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1.
J Neurol ; 269(6): 3086-3093, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34806129

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Patient-centered assessments have attracted increasing attention in the last decade in clinics and research. The purpose of this study was to examine the association between patients' satisfaction with symptoms and several disease-specific and generic outcome measures in 100 patients with generalized myasthenia gravis (gMG). METHODS: In this cross-sectional study, patients with gMG followed at the Copenhagen Neuromuscular Center from October 2019 to June 2020 participated in one test. The patients completed commonly used MG-specific outcome measures and generic questionnaires for depression (Major Depression Inventory), comorbidities (Charlson Comorbidity Index), fatigue (Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory), overall health state (EQ-5D-3L), and satisfaction with MG treatment. The analyses were anchored in the Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS). RESULTS: N = 190 patients were screened for the study, and 100 patients were included. One-third of the patients reported dissatisfaction (negative PASS status) with the current symptom state. Increasing MG symptoms, fatigue, depression, low MG-related quality of life, and shorter disease duration were associated with negative PASS status. Age, sex, BMI, MG treatment, and comorbidity did not influence PASS status. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that dissatisfaction with the current symptom level is high in patients with gMG and that dissatisfaction is associated with disease severity, disease length, depression, fatigue, and lower MG-related quality of life. The results emphasize the importance of a patient-centered approach to MG treatment to optimize patient satisfaction. The PASS question was useful in this study to investigate the causes of symptom dissatisfaction in gMG.


Subject(s)
Myasthenia Gravis , Quality of Life , Cross-Sectional Studies , Fatigue/etiology , Humans , Myasthenia Gravis/diagnosis , Myasthenia Gravis/drug therapy , Patient Satisfaction
3.
Oecologia ; 179(2): 509-18, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26085467

ABSTRACT

Bumble bee abundance in agricultural landscapes is known to decrease with increasing distance from seminatural grasslands, but whether the pollination of bumble-bee-pollinated wild plants shows a similar pattern is less well known. In addition, the relative effects of landscape composition (landscape heterogeneity) and landscape configuration (distance from seminatural grassland) on wild plant pollination, and the interaction between these landscape effects, have not been studied using landscape-level replication. We performed a field experiment to disentangle these landscape effects on the pollination of a native herb, the sticky catchfly (Lychnis viscaria), while accounting for the proportion of oilseed rape across landscapes and the local abundance of bee forage flowers. We measured pollen limitation (the degree to which seed set is pollen-limited), seed set, and seed set stability using potted plants placed in landscapes that differed in heterogeneity (composition) and distance from seminatural grassland (configuration). Pollen limitation and seed set in individual plants did not respond to landscape composition, landscape configuration, or proportion of oilseed rape. Instead, seed set increased with increasing local bee forage flower cover. However, we found within-plant variability in pollen limitation and seed set to increase with increasing distance from seminatural pasture. Our results suggest that average within-plant levels of pollen limitation and seed set respond less swiftly than the within-plant variability in pollen limitation and seed set to changes in landscape configuration. Although landscape effects on pollination were less important than predicted, we conclude that landscape configuration and local habitat characteristics play larger roles than landscape composition in the pollination of L. viscaria.


Subject(s)
Bees/physiology , Caryophyllaceae/physiology , Ecosystem , Pollination , Agriculture , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Flowers/physiology , Pollen , Seeds
4.
Oecologia ; 175(1): 199-208, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24562471

ABSTRACT

Marginal grassland fragments, such as road verges and field margins, may act as important supplemental habitats for grassland plants in the modern agricultural landscape. However, abundance of pollinators in such fragments has been found to decline with distance to larger natural and semi-natural habitats, and this could have corresponding effects on plant pollination. In this study, we performed a field experiment on road verges with three insect-pollinated grassland herbs to examine the relationship between distance to semi-natural grassland and plant reproductive success in two landscapes with contrasting farming intensities. In Lychnis viscaria and Lotus corniculatus, seed production tended to decrease with increasing distance to semi-natural grassland, but only in the landscape with high farming intensity. Seed production in Armeria maritima spp. maritima decreased with distance in both landscapes. Although many studies have investigated effects of natural habitat on crop pollination, little is known about the impact on pollination in native plants. The results from this study indicate that management of semi-natural grasslands improves not only biodiversity within the actual grassland but also pollination of native plants in the surrounding agricultural landscape.


Subject(s)
Asteraceae/physiology , Ecosystem , Lotus/physiology , Pollination , Seeds/physiology , Agriculture , Animals , Biodiversity , Insecta , Sweden
5.
Oecologia ; 174(1): 217-26, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24061551

ABSTRACT

Invasive plants may compete with native species for abiotic factors as light, space and nutrients, and have also been shown to affect native pollination interactions. Studies have mainly focused on how invasive plants affect pollinator behaviour, i.e. attraction of pollinators to or away from native flowers. However, when an invasive plant provides resources utilized by native pollinators this could increase pollinator population sizes and thereby pollination success in natives. Effects mediated through changes in pollinator population sizes have been largely ignored in previous studies, and the dominance of negative interactions suggested by meta-analyses may therefore be biased. We investigated the impact of the invasive Lupinus polyphyllus on pollination in the native Lotus corniculatus using a study design comparing invaded and uninvaded sites before and after the flowering period of the invasive. We monitored wild bee abundance in transects, and visit rate and seed production of potted Lotus plants. Bumblebee abundance increased 3.9 times in invaded sites during the study period, whereas it was unaltered in uninvaded sites. Total visit rate per Lotus plant increased 2.1 times in invaded sites and decreased 4.4 times in uninvaded sites. No corresponding change in seed production of Lotus was found. The increase in visit rate to Lotus was driven by an increase in solitary bee visitation, whereas mainly bumblebees were observed to visit the invasive Lupinus. The mechanism by which the invasive increases pollinator visit rates to Lotus could be increased availability of other flower resources for solitary bees when bumblebees forage on Lupinus.


Subject(s)
Bees , Introduced Species , Lotus/physiology , Lupinus , Pollination , Animals , Flowers , Population Density , Reproduction , Seeds , Sweden
6.
Oecologia ; 173(3): 881-93, 2013 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23579571

ABSTRACT

Differences among plant species in visitation rate and seed set within a community may be explained both by the species' floral traits and the community context. Additionally, the importance of species' floral traits vs. community context on visitation rate and seed set may vary among communities. In communities where the pollinator-to-flower ratio is low, floral traits may be more important than community context, as pollinators may have the opportunity to be choosier when visiting plant species. In this study we investigated whether species' floral traits (flower shape, size and number, and flowering duration) and community context (conspecific and heterospecific flower density, and pollinator abundance) could explain among-species variation in visitation rate and seed set. For this, we used data on 47 plant species from two Norwegian plant communities differing in pollinator-to-flower ratio. Differences among species in visitation rate and seed set within a community could be explained by similar variables as those explaining visitation rate and seed set within species. As expected, we found floral traits to be more important than community context in the community with a lower pollinator-to-flower ratio; whereas in the community with a higher pollinator-to-flower ratio, community context played a bigger role. Our study gives significant insights into the relative importance of floral traits on species' visitation rate and seed set, and contributes to our understanding of the role of the community context on the fitness of plant species.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Ecosystem , Flowers/anatomy & histology , Insecta/physiology , Plant Physiological Phenomena/physiology , Pollination/physiology , Seeds/physiology , Animals , Flowers/physiology , Genetic Fitness , Norway , Species Specificity
7.
Oecologia ; 160(4): 707-19, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19415338

ABSTRACT

Local flower density can affect pollen limitation and plant reproductive success through changes in pollinator visitation and availability of compatible pollen. Many studies have investigated the relationship between conspecific density and pollen limitation among populations, but less is known about within-population relationships and the effect of heterospecific flower density. In addition, few studies have explicitly assessed how the spatial scales at which flowers are monitored affect relationships. We investigated the effect of floral neighborhood on pollen limitation at four spatial scales in the self-incompatible herbs Armeria maritima spp. maritima and Ranunculus acris spp. acris. Moreover, we measured pollen deposition in Armeria and pollinator visits to Ranunculus. There was substantial variation in pollen limitation among Armeria individuals, and 25% of this variation was explained by the density of compatible and heterospecific flowers within a 3 m circle. Deposition of compatible pollen was affected by the density of compatible and incompatible inflorescences within a 0.5 m circle, and deposition of heterospecific pollen was affected by the density of heterospecific flowers within a 2 m circle. In Ranunculus, the number of pollinator visits was affected by both conspecific and heterospecific flower densities. This did not, however, result in effects of the floral neighborhood on pollen limitation, probably due to an absence of pollen limitation at the population level. Our study shows that considerable variation in pollen limitation may occur among individuals of a population, and that this variation is partly explained by floral neighborhood density. Such individual-based measures provide an important link between pollen limitation theory, which predicts ecological and evolutionary causes and consequences for individual plants, and studies of the effects of landscape fragmentation on plant species persistence. Our study also highlights the importance of considering multiple spatial scales to understand the spatial extent of pollination processes within a population.


Subject(s)
Flowers/physiology , Plumbaginaceae/physiology , Pollen/physiology , Pollination/physiology , Ranunculus/physiology , Analysis of Variance , Population Density , Reproduction , Sweden
8.
Environ Sci Technol ; 41(3): 830-6, 2007 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17328190

ABSTRACT

Any migration of radionuclides from nuclear waste repositories is expected to be mitigated by adsorption to the host rocks surrounding hydraulically conductive fractures. Fluid rock interfaces are considered to be important barriers for nuclear waste disposal schemes but their adsorptive capacity can be affected by the growth of microbial biofilms. This study indicates that biofilms growing on fracture surfaces decrease the rocks adsorption capacity for migrating radionuclides except for trivalent species. Potential suppression of adsorption by biofilms should, therefore, be accounted for in performance safety assessment models. In this study, the adsorptive capacity of in situ anaerobic biofilms grown 450 m underground on either glass or granite slides was compared to the capacity of the same surfaces without biofilms. Surfaces were exposed to the radiotracers 60Co(II), 147Pm(III), 241Am(III), 234Th(IV), and 237Np(V) for a period of 660 h in a pH neutral anaerobic synthetic groundwater. Adsorption was investigated at multiple time points over the 660 h using liquid scintillation and ICP-MS. Results indicate that these surfaces adsorb between 0 and 85% of the added tracers under the conditions of the specific experiments. After 660 h, the distribution coefficients, R (ratio between what is sorbed and what is left in the aqueous phase), approached 3 x 10(4) m for 60Co, 3 x 10(5) m for 147Pm and 241Am, 1 x 10(6)m for 234Th, and 1 x 10(3) m for 237Np. The highest rate of adsorption was during the first 200 h of the adsorption experiments and started to approach equilibrium after 500 h. Adsorption to colloids and precipitates contributed to decreases of up to 20% in the available 60Co, 147Pm, 241Am, and 237Np in the adsorption systems. In the 234Th system 95% of the aqueous 234Th was removed by adsorbing to colloids. Although the range of Rvalues for each surface tested generally overlapped, the biofilms consistently demonstrated lower R values except for the trivalant 147Pm and 241Am adsorption systems.


Subject(s)
Biofilms , Environmental Pollution/prevention & control , Radioisotopes/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Waste Disposal, Fluid/methods , Adsorption , Anaerobiosis , Chemical Precipitation , Colloids/chemistry , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mass Spectrometry , Scintillation Counting , Time Factors
9.
Oecologia ; 150(3): 506-18, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16955286

ABSTRACT

Spatial variation in environmental conditions can lead to local adaptation of plant populations, particularly if gene flow among populations is low. Many studies have investigated adaptation to contrasting environmental conditions, but little is known about the spatial scale of adaptive evolution. We studied population differentiation and local adaptation at two spatial scales in the monocarpic grassland perennial Carlina vulgaris. We reciprocally transplanted seedlings among five European regions (northwestern Czech Republic, central Germany, Luxembourg, southern Sweden and northwestern Switzerland) and among populations of different sizes within three of the regions. We recorded survival, growth and reproduction over three growing periods. At the regional scale, several performance traits and the individual fitness of C. vulgaris were highest if the plants were grown in their home region and they decreased with increasing transplant distance. The effects are likely due to climatic differences that increased with the geographical distance between regions. At the local scale, there were significant interactions between the effects of the population of origin and the transplant site, but these were not due to an enhanced performance of plants at their home site and they were not related to the geographical or environmental distance between the site of origin and the transplant site. The size of the population of origin did not influence the strength of local adaptation. The results of our study suggest that C. vulgaris consists of regionally adapted genotypes, and that distance is a good predictor of the extent of adaptive differentiation at large scales ( > 200 km) but not at small scales. We conclude that patterns of local adaptation should be taken into account for the efficient preservation of genetic resources, when assessing the status of a plant species and during conservation planning.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Biological/physiology , Asteraceae/growth & development , Biological Evolution , Ecosystem , Climate , Europe , Geography , Linear Models , Survival Analysis
10.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 266(2): 269-75, 2003 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14527449

ABSTRACT

The sorption of Pu(VI) onto TiO(2) was studied as a function of pH (2-10) and Pu concentration (10(-8)-10(-4) M) under an N(2) atmosphere, in 0.016 and 0.1 M NaClO(4). A batch-wise method was used, in which pH was measured in separate experimental containers after removal of a sample to determine the amount of Pu that had been sorbed. As Pu is radioactive, it was used as a tracer and measured by liquid scintillation counting. No ionic strength dependence was discerned, which was taken as an indication of inner sphere complex formation. In the interval of pH 2-7 the system could be described by the formation of two positively charged surface complexes using a 1-pK Stern model. Sorption of the plutonyl ion (PuO(2)(2+)) and the first hydrolysis species (PuO(2)(OH)(+)) was estimated using FITEQL to logK(1)=6.9 and logK(2)=1.4, respectively.

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