CI 95%0-5%) were severe and 3% (CI 95% 1-6%) were critical. Children <1-year-old had the higher odds of severe/critical cases with an OR of 2.07 (IC95% 1.40-3.05). All patients were hospitalized, and a total of 10.34% children admitted to PICU. The mortality rate was 0.16% (8/487). A total of 141 patients developed PIMS-TS and only one died. Conclusions: Most cases in children were non-severe, nevertheless children less than 1 year had the higher risk of severe/critical cases. Symptoms frequencies encountered from major to minor were fever, cough and gastrointestinal symptoms. More testing in children should be done in order to understand transmission characteristics in the pediatric population.
A chromosome-level genome of Portunus trituberculatus provides insights into its evol...
Jianjian Lv
Ronghua Li

Jianjian Lv

and 9 more

August 03, 2020
Portunus trituberculatus (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura), commonly known as the swimming crab, is of major ecological importance, as well as being important to the fisheries industry. P. trituberculatus is also an important farmed species in China due to its rapid growth rate and high economic value. Here, we report the genome sequence of the swimming crab, which was assembled at the chromosome scale, covering ~1.2 Gb, with 79.99% of the scaffold sequences assembled into 53 chromosomes. The contig and scaffold N50 values were 108.7 kb and 15.6 Mb, respectively, with 19,981 protein-coding genes and a high proportion of simple sequence repeats (49.43%). Based on comparative genomic analyses of crabs and shrimps, the C2H2 zinc finger protein family was found to be the only gene family expanded in crab genomes, and its members were mainly expressed in early embryonic development and during the flea-like larval stage, suggested it was closely related to the evolution of crabs. Combined with transcriptome and Bulked Segregant Analysis (BSA) providing insights into the genetic basis of salinity adaptation in P. trituberculatus, strong immunity and rapid growth of the species were also observed. In addition, the specific region of the Y chromosome was located for the first time in the genome of P. trituberculatus, and Dmrt1 was identified as a key sex determination gene in this region. Decoding the swimming crab genome not only provides a valuable genomic resource for further biological and evolutionary studies, but is also useful for molecular breeding of swimming crabs.
Long-term assessment of remediation treatments applied to an area affected by a minin...
Rocío Pastor Jáuregui
Mario Paniagua López

Rocío Pastor Jáuregui

and 4 more

August 03, 2020
This study evaluates the effectiveness of remediation treatments in the long-term (twenty years later) in one of the largest mine spills in the world, the Aznalcóllar accident. Soil recovery was carried out through the application of different rates of organic (compost and manure) and inorganic amendments (materials rich in iron oxides and calcium carbonate). The different amendment combinations were grouped in four treatments (T1 to T4) and applied in different sectors depending on the soil properties and the degree of initial pollution. To assess the degree of soil recovery, the physicochemical properties, the total, soluble and bioavailable concentrations of the main pollutants (Pb, As, Zn and Cu) were determined over time. The applied treatments increased the pH, CaCO3 and organic carbon of the soils, reduced the EC and decreased the mobility of the pollutants, indicating that remediation treatments were efficient in the recovery of soils contaminated by potentially harmful elements. However, twenty years after the accident, total concentrations of Pb and As still exceed the intervention levels of the current regulations in certain areas. These areas are located in the sectors closest to the mine and where treatments T1 and T2 were applied; in these cases, the dose of organic amendment, materials rich in iron oxides and calcium carbonate were not effective enough, so the application of new treatments is recommended to complete the full recovery of the area.
Clinical practice pattern of low back pain among physiotherapists in a low-income cou...
Mohammad  Ali
Zakir Uddin

Mohammad Ali

and 2 more

August 03, 2020
Background: Low back pain (LBP) is the top global cause of disability and physiotherapy interventions are used to manage it. However, the practice pattern of physiotherapists dealing with LBP patients in low-income countries are limited. Aim: The study aims to explore the LBP practice pattern of a low-income country’s ( i. e., Bangladeshi) physiotherapists by their demographic and professional factors. Methods: In a cross-sectional survey study, we have analyzed data from randomly selected 423 physiotherapists of Bangladesh who have invited to fill-up an online survey questionnaire about practice patterns. The first part of the questionnaire contained question demographic and professional background, second part included current intervention choices in the management of patients with LBP, the final part consisted of information on diagnosis, patient type and self-reported cure rate of LBP patients. Ethical approval: Clinical Trial Registry India: CTRI/2020/05/025313. Results: The Majority of the physiotherapists (54.8%) were non-government service holders and 87.7% worked in the town area. Regarding recommended interventions, only 12.3% frequently used those and 21.5% didn’t either offer or know about those interventions. For not recommended interventions, 69.3% occasionally, 13.5% frequently and 17.3% never used such interventions. The prevalence of good, moderate, and poor practice patterns was 14%, 62.4%, and 23.6% respectively. Participants‘ marital status (P = 0.003) and graduation institute category (P = 0.002) were significant factors for practice pattern variation. Conclusion: The study justified physiotherapy management status in a low-income country by comparing evidence-based practice guidelines. This finding set as a low-income country database to exhibit future research, clinical practice, and education for better LBP physiotherapy management adherence to evidence-based public health care.
Four Decade Land Degradation in Capital City of Islamabad Pakistan during 2017-2019-...
Attaullah Shah
Karamat Ali

Attaullah Shah

and 2 more

August 03, 2020
The study of Land Use Land Cover (LULC) changes and their patterns enhance our understanding of the causes and consequences of various natural and man caused phenomenon. The Capital City of Pakistan, Islamabad has expereinced high rate of urbnization and population increase in the last 3-4 decades. The main aim of our study was to provide compatible data on LULC change during the last 40 years for the functional city Islamabad, Pakistan. LULC statistics were extracted from Landsat Multi-spectral Scanner (MSS), Thematic Mapper (TM), Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) and Operational Land Imager (OLI) images. For each of the target years (1979, 1989, 1999, 2009 and 2019) LULC information was obtained through a supervised classification algorithm. The study area was classified into five major landscape categories, namely built-up, agriculture, forest, water bodies and barren land. The results have indicated that the urban expansion has been increasing due to mass migration and uncontrolled urbanization in the city. The urban sprawl analysis revealed that built-up area and farmland has expanded by 41.7% and 5.20% during (1979-2019). On the other hand, the forest and water bodies declined from at 9.03% and 1.21% respectively. The land degradation has forced the planners to revise the original master plan of the city and including the agricultural sector in the housing area during 2019. This degradation of land has also led to increase in the temperature of the city.
During The Second Wave Of COVID-19, Don't Forget About Influenza. A Call to Action
Fouad Atallah
Howard Minkoff

Fouad Atallah

and 1 more

August 03, 2020
Having lived through the havoc of COVID-19 in a hospital situated in one of the hardest hit zip codes in the United States, the thought that another wave could loom in the fall is bracing. Obstetricians at our institution have cared for well over 200 COVID-19-infected pregnant women, and are acutely aware of the herculean effort it took to reorganize the service to accommodate the needs of women infected with this new pathogen.1 Many institutions, including ours, modified the frequency of prenatal visits, among other measures, to minimize in-person contacts, in an effort to reduce the likelihood of viral spread. However, it is those changes, along with our prior experience of treating women unimmunized against influenza that leads to our concern that a singular focus on COVID-19 could leave pregnant women at risk from a more familiar threat.While COVID-19 is a threat to the health of individuals and society, its effect on pregnancy is less clear. Thus far, few COVID-19-infected pregnant women have required ICU care, and to date three maternal deaths has been reported in the United States.2-4 The toll of influenza in pregnancy is more clearly documented and is more severe.5Now that the first wave is ebbing in New York, we are seeing fewer and fewer cases but still diagnose about 15 infections per week in our hospital. That pattern is the converse of what is being seen in large swaths of the country. Despite the higher prevalence seen earlier in the epidemic in New York, and the fact that many of those women needed respiratory support, only two women in our hospital required admission to the intensive care unit (ICU), and only one needed ventilator support. Mercifully, none died. During the preceding influenza season, whose end overlapped with the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, we treated six women with influenza who required admission to the ICU, only one of whom had been vaccinated against influenza. As opposed to our COVID-19 cases (putting aside the more rigorous application of social distancing), there were clearly missed opportunities to have prevented some of the morbid events caused by influenza.Admittedly, the higher admission rate to the ICU may be misleading. It is certainly possible that criteria for admission to ICUs, like almost all other aspects of care, evolved during the COVID-19 crisis. There was such a rapid and dramatic increase in the need for ICU beds in our hospital (from a baseline of 40 mid-March, 2020 to a peak of 140 mid-April; 2020, internal data) that more stringent criteria for admission may have been applied and some of our COVID-19 patients that were cared for on the wards, may have been cared for in an ICU in less harrowing times. But even given that possibility, the fact that a similar number of women were extremely ill with influenza raises grave concerns going forward.In the first instance, co-infection with COVID-19 and influenza, as well as other viruses, has been reported.6 Co-infection events will make diagnosis of either entity more difficult, and could potentially increase morbidity. Thus, both because of the risks of co-infection, and the known risks of influenza in pregnancy, providers can’t afford to take their “eye off the ball,” and become less vigilant about vaccinating patients, even if some of the new protocols for fewer visits or telehealth visits remain in place. With fewer visits comes the risk of missing both the vaccination “window” and the opportunity to incorporate vaccination as an essential component of health maintenance. In addition, obstetricians’ performance as vaccinators has been less than ideal as only approximately half of pregnant women get influenza vaccines.7In addition to vaccination, obstetricians must remain vigilant in order to prevent progression of disease among those who get infected. Oseltamivir provides the opportunity for secondary prevention.8 It has been shown to reduce maternal ICU admission and mortality.9 Yet, as with vaccination, even before the COVID-19 epidemic, it was underutilized.10Beyond committing to better use of medical interventions for influenza, obstetricians have to assure that just because they have lived through COVID-19, and the world’s attention remains fixed on COVID-19, they don’t become so COVID-19-focused, that they fail to include influenza in the differential diagnosis of women reporting respiratory symptoms in the fall. Every fever and ache will not be COVID-19. If we delay consideration of the diagnosis of influenza, we will lose the opportunity to use Oseltamivir before the window of eligibility closes. In the post-pandemic world, it will be hard to avoid cognitive biases, such as the availability heuristic (a strategy for making judgments about likelihood of occurrence based on the salience of the information) and confirmation bias (the tendency to gather evidence that confirms preexisting expectations, typically by emphasizing or pursuing supporting evidence while dismissing or failing to seek contradictory evidence). These can result in physicians being hammers and every respiratory symptom, a COVID-19 nail; especially when rapid COVID-19 tests are not uniformly available and don’t yet have uniformly high quality. This is the reverse of one of the most cited examples of the availability heuristic, “In influenza season, it is tempting to consider all patients with fever and myalgias as having influenza.”11 An enhanced situational awareness, i.e., recognizing the influence of recent diagnoses on your diagnostic proclivities, will become an ever more crucial antidote to the hard earned reflex response to fevers and aches that developed during the first wave of COVID-19.We know from history that influenza recurs both in epidemic and pandemic forms, and that an initial wave can be a “herald wave” for the following one.12 Hence, it is our responsibility not to let the current COVID pandemic prevent us from properly dealing with the possibility of overlapping epidemics (seasonal influenza and COVID) in the fall. Vaccination, rapid recourse to antivirals (e.g., Oseltamivir), and community mitigation measures will be more important than ever. COVID-19 can kill, but so can influenza, and if we do our jobs, we can reduce that toll.
The effect of aspirin on blood pressure in untreated hypertensive patients and antihy...
Yao Wang
yi sun

Yao Wang

and 10 more

August 03, 2020
Aspirin is essential in the primary and secondary prevention of hypertension. However, the effect of aspirin on blood pressure (bp) in hypertensive patients has been controversial. Therefore, we quantitatively evaluated the effect of aspirin on the bp in untreated hypertensive patients and antihypertensive patients. We searched the PubMed, Embase and Cochrane library electronic databases for articles published prior to June 2019. The overall effect of aspirin on changes in systolic and diastolic bp was estimated by using random-effects models according to the I2 statistic. A total of 15 randomized controlled trials (including 27 studies) met the criteria and were included in the review. For untreated patients with mild hypertension, taking aspirin significantly reduced systolic bp by 1.83 mm Hg (95% CI: -3.15~-0.5, P =0.007) and diastolic bp by 1.32 mm Hg (95% CI: -2.82~0.19, P =0.09). Other subgroup analyses suggest different effects on bp with different aspirin doses, duration and time of administration. Compared with taking aspirin in the morning, taking aspirin before bedtime significantly reduced systolic bp by 2.97 mm Hg (95% CI: -3.78~ -2.17, P <0.00001) and decreased diastolic bp by 2.16 mm Hg (95% CI: -2.87~ -1.44, P <0.00001). However, for patients on antihypertensive therapy, taking aspirin has no significant effect on bp and did not interfere with the antihypertensive drug treatment. Overall, for untreated hypertensive patients, aspirin can reduce bp, and may have a time-dependent effect. However, aspirin was not found to have an effect on bp in antihypertensive patients.
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