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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Bacterial top and stalk rot of corn : influence of temperature and humidity on disease development, tolerance among corn inbreds and hybrids, and overwinter survival of the incitant bacteria

Teh, Muhammad Bin January 2011 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
12

Statistical methods for the study of etiologic heterogeneity

Zabor, Emily Craig January 2019 (has links)
Traditionally, cancer epidemiologists have investigated the causes of disease under the premise that patients with a certain site of disease can be treated as a single entity. Then risk factors associated with the disease are identified through case-control or cohort studies for the disease as a whole. However, with the rise of molecular and genomic profiling, in recent years biologic subtypes have increasingly been identified. Once subtypes are known, it is natural to ask the question of whether they share a common etiology, or in fact arise from distinct sets of risk factors, a concept known as etiologic heterogeneity. This dissertation seeks to evaluate methods for the study of etiologic heterogeneity in the context of cancer research and with a focus on methods for case-control studies. First, a number of existing regression-based methods for the study of etiologic heterogeneity in the context of pre-defined subtypes are compared using a data example and simulation studies. This work found that a standard polytomous logistic regression approach performs at least as well as more complex methods, and is easy to implement in standard software. Next, simulation studies investigate the statistical properties of an approach that combines the search for the most etiologically distinct subtype solution from high dimensional tumor marker data with estimation of risk factor effects. The method performs well when appropriate up-front selection of tumor markers is performed, even when there is confounding structure or high-dimensional noise. And finally, an application to a breast cancer case-control study demonstrates the usefulness of the novel clustering approach to identify a more risk heterogeneous class solution in breast cancer based on a panel of gene expression data and known risk factors.
13

A Systems-Level Approach to Understand The Seasonal Factors Of Early Development With Clinical and Pharmacological Applications

Boland, Mary Regina January 2017 (has links)
Major developmental defects occur in 100,000 to 200,000 children born each year in the United States of America. 97% of these defects are from unidentified causes. Many fetal outcomes (e.g., developmental defects), result from interactions between genetic and environmental factors. The lifetime effects from prenatal exposures with low impact (e.g., air pollution) are often understudied. Even when these exposures are studied, the focus is often placed on immediate effects of the exposure (e.g., fetal anomalies, miscarriage rates) leaving lifetime effects largely unexplored. This makes prolonged (or lifetime) effects of low-impact exposures an understudied research area. Included in this set of low-impact exposures is seasonal variance at birth. This thesis measures the effects of seasonal variance at birth on lifetime disease risk at both the population-level and molecular-levels. Four aims, comprising this thesis study, were conducted that utilize data from pharmacology, clinical care (Electronic Health Records) and genetics. These aims included: 1.) Development of an Algorithm to Reveal Diseases with a Prenatal/Perinatal Seasonality Component (described in chapter 2); 2.) Investigation of Climate Variables that Affect Lifetime Disease Risk By Altering Environmental Drivers (described in chapters 3 and 4); 3.) Discovery of Genes Involved in Birth Season – Disease Effects (described in chapter 5) and 4.) Investigation of Pharmacological Inhibitors As Phenocopies of the Birth Season – Disease Effect (described in chapters 6 and 7). Knowledge gained from these four areas, through seven distinct studies, establishes that birth season is a causal risk factor in a number of common diseases including cardiovascular diseases.
14

Biological Factors in the Etiology of Pulmonary Sarcoidosis

Schouten, Janine R. Unknown Date
No description available.
15

The politics of public health ideology and disease causality

Tesh, Sylvia N January 1980 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves [175]-184. / Microfiche. / v, 184 leaves, bound ill. 28 cm
16

The metabolic relationship between nutrition and cancer / by Judith Anne Carman

Carman, Judith Anne January 1988 (has links)
Typescript / Bibliography: leaves 127-139 / x, 139 leaves : ill ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Pathology, 1988
17

Cerebral lateralization : biological mechanisms, associations, and pathology

January 1987 (has links)
Norman Geschwind, Albert M. Galaburda. / "A Bradford book." "Much of this book appeared as a three-part article in the 'Archives of neurology' volume 42, May, June, and July, 1985"--T.p. verso. Includes index. / Bibliography: p. [241]-273.
18

Situs inversus viscerum completus : significance and etiology

Bauer, Donald de Forest January 1943 (has links)
No description available.
19

Host metabolites in bacterial infection and bioenergetics

Urso, Andreacarola January 2023 (has links)
Staphylococcus aureus is a pulmonary pathogen associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. It is a common complication of influenza and SARS CoV2 infection, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cystic fibrosis and is a major cause of ventilator associated pneumonia. The prevalence of this specific organism as a respiratory pathogen has been attributed to its many gene products that thwart innate immunity. However, vaccines targeting virulence determinants have failed to be protective in humans, suggesting that other bacterial or host factors are also critical in pathogenesis. We postulated that S. aureus that are able to persist in the lung must adapt to substrates that are especially abundant. Here we show that among the many potential carbon sources in the infected airway, S. aureus is directed by carbon catabolite repression (CCR) to utilize proline. By following transcriptomic and metabolomic changes over the initial course of infection by human clinical isolates of S. aureus, we established that CcpA and CcpE upregulate expression of the S. aureus collagenase (scpA) and proline transporter (putP). In response to infection, airway fibroblasts synthesize collagen, of which proline is a major component. Host-adapted S. aureus is thus poised to ingest and metabolize newly available proline which fuels oxidative metabolism via the TCA cycle, outcompeting strains that have not made this metabolic transition. Thus, clinical settings characterized by airway repair processes and fibrosis provide a milieu that is intrinsically supportive of S. aureus infection.
20

Change and continuity : perceptions about childhood diseases among the Tumbuka of Northern Malawi

Munthali, Alister Chaundumuka January 2003 (has links)
The objectives of this study were to determine what the Tumbuka people of northern Malawi consider to be the most dangerous childhood diseases, to explore their perceptions about the aetiology, prevention and treatment of these diseases, and to determine how such perceptions have changed over the years. The study was done in Chisinde and surrounding villages in western Rumphi District, northern Malawi. Although a household questionnaire was used to collect some quantitative data, the major data collection methods comprised participant observation, in-depth interviews with mothers with children under five and old men and women, and key informant interviews with traditional healers, traditional birth attendants, village headmen, health surveillance assistants and clinical officers. Informants in this study mentioned chikhoso chamoto, diarrhoea, malaria, measles, and conjunctivitis as the most dangerous childhood diseases in the area. Old men and women added that in the past smallpox was also a dangerous disease that affected both children and adults. Apart from measles and smallpox, community-based health workers and those at the local health centre also mentioned the same list of diseases as the most dangerous diseases prevalent among under-five children. Though health workers and informants mentioned the same diseases, the informants' perspectives about the aetiology and prevention of these diseases and the way they sought treatment during childhood illness episodes, in some cases, differed significantly from those of biomedicine. For example, while health workers said that the signs and symptoms presented by a child suffering from "chikhoso chamoto" were those of either kwashiorkor or marasmus, both young and elderly informants said that a child could contract this illness through contact with a person who had been involved in sexual intercourse. Biomedically, diarrhoea is caused by the ingestion of pathogenic agents, which are transmitted through, among other factors, drinking contaminated water and eating contaminated foods. While young men and women subscribed to this biomedical view, at the same time, just like old men and women, they also believed that if a breastfeeding mother has sexual intercourse, sperms will contaminate her breast milk and, once a child feeds on this milk, he or she will develop diarrhoea. They, in addition, associated diarrhoea with the process of teething and other infections, such as malaria and measles. In malaria-endemic areas such as Malawi, the occurrence of convulsions, splenomegaly and anaemia in children under five may be biomedically attributed to malaria. However, most informants in this study perceived these conditions as separate disease entities caused by, among other factors, witchcraft and the infringement of Tumbuka taboos relating to food, sexual intercourse and funerals. Splenomegaly and convulsions were also perceived as hereditary diseases. Such Tumbuka perceptions about the aetiology of childhood diseases also influenced their ideas about prevention and the seeking of therapy during illness episodes. Apart from measles, other childhood vaccine-preventable diseases (i.e. tetanus, diphtheria, tuberculosis, pertussis and poliomyelitis) were not mentioned, presumably because they are no longer occurring on a significant scale, which is an indication of the success of vaccination programmes. This study reveals that there is no outright rejection of vaccination services in the study area. Some mothers, though, felt pressured to go for vaccination services as they believed that non-vaccinated children were refused biomedical treatment at the local health centres when they fell ill. While young women with children under five mentioned vaccination as a preventative measure against diseases such as measles, they also mentioned other indigenous forms of 'vaccination', which included the adherence to societal taboos, the wearing of amulets, the rubbing of protective medicines into incisions, isolation of children under five (e.g. a newly born child is kept in the house, amongst other things, to protect him or her against people who are ritually considered hot because of sexual intercourse) who are susceptible to disease or those posing a threat to cause disease in children under five. For example, since diarrhoea is perceived to be caused by, among other things, a child feeding on breast milk contaminated with sperms, informants said that there is a strong need for couples to observe postpartum sexual intercourse. A couple with newly delivered twins is isolated from the village because of the belief that children will swell if they came into contact with them. Local methods of disease prevention seem therefore to depend on what is perceived to be the cause of the illness and the decision to adopt specific preventive measures depends on, among other factors, the diagnosis of the cause and of who is vulnerable. The therapy-seeking process is a hierarchical movement within and between aetiologies; at the same time, it is not a random process, but an ordered process of choices in response to negative feedback, and subject to a number of factors, such as the aetiology of the disease, distance, social costs, cost of the therapeutic intervention, availability of medicines, etc. The movement between systems (i.e. from traditional medicine to biomedicine and vice-versa) during illness episodes depends on a number of factors, including previous experiences of significant others (i.e. those close to the patient), perceptions about the chances of getting healed, the decisions of the therapy management group, etc. For example, febrile illness in children under five may be treated using herbs or antipyretics bought from the local grocery shops. When the situation worsens (e.g. accompanied by convulsions), a herbalist will be consulted or the child may be taken to the local health centre. The local health centre refers such cases to the district hospital for treatment. Because of the rapidity with which the condition worsens, informants said that sometimes such children are believed to be bewitched, hence while biomedical treatment is sought, at the same time diviners are also consulted. The therapeutic strategies people resort to during illness episodes are appropriate rational decisions, based on prevailing circumstances, knowledge, resources and outcomes. Boundaries between the different therapeutic options are not rigid, as people move from one form of therapy to another and from one mode of classification to another. Lastly, perceptions about childhood diseases have changed over the years. Old men and women mostly attribute childhood illnesses to the infringement of taboos (e.g. on . sexual intercourse), witchcraft and other supernatural forces. While young men and women also subscribe to these perceptions, they have at the same time also appropriated the biomedical disease explanatory models. These biomedical models were learnt at school, acquired during health education sessions conducted by health workers in the communities as well as during under-five clinics, and health education programmes conducted on the national radio station. Younger people, more frequently than older people, thus move within and between aetiological models in the manner described above.

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