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"Kennedy, Damien"
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Hippocampal pathology in individuals at ultra-high risk for psychosis: A multi-modal magnetic resonance study
by
Nelson, Barnaby
,
Wood, Stephen J.
,
Kennedy, Damien
in
Antipsychotic Agents - therapeutic use
,
Case-Control Studies
,
Confidence intervals
2010
Although the hippocampus is a key brain region in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia, it is unclear whether structural or biochemical abnormalities predate illness onset. In this study, we used magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy data acquired prior to both the onset of psychosis and treatment with antipsychotics to determine this. Sixty-six young people clinically at ultra high-risk of development of psychosis were recruited, 59 of whom did not later develop a psychotic disorder and 7 who had done so after at least 24months follow-up. These participants were compared with 29 healthy comparison subjects on multiple independent magnetic resonance measures: hippocampal volume, hippocampal T2 relaxation time, and medial temporal lobe metabolite concentrations (including N-acetylaspartate). We found similar reductions in left hippocampal volume in the at-risk group compared to comparison subjects regardless of later transition status; on the right this only reached significance for the at-risk group who did not transition to psychosis. T2 relaxation time in the left hippocampal head was significantly elevated in the later-psychotic group, and this elevation positively correlated with total positive symptoms in the UHR group as a whole. Medial temporal lobe metabolite concentrations did not differ. These findings suggest that there are subtle pathological changes in the hippocampus prior to the development of psychosis, but that they are limited to the left hippocampal head. However, standard measures of neuroanatomical disturbance do not appear to be predictive of later transition, and instead are likely to be non-specific and common in cases that later develop a non-psychotic disorder.
Journal Article
Race riots explode; Violence hits six suburbs Mob bashes scapegoats Thousands chant slurs
RACIAL violence erupted in several Sydney suburbs last night in apparent retaliation for a rampage by thousands of young residents through Cronulla that turned the seaside suburb into a battlefield.
Newspaper Article
Our racist shame; Rioting mob bashes scapegoats Thousands chant vicious slurs THE BATTLE FOR CRONULLA
Alcohol, the Australian flag and raw racism fuelled a violent rampage by thousands of young residents through the streets of Cronulla yesterday, drawing widespread revulsion as bloodshed and bigotry turned the seaside suburb into a battleground.
Newspaper Article
Hepatitis B virus–specific T cells associate with viral control upon nucleos(t)ide-analogue therapy discontinuation
2018
The clinical management of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) patients is based exclusively on virological parameters that cannot independently determine in which patients nucleos(t)ide-analogue (NUC) therapy can be safely discontinued. NUCs efficiently suppress viral replication, but do not eliminate HBV. Thus, therapy discontinuation can be associated with virological and biochemical relapse and, consequently, therapy in the majority is life-long.
Since antiviral immunity is pivotal for HBV control, we investigated potential biomarkers for the safe discontinuation of NUCs within immune profiles of chronic HBV patients by utilizing traditional immunological assays (ELISPOT, flow cytometry) in conjunction with analyses of global non-antigen-specific immune populations (NanoString and CyTOF). Two distinct cohorts of 19 and 27 chronic HBV patients, respectively, were analyzed longitudinally prior to and after discontinuation of 2 different NUC therapy strategies.
Absence of hepatic flares following discontinuation of NUC treatment correlated with the presence, during NUC viral suppression, of HBV core and polymerase-specific T cells that were contained within the ex vivo PD-1+ population.
This study identifies the presence of functional HBV-specific T cells as a candidate immunological biomarker for safe therapy discontinuation in chronic HBV patients. Furthermore, the persistent and functional antiviral activity of PD-1+ HBV-specific T cells highlights the potential beneficial role of the expression of T cell exhaustion markers during human chronic viral infection.
This work was funded by a Singapore Translational Research Investigator Award (NMRC/STaR/013/2012), the Eradication of HBV TCR Program (NMRC/TCR/014-NUHS/2015), the Singapore Immunology Network, the Wellcome Trust (107389/Z/15/Z), and a Barts and The London Charity (723/1795) grant.
Journal Article
Officers had `no option but to shoot
The police officers who shot dead a man after he set fire to his grandmother's Wollongong home were not equipped with capsicum spray and other equipment which the State Coroner urged police to introduce three months ago. Mr Paul Klein, 30, died after being shot twice in the chest following a tense two-hour siege at his grandmother's Berkeley home at 10.30 pm on Tuesday.
Newspaper Article
A Landscape Approach to Invasive Species Management
by
Kennedy, Malcolm
,
Wells, Konstans
,
Lurgi, Miguel
in
Agricultural land
,
Agricultural management
,
Agricultural production
2016
Biological invasions are not only a major threat to biodiversity, they also have major impacts on local economies and agricultural production systems. Once established, the connection of local populations into metapopulation networks facilitates dispersal at landscape scales, generating spatial dynamics that can impact the outcome of pest-management actions. Much planning goes into landscape-scale invasive species management. However, effective management requires knowledge on the interplay between metapopulation network topology and management actions. We address this knowledge gap using simulation models to explore the effectiveness of two common management strategies, applied across different extents and according to different rules for selecting target localities in metapopulations with different network topologies. These management actions are: (i) general population reduction, and (ii) reduction of an obligate resource. The reduction of an obligate resource was generally more efficient than population reduction for depleting populations at landscape scales. However, the way in which local populations are selected for management is important when the topology of the metapopulation is heterogeneous in terms of the distribution of connections among local populations. We tested these broad findings using real-world scenarios of European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) infesting agricultural landscapes in Western Australia. Although management strategies targeting central populations were more effective in simulated heterogeneous metapopulation structures, no difference was observed in real-world metapopulation structures that are highly homogeneous. In large metapopulations with high proximity and connectivity of neighbouring populations, different spatial management strategies yield similar outcomes. Directly considering spatial attributes in pest-management actions will be most important for metapopulation networks with heterogeneously distributed links. Our modelling framework provides a simple approach for identifying the best possible management strategy for invasive species based on metapopulation structure and control capacity. This information can be used by managers trying to devise efficient landscape-oriented management strategies for invasive species and can also generate insights for conservation purposes.
Journal Article
Racist furore as 'Aussie' mob riots on beach
ALCOHOL, the Australian flag and raw racism fuelled a violent rampage by thousands of young residents in Sydney yesterday, drawing widespread revulsion as bloodshed and bigotry turned a seaside suburb into a battleground.
Newspaper Article
Racist furore as mobs riot; Clashes continue into night
ALCOHOL, the Australian flag and raw racism fuelled a violent rampage by thousands of young residents in Sydney yesterday, drawing widespread revulsion as bloodshed and bigotry turned a seaside suburb into a battleground.
Newspaper Article
New DNA technology identifies long dead
2000
Relatives of more than 400 missing people in NSW are being asked to provide DNA samples to help identify remains. This follows the successful use of DNA technology by the police Missing Person Unit to identify the skeleton of a woman who went missing six years ago.
Newspaper Article
Police accused of assaulting public while off duty
2000
The NSW public has accused a hard-core group of 88 police of multiple assaults, claiming nearly half were made when the officers were off duty.
Newspaper Article