46 results on '"M H, Rodriguez"'
Search Results
2. Improved objective Bayesian estimator for a PLP model hierarchically represented subject to competing risks under minimal repair regime.
- Author
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Francisco Louzada, José A Cuminato, Oscar M H Rodriguez, Vera L D Tomazella, Paulo H Ferreira, Pedro L Ramos, Eder A Milani, Gustavo Bochio, Ivan C Perissini, Oilson A Gonzatto Junior, Alex L Mota, Luis F A Alegría, Danilo Colombo, Eduardo A Perondi, André V Wentz, Anselmo L Silva Júnior, Dante A C Barone, Hugo F L Santos, and Marcus V C Magalhães
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
In this paper, we propose a hierarchical statistical model for a single repairable system subject to several failure modes (competing risks). The paper describes how complex engineered systems may be modelled hierarchically by use of Bayesian methods. It is also assumed that repairs are minimal and each failure mode has a power-law intensity. Our proposed model generalizes another one already presented in the literature and continues the study initiated by us in another published paper. Some properties of the new model are discussed. We conduct statistical inference under an objective Bayesian framework. A simulation study is carried out to investigate the efficiency of the proposed methods. Finally, our methodology is illustrated by two practical situations currently addressed in a project under development arising from a partnership between Petrobras and six research institutes.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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3. A Repairable System Subjected to Hierarchical Competing Risks: Modeling and Applications
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Francisco Louzada, Jose A. Cuminato, Oscar M. H. Rodriguez, Vera L. D. Tomazella, Paulo H. Ferreira, Pedro L. Ramos, Seyed R. A. Niaki, Oilson A. Gonzatto, Ivan C. Perissini, Luis F. A. Alegria, Danilo Colombo, David E. A. Martins, and Hugo F. L. Santos
- Subjects
Bias correction ,competing risks ,hierarchical systems ,maximum likelihood estimation ,power-law process ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
In this paper, we propose modeling for a single repairable system with a hierarchical structure under the assumption that the failures follow a nonhomogeneous Poisson process (which corresponds to minimal repair action) with a power-law intensity function. The properties of the new model are discussed in detail. The parameter estimators are obtained using the maximum likelihood method. A corrective approach is used to remove bias with order O(n-1), and the respective exact confidence intervals are proposed. A simulation study is conducted to show that our estimators are bias-free. The proposed modeling is illustrated via a toy example on a butterfly valve system, an example of an early-stage real project related to the traction system of an in-pipe robot, and also a real example on a blowout preventer system.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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4. HYBRID MACHINE LEARNING MODEL APPLIED TO PHASE INVERSION PREDICTION IN LIQUID-LIQUID PIPE FLOW
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Pedro B. Bazon, Johann E. Castro-Bolivar, C. M. Ruiz-Diaz, Marlon M. Hernández-Cely, and Oscar M. H. Rodriguez
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Modeling and Simulation ,General Engineering ,Condensed Matter Physics - Abstract
One of the current challenges in two-phase flow is the characterization of phase inversion in the oil and gas industry. Empirical and semi-empirical models have been developed by several researchers, allowing limited predictions through correlations. Recently, models obtained with application of artificial intelligence techniques, such as artificial neural networks, have become a promising alternative to identify flow patterns and their transition boundaries. This work's aim is to develop a hybrid model that identifies the phase inversion transition from oil-in-water to water-in-oil flow in vertical pipes. It is based on recent models found in the literature and logistic regression models based on artificial neural networks, for which information was obtained from the literature. The proposed hybrid model achieved an RMSE ≈ 0.0834, thus being an efficient contribution to the identification of phase inversion in oil-water two-phase flow.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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5. Optimisation of nickel extraction from spent cathodes of NiMH batteries by hydrometallurgical process through experimental design
- Author
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D. M. Navarrete, S. Drajlin Gordon, M. R. Esquivel, and M. H. Rodriguez
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Metals and Alloys ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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6. Efficiency of an Inverted-Shroud Gravitational Gas Separator: Effect of the Liquid Viscosity and Inclination
- Author
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P. J. Miranda-Lugo, Marcel C. Barbosa, L. Enrique Ortiz-Vidal, and O. M. H. Rodriguez
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Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology - Abstract
Summary Gas-liquid separation is a typical process in many applications. For instance, gas separation is critical for the proper operation of electrical submergible pumps in the oil and gas industry as the pumps’ performance and lifetime are severely reduced when working with high gas/oil ratios. Gas-liquid separators are installed in oil production wells to reduce the void fraction at the pump inlet. The inverted-shroud gravitational separator stands out due to its efficiencies higher than 97%. This separator performs the gas separation process in two stages. The first is a segregation process related to inversion from liquid to gas continuous flow, whereas the second stage is related to gas entrainment associated with kinetic-energy dissipation process. The latter is more complex to model in the vertical than in the inclined separator’s position. Previous studies revealed that the liquid flow rate and separator’s inclination are relevant parameters for the gas separation efficiency (GSE). However, studies regarding the effect of the liquid viscosity on GSE are scanty. We evaluate the influence of the liquid viscosity and separator’s inclination on the GSE of an inverted-shroud separator (IS-separator) with water-air and oil-air mixtures. Efficiency maps for each inclination and empirical correlations to predict the GSE in the vertical inclination are proposed. New experimental data collected for several liquid flow rates and separator inclinations are offered in this study as a starting point to develop universal GSE maps. Different gas separation phenomena are observed depending on the flow pattern at the inner annular channel (IAC) of the separator and its inclination. The experiments conducted with the water-air mixture indicated turbulent flow, while the oil-air mixture revealed laminar flow for both inclined and vertical positions. The results suggest that the greater the liquid viscosity, the higher the GSE. The efficiency maps indicate that it is possible to reach total gas separation (TGS) for many experimental conditions. In practice, our approach proposes an alternative technology where the variables that influence the production well’s dynamic fluid level are actively controlled. Therefore, the IS-separator can operate under operational field conditions similar to those tested on a laboratory scale. This fact makes the IS-separator a promising tool for industrial applications.
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- 2022
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7. State-of-the-Art Instrumentation and Experimental Methods Developed at the Industrial Multiphase Flow Laboratory over the Last 17 Years: From Gamma-Ray and Wire-Mesh Tomography to Physics-Informed Machine Learning
- Author
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Oscar M. H. Rodriguez, André M. Quintino, Marlon M. Hernández-Cely, and Francisco J. Nascimento
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- 2022
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8. Data-Driven Machine Learning Applied to Liquid-Liquid Flow Pattern Prediction
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Lívia O. Zampereti, André M. Quintino, and Oscar M. H. Rodriguez
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- 2022
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9. Evaluation of Multiphase Flow Pattern and Friction Loss Prediction Models Applied to NEMOG’s Multiphase Flow Circuit
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Tiago G. S. Lima, Francisco J. do Nascimento, Oscar M. H. Rodriguez, and Rogério Ramos
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- 2022
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10. Estimation of Permittivity Models for Holdup Measurement of Viscous-Oil for different patterns
- Author
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Arthur F. De A. Teixeira, M H Rodriguez Oscar, Marcelo Souza de Castro, Marlon Hernandez-Cely, and Rodrigo H. Ruschel
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Permittivity ,Viscosity ,Materials science ,Tap water ,Borosilicate glass ,Phase (matter) ,Mechanics ,Tomography ,Capacitance ,Viscous oil - Abstract
In this research the wire mesh sensor (WMS) based on the measurement of the electrical capacitance or fluid permittivity was used in order to characterize two-phase liquid-liquid flows. Tap water and oil with 220 mPa.s of viscosity and 860 kg/m3 of density were the working fluids. The experiments were carried out in a 25.4mm i.d. 12m-long borosilicate glass pipe. To validate the results, phase fractions were measured with quick-closing valves technique (QCVs) and the results were compared with in-situ phase fractions calculated with the twelve permittivity models from the WMS. Images obtained by a high-speed camera were compared with the cross-sectional tomography obtained by the WMS, as a qualitatively validation. The results showed that the wire mesh sensor (WMS) is an accurate instrument for in situ holdup measurements of water-high viscosity oil liquid-liquid two-phase flows for the smooth stratified, wavy stratified and stratified with mixture at the interface flow patterns.
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- 2019
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11. Estimation of Permittivity Models for Holdup Measurement of Viscous-Oil for different patterns
- Author
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Hernandez-Cely, Marlon, primary, De A. Teixeira, Arthur F., additional, Ruschel, Rodrigo H., additional, Oscar M. H., Rodriguez, additional, and de Castro, Marcelo S., additional
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- 2019
- Full Text
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12. Expression of Coagulation Factor IX in a Haematopoietic Cell Line
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Jean-Luc Plantier, Georges Uzan, M. Rea, Jean-Claude Bordet, Claude Negrier, Nathalie Enjolras, Marylène Leboeuf, and M. H. Rodriguez
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Genetic enhancement ,Hematology ,Transfection ,Biology ,Coagulation Factor IX ,Cell biology ,Haematopoiesis ,Cell culture ,Immunology ,medicine ,Northern blot ,Stem cell ,Factor IX ,medicine.drug - Abstract
SummaryWe have developed a gene therapy project for haemophilia B which aims to express factor IX (FIX) in haematopoietic lineage. Haematopoietic stem cells and subsequent megakaryocyte-derived cells represent the target cells of this approach. Our speculation is that platelets can deliver the coagulation factor at the site of injury, and subsequently correct the haemostasis defect. In order to direct FIX expression in cells from the megakaryocytic lineage, we designed a FIX cassette where the FIX cDNA was placed under the control of the tissue-specific glycoprotein IIb (GPIIb) promoter. In stably transfected HEL cells, FIX production was higher when driven by the GPIIb promoter compared to the CMV promoter. Using a cassette containing both the GPIIb promoter and a truncated FIX intron 1, FIX synthesis was dramatically increased in HEL cells. Northern blot analysis demonstrated an increase in FIX mRNA amounts, which paralleled with an increase of FIX antigen in the culture supernatants. Using a one-stage clotting assay and an activation by FXIa and FVIIa/TF, the HEL-derived recombinant FIX was shown to be a biologically active protein. This recombinant protein exhibited a 60-kDa molecular mass and was more heterogeneous than plasma immunopurified FIX (Mononine®). The molecular mass difference could be partly explained by a different glycosylation pattern. The GPIIb promoter appears therefore to be a very attractive sequence to specifically direct FIX production in the megakaryocytic compartment of hematopoietic cells. These data also demonstrate that hematopoietic cells may represent potential target cells in an approach to gene therapy of haemophilia B.
- Published
- 2002
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13. [Global health: a globalized public health]
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P, Buekens, G, Bréart, M, Cot, A, Leveque, A, Massougbodji, and M H Rodriguez, López
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Internationality ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Developed Countries ,Incidence ,Neoplasms ,Chronic Disease ,Humans ,Wounds and Injuries ,Public Health ,Global Health ,Developing Countries - Published
- 2010
14. Susceptibility of three laboratory strains of Anopheles albimanus (Diptera: Culicidae) to coindigenous Plasmodium vivax circumsporozoite protein phenotypes in southern Mexico
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L, Gonzalez-Ceron, M H, Rodriguez, F V, Santillan, J E, Hernandez, and R A, Wirtz
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Phenotype ,Animals, Laboratory ,Anopheles ,Protozoan Proteins ,Animals ,Antigens, Protozoan ,Plasmodium vivax ,Mexico - Abstract
The susceptibility to two coindigenous Plasmodium vivax GrassiFeletti phenotypes VK210 and VK247 of three colonized Anopheles albimanus Wiedemann strains (white-striped, green and brown) from southern Mexico was investigated. Mosquitoes of the three strains were simultaneously fed with P. vivax-infected patient blood and examined 1 wk later for the presence of oocysts. The circumsporozoite protein phenotype type (VK210 and VK247) was determined by immunoflorescence of salivary gland sporozoites using monoclonal antibodies. The proportions of specimens infected and the number of oocyst per mosquito indicated that all mosquito strains were more susceptible to the phenotype VK210 than to VK247, but the white-striped strain was more susceptible to both parasite phenotypes than the other two strains.
- Published
- 2004
15. The P-selectin cytoplasmic domain directs the cellular storage of a recombinant chimeric factor IX
- Author
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M. H. Rodriguez, Claude Negrier, Massé Jm, Cramer Em, Nathalie Enjolras, and Jean-Luc Plantier
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DNA, Complementary ,P-selectin ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Genetic Vectors ,Biology ,In Vitro Techniques ,Transfection ,Hemophilia B ,law.invention ,Cell Line ,Factor IX ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Adrenocorticotropic Hormone ,law ,Animals ,Humans ,Base Sequence ,Hematology ,Transmembrane protein ,Peptide Fragments ,Cell biology ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,P-Selectin ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Cytoplasm ,Phorbol ,Recombinant DNA ,Intracellular - Abstract
Hemophilia B was recognized as a good candidate for gene therapy. Several strategies have been attempted and gave promising results in hemophilic animals but failed to achieve corrective levels in humans. To overcome this inconvenience we aimed to generate intracellular pools of factor (F)IX in cells that are implicated in the hemostatic response, e.g. endothelial cells and platelets. Upon stimulation, these cells release their granule content, which in this case would result in an increase in local FIX concentration, and could locally produce an effective hemostasis. In an attempt to produce an intracellular pool of releasable coagulation FIX, the cytoplasmic domain of the P-selectin (pselCT) molecule was fused to the carboxy-terminal extremity of the human FIX protein. The properties of this chimeric molecule (FIX-pselCT) were studied in AtT20, a cell line which possesses storage granules. As previously shown for transmembrane molecules but not for a soluble protein such as FIX, the pselCT fragment induces the storage of FIX-pselCT. The coagulant activity of FIX-pselCT was not affected by the addition of the pselCT tail. The treatment of AtT20 cells with different inhibitors revealed that FIX-pselCT was not submitted to intracellular degradation and that the half-life of the chimeric molecule was at least two times longer than that of FIX-WT. An immunoelectron microscopic analysis demonstrated a specific localization of FIX-pselCT within the ACTH-containing granules. Cell stimulation using Phorbol Myristrate Acetate (PMA), ionophore A-23187 or 8-Br-cAMP induced efficient release of an active FIX-pselCT. These data demonstrate that the addition of the cytoplasmic domain of P-selectin to FIX modifies the cellular fate of the FIX molecule by directing the recombinant protein toward regulated-secretory granules without altering its coagulant activity.
- Published
- 2003
16. Characterization of a cDNA encoding a cathepsin L-like protein of Rhodnius prolixus
- Author
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T, Lopez-Ordoñez, M H, Rodriguez, and F D, Hernández-Hernández
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DNA, Complementary ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Cathepsin L ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Cathepsins ,Cysteine Endopeptidases ,Rhodnius ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Protein Precursors ,5' Untranslated Regions ,3' Untranslated Regions ,Arthropods ,Digestive System ,Sequence Alignment ,Phylogeny - Abstract
The interaction of Rhodnius prolixus digestive enzymes with Trypanosoma cruzi could be important for parasite survival. We report herein the complete sequence of the messenger of a cathepsin L-like molecule (RpCat). The cDNA has 5'- and 3'- end UTRs and a methionine codon that corresponds likely to a translation initiation codon. In the deduced amino acid sequence, a region corresponding to an ERFININ domain, diagnostic of L-cathepsins, and a possible pro-peptide cleavage site were observed. At the C-terminus, a nine-amino acid sequence, almost identical to a secretion signal of human cathepsin L was found. RpCat messenger was expressed in intestines of R. prolixus adults, and from 1st to 4th but not in 5th instar nymph stages. In a similarity analysis, RpCat was grouped with L cathepsins forming a clear group separate of the B cathepsins.
- Published
- 2002
17. Santé globale: une santé publique mondialisée.
- Author
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Buekens, Pierre, Bréart, G, Cot, M, Levêque, Alain, Massougbodji, A., López, M H Rodriguez, Buekens, Pierre, Bréart, G, Cot, M, Levêque, Alain, Massougbodji, A., and López, M H Rodriguez
- Abstract
Editorial, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2011
18. Evidence for an inactive transposable mariner-like element in Anopheles albimanus
- Author
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K, Liu, P, Lizardi, J, Yu, and M H, Rodriguez
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Anopheles ,DNA Transposable Elements ,Animals ,DNA ,Phylogeny ,Insect Vectors ,Malaria - Abstract
Transposable elements may eventually be used as transformation vectors of anti-Plasmodium genes in natural populations of Anopheles mosquitoes. The mariner transposable element is widespread in most animal phyla and we wished to test for its presence in the important Latin American malaria vector, Anopheles albimanus. Degenerate primers were designed from the consensus of insect mariner elements and used in a polymerase chain reaction to amplify a fragment of the predicted size from An. albimanus. The fragment was cloned, sequenced, and determined to be a mariner-like element through multiple alignment with known insect mariner elements. Dot blot and Southern blot analyses showed only one or a few elements per haploid genome. The cloned fragment was used as a probe to isolate similar sequences from an An. albimanus genomic DNA library. A 659-base-pair clone was 57% similar at the DNA level with mariner elements from Anopheles gambiae, Chrysoperla ptorapunda, and Haematobia irritans. This low sequence similarity is comparable to that found among mariner-like elements in all insects. However, conserved amino acid motifs were not discovered nor was a single open reading frame found. These aspects suggest that the An. albimanus mariner-like element may represent an ancient transposition event but that the element is no longer active, the typical open reading frame having been disrupted through nucleotide insertions and deletions.
- Published
- 1999
19. Colonization of Anopheles pseudopunctipennis from Mexico
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C, Villarreal, J I, Arredondo-Jiménez, M H, Rodriguez, and A, Ulloa
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Male ,Survival ,Animals, Laboratory ,Photoperiod ,Reproduction ,Anopheles ,Temperature ,Animals ,Female ,Mexico ,Insect Vectors - Abstract
Two colonies of Anopheles pseudopunctipennis, Tapachula and Abasolo strains, were established under laboratory conditions with a thermoperiod (29 degrees C during the day; 24 degrees C during the night) and artificial dusk. To stimulate mating, a light beam from a flashlight was shone on the cage shortly after lights off. This procedure was repeated for the first 6 mosquito generations (parental to F6) and thereafter light stimulation was unnecessary for mating. The Tapachula colony has been maintained for 24 generations in 24 months, with insemination rates in females80% since the F3, and a monthly production of 30,000 pupae since the F7. Using the same procedure, the Abasolo colony from northeastern Mexico has been maintained for 13 generations in 14 months, with insemination rates of 26-52%.
- Published
- 1999
20. Use of generalized regression tree models to characterize vegetation favoring Anopheles albimanus breeding
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J E, Hernandez, L D, Epstein, M H, Rodriguez, A D, Rodriguez, E, Rejmankova, and D R, Roberts
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Reproduction ,Anopheles ,Animals ,Plants ,Mexico - Abstract
We propose the use of generalized tree models (GTMs) to analyze data from entomological field studies. Generalized tree models can be used to characterize environments with different mosquito breeding capacity. A GTM simultaneously analyzes a set of predictor variables (e.g., vegetation coverage) in relation to a response variable (e.g., counts of Anopheles albimanus larvae), and how it varies with respect to a set of criterion variables (e.g., presence of predators). The algorithm produces a treelike graphical display with its root at the top and 2 branches stemming down from each node. At each node, conditions on the value of predictors partition the observations into subgroups (environments) in which the relation between response and criterion variables is most homogeneous.
- Published
- 1997
21. Fine structure of the eggs of Anopheles (Anopheles) apicimacula (Diptera:Culicidae)
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M H, Rodriguez, B, Chávez, A, Orozco, and A, Martínez-Palomo
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Anopheles ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Animals ,Ovum - Abstract
The eggs of Anopheles (Anopheles) apicimacula Dyar and Knab are described from scanning electron micrographs. The eggs are boat-shaped, with frills that extend ventrally along the length of the egg and surround the deck region. The ornamentation on the dorsal and lateral surfaces is formed by groups of smooth, round tubercles. The ventral surface is covered by irregularly jagged tubercles. Prominent lobed tubercles are present at the anterior and posterior ends of the deck.
- Published
- 1996
22. Acquired transmission-blocking immunity to Plasmodium vivax in a population of southern coastal Mexico
- Author
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E. Salinas, J. M. Ramsey, and M. H. Rodriguez
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Plasmodium vivax ,Antibodies, Protozoan ,Group A ,Group B ,Anopheles albimanus ,Immunity ,Virology ,Internal medicine ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Malaria, Vivax ,Animals ,Humans ,education ,Child ,Mexico ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Immunity, Innate ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,Population study ,Parasitology ,Female ,Malaria - Abstract
Naturally acquired transmission-blocking immunity to Plasmodium vivax was studied in three groups of patients from the southern coast of Mexico: primary cases (Group A, 61% of the study population), secondary cases with the prior infection seven or more months earlier (Group B, 23%), and secondary cases with the previous malaria experience within six months of the present study (Group C, 16%). Anopheles albimanus mosquitoes were fed with patients' infected blood cells in the presence of autologous or control serum, with or without heat-inactivation. Patients from all three groups had transmission-blocking immunity, although the quality and quantity of this blocking activity was significantly higher in the two secondary patient groups (B and C). Only primary malaria cases produced transmission-enhancing activity (23% of the cases), which was dependent on heat-labile serum components. The levels of patient group transmission-blocking immunity and mosquito infectivity were used to calculate the probabilities of a mosquito becoming infective after taking a blood meal from a P. vivax-infected patient from any one of the three groups. This probability was 0.025, with Group A patients providing the major source of these infections (92% risk from Group A and 4% risk for Groups B and C).
- Published
- 1996
23. Estimating the gonotrophic cycle and survivorship of Simulium ochraceum (Diptera: Simuliidae) during routine vector surveillance in southern Mexico
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M A, Rodriguez-Perez, F, Reyes-Villanueva, and M H, Rodriguez
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Animals ,Female ,Simuliidae ,Mexico ,Insect Vectors - Abstract
The gonotrophic cycle, survivorship, and daily parity rate of Simulium ochraceum were estimated from specimens collected during routine vector surveillance in southern Mexico, using a vertical (time-specific) method. Series of sequential data analysis on parity of the entomological data obtained in February 1994 showed the highest significant (P0.05 alpha) correlation indices (r = 0.63 and r = 0.67) for a 4-day time lag, indicating that the mean gonotrophic cycle length corresponded to 4 days. Daily survival rate was estimated to be 0.80, the survival to infective age (12 days) to be 6.9%, and the daily parity rate to be 0.41. These estimations are in accordance with those previously obtained by others from mark-release-recapture experiments (horizontal method) in Guatemala.
- Published
- 1995
24. Effect of semiannual treatments of ivermectin on the prevalence and intensity of Onchocerca volvulus skin infection, ocular lesions, and infectivity of Simulium ochraceum populations in southern Mexico
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M A, Rodriguez-Perez, M H, Rodriguez, H M, Margeli-Perez, and A R, Rivas-Alcala
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Adult ,Male ,Ivermectin ,Adolescent ,Antiparasitic Agents ,Anterior Chamber ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,Onchocerciasis ,Insect Vectors ,Cornea ,Onchocerca volvulus ,Onchocerciasis, Ocular ,Prevalence ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Simuliidae ,Skin Diseases, Parasitic ,Child ,Mexico ,Microfilariae ,Skin - Abstract
The effect of semiannual ivermectin treatment along with nodulectomy on filarial transmission levels were estimated during the three dry seasons of 1991-1993 in a hyperendemic village in southern Mexico. Parasitologic and ophthalmologic examinations were carried out every six months until five drug treatments were completed. Ivermectin mass treatment with a coverage of approximately 80% had a significant impact (P0.05) on the prevalence of skin infection and the mean microfilarial skin density (CMFL), which were reduced 38% and 89%, respectively. A gradual and significant (P0.05) decrease in the mean microfilariae number in the anterior chamber of the eye and in corneal opacities was also observed as the CMFL was reduced. After three treatments, these were reduced 84% and 69%, respectively. However, after two years of continuous intervention, no significant differences (P0.05) were observed in either the daily mean infective biting density and the daily mean transmission potential. This was probably due to the remaining microfilarial load provided by the untreated resident population and migrant groups. On the whole, our results confirm both the efficacy of ivermectin to alleviate the clinical manifestations of the disease and its minimal impact on Onchocerca volvulus transmission, and indicate the need both to achieve higher levels of drug coverage and to incorporate other measures to stop transmission until a macrofilaricide drug is found.
- Published
- 1995
25. Bionomics of larval populations of Anopheles pseudopunctipennis in the Tapachula foothills area, southern Mexico
- Author
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I, Fernandez-Salas, D R, Roberts, M H, Rodriguez, and C F, Marina-Fernandez
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Ecology ,Larva ,Anopheles ,Animals ,Seasons ,Mexico ,Demography - Abstract
The population dynamics of Anopheles pseudopunctipennis larvae were studied in a foothill region near Tapachula, Mexico. Systematic surveillance of wet-season and dry-season habitats was conducted during 1990 and 1991. Sampling along transects of the Coatan River was employed to quantify habitat availability and population densities of larvae during the dry season. During the wet season, larvae were most abundant in temporary habitats, such as seepage springs, rain pools, and pools in stream and river margins. The temporary habitats disappeared during the dry season, which occurred concurrent with increasing densities of larvae in dry-season habitats within transects along the Coatan River. The great abundance of the dry-season riverine habitats, viz., small pools with filamentous algae, resulted in peak densities of host-seeking adult populations in villages associated with the river. During both seasons, there were significant associations between the presence and abundance of larvae and habitats containing filamentous algae, and secondarily with selected aquatic and semiaquatic plants. There was a significant correlation between mean numbers of larvae per habitat and mean numbers of breeding sites in the transects. Overall, An. pseudopunctipennis larvae were very abundant during the dry season and relatively uncommon during the wet season.
- Published
- 1994
26. Plasmodium vivax sporozoite rates from Anopheles albimanus in southern Chiapas, Mexico
- Author
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J M, Ramsey, E, Salinas, D N, Bown, and M H, Rodriguez
- Subjects
Anopheles ,Malaria, Vivax ,Protozoan Proteins ,Animals ,Humans ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Female ,Seasons ,Plasmodium vivax ,Mexico ,Insect Vectors - Abstract
Anopheles albimanus mosquitoes were collected from August 1984 to November 1987 on intra- and peridomicile human bait in Rancheria El Gancho, Chiapas, Mexico. The mosquitoes were desiccated and stored in silicon chambers from 3 mo to 3 yr post-collection prior to being assayed using a direct enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to detect Plasmodium vivax predominant-type sporozoite protein. Peridomicile-collected mosquitoes had a 10-fold higher sporozoite rate than those collected indoors, but only the latter correlate significantly with the seasonal human parasite index. Mosquito sporozoite burden was also significantly higher in the peridomicile-collected population.
- Published
- 1994
27. Low rates of multiple fertilization in parous Anopheles albimanus
- Author
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C, Villarreal, G, Fuentes-Maldonado, M H, Rodriguez, and B, Yuval
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Genetic Markers ,Male ,Parity ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,Aedes ,Fertilization ,Animals ,Female - Abstract
We determined how frequently parous female Anopheles albimanus fertilize their eggs with sperm from more than one male. To establish paternity we relied on 2 phenotypically distinct laboratory strains. Nulliparous females were allowed to mate freely with males from one strain, and after oviposition they were offered a 2nd mating with males of the other strain. Fertilization patterns were determined by the phenotypes of offspring. Only 0.6% of females ovipositing for a 2nd time (n = 312) used sperm from the 2nd male, as did 4% of females completing a 3rd gonotrophic cycle (n = 25). In this species receptivity is not routinely renewed following oviposition.
- Published
- 1994
28. Effects of transmission-blocking immunity on Plasmodium vivax infections in Anopheles albimanus populations
- Author
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J M, Ramsey, E, Salinas, M H, Rodriguez, and R L, Beaudoin
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Anopheles ,Malaria, Vivax ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Plasmodium vivax ,Mexico ,Insect Vectors - Abstract
Two colonized populations of Anopheles albimanus isolated from the Suchiate region, Chiapas State, Mexico, were compared for their susceptibility to coindigenous Plasmodium vivax. Groups of mosquitoes were fed in vitro with either autologous donor blood or the same blood cells substituted with serum negative for anti-gametocyte antibody. Significant differences in susceptibility between the 2 colonies were encountered if the autologous blood from a patient was fed to mosquitoes: mean infection rates of AnA2-positive groups was double that in AnA1 mosquitoes. Consistent for both colonies, only 23.6% of samples positive from malaria-negative serum-substituted blood were infected with an autologous blood feed. Vector competence in these mosquito populations was partially linked to the human populations's immune response to the parasite.
- Published
- 1994
29. Remote sensing of tropical wetlands for malaria control in Chiapas, Mexico
- Author
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K O, Pope, E, Rejmankova, H M, Savage, J I, Arredondo-Jimenez, M H, Rodriguez, and D R, Roberts
- Subjects
Mosquito Control ,Geography ,Satellite Communications ,Insect Vectors ,Malaria ,Larva ,Anopheles ,Epidemiological Monitoring ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Animals ,Mexico ,Ecosystem ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Malaria, transmitted by anopheline mosquitoes, remains a serious health problem in the tropics. Most malaria eradication efforts focus on control of anopheline vectors. These efforts include the NASA Di-Mod project, whose current goal is to integrate remote sensing, geographic information systems (GIS), and field research to predict anopheline mosquito population dynamics in the Pacific coastal plain of Chiapas, Mexico. Field studies demonstrate that high larval production of Anopheles albimanus, the principal malaria vector in the plain, can be linked to a small number of larval habitat-types, determined by larval sampling and cluster analysis of wetlands in the coastal plain. Analysis of wet and dry season Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) satellite imagery identified 16 land cover units within an 185-km2 study area in the coastal zone. A hierarchical approach was used to link the larval habitat-types with the larger land cover units and make predictions of potential and actual low, medium, and high anopheline production. The TM-based map and GIS techniques were then used to predict differences in anopheline production at two villages, La Victoria and Efrain Gutierrez. La Victoria was predicted to have much higher Anopheles albimanus production, based upon a 2-10 times greater extent of medium- and high-producing land cover units in its vicinity. This difference between villages was independently supported by sampling (with light traps) of adults, which were 5-10 times more abundant in La Victoria.
- Published
- 1994
30. Attempted isolation of the gene encoding the 21 Kd Plasmodium berghei ookinete transmission blocking antigen from Plasmodium yoelli and Plasmodium vivax
- Author
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Robert E. Sinden, M. H. Rodriguez, and Guy C. Barker
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Plasmodium ,lcsh:Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,lcsh:RC955-962 ,Plasmodium berghei ,Plasmodium vivax ,Genes, Protozoan ,Molecular Sequence Data ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,lcsh:Microbiology ,law.invention ,Mice ,Antigen ,law ,parasitic diseases ,ookinete ,Animals ,Genomic library ,Gene ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Gene Library ,biology ,Base Sequence ,Oligonucleotide ,Chromosome Mapping ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Plasmodium yoelii ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Genetic Code ,transmission blocking - Abstract
The 21kD ookinete antigen of Plasmodium berghei (Pbs 21) has been shown to elicit an effective and long lasting transmission blocking immune response in mice. Having cloned and sequenced this antigen (Paton et al. 1993) the sequence was compared to the genes of the same family previously identified in P. falciparum, P. gallinaceum (Kaslow et al. 1989) and P. reichenowi (Lal et al. 1990). Four conserved areas were identified in this comparison, to which degenerate oligonucleotides were designed. PCR amplification and screening of genomic libraries was then carried out using these oligonucleotides. The P. yoelii gene was successfully cloned and a number of novel P. vivax genes identified but the P. vivax homologue of Pbs21 remains elusive.
- Published
- 1994
31. Host selection patterns of Anopheles pseudopunctipennis under insecticide spraying situations in southern Mexico
- Author
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I, Fernandez-Salas, D R, Roberts, M H, Rodriguez, M del C, Rodriguez, and C F, Marina-Fernandez
- Subjects
Dogs ,Mosquito Control ,Swine ,Anopheles ,Population Dynamics ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Feeding Behavior ,Horses ,Seasons ,Mexico - Abstract
Studies of host selection patterns of Anopheles pseudopunctipennis were conducted in villages in foothills near Tapachula, Mexico. Based on 2 years of collections, 53.8 and 86.1% of all engorged females resting inside houses were found to contain human blood. Estimates of weighted and unweighted human blood indices, including data from outdoor resting collections, varied from 29.5 to 54.7%. Humans and dogs were the more common blood sources for all An. pseudopunctipennis mosquitoes, accounting for 96% of blood meals tested. Results of analyses of host preference through estimates of forage ratios (FRs) indicated that the large numbers of blood meals from humans and dogs were more reflective of host availability than host preference. An FR of less than 1 indicated that, in terms of host availability, proportionately fewer An. pseudopunctipennis females fed on humans than other large animal hosts. In contrast, FRs of 15-20 and 5-7 revealed strong selective biases for horses and pigs as sources of blood meals, respectively. The proportion of outdoor-resting, blood-engorged females containing human blood declined markedly after houses were sprayed with DDT. This response to house spraying is attributed to an excito-repellency effect of DDT.
- Published
- 1993
32. Heterogeneity in patterns of malarial oocyst infections in the mosquito vector
- Author
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S. L. Fleck, Peter F. Billingsley, N. Tirawanchap, Graham F. Medley, Robert E. Sinden, and M. H. Rodriguez
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Plasmodium berghei ,Population ,Plasmodium falciparum ,Plasmodium gallinaceum ,Aedes aegypti ,law.invention ,law ,Aedes ,parasitic diseases ,Anopheles ,medicine ,Animals ,Poisson Distribution ,education ,Anopheles stephensi ,education.field_of_study ,Likelihood Functions ,biology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Insect Vectors ,Binomial Distribution ,Infectious Diseases ,Transmission (mechanics) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Parasitology ,Plasmodium vivax ,Malaria - Abstract
SUMMARYOocyst prevalence and intensity have been recorded in 349 laboratory infections ofAnopheles stephensiwithPlasmodium berghei. Intensity and prevalence of infection are shown to be predictably related. The structure and heterogeneity in the infections has been analysed with the objective of describing the biological mechanisms by which the observed negative binomial oocyst distributions are generated. The analysis has revealed that the most likely processes lie within the population dynamic events of malaria within the mosquito, namely gametogenesis, fertilization and mortality. The distribution is similar in allPlasmodium– mosquito combinations examined so far, whether they are of laboratory (P. gallinaceuminAedes aegypti) or field (P. vivaxinAn. albimanusandP. falciparuminAn. gambiae s.l.andAn. funestus) origin. Further we conclude that there is competition between parasites in the vector. Oocyst frequency distribution analysis shows that under natural conditions of transmission intensity, and even under the best laboratory conditions, significant numbers (> 10%) offullysusceptible mosquitoes will not be infected under conditions where the mean infection is as high as 250 oocysts. Failure to infect is not therefore an absolute indicator of refractoriness. In assessing transmission data it is shown that sample sizes should not be less than 50, and ideally 100 mosquitoes, if reliable data are to be obtained. In the field it is suggested that difficulties in determining the low natural intensity of oocyst infections indicate that prevalence estimates are a useful and accessible parameter to measure. In determining the impact of transmission blocking mechanisms we predict that under conditions where high oocyst intensities prevail, large reductions in intensity will be required before a reduction in prevalence can be expected i.e. here it will be necessary to measure intensity of infection. Conversely, under conditions where low oocyst intensities prevail, a rapid reduction in prevalence will occur with little concurrent reduction in intensity i.e. prevalence determination will be the more sensitive estimate.
- Published
- 1993
33. Polyhydramnios: does reducing the amniotic fluid volume decrease the incidence of prematurity?
- Author
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M H, Rodriguez
- Subjects
Polyhydramnios ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Obstetric Labor, Premature ,Pregnancy ,Incidence ,Indomethacin ,Amniocentesis ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Humans ,Female ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Ultrasonography, Prenatal - Abstract
Polyhydramnios is an uncommon cause of premature labor and delivery. After sonographic evaluation has confirmed the polyhydramnios and a determination is made of the potential etiologies, indomethacin appears to be an effective agent in reducing the amniotic fluid volume and in preventing prematurity.
- Published
- 1992
34. Effects of Transmission-Blocking Immunity on Plasmodium vivax Infections in Anopheles albimanus Populations
- Author
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R. L. Beaudoin, E. Salinas, M. H. Rodriguez, and J. M. Ramsey
- Subjects
Infectivity ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Population ,Plasmodium vivax ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Plasmodium ,Virology ,Anopheles albimanus ,Vector (epidemiology) ,parasitic diseases ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Parasitology ,Antibody ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Malaria - Abstract
ABSTRAcr: Two colonized populations of Anopheles albimanus isolated from the Suchiate region, Chiapas State, Mexico, were compared for their susceptibility to coindigenous Plasmodium vivax. Groups of mosquitoes were fed in vitro with either autologous donor blood or the same blood cells substituted with serum negative for antigametocyte antibody. Significant differences in susceptibility between the 2 colonies were encountered if the autologous blood from a patient was fed to mosquitoes: mean infection rates of AnA2-positive groups was double that in AnAl mosquitoes. Consistent for both colonies, only 23.6% of samples positive from malarianegative serum-substituted blood were infected with an autologous blood feed. Vector competence in these mosquito populations was partially linked to the human population's immune response to the parasite. The susceptibility of mosquito populations to coindigenous species of Plasmodium is an important variable in the determination of transmission levels in an endemic area. The real de
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Preliminary limnological and botanical characterization of larval habitats for two primary malarial vectors, Anopheles albimanus and An. pseudopunctipennis, in coastal areas of Chiapas State, Mexico
- Author
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H. M. Savage, M. H. Rodriguez, D. R. Roberts, Eliška Rejmánková, and J. I. Arredondo-Jimenez
- Subjects
Anopheles albimanus ,biology ,Ecology ,Larval habitats ,biology.organism_classification - Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Malaria incidence
- Author
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E G, Loyola, M H, Rodriguez, L, Gonzales-Ceron, and M A, Vaca-Marin
- Subjects
Parasitology - Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The shell spectrum of CH Cygni in 1981
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M. H. Rodriguez
- Subjects
Physics ,Absorption spectroscopy ,Shell (structure) ,Balmer series ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Electron ,Astronomical spectroscopy ,symbols.namesake ,Absorption edge ,Space and Planetary Science ,Excited state ,symbols ,Atomic physics ,Excitation - Abstract
The shell spectrum of CH Cyg observed in 1981 has been analyzed by the curve of growth method and using the equivalent widths of Balmer lines. The following parameters for the region of the shell where the absorption spectrum is formed have been obtained: excitation temperatureTex=9000 K, microturbulent velocityvt=16 km s−1, electron densityne=6.3×1012, number of active hydrogen atoms in the second excited stateN0.2=5.8×1015, and the effective height of the absorption spectrum formation regionH=105 km.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Distribution of a macaque immunosuppressive type D retrovirus in neural, lymphoid, and salivary tissues
- Author
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Linda J. Lowenstine, Andrew A. Lackner, C. E. Bush, Peter F Moore, Murray B. Gardner, M. H. Rodriguez, P. A. Marx, K. G. Osborn, Robert J. Munn, and H. S. Kwang
- Subjects
Lymphoid Tissue ,Immunology ,In situ hybridization ,Microbiology ,Macaque ,Salivary Glands ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Retrovirus ,Viral Envelope Proteins ,Virology ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Tissue Distribution ,Southern blot ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,biology ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Brain ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,biology.organism_classification ,Macaca mulatta ,Microscopy, Electron ,Lymphatic system ,Retroviridae ,Simian AIDS ,Insect Science ,Immunohistochemistry ,RNA, Viral ,Lymph ,Research Article - Abstract
Simian acquired immune deficiency syndrome (SAIDS) in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) at the California Primate Research Center is caused by a type D retrovirus designated SAIDS retrovirus serotype 1 (SRV-1). This syndrome is characterized by profound immunosuppression and death associated with opportunistic infections. Neurologic signs and lesions have not been described as part of this syndrome. The distribution of SRV-1 in the salivary glands, lymph nodes, spleens, thymuses, and brains of eight virus-infected rhesus macaques was examined by immunohistochemistry. Electron microscopy, in situ RNA hybridization, and Southern blot hybridization were also performed on selected tissues to detect viral particles, RNA, and DNA, respectively. In seven of eight SRV-1-infected animals, the transmembrane envelope glycoprotein (gp20) of SRV-1 was present in three or more tissues, but never in the brain. In the remaining animal, no viral antigen was detected in any tissue. In this same group of animals, viral nucleic acid was detected in the lymph nodes of six of six animals by Southern blot hybridization, in the salivary glands of two of five animals by both Southern blot and in situ hybridizations, and, surprisingly, in the brains of three of three animals by Southern blot and of three of five animals by in situ hybridization, including the one animal in which viral gp20 was undetectable. None of these animals had neurologic signs or lesions. The detection of viral nucleic acid in the absence of viral antigen in the brain suggests latent SRV-1 infection of the central nervous system.
- Published
- 1988
39. Twice a cesarean, always a cesarean?
- Author
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J P, Phelan, M O, Ahn, F, Diaz, H S, Brar, and M H, Rodriguez
- Subjects
Reoperation ,Uterine Rupture ,Cesarean Section ,Pregnancy ,Surgical Wound Dehiscence ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Fetal Monitoring ,Oxytocin ,Trial of Labor - Abstract
The cesarean delivery rate has quadrupled during the past two decades, resulting in considerable attention focused on alternatives to cesarean birth. One option, vaginal birth after one previous cesarean, has come to be recognized as an acceptable alternative to routine elective repeat cesarean delivery. The purpose of this report was to evaluate whether women with two previous cesareans can safely undergo a trial of labor. Between July 1, 1982 and June 30, 1986, data were collected prospectively on all women with previous cesareans. Those with a known classical incision or a medical or obstetric contraindication to a trial of labor were excluded from an attempted vaginal delivery. During this period, 67,784 patients were delivered, of whom 6250 (9.2%) had had a previous cesarean. Of the 6250 previous-cesarean patients, 1088 (17.4%) had had two previous cesareans; of these, 501 (46%) underwent a trial of labor and 346 (69%) delivered vaginally. Whereas the overall rate of uterine dehiscence was 3%, the rate in those women who attempted a vaginal delivery was 1.8%, versus 4.6% in those who did not. Overall, oxytocin was used in 284 (57%) and was associated with a dehiscence rate of 2.1%, versus 1.4% in the no-oxytocin group. Successful vaginal delivery was related significantly to the use of oxytocin and to a previous vaginal delivery. Trial of labor in patients with two previous cesareans appears to be a reasonable consideration.
- Published
- 1989
40. Ultrasound-guided paracentesis in the diagnosis of postpartum hemoperitoneum. A report of three cases
- Author
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M H, Rodriguez, J, Smith, S L, Clark, and J P, Phelan
- Subjects
Adult ,Cesarean Section ,Pregnancy ,Hemoperitoneum ,Humans ,Female ,Puerperal Disorders ,Punctures ,Suction ,Ultrasonography - Abstract
Real-time ultrasound and ultrasound-guided paracentesis were used in the diagnosis of hemoperitoneum in three patients. In all three, who had decreasing hematocrits, the possibility of intraperitoneal bleeding was confirmed or excluded with the two techniques.
- Published
- 1987
41. Estimates of malaria incidence
- Author
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L. Gonzalez-Ceron, E. G. Loyola, M. A. Vaca-Marin, and M. H. Rodriguez
- Subjects
Malaria incidence ,business.industry ,Environmental health ,Medicine ,Parasitology ,business - Published
- 1989
42. Glycoprotein recognition mediates attachment of Plasmodium chabaudi to mouse erythrocytes
- Author
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M H Rodriguez and M Jungery
- Subjects
Plasmodium ,Erythrocytes ,Sialoglycoproteins ,Immunology ,Plasma protein binding ,Microbiology ,Chromatography, Affinity ,Plasmodium chabaudi ,Mice ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Cell Adhesion ,Glycophorin ,Animals ,Glycophorins ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Erythrocyte Membrane ,Plasmodium falciparum ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Cell biology ,Molecular Weight ,Red blood cell ,Disease Models, Animal ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Membrane protein ,biology.protein ,Immunologic Techniques ,Parasitology ,Antibody ,Glycoprotein ,Protein Binding ,Research Article - Abstract
The interaction between Plasmodium falciparum merozoites and human erythrocytes is mediated by specific parasite proteins and sialoglycoproteins (SGPs) on the surface of the host cell. To investigate whether a similar mechanism functions in rodent malaria, a series of experiments was performed to identify the proteins involved in the interaction of Plasmodium chabaudi parasites and mouse erythrocytes. Labeled parasite proteins incubated with purified mouse SGP bound specifically to glycoprotein 2.1. Two parasite proteins (72 and 126 kilodaltons [kDa]) were coprecipitated with antibody directed to mouse erythrocyte membrane proteins. The lower band (72 kDa) as well as a band of 105 kDa were also observed to bind to N-acetyl-D-galactosamine affinity columns, suggesting a carbohydrate component in the binding of these parasites to erythrocytes. These experiments indicate that P. chabaudi possesses specific proteins which recognized SGP on the surface of murine erythrocytes in a manner similar to that of the merozoites of P. falciparum. Thus P. chabaudi in mice may provide an in vivo model of the human parasite for testing ways to inhibit merozoite recognition and invasion of host cells.
- Published
- 1987
43. Further purification and characterization of the lubricating fraction from temporo-mandibular joint-synovial fluid of rabbit
- Author
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J A, Kofoed and M H, Rodriguez
- Subjects
Temporomandibular Joint ,Synovial Fluid ,Carbohydrates ,Animals ,Rabbits ,Amino Acids ,Glycoproteins - Published
- 1984
44. Polarization in CH Cygni During Quiet and Active Phases
- Author
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M. H. Rodriguez
- Subjects
Physics ,Photon noise ,QUIET ,Cataclysmic variable star ,Degree of polarization ,Astrophysics ,Polarization (waves) ,Position angle - Abstract
Our wide-band Polarimetric observations of CH Cyg began in 1974 and continued in 1976 and 1984. During the first two observational seasons the star was in quiet phase between two outbursts, in 1984 the latest outburst that began in 1977 was declining. Figure shows mean values of the degree of polarization P and the position angle ⍬ for the different observational periods. Standard errors calculated by photon noise statistics are 0.02–0.04% for P and 1–5% for ⍬ .
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Spectral and Polarimetric Investigation of RCB Stars
- Author
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M. H. Rodriguez and M. Ya. Orlov
- Subjects
Physics ,Stars ,Polarimetry ,Astrophysics - Abstract
Spectroscopic and polarimetric observations of the RCB variables DZ And, R CrB and XX Cam are described. DZ And is not a RCB-type star.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. [Global health: a globalized public health].
- Author
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Buekens P, Bréart G, Cot M, Leveque A, Massougbodji A, and López MH
- Subjects
- Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Chronic Disease epidemiology, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Global Health, Humans, Incidence, Neoplasms epidemiology, Wounds and Injuries epidemiology, Internationality, Public Health trends
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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