familial differences
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2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Grabowski ◽  
Tue Helms Andersen

Objectives In families living with type 2 diabetes, relatives have a significantly heightened risk of developing the disease. In many families, both the person with type 2 diabetes and his/her relatives lack detailed knowledge about this risk. One obstacle to constructive intra-familial prevention and risk reduction is the lack of perceived familial disease relevance. The objective of the present study is to explore barriers to prevention in families with at least one adult with type 2 diabetes. Methods Data were gathered during eight problem assessment and ideation workshops with families. The data were analyzed using radical hermeneutics and interpreted using Taylor’s concepts of social imaginaries and horizons of significance. Results The analysis revealed three main barriers: (1) Sole responsibilities and the absence of collective practices, (2) intra-familial differences in perceptions of risks and future health, and (3) lack of perceived disease significance and the ensuing lack of mutual care. The participating families all experienced one or more of the three identified primary barriers. Discussion The study has produced important knowledge about barriers to familial prevention of type 2 diabetes. The findings confirm that familial prevention is indeed a complex matter that calls for the use of complexity-oriented approaches in health care practice.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 170453 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. J. Johnson ◽  
M. J. Noonan ◽  
A. C. Kitchener ◽  
L. A. Harrington ◽  
C. Newman ◽  
...  

The tendency for sexual size dimorphism (SSD) to increase with body mass in taxa where males are larger, and to decrease when females are larger, is known as Rensch's rule. In mammals, where the trend occurs, it is believed to be the result of a competitive advantage for larger males, while female mass is constrained by the energetics of reproduction. Here, we examine the allometry of SSD within the Felidae and Canidae, demonstrating distinctly different patterns: in felids, there is positive allometric scaling, while there is no trend in canids. We hypothesize that feeding ecology, via its effect on female spacing patterns, is responsible for the difference; larger male mass may be advantageous only where females are dispersed such that males can defend access to them. This is supported by the observation that felids are predominately solitary, and all are obligate carnivores. Similarly, carnivorous canids are more sexually dimorphic than insectivores and omnivores, but carnivory does not contribute to a Rensch effect as dietary variation occurs across the mass spectrum. The observed inter-familial differences are also consistent with reduced constraints on female mass in the canids, where litter size increases with body mass, versus no observable allometry in the felids.


2013 ◽  
Vol 182 ◽  
pp. 316-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire W. Varian-Ramos ◽  
John P. Swaddle ◽  
Daniel A. Cristol

Author(s):  
Suzanne E. Tallichet ◽  
Christopher Hensley

Despite the recent surge in society's interest in human violence, relatively few studies have been conducted examining the closely related phenomenon of animal cruelty. Although several researchers have begun to identify some of the correlates of animal cruelty, few have attempted to understand how differences in the backgrounds of rural and urban residents have led to their abuse of animals. Using survey data from261 inmates, the authors investigate how demographic, familial differences and species type have contributed to the frequency of acts of animal cruelty. In general, early exposure to animal abuse is a strong predictor of the subsequent behavior. However, rural inmates learned to be cruel by watching family members exclusively, whereas urban inmates learned from family members and friends. Moreover, urban inmates chose dogs, cats, and wild animals as their target animals; however, rural inmates chose only cats.


Parasitology ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 131 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-185 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. K. MORLEY ◽  
R. H. WILLIAMS ◽  
J. M. HUGHES ◽  
R. S. TERRY ◽  
P. DUNCANSON ◽  
...  

A study was carried out to investigate the frequencies of abortion and congenital Toxoplasma gondii infection within 27 families (765 individuals) of a pedigree Charollais sheep flock maintained on a working farm in Worcestershire, UK, since 1992. Pedigree lambing records were analysed to establish the frequency of abortion for each family. The frequency of congenital infection was determined for each family by PCR analysis of tissue samples taken from newborn lambs. A total of 155 lambs were tested for congenital T. gondii infection, which were all born during the study period 2000–2003. Significant differences in the frequency of abortion between sheep families within this flock were observed with frequencies ranging between 0% and 48% (P<0·01). Significantly different infection frequencies with T. gondii were also observed for different families and ranged between 0% and 100% (P<0·01). Although the actual cause of each abortion was not verified, a highly significant positive correlation was found to exist between the frequency of abortion and the frequency of T. gondii infection in the same families (P<0·01). The data presented here raise further questions regarding the significance of congenital transmission of T. gondii within sheep populations, the possible successive vertical transmission of T. gondii within families of sheep, and the potential role of inherited genetic susceptibility to abortion with respect to T. gondii infection. This work invites further study into the epidemiology of ovine toxoplasmosis and may have implications for sheep husbandry methods in the future.


1998 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 168-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Schafer ◽  
G. Kelly ◽  
R. Schrader ◽  
W. C. Griffith ◽  
B. A. Muggenburg ◽  
...  

Intact female Beagles from life-span studies in the Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute colony were examined for mammary tumor incidence. The breeding colony, founded in 1963, produced five generations from 28 founder females. After proportional hazards analysis, two maternal families were shown to have markedly different phenotypes, one susceptible and one resistant to mammary neoplasia, as compared with the entire colony. When tumors were subdivided into benign and malignant based on local invasiveness, familial differences in tumor incidence were preserved for each tumor type. Fifty-seven females in the susceptible family developed 149 benign and 39 malignant tumors, and 95 females in the resistant family developed 70 benign and 20 malignant tumors. The ratio of benign to malignant tumors of about 4:1 for both families was higher than expected. Using Kaplan–Meier and log-rank analyses, the susceptible family had a 50% malignant tumor incidence by age 13.6 years, whereas the resistant family did not have a 50% incidence until 17.0 years ( P = 0.0065). Because of marked censoring, Kaplan–Meier analyses could not provide an estimate of the 50% benign tumor incidence; mean incidence age was calculated instead. These estimates for benign tumors for susceptible and resistant families were 10.8 and 13.8 years ( P = 0.0001), respectively. Using χ2 tests, families had no differences in the occurrence of the types of benign ( P = 0.098) or malignant ( P = 0.194) tumors or in the ratio of benign to malignant tumors ( P = 0.778). Immunohistochemical analysis of malignant tumors from both families did not demonstrate differences in p53 mutation rate or p185 erbB-2 expression. These results suggest that 1) genetic factors produce familial differences in the age of onset of both benign and malignant mammary tumors; histologic types do not segregate by family; 2) the ratio of benign to malignant tumors is greater than formerly reported; and 3) neither p53 nor p185 erbB-2 alterations are the basis for the familial predisposition.


1996 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 735-746 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniele Sandman ◽  
Brian B. Boycott ◽  
Leo Peichl

AbstractThe morphology of horizontal cells in ox, sheep, and pig retinae as observed after Lucifer Yellow injections are described and compared with the descriptions of Golgi-stained cells by Ramón y Cajal (1893). Horizontal cells in the retinae of less domesticated species, wild pig, fallow and sika deer, mouflon, and aurochs were also examined. All these retinae have two types of horizontal cell; their morphologies are in common, although with some familial differences. Their basic appearance is as Cajal described; except in one important respect, a single axon-like process could not be identified on the external horizontal cells. It is concluded that external horizontal cells of artiodactyls correspond to the axonless (A-type) cells of other mammals. Cajal's internal horizontal cells have a single axon which contacts rods. This type corresponds to the B-type cells of other mammalian retinae. Artiodactyl A- and B-type horizontal cells differ from those of many other mammals in that the B-type dendritic tree is robust and the A-type dendritic tree is delicate. Historically, this morphological difference between orders of mammals has led to some confusion. The comparisons presented here suggest that the morphological types of primate horizontal cells can be integrated into a general mammalian classification.


Author(s):  
H. Tyler-Walters ◽  
A. R. Hawkins

This paper describes the random amplification of polymorphic DNA markers (RAPDs) in Lasaea rubra (Erycinidae: Bivalvia). Present evidence suggests that L. rubra is an asexual species; however, the exact mode of clonal reproduction in this species is still a matter of debate. In this preliminary study, four of the primers used generated polymorphic RAPDs. One primer was able to distinguish between individuals from the same or different crevice population. This same primer also resolved a single band difference between otherwise identical RAPD patterns of a parent and its offspring. No familial differences have been detected in several previous studies using allozyme electrophoresis. This paper suggests that many polymorphic markers could be obtained with this species using the RAPD technique. Population genetic analysis of L. rubra has long been hampered by a dearth of polymorphic markers due to its small size. These findings suggest that this technique has the potential to further the study of population genetics in this asexual species.


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