Search results for "indians"

showing 10 items of 17 documents

Carriage of Enterobacteria Producing Extended-Spectrum β-Lactamases and Composition of the Gut Microbiota in an Amerindian Community

2015

ABSTRACT Epidemiological and individual risk factors for colonization by enterobacteria producing extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (E-ESBL) have been studied extensively, but whether such colonization is associated with significant changes in the composition of the rest of the microbiota is still unknown. To address this issue, we assessed in an isolated Amerindian Guianese community whether intestinal carriage of E-ESBL was associated with specificities in gut microbiota using metagenomic and metatranscriptomic approaches. While the richness of taxa of the active microbiota of carriers was similar to that of noncarriers, the taxa were less homogeneous. In addition, species of four genera,…

AdultMale0301 basic medicinefood.ingredient030106 microbiologyGene ExpressionGut floradigestive systembeta-LactamasesCoprococcusMicrobiologyFeces03 medical and health sciencesfluids and secretionsfoodEnterobacteriaceaeMechanisms of ResistancePhylogeneticsRNA Ribosomal 16SHumansPharmacology (medical)ColonizationPhylogenyAgedPharmacologybiologyEnterobacteriaceae InfectionsSequence Analysis DNAMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classificationParabacteroidesDesulfovibrioEnterobacteriaceaeFrench GuianaGastrointestinal Microbiomestomatognathic diseasesInfectious DiseasesGenes BacterialMetagenomicsCarrier StateIndians North AmericanbacteriaMetagenomeDesulfovibrioFemaleTranscriptomeAntimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
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Finger ridge-count asymmetry and diversity in Andean Indians and interpopulation comparisons

1998

A separate analysis of ulnar and radial finger ridge-counts, obtained from 115 Aymara Indians (55 males and 60 females) of northern Chile, was performed. From these variables, directional asymmetry, fluctuating asymmetry, indices of bilateral asymmetry (square root of A2), and intraindividual diversity (s/square root of 5) were calculated for each sex. The results show that most bimanual differences for the ridge-counts are not statistically significant in the Aymara, except for radial counts in female first and second fingers (right hand means are larger), while most ulnar-radial differences are highly significant in both sexes (radial values exceed ulnar ones). Most sex differences do not…

AdultMaleAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectUlnaBiologyAsymmetryFluctuating asymmetryFingersSex FactorsStatistical significanceEthnicityHumansChileChildSouthern Hemispheremedia_commonBilateral asymmetryIndians South AmericanRidge countRadiusAnthropologyFemaleAnatomyDermatoglyphicsDiversity (business)DemographyAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology
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The Association of Arsenic Exposure and Arsenic Metabolism With the Metabolic Syndrome and Its Individual Components: Prospective Evidence From the S…

2018

Inorganic arsenic exposure is ubiquitous, and both exposure and interindividual differences in its metabolism have been associated with cardiometabolic risk. However, the associations of arsenic exposure and arsenic metabolism with the metabolic syndrome (MetS) and its individual components are relatively unknown. We used Poisson regression with robust variance to evaluate the associations of baseline arsenic exposure (urinary arsenic levels) and metabolism (relative percentage of arsenic species over their sum) with incident MetS and its individual components (elevated waist circumference, elevated triglycerides, reduced high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, hypertension, and elevated fast…

AdultMaleWaistDiabetes riskEpidemiologyOriginal Contributionschemistry.chemical_elementPhysiology010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesArsenicMidwestern United States03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineProspective StudiesProspective cohort studyArsenic0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMetabolic SyndromeArsenic toxicitybusiness.industryArizonaEnvironmental exposureEnvironmental ExposureMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasechemistryIndians North AmericanFemaleMetabolic syndromebusinessCohort study
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Cytotoxicity of medicinal plants of the West-Canadian Gwich׳in Native Americans towards sensitive and multidrug-resistant cancer cells

2015

Abstract Ethnopharmacological relevance Traditional medicine of the Native Americans has a long tradition of medicinal plants, which also influenced modern oncology. For instance, podophyllotoxin the active ingredient of Podophyllum peltatum L. (Berberidaceae) used by Native Americans to treat warts led to the development of etoposide and teniposide. In the present investigation, we studied 10 medicinal plants used by the Gwich׳in First Nation of West-Canada, which have been used against diverse diseases including cancer. Material and methods Sensitive and multidrug-resistant (MDR) tumor cell lines expressing various ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters (P-glycoprotein/ ABCB1/MDR1 , MRP1…

CanadaCell SurvivalAntineoplastic AgentsDrug resistancePharmacologyBerberidaceaeCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryLiliaceaemedicineAraceaeHumansMedicinal plantsEtoposidePharmacologyPlants MedicinalbiologyPlant Extractsbiology.organism_classificationDrug Resistance MultipleArctiumMultiple drug resistancePodophyllotoxinDrug Resistance NeoplasmIndians North AmericanATP-Binding Cassette TransportersArctiumPodophyllum peltatummedicine.drugJournal of Ethnopharmacology
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Biopiracy and the right to self-determination of indigenous peoples.

2018

Abstract Background: Since over thirty years, I work on the unclear legal situation of in which indigenous peoples find themselves today in the beginning mainly in the USA and later also in Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The status of indigenous people and native nations is characterized as a mixture of national and international law. Hypothesis/Purpose: To clarify the status of indigenous people it is necessary to analyze and interpret carefully hundreds of old treaties, international declarations and covenants, national statutes and jurisprudence, especially the old leading decisions of the US-Supreme Court. Such an analysis and interpretation should prove that indigenous people have …

CanadaUnited NationsPharmaceutical ScienceTheftIndigenousStatute03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePopulation GroupsPolitical scienceDrug DiscoveryComparative lawHumansTreaty030304 developmental biologyPharmacology0303 health sciencesAustraliaDeclaration on the Rights of Indigenous PeoplesBiodiversityInternational lawIndigenous rightsUnited StatesComplementary and alternative medicine030220 oncology & carcinogenesisLawPersonal AutonomyIndians North AmericanMolecular MedicineMinority rightsNew ZealandPhytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology
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“Things which don’t shift and grow are dead things”: Revisiting Betonie’s Waste-Lands in Leslie Silko’s Ceremony

2014

This article explores the socio-political background that led to widespread Native American urban relocation in the period following World War II – a historical episode which is featured in Leslie Marmon Silko’s acclaimed novel Ceremony (1977). Through an analysis of the recycling, reinterpreting practices carried out by one of Ceremony’s memorable supporting characters, Navajo healer Betonie, Silko’s political aim to interrogate the state of things and to re-value Native traditions in a context of ongoing relations of coloniality is made most clear. In Silko’s novel, Betonie acts as an organic intellectual who is able to identify and challenge the 1950s neocolonial structure that forced Na…

EmbryologyHegemonymedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:PR1-9680Reification (Marxism)IndigenousPoliticsUrban IndiansNeocolonialismmedia_commonlcsh:English languageLeslie Marmon SilkoCell BiologyCeremonyCeremonylanguage.human_languageGenealogylcsh:English literatureNavajoGeographyCultural recyclingAestheticslanguagelcsh:PE1-3729AnatomyNeocolonialismLiminalityFilología InglesaDevelopmental Biology
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“From Savage to Sublime (And Partway Back): Indians and Antiquity in Early Nineteenth-Century American Literature”

2016

This article examines the comparisons made between Indians and Antiquity in early nineteenth-century American literature (notably in the works of Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper); to do so, it begins by reaching back to references in European and American writings of the eighteenth century. One of the main motivations behind the associations between Native Americans and the Ancient World made in the early decades of the nineteenth century was to “elevate” Indians in order to transform them into worthy symbols of the recently established United States. Such associations also rendered them suitable subjects for treatment by authors inspired to a large extent by the Romantic Moveme…

Historylcsh:E11-143[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literaturemedia_common.quotation_subjectWashington IrvingAmericaAncient historylcsh:History AmericaAntiquitéromanticismeoratory[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature060104 historyIndiansNative AmericansWilliam TudorHistory America0601 history and archaeologyCountrynineteenth-century American literatureE11-143lcsh:E-FRomanticismAntiquityart oratoireOrder (virtue)littérature américaine du XIXe siècleComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSmedia_commonCivilizationmanuels scolaires du XIXe siècleThomas Jeffersonlcsh:AmericaAmerican Indians06 humanities and the arts[ SHS.LITT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature060202 literary studiesSublimeAncient GreeceE-Fnineteenth-century textbooksAmérindiensRomanticism0602 languages and literatureJames Fenimore CooperGeriatrics and GerontologyComplicityAmerican literature
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Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class III genetics in two Amerindian tribes from southern Brazil: the Kaingang and the Guarani.

1997

Population genetic studies of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class III region, comprising C2, BF and C4 phenotypes, and molecular genetic data are rarely available for populations other than Caucasoids. We have investigated three Amerindian populations from Southern Brazil: 131 Kaingang from Ivaí (KIV), 111 Kaingang (KRC) and 100 Guarani (GRC) from Rio das Cobras. Extended MHC haplotypes were derived after standard C2, BF, C4 phenotyping and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis with TaqI, together with HLA data published previously by segregation analysis. C2 and BF frequencies corresponded to other Amerindian populations. C4B*Q0 frequency was high in the GRC…

MaleTaqIPopulationLocus (genetics)Human leukocyte antigenBiologyMajor Histocompatibility Complexchemistry.chemical_compoundGene FrequencyGeneticsHumanseducationChildGenetics (clinical)Geneticseducation.field_of_studyHistocompatibility TestingIndians South AmericanHaplotypeComplement C4Complement System ProteinsComplement C2Genetic distancechemistryHaplotypesGenetic markerFemaleSteroid 21-HydroxylaseRestriction fragment length polymorphismBrazilPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthComplement Factor BHuman genetics
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Mexican indigenous music as a communicative system

2000

Meksikoindiansmusicaindigena mexicanamusiikkiMesoamericamythintiaanitMexixan music
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Tra alterità e domesticazione: il mare tra i Wayuu

2011

Settore M-DEA/01 - Discipline DemoetnoantropologicheWayuu Lowland South American indians animals cattle mythology
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