42 results on '"Borgdorff, H"'
Search Results
2. Cervicovaginal microbiome dysbiosis is associated with proteome changes related to alterations of the cervicovaginal mucosal barrier
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Borgdorff, H, Gautam, R, Armstrong, S D, Xia, D, Ndayisaba, G F, van Teijlingen, N H, Geijtenbeek, T B H, Wastling, J M, and van de Wijgert, J H H M
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- 2016
- Full Text
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3. Kissing and staring in times of neuro-mania: The social brain in art-science experiments
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Lysen, F., Borgdorff, H., Peters, P., Pinch, T., and ASCA (FGw)
- Abstract
This chapter explains a contentious area, in which art-science experiments can play an important investigative part. It argues that such art-science installations, as entangled experiments, can help to reimagine the empirical and conceptual outlines of research into the social brain but that such reflections are also always paired with other logics and tendencies, including, for example, art’s position in an innovation-oriented neuro-techno-scientific society and art’s relation to ‘neuro-enchantment’. Attending to current discourses on the position of brain science, one can start to see why art-science experiments are especially imperative in this academic arena and why potential reconfigurations of neuroscientific concepts stemming from these art-science experiments are so important today. Some artworks may be seen as fortifying the aforementioned materialist tendencies of brain imaging. The chapter provides examples of art-science installations in which the participating members of the public alternate positions as spectators, as experimenters and as objects of investigation.
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- 2020
4. Dialogues between Artistic Research and Science and Technology Studies: An Introduction
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Peters, Peter, Borgdorff, H., Pinch, Trevor J., Borgdorff, Henk, Pinch, Trevor, Philosophy, RS: FASoS WTMC, and RS: FASoS MUSTS
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- 2019
5. Unique Insights in the Cervicovaginal Lactobacillus iners and L. crispatus Proteomes and Their Associations with Microbiota Dysbiosis
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Borgdorff, H., Armstrong, S., Tytgat, Hanne, Xia, D., Ndayisaba, G.F., Wastling, J.M., van de Wijgert, J.H., Borgdorff, H., Armstrong, S., Tytgat, Hanne, Xia, D., Ndayisaba, G.F., Wastling, J.M., and van de Wijgert, J.H.
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: A Lactobacillus-dominated cervicovaginal microbiota (VMB) protects women from adverse reproductive health outcomes, but the role of L. iners in the VMB is poorly understood. Our aim was to explore the association between the cervicovaginal L. iners and L. crispatus proteomes and VMB composition.METHODS: The vaginal proteomes of 50 Rwandan women at high HIV risk, grouped into four VMB groups (based on 16S rDNA microarray results), were investigated by mass spectrometry using cervicovaginal lavage (CVL) samples. Only samples with positive 16S results for L. iners and/or L. crispatus within each group were included in subsequent comparative protein analyses: Lactobacillus crispatus-dominated VMB cluster (with 16S-proven L. iners (ni) = 0, and with 16S-proven L. crispatus (nc) = 5), L. iners-dominated VMB cluster (ni = 11, nc = 4), moderate dysbiosis (ni = 12, nc = 2); and severe dysbiosis (ni = 8, nc = 2). The relative abundances of proteins that were considered specific for L. iners and L. crispatus were compared among VMB groups.RESULTS: Forty Lactobacillus proteins were identified of which 7 were specific for L. iners and 11 for L. crispatus. The relative abundances of L. iners DNA starvation/stationary phase protection protein (DPS), and the glycolysis enzymes glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and glucose-6-phosphate isomerase (GPI), were significantly decreased in women with L. iners-containing dysbiosis compared to women with a L. iners-dominated VMB, independent of vaginal pH and L. iners abundance. Furthermore, L. iners DPS, GAPDH, GPI, and fructose-bisphosphate aldolase (ALDO) were significantly negatively associated with vaginal pH. Glycolysis enzymes of L. crispatus showed a similar negative, but nonsignificant, trend related to dysbiosis.CONCLUSIONS: Most identified Lactobacillus proteins had conserved intracellular functions, but their high abundance in CVL supernatant might imply an additional extracellular (moonlighting) role.
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- 2016
6. Vaginal high-risk human papillomavirus infection in a cross-sectional study among women of six different ethnicities in Amsterdam, the Netherlands: the HELIUS study
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Alberts, C J, primary, Vos, R A, additional, Borgdorff, H, additional, Vermeulen, W, additional, van Bergen, J, additional, Bruisten, S M, additional, Geerlings, S E, additional, Snijder, M B, additional, van Houdt, R, additional, Morré, S A, additional, de Vries, H J C, additional, van de Wijgert, J H H M, additional, Prins, M, additional, and Schim van der Loeff, M F, additional
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- 2016
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7. Artistic Researching: Expositions as Matters of Concern
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Benschop, R., Peters, P.F., Lemmens, B., Schwab, M., Borgdorff, H., Philosophy, and RS: FASoS MUSTS
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- 2014
8. Neighborhood Co-regularized Multi-view Spectral Clustering of Microbiome Data
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Tsivtsivadze, E., Borgdorff, H., Wijgert, J. van de, Schuren, F., Verhelst, R., Heskes, T., Zhou, Z., and Zhou, Z.
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Computer science ,Data Science ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,computer.software_genre ,medicine.disease_cause ,Spectral clustering ,medicine ,Unsupervised learning ,Lecture Notes in Computer Science ,Data mining ,Microbiome ,Cluster analysis ,computer - Abstract
In many unsupervised learning problems data can be available in different representations, often referred to as views. By leveraging information from multiple views we can obtain clustering that is more robust and accurate compared to the one obtained via the individual views. We propose a novel algorithm that is based on neighborhood co-regularization of the clustering hypotheses and that searches for the solution which is consistent across different views. In our empirical evaluation on publicly available datasets, the proposed method outperforms several state-of-the-art clustering algorithms. Furthermore, application of our method to recently collected biomedical data leads to new insights, critical for future research on determinants of the cervicovaginal microbiome and the cervicovaginal microbiome as a risk factor for the transmission of HIV. These insights could have an influence on the interpretation of clinical presentation of women with bacterial vaginosis and treatment decisions. © 2013 Springer-Verlag.
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- 2013
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9. Het zoeken van regels die niet bestaan
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Boomgaard, J., Borgdorff, H., Sonderen, P., and History of Arts
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- 2012
10. Artistieke praxis en de neoliberalisering van de onderwijsruimte
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Gielen, P.J.D., Borgdorff, H., and Sonderen, P
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- 2012
11. Ook met je hoofd kun je studeren
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van der Schoot, A., Borgdorff, H, Sonderen, P., and ASCA (FGw)
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- 2012
12. Woorden van Hout. Voorbij het Dualisme van Theorie en Praktijk in het Kunstonderwijs
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Peters, P.F., Borgdorff, H., Sonderen, P., Philosophy, and RS: FASoS MUSTS
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- 2012
13. O13.4 Cervicovaginal microbiome dysbiosis is associated with proteome changes related to alterations of the cervicovaginal mucosal barrier
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Borgdorff, H, primary, Gautam, R, additional, Armstrong, SD, additional, Xia, D, additional, Ndayisaba, GF, additional, van Teijlingen, NH, additional, Geijtenbeek, TBH, additional, Wastling, JM, additional, and van de Wijgert, JHHM, additional
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- 2015
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14. P06.01 Women of dutch ethnic origin have lower prevalence of vaginal microbiome dysbiosis than women of other ethnic origin residing in amsterdam
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Borgdorff, H, primary, van der Veer, C, additional, van Houdt, R, additional, Alberts, CJ, additional, de Vries, HJ, additional, Bruisten, SM, additional, Snijder, MB, additional, Prins, M, additional, Geerlings, SE, additional, van der Loeff, MF Schim, additional, and Jhhm, van de Wijgert, additional
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- 2015
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15. P06.02 Longitudinal cervicovaginal microbiome measurements of women before and after hiv-seroconversion
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Borgdorff, H, primary, Ndayisaba, GF, additional, and Jhhm, van de Wijgert, additional
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- 2015
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16. Neighborhood co-regularized multi-view spectral clustering of microbiome data
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Zhou, Z., Tsivtsivadze, E., Borgdorff, H., Wijgert, J. van de, Schuren, F., Verhelst, R., Heskes, T., Zhou, Z., Tsivtsivadze, E., Borgdorff, H., Wijgert, J. van de, Schuren, F., Verhelst, R., and Heskes, T.
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Item does not contain fulltext
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- 2013
17. Diabetes and the Course of Febrile Urinary Tract Infection
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van der Starre, W. E., primary, Borgdorff, H., additional, Vollaard, A. M., additional, Delfos, N. M., additional, van 't Wout, J. W., additional, Spelt, I. C., additional, Blom, J. W., additional, Leyten, E. M. S., additional, Koster, T., additional, Ablij, H. C., additional, van Dissel, J. T., additional, and van Nieuwkoop, C., additional
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- 2013
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18. P1.033 The Vaginal Microbiome and Its Clinical Correlates in a Cohort of African Sex Workers
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Borgdorff, H, primary, Tsivtsivadze, E, additional, Verhelst, R, additional, Schuren, F H, additional, Marzorati, M, additional, and Wijgert, J H H M van de, additional
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- 2013
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19. O04.1 The Influence of Hormonal Contraception and Pregnancy on the Vaginal Microbiome, Sexually Transmitted Infections, and Cytokine Responses in a Cohort of Rwandan Sex Workers
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Verwijs, M C, primary, Borgdorff, H, additional, Wit, F W N M, additional, Schuren, F H, additional, Lutter, R, additional, Verhelst, R, additional, Bonten, M J M, additional, and Wijgert, J H H M van de, additional
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- 2013
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20. The Conflict of the Faculties
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Borgdorff, Henk
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research ,art ,academia ,Art school ,Epistemology ,Theory of art - Abstract
Artistic research is an endeavour in which the artistic and the academic are connected. In this emerging field of research artistic practices contribute as research to what we know and understand, and academia opens its mind to forms of knowledge and understanding that are entwined with artistic practices. Henk Borgdorff also addresses how we comment on such issues, and how the things we say cause the practices involved to manifest themselves in specific ways, while also setting them into motion. In this sense, this work not only explores the phenomenon of artistic research in relation to academia, but it also engages with that relationship.
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- 2016
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21. Re-inventing the nineteenth-century tools of unprescribed modifications of rhythm and tempo in performances of Brahms’s symphonies and concertos
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Leertouwer, J., Cobussen, M., Brown, C., Scott, A., Blier-Carruthers, A., borgdorff, H., Frisch, W., Köpp, K., and Leiden University
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Brahms Symphonies ,Historically Informed Performance Practice ,Brahms Concertos ,Orchestral repertoire ,Brahms - Abstract
This dissertation and the corresponding films and recordings presented here are an effort to distil an approach to performing the orchestral music of Johannes Brahms that is significantly different from what has hitherto been produced in the fields of both Mainstream Orchestral Performance Practice (MPP) and the Historically Informed Performance Practice (HIPP). In the first chapter, I demonstrate how my approach is based on my understanding of historical sources concerning the use of modification of rhythm and tempo in orchestral performance, particularly relating to the work of the conductor Fritz Steinbach and the Meiningen Orchestra. In the second chapter, I describe my role as a conductor in this project, and the way in which I have tried to reinvent and re-implement the tools of modifying rhythm and tempo with my project orchestra. I describe my methodology in four films about each project week in the years 2019-2022. The films show how I evaluated the preliminary results and considered them in following editions and they demonstrate how my perspective changed over the course of the project, as well as how the project was perceived by participating musicians and by experts and audiences. In separate films, I provide examples of modifications of rhythm and tempo as realised with the project orchestra in the recordings. In the third chapter, I describe other characteristics of the project orchestra and its way of playing, including the use of portamento. In Chapter 4, I present recordings of the four Brahms symphonies and the four concertos that were made during the four years in which I conducted my PhD research, 2019-2022. The fifth chapter contains evaluations and conclusions. It also mentions possible future goals and projects. In a separate section I present a list of works and recordings cited, a summary, a short biography and my acknowledgements.
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- 2023
22. Between Freedom and Fixity: Artistic Reflections on Composition and Improvisation
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Ziblat Shay, I., Cobussen, M., Barret, R., Peters, G., Ruiter, F. de, Borgdorff, H., Vitkauskaite, R., Frisk, H., and Leiden University
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InformationSystems_INFORMATIONINTERFACESANDPRESENTATION(e.g.,HCI) ,composition ,improvisation ,free-improvisation ,notation - Abstract
Between Freedom and Fixity: Artistic Reflections on Composition and Improvisation is a practice-based research project that aims to highlight the role of freedom and fixity in music and to develop a discourse based on these two concepts. The research suggests a creative approach based on the interrelationship between freedom and fixity, for example their combination, juxtaposition, and tension, and describes them as abstractions or placeholders for musical agents such as rhythm, notes, structure, timeline, and interactive computer systems. Another important notion is the inherent coexistence of the two concepts, and proposing the constant oscillating between them as a creative musical approach. Furthermore, the research aims to establish the use of freedom and fixity as a productive paths for extra-musical disciplines. Four works by the author are used as case studies to examine the integration of the research concepts as tangible musical forms. In each of the case studies the concepts are embodied differently, thus different relationships develop between them in each piece. This study relies on the author's experience and experimentation as a composer, performer, improviser, and electronic-music practitioner, and draws inspiration from works by other musicians and scholars.
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- 2019
23. The variational mode: three cases about documents, artworks and animation
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Giacconi, R., Korsten, F.W., Wesseling, J., Horsman, Y., Villevoye, R., Borgdorff, H., Ruiter, F. de, Zwijnenberg, R., Bloois, J. de, Boumeester, M., Hesselberth, P., and Leiden
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Puppetry ,Variational ,Anarchism ,Animation ,Documents ,Evidence - Abstract
My artistic practice deals with documents and, more specifically, with the use and the exploration of their narrative potential. This dissertation is about three different cycles of artworks I produced as part of the research project. The notion of animation inheres in each of the three case studies: – Case 1 focuses on my artworks about Simone Pianetti (1858-?), an Italian mass murderer who escaped and disappeared, and who then became a puppet character, animated as a stock character.– Case 2 focuses on Augusto Masetti (1888-1966), an Italian soldier who shot at his superior officer and declared not to remember having done it, as if in a state of ecstatic possession, as if animated by an external entity. Mainly using publications and workshops, I produced a series of artworks related to legal, medical and anarchist records on his case.– Case 3 follows the appearance of a puppet character in Colombia, el espiritado, and its supposed connections to the Masetti case. I describe a series of artistic works I produced, starting from a puppet script about the self-destruction of a village, which can be read as a commentary on puppetry, anarchism and animation.
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- 2019
24. Sonic peripheries : middling with/in the event
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Klusmeyer, P., Cobussen, M.A., Doruff, S., Borgdorff, H., Voegelin, S., O'Sullivan, S., Manning, E., Barrett, R., and Leiden University
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Anarchive ,Fictioning ,Writing ,Research creation ,Process philosophy ,Sound studies ,Artistic research ,Sounding art - Abstract
The research explores what and how sound does in certain art practices; it lends an ear to so-called material-discursive events that come into expression as in/determined sonic occurrences. The dissertation has three main objectives. Firstly, it describes sonic art practice as experimental research and makes a case for curating such practices as a form of research; it positions this type of research as a contribution to new forms of knowledge and provides a resource for future research-creations and evaluation practices. Secondly, it brings together philosophy and art to elaborate a genuine manner of working with sonic matter (mattering); it conceptualizes and materializes novel ways of thinking, and creates a case for writing itself as practice and curating/producing art as theory; that is, it seeks to practice what it theorizes and vice versa. Thirdly, it advocates a certain transformation of self that lets us side-step ourselves, intervene and invent possible worlds or future fabulations. Practicing a process-oriented exploration complexifies as it advances; it creates resonances between theory and practice, between audience and sound art, between the written thesis – inclusive of presented artifacts – and the reader. It wants not to reduce but foster awareness of the ongoing complexity of life.
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- 2019
25. Cantos da Floresta (Forest Songs) : exchanging and sharing indigenous music in Brazil
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Pucci, M.D., Bor, J., Meer, W. van der, Churampi, A., Groot, R. de, Ruiter, F. de, Borgdorff, H., Setti, K., and Leiden University
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Amazonian music ,Musical exchange ,Indigenous music ,Artistic research ,Mawaca - Abstract
This thesis presents the research process behind the project Rupestres Sonoros, by the São Paulo-based musical group Mawaca, that recreated indigenous Brazilian songs, and the Cantos da Floresta tour of the Amazon, involving an intercultural exchange with six different indigenous groups. The thesis also addresses the projects’ outcomes, such as the publication of didactic books, creation of websites, workshops and new projects that seek to shed light on indigenous musical expressions. The thesis is about the journey of going up on stage, organizing intercultural activities, producing books, records and videos that transformed me and Mawaca, in a postmodern context, into artists that create in order to help raise awareness on the current political issues concerning the indigenous communities in Brazil. The purpose of this thesis is to reveal how music performance and research can be conducted by “anthropophagizing” knowledge, that is, consuming from a broad range of cultural sources, regurgitating and reinventing multicultural musicalities.
- Published
- 2019
26. The deep-rooted microtonality of the bass clarinet
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Bok, H.J., Cobussen, M.A., Ruiter, F. de, Nijssen, P., Borgdorff, H., Fox, C., Hair, G., Pearson, I., and Leiden University
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Embouchure ,Multiphonics ,Single reed instruments ,Overtones ,Bass clarinet ,Quartertones ,Fingering patterns ,Microtonality ,Adolphe Sax ,Contemporary music - Abstract
The existing literature only partly acknowledges the microtonal possibilities of the bass clarinet, restricting the options mainly to quartertones. When measured, the results of the proposed fingering patterns are often approximative. This PhD proposes a new microtonal approach of the bass clarinet, further developing the instrument’s capability to produce not only exact quartertones, but also smaller units: eighth-tones and 31-tones. The ‘root-overtone’ microtonality of the bass clarinet is explored as well, using the natural overtones which can be generated on top of roots, as a means to create more microtonal variants, often in the form of nano tones. The numerous fingering patterns that are the outcome of this research have been documented in the appendices. All these fingering patterns are shown in combined audio/video recordings. Instruction and demonstration videos clarify the different subjects of this research. Audio recordings illustrate the use of the microtonal bass clarinet playing in the pieces which were the result of the collaboration with several interested composers. The findings are also applied in a number of compositions of my own. The extension of the bass clarinet’s microtonal possibilities presented here will allow bass clarinettists, composers and other instrumentalists to inform and enrich their creative processes.
- Published
- 2018
27. La Cetra Cornuta : the horned lyre of the Christian World
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Young, R.C., Koopman, T., Ruiter, F. de, Fabris, D., Borgdorff, H., Cavicchi, C., Coelho, V., Heck, P. van, Kirnbauer, M., Wentz, J., and Leiden University
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Cetra ,Cittern ,Cittern predecessor ,Italian medieval and Renaissance music - Abstract
“La Cetra Cornuta : the Horned Lyre of the Christian World ”A musical instrument of substantial importance in the history of Christianity, specifically during the Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance periods in Italy, the cetra was the forerunner of the stringed instrument known in English since the 16th-c. as “cittern”.This study presents a detailed examination of the chordophone,featuring an iconographical catalog assembled from the visual artsc. 1100 - c. 1540. The field of iconographical data presented in the catalog is then analyzed, together with relevant literary and musictheory sources from the same period, to give a definitive account ofthe instrument’s morphology, evolution, construction, culturalidentity, musical function and repertories. Art historians as well as music historians and players of mediëval and Renaissance instruments will find answers to questions raisedabout this uniquely Italian ancestor of the High Renaissance and Baroque cittern, as will anyone seeking to gain a more focused view of musical instrument history in Italy during the centuries that shaped Western culture; for here is a stringed instrument recalling Classical Antiquity, and one of quintessential importance to both Christians and Humanists: made in Italy
- Published
- 2018
28. Global music : recasting and rethinking the popular as global
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Roos Muñoz, C.M., Borgdorff, H., Meer, W. van der, Zijlmans, K., Bor, J., Ruiter, F. de, Groot, R. de, Titus, B., and Leiden University
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Transculture ,Institutional Mediatization ,Postmodernism ,Popular Music ,Globalization ,Political Economy ,Global Music ,Musical Analysis - Abstract
Vertrekkend vanuit een communicatief perspectief en concentrerend op mediatiseringsprocessen, formuleert deze dissertatie een alternatief voor het probleem van equivociteit binnen de studie naar populaire muziek. Verschillende culturele en theoretische perspectieven zijn ingezet om de diverse vormen en betekenissen van populaire muziek te evalueren, bijvoorbeeld het type van muziek dat via complexe netwerken van betekenis in verschillende ambits door de geglobaliseerde wereld snelt. Authenticiteit en commodificatie zijn geïdentificeerd als de belangrijkste concepten voor de duiding van populaire repertoires -en van het begrip ‘'populair’ in relatie tot 'kunst' en 'folk'. Deze identificatie openbaart een patroon van betekenis-gevende praktijken, welke ik de ‘strategie van afwijzing’ heb genoemd. Deze strategie maakt het voor de cultuur-theoreticus mogelijk om inzicht te krijgen in de manier waarop het genre van populaire muziek is gedefinieerd, haar productie, verspreiding en consumptie. De essentie van het populaire lied wordt doorgaans negatief gedefinieerd, dat wil zeggen, door aan te geven wat het niet is: noch kunst noch folk. Opmerkelijk is dat negatieve definities van populaire muziek getuigen van latente spanningen tussen muziek producenten en consumenten, specifiek met betrekking tot de eclectische krachten gesignaleerd door het postmoderne denken en de waardeoordelen toegekend aan haar verschillende verschijningen.
- Published
- 2017
29. Beyond borders : broadening the artistic palette of (composing) improvisers in jazz
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Graaf, D.P. de, Cobussen, M., Leur, W. van der, Carlberg, F., Borgdorff, H., Ruiter, F. de, Bruckner-Haring, C., Dijk, R. van, and Leiden University
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Improvisation ,Jazz ,Improvised_music ,Olivier_Messiaen's_modes_of_limited_transposition ,Peter_Schat's_tone_clock ,(Composing)_improviser ,Jazz_education - Abstract
In this on-line dissertation, jazz saxophonist Dick de Graaf investigates a variety of compositional and improvisational models and techniques in contemporary jazz and Western art music, and discusses possible applications of these materials in current jazz practices. The study includes examinations of educational publications by five selected jazz artists (Dave Liebman, Jerry Bergonzi, George Garzone, Walt Weiskopf, and John O’Gallagher), and the analysis of compositional techniques by two composers of the 20th century: Peter Schat's Tone Clock and Olivier Messiaen's modes of limited transposition. In addition, these theories and techniques are illustrated by selected examples (transcriptions and audio excerpts) and by examples of applications by various musicians, including the author. All examples are thoroughly analyzed and evaluated in order to determine their potential use in contemporary jazz practices. The research results provide comprehensive insights into compositional and improvisational processes in jazz, and offer materials that can be useful for the personal artistic development of jazz practitioners, including musicians, composers, and educators.
- Published
- 2017
30. [Choose oral over intravenous antibiotic therapy].
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Kaal AG, Roos R, Wilms EB, Borgdorff H, and van Nieuwkoop C
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- Humans, Bacterial Infections drug therapy, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Administration, Intravenous, Administration, Oral, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Many physicians and patients hold the (unconscious) belief that intravenous antibiotic therapy is superior to oral therapy. This belief is also reflected in guidelines, where increasing severity of infection often leads to the recommendation of intravenous options only. But is this belief justified, and where does it come from? Treating with oral antibiotics has many potential advantages, such as fewer hospital admissions and the prevention of related complications. In this era of increasing demand for appropriate and efficient care, oral antibiotic treatment should replace intravenous treatment where possible. Here, we outline the crucial factors that should be considered when deciding between oral and intravenous treatment of infections: pharmacokinetics and dynamics, antibiotic resistance, and specific patient factors.
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- 2024
31. Prevotella timonensis Bacteria Associated With Vaginal Dysbiosis Enhance Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Susceptibility Of Vaginal CD4+ T Cells.
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van Teijlingen NH, van Smoorenburg MY, Sarrami-Forooshani R, Zijlstra-Willems EM, van Hamme JL, Borgdorff H, van de Wijgert JHHM, van Leeuwen E, van der Post JAM, Strijbis K, Ribeiro CMS, and Geijtenbeek TBH
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- Humans, Female, Disease Susceptibility, Microbiota, Virus Internalization, Prevotella isolation & purification, Dysbiosis microbiology, Vagina microbiology, Vagina virology, Vagina immunology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, HIV-1, HIV Infections microbiology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV Infections virology
- Abstract
Dysbiosis of the vaginal microbiome poses a serious risk for sexual human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transmission. Prevotella spp are abundant during vaginal dysbiosis and associated with enhanced HIV-1 susceptibility; however, underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we investigated the direct effect of vaginal bacteria on HIV-1 susceptibility of vaginal CD4+ T cells. Notably, pre-exposure to Prevotella timonensis enhanced HIV-1 uptake by vaginal T cells, leading to increased viral fusion and enhanced virus production. Pre-exposure to antiretroviral inhibitors abolished P timonensis-enhanced infection. Our study shows that the vaginal microbiome directly affects mucosal CD4+ T-cell susceptibility, emphasizing importance of vaginal dysbiosis diagnosis and treatment., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. All authors: No reported conflicts of interest. All authors have submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. Conflicts that the editors consider relevant to the content of the manuscript have been disclosed., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America.)
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- 2024
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32. Vaginal bacterium Prevotella timonensis turns protective Langerhans cells into HIV-1 reservoirs for virus dissemination.
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van Teijlingen NH, Helgers LC, Sarrami-Forooshani R, Zijlstra-Willems EM, van Hamme JL, Segui-Perez C, van Smoorenburg MY, Borgdorff H, van de Wijgert JH, van Leeuwen E, van der Post JA, Strijbis K, Ribeiro CM, and Geijtenbeek TB
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- Antiviral Agents, Dysbiosis, Female, Humans, Langerhans Cells, Prevotella, HIV Infections, HIV-1
- Abstract
Dysbiosis of vaginal microbiota is associated with increased HIV-1 acquisition, but the underlying cellular mechanisms remain unclear. Vaginal Langerhans cells (LCs) protect against mucosal HIV-1 infection via autophagy-mediated degradation of HIV-1. As LCs are in continuous contact with bacterial members of the vaginal microbiome, we investigated the impact of commensal and dysbiosis-associated vaginal (an)aerobic bacterial species on the antiviral function of LCs. Most of the tested bacteria did not affect the HIV-1 restrictive function of LCs. However, Prevotella timonensis induced a vast uptake of HIV-1 by vaginal LCs. Internalized virus remained infectious for days and uptake was unaffected by antiretroviral drugs. P. timonensis-exposed LCs efficiently transmitted HIV-1 to target cells both in vitro and ex vivo. Additionally, P. timonensis exposure enhanced uptake and transmission of the HIV-1 variants that establish infection after sexual transmission, the so-called Transmitted Founder variants. Our findings, therefore, suggest that P. timonensis might set the stage for enhanced HIV-1 susceptibility during vaginal dysbiosis and advocate targeted treatment of P. timonensis during bacterial vaginosis to limit HIV-1 infection., (© 2022 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY NC ND 4.0 license.)
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- 2022
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33. Urine and vaginal microbiota compositions of postmenopausal and premenopausal women differ regardless of recurrent urinary tract infection and renal transplant status.
- Author
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Hugenholtz F, van der Veer C, Terpstra ML, Borgdorff H, van Houdt R, Bruisten S, Geerlings SE, and van de Wijgert JHHM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Bacteria genetics, Female, Humans, Microbiota genetics, Middle Aged, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S analysis, Young Adult, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Postmenopause urine, Premenopause urine, Urinary Tract Infections microbiology, Urine microbiology, Vagina microbiology
- Abstract
Postmenopausal women and renal transplant recipients are at increased risk of recurrent urinary tract infections (RUTI). Urine and vaginal microbiota of premenopausal controls (N = 18) and RUTI cases (18), and of postmenopausal controls (30) and RUTI cases (20) with and without a renal transplant, were characterized using 16S rRNA sequencing. Participants did not have UTI symptoms at the time of sampling. Gram-negative uropathobionts (predominantly Escherichia/Shigella, Pseudomonas, Klebsiella, and Acinetobacter) had a much higher mean relative abundance in urine than vaginal samples, especially in premenopausal women. No statistically significant differences in mean relative abundances of bacterial groups were found within the premenopausal group or within the postmenopausal group by RUTI or renal transplant status without chronic antibiotic use. Comparing postmenopausal to premenopausal women, mean relative abundances of lactobacilli (especially L. crispatus) in urine and vaginal samples and of Gram-negative uropathobionts in urine were lower, and of BV-anaerobes and Gram-positive uropathobionts in urine and vaginal samples were higher. While RUTI in premenopausal women is predominantly caused by Escherichia, the causative organisms in postmenopausal women are likely more diverse. The relative importance of individual organisms is currently unknown. We recommend that future studies, including intervention studies, include longitudinal microbiota assessments., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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34. The Exposition of Artistic Research : Publishing Art in Academia
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Schwab, Michael, Borgdorff, Henk, Schwab, Michael, and Borgdorff, Henk
- Published
- 2013
35. Pathobionts in the Vaginal Microbiota: Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis of Three Sequencing Studies.
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van de Wijgert JHHM, Verwijs MC, Gill AC, Borgdorff H, van der Veer C, and Mayaud P
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- Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Netherlands, South Africa, Vagina, Microbiota, Vaginosis, Bacterial
- Abstract
Sequencing studies have shown that optimal vaginal microbiota (VMB) are lactobacilli-dominated and that anaerobes associated with bacterial vaginosis (BV-anaerobes) are commonly present. However, they overlooked a less prevalent but more pathogenic group of vaginal bacteria: the pathobionts that cause maternal and neonatal infections and pelvic inflammatory disease. We conducted an individual participant data meta-analysis of three VMB sequencing studies that included diverse groups of women in Rwanda, South Africa, and the Netherlands (2,044 samples from 1,163 women in total). We identified 40 pathobiont taxa but only six were non-minority taxa (at least 1% relative abundance in at least one sample) in all studies: Streptococcus (54% of pathobionts reads) , Staphylococcus, Enterococcus, Escherichia/Shigella, Haemophilus , and Campylobacter . When all pathobionts were combined into one bacterial group, the VMB of 17% of women contained a relative abundance of at least 1%. We found a significant negative correlation between relative abundances (ρ = -0.9234), but not estimated concentrations ( r = 0.0031), of lactobacilli and BV-anaerobes; and a significant positive correlation between estimated concentrations of pathobionts and BV-anaerobes ( r = 0.1938) but not between pathobionts and lactobacilli ( r = 0.0436; although lactobacilli declined non-significantly with increasing pathobionts proportions). VMB sequencing data were also classified into mutually exclusive VMB types. The overall mean bacterial load of the ≥20% pathobionts VMB type (5.85 log
10 cells/μl) was similar to those of the three lactobacilli-dominated VMB types (means 5.13-5.83 log10 cells/μl) but lower than those of the four anaerobic dysbiosis VMB types (means 6.11-6.87 log10 cells/μl). These results suggest that pathobionts co-occur with both lactobacilli and BV-anaerobes and do not expand as much as BV-anaerobes do in a dysbiotic situation. Pathobionts detection/levels were increased in samples with a Nugent score of 4-6 in both studies that conducted Nugent-scoring. Having pathobionts was positively associated with young age, non-Dutch origin, hormonal contraceptive use, smoking, antibiotic use in the 14 days prior to sampling, HIV status, and the presence of sexually transmitted pathogens, in at least one but not all studies; inconsistently associated with sexual risk-taking and unusual vaginal discharge reporting; and not associated with vaginal yeasts detection by microscopy. We recommend that future VMB studies quantify common vaginal pathobiont genera., (Copyright © 2020 van de Wijgert, Verwijs, Gill, Borgdorff, van der Veer and Mayaud.)- Published
- 2020
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36. The association between ethnicity and vaginal microbiota composition in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
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Borgdorff H, van der Veer C, van Houdt R, Alberts CJ, de Vries HJ, Bruisten SM, Snijder MB, Prins M, Geerlings SE, Schim van der Loeff MF, and van de Wijgert JHHM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Bifidobacterium genetics, Bifidobacterium physiology, Corynebacterium genetics, Corynebacterium physiology, Enterobacteriaceae genetics, Enterobacteriaceae physiology, Female, Humans, Lactobacillus genetics, Lactobacillus physiology, Microbiota genetics, Netherlands, Proteus genetics, Proteus physiology, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Staphylococcus genetics, Staphylococcus physiology, Streptococcus genetics, Streptococcus physiology, Young Adult, Microbiota physiology, Vagina microbiology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether ethnicity is independently associated with vaginal microbiota (VMB) composition in women living in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, as has been shown for American women., Methods: Women (18-34 years, non-pregnant, N = 610) representing the six largest ethnic groups (Dutch, African Surinamese, South-Asian Surinamese, Turkish, Moroccan, and Ghanaian) were sampled from the population-based HELIUS study. Sampling was performed irrespective of health status or healthcare seeking behavior. DNA was extracted from self-sampled vaginal swabs and sequenced by Illumina MiSeq (16S rRNA gene V3-V4 region)., Results: The overall prevalence of VMBs not dominated by lactobacilli was 38.5%: 32.2% had a VMB resembling bacterial vaginosis and another 6.2% had a VMB dominated by Bifidobacteriaceae (not including Gardnerella vaginalis), Corynebacterium, or pathobionts (streptococci, staphylococci, Proteus or Enterobacteriaceae). The most prevalent VMB in ethnically Dutch women was a Lactobacillus crispatus-dominated VMB, in African Surinamese and Ghanaian women a polybacterial G. vaginalis-containing VMB, and in the other ethnic groups a L. iners-dominated VMB. After adjustment for sociodemographic, behavioral and clinical factors, African Surinamese ethnicity (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 5.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.1-12.0) and Ghanaian ethnicity (aOR 4.8, 95% CI 1.8-12.6) were associated with having a polybacterial G. vaginalis-containing VMB, and African Surinamese ethnicity with a L. iners-dominated VMB (aOR 2.8, 95% CI 1.2-6.2). Shorter steady relationship duration, inconsistent condom use with casual partners, and not using hormonal contraception were also associated with having a polybacterial G. vaginalis-containing VMB, but human papillomavirus infection was not. Other sexually transmitted infections were uncommon., Conclusions: The overall prevalence of having a VMB not dominated by lactobacilli in this population-based cohort of women aged 18-34 years in Amsterdam was high (38.5%), and women of sub-Saharan African descent were significantly more likely to have a polybacterial G. vaginalis-containing VMB than Dutch women independent of modifiable behaviors.
- Published
- 2017
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37. Unique Insights in the Cervicovaginal Lactobacillus iners and L. crispatus Proteomes and Their Associations with Microbiota Dysbiosis.
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Borgdorff H, Armstrong SD, Tytgat HL, Xia D, Ndayisaba GF, Wastling JM, and van de Wijgert JH
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- Adult, Bacterial Proteins genetics, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Dysbiosis microbiology, Female, Humans, Lactobacillus genetics, Middle Aged, Proteome genetics, RNA, Bacterial genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Bacterial Proteins metabolism, Cervix Uteri microbiology, Dysbiosis metabolism, Lactobacillus metabolism, Microbiota, Proteome metabolism, Vagina microbiology
- Abstract
Background: A Lactobacillus-dominated cervicovaginal microbiota (VMB) protects women from adverse reproductive health outcomes, but the role of L. iners in the VMB is poorly understood. Our aim was to explore the association between the cervicovaginal L. iners and L. crispatus proteomes and VMB composition., Methods: The vaginal proteomes of 50 Rwandan women at high HIV risk, grouped into four VMB groups (based on 16S rDNA microarray results), were investigated by mass spectrometry using cervicovaginal lavage (CVL) samples. Only samples with positive 16S results for L. iners and/or L. crispatus within each group were included in subsequent comparative protein analyses: Lactobacillus crispatus-dominated VMB cluster (with 16S-proven L. iners (ni) = 0, and with 16S-proven L. crispatus (nc) = 5), L. iners-dominated VMB cluster (ni = 11, nc = 4), moderate dysbiosis (ni = 12, nc = 2); and severe dysbiosis (ni = 8, nc = 2). The relative abundances of proteins that were considered specific for L. iners and L. crispatus were compared among VMB groups., Results: Forty Lactobacillus proteins were identified of which 7 were specific for L. iners and 11 for L. crispatus. The relative abundances of L. iners DNA starvation/stationary phase protection protein (DPS), and the glycolysis enzymes glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and glucose-6-phosphate isomerase (GPI), were significantly decreased in women with L. iners-containing dysbiosis compared to women with a L. iners-dominated VMB, independent of vaginal pH and L. iners abundance. Furthermore, L. iners DPS, GAPDH, GPI, and fructose-bisphosphate aldolase (ALDO) were significantly negatively associated with vaginal pH. Glycolysis enzymes of L. crispatus showed a similar negative, but nonsignificant, trend related to dysbiosis., Conclusions: Most identified Lactobacillus proteins had conserved intracellular functions, but their high abundance in CVL supernatant might imply an additional extracellular (moonlighting) role. Our findings suggest that these proteins can be important in maintaining a Lactobacillus-dominated VMB. Functional studies are needed to investigate their roles in vaginal bacterial communities and whether they can be used to prevent vaginal dysbiosis.
- Published
- 2016
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38. The impact of hormonal contraception and pregnancy on sexually transmitted infections and on cervicovaginal microbiota in african sex workers.
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Borgdorff H, Verwijs MC, Wit FW, Tsivtsivadze E, Ndayisaba GF, Verhelst R, Schuren FH, and van de Wijgert JH
- Subjects
- Adult, Cervix Uteri immunology, Female, Humans, Incidence, Microarray Analysis, Phylogeny, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Rwanda epidemiology, Sexual Behavior, Sexually Transmitted Diseases epidemiology, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control, Vagina immunology, Cervix Uteri microbiology, Condoms statistics & numerical data, Contraceptive Agents, Female, Contraceptives, Oral, Hormonal, Sex Workers statistics & numerical data, Sexually Transmitted Diseases immunology, Vagina microbiology
- Abstract
Background: The observed association between Depo-Provera injectable use and increased HIV acquisition may be caused by hormone-induced increased susceptibility to other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) or changes in the cervicovaginal microbiota (VMB), accompanied by genital immune activation and/or mucosal remodeling., Methods: Rwandan female sex workers (n = 800) were interviewed about contraceptive use and sexual behavior and were tested for STIs, bacterial vaginosis by Nugent score and pregnancy, at baseline. A subset of 397 HIV-negative, nonpregnant women were interviewed and tested again at regular intervals for 2 years. The VMB of a subset of 174 women was characterized by phylogenetic microarray. Outcomes of STI and VMB were compared between women with hormonal exposures (reporting oral contraceptive or injectable use, or testing positive for pregnancy) and controls (not reporting hormonal contraception and not pregnant)., Results: Oral contraceptive use was associated with increased human papillomavirus prevalence (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 3.10; 1.21-7.94) and Chlamydia trachomatis incidence (aOR, 6.13; 1.58-23.80), injectable use with increased herpes simplex virus-2 prevalence (aOR, 2.13; 1.26-3.59) and pregnancy with lower HIV prevalence (aOR, 0.45; 0.22-0.92) but higher candidiasis incidence (aOR, 2.14; 1.12-4.09). Hormonal status was not associated with Nugent score category or phylogenetic VMB clustering, but oral contraceptive users had lower semiquantitative vaginal abundance of Prevotella, Sneathia/Leptotrichia amnionii, and Mycoplasma species., Conclusions: Oral contraceptive and injectable use were associated with several STIs but not with VMB composition. The increased herpes simplex virus-2 prevalence among injectable users might explain the potentially higher HIV risk in these women, but more research is needed to confirm these results and elucidate biological mechanisms.
- Published
- 2015
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39. Correlates of the molecular vaginal microbiota composition of African women.
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Gautam R, Borgdorff H, Jespers V, Francis SC, Verhelst R, Mwaura M, Delany-Moretlwe S, Ndayisaba G, Kyongo JK, Hardy L, Menten J, Crucitti T, Tsivtsivadze E, Schuren F, and van de Wijgert JH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Africa epidemiology, Female, Humans, Lactobacillus genetics, Microbiota, Phylogeny, Prevalence, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Bacterial epidemiology, Young Adult, HIV Infections prevention & control, Lactobacillus isolation & purification, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Bacterial microbiology, Vagina microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Sociodemographic, behavioral and clinical correlates of the vaginal microbiome (VMB) as characterized by molecular methods have not been adequately studied. VMB dominated by bacteria other than lactobacilli may cause inflammation, which may facilitate HIV acquisition and other adverse reproductive health outcomes., Methods: We characterized the VMB of women in Kenya, Rwanda, South Africa and Tanzania (KRST) using a 16S rDNA phylogenetic microarray. Cytokines were quantified in cervicovaginal lavages. Potential sociodemographic, behavioral, and clinical correlates were also evaluated., Results: Three hundred thirteen samples from 230 women were available for analysis. Five VMB clusters were identified: one cluster each dominated by Lactobacillus crispatus (KRST-I) and L. iners (KRST-II), and three clusters not dominated by a single species but containing multiple (facultative) anaerobes (KRST-III/IV/V). Women in clusters KRST-I and II had lower mean concentrations of interleukin (IL)-1α (p < 0.001) and Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factor (G-CSF) (p = 0.01), but higher concentrations of interferon-γ-induced protein (IP-10) (p < 0.01) than women in clusters KRST-III/IV/V. A lower proportion of women in cluster KRST-I tested positive for bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs; ptrend = 0.07) and urinary tract infection (UTI; p = 0.06), and a higher proportion of women in clusters KRST-I and II had vaginal candidiasis (ptrend = 0.09), but these associations did not reach statistical significance. Women who reported unusual vaginal discharge were more likely to belong to clusters KRST-III/IV/V (p = 0.05)., Conclusion: Vaginal dysbiosis in African women was significantly associated with vaginal inflammation; the associations with increased prevalence of STIs and UTI, and decreased prevalence of vaginal candidiasis, should be confirmed in larger studies.
- Published
- 2015
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40. Lactobacillus-dominated cervicovaginal microbiota associated with reduced HIV/STI prevalence and genital HIV viral load in African women.
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Borgdorff H, Tsivtsivadze E, Verhelst R, Marzorati M, Jurriaans S, Ndayisaba GF, Schuren FH, and van de Wijgert JH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cervix Uteri virology, Female, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Lactobacillus genetics, Middle Aged, Phylogeny, Pregnancy, Prevalence, Rwanda, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Bacterial epidemiology, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Viral epidemiology, Vagina virology, Viral Load, Young Adult, Cervix Uteri microbiology, HIV Infections microbiology, Lactobacillus isolation & purification, Microbiota, Vagina microbiology
- Abstract
Cervicovaginal microbiota not dominated by lactobacilli may facilitate transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs), as well as miscarriages, preterm births and sepsis in pregnant women. However, little is known about the exact nature of the microbiological changes that cause these adverse outcomes. In this study, cervical samples of 174 Rwandan female sex workers were analyzed cross-sectionally using a phylogenetic microarray. Furthermore, HIV-1 RNA concentrations were measured in cervicovaginal lavages of 58 HIV-positive women among them. We identified six microbiome clusters, representing a gradient from low semi-quantitative abundance and diversity dominated by Lactobacillus crispatus (cluster R-I, with R denoting 'Rwanda') and L. iners (R-II) to intermediate (R-V) and high abundance and diversity (R-III, R-IV and R-VI) dominated by a mixture of anaerobes, including Gardnerella, Atopobium and Prevotella species. Women in cluster R-I were less likely to have HIV (P=0.03), herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2; P<0.01), and high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV; P<0.01) and had no bacterial STIs (P=0.15). Statistically significant trends in prevalence of viral STIs were found from low prevalence in cluster R-I, to higher prevalence in clusters R-II and R-V, and highest prevalence in clusters R-III/R-IV/R-VI. Furthermore, only 10% of HIV-positive women in clusters R-I/R-II, compared with 40% in cluster R-V, and 42% in clusters R-III/R-IV/R-VI had detectable cervicovaginal HIV-1 RNA (Ptrend=0.03). We conclude that L. crispatus-dominated, and to a lesser extent L. iners-dominated, cervicovaginal microbiota are associated with a lower prevalence of HIV/STIs and a lower likelihood of genital HIV-1 RNA shedding.
- Published
- 2014
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41. The vaginal microbiota: what have we learned after a decade of molecular characterization?
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van de Wijgert JH, Borgdorff H, Verhelst R, Crucitti T, Francis S, Verstraelen H, and Jespers V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cluster Analysis, Female, Humans, Microbiota, Pregnancy, Vaginosis, Bacterial diagnosis, Microbial Consortia, Vagina microbiology, Vaginosis, Bacterial microbiology
- Abstract
We conducted a systematic review of the Medline database (U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, U.S.A) to determine if consistent molecular vaginal microbiota (VMB) composition patterns can be discerned after a decade of molecular testing, and to evaluate demographic, behavioral and clinical determinants of VMB compositions. Studies were eligible when published between 1 January 2008 and 15 November 2013, and if at least one molecular technique (sequencing, PCR, DNA fingerprinting, or DNA hybridization) was used to characterize the VMB. Sixty three eligible studies were identified. These studies have now conclusively shown that lactobacilli-dominated VMB are associated with a healthy vaginal micro-environment and that bacterial vaginosis (BV) is best described as a polybacterial dysbiosis. The extent of dysbiosis correlates well with Nugent score and vaginal pH but not with the other Amsel criteria. Lactobacillus crispatus is more beneficial than L. iners. Longitudinal studies have shown that a L. crispatus-dominated VMB is more likely to shift to a L. iners-dominated or mixed lactobacilli VMB than to full dysbiosis. Data on VMB determinants are scarce and inconsistent, but dysbiosis is consistently associated with HIV, human papillomavirus (HPV), and Trichomonas vaginalis infection. In contrast, vaginal colonization with Candida spp. is more common in women with a lactobacilli-dominated VMB than in women with dysbiosis. Cervicovaginal mucosal immune responses to molecular VMB compositions have not yet been properly characterized. Molecular techniques have now become more affordable, and we make a case for incorporating them into larger epidemiological studies to address knowledge gaps in etiology and pathogenesis of dysbiosis, associations of different dysbiotic states with clinical outcomes, and to evaluate interventions aimed at restoring and maintaining a lactobacilli-dominated VMB.
- Published
- 2014
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42. Feasibility and acceptability of a novel cervicovaginal lavage self-sampling device among women in Kigali, Rwanda.
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Ndayisaba G, Verwijs MC, van Eeckhoudt S, Gasarabwe A, Hardy L, Borgdorff H, Kestelyn E, Jespers VA, and van de Wijgert J
- Subjects
- Adult, Cohort Studies, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Prospective Studies, Rwanda, Self Care, Vaginal Douching, Young Adult, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control, Specimen Handling methods
- Abstract
The Delphi Screener is a novel cervicovaginal lavage self-sampling device. Sixty women in Kigali (Rwanda) assessed the Screener at 2 consecutive visits. Between the visits, ease of use improved, reported difficulties decreased, and the collected sample weight increased. Most women preferred self-collection over a speculum examination.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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