Publications by authors named "J B McClintock"

Chemical investigation of the Antarctic sponge sp. has previously led to the identification of new suberitane derivatives, some of which show bioactivity toward respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Our ongoing NMR-guided investigation of new specimens of the sponge resulted in the isolation of five new analogs (-), previously reported suberitenones A-D (-), and oxaspirosuberitenone ().

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The psychological burden of type 1 diabetes (T1D) can negatively impact health outcomes. This study evaluates the prevalence of low mood (WHO-5), disordered eating (DEPS-R), diabetes distress (PAID) and fear of hypoglycaemia (HFS-II), in a sample of 250 New Zealand adults (8.4% Māori/91.

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Introduction: Associative connections have previously been identified between nasopharyngeal infections and infant mortality. The nasopharyngeal microbiome may potentially influence the severity of these infections.

Methods: We conducted an analysis of a longitudinal prospective cohort study of 1,981 infants who underwent nasopharyngeal sampling from 1 week through 14 weeks of age at 2-3-week intervals.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study investigates the trends and severity of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) in Waikato, New Zealand, from 2000 to 2019, revealing a dramatic increase in DKA admissions, particularly among Māori and women.
  • The research analyzed patient data to categorize DKA cases by type, ethnicity, social deprivation, ICU admission, and hospital stay duration, finding that two-thirds of admissions were recurrent DKA events.
  • Key findings highlight the urgent need to address healthcare inequities and improve mental health support for patients, especially for vulnerable groups like youth and indigenous populations dealing with diabetes.
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Meiosis and syngamy generate an alternation between two ploidy stages, but the timing of these two processes varies widely across taxa, thereby generating life cycle diversity. One hypothesis suggests that life cycles with long-lived haploid stages are correlated with selfing, asexual reproduction, or both. Though mostly studied in angiosperms, selfing and asexual reproduction are often associated with marginal habitats.

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