Dengue is the most widespread mosquito-borne viral disease of man and spreading at an alarming rate. Socio-economic inequality has long been thought to contribute to providing an environment for viral propagation. However, identifying socio-economic (SE) risk factors is confounded by intra-urban daily human mobility, with virus being ferried across cities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe general purpose of the primary and secondary data available in this article is to support an integrated assessment of scenarios of crop-livestock integration at the territorial level i.e. of exchanges between arable and livestock farms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDengue, the most widespread urban vector-borne disease, is transmitted to human by the mosquito Aedes aegypti. Its distribution in urban areas is heterogeneous over time and space. In time, it is linked to seasonal variations such as warm and cold seasons, as well as rainy and dry seasons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: No European data currently describe the relation between neighbourhood socio-economic status (SES) and rates of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). This study aims to analyse this effect with a robust deprivation index.
Methods: Data about all OHCA in Paris were collected prospectively between 2000 and 2010.
Background: The benefits of available automatic external defibrillators (AEDs) for out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCAs) are well known, but strategies for their deployment outdoors remain somewhat arbitrary. Our study sought to assess different strategies for AED deployment.
Methods: All OHCAs in Paris between 2000 and 2010 were prospectively recorded and geocoded.
The expansion in the geographical distribution of vector-borne diseases is a much emphasized consequence of climate change, as are the consequences of urbanization for diseases that are already endemic, which may be even more important for public health. In this paper, we focus on dengue, the most widespread urban vector-borne disease. Largely urban with a tropical/subtropical distribution and vectored by a domesticated mosquito, Aedes aegypti, dengue poses a serious public health threat.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo principal component analyses of anxiety were undertaken investigating two strains of mice (ABP/Le and C57BL/6ByJ) in two different experiments, both classical tests for assessing anxiety in rodents. The elevated plus-maze and staircase were used for the first experiment, and a free exploratory paradigm and light-dark discrimination were used for the second. The components in the analyses produced definitions of four fundamental behavior patterns: novelty-induced anxiety, general activity, exploratory behavior, and decision making.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe <
Fear can be conceived as a functional defense behavior system representing a part of the innate species-specific behavioral repertoire (ethogram), basic to the survival of individuals and species. Its function is to protect living beings against dangerous, threatening and aversive situations. A distinction is made between anticipatory defense behaviors released by potential dangers and those elicited by effective dangers, especially predators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMelatonin is a neurohormone synthesized in the pineal gland during the dark period in all species, including humans. The diversity and differences in melatonin receptor distribution in the brain and extracerebral organs suggest multiple functional roles for melatonin. Administration of melatonin agonists reduces neophobia and treatment with a melatonin antagonist during the dark period reverses the anxiolytic-like effect of endogenous melatonin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn aqueous alcohol extract of Eschscholzia californica (Ec) has been evaluated for benzodiazepine, neuroleptic, antidepressant, antihistaminic and analgesic properties, in order to complete the study of the sedative and anxiolytic effects previously demonstrated. The plant extract did not protect mice against the convulsant effects of pentylenetetrazol, and did not cause muscle relaxant effects but appeared to possess an affinity for the benzodiazepine receptor: thus, flumazenil, an antagonist of these receptors, suppressed the sedative and anxiolytic effects of the extract. The Ec extract induced peripheral analgesic effects in mice but did not possess antidepressant, neuroleptic or antihistaminic effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new series of 3,4-dihydro-3-amino-2H-1-benzopyran derivatives (1 and 2) bearing various substituents on the 5-position was successfully prepared via palladium-mediated cross-coupling reactions. Some of the new compounds showed high affinity for 5-HT1A and 5-HT7 receptors. The best affinity for the 5-HT1A and 5-HT7 receptors was obtained for 2b (Ki = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZhongguo Yao Li Xue Bao
September 1999
Aim: To study the effect of S-21007, a 5-HT3 partial agonist in different animal models of anxiety in mice.
Methods: S-21007 effects were evaluated in the behavior tests after intraperitoneal and oral acute treatment or in the light/dark test after both acute and chronic treatments.
Results: S-21007 presented anxiolytic-like properties after acute administration in the light/dark box test, the mirrored chamber test, and the elevated plus-maze at low doses 10 ng.
The adaptation of the locomotor activity rhythm to a daylight reversal was previously found to be faster in C57BL/6 mice, which present a low level of melatonin, than in C3H/He mice, which exhibit a large nocturnal melatonin peak. Because pinealectomy has been shown to accelerate resynchronisation time in rats after a daylight reversal, we investigated the involvement of melatonin in the resynchronisation rate of locomotor activity rhythm in C57BL/6 and C3H/He strains. We first tested the effects of melatonin, administered at zeitgeber time (ZT) 20 (with ZT0 corresponding to light onset) for the 3 days preceding the daylight reversal, on the reentrainment of locomotor activity rhythm in both strains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe anxiolytic-like properties of melatonin have been established in rodents. The present study investigated the possible involvement of melatonin receptors/binding sites in the regulation of emotional responsiveness in mice, using an mt1/MT2 receptor specific agonist (S 23478) and two specific ligands of MT3 binding sites with agonistic properties (N-acetylserotonin (NAS) and 5-methoxycarbonylamino N-acetyltryptamine (5-MCA-NAT)). We examined the behavioural effects of these compounds in C3H/He mice confronted with two anxiety models: the free-exploratory test, in which C3H/He mice present neophobic reactions ("trait" anxiety), and the light/dark choice test, which is an unconditioned conflict test (inducing "state" anxiety).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn rodents, exposure to chronic mild stress (CMS) is known to induce unresponsiveness to environmental stimuli, as well as sleep disturbances, suggesting some analogies between this syndrome and human depression. Furthermore, numerous studies reported a decrease in nocturnal melatonin concentration in depressed patients, compared with controls. The present study was conducted to test a possible preventative action of daily treatment with melatonin on behavioural alterations induced in C3H/He mice by CMS exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Pharmacol
December 1999
Pineal melatonin secretion occurs at night in all vertebrates and the duration of its secretion is negatively correlated with day length. As short-day exposure was previously shown to decrease emotional behaviour of mice toward an unfamiliar environment, the present study was designed to determine whether such behavioural changes could be mediated by melatonin. In a first experiment, the effects of a 3-week exposure to various day lengths (18h-6h, 12h-12h and 6h-18h light-dark conditions) on neophobic behaviour (free-exploratory paradigm) were examined in both BALB/c mice, which exhibit a very transitory melatonin peak of low amplitude in a 12h light-12h dark cycle, and C3H/He mice, which present a clear melatonin rise during the night-time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacol Biochem Behav
January 2000
The distribution of benzodiazepine receptors in the brain of neophobic BALB/c mice was studied by autoradiographic analysis using [3H]-diazepam and compared to that of the same receptors of the "nonemotional" C57BL/6 mice. This technique revealed no significant interstrain difference except for a lower density of diazepam binding sites in the amygdala of BALB/c mice. Therefore, the expression of benzodiazepine receptors in the amygdala of the two strains of mice were quantified by binding studies on brain membranes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Processes
October 1999
Anxious behaviour constitutes one of the markers that best differentiated the 'non-emotional' C57BL/6 (C57) strain from the 'emotional' BALB/c (BALB) strain. Interestingly, C3H/He (C3H) mice, which possess a common genetic background to BALB, have also been found to be 'emotional' mice. The present study first illustrates that BALB and C3H mice exhibit a higher emotional level both in non-constraining situation (free-exploratory paradigm) and in a stressful one (light/dark choice test).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen exposed to a free-exploratory situation, BALB/c mice are well known to exhibit strong avoidance responses toward unfamiliar places (neophobia). Because melatonin was found to significantly reduce neophobia in BALB/c mice, it seemed interesting to examine potential antagonistic effects of S 22153, a new melatonin mt1 and MT2 receptor ligand, on the neophobia-reducing properties of melatonin in BALB/c mice confronted with the free-exploratory paradigm. S 22153 was able to block, in a dose-dependent manner, the anxiolytic-like properties of melatonin when it was administered 5 min before melatonin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacol Biochem Behav
August 1999
Anxiolytic properties of melatonin in rodents had usually been examined in behavioral tests based on stressful situations, i.e., in animal models of "state" anxiety.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropharmacology
October 1998
The effect of paternal alcohol exposure on neurochemical and behavioral parameters was investigated using as a model system glial cells derived from newborn rat brain and cultured for 4 weeks. The total brain neurochemical parameters from rats born to mothers sired by an alcohol treated father were also investigated. Enzymatic markers of nerve cell development (enolase isoenzymes and glutamine synthetase) and the defense system (superoxide dismutase) against free radicals formed during alcohol degradation were measured in order to evaluate nerve cell damage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is some evidence of melatonin implication in the nycthemeral regulation of running activity rhythm in rodents. Because some inbred strains of mice such as C57BL/6 and BALB/c have been generally found to present no nocturnal melatonin peak, in contrast to others such as C3H/He and CBA mice, the aim of this study was to examine the adaptation of daily locomotor activity to a light/dark cycle phase shift in these four strains. An apparatus consisting of two boxes connected by a tunnel was used to record spontaneous locomotor activity, defined as the number of transitions between the two boxes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPineal melatonin secretion occurs at night in all vertebrates and the duration of its secretion is negatively correlated with day length. As an anxiolytic activity of melatonin has been shown in rats and mice, this study examined possible changes of emotional reactivity in response to day length variations in Swiss mice. Three groups of mice were observed in a free-exploratory test: a group submitted to a short-day exposure (6:18 h light-dark cycle) for 2 weeks, a group submitted to a long-day exposure (18:6 h light-dark cycle) for 2 weeks and a control group which was maintained in housing 12:12 h light-dark cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn continuation of our previous work on piperazinopyrrolothienopyrazine derivatives, three series of piperazinopyridopyrrolopyrazines, piperazinopyrroloquinoxalines, and piperazinopyridopyrroloquinoxalines were prepared and evaluated as 5-HT3 receptor ligands. The chemical modifications performed within these new series led to structure-activity relationships regarding both high affinity and selectivity for the 5-HT3 receptors that are in agreement with those established previously for the pyrrolothienopyrazine series. The best compound (8a) obtained in these new series is in the picomolar range of affinity for 5-HT3 receptors with a selectivity higher than 10(6).
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