Walters Webb (robertsphere42)
16 [1.74-2.69]), gestational age less then 37 weeks (aOR 1.73 [1.42-2.10]), chromosomal abnormalities (aOR 3.07 [2.60-3.64]) and renal anomalies (aOR 1.34 [1.10-1.61]). Independent modifiable risk factors for mortality were being transferred-in from another hospital (aOR 1.15 [1.03-1.29]), use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (aOR 12.74 [10.91-14.88]). Receiving care in a teaching hospital is a modifiable variable, and it decreased the odds of mortality (aOR 0. 78 [0.64-0.95]). In conclusion, chromosomal anomalies, Extra Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation, gestational age less then 37 weeks or birth weight less then 2500 g were associated with increased odds of mortality. Modifiable variables as receiving care at birth center and in a hospital designated as a teaching hospital decreased the odds of mortality.PURPOSE Prior studies have compared unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) with high tibial osteotomy (HTO) suggesting that both procedures had good functional outcomes. But none had established the superiority of one of the two procedures for patients with high expectation including return to impact sport. The aim of this study was to compare functional outcomes and ability to return to impact sport of active patients defined with a pre-arthritis University of California and Los Angeles activity (UCLA) score > 8, after UKA or HTO procedures. selleck chemicals METHODS A retrospective review of patients with a pre-arthritis UCLA score > 8 operated between January 2014 and September 2017 has identified 91 patients with open-wedge HTO and 117 patients with UKA. A matching process based on age (± 3 years) and gender allowed to include 50 patients in each group for comparative analysis. Patient reported outcomes included Knee Osteoarthritis Outcomes Score (KOOS), UCLA Score, Knee Society Score (KSS) and time to return to sport or(62% for HTO vs 28% for UKA) and better sports related functional scores at two years after surgery compared to UKA. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE III retrospective case-control study.Resistant rapeseed lines pyramided with multiple resistant QTLs derived from Brassica oleracea were developed via a hexaploidy strategy. Rapeseed (Brassica napus L.) suffers heavily from Sclerotinia stem rot, but the breeding of Sclerotinia-resistant rapeseed cultivar has been unsuccessful. During the study, interspecific hexaploids were generated between rapeseed variety 'Zhongshuang 9' and a wild B. oleracea which was highly resistant to S. sclerotiorum, followed by backcrossing with Zhongshuang 9 and successive selfing. By molecular marker-assisted selection, three major resistant QTLs were transferred and pyramided from B. oleracea into two BC1F8 lines which exhibited ~ 35% higher resistance level than Zhongshuang 9 and produced good seed yield and seed quality. It is the first report on successful development of Sclerotinia-resistant rapeseed lines by introducing multiple resistant loci from wild B. oleracea. This study revealed the effectiveness of pyramiding multiple QTLs in improving Sclerotinia resistance in rapeseed and provided a novel breeding strategy on utilization of B. oleracea in rapeseed improvement.Bymovirus-induced yellow mosaic diseases seriously threaten global production of autumn-sown barley and wheat, which are two of the presently most important crops around the world. Under natural field conditions, the diseases are caused by infection of soil-borne plasmodiophorid Polymyxa graminis-transmitted bymoviruses of the genus Bymovirus of the family Potyviridae. Focusing on barley and wheat, this article summarizes the achievements on taxonomy, geography and host specificity of these disease-conferring viruses, as well as the genetics of resistance in barley, wheat and wild relatives. Moreover, based on recent progress of barley and wheat genomics, germplasm resources and large-scale sequencing, the exploration and isolation of corresponding resistant genes from wheat and b