308 results on '"Lami L"'
Search Results
2. GRASS GIS
- Author
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Neteler, M., Beaudette, D.E., Cavallini, P., Lami, L., Cepicky, J., Balram, Shivanand, editor, Dragicevic, Suzana, editor, Hall, G. Brent, editor, and Leahy, Michael G., editor
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- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. On a gap in the proof of the generalised quantum Stein's lemma and its consequences for the reversibility of quantum resources
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Berta, M, Brandão, FGSL, Gour, G, Lami, L, Plenio, MB, Regula, B, Tomamichel, M, Berta, M, Brandão, FGSL, Gour, G, Lami, L, Plenio, MB, Regula, B, and Tomamichel, M
- Published
- 2022
4. Globalization, Security and Governance Challenges in Nigeria
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WILSON SIMON OKWOLI, LAMI LENTON ANUGA, and JOSEPH ABOGENYE ANUGA
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Globalization ,terrorism ,insurgency ,governance ,security ,economic development ,History (General) ,D1-2009 - Abstract
The study focused on the nature of the challenges and opportunities the process of globalization imposes on the development of the security sector of the Nigerian state. Security challenges such as insurgency and political agitations relying on terrorism were studied in the context of a globalized world. The Instrumental Theory of Insecurity was adopted as the theoretical framework guiding the study. Secondary sources of data were used relying on content analyses and the literary critical method for analyses of the data. The study found that residual authoritarian constructs still pervade Nigerian society and as such the peaceful processing of conflicts have not been adequately prioritized as policy across the country. It also found that the inability of the Nigerian state to deliver on material development aspirations of citizens exposes the country to global terrorist actors who highjack the difficulties of governance to pursue their own ends. This study contributes to knowledge in a number of ways, including by attempting to pinpoint the prominent role that violent non-state actors in play on the global stage in subverting the governments by reenacting the narratives surrounding violent extremism with ethnic and religious overtones in an effort d to benefit economically and politically from the outcomes. That is a defining attribute of terrorist organizations that are active in Nigeria with their international links. The study also shows that the international system has been successful in establishing substitute routes for supply chains and communication that circumvent the legal exchange route for the transfer of illegal goods and money between nations, compromising the ability of those nations to survive. The study therefore recommended that Nigeria need to be at the forefront of promoting the establishment of a strong economic bloc among African nations with the goal of curbing the explosive trend of globalization toward the proliferation of weapons and other types of transnational crimes. Also, Nigerian state should prioritize good and inclusive government to reorient citizen loyalties, mechanisms oriented towards the peaceful processing of conflicts and seriously engage in delivering on economic development for its citizens through adopting modern economic practices and enforcing global best practice protocols for public institutions within the state.
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- 2024
5. GRASS GIS
- Author
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Neteler, M., primary, Beaudette, D.E., additional, Cavallini, P., additional, Lami, L., additional, and Cepicky, J., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Critical Care Guidance for Tracheostomy Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Global, Multidisciplinary Approach.
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Pandian, V, Morris, LL, Brodsky, MB, Lynch, J, Walsh, B, Rushton, C, Phillips, J, Rahman, A, DeRose, T, Lambe, L, Lami, L, Man Wu, SP, Garza, FP, Maiani, S, Zavalis, A, Okusanya, KA, Palmieri, PA, McGrath, BA, Pelosi, P, Sole, ML, Davidson, P, Brenner, MJ, Pandian, V, Morris, LL, Brodsky, MB, Lynch, J, Walsh, B, Rushton, C, Phillips, J, Rahman, A, DeRose, T, Lambe, L, Lami, L, Man Wu, SP, Garza, FP, Maiani, S, Zavalis, A, Okusanya, KA, Palmieri, PA, McGrath, BA, Pelosi, P, Sole, ML, Davidson, P, and Brenner, MJ
- Abstract
PURPOSE:Critical care nurses caring for patients with a tracheostomy are at high risk because of the predilection of SARS-CoV-2 for respiratory and mucosal surfaces. This review identifies patient-centered practices that ensure safety and reduce risk of infection transmission to health care workers during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. METHODS:Consensus statements, guidelines, institutional recommendations, and scientific literature on COVID-19 and previous outbreaks were reviewed. A global interdisciplinary team analyzed and prioritized findings via electronic communications and video conferences to develop consensus recommendations. RESULTS:Aerosol-generating procedures are commonly performed by nurses and other health care workers, most notably during suctioning, tracheostomy tube changes, and stoma care. Patient repositioning, readjusting circuits, administering nebulized medications, and patient transport also present risks. Standard personal protective equipment includes an N95/FFP3 mask with or without surgical masks, gloves, goggles, and gown when performing aerosol-generating procedures for patients with known or suspected COVID-19. Viral testing of bronchial aspirate via tracheostomy may inform care providers when determining the protective equipment required. The need for protocols to reduce risk of transmission of infection to nurses and other health care workers is evident. CONCLUSION:Critical care nurses and multidisciplinary teams often care for patients with a tracheostomy who are known or suspected to have COVID-19. Appropriate care of these patients relies on safeguarding the health care team. The practices described in this review may greatly reduce risk of infectious transmission.
- Published
- 2020
7. Ultimate Data Hiding in Quantum Mechanics and Beyond
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Lami, L, Palazuelos, C, Winter, A, Lami, L, Palazuelos, C, and Winter, A
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- 2018
8. Probabilistic Distillation of Quantum Coherence
- Author
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Fang, K, Wang, X, Lami, L, Regula, B, Adesso, G, Fang, K, Wang, X, Lami, L, Regula, B, and Adesso, G
- Abstract
© 2018 American Physical Society. The ability to distill quantum coherence is pivotal for optimizing the performance of quantum technologies; however, such a task cannot always be accomplished with certainty. Here we develop a general framework of probabilistic distillation of quantum coherence in a one-shot setting, establishing fundamental limitations for different classes of free operations. We first provide a geometric interpretation for the maximal success probability, showing that under maximally incoherent operations (MIO) and dephasing-covariant incoherent operations (DIO) the problem can be simplified into efficiently computable semidefinite programs. Exploiting these results, we find that DIO and its subset of strictly incoherent operations have equal power in the probabilistic distillation of coherence from pure input states, while MIO are strictly stronger. We then prove a fundamental no-go result: Distilling coherence from any full-rank state is impossible even probabilistically. We further find that in some conditions the maximal success probability can vanish suddenly beyond a certain threshold in the distillation fidelity. Finally, we consider probabilistic coherence distillation assisted by a catalyst and demonstrate, with specific examples, its superiority to the unassisted and deterministic cases.
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- 2018
9. Gaussian quantum resource theories
- Author
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Lami, L, Regula, B, Wang, X, Nichols, R, Winter, A, Adesso, G, Lami, L, Regula, B, Wang, X, Nichols, R, Winter, A, and Adesso, G
- Abstract
© 2018 American Physical Society. We develop a general framework to assess capabilities and limitations of the Gaussian toolbox in continuous-variable quantum information theory. Our framework allows us to characterize the structure and properties of quantum resource theories specialized to Gaussian states and Gaussian operations, establishing rigorous methods for their description and yielding a unified approach to their quantification. We show in particular that, under a few intuitive and physically motivated assumptions on the set of free states, no Gaussian quantum resource can be distilled with free Gaussian operations, even when an unlimited supply of the resource state is available. This places fundamental constraints on state manipulations in all such Gaussian resource theories. We discuss in particular the applications to quantum entanglement, where we extend previously known results by showing that Gaussian entanglement cannot be distilled even with Gaussian operations preserving the positivity of the partial transpose, as well as to other Gaussian resources such as steering and optical nonclassicality. A comprehensive semidefinite programming representation of all these resources is explicitly provided.
- Published
- 2018
10. ALCE. Assessment di Lettura e Comprensione per l’Età Evolutiva
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Bonifacci P, Tobia V, Lami L, Snowling M, Bonifacci, P, Tobia, V, Lami, L, Snowling, M, Bonifacci, Paola, Tobia, Valentina, Lami, Laura, and Snowling, Margaret
- Subjects
test ,comprensione del testo ,M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,lettura ,Comprensione del testo, decodifica, valutazione, simple view of reading - Abstract
Introduzione Il Simple View of Reading è un modello teorico che offre una cornice per descrivere i processi e le competenze coinvolte in compiti di lettura e comprensione, secondo il quale l’abilità di “lettura” è data dal prodotto della capacità di decodifica e della capacità di comprensione orale. Decodifica e comprensione orale sarebbero quindi le competenze centrali alla base dell’efficienza della lettura, nel momento in cui si faccia riferimento a una visione ecologica della lettura come processo orientato a uno scopo: la comprensione. Sulla base di questa prospettiva teorica nasce ALCE, una batteria di test finalizzata ad indagare le abilità di lettura e comprensione del testo in bambini della scuola primaria. Informazioni tecniche Applicazioni ALCE può essere somministrato a bambini della scuola primaria dalla classe prima alla classe quinta e nell’ambito dei protocolli diagnostici per l’assessment delle difficoltà di apprendimento e dei disturbi dello sviluppo. Può costituire uno strumento completo per la valutazione, da parte di psicologi, neuropsichiatri e logopedisti, delle funzioni di lettura e comprensione nell’ambito dei casi di sospetto Disturbo Specifico di Apprendimento (DSA), ma anche per la valutazione delle competenze di lettura e comprensione in profili di Funzionamento Intellettivo Limite o Ritardo intellettivo di grado lieve. La valutazione delle componenti di base della competenza di lettura contribuisce a descrivere il profilo funzionale del bambino per definire i punti di forza e di debolezza e predisporre, di conseguenza, dei piani di trattamento o una più efficace consulenza agli insegnanti per l’intervento didattico. Struttura ALCE è una batteria di test costituita da cinque prove: lettura di parole lettura di non parole lettura del brano comprensione del brano scritto comprensione del brano orale. Tutti i brani utilizzati per le prove di lettura e comprensione sono distinti per classe e adeguati in termini di contenuti e complessità strutturale, e al bambino è richiesto di rispondere oralmente. La scelta di utilizzare la modalità di risposta orale e la tipologia di domande a risposta aperta per le prove di comprensione consente al clinico di condurre una valutazione più approfondita delle strategie e delle modalità che portano alla formulazione della risposta, e di considerare indirettamente la competenza espressiva del bambino. Campione Il campione totale è costituito da 1895 bambini (952 maschi, 943 femmine), di cui 181 bilingui apprendenti l’italiano come L2. La numerosità del campione di bambini bilingui è del 9.55%, in linea con quanto riportato dall’ultimo rapporto MIUR (ottobre 2012) sulla presenza degli alunni stranieri nel sistema scolastico italiano (9.5% per la scuola primaria). La distribuzione del campione nelle diverse classi è la seguente: classe prima: n = 342, età media = 6.79, DS = .33 anni; classe seconda: n = 345, età media = 7.77; DS = .36 anni; classe terza: n = 353, età media = 8.71, DS = .33 anni; classe quarta: n = 415, età media = 9.76, DS = .34 anni; classe quinta: n = 440, età media = 10.78 DS = .39 anni. Vantaggi: Valutazione rapida e completa: ALCE offre l’opportunità di valutare con un unico strumento e in poco tempo le abilità di lettura e di comprensione del testo, letto in autonomia e ascoltato oralmente. Consente inoltre, in soli 3’, di approfondire l’assessment indagando il funzionamento dei meccanismi cognitivi sottostanti alla decodifica mediante prove di lettura di parole e non parole. Valutazione ecologica della lettura: la scelta di valutare con un unico brano di lettura e comprensione, avvertendo il bambino che dovrà rispondere a domande di comprensione una volta terminata la lettura a voce alta, permette di verificare l’efficienza del processo di lettura in una situazione che riflette le richieste alle quali il bambino è più frequentemente esposto nel contesto scolastico, ovvero leggere per comprendere. Questa modalità consente, inoltre, di testare in un unico momento la lettura del brano per la valutazione dei parametri di accuratezza e velocità e la lettura del brano per la comprensione, limitando i tempi di somministrazione e le richieste per il bambino. Assessment approfondito dell’abilità di comprensione: ALCE è il primo test italiano che pone in relazione comprensione orale e comprensione del testo scritto nella fascia di età di pertinenza, con conseguenti interessanti ricadute sul piano diagnostico e riabilitativo. L’abilità di comprensione è inoltre sempre indagata tramite risposta orale a domande aperte, che consentono al clinico di condurre una valutazione più approfondita delle strategie e delle modalità che portano alla formulazione della risposta, e di considerare indirettamente la competenza espressiva del bambino. eTest Il manuale è il solo componente cartaceo di ALCE; esso offre al clinico una descrizione approfondita del modello teorico di riferimento Simple View of Reading, una descrizione dettagliata delle modalità di somministrazione e alcune indicazioni operative sull’interpretazione dei profili e la predisposizione di progetti di intervento. I materiali necessari alla valutazione sono invece disponibili in formato PDF (“eTest”) sulla piattaforma Hogrefe eLibrary. L’eTest si compone di 5 fascicoli per l’esaminatore (classi 1a – 5a) e 5 per il bambino (classi 1a – 5a). L’acquisto di ALCE mette a disposizione dell’utente una propria sezione della Hogrefe eLibrary, così da poter stampare di volta in volta i fascicoli in base alle sue esigenze del momento: l’eTest, infatti, può essere stampato (ma anche scaricato sul proprio pc), in toto o a “sezioni” (grazie ai bookmark) quante volte si vuole, e indefinitamente senza più alcuna necessità di ricarica.
- Published
- 2014
11. Parents of children with dyslexia: Cognitive, emotional and behavioural profile
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Bonifacci, P, Montuschi, M, Lami, L, Snowling, M, Paola Bonifacci, Martina Montuschi, Laura Lami, and Margareth J. Snowling
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Parenting ,Emotions ,READING SKILLS ,PARENTING STRESS INDEX ,Reading ,Social Perception ,PARENTS ,Adaptation, Psychological ,BROADER PHENOTYPE ,Humans ,Female ,Parent-Child Relations ,Child ,Comprehension ,DYSLEXIA - Abstract
Within a dimensional view of reading disorders, it is important to understand the role of environmental factors in determining individual differences in literacy outcome. In the present study, we compared a group of 40 parents of children with dyslexia (PDys) with a group of 40 parents of typically developing children. The two parent groups did not differ in socioeconomic status or nonverbal IQ. Participants were assessed on cognitive (IQ, digit span) and literacy (reading fluency and accuracy) tasks, phonological awareness and verbal fluency measures. Questionnaires addressed reading history, parental distress, family functioning, anxiety and depression. The PDys group performed worse in all literacy measures and more frequently reported a history of poor reading; they also showed more parental distress. There were no differences between the two groups in depression or family functioning and no differences between mothers and fathers. Findings indicate that PDys show a cognitive profile consistent with the broader phenotype of dyslexia (i.e. reading impairment and poor phonological awareness), whereas, considering the emotional profile, the impact of dyslexia on the family system is limited to parental distress associated with the perception of having a child with specific needs. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.
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- 2014
12. Entanglement-saving channels
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Lami, L., primary and Giovannetti, V., additional
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- 2016
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13. Entanglement–breaking indices
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Lami, L., primary and Giovannetti, V., additional
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- 2015
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14. GRASS GIS
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Neteler, M.G., Beaudette, D.E., Cavallini, P., Lami, L., and Cepicky, J.
- Published
- 2008
15. Lakes
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Guilizzoni P., Lami L., Marchetto A., and Ariztegui D.
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Holocene ,sediments ,Last Glacial maximum ,climate ,Climex map - Abstract
Lakes with sediments suitable for climate change reconstruction are varied in origin, in geographical distribution, in age, and in chemistry. Sedimentary archives provide a rich source of information about the past history of lakes and their catchment areas; here we report climate and palaeoenvironmental information derived from our own studies and from a number of published palaeolimnological studies. No pollen data are included in this report. The work reviews the evidence for past abrupt climatic changes and terrestrial environment changes in the Mediterranean region and perialpine region. A database structure was developed to integrate these data with related information.
- Published
- 2004
16. Indagini sui sedimenti lacustri. Campionamento, preparazione dei campioni per le analisi di DDT e correlazione tra carote mediante studio diatomologico
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Marchetto A., Guilizzoni P., and Lami L.
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- 2004
17. ALCE. Assessment di Lettura e Comprensione per l’Età Evolutiva
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Bonifacci, P, Tobia, V, Lami, L, Snowling, M, Snowling, M., TOBIA, VALENTINA ANTONIA, Bonifacci, P, Tobia, V, Lami, L, Snowling, M, Snowling, M., and TOBIA, VALENTINA ANTONIA
- Published
- 2014
18. Profili neuropsicologici nella dislessia evolutiva
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Chilosi, A. M., Lami, L., Pizzoli, C., Pignatti, B., D'Alessandro, D., Gruppioni, B., Cipriani, P., and Brizzolara, Daniela
- Published
- 2003
19. Indici di rischio delle difficoltà specifiche di apprendimento:relazione fra disturbo del linguaggio orale e scritto
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Brizzolara, Daniela, Chilosi, A. M., Cipriani, P, Lami, L, Pizzoli, C, and Pfanner, L.
- Published
- 2003
20. Synthesis of 2,4-D ester herbicides: New routes using inorganic solid supports
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Lami, L., Casal, B., Cuadra, L., Merino, J., Alvarez, A., Eduardo Ruiz-Hitzky, Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología, CICYT (España), and Instituto Cubano de Investigaciones de los Derivados de la Caña de Azúcar
- Abstract
A clean method for the rapid and solventless preparation of herbicides based on 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D esters) is reported. Micro-particulate inorganic materials such as silica, clays and zeolites are able to act as supports for the 2,4-D esterification reactions under mild conditions in the absence of organic solvents. The synthesis takes place with elevated yield and the conversion rate of the process is strongly enhanced when the reaction is microwave-assisted. Not only can well-defined supports be used, but soil can also be used for this synthesis, except when iron oxides are present which lead to extensive oxidation under microwave irradiation. The 2,4-D ester remains adsorbed on the solid support as a bioactive product. Therefore the resulting powder is a partially formulated compound that can be directly applied in the field avoiding the use of solvents and with minimal hazardous and pollutant effects., We gratefully acknowledge Professor R. González-Ponce for bioassays facilities, Dr P. Aranda for revising the manuscript and ICIDCA (Cuba), CSIC and CICYT (Spain) for financial support. We are also indebted to the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Office (Programa Fondo de Expertos, AECI) for the facilities given to develop this work
- Published
- 1999
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21. Prioritization of zoonotic diseases of public health significance in Nigeria using the one-health approach
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Chikwe Ihekweazu, Charles Akataobi Michael, Patrick M. Nguku, Ndadilnasiya Endie Waziri, Abdulrazaq Garba Habib, Mathew Muturi, Abayomi Olufemi, Asabe A. Dzikwi-Emennaa, Muhammad Shakir Balogun, Tyakaray Ibrahim Visa, Mahmood Muazu Dalhat, Nnomzie Charles Atama, Chukwuma David Umeokonkwo, Gideon Mbrusa Mshelbwala, Columba Teru Vakuru, Junaidu Kabir, Emmanuel C. Okolocha, Jarlath U. Umoh, Babasola Olugasa, Olutayo Babalobi, Lami Lombin, Simeon Cadmus, Kaitlin Sandhaus, Philip M. Ricks, Albert Ogunkoya, Sola Aruna, Aisha Abubakar, Yusuf Bidemi, Kariuki Njenga, Garba Ibrahim, Olukemi Adekanmbi, Ifeoma Nwadiuto, Idris S. Hadejia, Gatai Nganda, Kwaga Jacob, Olajide Owolodun, Okafor Christoper, T.Z. Gandi Benjamin Tule, Habib Abdulrazak, Dooshima Kwange, Sabitu Kabiru, Gidado M. Muhammed, Tony Joannis, Sunday Omilabu, Junaid Kabir, G.A.T. Ogundipe, Olubunmi Ojo, Obasanya Joshua, Aisha Abubakar Sadiq, Olayinka Adebola, Abdullahi A. Magaji, Aisha Nasir, Dan Duvall, S. Tekki, Sati Ngulukun, Dotun Soruuke, Abiodun Egumenu, Ibro Idiona, Oyiri Ferdinand, Olufemi Abayomi, Ilori Elsie, Visa I. Tyakaray, Angela Oyo-Ita, Godson Ana, Olaniran Alabi, Mabel Aworh, John Kvagai, Gana Chinyere, and Okara Gloria
- Subjects
Zoonotic diseases ,Prioritization ,Public Health ,One Health ,Nigeria ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Nigeria, with a population of over 190 million people, is rated among the 10 countries with the highest burden of infectious and zoonotic diseases globally. In Nigeria, there exist a sub-optimal surveillance system to monitor and track priority zoonoses. We therefore conducted a prioritization of zoonotic diseases for the first time in Nigeria to guide prevention and control efforts. Towards this, a two-day in-country consultative meeting involving experts from the human, animal, and environmental health backgrounds prioritized zoonotic diseases using a modified semi-quantitative One Health Zoonotic Disease Prioritization tool in July 2017. Overall, 36 of 52 previously selected zoonoses were identified for prioritization. Five selection criteria were used to arrive at the relative importance of prioritized diseases based on their weighted score. Overall, this zoonotic disease prioritization process marks the first major step of bringing together experts from the human-animal-environment health spectrum in Nigeria. Importantly, the country ranked rabies, avian influenza, Ebola Virus Disease, swine influenza and anthrax as the first five priority zoonoses in Nigeria. Finally, this One Health approach to prioritizing important zoonoses is a step that will help to guide future tracking and monitoring of diseases of grave public health importance in Nigeria.
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- 2021
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22. Le condizioni di applicabilità delle misure coercitive. Le modalità di esecuzione del provvedimento che applica gli arresti domiciliari
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Amodio, E, Ambrosoli, L, Bassi, M, Bernasconi, A, Capitta, A, Casartelli, G, Catalano, E, Cesaris, A, De Castiglione, E, Galbusera, V, Vittorini, GS, Lami, L, Liberini, N, Ruggieri, F, CAPITTA, ANNA MARIA, Amodio, E, Ambrosoli, L, Bassi, M, Bernasconi, A, Capitta, A, Casartelli, G, Catalano, E, Cesaris, A, De Castiglione, E, Galbusera, V, Vittorini, GS, Lami, L, Liberini, N, Ruggieri, F, and CAPITTA, ANNA MARIA
- Published
- 1996
23. Eficacia del programa de rehabilitación respiratoria para personas con lesiones medulares cervicales.
- Author
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Real-González, Y., López-Hernández, M., Cabrera-Gómez, José A., González-Murgado, M., Díaz-Márquez, R., Armenteros-Herrera, N., and Álvarez-Lami, L.
- Subjects
RESPIRATORY intensive care ,CERVICAL vertebrae injuries ,RESPIRATORY organs ,NAUSEA ,MOTION sickness - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Mexicana de Neurociencia is the property of Academia Mexicana de Neurologia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2008
24. Activation of indistinguishability-based quantum coherence for enhanced metrological applications with particle statistics imprint
- Author
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Kai Sun, Zheng-Hao Liu, Yan Wang, Ze-Yan Hao, Xiao-Ye Xu, Jin-Shi Xu, Chuan-Feng Li, Guang-Can Guo, Alessia Castellini, Ludovico Lami, Andreas Winter, Gerardo Adesso, Giuseppe Compagno, Rosario Lo Franco, Sun K., Liu Z.-H., Wang Y., Hao Z.-Y., Xu X.-Y., Xu J.-S., Li C.-F., Guo G.-C., Castellini A., Lami L., Winter A., Adesso G., Compagno G., and Lo Franco R.
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Multidisciplinary ,identical particles, quantum coherence, quantum metrology ,Settore FIS/03 - Fisica Della Materia - Abstract
Quantum coherence, an essential feature of quantum mechanics allowing quantum superposition of states, is a resource for quantum information processing. Coherence emerges in a fundamentally different way for nonidentical and identical particles. For the latter, a unique contribution exists linked to indistinguishability that cannot occur for nonidentical particles. Here, we experimentally demonstrate this additional contribution to quantum coherence with an optical setup, showing that its amount directly depends on the degree of indistinguishability, and exploiting it in a quantum phase discrimination protocol. Furthermore, the designed setup allows for simulating fermionic particles with photons, thus assessing the role of exchange statistics in coherence generation and utilization. Our experiment proves that independent indistinguishable particles can offer a controllable resource of coherence and entanglement for quantum-enhanced metrology.
- Published
- 2022
25. Bosonic quantum communication across arbitrarily high loss channels
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Martin B. Plenio, Ludovico Lami, Alexander S. Holevo, Vittorio Giovannetti, Lami, L., Plenio, M. B., Giovannetti, V., and Holevo, A. S.
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Attenuator (electronics) ,Conditional entropy ,Physics ,Quantum Physics ,Physical constant ,General Physics and Astronomy ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Monotonic function ,Quantum channel ,Quantum capacity ,Mathematical Physics (math-ph) ,01 natural sciences ,Settore FIS/03 - Fisica della Materia ,law.invention ,law ,Quantum mechanics ,0103 physical sciences ,010306 general physics ,Quantum information science ,Quantum Physics (quant-ph) ,Beam splitter ,Mathematical Physics - Abstract
A general attenuator $\Phi_{\lambda, \sigma}$ is a bosonic quantum channel that acts by combining the input with a fixed environment state $\sigma$ in a beam splitter of transmissivity $\lambda$. If $\sigma$ is a thermal state the resulting channel is a thermal attenuator, whose quantum capacity vanishes for $\lambda\leq 1/2$. We study the quantum capacity of these objects for generic $\sigma$, proving a number of unexpected results. Most notably, we show that for any arbitrary value of $\lambda>0$ there exists a suitable single-mode state $\sigma(\lambda)$ such that the quantum capacity of $\Phi_{\lambda,\sigma(\lambda)}$ is larger than a universal constant $c>0$. Our result holds even when we fix an energy constraint at the input of the channel, and implies that quantum communication at a constant rate is possible even in the limit of arbitrarily low transmissivity, provided that the environment state is appropriately controlled. We also find examples of states $\sigma$ such that the quantum capacity of $\Phi_{\lambda,\sigma}$ is not monotonic in $\lambda$. These findings may have implications for the study of communication lines running across integrated optical circuits, of which general attenuators provide natural models., Comment: 28 pages, 4 figures; v2 is very close to the published version. In the SM we added Section I.D, on the comparison between quantum communication and non-locality distribution, and Section V, where we discuss a possible extension of our main result (Thm. 2)
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- 2020
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26. THE PROTECTIVE ACTION OF A PHOSPHOLIPID EXTRACT OF SPLEEN ON MICE SUBJECTED TO A FATAL DOSE OF WHOLE-BODY IRRADIATION
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Lami, L
- Published
- 1965
27. THE PROTECTIVE EFFECT OF A DUODENAL HEPARINOID ON THE MOUSE EXPOSED TO A LETHAL DOSE OF WHOLE-BODY IRRADIATION
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Lami, L
- Published
- 1965
28. Le condizioni di applicabilità delle misure coercitive. Le modalità di esecuzione del provvedimento che applica gli arresti domiciliari
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CAPITTA, ANNA MARIA, Amodio, E, Ambrosoli, L, Bassi, M, Bernasconi, A, Capitta, A, Casartelli, G, Catalano, E, Cesaris, A, De Castiglione, E, Galbusera, V, Vittorini, GS, Lami, L, Liberini, N, and Ruggieri, F
- Subjects
garanzie difensive ,IUS/16 - DIRITTO PROCESSUALE PENALE ,misure cautelari personali - Published
- 1996
29. Out-of-Catchment Area Antiretroviral Therapy Initiation and its Factors among HIV Positive People on Lifelong Therapy in Western Ethiopia: Implementation of Decentralized ART Services.
- Author
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Bayisa L, Keno TS, Ayana GE, Abera T, and Akuma AO
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- Humans, Ethiopia epidemiology, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Adult, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Adolescent, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections psychology, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Decentralized human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a model adopted to improve access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) within communities and mitigate the burden of HIV treatment and care on health care facility. In Ethiopia, these services help HIV clients fully benefit from ART as they are able to access ART within their catchment areas. However, HIV clients still travel out of their catchment areas to commence the ART. Thus, this study aimed to assess the magnitude of out-of-catchment area ART initiation and its associated factors among people living with HIV (PLWHIV) in Western Ethiopia. Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted among 423 PLWHIV from November 25 to December 30, 2025, at Nekemte Comprehensive Specialized Hospital. A systematic sampling method was used to recruit the study participants. Epi Data 3.1 and STATA 14.0 were used for data entry and analysis, respectively. Logistic regression analysis was computed to identify factors associated with out-of-catchment ART initiation among PLWHIV. Variables with a P value <.25 from the bivariable analysis were entered into the multivariable analysis. Adjusted odds ratio (AOR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) and P value <.05 were used to determine a significant association. Results: A total of 423 PLHIV were included in the study. The mean age of study participants was 33.43 ± 9.79 years. One-fifth (22%) of the participants-initiated ART out of their catchment area with 95% (CI: 18.28-26.20). Participants who did not disclose their HIV (AOR = 4.39, 95% CI = 2.45-7.87), tested through voluntary counseling and testing (AOR = 3.99, 95% CI = 2.21-7.19), knowledgeable about HIV/AIDS (AOR = 2.15, 95% CI = 1.18-3.93), using traditional healing (AOR = 1.91, 95% CI = 1.03-3.55), being female (AOR = 2.42, 95% CI = 1.36-4.32), and perceived stigma (AOR = 3.41, 95% CI = 1.88-6.18) were significantly associated with out-of-catchment ART initiation. Conclusion and Recommendation: A substantial number of PLWHIV in study area had initiated ART outside their designated catchment areas. To address this, it is crucial to enhance HIV serostatus disclosure, combat discrimination associated with HIV/AIDS, and promote decentralized HIV care and ART services., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2025
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30. Treatment of cervical insufficiency and/or a short cervix with antimicrobial agents can restore cervical length and lead to pregnancy prolongation and term delivery.
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Romero R, Chaiworapongsa T, Meyyazhagan A, Jung E, Yoon BH, Kmak D, Yeo L, Johnson J, and Hsu CD
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Adult, Cervix Uteri drug effects, Term Birth, Anti-Infective Agents therapeutic use, Anti-Infective Agents administration & dosage, Cervical Length Measurement, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Uterine Cervical Incompetence drug therapy
- Published
- 2024
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31. Distillable entanglement under dually non-entangling operations.
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Lami L and Regula B
- Abstract
Computing the exact rate at which entanglement can be distilled from noisy quantum states is one of the longest-standing questions in quantum information. We give an exact solution for entanglement distillation under the set of dually non-entangling (DNE) operations-a relaxation of the typically considered local operations and classical communication, comprising all channels which preserve the sets of separable states and measurements. We show that the DNE distillable entanglement coincides with a modified version of the regularised relative entropy of entanglement in which the arguments are measured with a separable measurement. Ours is only the second known regularised formula for the distillable entanglement under any class of free operations in entanglement theory, after that given by Devetak and Winter for (one-way) local operations and classical communication. An immediate consequence of our finding is that, under DNE, entanglement can be distilled from any entangled state. As our second main result, we construct a general upper bound on the DNE distillable entanglement, using which we prove that the separably measured relative entropy of entanglement can be strictly smaller than the regularisation of the standard relative entropy of entanglement, solving an open problem posed by Li and Winter. Finally, we study also the reverse task of entanglement dilution and show that the restriction to DNE operations does not change the entanglement cost when compared with the larger class of non-entangling operations. This implies a strong form of irreversiblility of entanglement theory under DNE operations: even when asymptotically vanishing amounts of entanglement may be generated, entangled states cannot be converted reversibly., Competing Interests: Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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32. Postoperative results, learning curve, and outcomes of pancreatectomy with arterial resection: a single-center retrospective cohort study on 236 procedures.
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Napoli N, Kauffmann EF, Lombardo C, Ginesini M, Di Dato A, Lami L, Annunziata E, Vistoli F, Campani D, Cappelli C, Amorese G, and Boggi U
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Treatment Outcome, Adult, Hepatic Artery surgery, Celiac Artery surgery, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Mesenteric Artery, Superior surgery, Aged, 80 and over, Pancreatectomy methods, Learning Curve, Pancreatic Neoplasms surgery, Pancreatic Neoplasms mortality
- Abstract
Background: Newer chemotherapy regimens are reviving the role of pancreatectomy with arterial resection (PAR) in locally advanced pancreatic cancer. However, concerns about the early outcomes and learning curve of PAR remain. This study aimed to define the postoperative results and learning curve of PAR and provide preliminary data on oncologic outcomes., Materials and Methods: A single center's experiences (1993-2023) were retrospectively analyzed to define the postoperative outcomes and learning curve of PAR. Oncologic results were also reported., Results: During the study period 236 patients underwent PAR. Eighty PAR (33.9%) were performed until 2012, and 156 were performed thereafter (66.1%). Pancreatic cancer was diagnosed histologically in 183 patients (77.5%). Induction therapy was delivered to 18 of these patients (31.0%) in the early experience and to 101 patients (80.8%) in the last decade ( P <0.0001). The superior mesenteric artery (PAR-SMA), celiac trunk/hepatic artery (PAR-CT/HA), superior mesenteric/portal vein, and inferior vena cava were resected in 95 (40.7%), 138 (59.2%), 189 (80.1%), and 9 (3.8%) patients, respectively. Total gastrectomy was performed in 35 (18.5%) patients. The 30-day mortality rate was 7.2% and 90-day mortality rate was 9.7%. The learning curve for mortality was 106 PAR [16.0 vs. 4.6%; odds ratio, OR=0.25 (0.10-0.67), P =0.0055]. Comparison between the PAR-SMA and PAR-CT/HA groups showed no differences in severe postoperative complications (25.3 vs. 20.6%), 90-day mortality (12.6 vs. 7.8%), and median overall survival. Vascular invasion was confirmed in 123 patients (67.2%). The median number (interquartile range) of examined lymph nodes was 60.5 (41.3-83) and rate of R0 resection was 66.1% (121/183). Median overall survival for PAR was 20.9 (12.5-42.8) months, for PAR-SMA was 20.2 (14.4-44) months, and for PAR-CT/HA was 20.2 (11.4-42.7). Long-term prognosis improved by study decade [1993-2002: 12.0 (5.4-25.9) months, 2003-2012: 15.1 (9.8-23.4) months, and 2013-present: 26.2 (14.3-51.5) months; P <0.0001]., Conclusions: In recent times, PAR is associated with improved outcomes despite a steep learning curve. Pancreatic surgeons should be prepared to face the technical challenge posed by PAR., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
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- 2024
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33. Population-Level Study on Fetal Deaths and Preterm Births during SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic in the State of Michigan.
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Bajaj M, Romero R, Myers L, Duncan J, Yeo L, Jani S, and Natarajan G
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- Humans, Female, Michigan epidemiology, Pregnancy, Adult, Infant, Newborn, Gestational Age, SARS-CoV-2, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious epidemiology, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Fetal Mortality trends, COVID-19 epidemiology, Premature Birth epidemiology, Fetal Death
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of the study is to explore the effect of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic on preterm birth at different gestational ages and fetal death in the state of Michigan., Study Design: Data on live births and fetal deaths in the state of Michigan from March to November in the years 2017 through 2020 were obtained from Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS). Preterm birth rate, fetal death rate (per 1,000 live births) overall and stratified by race and maternal comorbidities during the period of pandemic (March-November 2020) were compared with the same period (March-November) in the prepandemic years (2017-2019)., Results: Of 328,879 live births and 1,470 fetal deaths during the study period, 77,983 live births and 242 fetal deaths were reported in 2020. Compared with prepandemic years, fetal death rate per 1,000 live births was significantly lower in 2020 (3.1 vs. 4.7 [2017], 5.2 [2018], 4.4 [2019], p -value <0.001). The adjusted risk for fetal death in 2020 was decreased (odds ratio [OR] = 0.64 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.56-0.74], p <0.0001), compared with prepandemic years. Fetal death was significantly associated with African-American race, pregnancy hypertension and prepregnancy diabetes. No significant difference in the proportion of preterm births (<37 weeks' gestation) was noted between pandemic and prepandemic years (9.9 vs. 10.0%, p = 0.50). There was no significant difference in the risk of preterm birth across gestational age strata (<28, 28-31
6/7 , 32-366/7 , 37-416/7 , and >42 weeks) between pandemic and prepandemic years on multinomial analysis. Significant associations with preterm birth across all years included African American race, lower level of maternal education, pregnancy-induced hypertension, chronic hypertension, prepregnancy diabetes, congenital anomalies, previous preterm birth, and prolonged rupture of membranes >12 hours., Conclusion: Fetal death rate was significantly lower whereas preterm births remained unchanged during pandemic in comparison with prepandemic years in the state of Michigan., Key Points: · A decrease in fetal death rate was noted during SARS CoV-2 pandemic in the State of Michigan.. · Overall state-wide rates of preterm birth did not change in 2020, compared to previous years.. · Significant risk factors associated with preterm birth and fetal deaths did not differ between prepandemic and pandemic years.., Competing Interests: None declared., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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34. Reversibility of quantum resources through probabilistic protocols.
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Regula B and Lami L
- Abstract
Among the most fundamental questions in the manipulation of quantum resources such as entanglement is the possibility of reversibly transforming all resource states. The key consequence of this would be the identification of a unique entropic resource measure that exactly quantifies the limits of achievable transformation rates. Remarkably, previous results claimed that such asymptotic reversibility holds true in very general settings; however, recently those findings have been found to be incomplete, casting doubt on the conjecture. Here we show that it is indeed possible to reversibly interconvert all states in general quantum resource theories, as long as one allows protocols that may only succeed probabilistically. Although such transformations have some chance of failure, we show that their success probability can be ensured to be bounded away from zero, even in the asymptotic limit of infinitely many manipulated copies. As in previously conjectured approaches, the achievability here is realised through operations that are asymptotically resource non-generating, and we show that this choice is optimal: smaller sets of transformations cannot lead to reversibility. Our methods are based on connecting the transformation rates under probabilistic protocols with strong converse rates for deterministic transformations, which we strengthen into an exact equivalence in the case of entanglement distillation., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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35. Robotic Versus Open Pancreatoduodenectomy With Vein Resection and Reconstruction: A Propensity Score-Matched Analysis.
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Napoli N, Kauffmann EF, Ginesini M, Di Dato A, Viti V, Gianfaldoni C, Lami L, Cappelli C, Rotondo MI, Campani D, Amorese G, Vivaldi C, Cesario S, Bernardini L, Vasile E, Vistoli F, and Boggi U
- Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to compare robotic pancreatoduodenectomy with vein resection (PD-VR) based on the incidence of severe postoperative complications (SPC)., Background: Robotic pancreatoduodenectomy has been gaining momentum in recent years. Vein resection is frequently required in this operation, but no study has compared robotic and open PD-VR using a matched analysis., Methods: This was an intention-to-treat study designed to demonstrate the noninferiority of robotic to open PD-VR (2011-2021) based on SPC. To achieve a power of 80% (noninferiority margin:10%; α error: 0.05; ß error: 0.20), a 1:1 propensity score-matched analysis required 35 pairs., Results: Of the 151 patients with PD-VR (open = 115, robotic = 36), 35 procedures per group were compared. Elective conversion to open surgery was required in 1 patient with robotic PD-VR (2.9%). One patient in both groups experienced partial vein thrombosis. SPC occurred in 7 (20.0%) and 6 patients (17.1%) in the robotic and open PD-VR groups, respectively ( P = 0.759; OR: 1.21 [0.36-4.04]). Three patients died after robotic PD-VR (8.6%) and none died after open PD-VR ( P = 0.239). Robotic PD-VR was associated with longer operative time (611.1 ± 13.9 minutes vs 529.0 ± 13.0 minutes; P < 0.0001), more type 2 vein resection (28.6% vs 5.7%; P = 0.0234) and less type 3 vein resection (31.4% vs 71.4%; P = 0.0008), longer vein occlusion time (30 [25.3-78.3] minutes vs 15 [8-19.5] minutes; P = 0.0098), less blood loss (450 [200-750] mL vs 733 [500-1070.3] mL; P = 0.0075), and fewer blood transfusions (intraoperative: 14.3% vs 48.6%; P = 0.0041) (perioperative: 14.3% vs 60.0%; P = 0.0001)., Conclusions: In this study, robotic PD-VR was noninferior to open PD-VR for SPC. Robotic and open PD-VR need to be compared in randomized controlled trials., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
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- 2024
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36. Compliance with research ethics in epidemiological studies targeted to conflict-affected areas in Western Ethiopia: validity of informed consent (VIC) by information comprehension and voluntariness (ICV).
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Tiruneh G, Yilma M, Wakuma B, Abdisa E, Bayisa L, Nichols M, Bedeker A, and Tiffin N
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Ethiopia, Prospective Studies, Ethics, Research, Surveys and Questionnaires, Comprehension, Informed Consent
- Abstract
Background: The conduct of research is critical to advancing human health. However, there are issues of ethical concern specific to the design and conduct of research in conflict settings. Conflict-affected countries often lack strong platform to support technical guidance and monitoring of research ethics, which may lead to the use of divergent ethical standards some of which are poorly elaborated and loosely enforced. Despite the growing concern about ethical issues in research, there is a dearth of information about ethical compliance in conflict areas. Valid and ethically informed decision-making is a premier pact with research participants in settling possible ethical issues before commencing the research, which is ensured by gaining informed consent from prospective participants of the research., Aims: This research aimed to explore compliance with research ethics and consent validity in community-based epidemiological research conducted previously., Methods: Research participants were recruited in the western part of Ethiopia in three districts subjected to conflicts. A community-based cross-sectional study design was utilized, and 338 residents were enrolled as study participants. All participants had previously been enrolled as research participants in epidemiological studies. Data was collected using a questionnaire that was pilot-tested before the commencement of the main data collection. The questionnaire focused on participants' experiences of the informed consent process followed when they were recruited for an epidemiological study and covered themes such as essential information provided, level of comprehension, and voluntarism of consent., Results: Over half of the study participants, 176 (52%), were not provided with essential information before consenting. And 135 (40%) of them did not comprehend the information provided to them. One hundred and ninety (56%) participants freely and voluntarily agreed to partake in one of these epidemiological studies, with over a quarter (97; 28.7%) of them reporting they were subjected to undue influence. Written consent was obtained from only 32 (9.4%) of the participants., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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37. Predictors of willingness to accept COVID-19 vaccine among adults.
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Huka AE, Alemeyehu L, Jara D, Ayele A, and Shifa T
- Abstract
Background: Vaccines are an effective and ultimate solution that can decrease the burden of coronavirus disease 2019 worldwide. However, poor knowledge and unwillingness to accept this vaccine are key barriers to manage the COVID-19 pandemic in different countries including Ethiopia. Control of the pandemic will depend on the acceptance of coronavirus disease vaccine. However, there is a paucity of evidence on coronavirus disease vaccine acceptance in the study area. The current study was aimed to assess willingness to accept the COVID-19 vaccine and associated factors among adult clients attending Bule Hora University Teaching Hospital, West Guji Zone, southern Ethiopia., Methods: An institution-based cross-sectional study was conducted among 385 study participants selected by a systematic random sampling technique. Data was collected through observation and structured questionnaires from April 10 to May 30, 2022. The collected data was cleaned and entered into EpiData 3.1 software before being exported to SPSS 25 statistical software for analysis. Bi-variable and multi-variable binary logistic regression model was used to identify the predictors of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance. The strength of association was measured using AOR with 95% confidence interval and significance was declared at p - value < 0.05., Result: Magnitude of willingness to accept coronavirus disease-19 vaccine was 67.5% (95%Cl: 63-72). Good knowledge [AOR = 2.07, (1.17-3.64)], history of chronic disease [AOR = 2.59, (1.4-4.78)], being a government employee [AOR = 2.35 (1.1-5)], having a favorable attitude [AOR = 14.15 (5.25-37.46)], and good adherence [AOR = 1.74 (1.02-2.97)] were factors that significantly associated with willingness to accept the coronavirus disease 2019 vaccine., Conclusion: Magnitude of willingness to accept the COVID-19 vaccine was considerable and needs to be improved. Knowledge, attitude, chronic illness, adherence, and being a government employee were factors that associated with willingness to accept the vaccine. Community awareness, advocacy, social mobilization and health education should be given at different levels., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (© 2023 Huka, Alemeyehu, Jara, Ayele and Shifa.)
- Published
- 2023
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38. Ca 125 is an independent prognostic marker in resected pancreatic cancer of the head of the pancreas.
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Napoli N, Kauffmann EF, Ginesini M, Lami L, Lombardo C, Vistoli F, Campani D, and Boggi U
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- Humans, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Pancreas surgery, Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal surgery, Pancreatic Neoplasms, Head and Neck Neoplasms
- Abstract
The prognostic value of carbohydrate antigen 125 (Ca 125) is emerging also in pancreatic cancer (PDAC). In this study, we aim to define the prognostic value of Ca 125 in resected PDAC of the head of the pancreas. This is a single-center, retrospective study. Data from patients with a pre-operative assay of Ca 125 who underwent a pancreatic resection for PDAC between 2010 and 2018 were analyzed. As per National Comprehensive Cancer Guidelines, tumors were classified in resectable (R-PDAC), borderline resectable (BR-PDAC), and locally advanced (LA-PDAC). The Kaplan-Meier method was used to evaluate the overall survival. Cox proportional hazard regression was used to evaluate the role of pre-operative Ca 125 in predicting survival (while adjusting for confounders). The maximally selected log-rank statistic was used to identify a Ca 125 cut-off defining two groups with different survival probability. Inclusion criteria were met by 207 patients (R-PDAC: 80, BR-PDAC: 91, and LA-PDAC: 36). Ca 125 predicted overall survival before and after adjusting for confounding factors in all categories of anatomic resectability (R-PDAC: HR = 4.3; p = 0.0249) (BR-PDAC: HR = 7.82; p = 0.0024) (LA-PDAC: HR = 11.4; p = 0.0043). In BR-PDAC and LA-PDAC (n = 127), the division in two groups (high vs. low Ca 125) correlated with T stage (p = 0.0317), N stage (p = 0.0083), mean LN ratio (p = 0.0292), and tumor grading (p = 0.0143). This study confirmed the prognostic value of Ca125 in resected pancreatic cancer and, therefore, the importance of biologic over anatomic resectability. Ca 125 should be routinely assayed in surgical candidates with PDAC., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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39. Burden of intestinal parasitic infections and associated factors among pregnant women in East Africa: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Mosisa G, Diriba DC, Tsegaye R, Kejela G, Bayisa D, Oluma A, Wakuma B, Abadiga M, Turi E, Abera T, Bayisa L, and Tufa G
- Abstract
Background: The ultimate goal of preventing intestinal parasites among pregnant women is to reduce maternal and newborn morbidity and mortality. Numerous primary studies were conducted in East Africa presented intestinal parasite infection and associated factors among pregnant women. However, the pooled finding is not known. Therefore, this review aimed to identify the pooled prevalence of intestinal parasite infection and its determinants among pregnant women in East Africa., Methods: Articles published from 2009 to 2021 were searched in PubMed, Web of Science, EMBASE, and HINARI databases. The search for unpublished studies such as thesis and dissertations was checked in Addis Ababa University and Africa Digital Library. PRISMA checklist was used to report the review. Articles published in the English Language were considered. The data were extracted by two authors using data extraction checklists on Microsoft excel. Heterogeneity among the included studies was checked using I
2 statistics on forest plots. Sensitivity and sub-group analyses were conducted to assess the presence of primary studies, and study characteristics responsible for the observed heterogeneity., Results: Of the 43 identified articles, about 23 articles were removed due to duplications. Then, by assessing the abstracts and full texts, four articles were removed because they failed to meet the eligibility criteria. Finally, 16 articles were included in the systematic and meta-analysis.The pooled prevalence of intestinal parasites among pregnant women in East Africa was 38.54 (28.77, 48.32). In this study, variables like residing in rural areas (OR: 3.75; CI: 1.15,12.16), availability of latrine(OR: 2.94; 95% CI: 2.22, 3.91), eating raw fruits/vegetables (OR: 2.44; 95% CI: 1.16, 5.11). and sources of water as unprotected sources (OR: 2.20; 95% CI: 1.11,4.35) show statistically significant association with the increased burden of intestinal parasites among pregnant women., Conclusion: The burden of intestinal parasite infection among pregnant women in East Africa was high. Therefore, efforts should be made in deworming pregnant women at the community and institutional level by stakeholders to reduce the burden of intestinal parasite infections and related complications., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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40. Meconium Stained Amniotic Fluid and Associated Factors among Women Who Gave Birth at Term in Adama Hospital Medical College, Ethiopia.
- Author
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Dereje T, Sharew T, and Hunde L
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Young Adult, Pregnancy Complications diagnosis, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Infant, Newborn, Diseases diagnosis, Infant, Newborn, Diseases epidemiology, Ethiopia epidemiology, Obstetric Labor Complications, Amniotic Fluid chemistry
- Abstract
Background: Meconium stained amniotic fluid (MSAF) is a commonly observed phenomenon in day-to-day practice of obstetrics. The reported prevalence of MSAF was 7-22% of all term deliveries. Some of the factors that increases the risk of meconium stained amniotic fluid includes; advanced gestational age at delivery, prolonged rupture of membranes, intra-amniotic infection, pre-eclampsia, oligohydroamnios, and diabetes mellitus. The study aimed to determine the prevalence of meconium stained amniotic fluid and its associated factors among women who gave birth at term, from January 1
st to July 30th , 2020, at Adama Hospital Medical College., Methods: Institutional based cross-sectional study was conducted on 314 laboring women who gave birth at term. Systematic random sampling was used to select the study participants. Data entry and analysis were made by using Epi- info 7 and SPSS version 20, respectively., Results: The prevalence of meconium stained amniotic fluid was 23.9%. Late term pregnancy, Oligohydraminos, Antepartum hemorrhage, Premature rupture of membrane, and Non-reassuring fetal heart rate pattern were significantly associated with meconium-stained amniotic fluid., Conclusions: The prevalence of MSAF was comparable with other studies. Late-term pregnancy, oligohydramnios, antepartum hemorrhage, non-reassuring fetal heart rate pattern, and premature rupture of the membrane were factors associated with an increased risk of MSAF., (© 2023 Dereje Tegene, et al.)- Published
- 2023
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41. Same-Day ART Initiation and Associated Factors Among People Living with HIV on Lifelong Therapy at Nekemte Specialized Hospital, Western Ethiopia.
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Bayisa L, Bayisa D, Turi E, Mulisa D, Tolossa T, Akuma AO, Bokora MC, and Rundasa DT
- Abstract
Background: The test-and-treat approach recommends early ART initiation (same day). Early ART start has double the benefits as treatment and as prevention. However, there is limited information regarding same-day ART initiation in Ethiopia. Hence, this study aimed to assess the magnitude and factors of same-day ART initiation among people living with HIV (PLHIV) on ART at Nekemte specialized hospital, in Western Ethiopia., Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among 483 PLHIV from January 10 to February 15, 2021. Data were collected using an investigator-administered questionnaire. Epi Data 3.1 and STATA 14.0 were used for data entry and analysis, respectively. Variables with P-value <0.25 from bivariable analysis were included in the multivariable analysis. AOR with 95% CI and P-value <0.05 were used to declare statistical significance., Results: A total of 483 study subjects participated and gave a 100% response rate. Two thirds (65%) of them started ART on the same day with a 95% CI [60.2-68.8]. Urban dwellers (AOR = 3.93 (95% 1.96-7.87)), with no OIs (AOR = 4.02 (95% CI: 1.54-10.47)), not screened for TB (AOR = 6.02 (95% CI: 1.71-21.15)), tested via VCT (AOR = 2.32 (95% CI: 1.37-3.26)), who have not used CPT (AOR = 1.88 (95% CI: 1.10-3.23)), who have not used IPT (AOR = 2.36 (95% CI: 1.0-5.57)), who were tested in 2019/20 (AOR = 2.37 (95% CI: 1.08-5.518)), and with BMI ≥25 kg/m
2 (AOR = 2.18 (95% CI: 1.05-4.52)) were significantly associated with same-day ART initiation., Conclusion: Two thirds of study subjects initiated ART on the same day as HIV diagnosis. Voluntary testing and immediate referral to HIV care, advocating test-and-treat, and intensive counseling should be strengthened and reinforced for newly diagnosed HIV-positive people. Given that, high attention should be paid to individuals from urban residence, not screened for TB, who have not used CPT and IPT prophylaxis., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (© 2023 Bayisa et al.)- Published
- 2023
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42. Asymptotic State Transformations of Continuous Variable Resources.
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Ferrari G, Lami L, Theurer T, and Plenio MB
- Abstract
We study asymptotic state transformations in continuous variable quantum resource theories. In particular, we prove that monotones displaying lower semicontinuity and strong superadditivity can be used to bound asymptotic transformation rates in these settings. This removes the need for asymptotic continuity, which cannot be defined in the traditional sense for infinite-dimensional systems. We consider three applications, to the resource theories of (I) optical nonclassicality, (II) entanglement, and (III) quantum thermodynamics. In cases (II) and (III), the employed monotones are the (infinite-dimensional) squashed entanglement and the free energy, respectively. For case (I), we consider the measured relative entropy of nonclassicality and prove it to be lower semicontinuous and strongly superadditive. One of our main technical contributions, and a key tool to establish these results, is a handy variational expression for the measured relative entropy of nonclassicality. Our technique then yields computable upper bounds on asymptotic transformation rates, including those achievable under linear optical elements. We also prove a number of results which guarantee that the measured relative entropy of nonclassicality is bounded on any physically meaningful state and easily computable for some classes of states of interest, e.g., Fock diagonal states. We conclude by applying our findings to the problem of cat state manipulation and noisy Fock state purification., Competing Interests: Conflict of interestThe authors declare no competing interests., (© The Author(s) 2022.)
- Published
- 2023
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43. Fetal intelligent navigation echocardiography (FINE) has superior performance compared to manual navigation of the fetal heart by non-expert sonologists.
- Author
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Swor K, Yeo L, Tarca AL, Jung E, and Romero R
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Echocardiography methods, Fetal Heart diagnostic imaging, Prospective Studies, Prenatal Care, Ultrasonography, Prenatal methods, Heart Defects, Congenital
- Abstract
Objectives: Manual and intelligent navigation (i.e. fetal intelligent navigation echocardiography or FINE) by the operator are two methods to obtain standard fetal cardiac views from spatiotemporal image correlation (STIC) volumes. The objective was to compare the performance between manual and intelligent navigation (FINE) of the fetal heart by non-expert sonologists., Methods: In this prospective observational study, ten sonologists underwent formal training on both navigational methods. Subsequently, they were tested on their ability to obtain nine cardiac views from five STIC volumes of normal fetal hearts (19-28 gestational weeks) using such methods. The following parameters were determined for both methods: (1) success rate of obtaining nine cardiac views; (2) mean time to obtain nine cardiac views per sonologist; and (3) maximum number of cardiac views successfully obtained for each STIC volume., Results: All fetal cardiac images obtained from 100 STIC volumes (50 for each navigational method) were reviewed by an expert in fetal echocardiography. Compared to manual navigation, FINE was associated with a significantly: (1) higher success rate of obtaining eight (excluding the abdomen view) appropriate cardiac views (92-100% vs. 56-88%; all p<0.05); (2) shorter mean time (minute:seconds) to obtain nine cardiac views (2:11 ± 0:37 vs. 15:49 ± 7:44; p<0.0001); and (3) higher success rate of obtaining all nine cardiac views for a given STIC volume (86 vs. 14%; p<0.001)., Conclusions: When performed by non-expert sonologists, intelligent navigation (FINE) had a superior performance compared to manual navigation of the normal fetal heart. Specifically, FINE obtained appropriate fetal cardiac views in 92-100% of cases., (© 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2022
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44. Cervical insufficiency, amniotic fluid sludge, intra-amniotic infection, and maternal bacteremia: the need for a point-of-care test to assess inflammation and bacteria in amniotic fluid.
- Author
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Jung EJ, Romero R, Gomez-Lopez N, Paredes C, Diaz-Primera R, Hernandez-Andrade E, Hsu CD, and Yeo L
- Subjects
- Amniotic Fluid microbiology, Bacteria, Female, Humans, Inflammation, Point-of-Care Testing, Pregnancy, Sewage, Bacteremia, Chorioamnionitis diagnosis, Chorioamnionitis microbiology, Uterine Cervical Incompetence
- Abstract
Acute cervical insufficiency is frequently associated with subclinical intra-amniotic inflammation and intra-amniotic infection. Amniotic fluid analysis has been recommended prior to the placement of a cervical cerclage given that preexisting infection is associated with adverse pregnancy outcome. We report a case for which commonly available laboratory tests-amniotic fluid Gram stain, white blood cell count, and glucose concentration-did not detect either intra-amniotic inflammation, diagnosed by elevated amniotic fluid interleukin-6, or intra-amniotic infection, diagnosed by cultivation. Following cerclage placement, the patient developed clinical chorioamnionitis and bacteremia and experienced a spontaneous mid-trimester pregnancy loss. This case illustrates the need for a rapid and sensitive point-of-care test capable of detecting infection or inflammation, given recent evidence in support of treatment of intra-amniotic infection and intra-amniotic inflammation with antimicrobial agents.
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- 2022
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45. Characterization of amniotic fluid sludge in preterm and term gestations.
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Kusanovic JP, Jung E, Romero R, Mittal Green P, Nhan-Chang CL, Vaisbuch E, Erez O, Kim CJ, Gonçalves LF, Espinoza J, Mazaki-Tovi S, Chaiworapongsa T, Diaz-Primera R, Yeo L, Suksai M, Gotsch F, and Hassan SS
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Infant, Newborn, Female, Humans, Amniotic Fluid diagnostic imaging, Amniotic Fluid microbiology, Sewage, Amniocentesis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Particulate Matter, Suppuration, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious diagnosis, Chorioamnionitis diagnosis, Chorioamnionitis microbiology
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the characteristics of amniotic fluid sludge obtained from patients in term and preterm gestations., Methods: This cross-sectional study included patients with dense aggregates of particulate matter detected in amniotic fluid, observed with transvaginal sonography. All patients were in labor and had an impending delivery, either preterm or at term. Echogenic material contained within amniotic fluid was retrieved transvaginally by needle amniotomy under direct visualization. The amniotic fluid analysis consisted of a Gram stain, cultures for aerobic/anaerobic bacteria and genital mycoplasmas, and a white blood cell count., Results: Twenty-five patients ranging from 18 to 41 weeks of gestation were included in the study. We observed the following: (1) the appearance of amniotic fluid was consistent with pus-like material, vernix, or meconium by naked eye examination; (2) samples collected before 33 weeks of gestation ( n = 13) had a pus-like appearance; however, after this gestational age, most of the samples [83% (10/12)] appeared to be consistent with vernix; (3) amniotic fluid cultures were positive for microorganisms in 13 patients, of which 10 were preterm gestations before 33 weeks; (4) the most frequent microorganisms retrieved by culture were genital mycoplasmas ( Ureaplasma urealyticum [46% (6/13)]), followed by Mycoplasma hominis [31% (4/13)] and Candida albicans [15% (2/13)]; and (5) patients with sonographic particulate matter in preterm gestations frequently presented acute histologic chorioamnionitis and funisitis, but these conditions were rare in patients at term., Conclusion: The nature of amniotic fluid particulate material varies as a function of gestational age. The material obtained in preterm gestations is frequently related to an inflammatory process, while that obtained at term is often consistent with vernix and appears to represent a maturational process.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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46. Resolution of acute cervical insufficiency after antibiotics in a case with amniotic fluid sludge.
- Author
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Yeo L, Romero R, Chaiworapongsa T, Para R, Johnson J, Kmak D, Jung E, Yoon BH, and Hsu CD
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Female, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Amniotic Fluid, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Sewage, Amniocentesis methods, Inflammation, Chorioamnionitis drug therapy, Chorioamnionitis diagnosis, Premature Birth drug therapy, Uterine Cervical Incompetence drug therapy
- Abstract
Cervical insufficiency generally refers to a condition in which there is mid-trimester cervical dilatation or protruding chorioamniotic membranes in the absence of uterine contractions. Such condition is a risk factor for spontaneous mid-trimester abortion or early preterm birth, and is associated with adverse neonatal outcomes. Both intra-amniotic infection and inflammation ascertained by amniocentesis have been identified in patients with cervical insufficiency, and are poor prognostic factors. A subset of patients with intra-amniotic inflammation will have no demonstrable microorganisms detected via cultivation or molecular methods, and therefore represent cases of sterile intra-amniotic inflammation. Amniotic fluid sludge (free-floating hyperechogenic material within the amniotic fluid in close proximity to the uterine cervix) identified on sonography is a biomarker for intra-amniotic infection and inflammation. Recent evidence suggests that intra-amniotic infection, as well as sterile intra-amniotic inflammation can be treated successfully using antimicrobial agents. We report a unique case in which administration of antibiotics in the presence of mid-trimester cervical insufficiency, sterile intra-amniotic inflammation, and amniotic fluid sludge was associated with resolution of the cervical findings, as demonstrated on both sonographic and speculum examination. The patient successfully underwent elective cesarean delivery at 36-2/7 weeks of gestation. This case illustrates that antibiotic therapy may be effective despite the presence of several high-risk pregnancy conditions, and that successful outcome is possible.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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47. HIV sero-status disclosure and associated factors among HIV positive women in East Africa: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Implications for prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission.
- Author
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Mosisa G, Mulisa D, Oluma A, Bayisa L, Merdassa E, Bayisa D, Tamiru A, Tolossa T, Chala Diriba D, Fetensa G, and Wakuma B
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Humans, Female, Mothers, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical prevention & control, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Women's HIV-positive disclosure plays a pivotal role to achieve the goal of preventing mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) among pregnant women in particular. Although several primary studies were conducted in the different countries of East Africa, no study concluded the prevalence of women's HIV status disclosure and associated factors in East Africa. Therefore, the current study aimed to assess the pooled prevalence of disclosure status and associated factors among women in East Africa., Objectives: To assess the pooled prevalence of HIV sero-status disclosure and associated factors among women in East Africa., Methods: HINARI, PubMed, and Cochrane Library databases were searched. The data were extracted using a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet and STATA v 14.1 was used for the analysis. The Funnel plots and Egger's statistical test was used to check publication bias. Heterogeneity was assessed by conducting sensitivity and subgroup analyses., Result: The pooled prevalence of sero-status disclosure among women in East Africa was 73.77% (95%CI 67.76, 79.77). Knowing partner's sero-status (OR = 10.04(95%CI 3.36, 31.84), married (OR = 2.46 (95%CI 1.23, 4.89), smooth relationship (OR = 3.30 (95%CI 1.39, 7.84), and discussion on HIV before the test (OR = 6.96 (95%CI 3.21, 15.05) were identified determinants of HIV sero-status disclosure., Conclusion: The current systematic and meta-analysis revealed that nearly one-fourth of women had not disclosed HIV sero-status to at least one individual. Knowing the partner's HIV sero-status, being married, having a smooth relationship, and discussing on HIV before the test were determinants of disclosure status. Therefore, disclosure of HIV-positive sero-status among women living with HIV needs to be strengthened., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The reviewer ET declared a shared affiliation with the authors to the handling editor at time of review., (Copyright © 2022 Mosisa, Mulisa, Oluma, Bayisa, Merdassa, Bayisa, Tamiru, Tolossa, Chala Diriba, Fetensa and Wakuma.)
- Published
- 2022
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48. Restoring Quantum Communication Efficiency over High Loss Optical Fibers.
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Mele FA, Lami L, and Giovannetti V
- Abstract
In the absence of quantum repeaters, quantum communication proved to be nearly impossible across optical fibers longer than ≳20 km due to the drop of transmissivity below the critical threshold of 1/2. However, if the signals fed into the fiber are separated by a sufficiently short time interval, memory effects must be taken into account. In this Letter, we show that by properly accounting for these effects it is possible to devise schemes that enable unassisted quantum communication across arbitrarily long optical fibers at a fixed positive qubit transmission rate. We also demonstrate how to achieve entanglement-assisted communication over arbitrarily long distances at a rate of the same order of the maximum achievable in the unassisted noiseless case.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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49. Toward a new taxonomy of obstetrical disease: improved performance of maternal blood biomarkers for the great obstetrical syndromes when classified according to placental pathology.
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Romero R, Jung E, Chaiworapongsa T, Erez O, Gudicha DW, Kim YM, Kim JS, Kim B, Kusanovic JP, Gotsch F, Taran AB, Yoon BH, Hassan SS, Hsu CD, Chaemsaithong P, Gomez-Lopez N, Yeo L, Kim CJ, and Tarca AL
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Cohort Studies, Female, Fetal Membranes, Premature Rupture, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Placenta pathology, Placenta Growth Factor, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-1, Obstetric Labor Complications, Obstetric Labor, Premature, Pre-Eclampsia
- Abstract
Background: The major challenge for obstetrics is the prediction and prevention of the great obstetrical syndromes. We propose that defining obstetrical diseases by the combination of clinical presentation and disease mechanisms as inferred by placental pathology will aid in the discovery of biomarkers and add specificity to those already known., Objective: To describe the longitudinal profile of placental growth factor (PlGF), soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 (sFlt-1), and the PlGF/sFlt-1 ratio throughout gestation, and to determine whether the association between abnormal biomarker profiles and obstetrical syndromes is strengthened by information derived from placental examination, eg, the presence or absence of placental lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion., Study Design: This retrospective case cohort study was based on a parent cohort of 4006 pregnant women enrolled prospectively. The case cohort of 1499 pregnant women included 1000 randomly selected patients from the parent cohort and all additional patients with obstetrical syndromes from the parent cohort. Pregnant women were classified into six groups: 1) term delivery without pregnancy complications (n=540; control); 2) preterm labor and delivery (n=203); 3) preterm premature rupture of the membranes (n=112); 4) preeclampsia (n=230); 5) small-for-gestational-age neonate (n=334); and 6) other pregnancy complications (n=182). Maternal plasma concentrations of PlGF and sFlt-1 were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays in 7560 longitudinal samples. Placental pathologists, masked to clinical outcomes, diagnosed the presence or absence of placental lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion. Comparisons between mean biomarker concentrations in cases and controls were performed by utilizing longitudinal generalized additive models. Comparisons were made between controls and each obstetrical syndrome with and without subclassifying cases according to the presence or absence of placental lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion., Results: 1) When obstetrical syndromes are classified based on the presence or absence of placental lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion, significant differences in the mean plasma concentrations of PlGF, sFlt-1, and the PlGF/sFlt-1 ratio between cases and controls emerge earlier in gestation; 2) the strength of association between an abnormal PlGF/sFlt-1 ratio and the occurrence of obstetrical syndromes increases when placental lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion are present (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 13.6 vs 6.7 for preeclampsia; aOR, 8.1 vs 4.4 for small-for-gestational-age neonates; aOR, 5.5 vs 2.1 for preterm premature rupture of the membranes; and aOR, 3.3 vs 2.1 for preterm labor (all P<0.05); and 3) the PlGF/sFlt-1 ratio at 28 to 32 weeks of gestation is abnormal in patients who subsequently delivered due to preterm labor with intact membranes and in those with preterm premature rupture of the membranes if both groups have placental lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion. Such association is not significant in patients with these obstetrical syndromes who do not have placental lesions., Conclusion: Classification of obstetrical syndromes according to the presence or absence of placental lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion allows biomarkers to be informative earlier in gestation and enhances the strength of association between biomarkers and clinical outcomes. We propose that a new taxonomy of obstetrical disorders informed by placental pathology will facilitate the discovery and implementation of biomarkers as well as the prediction and prevention of such disorders., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2022
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50. Characterization of the "gut microbiota-immunity axis" and microbial lipid metabolites in atrophic and potential celiac disease.
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Federica R, Edda R, Daniela R, Simone B, Giulia N, Gabriele L, Marta M, Marco P, Gianluca B, Elena N, Matteo C, Serena S, Matteo R, Amedeo A, and Salvatore CA
- Abstract
Introduction: Potential celiac disease (pCD) is characterized by genetic predisposition, positive anti-endomysial and anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies, but a normal or almost normal jejunal mucosa (e.g., minor histological abnormalities without villous atrophy). To gain further insights into basic mechanisms involved in the development of intestinal villous atrophy, we evaluated and compared the microbial, lipid, and immunological signatures of pCD and atrophic CD (aCD)., Materials and Methods: This study included 17 aCD patients, 10 pCD patients, and 12 healthy controls (HC). Serum samples from all participants were collected to analyze free fatty acids (FFAs). Duodenal mucosa samples of aCD and pCD patients were taken to evaluate histology, tissue microbiota composition, and mucosal immune response., Results: We found no significant differences in the mucosa-associated microbiota composition of pCD and aCD patients. On the other hand, in pCD patients, the overall abundance of serum FFAs showed relevant and significant differences in comparison with aCD patients and HC. In detail, compared to HC, pCD patients displayed higher levels of propionic, butyric, valeric, 2-ethylhexanoic, tetradecanoic, hexadecanoic, and octadecanoic acids. Instead, aCD patients showed increased levels of propionic, isohexanoic, and 2-ethylhexanoic acids, and a lower abundance of isovaleric and 2-methylbutyricacids when compared to HC. In addition, compared to aCD patients, pCD patients showed a higher abundance of isobutyric and octadecanoic acid. Finally, the immunological analysis of duodenal biopsy revealed a lower percentage of CD4
+ T lymphocytes in pCD infiltrate compared to that observed in aCD patients. The functional characterization of T cells documented a pro-inflammatory immune response in both aCD and pCD patients, but the pCD patients showed a higher percentage of Th0/Th17 and a lower percentage of Th1/Th17., Conclusion: The results of the present study show, for the first time, that the duodenal microbiota of patients with pCD does not differ substantially from that of aCD; however, serum FFAs and local T cells displayed a distinctive profile between pCD, aCD, and HC. In conclusion, our result may help to shed new light on the "gut microbiota-immunity axis," lipid metabolites, and duodenal immune response in overt CD and pCD patients, opening new paradigms in understanding the pathogenesis behind CD progression., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Federica, Edda, Daniela, Simone, Giulia, Gabriele, Marta, Marco, Gianluca, Elena, Matteo, Serena, Matteo, Amedeo and Salvatore.)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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