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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.
1

Carrion’s Disease: diagnostic and antibody levels in a northern endemic area of Peru

Gomes, Cláudia, Palma, Noemí, Sandoval, Isabel, Tinco, Carmen, Gutarra, Carlos, Kubota, Mayumi, Ruiz, Joaquim, Del Valle Mendoza, Juana, Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas (UPC) 13 August 2015 (has links)
The objective of this study was to compare 2 different techniques used in Peru for diagnostic and evaluate the antibody titters for B. bacilliformis in inhabitants of both post-outbreak and one established endemic area.
2

Succinil-CoA sintetasa: Nueva antígeno candidato de Bartonella bacilliformis

Gomes, Claudia, Palma, Noemí, Pons, Maria J., Magallón Tejada,Ariel, Sandoval,Isabel, Tinco Valdez, Carmen, Gutarra, Carlos, Del Valle Mendoza, Juana, Ruiz, Joaquim, Matsuoka,Mayumi 14 September 2016 (has links)
El estudio fue apoyado por el Programa Nacional de Innovación para la Competitividad y Productividad (Innovar Perú). / FONDO: Bartonella bacilliformis es el agente causante de la enfermedad de Carrion, una enfermedad descuidado con tasas de mortalidad de 40 a 85% en ausencia de tratamiento. La falta de una técnica de diagnóstico para superar un mal diagnóstico y el tratamiento de portadores asintomáticos es de nota. Este estudio tuvo como objetivo identificar nuevos candidatos B. bacilliformis antigénicos que podrían dar lugar a una nueva herramienta de diagnóstico capaz de ser implementado en las zonas rurales endémicas.
3

Territorial behaviour of the Carrion Crow, Corvus corone L., in relation to food supply : an experimental study

Spray, Christopher James January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
4

Identification of Chicken Repeat 1 (CR1) elements in forensically important carrion fly species and characterization of one such element within Sarcophaga bullata

Thompson, Michelle Lee. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--West Virginia University, 2009. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains vi, 119 p. : ill. (some col.). Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 40-45).
5

7 datos sobre la Enfermedad de Carrión

Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas (UPC), Del Valle Mendoza, Juana 20 August 2015 (has links)
Endémica de los valles andinos de Perú, Ecuador y Colombia, la enfermedad de Carrión, si no es tratada, resulta fatal entre el 44% y el 88% de los casos.
6

Etiological and molecular diagnostic of Carrion’s disease in patients from Cajamarca - Perú

Ruiz, J, Silva, W., Tinoco, C., Pons, Maria J, Pons, Maria J, Del Valle, Luis J., Gomez, C., Bazan, Jorge, Vargas, M., Champin, D., Mendoza, J. del Valle 17 July 2014 (has links)
[EN] Poster presented in the poster session in the 15th ICID Abstracts. June 13th-16th 2012, Bangkok, Thailand. Session: Emerging Infectious Diseases. Date: Friday, June 15, 2012. Room: Poster & Exhibition Area. / Background: Bartonellagenus is a group of facultative intracellular pathogens that posses able to survive and proliferate inside of erythrocytes. Classified within this genus,Bartonella bacilliformisis of special relevance. This microorganism is the etiological agent of the so called Carrion’s Disease (Human bartonellosis). Additionally the presence of sub-clinical cases (asymptomatyc carriers) is of special interest, because acts as a reservoir of this illness. Carrión’s Disease is an endemic illnes in Perú, affecting in a special manner the north interandean valleys. However, the current in use diagnostic techniques (Giemsa Stain) possess low sensitivity and specificity, and due to the fact thatB. bacilliformispossess a low growth (weeks), bacterial cultures lacks of clinical utility. Thus suspictious cases frequently are not confirmed, and the real relevance of this illness remains underestimated. This work is addressed to the direct identification from blood samples ofBartonella baciliformisusing a conventional PCR. All patients were from the Cajamarca area being enrolled by the Epidemiological Surveillance program of DIRESA. Methods: The samples were processed at arriving to the laboratory, by molecular and microbiological techniques. Thus samples were cultured in Blood Columbia Agar (10%), in anaerobic conditions at 28 ◦C for a period of 2 months. Positive cultures were both Giemsa stained and identified by the amplification of a fragment the 16S rRNA gene. Genetic material was directly extracted from blood samples using the Kit High Pure (Roche diagnostic), and a fragment of 438 bp of the 16S rRNA gene was amplified withBartonellagenus specific primers. All positive PCR were sequenced (Macrogen-Korea). Results: A total of 134 blood samples were processed, from this 12 (8.9%) grown in blood agar, while in 18 (13.4%), including the aforementioned 12, the 16 s rRNA gene was amplified. In all cases the sequence analysis showed the presence ofB. bacilliformis Conclusion: Although microbiological culture is the gold standard in the identification ofBartonellaspp., this technique possess strong limitations due to the low growth of these microorganisms. However, the PCR is a rapid technique, possessing a high sensibility and specificity that may be used as routine diagnostic tool for the identification of Carrion’s Disease. / Revisión por pares
7

The effect of clothing and carrion biomass load on decomposition and scavenging in a forensically significant thicketed habitat in Cape Town, South Africa

Jan Spies, Maximilian 20 April 2023 (has links) (PDF)
Estimating the post-mortem interval is important to help identify the deceased in forensic death investigations and requires biogeographically specific knowledge of the rate of decay. Decomposition is influenced by numerous variables, including clothing, climate, and vertebrate scavenging guilds, requiring local studies. Conflicting results have been reported for clothing's effect on decomposition from various international habitats, with no data for Cape Town, South Africa, despite most local forensic cases involving single clothed decedents. Most taphonomic research uses large samples of unclothed human/animal remains to increase statistical reliability, despite this design not simulating common forensic scenarios. This study examined the effect of seasonally appropriate clothing and carrion biomass load on decomposition and scavenging in the thicketed Cape Flats Dune Strandveld, a forensically significant local habitat. Clothing was identified from forensic case files and tailored to ensure an appropriate fit, preventing unrealistic scavenger access. The decay of ten ~60 kg porcine carcasses, as proxies for human decomposition, was quantitatively examined using daily weight loss. This occurred over two consecutive summers and winters between 2018 and 2020, initially comparing clothed versus unclothed carcasses, then examining single clothed carcasses to ascertain the effect of carrion biomass load. On average, double-layer coolweather clothing notably delayed decomposition in winter, but single-layer warm-weather clothing had a comparatively negligible impact in summer. Weight loss correlated with scavenging activity by the Cape grey mongoose (Galerella pulverulenta), which displaced clothing to feed on the abdomen, more so during winter. Scavenging was hindered by the denim trousers, altering feeding patterns and causing preferential scavenging on unclothed carcasses. Single carcasses received more, longer mongoose visits and decomposed quicker than multi-carcass deployments. These results suggest that clothing delays decomposition locally by modulating the effect of seasonal weather and scavenging behaviour. Additionally, research forgoing forensic realism, with large unclothed samples deployed simultaneously, will inadvertently alter the decay rate, creating inaccurate decomposition models for postmortem interval estimation. Future studies should balance statistical robusticity and forensic realism, especially in environments where scavenging is prevalent. Single carcasses clothed in forensically realistic season-specific appropriately tailored clothing should be considered with statistical replication obtained via temporally separated repeat deployments.
8

The ecology of invertebrate associations with vertebrate carrion in Victoria, with reference to forensic entomology

Archer, Melanie Siân. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Melbourne, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 156-172).
9

De codicis Valeriani Carrionis auctoritate. Dissertatio inauguralis ...

Krenkel, Paul. January 1909 (has links)
Inaug. Diss.--Leipzig. / Bibliographical footnotes.
10

Post mortem interval and decomposition rates : biological observations and mathematical analysis /

England, David B. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 2006. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references. Also available via the World Wide Web.

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