Publications by authors named "Picard J"

Background: Melioidosis, caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, is an important disease that is endemic in areas of northern Australia and can cause a wide range of clinical signs in people and animals. There is limited published data on the disease in marsupials.

Case Report: Two captive red-legged pademelons (Thylogale stigmatica) with collective signs of lethargy, dysphagia and bloody oral discharge were submitted for necropsy and showed variations in pathology findings ranging from multifocal abscessation in various tissues to evidence of fulminant septicaemia.

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  • Leptospira species are globally distributed, predominantly in tropical areas, and can infect various animals; they are primarily spread through urine, though some species, like horses, may also harbor the bacteria in their reproductive tract.
  • A study was conducted on 50 healthy non-breeding mares to investigate leptospiral infection via serum and endometrial swabs, in addition to urine samples where available.
  • The study revealed a 48% seroprevalence of leptospirosis with the most common serovars being Arborea, Bratislava, and Australis, while PCR testing found low positivity in endometrial and urine samples, marking the first identification of serovar Bratislava in Australian horses.
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A new species of sucking louse, Hoplopleura kuhnludwigi (Phthiraptera: Hoplopleuridae), from the Cape York rat Rattus leucopus cooktownensis Tate, 1951 (Rodentia: Muridae) is described and illustrated with photos and drawings. The host rat(s) were trapped in Northeast Queensland, Australia and identified using morphological characters and DNA sequencing. Hoplopleura kuhnludwigi is the first louse species to be described on R.

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Does prompting people to volunteer for the climate spur or hamper further environmental engagement? We address this question in an online experiment with 10,670 German respondents. First, respondents read a text explaining how to help scientists fight climate change. Second, participants choose whether to do a real-effort task, like the behavior emphasized in the text.

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Introduction: European regulations have recently moved towards more stringent requirements for demonstrating the safety and performance of medical devices (MDs).

Objective: To apply an innovative testing method using medical simulation to the evaluation of three medical devices at different stages of their life cycle.

Method: The methodology for evaluating DMs using simulation is based on seven stages: definition of the context, training, construction of a scenario to test the DM, validation of the scenario, realization of the scenario, evaluation of the scenario by the players and validation and exploitation of the results.

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Marantaceae forests are tropical rainforests characterized by a continuous understory layer of perennial giant herbs and a near absence of tree regeneration. Although widespread in West-Central Africa, Marantaceae forests have rarely been considered in the international literature. Yet, they pose key challenges and opportunities for theoretical ecology that transcend the borders of the continent.

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Introduction: Yellow fever is caused by an RNA flavivirus. Immunisation in conjunction with vector control is at the forefront of yellow fever control and elimination.

Objective: This narrative review describes the impact and importance of yellow fever vaccinations for northern Australian health practitioners.

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  • - Cerebral air embolism, a rare cause of acute ischemic stroke, is gaining attention in medical literature, but delayed ischemia from it is not commonly reported.
  • - A case involved a 75-year-old man who became unresponsive, and imaging revealed air in his brain veins and signs of potential ischemia.
  • - The study emphasizes that cerebral air emboli can lead to delayed ischemia not seen initially, suggesting that patients may need intensive care and repeated imaging regardless of initial results.
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Objective: To evaluate the performance of a comorbidity-based risk-adjustment model for surgical-site infection (SSI) reporting and benchmarking using a panel of variables extracted from the hospital discharge database (HDD), including comorbidities, compared to other models that use variables from different data sources.

Methods: The French national surveillance program for SSI (SPICMI) has collected data from voluntary hospitals in the first 6 months of 2020 and 2021, for 16 selected surgery procedures, using a semiautomated algorithm for detection. Four risk-adjustment models were selected with logistic regression analysis, combining the different patterns of variables: National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance System (NNIS) risk-index components, individual operative data, and 6 individual comorbidities according to (ICD-10) diagnosis: obesity, diabetes, malnutrition, hypertension, cancer, or immunosuppression.

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Objectives: To highlight important clinical aspects of Persistent Müllerian duct syndrome (PMDS). PMDS belongs to the group of differences of sex development. It is attributed to mutations in genes encoding for the anti-Müllerian hormone or its type II receptor (AMHR2) and inherited via an autosomal recessive transmission.

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Objective: To provide guidelines to define the place of human factors in the management of critical situations in anaesthesia and critical care.

Design: A committee of nineteen experts from the SFAR and GFHS learned societies was set up. A policy of declaration of links of interest was applied and respected throughout the guideline-producing process.

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Fungi are ubiquitous in the environment and part of the commensal microflora on the conjunctiva of equine eyes. North Queensland, being tropical, presents an ideal environment for fungi growth. When the cornea is injured, fungi can invade the corneal stroma, resulting in keratomycosis.

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Conventional gas-liquid phase transitions feature a coexistence line that has a monotonic and positive slope in line with our intuition that cooling always leads to condensation. Here, we study the inverse phenomenon, condensation of adsorbed organic molecules into dense domains upon heating. Our considerations are motivated by recent experiments [Aeschlimann et al.

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Whilst the re-introduction of fire can contribute to biodiversity conservation in Fennoscandian forests, the effects on reindeer herding remain uncertain. To assess the short- and long-term effects of prescribed burning on lichen supply in a productive forest landscape, we developed a model simulating lichen biomass available for reindeer grazing, covering 300 years and 1500 pine stands, under different soil preparation scenarios, including different prescribed burning regimes and mechanical scarification. Our simulations revealed that burning 25-50% of yearly clear-cuts has the potential to stop, or even reverse, reindeer lichen decline at landscape scale after 70 years, greatly surpassing the short-term losses caused by burning.

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Study Question: Can mutations of genes other than AMH or AMHR2, namely PPP1R12A coding myosin phosphatase, lead to persistent Müllerian duct syndrome (PMDS)?

Summary Answer: The detection of PPP1R12A truncation mutations in five cases of PMDS suggests that myosin phosphatase is involved in Müllerian regression, independently of the anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) signaling cascade.

What Is Known Already: Mutations of AMH and AMHR2 are detectable in an overwhelming majority of PMDS patients but in 10% of cases, both genes are apparently normal, suggesting that other genes may be involved.

Study Design, Size, Duration: DNA samples from 39 PMDS patients collected from 1990 to present, in which Sanger sequencing had failed to detect biallelic AMH or AMHR2 mutations, were screened by massive parallel sequencing.

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: The urgency of having fair and trustworthy competency-based assessment in medical training is growing. Simulation is increasingly recognized as a potent method for building and assessing applied competencies. The growing use of simulation and its application in summative assessment calls for comprehensive and rigorously designed programs.

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In the testis, Leydig cells produce steroid hormones that are needed to masculinize typical genetic males during fetal development and to initiate and maintain spermatogenesis at puberty and adulthood, respectively. Steroidogenesis is initiated by the transfer of cholesterol from the outer to the inner mitochondrial membrane through the action of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (STAR). Given its importance for the steroidogenic process, the regulation of gene expression has been the subject of numerous studies.

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Wrong route medication errors due to tubing misconnections can lead to serious adverse events, especially when they concern the neuraxial and perineural routes. It has been favoured by the use of the universal Luer connector for medical devices with a risk of confusion with the intravenous route. The prevention of these errors is based on passive measures such as using specific small-bore connectors, and active measures such as reading Specific labelling which must be systematically affixed to the routes.

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A novel alphaherpesvirus was detected in a captive adult, lactating, female koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) admitted to James Cook University Veterinary Emergency Teaching & Clinical Hospital in March 2019, showing signs of anorexia and severe respiratory disease. Postmortem examination revealed gross pathology indicative of pneumonia. Histopathology demonstrated a chronic interstitial pneumonia, multifocal necrotising adrenalitis and hepatitis.

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Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) is a member of the TGF-β family produced essentially by the supporting somatic cells of the testis. Initially known for its inhibiting role upon the development of female internal organs, AMH has been shown to exert many other effects namely upon germ cells. Circulating AMH reflects the ovarian reserve of young developing follicles and is used to evaluate the fertility potential in assisted reproduction.

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Background: Communication and teamwork are critical non-technical skills in the operating theatre. However, prevention of events associated with communication failures by large simulation-based programs remains to be evaluated. The objective was to assess the impact of an interprofessional simulation-based training course on communication, teamwork, checklist adherence, and safety culture.

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