SUMMARY Background Enterovirus D68 (EV-D68) is implicated in a widespread 2014 outbreak of severe respiratory illness across the United States, and has also been sporadically reported in patients with acute flaccid myelitis (AFM). The association between EV-D68 infection and AFM remains unclear. Methods Here we report metagenomic and molecular epidemiological analyses of 25 AFM cases in California and Colorado from 2012−2014. Findings EV-D68 was detected in respiratory secretions from 7 of 11 (64%) patients comprising two temporally and geographically linked AFM clusters at the height of the 2014 outbreak, and from 12 of 25 (48%) investigated AFM cases overall. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that all AFM-associated EV-D68 sequences grouped into a single novel clade B1 strain that originally emerged in 2010. Out of six observed coding polymorphisms in the clade B1 EV-D68 polyprotein, 5 of 6 polymorphisms were shared between neuropathogenic poliovirus and/or EV-D70. One child with AFM and a sibling with only upper respiratory illness were both infected by identical EV-D68 strains, suggesting a potential role for host-specific factors in differential responses to EV-D68 infection. Notably, EV-D68 viremia was identified in a child experiencing acute neurologic progression of his paralytic illness. Deep metagenomic sequencing of CSF from 14 AFM cases failed to reveal evidence of an alternative infectious etiology to EV-D68. Interpretation Taken together, these findings strengthen the putative association between EV-D68 and AFM, as well as the contention that AFM is a rare yet severe clinical manifestation of EV-D68 infection in susceptible hosts.
In this series of patients identified in California from June 2012 through July 2015, clinical manifestations indicated a rare but distinct syndrome of acute flaccid paralysis with evidence of spinal motor neuron involvement. The etiology remains undetermined, most patients were children and young adults, and motor weakness was prolonged.
In this study, we evaluated observers' ability to compare naturally shaped three-dimensional (3-D) objects, using their senses of vision and touch. In one experiment, the observers haptically manipulated 1 object and then indicated which of 12 visible objects possessed the same shape. In the second experiment, pairs of objects were presented, and the observers indicated whether their 3-D shape was the same or different. The 2 objects were presented either unimodally (vision-vision or haptic-haptic) or cross-modally (vision-haptic or haptic-vision). In both experiments, the observers were able to compare 3-D shape across modalities with reasonably high levels of accuracy. In Experiment 1, for example, the observers' matching performance rose to 72% correct (chance performance was 8.3%) after five experimental sessions. In Experiment 2, small (but significant) differences in performance were obtained between the unimodal vision-vision condition and the two cross-modal conditions. Taken together, the results suggest that vision and touch have functionally overlapping, but not necessarily equivalent, representations of 3-D shape.
Resonance Raman spectroscopy (RRS) and reflection spectroscopy (RS) are optical methods applicable to the non-invasive detection of carotenoids in human skin. RRS is the older, more thoroughly validated method, whereas RS is newer and has several advantages. Since collective skin carotenoid levels serve as a biomarker for vegetable and fruit intake, both methods hold promise as convenient screening tools for assessment of dietary interventions and correlations between skin carotenoids and health and disease outcomes. In this manuscript, we describe the most recent optimized device configurations and compare their use in various clinical and field settings. Both RRS and RS devices yield a wide range of skin carotenoid levels between subjects, which is a critical feature for a biomarker. Repeatability of the methods is 3-15% depending on the subject's skin carotenoid level and the uniformity of its local distribution. For 54 subjects recruited from an ophthalmology clinic, we first checked the validity of the relatively novel RS methodology via biochemical serum carotenoid measurements, the latter carried out with high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). A high correlation between RS skin and serum HPLC carotenoid levels was established (R = 0.81; p < 0.001). Also, a high correlation was found between RS and RRS skin levels (R = 0.94 p < 0.001). Subsequent comparisons of skin carotenoid measurements in diverse age groups and ethnicities included 569 Japanese adults, 947 children with ages 2-5 screened in 24 day care centers in San Francisco, and 49 predominantly Hispanic adults screened at an outdoor health fair event. Depending on the particular subject group, correlation coefficients between the RRS and RS methods ranged between R ∼0.80 and R ∼0.96. Analysis of the Japanese screening showed that, on average, skin carotenoid levels are higher in women compared to men, skin levels do not depend on age, and tobacco smokers have reduced levels versus non-smokers. For the two most ethnically diverse groups with widely varying melanin levels, we investigated the effect of dermal melanin on RS and RRS skin carotenoid levels. The analysis revealed that large variations in skin carotenoid levels remain detectable independent of the particular melanin index. This behavior is consistent with the absence of melanin effects on the skin carotenoid levels generated with the instrument configurations. The RS method has an advantage over RRS in its relative simplicity. Due to its detection of skin reflection over a wide spectral range from the near UV to the near IR, it has the unique ability to quantify each of the major tissue chromophores and take them into account in the derivation of skin carotenoid levels.
Background Few studies have explored the relationship between weight bias and weight loss treatment outcomes. Purpose This investigation examined the relationship between implicit and explicit weight bias and (a) program attrition, (b) weight loss, (c) self-monitoring adherence, (d) daily exercise levels and overall caloric expenditure, (e) daily caloric intake, and (f) daily caloric deficit among overweight/obese treatment-seeking adults. Methods Forty-six overweight/obese adults (body mass index≥27 kg/m2) participating in an 18-week, stepped-care, behavioral weight loss program completed implicit and explicit measures of weight bias. Participants were instructed to self-monitor and electronically report daily energy intake, exercise, and energy expenditure. Results Greater weight bias was associated with inconsistent self-monitoring, greater caloric intake, lower energy expenditure and exercise, creation of a smaller caloric deficit, higher program attrition, as well as less weight loss during the self-help phase of the stepped-care treatment. Conclusions Weight bias may interfere with overweight/obese treatment-seeking adults' ability to achieve optimal health.
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