Background: The 2020 pandemic of SARS-CoV-2 causing COVID-19 disease is an unprecedented global emergency. COVID-19 appears to be a disease with an early phase where the virus replicates, coinciding with the first presentation of symptoms, followed by a later 'inflammatory' phase which results in severe disease in some individuals. It is known from other rapidly progressive infections such as sepsis and influenza that early treatment with antimicrobials is associated with a better outcome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: The current practice in immunochemistry staining for Lynch syndrome (LS) is to use a four-antibody panel, (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2) to screen for the four Mismatch Repair (MMR) gene expressions involved. We hypothesised that testing two antibodies (MSH6 and PMS2), followed by the other two only when there is loss of expression of the first two antibodies, would be equally effective as a four antibody panel in detecting LS. This hypothesis is based on the biochemical binding properties of the MMR proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe addition of iron to high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll regions induces phytoplankton blooms that take up carbon. Carbon export from the surface layer and, in particular, the ability of the ocean and sediments to sequester carbon for many years remains, however, poorly quantified. Here we report data from the CROZEX experiment in the Southern Ocean, which was conducted to test the hypothesis that the observed north-south gradient in phytoplankton concentrations in the vicinity of the Crozet Islands is induced by natural iron fertilization that results in enhanced organic carbon flux to the deep ocean.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Accurate measurement of temperature is vital in the intensive care setting. A prospective trial was performed to compare the accuracy of tympanic, urinary, and axillary temperatures with that of pulmonary artery (PA) core temperature measurements.
Design: A total of 110 patients were enrolled in a prospective observational cohort study.
Long-term research in the western English Channel, undertaken by the marine laboratories in Plymouth, is described and details of survey methods, sites, and time series given in this chapter. Major findings are summarized and their limitations outlined. Current research, with recent reestablishment and expansion of many sampling programmes, is presented, and possible future approaches are indicated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiatoms dominate spring bloom phytoplankton assemblages in temperate waters and coastal upwelling regions of the global ocean. Copepods usually dominate the zooplankton in these regions and are the prey of many larval fish species. Recent laboratory studies suggest that diatoms may have a deleterious effect on the success of copepod egg hatching.
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