3,937 results on '"Barreras, A."'
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2. Influences of a Supplemental Blend of Essential Oils Plus 25-Hydroxy-Vit-D3 and Zilpaterol Hydrochloride (β2 Agonist) on Growth Performance and Carcass Measures of Feedlot Lambs Finished under Conditions of High Ambient Temperature.
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Estrada-Angulo, Alfredo, Verdugo-Insúa, Moisés, Escobedo-Gallegos, Lucía, Castro-Pérez, Beatriz, Urías-Estrada, Jesús, Ponce-Barraza, Elizama, Mendoza-Cortez, Daniel, Ríos-Rincón, Francisco, Monge-Navarro, Francisco, Barreras, Alberto, Zinn, Richard, Corona-Gochi, Luis, and Plascencia, Alejandro
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carcass ,energetics ,essential oils ,feedlot lambs ,growth performance ,zilpaterol chlorhydrate - Abstract
Forty-eight Pelibuey × Katahdin male intact lambs (25.12 ± 3.79 kg LW) were used in a 70-d growing-finishing trial. Dietary treatments consisted of total mixed corn-based diet supplemented with: (1) no feed additives (Control); (2) 150 mg of essential oils blend plus 0.10 mg of 25-hydroxy-Vit-D3/kg diet offered throughout the 70-d experimental period (EOD3); (3) Control diet fed during the first 35 days and zilpaterol hydrochloride (ZH) supplementation at 6 mg/kg diet offered during the final 35 days of the experiment (32 days with ZH with a withdrawal 3-d before harvest), and (4) basal diet supplemented with EOD3 during first 35 days finishing, and EOD3 in combination with ZH (EOD3 + ZH) during the subsequent 32-days with ZH withdrawal 3 days before harvest. The temperature-humidity index during the experiment averaged 80.4 ± 3.2. There were no treatment interactions (p > 0.20) on growth performance and carcass measures. Supplemental EOD3 did not affect (p = 0.43) dry matter intake (DMI), but increased (p < 0.01) carcass adjusted average daily gain (ADG, 9.2%), gain efficiency (GF, 6.7%), and observed vs. expected dietary net energy for maintenance (NEm, 4.8%) and for gain (NEg, 6.4%). Supplemental ZH did not affect dry matter intake (DMI, p = 0.50) but increased (p < 0.01) carcass adjusted ADG (14.5%), GF (13%) and observed vs. expected dietary NEm (9%) and NEg (11.7%). Compared to control lambs, the combination of both additives increased ADG (24.9%), GF (21.2%), and observed vs. expected dietary NEm and NEg (14.2% and 18.9%, respectively). There were no treatment interactions on carcass characteristics, visceral organ mass, or on gene expression of IGF1, IGF2 and mTOR in longissimus muscle (LM). Supplemental EOD3 increased hot carcass weight (HCW; 4.0%, p < 0.01) but did not affect other carcass measures. Supplemental EOD3 decreased (3%, p = 0.03) intestine mass weight (g intestine/kg empty body weight). Supplemental ZH increased HCW (6%, p < 0.01), dressing percentage (1.7%, p = 0.04), and LM area (9.7%, p < 0.01), and decreased kidney-pelvic-fat percentage (16.2%, p < 0.01), fat thickness (14.7%, p = 0.03), and visceral fat. Compared to controls, the combination of EOD3 with ZH increased HCW (10.2%). It is concluded that growth performance responses to supplemental EOD3 and ZH are additive. Both supplements can be fed in combination without detrimental effects on expected benefits when fed separately. In addition, ZH supplementation improves carcass traits.
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- 2024
3. Minnelide suppresses GVHD and enhances survival while maintaining GVT responses.
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Copsel, Sabrina, Garrido, Vanessa, Barreras, Henry, Bader, Cameron, Pfeiffer, Brent, Mateo-Victoriano, Beatriz, Wolf, Dietlinde, Gallardo, Miguel, Paczesny, Sophie, Benjamin, Cara, Villarino, Alejandro, Saluja, Ashok, Levy, Robert, and Komanduri, Krishna
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Cellular immune response ,Immunology ,Stem cell transplantation ,Transplantation ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Animals ,Mice ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Diterpenes ,Epoxy Compounds ,Phenanthrenes ,Humans ,Transplantation ,Homologous ,Female ,Cyclophosphamide ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Graft vs Leukemia Effect ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Male - Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (aHSCT) can cure patients with otherwise fatal leukemias and lymphomas. However, the benefits of aHSCT are limited by graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Minnelide, a water-soluble analog of triptolide, has demonstrated potent antiinflammatory and antitumor activity in several preclinical models and has proven both safe and efficacious in clinical trials for advanced gastrointestinal malignancies. Here, we tested the effectiveness of Minnelide in preventing acute GVHD as compared with posttransplant cyclophosphamide (PTCy). Strikingly, we found Minnelide improved survival, weight loss, and clinical scores in an MHC-mismatched model of aHSCT. These benefits were also apparent in minor MHC-matched aHSCT and xenogeneic HSCT models. Minnelide was comparable to PTCy in terms of survival, GVHD clinical score, and colonic length. Notably, in addition to decreased donor T cell infiltration early after aHSCT, several regulatory cell populations, including Tregs, ILC2s, and myeloid-derived stem cells in the colon were increased, which together may account for Minnelides GVHD suppression after aHSCT. Importantly, Minnelides GVHD prevention was accompanied by preservation of graft-versus-tumor activity. As Minnelide possesses anti-acute myeloid leukemia (anti-AML) activity and is being applied in clinical trials, together with the present findings, we conclude that this compound might provide a new approach for patients with AML undergoing aHSCT.
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- 2024
4. The exciting potential and daunting challenge of using GPS human-mobility data for epidemic modeling
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Barreras, Francisco and Watts, Duncan J.
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- 2024
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5. Navigating Point-of-Care Reimbursement in Critical Care, Challenges and Current State
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Yamanaka, Travis, Kaul, Malvika, and Barreras, Nicholas
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- 2024
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6. Teachers’ attitudes towards the use of virtual simulations: Design and validation of a questionnaire
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Alicia Palacios, Rosa Gómez, Álvaro Barreras, and Daniel Moreno Mediavilla
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virtual simulations ,teacher attitude ,questionnaire ,secondary teaching ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
Virtual simulations in science classes are not used as often as might be expected if we consider the demonstrated improvement in students’ conceptual learning, the development of their skills, and their acquisition of positive emotions. This makes it necessary to identify teachers’ attitudes and perceptions to the use of these tools. The aim of this work is to construct and validate an instrument for measuring the attitudes of secondary education teachers towards the use of virtual simulations in STEM fields. Based on an in-depth theoretical review, we developed an initial questionnaire that was subjected to a process of expert validation and a pilot study. A questionnaire comprising 27 items was obtained, which was applied to 783 secondary school teachers in Spain. After carrying out confirmatory factor analysis, a scale comprising five factors was obtained. The psychometric analyses displayed satisfactory fit indices that prove the discriminant and convergent validity of the model. The result is a useful instrument for determining the principal factors that discourage teachers from habitually using simulations. This enables the design of training proposals that take teachers’ prior attitudes into account.
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- 2024
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7. Preparation and Characterization of Zein-Metformin/Gelatin Nanofibers by Coaxial Electrospinning
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Eneida Azaret Montaño-Grijalva, Francisco Rodríguez-Félix, Lorena Armenta-Villegas, Carmen Lizette Del Toro-Sanchez, Elizabeth Carvajal-Millan, Wilfrido Torres-Arreola, Dora Evelia Rodríguez-Félix, José Agustín Tapia-Hernández, Carlos Gregorio Barreras-Urbina, Itzel Yanira López-Peña, Silvia Elena Burruel-Ibarra, Irela Santos-Sauceda, and José Luis Pompa-Ramos
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Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2024
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8. Response of chickpea genotypes (Cicer arietinum L.) to the fungi complex that causes wilt
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Cota-Barreras, Carlos I., Garcfa-Estrada, Raymundo S., Avalos-Castro, Raul, Garcfa-Leon, Elizabeth, Ramfrez-Soto, Milagros, Lopez-Corrales, Rosalia, and Tovar-Pedraza, Juan M.
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- 2024
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9. Vanishing of the Infinitesimal First Cohomology of Poisson Submanifolds
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García-Beltrán, D., Ruíz-Pantaleón, J. C., and Velasco-Barreras, E.
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Mathematics - Symplectic Geometry ,Mathematics - Differential Geometry ,53D17, 17B63, 17B56, 53C05, 17B60, 16W25 - Abstract
We present sufficient conditions for the vanishing of the first cohomology of the so-called infinitesimal Poisson algebra of a Poisson submanifold., Comment: 6 pages
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- 2023
10. Valorization of Agave angustifolia Bagasse Biomass from the Bacanora Industry in Sonora, Mexico as a Biochar Material: Preparation, Characterization, and Potential Application in Ibuprofen Removal
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Hylse Aurora Ruiz-Velducea, María de Jesús Moreno-Vásquez, Héctor Guzmán, Javier Esquer, Francisco Rodríguez-Félix, Abril Zoraida Graciano-Verdugo, Irela Santos-Sauceda, Idania Emedith Quintero-Reyes, Carlos Gregorio Barreras-Urbina, Claudia Vásquez-López, Silvia Elena Burruel-Ibarra, Karla Hazel Ozuna-Valencia, and José Agustín Tapia-Hernández
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bioadsorbent ,adsorption ,bagasse ,Agave angustifolia ,removal ,ibuprofen ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
The aim of this research was to separate the over-the-counter nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), ibuprofen, from an aqueous solution using the adsorption method, as this NSAID is one of the most globally consumed. An adsorbent was crafted from the Agave angustifolia bagasse, a byproduct of the bacanora industry (a representative alcoholic beverage of the state of Sonora, in northwestern Mexico). Three bioadsorbents (BCT1, BCT2, and BCT3) were produced via pyrolysis at a temperature of 550 °C, with slight variations in each process for every bioadsorbent. The bioadsorbents achieved material yields of 25.65%, 31.20%, and 38.28% on dry basis respectively. Characterization of the bagasse and adsorbents involved scanning electron microscopy (SEM), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The biomass morphology exhibited a cracked surface with holes induced via the bacanora production process, while the surface of the bioadsorbents before ibuprofen adsorption was highly porous, with a substantial surface area. After adsorption, the surface of the bioadsorbents was transformed into a smoother grayish layer. The macromolecules of cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin were present in the biomass. According to functional groups, cellulose and hemicellulose degraded to form the resulting bioadsorbents, although traces of lignin persisted after the pyrolysis process was applied to the biomass. In an adsorption study, BCT1 and BCT2 bioadsorbents successfully removed 100% of ibuprofen from aqueous solutions with an initial concentration of 62.6 mg/L. In conclusion, the biocarbon derived from Agave angustifolia bagasse exhibited significant potential for removing ibuprofen via adsorption from aqueous solutions.
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- 2024
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11. Effect of Combining the Ionophore Monensin with Natural Antimicrobials Supplemented in the Last Phase of Finishing of Lambs: Growth Performance, Dietary Energetics, and Carcass Characteristics.
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Estrada-Angulo, Alfredo, Escobedo-Gallegos, Lucía, Arteaga-Wences, Yesica, Ramos-Méndez, Jorge, Quezada-Rubio, Jesús, Vizcarra-Chávez, Claudia, Valdés-García, Yissel, Barreras, Alberto, Plascencia, Alejandro, and Zinn, Richard
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carcass ,energetics ,growth-performance ,lambs ,monensin ,natural additives - Abstract
With the aim of evaluating the effect of combining an antibiotic ionophore with plant extracts and probiotics on the productive efficiency (performance and carcass) during the last phase of lamb fattening, 24 Pelibuey × Katahdin male lambs (38.47 ± 3.92 kg, initial weight) were fed with a high-energy diet during for 56 days, and assigned, under a complete randomized block design experiment to one of the following supplement treatments: (1) 28 mg of monensin/kg diet DM supplemented alone (MON), (2) combination of MON plus 2 g/kg diet of a product contained Bacillus subtilis 2.2 × 108 CFU kg diet DM (MON + BS), (3) combination of MON + BS plus 300 mg essential oils/kg diet DM (MON + BS + EO), and (4) BS alone. At the end of the feeding trial (56-d), lambs were slaughtered and carcass variables were measured. Compared to the rest of the treatments, combining MON with BS improved dietary NE by 3.4% and the efficiency of utilization of dietary energy consumed. Inclusion of EO in the MON + BS combination resulted in a similar average daily weight gain (ADG) and feed efficiency (GF) when compared with MON + BS, but showed a lower dietary net energy (NE), hot carcass weight, and dressing percentage. Lambs receiving BS alone showed greater average ADG and dry matter intake (DMI) than lambs receiving MON + BS + EO, but similar feed GF and dietary NE. There were no treatment effects on tissue composition, whole cut, or visceral organ mass. It was concluded that combining probiotics with the ionophore monensin can improve the efficiency of dietary energy utilization in the last phase of finishing. Probiotics supplemented alone result in greater ADG without a difference in dietary energy efficiency when compared with MON alone. Inclusion of EO in the MON + BS combination did not show advantages; on the contrary, it reduced carcass weight and dressing percentage. It is necessary to further research the potential complementary effects of combining diverse sources of natural additives with synthetic antibiotics.
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- 2023
12. Essential Oils Combined with Vitamin D3 or with Probiotic as an Alternative to the Ionophore Monensin Supplemented in High-Energy Diets for Lambs Long-Term Finished under Subtropical Climate.
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Escobedo-Gallegos, Lucía, Estrada-Angulo, Alfredo, Castro-Pérez, Beatriz, Urías-Estrada, Jesús, Calderón-Garay, Elizabeth, Ramírez-Santiago, Laura, Valdés-García, Yissel, Barreras, Alberto, Plascencia, Alejandro, and Zinn, Richard
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carcass ,energetics ,growth-performance ,lambs ,monensin ,natural additives - Abstract
Supplementation with natural additives such as essential oils (EO) or probiotics has resulted in comparable growth performance to that of supplemental monensin in fattening lambs in hot environments. Supra-supplementation levels of vitamin D3 improved the carcass weight and dressing percentage of steers fattened under tropical conditions. We hypothesized that certain combinations of these natural additives could be complementary. For this reason, a feeding trial was carried out using 48 Pelibuey × Katahdin non-castrated male lambs (107 ± 14 d age; 17.9 ± 2.51 kg LW). Lambs were fed an 88:12 concentrate to forage ratio basal diet supplemented (dry matter basis, DMI) with: (1) no additive (CON); (2) 28 mg monensin/kg diet (MON); (3) 150 mg of essential oils containing a combination of thymol, eugenol, vanillin, guaiac, and limonene plus 0.12 mg vitamin D3 (EO + D3)/kg diet; and (4) 300 mg of essential oils containing a combination of carvacrol and cynamaldehyde plus 2 g probiotic (2.2 × 108 CFU of bacillus subtilis/kg diet, EO + BS). Lambs were grouped by initial weight and assigned within six weight groupings to 24 pens (2 lambs/pen, 6 replicas per treatment) in a randomized complete block design. The experiment lasted 121 days. Daily maximal THI exceeded the 80 danger or emergency range for 119 days of the 121 days of the trial. Lambs supplemented with MON had similar DMI, growth performance, and dietary energetics to those of CON lambs. Lambs supplemented with EO + BS had a greater (9.2%, p ≤ 0.05) average daily gain (ADG) than the CON and MON groups due to enhanced (10.2%, p ≤ 0.05) dry matter intake. Thus, gain efficiency (GF) and estimated dietary energy were similar for CON, MON, and EO + BS. Lambs receiving EO + D3 had similar (0.254 vs. 0.262 kg/d) ADG but a lower DMI (8%, p < 0.05) compared with EO + BS lambs. Consequently, GF and estimated dietary net energy were greater (4.9 and 3.7%, respectively; p ≤ 0.05) for EO + D3 lambs. Even when ambient heat load was elevated, the efficiency of utilization of dietary energy (observed-to-expected dietary net energy) was close to 1.00 (0.992) expected for EO + D3 lambs. In contrast, efficiency of energy utilization was depressed by -4.4% for lambs on the other treatments. Compared with the other treatments, lambs receiving EO + D3 had greater longissimus muscle area (5.6%, p < 0.05) and lower kidney pelvic fat (21.8%, p ≤ 0.05). There were no treatment effects on shoulder tissue composition or whole cuts (expressed as % of cold carcass weight). Compared to CON, lambs that were fed with natural additives showed 3.5% lower (p ≤ 0.05) intestine mass. All supplemental additives decreased visceral fat mass, which was minimal with EO + D3 treatment. Combinations of essential oils with vitamins or probiotics were superior to antibiotic monensin in finishing diets for feedlot lambs. Combining EO with probiotics promoted DM intake and gain but not gain efficiency, while combining EO with vitamin D3 supra-supplementation increased dietary energy efficiency and improved some carcass characteristics in lambs fattening under high ambient heat loads.
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- 2023
13. Mandibular Myxoid Liposarcoma: a Case Study
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Barreras-Espinoza, Jorge Arturo, López-Uribe, Pamela Estefanía, Leyva-Moraga, Francisco Alberto, Leyva-Moraga, Fernando, Leyva-Moraga, Eduardo, Ocejo-Gallegos, Jesús Antonio, Burrola-Suárez, Martín Armando, Burgos-Claudio, Mónica I., Llanez-Grijalva, Martha María, and Martínez-Legorreta, Ulises
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- 2024
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14. Biopolymer-Derived Nanomaterials for Improved Fertilizer Efficiency
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Barreras-Urbina, Carlos Gregorio, Madera-Santana, Tomás Jesús, Montaño-Grijalva, Eneida Azaret, Figueroa-Enríquez, Cielo Estefanía, Álvarez-Moreno, Milagros Guadalupe, Tapia-Hernández, José Agustín, Estrella-Osuna, Luis Enrique, Prasad, Ram, Series Editor, Abd-Elsalam, Kamel A., editor, Hashim, Ayat F., editor, Ahmed, Farah K., editor, and Thomas, Sabu, editor
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- 2024
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15. Regulatory T Cell Amelioration of Graft-versus-Host Disease following Allogeneic/Xenogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation Using Mobilized Mouse and Human Peripheral Blood Donors.
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Barreras, Henry, Copsel, Sabrina, Bader, Cameron, Ding, Ying, Wolf, Dietlinde, Cash, Charles, Stacey, Caleb, Benjamin, Cara, Seavey, Mathew, Wolf, Jeffrey, Jasuja, Rahul, Pfeiffer, Brent, Hill, Geoffrey, Jurecic, Roland, Malek, Thomas, Levy, Robert, and Komanduri, Krishna
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Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,GVT ,Xenotransplantation ,Graft-versus-Host Disease ,Mobilization ,TL1A ,Tregs ,IL-2 ,Humans ,Animals ,Mice ,T-Lymphocytes ,Regulatory ,Blood Donors ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Mobilization ,Mice ,Inbred C3H ,Mice ,Inbred NOD ,Heterocyclic Compounds ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Proteins - Abstract
The present studies examined experimental transplant outcomes using mobilized peripheral blood from mice and humans together with FoxP3+Treg cells. Donor mice were treated with filgrastim and / or plerixafor and their peripheral blood (PB) displayed significant elevations in hematopoietic stem and progenitor populations. Some of these PB donors were concurrently administered a Treg expansion strategy consisting of a TL1A-Ig fusion protein low dose rIL-2. A significant increase (4-5x) in the frequency Tregs occurred during mobilization. C3H.SW PB was collected from mobilized and Treg unexpanded (TrUM) or mobilized and Treg expanded (TrEM) donors and transplanted into MHC-matched B6 (H2b) recipients. Recipients of TrEM, exhibited significantly reduced weight loss and clinical GVHD scores compared to recipients of TrUM. Notably, recipients of TrEM exhibited comparable GVL activity to TrUM recipients against leukemia levels. Next, huTregs (CD4+CD25+CD127lo) from a healthy human PB mobilized donor were expanded ex-vivo prior to transplant into NSG/ NOD-scid IL2Rgammanull mice. We found that treatment with ex-vivo expanded huTregs resulted in significant reduction of lethality and clinical xGVHD scores. Notably, post-transplant, PB huTregs levels remained elevated and the frequency of huCD4+Tconv and CD8+ cells was diminished supporting the improved xGVHD outcomes. These findings demonstrated that the use of mPB containing elevated Treg levels significantly reduced GVHD following MUD and MHC-mismatched mouse HSCT without loss of GVL activity. Moreover, utilizing ex-vivo expanded huTregs from a mobilized PB donor and added back to donor PB ameliorated xGVHD. In total, these studies support the notion that in vivo or ex-vivo manipulation of donor Tregs together with mobilized peripheral blood could provide therapeutic approaches to improve aHSCT outcomes.
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- 2023
16. Development of carbide-free bainite/martensite/austenite triplex steels through short-term austenitizing and isothermal bainitic treatments
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Barreras Castro, R. E., Gutiérrez Castañeda, E. J., Saldaña Garcés, R., Compeán Jasso, M. E., Del Ángel Monroy, M., Salinas Rodríguez, A., and Botello Rionda, F.
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- 2023
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17. Discrimination and adherence in a cross-sectional study of Latino sexual minority men with HIV: Coping with discrimination as a mediator and coping self-efficacy as a moderator
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Barreras, Joanna L., Bogart, Laura M., MacCarthy, Sarah, Klein, David J., and Pantalone, David W.
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- 2023
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18. A CURE on the Evolution of Antibiotic Resistance in 'Escherichia coli' Improves Student Conceptual Understanding
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Freeman, Scott, Mukerji, Joya, Sievers, Matt, Beltran, Ismael Barreras, Dickinson, Katie, Dy, Grace E. C., Gardiner, Amanda, Glenski, Elizabeth H., Hill, Mariah J., Kerr, Ben, Monet, Deja, Reemts, Connor, Theobald, Elli, Tran, Elisa T., Velasco, Vicente, Wachtell, Lexi, and Warfield, Liz
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We developed labs on the evolution of antibiotic resistance to assess the costs and benefits of replacing traditional laboratory exercises in an introductory biology course for majors with a course-based undergraduate research experience (CURE). To assess whether participating in the CURE imposed a cost in terms of exam performance, we implemented a quasi-experiment in which four lab sections in the same term of the same course did the CURE labs, while all other students did traditional labs. To assess whether participating in the CURE impacted other aspects of student learning, we implemented a second quasi-experiment in which all students either did traditional labs over a two-quarter sequence or did CURE labs over a two-quarter sequence. Data from the first experiment showed minimal impact on CURE students' exam scores, while data from the second experiment showed that CURE students demonstrated a better understanding of the culture of scientific research and a more expert-like understanding of evolution by natural selection. We did not find disproportionate costs or benefits for CURE students from groups that are minoritized in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.
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- 2023
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19. Shifts in the gut microbiota of sea urchin Diadema antillarum associated with the 2022 disease outbreak
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Juliana M. Ruiz-Barrionuevo, Elif Kardas, Ruber Rodríguez-Barreras, Marcos A. Quiñones-Otero, Claudia P. Ruiz-Diaz, Carlos Toledo-Hernández, and Filipa Godoy-Vitorino
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Diadema antillarum ,sea urchin ,gut microbiota ,outbreak ,16S rRNA ,Puerto Rico ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
IntroductionIn recent decades, Caribbean coral reefs have lost many vital marine species due to diseases. The well-documented mass mortality event of the long-spined black sea urchin Diadema antillarum in the early 1980s stands out among these collapses. This die-off killed over 90% of D. antillarum changing the reefscape from coral to algal-dominated. Nearly 40 years later, D. antillarum populations have yet to recover. In early 2022, a new mortality event of D. antillarum was reported along the Caribbean, including Puerto Rico.MethodsThis study identifies the gut microbiota changes associated with the D. antillarum during this mortality event. It contrasts them with the bacterial composition of gut samples from healthy individuals collected in 2019 by using 16S rRNA sequencing analyses.ResultsNotably, the die-off group’s core microbiome resembled bacteria commonly found in the human skin and gut, suggesting potential anthropogenic contamination and wastewater pollution as contributing factors to the 2022 dysbiosis. The animals collected in 2022, especially those with signs of disease, lacked keystone taxa normally found in Diadema including Photobacterium and Propionigenium.DiscussionThe association between human microbes and disease stages in the long-spined urchin D. antillarum, especially in relation to anthropogenic contamination, highlights a complex interplay between environmental stressors and marine health. While these microbes might not be the direct cause of death in this species of sea urchins, their presence and proliferation can indicate underlying issues, such as immune depletion due to pollution, habitat destruction, or climate change, that ultimately compromise the health of these marine organisms.
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- 2024
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20. Editorial: Green technologies for the extraction of bioactive compounds, its use for the production of nanomaterials, and their application in the food industry
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Tomás Jesús Madera-Santana, Carlos Gregorio Barreras-Urbina, Francisco Rodríguez-Félix, and María Ancín
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bioactive compounds ,nanotechnology ,food industry ,nanomaterials ,green extraction ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Food processing and manufacture ,TP368-456 - Published
- 2024
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21. INFLUENCE OF LIVE WEIGHT ON STARCH AND N DIGESTION OF CORN-BASED (DRY-ROLLED OR STEAM-FLAKED) FINISHING DIETS FOR HOLSTEIN STEERS
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Juan Octavio Chirino Romero, Martin Francisco Montano Gómez, Víctor Manuel González Vizcarra, Olga Maritza Manríquez Núñez, Alberto Barreras Serrano, and Richard Avery Zinn
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live weight ,starch ,digestion ,corn processing. ,Agriculture ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 - Abstract
Background. A possible effect of live weight on digestion capacity and starch and nitrogen utilization in cattle has been suggested, however, to our knowledge, this effect has not been evaluated by direct testing. This becomes especially relevant when finishing diets are used, which are characterized by their high percentages of starch and nitrogen Objective: To study the possible effect of live weight (BW) on digestion and utilization of two treatments corn, dry rolled (DR) and steam-flaked (SF). Results. Microbial N and microbial efficiency were not affected by the live weight by corn processing interaction. PV decreased linearly (P
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- 2024
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22. Ongoing CPR with an onboard physician
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Alfredo Echarri Sucunza, Patricia Fernández del Valle, Jose Antonio Iglesias Vázquez, Youcef Azeli, Jose María Navalpotro Pascual, Juan Valenciano Rodriguez, Cristian Fernández Barreras, Sonia Royo Embid, Carmen Gutiérrez-García, María Isabel Ceniceros Rozalén, Cesar Manuel Guerra García, Carmen del Pozo Pérez, María José Luque-Hernández, Silvia Sola Muñoz, Ana Belén Forner Canos, María Isabel Herrera Maíllo, Marcos Juanes García, Natividad Ramos García, Belén Muñoz Isabel, Junior Jose García Mendoza, José Antonio Cortés Ramas, Faustino Redondo Revilla, Inmaculada Mateo-Rodríguez, Félix Rivera Sanz, Emily Knox, Antonio Daponte Codina, José Ignacio Ruiz Azpiazu, and Fernando Rosell Ortiz
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Out of hospital cardiac arrest ,Survival ,Ongoing CPR ,Emergency medical services ,Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
Introduction: Recent data are not available on ongoing CPR for emergency services with an onboard physician. The aim of the present study was to identify factors associated with the decision to transport patients to hospital with ongoing CPR and examine their survival to hospital discharge with good neurological status. Methods: An observational study based on a registry of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests attended to by emergency services with an onboard physician. All OHCA cases occurring between the 1st of January and the 31st of December 2022 were included. Patients receiving ongoing CPR during transport to the hospital were compared with patients pronounced dead at the scene following arrival of the care team. The dependent variable was ongoing CPR during transport to the hospital. The main characteristics and the neurological status of patients surviving to discharge were described. Results: A total of 9321 cases were included, of which 350 (3.7%) were transported to hospital with ongoing CPR. Such patients were young (59.9 ± 20.1 years vs 64.6 ± 16.9 years; p
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- 2024
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23. Recommendations from Black and Latinx sexual minority males to include pharmacists to increase greater accessibility and OnlyFans stars to promote uptake of injectable PrEP
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Washington, Thomas Alex, Applewhite, Sheldon, Green, Yolanda, Malone, Nicholas, and Barreras, Joanna
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- 2024
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24. Impact of presence of zeolite in diets for lambs supplemented with zilpaterol hydrochloride: Growth performance and dietary energetics
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D. Urias-Estrada, Jesus, Estrada-Angulo, Alfredo, I. Castro-Perez, Beatriz, Ponce-Barraza, Elizma, J. Arteaga-Wences, Yesica, L. Ramos-Mendez, Jorge, Barreras, Alberto, S. Valdes-Garcia, Yissel, and Plascencia, Alejandro
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- 2023
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25. De-Randomization of MAC Addresses Using Fingerprints and RSSI With ML for Wi-Fi Analytics
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Abraham Perez-Hernandez, Maydelis N. Barreras-Martin, Juan A. Becerra, Maria J. Madero-Ayora, and Pablo Aguilera
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Data processing ,IEEE 802.11 networks ,machine learning ,MAC randomization ,passive sniffing ,system validation ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
Media Access Control (MAC) address randomization causes significant distortion and data loss in Wi-Fi analytics systems, becoming a real challenge for building services based on tracking, location, and presence data. This study aims to mitigate this problem by combining two key points: the construction of a quasi-unique, stable, reliable, and anonymous identifier for non-connected Wi-Fi devices, and the inability of Wi-Fi devices to deliberately change the physical conditions of the connection. We propose a new system that builds identifiers based on the capabilities and information elements announced within the probe request management frames, and consequently applies unsupervised machine learning techniques in the multidimensional Received Signal Strength Indicator (RSSI) space. Experimental tests in a real-world environment were conducted, and the results of this extensive field study demonstrated that the proposed system achieves high accuracy in identifying and tracking non-connected Wi-Fi devices in these challenging scenarios, even in the presence of MAC randomization. Our findings suggest that the proposed system has a significant potential for enhancing building services that rely on Wi-Fi data.
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- 2024
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26. Improved NK Cell Recovery Following Use of PTCy or Treg Expanded Donors in Experimental MHC-Matched Allogeneic HSCT
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Wolf, Dietlinde, Barreras, Henry, Copsel, Sabrina N, Komanduri, Krishna V, and Levy, Robert B
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Immunology ,Prevention ,Stem Cell Research ,Transplantation ,Hematology ,Regenerative Medicine ,Rare Diseases ,Cancer ,Aetiology ,5.2 Cellular and gene therapies ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Inflammatory and immune system ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Cyclophosphamide ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Killer Cells ,Natural ,Mice ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,T-Lymphocytes ,Regulatory ,Transplantation ,Homologous ,Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Graft-versus-host disease ,IL-2 ,Natural killer cell ,Post-transplantation cyclophosphamide ,Regulatory T cell ,TL1A ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) is complicated by graft- versus-host disease (GVHD), which causes immune dysfunction and further delays immune reconstitution through its effects on primary and secondary lymphoid organs. Treatments to prevent GVHD and improve immune recovery following allo-HSCT are needed. Post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy) is a well-established and clinically widely used method for GVHD prophylaxis after HLA-matched as well as haploidentical allo-HSCT, as well as a promising strategy in the setting of mismatched unrelated donor allo-HSCT. Recently, regulatory T cells (Tregs), a critical subset for immune homeostasis and tolerance induction, have been evaluated for use as GVHD prophylaxis in experimental models and clinical trials. Natural killer (NK) cells are one of the first lymphoid populations to reconstitute following allo-HSCT and are important mediators of protective immunity against pathogens, and are also critical for limiting post-transplantation relapse of hematologic cancers. Several reports have noted that a delay in NK cell recovery may occur following experimental mouse allo-HSCT as well as after clinical allo-HSCT. Here we examined how 2 treatment strategies, PTCy and donor expanded Tregs (TrED), in experimental MHC-matched allo-HSCT affect NK recovery. Our experiments show that both strategies improved NK cell numbers, with PTCy slightly better than TrED, early after allo-HSCT (1 month) compared with untreated allo-HSCT recipients. Importantly, NK cell IFN-γ production and cytotoxic function, as reflected by CD107 expression as well as in vivo killing of NK-sensitive tumor cells, were improved using either PTCy or TrED versus control allo-HSCT recipients. In conclusion, both prophylactic treatments were found to be beneficial for NK recovery and NK cell function following MHC-matched minor antigen-mismatched experimental allo-HSCT. Improved NK recovery could help provide early immunity toward tumors and pathogens in these transplant recipients.
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- 2022
27. Assessing How Well Students Understand the Molecular Basis of Evolution by Natural Selection
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Sievers, Matt, Reemts, Connor, Dickinson, Katherine J., Mukerji, Joya, Beltran, Ismael Barreras, Theobald, Elli J., Velasco, Vicente, and Freeman, Scott
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Researchers have called for undergraduate courses to update teaching frameworks based on the Modern Synthesis with insights from molecular biology, by stressing the molecular underpinnings of variation and adaptation. To support this goal, we developed a modified version of the widely used Assessing Conceptual Reasoning of Natural Selection (ACORNS) instrument. The expanded tool, called the E-ACORNS, is explicitly designed to test student understanding of the connections among genotypes, phenotypes, and fitness. E-ACORNS comprises a slight modification to the ACORNS open-response prompts and a new scoring rubric. The rubric is based on five core concepts in evolution by natural selection, with each concept broken into elements at the novice, intermediate, and expert-level understanding. Initial tests of the E-ACORNS showed that (1) upper-level undergraduates can score responses reliably and quickly, and (2) students who were just starting an introductory biology series for majors do not yet grasp the molecular basis of phenotypic variation and its connection to fitness.
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- 2023
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28. Tumor sólido pseudopapilar de páncreas: un estudio retrospectivo en la Comunidad Valenciana
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Duque Alvarez, Xiomara, Fernando Alcázar, Cándido, Hernando Sanz, Ana, Mora Oliver, Isabel, Granel, Laura, Barreras, José A., Calero, Alicia, Carbonell Morote, Silvia, Domingo, Carlos, Estevan, Rafael, Oliver, Israel, López Andujar, Rafael, Sabater, Luis, Compañ, Antonio, and Ramia, José M.
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- 2024
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29. Ongoing CPR with an onboard physician
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Sucunza, Alfredo Echarri, Fernández del Valle, Patricia, Vázquez, Jose Antonio Iglesias, Azeli, Youcef, Navalpotro Pascual, Jose María, Rodriguez, Juan Valenciano, Barreras, Cristian Fernández, Embid, Sonia Royo, Gutiérrez-García, Carmen, Rozalén, María Isabel Ceniceros, García, Cesar Manuel Guerra, del Pozo Pérez, Carmen, Luque-Hernández, María José, Muñoz, Silvia Sola, Canos, Ana Belén Forner, Maíllo, María Isabel Herrera, García, Marcos Juanes, García, Natividad Ramos, Isabel, Belén Muñoz, Mendoza, Junior Jose García, Ramas, José Antonio Cortés, Revilla, Faustino Redondo, Mateo-Rodríguez, Inmaculada, Sanz, Félix Rivera, Knox, Emily, Codina, Antonio Daponte, Azpiazu, José Ignacio Ruiz, and Ortiz, Fernando Rosell
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- 2024
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30. Solid pseudopapillary neoplasms of the pancreas: Multicenter Vasepa study
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Alvarez, Xiomara Duque, Fernando Alcázar, Cándido, Hernando Sanz, Ana, Mora Oliver, Isabel, Granel, Laura, Barreras, José A., Calero, Alicia, Carbonell Morote, Silvia, Domingo, Carlos, Estevan, Rafael, Oliver, Israel, López Andujar, Rafael, Sabater, Luis, Compañ, Antonio, and Ramia, José M.
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- 2024
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31. Design and Evaluation of a Technological Platform for Monitoring Patients with Dementia: Unifying Requirements from Mexican Day Centers
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Barreras Diaz, Tania-Arisdelci, Esquer-Rochin, Marco, Gutierrez-Garcia, J. Octavio, and Rodriguez, Luis-Felipe
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- 2023
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32. Influencia del espacio vital en corral sobre las variables productivas, calidad de la canal y carne en novillos Holstein
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Ana Mireya Romo-Valdez, Cristina Pérez-Linares, Francisco Gerardo Ríos-Rincón, Fernando Figueroa-Saavedra, Alberto Barreras-Serrano, Beatriz Isabel Castro-Pérez, Eduardo Sánchez-López, and Georgina Valentina Cervantes Cazarez
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espacio vital ,novillos Holstein ,Corral de engorda ,Canales ,Calidad de la carne ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
Se determinó cómo la cantidad de espacio vital asignado en el corral de engorda, influye tanto en los indicadores de producción como en los rasgos de calidad de la canal y la carne obtenidas de novillos Holstein mediante la formación de dos grupos de tratamiento, T14: 65 novillos/corral (14 m2/cabeza de espacio permitido) y T16: 57 novillos/corral (16 m2/cabeza de espacio permitido), con cinco repeticiones en cada tratamiento. El peso promedio de llegada fue de 238 ± 0.74 kg. Durante el período de engorda el ganado se alimentó dos veces al día con dietas comerciales. Los novillos se sacrificaron después de un período de 261 días. En el momento del primer reimplante se encontró un mayor peso corporal promedio en T16 vs T14 (384.25 vs 378.38 kg; P
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- 2024
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33. AutoEKF: Scalable System Identification for COVID-19 Forecasting from Large-Scale GPS Data
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Barreras, Francisco, Hayhoe, Mikhail, Hassani, Hamed, and Preciado, Victor M.
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control ,Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing ,Mathematics - Dynamical Systems - Abstract
We present an Extended Kalman Filter framework for system identification and control of a stochastic high-dimensional epidemic model. The scale and severity of the COVID-19 emergency have highlighted the need for accurate forecasts of the state of the pandemic at a high resolution. Mechanistic compartmental models are widely used to produce such forecasts and assist in the design of control and relief policies. Unfortunately, the scale and stochastic nature of many of these models often makes the estimation of their parameters difficult. With the goal of calibrating a high dimensional COVID-19 model using low-level mobility data, we introduce a method for tractable maximum likelihood estimation that combines tools from Bayesian inference with scalable optimization techniques from machine learning. The proposed approach uses automatic backward-differentiation to directly compute the gradient of the likelihood of COVID-19 incidence and death data. The likelihood of the observations is estimated recursively using an Extended Kalman Filter and can be easily optimized using gradient-based methods to compute maximum likelihood estimators. Our compartmental model is trained using GPS mobility data that measures the mobility patterns of millions of mobile phones across the United States. We show that, after calibrating against incidence and deaths data from the city of Philadelphia, our model is able to produce an accurate 30-day forecast of the evolution of the pandemic.
- Published
- 2021
34. Effect of a Prolonged-Release System of Urea on Nitrogen Losses and Microbial Population Changes in Two Types of Agricultural Soil
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Carlos Gregorio Barreras-Urbina, Francisco Rodríguez-Félix, José Luis Cárdenas-López, Maribel Plascencia-Jatomea, Manuel Pérez-Tello, Ana Irene Ledesma-Osuna, Tomás Jesús Madera-Santana, José Agustín Tapia-Hernández, and Daniela Denisse Castro-Enríquez
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Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2023
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35. Online estimation of the state of charge and state of health of a vanadium redox flow battery
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Clemente, Alejandro, Montiel, Manuel, Barreras, Félix, Lozano, Antonio, Escachx, Bryan, and Costa-Castelló, Ramon
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- 2024
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36. Influence of arrival weight of Holstein steers of similar age on feedlot growth performance, dietary energetics, and carcass characteristics
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Flores, Rodrigo, Plascencia, Alejandro, Barreras, Alberto, Salinas-Chavira, Jaime, Torrentera, Noemí, and Zinn, Richard A
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Zoology ,Agricultural ,Veterinary and Food Sciences ,Animal Production ,Biological Sciences ,Nutrition ,Arrival weight ,feedlot ,Holstein ,performance ,carcass ,Veterinary sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveEvaluate the effect of arrival weight on feedlot growth performance and carcass characteristics of Holstein steers of similar age.Material and methodsThree hundred calf-fed Holstein steers (age 113 ± 1-day) were distributed in a completely randomly unbalanced design and divided into five categories (105, 112, 117, 123, and 129 kg) of shrunk initial weight (SIW). Calves were weighed on days 1, 112, 224, and 361. Calves were fed steam-flaked corn-based diets. Growth performance and dietary energy were evaluated for each period and the study as a whole (1-361-day).ResultsDuring the rearing period, average daily gain (ADG) increased (linearly effect, p < 0.01) with increasing birth weight. Birthweight was positively associated (p < 0.05) with feedlot arrival weight (R 2 = 0.47) and final harvest weight (R 2 = 0.36). Overall ADG increased (p < 0.01) with increasing SIW. Dry matter intake increased linearly during the first 224-day but quadratically during the last 137 days. Overall, there was a quadratic effect (p < 0.05) of SIW on gain-to-feed and observed-to-expected dietary NE, with lower efficiencies (4%) for steers in both the lightest and heaviest SIW. Hot carcass weight, Longissimus muscle area, marbling score, and fat thickness increased (linear effect, p ≤ 0.03) as SIW increased, whereas kidney-pelvic-heart fat and yield-grade were unaffected.ConclusionsThe initial arrival weight influences the growth performance, energetic efficiency, and carcass characteristics of Holstein steers of similar age. The effect is more pronounced in the lighter (
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- 2022
37. The Transcriptomic Portrait of Locally Advanced Breast Cancer and Its Prognostic Value in a Multi-Country Cohort of Latin American Patients
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Llera, Andrea Sabina, Abdelhay, Eliana Saul Furquim Werneck, Artagaveytia, Nora, Daneri-Navarro, Adrián, Müller, Bettina, Velazquez, Carlos, Alcoba, Elsa B, Alonso, Isabel, da Quinta, Daniela B Alves, Binato, Renata, Bravo, Alicia Inés, Camejo, Natalia, Carraro, Dirce Maria, Castro, Mónica, Castro-Cervantes, Juan M, Cataldi, Sandra, Cayota, Alfonso, Cerda, Mauricio, Colombo, Alicia, Crocamo, Susanne, Del Toro-Arreola, Alicia, Delgadillo-Cisterna, Raúl, Delgado, Lucía, Dreyer-Breitenbach, Marisa, Fejerman, Laura, Fernández, Elmer A, Fernández, Jorge, Fernández, Wanda, Franco-Topete, Ramón A, Gabay, Carolina, Gaete, Fancy, Garibay-Escobar, Adriana, Gómez, Jorge, Greif, Gonzalo, Gross, Thomas G, Guerrero, Marisol, Henderson, Marianne K, Lopez-Muñoz, Miguel E, Lopez-Vazquez, Alejandra, Maldonado, Silvina, Morán-Mendoza, Andrés J, Nagai, Maria Aparecida, Oceguera-Villanueva, Antonio, Ortiz-Martínez, Miguel A, Quintero, Jael, Quintero-Ramos, Antonio, Reis, Rui M, Retamales, Javier, Rivera-Claisse, Ernesto, Rocha, Darío, Rodríguez, Robinson, Rosales, Cristina, Salas-González, Efrain, Sanchotena, Verónica, Segovia, Laura, Sendoya, Juan Martín, Silva-García, Aida A, Trinchero, Alejandra, Valenzuela, Olivia, Vedham, Vidya, Zagame, Livia, Network, States-Latin American Cancer Research, Podhajcer, Osvaldo L, Abarca, Juan, Acevedo, Pamela, Acosta, Graciela, Acosta, Gissel, Haab, Gabriela Acosta, Silva, Ana Lilian Acosta, Aghazarian, Marta, Aguayo, Carola, Aizen, Bernardo, Lopez, Gustavo Alarcon, Almeida, Liz, Alvarez, Ana, Andrade, Viviane, Angeles-Bueno, Wenceslao, Arai, Roberto, Barreras, Priscila Elvira Arambula, Rubio, Ma Isabel Aramburo, Ardao, Gonzalo, Arellano-Jimenez, Lilia A, Arias, Claudia, Armisen, Ricardo, Aspee, Mauricio, Assar, Rodrigo, Rascón, Itzel Rene xe9 Astiazar xe1 N, Astorga, Sebastian, Rodriguez, Maxwell Aviles, Bailão, Ant xf4 nio, Barragan-Curiel, Adolfo E, Barragan-Ruiz, Adelfo, Bermudez, Fernanda, Bernachin, Julia, Herrera, Wilfrido Bernal, Bonet, Mara, Brnich, Sarah, Bustamante, Claudio, Bustamante, Miguel Angel, and Bustos-Gomez, Julio
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Genetics ,breast cancer ,Latin America ,PAM50 subtypes ,risk of recurrence ,biological pathways ,United States-Latin American Cancer Research Network ,Clinical sciences ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
PurposesMost molecular-based published studies on breast cancer do not adequately represent the unique and diverse genetic admixture of the Latin American population. Searching for similarities and differences in molecular pathways associated with these tumors and evaluating its impact on prognosis may help to select better therapeutic approaches.Patients and methodsWe collected clinical, pathological, and transcriptomic data of a multi-country Latin American cohort of 1,071 stage II-III breast cancer patients of the Molecular Profile of Breast Cancer Study (MPBCS) cohort. The 5-year prognostic ability of intrinsic (transcriptomic-based) PAM50 and immunohistochemical classifications, both at the cancer-specific (OSC) and disease-free survival (DFS) stages, was compared. Pathway analyses (GSEA, GSVA and MetaCore) were performed to explore differences among intrinsic subtypes.ResultsPAM50 classification of the MPBCS cohort defined 42·6% of tumors as LumA, 21·3% as LumB, 13·3% as HER2E and 16·6% as Basal. Both OSC and DFS for LumA tumors were significantly better than for other subtypes, while Basal tumors had the worst prognosis. While the prognostic power of traditional subtypes calculated with hormone receptors (HR), HER2 and Ki67 determinations showed an acceptable performance, PAM50-derived risk of recurrence best discriminated low, intermediate and high-risk groups. Transcriptomic pathway analysis showed high proliferation (i.e. cell cycle control and DNA damage repair) associated with LumB, HER2E and Basal tumors, and a strong dependency on the estrogen pathway for LumA. Terms related to both innate and adaptive immune responses were seen predominantly upregulated in Basal tumors, and, to a lesser extent, in HER2E, with respect to LumA and B tumors.ConclusionsThis is the first study that assesses molecular features at the transcriptomic level in a multicountry Latin American breast cancer patient cohort. Hormone-related and proliferation pathways that predominate in PAM50 and other breast cancer molecular classifications are also the main tumor-driving mechanisms in this cohort and have prognostic power. The immune-related features seen in the most aggressive subtypes may pave the way for therapeutic approaches not yet disseminated in Latin America.Clinical trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov (Identifier: NCT02326857).
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- 2022
38. Comparing Blend of Essential Oils Plus 25-Hydroxy-Vit-D3 Versus Monensin Plus Virginiamycin Combination in Finishing Feedlot Cattle: Growth Performance, Dietary Energetics, and Carcass Traits
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Estrada-Angulo, Alfredo, Mendoza-Cortez, Daniel A, Ramos-Méndez, Jorge L, Arteaga-Wences, Yesica J, Urías-Estrada, Jesús D, Castro-Pérez, Beatriz I, Ríos-Rincón, Francisco G, Rodríguez-Gaxiola, Miguel A, Barreras, Alberto, Zinn, Richard A, and Plascencia, Alejandro
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Zoology ,Agricultural ,Veterinary and Food Sciences ,Animal Production ,Biological Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Nutrition ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,feedlot cattle ,essential oils ,vitamin D3 ,monensin ,virginiamycin ,growth performance ,carcass ,Environmental Science and Management ,Animal production ,Veterinary sciences - Abstract
Ninety crossbreed bulls (349.5 ± 8.25 kg initial weight) were used in an 87day trial to compare the effects of a blend of essential oils plus 25-hydroxy-Vit-D3 (EO + HyD) versus the combination of monensin with virginiamycin (MON + VM) on feedlot growth performance and carcass characteristics. Dietary treatments (nine replicates/treatment) were supplemented with 40 mg/kg diet dry matter of MON + VM (equal parts) or with 120.12 mg/kg diet dry matter of a combination of standardized mixture of essential oils (120 mg) plus 0.12 mg of 25-hydroxy-vitamin-D3 (EO + HyD). There were no treatment effects on dry matter intake (DMI, p = 0.63). However, the coefficient of variation in day-to-day DMI was greater for EO + HyD than for MON + VM (11.4% vs. 3.88%, p = 0.04). There were no treatment effects (p ≥ 0.17) on daily weight gain, gain-to-feed ratio, and estimated dietary net energy. Cattle supplemented with EO + HyD had greater Longissimus muscle area (7.9%, p < 0.01) and estimated retail yield (1.6%, p = 0.03), and tended to have heavier (1.7%, p = 0.10) carcass weight. Differences among treatments in dressing percentage, fat thickness, kidney−pelvic−heart fat, and marbling score were not appreciable (p > 0.10). It is concluded that growth performance response and dietary energetic are similar for finishing cattle supplemented with EO + HyD vs. MON + VM. However, compared with MON + VM, supplementation with EO + HyD during the finishing phase may improve carcass Longissimus area and carcass yield.
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- 2022
39. Geometrical Aspects of the Hamiltonization Problem of Dynamical Systems
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Avendaño-Camacho, Misael, García-Mendoza, Claudio C., Ruíz-Pantaleón, José C., and Velasco-Barreras, Eduardo
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Mathematics - Symplectic Geometry ,37J06, 37J39, 53D17, 37C86, 70G45, 37C79 - Abstract
Some positive answers to the problem of endowing a dynamical system with a Hamiltonian formulation are presented within the class of Poisson structures in a geometric framework. We address this problem on orientable manifolds and by using decomposable Poisson structures. In the first case, the existence of a Hamiltonian formulation is ensured under the vanishing of some topological obstructions, improving a result of Gao. In the second case, we apply a variant of the Hojman construction to solve the problem for vector fields admitting a transversally invariant metric and, in particular, for infinitesimal generators of proper actions. Finally, we also consider the hamiltonization problem for Lie group actions and give solutions in the particular case in which the acting Lie group is a low-dimensional torus.
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- 2021
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40. Influence of unsaturated to saturated ratio of fatty acids reaching the duodenum on postruminal digestion of stearic acid in Holstein steers fed a high-fat finishing diet.
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Plascencia, Alejandro, Barreras, Alberto, Valdés-García, Yissel, and Zinn, Richard A
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Fatty acid ,finishing diets ,oleic acid ,postruminal digestion ,stearic acid ,steers ,Digestive Diseases ,Prevention ,Nutrition - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the influence of the unsaturated to saturated ratio of fatty acids (FAs) reaching the duodenum on postruminal digestion of FAs, mainly focused on stearic acid (C18:0).Materials and methodsSix Holstein steers [208 ± 3 kg initial live weight (LW)] with cannulas in the abomasum and proximal duodenum were used in a replicated 3 × 3 Latin square design. Steers were fed a fixed amount of a basal steam-flaked corn-based diet containing 8% supplemental fat and were daily infused via abomasum with 0, 67, and 165 gm oleic acid (C18:1). The experiment lasted for 42 days.ResultsThe daily total FA (TFA) intake (dietary FA intake plus abomasal infusion of oleic acid) represented a 1.78, 2.10, and 2.56 gm TFA/kg LW ratio. The unsaturated to saturated ratio of FAs entering the duodenum increased (p < 0.01) as level C18:1 infusion into the abomasum increased. Infusion of C18:1 tended (quadratic component, p = 0.07) to improve postruminal TFA digestion, being maximal for the 67 gm/day infusions. This increase in TFA digestion was due to increased (quadratic component, p = 0.03) postruminal C18:0 digestion (postruminal digestion of the other FAs was not different, p ≥ 0.13).ConclusionIncreasing the unsaturated to saturated ratio of FAs entering the small intestine will enhance intestinal C18:0 digestion. This positive effect is expected to be more likely beneficial when FA intake is high (and thus, the duodenal flow of FA is high), but this benefit looks diminished when the quantity of TFA reaching the intestine exceeds the proportion of 2.13 gm FA/kg LW.
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- 2021
41. Design, development, integration and evaluation of hybrid fuel cell power systems for an unmanned water surface vehicle
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Renau, Jordi, Tejada, Diego, García, Víctor, López, Eduardo, Domenech, Luis, Lozano, Antonio, and Barreras, Félix
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- 2024
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42. New insights into the role of VKORC1 polymorphisms for optimal warfarin dose selection in Caribbean Hispanic patients through an external validation of a population PK/PD model
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Rodríguez-Fernández, Karine, Reynaldo-Fernández, Gledys, Reyes-González, Stephanie, de las Barreras, Camila, Rodríguez-Vera, Leyanis, Vlaar, Cornelis, Monbaliu, Jean-Christophe M., Stelzer, Torsten, Duconge, Jorge, and Mangas-Sanjuan, Victor
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- 2024
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43. Comparison in Detection Rate of Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer Between Microultrasound-guided Prostate Biopsy (ExactVu) and Multiparametric Resonance Imaging-guided Prostate Biopsy (Koelis System)
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García Rojo, Esther, García Gómez, Borja, Sopeña Sutil, Raquel, Vallejo Arzayus, Diana, Justo Quintas, Juan, García Barreras, Silvia, Brime Menéndez, Ricardo, Peña Vallejo, Elena, Calzas Montalvo, Cristina, López Curtis, David, Bozzini, Giorgio, and Romero Otero, Javier
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- 2024
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44. El Procedimiento en el sistema integral de justicia penal para adolescentes y su homologación y diferencias con el sistema penal acusatorio y oral
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Iván de Jesús Ochoa Barreras
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Sistema Integral de Justicia Penal para Adolescentes ,adolescentes ,sistema penal acusatorio y oral ,Law - Abstract
En México, se ha construido un Sistema de Justicia Penal Acusatorio y Oral. Este sistema vino a renovar los paradigmas sobre la justicia penal en su carácter adjetivo o procesal. Al mismo tiempo, la reforma penal impactó el Sistema de Justicia Penal para Adolescentes, que a su vez iba siendo objeto de una renovación en su parte sustantiva, pasando de un paradigma tutelar a un paradigma integral de Derechos. El Sistema de Justicia Penal para Adolescentes se homologó en su parte procesal con el Sistema de Justicia Penal Acusatorio y Oral. Sin embargo, a pesar de que se trata de Sistemas que convergen en un mismo objetivo y que se guían bajo un mismo procedimiento, la naturaleza de los sujetos procesales es distinta en cada uno, pues un sistema trata con adultos y en el otro trata con adolescentes. En el presente artículo, mediante una metodología basada en la técnica de análisis de contenido, se realizará un estudio comparativo para identificar las diferencias sustanciales entre el procedimiento penal acusatorio y oral y el Sistema de Justicia Penal para Adolescentes, documentando la justificación de esas diferencias para así proveer una mayor comprensión de la justicia penal para adolescentes y a su vez identificar las áreas de oportunidad en ambos sistemas. Entre las conclusiones se destaca que en el Sistema para Adolescentes se observa de manera más estricta el principio procesal de Mínima Intervención y tiene mayor armonía con los Tratados Internacionales en los que se fundamenta. Aun así, existen áreas de oportunidad que deben atenderse.
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- 2024
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45. Food Grade Nanofiber of Polylactic Acid by Electrospinning: Physicochemical Characterization of Solutions and Parameters of the Technique
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Dalila Fernanda Canizales-Rodríguez, Francisco Rodríguez-Félix, José Agustín Tapia-Hernández, Carmen Lizette Del-Toro-Sánchez, Saúl Ruíz-Cruz, Santiago P. Aubourg, Daniela Denisse Castro-Enríquez, Carlos Gregorio Barreras-Urbina, Silvia Elena Burruel-Ibarra, José Luis Pompa-Ramos, and Lorena Armenta-Villegas
- Subjects
Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
Nowadays, one-third of the world’s food production is wasted, so food industry has focused on the design of new technologies that contribute to preserving food quality and safety, focusing on environmentally friendly packaging. Polylactic acid (PLA) is a polymer which is biocompatible and biodegradable, of low cost, and generally recognized as safe (GRAS) by FDA; on the other hand, nanofibers obtained by electrospinning have the potential food industry application, for protection and release of bioactive compounds, producing active and intelligent packaging and increasing and monitoring food quality. The main objective of this work was to obtain food grade nanofibers (FGNs) of PLA (FGN-PLA) by electrospinning, for which different food grade solutions (FGSs) of PLA (FGS-PLA) concentrations with food grade solvent acetone (FGSA) were made and characterized via viscosity, density, conductivity, surface tension measurements, and rheological properties, and to correlate its effect on the FGN-PLA production by electrospinning as well as the effect of technique process parameters (distance from needle to collector plate and flow rate) on fiber characteristics was investigated. Morphological and dimensional characteristics of fibers were analyzed by SEM; increasing the FGS concentration as from 10% (w/v), beaded free and uniform nanofibers were produced. Also, average diameters increasing at higher polymer concentrations and flow rates. Rheological analysis indicates a Newtonian behavior, and the 10% (w/v) FGS shows stability for electrospinning process. In this paper, we report a detailed investigation of how electrospinning parameters interplay and affect FGN morphology and diameter that can be utilized for future research in food industry, for protection and release of bioactive compounds, as well as to maintain and monitor the food quality, as smart packaging systems.
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- 2024
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46. New insights into the role of VKORC1 polymorphisms for optimal warfarin dose selection in Caribbean Hispanic patients through an external validation of a population PK/PD model
- Author
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Karine Rodríguez-Fernández, Gledys Reynaldo-Fernández, Stephanie Reyes-González, Camila de las Barreras, Leyanis Rodríguez-Vera, Cornelis Vlaar, Jean-Christophe M. Monbaliu, Torsten Stelzer, Jorge Duconge, and Victor Mangas-Sanjuan
- Subjects
Warfarin ,Pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic ,VKORC1 ,CYP2C9 ,Hispanic Caribbean ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Warfarin, an oral anticoagulant, has been used for decades to prevent thromboembolic events. The complex interplay between CYP2C9 and VKORC1 genotypes on warfarin PK and PD properties is not fully understood in special sub-groups of patients. This study aimed to externally validate a population pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) model for the effect of warfarin on international normalized ratio (INR) and to evaluate optimal dosing strategies based on the selected covariates in Caribbean Hispanic patients. INR, and CYP2C9 and VKORC1 genotypes from 138 patients were used to develop a population PK/PD model in NONMEM. The structural definition of a previously published PD model for INR was implemented. A numerical evaluation of the parameter-covariate relationship was performed. Simulations were conducted to determine optimal dosing strategies for each genotype combinations, focusing on achieving therapeutic INR levels. Findings revealed elevated IC50 for G/G, G/A, and A/A VKORC1 haplotypes (11.76, 10.49, and 9.22 mg/L, respectively), in this population compared to previous reports. The model-guided dosing analysis recommended daily warfarin doses of 3–5 mg for most genotypes to maintain desired INR levels, although subjects with combination of CYP2C9 and VKORC1 genotypes * 2/* 2-, * 2/* 3- and * 2/* 5-A/A would require only 1 mg daily. This research underscores the potential of population PK/PD modeling to inform personalized warfarin dosing in populations typically underrepresented in clinical studies, potentially leading to improved treatment outcomes and patient safety. By integrating genetic factors and clinical data, this approach could pave the way for more effective and tailored anticoagulation therapy in diverse patient groups.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Data-Driven Control of the COVID-19 Outbreak via Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions: A Geometric Programming Approach
- Author
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Hayhoe, Mikhail, Barreras, Francisco, and Preciado, Victor M.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Optimization and Control ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
In this paper we propose a data-driven model for the spread of SARS-CoV-2 and use it to design optimal control strategies of human-mobility restrictions that both curb the epidemic and minimize the economic costs associated with implementing non-pharmaceutical interventions. We develop an extension of the SEIR epidemic model that captures the effects of changes in human mobility on the spread of the disease. The parameters of our data-driven model are learned using a multitask learning approach that leverages both data on the number of deaths across a set of regions, and cellphone data on individuals' mobility patterns specific to each region. We propose an optimal control problem on this data-driven model with a tractable solution provided by geometric programming. The result of this framework is a mobility-based intervention strategy that curbs the spread of the epidemic while obeying a budget on the economic cost incurred. Furthermore, in the absence of a straightforward mapping from human mobility data to economic costs, we propose a practical method by which a budget on economic losses incurred may be chosen to eliminate excess deaths due to over-utilization of hospital resources. Our results are demonstrated with numerical simulations using real data from the Philadelphia metropolitan area., Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A Dynamical Approach to Efficient Eigenvalue Estimation in General Multiagent Networks
- Author
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Hayhoe, Mikhail, Barreras, Francisco, and Preciado, Victor M.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Optimization and Control ,Computer Science - Multiagent Systems ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control ,Mathematics - Dynamical Systems ,Mathematics - Spectral Theory - Abstract
We propose a method to efficiently estimate the eigenvalues of any arbitrary (potentially weighted and/or directed) network of interacting dynamical agents from dynamical observations. These observations are discrete, temporal measurements about the evolution of the outputs of a subset of agents (potentially one) during a finite time horizon; notably, we do not require knowledge of which agents are contributing to our measurements. We propose an efficient algorithm to exactly recover the (potentially complex) eigenvalues corresponding to network modes that are observable from the output measurements. The length of the sequence of measurements required by our method to generate a full reconstruction of the observable eigenvalue spectrum is, at most, twice the number of agents in the network, but smaller in practice. The proposed technique can be applied to networks of multiagent systems with arbitrary dynamics in both continuous- and discrete-time. Finally, we illustrate our results with numerical simulations., Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1912.03177
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Uneven demographic consequences of the 2022 disease outbreak for the sea urchin Diadema antillarum in Puerto Rico
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Ruber Rodríguez-Barreras, Claudia Patricia Ruiz-Diaz, Marcos A. Quiñones-Otero, and Carlos Toledo-Hernández
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Diadema antillarum ,Mass mortality ,Sea urchin ,Demography ,Puerto Rico ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Pervasive epizootic events have had a significant impact on marine invertebrates throughout the Caribbean, leading to severe population declines and consequential ecological implications. One such event was the regional collapse of herbivory, partly caused by the Diadema antillarum mortality event in 1983–84, resulting in a trophic cascade and altering the structure of reef communities. Consequently, there was a notable decrease in coral recruitment and an increase in the coverage of macroalgae. Nearly four decades later, in early 2022, the Caribbean basin experienced another widespread mass mortality event, further reducing the populations of D. antillarum. To assess the effects of this recent mortality event on the current demographics of D. antillarum, we surveyed eight populations along the eastern, northeastern, northern, and northwestern coast of Puerto Rico from May to July 2022, estimating their population density, size distribution, and disease prevalence. Additionally, the study compared these population parameters with data from four sites previously surveyed in 2012 and 2017 to understand the impact of the recent mortality event. The survey conducted in 2022 showed varying population densities at the surveyed reefs. Some populations exhibited mean densities of nearly one individual per square meter, while others had extremely low or no living individuals per square meter. The four populations with the highest density showed no evidence of disease, whereas the four populations with the lowest D. antillarum densities exhibited moderate to high disease prevalence. However, when considering all sites, the estimated disease prevalence remained below 5%. Nevertheless, the comparison with data from 2012 and 2017 indicated that the recent mortality event had a negative impact on D. antillarum demographics at multiple sites, as the densities in 2022 were reduced by 60.19% compared to those from the previous years. However, it is still too early to determine the severity of this new mortality event compared to the 1983–84 mortality event. Therefore, it is imperative to continue monitoring these populations.
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- 2023
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50. Procedimiento para el diseño organizacional con enfoque a procesos en empresas de la industria alimentaria
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Oviamna Martínez Barreras and Tania Vargas Fernández
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diseño organizacional ,procedimiento ,procesos ,Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform ,HN1-995 - Abstract
El diseño organizacional cada vez adquiere mayor relevancia, pues se hace necesario lograr mayor eficacia y eficiencia en las organizaciones, optimizando los recursos, no solo materiales y financieros, sino también humanos. El presente trabajo fue realizado en la Empresa Provincial de la Industria Alimentaria de Pinar del Río, con el propósito de proponer un procedimiento para el diseño organizacional con enfoque a procesos que contribuya a una mejor gestión organizacional. Se utilizó el método de nivel teórico histórico lógico, con el apoyo de la técnica del análisis documental, fundamentalmente en el estudio de diversas tecnologías para el diseño organizacional que sirvieron como referentes teórico-metodológicos, lo que permitió determinar sus principales aportes y limitaciones como base para la propuesta realizada. Para la realización del diagnóstico empírico, se aplicó una metodología que permitió caracterizar el proceso de diseño organizacional en la empresa, para lo cual se utilizaron fuentes secundarias y primarias de información que posibilitaron conocer elementos necesarios relacionados con las dimensiones del diseño organizacional. Se utilizaron métodos científicos, procedimientos y técnicas de investigación que permitieron recolectar, procesar y analizar la información. Como resultado del trabajo, se diseñó un procedimiento que establece las etapas y pasos para el diseño organizacional con enfoque a procesos en la entidad objeto de estudio, el cual contribuirá a optimizar los recursos sobre la base de los procesos que desarrolla la entidad y a mejorar el proceso de toma de decisiones, en aras de garantizar una mayor eficiencia, eficacia y efectividad.
- Published
- 2023
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