(Press-News.org) To combat disease outbreaks, public health officials often use painstaking fieldwork to try to stay one step ahead of the infectious bugs, linking patients' symptoms to a source of infection to quickly identify the common culprit in related cases.
Now, a new field called genomic epidemiology is taking advantage of the rapidly reduced costs of next-generation DNA sequencing to better inform public health officials faced with ongoing outbreaks. In the advanced online edition of Molecular Biology and Evolution, authors Didelot et al. developed a versatile computational tool that can rely on genomic data alone or be customized to add weighted information from field epidemiology (such as timing of infectivity, level of infectivity, geographic location, etc.). The research group tested the new tool's reliability against a real-world dataset to reconstruct the transmission of an outbreak of M. tuberculosis.
"We're on the edge of an exciting new era in public health epidemiology, as genomics gives us the ability to reconstruct outbreaks in far more detail and with much greater accuracy than ever before. This paper addresses an important question – just how much information about an outbreak can we reliably derive from genomic data alone – and gives public health officials a new tool for their detective kits," according to authors Jennifer Gardy, Caroline Colijn, and Xavier Didelot.
With their tool, they found that they were able to capture several aspects of known epidemiology. For example, their method correctly inferred the most likely source case and several key transmission clusters.
While the authors caution that genomics alone cannot truly replace traditional epidemiology, they show the value and potential of using their sequence data analysis tool as a companion method for public health officials to shed light on outbreaks.
INFORMATION:
New tool advances investigations of disease outbreaks
This week in Molecular Biology and Evolution
2014-04-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Brain anatomy differences between deaf, hearing depend on first language learned
2014-04-16
WASHINGTON – In the first known study of its kind, researchers have shown that the language we learn as children affects brain structure, as does hearing status. The findings are reported in the Journal of Neuroscience.
While research has shown that people who are deaf and hearing differ in brain anatomy, these studies have been limited to studies of individuals who are deaf and use American Sign Language (ASL) from birth. But 95 percent of the deaf population in America is born to hearing parents and use English or another spoken language as their first language, usually ...
Chrono, the last piece of the circadian clock puzzle?
2014-04-16
All organisms, from mammals to fungi, have daily cycles controlled by a tightly regulated internal clock, called the circadian clock. The whole-body circadian clock, influenced by the exposure to light, dictates the wake-sleep cycle. At the cellular level, the clock is controlled by a complex network of genes and proteins that switch each other on and off based on cues from their environment.
Most genes involved in the regulation of the circadian clock have been characterized, but Akihiro Goriki, Toru Takumi and their colleagues from RIKEN and Hiroshima University in ...
Casual marijuana use linked to brain abnormalities in students
2014-04-16
CHICAGO --- Young adults who used marijuana only recreationally showed significant abnormalities in two key brain regions that are important in emotion and motivation, scientists report. The study was a collaboration between Northwestern Medicine® and Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School.
This is the first study to show casual use of marijuana is related to major brain changes. It showed the degree of brain abnormalities in these regions is directly related to the number of joints a person smoked per week. The more joints a person smoked, the more abnormal ...
Mothers with higher BMI have increased risk of stillbirth, infant death
2014-04-15
Higher maternal body mass index (BMI) before or in early pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of fetal death, stillbirth, and infant death, with women who are severely obese having the greatest risk of these outcomes from their pregnancy, according to a study in the April 16 issue of JAMA.
Worldwide, approximately 2.7 million stillbirths occurred in 2008. In addition, an estimated 3.6 million neonatal deaths (death following live birth of an infant but before age 28 days) occur each year. Several studies have suggested that greater maternal body mass index ...
Thyroid disease risk varies among blacks, Asians, and whites
2014-04-15
An analysis that included active military personnel finds that the rate of the thyroid disorder Graves disease is more common among blacks and Asian/Pacific Islanders compared with whites, according to a study in the April 16 issue of JAMA.
Donald S. A. McLeod, F.R.A.C.P., M.P.H., of the QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Queensland, Australia and colleagues studied all U.S. active duty military, ages 20 to 54 years, from January 1997 to December 2011 to determine the rate of Graves disease and Hashimoto thyroiditis (a progressive autoimmune disease of the thyroid ...
Pre-diabetes and diabetes nearly double over the past 2 decades
2014-04-15
Cases of diabetes and pre-diabetes in the United States have nearly doubled since 1988, suggests new research from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, with obesity apparently to blame for the surge. The researchers also found that the burden of the disease has not hit all groups equally, with alarming increases in diabetes in blacks, Hispanics and the elderly.
According to new research reported in the April 15, 2014 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine, diabetes increased from 6 percent to 10 percent in the past two decades and pre-diabetes also doubled ...
Drought hormones measured
2014-04-15
Stanford, CA—Floods and droughts are increasingly in the news, and climate experts say their frequency will only go up in the future. As such, it is crucial for scientists to learn more about how these extreme events affect plants in order to prepare for and combat the risks to food security that could result.
Like animals, plants have hormones that send chemical signals between its cells relaying information about the plant's development or interactions with the outside world. One particular way in which plants use hormone signals is in reaction to drought or soil saltiness. ...
Scholars propose new standards for gauging muscle decline in older adults
2014-04-15
Sarcopenia — the age-related loss of muscle mass and strength — may put up to 50 percent of seniors at greater risk for disability, yet there is no consensus within the medical community for how this condition should be measured. However, a new collection of articles appearing in The Journals of Gerontology, Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences (volume 69, number 5) lays out an empirically derived set of criteria for diagnosing sarcopenia.
These recommendations are a result of the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health Biomarkers Consortium Sarcopenia ...
New technique will accelerate genetic characterization of photosynthesis
2014-04-15
Stanford, CA— Photosynthesis provides fixed carbon and energy for nearly all life on Earth, yet many aspects of this fascinating process remain mysterious. For example, little is known about how it is regulated in response to changes in light intensity. More fundamentally, we do not know the full list of the parts of the molecular machines that perform photosynthesis in any organism.
A type of single-cell green algae called Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a leading subject for photosynthesis research. Despite its importance in the research world, few tools are available ...
The human food connection: A new study reveals more about our relationship to food
2014-04-15
Tucked away in Hartford, Connecticut, a Puerto Rican community is creating a tropical home away from home through cuisine that is so authentic it has caught the attention of scientists. David W. Taylor (University of Portland) and Gregory J. Anderson (University of Connecticut) took a close look at the fresh crops in the Puerto Rican markets of Hartford and uncovered evidence that gives new meaning to a phrase that food lovers have been using for years: home is in the kitchen.
"Culinary preferences tell us a good deal about human culture, what is important, and what constitutes ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
I’m walking here! A new model maps foot traffic in New York City
AI model can read and diagnose a brain MRI in seconds
Researchers boost perovskite solar cell performance via interface engineering
‘Sticky coat’ boosts triple negative breast cancer’s ability to metastasize
James Webb Space Telescope reveals an exceptional richness of organic molecules in one of the most infrared luminous galaxies in the local Universe
The internet names a new deep-sea species, Senckenberg researchers select a scientific name from over 8,000 suggestions.
UT San Antonio-led research team discovers compound in 500-million-year-old fossils, shedding new light on Earth’s carbon cycle
Maternal perinatal depression may increase the risk of autistic-related traits in girls
Study: Blocking a key protein may create novel form of stress in cancer cells and re-sensitize chemo-resistant tumors
HRT via skin is best treatment for low bone density in women whose periods have stopped due to anorexia or exercise, says study
Insilico Medicine showcases at WHX 2026: Connecting the Middle East with global partners to accelerate translational research
From rice fields to fresh air: Transforming agricultural waste into a shield against indoor pollution
University of Houston study offers potential new targets to identify, remediate dyslexia
Scientists uncover hidden role of microalgae in spreading antibiotic resistance in waterways
Turning orange waste into powerful water-cleaning material
Papadelis to lead new pediatric brain research center
Power of tiny molecular 'flycatcher' surprises through disorder
Before crisis strikes — smartwatch tracks triggers for opioid misuse
Statins do not cause the majority of side effects listed in package leaflets
UC Riverside doctoral student awarded prestigious DOE fellowship
UMD team finds E. coli, other pathogens in Potomac River after sewage spill
New vaccine platform promotes rare protective B cells
Apes share human ability to imagine
Major step toward a quantum-secure internet demonstrated over city-scale distance
Increasing toxicity trends impede progress in global pesticide reduction commitments
Methane jump wasn’t just emissions — the atmosphere (temporarily) stopped breaking it down
Flexible governance for biological data is needed to reduce AI’s biosecurity risks
Increasing pesticide toxicity threatens UN goal of global biodiversity protection by 2030
How “invisible” vaccine scaffolding boosts HIV immune response
Study reveals the extent of rare earthquakes in deep layer below Earth’s crust
[Press-News.org] New tool advances investigations of disease outbreaksThis week in Molecular Biology and Evolution
