Publications by authors named "H Charles"

The pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, is an emerging model system in functional and comparative genomics, in part due to the availability of new genomic approaches and the different sequencing and annotation efforts that the community has dedicated to this important crop pest insect. The pea aphid is also used as a model to study fascinating biological traits of aphids, such as their extensive polyphenisms, their bacteriocyte-confined nutritional symbiosis, or their adaptation to the highly unbalanced diet represented by phloem sap. To get insights into the molecular basis of all these processes, it is important to have an appropriate annotation of transcription factors (TFs), which would enable the reconstruction/inference of gene regulatory networks in aphids.

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  • - The study analyzed 3847 patients who suffered from a transient ischemic attack or minor ischemic stroke, focusing on those without traditional risk factors (like hypertension and diabetes) to compare their outcomes with those who did have risk factors.
  • - After one year, the risk of major cardiovascular events (MACE) was similar between the two groups, but after five years, those without traditional risk factors had a significantly lower risk of MACE (7.9% vs 13.9%).
  • - In patients without traditional risk factors, arterial stenosis was identified as a critical predictor for MACE, indicating that while their long-term risk was lower, they were not entirely without risk.
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  • * The decline during the pandemic affected certain species differently, and the data suggested that adult males were more likely to experience azithromycin resistance compared to adult females across various Shigella types.
  • * There’s a concerning trend of increased antibiotic resistance, particularly in non-traveling adult males, leading us to recommend improved surveillance to assess how travel and sexual behavior contribute to the spread of multidrug-resistant Shigella infections.
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Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic profoundly affected nurses globally. As frontline workers, nurses faced increased responsibilities amid challenges such as isolation, infection risks, family obligations and disrupted social support systems. Coping with these challenges was associated with adverse mental health outcomes.

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