Publications by authors named "T H Flowers"

Climate change is likely to affect the ability of world agricultural systems to provide food, fibre, and fuel for the growing world population, especially since the area of salinised land will increase. However, as few species of plants (less than 1% of all plant species) can tolerate saline soils, we believe it is important to evaluate their potential as crops for salinised soils. We have analysed the economic and potential economic uses of plants that are listed in the database eHALOPH, including the most tolerant species, halophytes.

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There exists a global challenge of feeding the growing human population of the world and supplying its energy needs without exhausting global resources. This challenge includes the competition for biomass between food and fuel production. The aim of this paper is to review to what extent the biomass of plants growing under hostile conditions and on marginal lands could ease that competition.

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Article Synopsis
  • A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted to explore the relationship between pre-existing celiac disease (CD) and outcomes of COVID-19, as there is limited scientific evidence on this topic.
  • The analysis included data from 11 studies with a total of 44,378 CD patients, revealing a SARS-CoV-2 infection rate of 4.25% among them.
  • Findings suggested that having CD does not significantly increase the risk of hospitalization or mortality due to COVID-19 compared to individuals without CD, but more research is needed for conclusive results.
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Background: Recycling tenofovir and lamivudine/emtricitabine with dolutegravir (TLD) after failure of non-nucleoside transcriptase inhibitor first-line antiretroviral therapy is more tolerable and scalable than dolutegravir plus optimized nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors. Studies have demonstrated TLD's efficacy as second line, but long-term follow-up is limited.

Methods: ARTIST is a single arm, prospective, interventional study conducted in Khayelitsha, South Africa, which switched 62 adults with 2 viral loads >1000 copies/mL from tenofovir, lamivudine/emtricitabine, and an non-nucleoside transcriptase inhibitor to TLD.

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