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13 result(s) for "Gow, Derek"
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Absence of hantavirus in water voles and Eurasian beavers in Britain
Hantaviruses are RNA viruses (order Bunyavirales, family Hantaviridae) found in rodent, bat and insectivore reservoir-hosts and have been reported as an emerging significant zoonotic risk in Europe. As part of two native semiaquatic rodent restoration projects, tissue and urine samples were tested for hantavirus from water voles (Arvicola amphibius) (n=26, in 2015) and Eurasian beavers (Castor fiber) (n=20, covering 2010–2015) using a pan-hantavirus nested real-time PCR test. Kidney and lung samples were also analysed by light microscopy after haematoxylin and eosin staining of formalin-fixed paraffin wax sections. Individuals selected included those forming the source of release animals and from those already free-living in Britain in areas targeted for release, to identify existing reservoirs. For water voles all tested individuals were from Britain (n=26); for beavers some were from Britain (Scotland) (n=9) and some were samples from wild Norwegian (Telemark region) (n=6) and German (Bavaria region) animals (n=5) that formed the source of accepted wild populations currently present in Scotland. All samples tested from both species were negative for hantavirus RNA and showed no significant histopathological changes suggesting that reservoir infection with hantavirus in water voles in Britain and Eurasian beavers present in Britain, Norway and Bavaria, Germany, is unlikely.
Farming for food v farming for the benefit of wider society
Linked corridors of wildlife habitats which store water, capture carbon, improve the air and provide an enhanced living environment for the populations of industrial cities are now a reality.
English beavers face wipe-out for the second time at the hands of humans
Beaver felled trees can result in the formation over time of riffles - areas of trapped, coarse gravels which fish utilise for spawning - while their dam systems sustain ably capture and retain huge amounts of silts, sediments and chemicals which would otherwise destroy and degrade river systems.
Resilient beavers deserve the protection we demand for elephants and tigers
The landscapes they create play a sustainable role in flood mitigation, aquifer recharge, chemical capture, water purification, silt retention, and carbon storage. At this event British politicians and members of the royal family gathered in commitment to oppose the international trade in the carcasses of tigers, the tusks of elephants and the horns of rhinos.
Array of benefits to be had from beavers
A study in North America undertaken over a 30-year period demonstrated quite clearly in three research sites that where two mosquito species were once common in a river system they declined to the point of virtual extinction once beavers created ponds. The creation of much greater densities of invertebrates feeding on submerged dead wood habitat provides a greater abundance of fish food, the cleaned gravels beneath dams provide spawning areas - the dead wood habitats provide lays for big fish and refuge for fry from predators, and beaver coppicing of riverside trees opens banks to sunshine and rapidly encourages plant growth which again feeds terrestrial insects and fish.
Asthma exacerbations are associated with a decline in lung function: a longitudinal population-based study
RationaleProgressive lung function (LF) decline in patients with asthma contributes to worse outcomes. Asthma exacerbations are thought to contribute to this decline; however, evidence is limited with mixed results.MethodsThis historical cohort study of a broad asthma patient population in the Optimum Patient Care Research Database, examined asthma patients with 3+eligible post-18th birthday peak expiratory flow rate (PEF) records (primary analysis) or records of forced expiratory flow in 1 s (FEV1) (sensitivity analysis). Adjusted linear growth models tested the association between mean annual exacerbation rate (AER) and LF trajectory.ResultsWe studied 1 09 182 patients with follow-up ranging from 5 to 50 years, of which 75 280 had data for all variables included in the adjusted analyses. For each additional exacerbation, an estimated additional −1.34 L/min PEF per year (95% CI −1.23 to –1.50) were lost. Patients with AERs >2/year and aged 18–24 years at baseline lost an additional −5.95 L/min PEF/year (95% CI −8.63 to –3.28) compared with those with AER 0. These differences in the rate of LF decline between AER groups became progressively smaller as age at baseline increased. The results using FEV1 were consistent with the above.ConclusionTo our knowledge, this study is the largest nationwide cohort of its kind and demonstrates that asthma exacerbations are associated with faster LF decline. This was more prominent in younger patients but was evident in older patients when it was related to lower starting LF, suggesting a persistent deteriorating phenotype that develops in adulthood over time. Earlier intervention with appropriate management in younger patients with asthma could be of value to prevent excessive LF decline.
Observational UK cohort study to describe intermittent oral corticosteroid prescribing patterns and their association with adverse outcomes in asthma
Oral corticosteroids (OCS) for asthma are associated with increased risks of developing adverse outcomes (adverse outcomes); no previous study has focused exclusively on intermittent OCS use. This historical (2008-2019) UK cohort study using primary care medical records from two anonymised, real-life databases (OPCRD and CPRD) included patients aged≥4 years with asthma receiving only intermittent OCS. Patients were indexed on their first recorded intermittent OCS prescription for asthma and categorised by OCS prescribing patterns: one-off (single), less frequent (≥90 day gap) and frequent (<90 day gap). Non-OCS patients matched 1:1 on gender, age and index date served as controls. The association of OCS prescribing patterns with OCS-related AO risk was studied, stratified by age, Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) 2020 treatment step, and pre index inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) and short-acting β -agonist (SABA) prescriptions using a multivariable Cox-proportional hazard model. Of 476 167 eligible patients, 41.7%, 26.8% and 31.6% had one-off, less frequent and frequent intermittent OCS prescribing patterns, respectively. Risk of any AO increased with increasingly frequent patterns of intermittent OCS versus non-OCS (HR; 95% CI: one-off 1.19 (1.18 to 1.20), less frequent 1.35 (1.34 to 1.36), frequent 1.42 (1.42 to 1.43)), and was consistent across age, GINA treatment step and ICS and SABA subgroups. The highest risks of individual OCS-related adverse outcomes with increasingly frequent OCS were for pneumonia and sleep apnoea. A considerable proportion of patients with asthma receiving intermittent OCS experienced a frequent prescribing pattern. Increasingly frequent OCS prescribing patterns were associated with higher risk of OCS-related adverse outcomes. Mitigation strategies are needed to minimise intermittent OCS prescription in primary care.