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  • Articles  (1)
  • OceanRep  (1)
  • Springer  (1)
  • Wiley  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1435-4373
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In a prospective study sixty-eight patients consecutively diagnosed as having AIDS or advanced ARC who were started on zidovudine therapy were followed up for a median period of 725 days. In the 20 patients who had a baseline p24 antigen level above 20 pg/ml, there was a statistically significant trend towards reduction of the p24 antigen levels after the first month of treatment. The median time of survival of the 68 patients was 702 days and the median symptom-free period was 510 days. Treatment with zidovudine significantly reduced the p24 antigen levels. However, the life expectancy and the symptom-free period were not statistically different in the patients with p24 antigen levels always below or with levels always above two arbitrarily chosen cut-off points of 20 pg/ml and 50 pg/ml, respectively.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: We report a new synthesis of best estimates of the inputs of fixed nitrogen to the world ocean via atmospheric deposition and compare this to fluvial inputs and dinitrogen fixation. We evaluate the scale of human perturbation of these fluxes. Fluvial inputs dominate inputs to the continental shelf, and we estimate that about 75% of this fluvial nitrogen escapes from the shelf to the open ocean. Biological dinitrogen fixation is the main external source of nitrogen to the open ocean, i.e., beyond the continental shelf. Atmospheric deposition is the primary mechanism by which land-based nitrogen inputs, and hence human perturbations of the nitrogen cycle, reach the open ocean. We estimate that anthropogenic inputs are currently leading to an increase in overall ocean carbon sequestration of ~0.4% (equivalent to an uptake of 0.15 Pg C yr−1 and less than the Duce et al. (2008) estimate). The resulting reduction in climate change forcing from this ocean CO2 uptake is offset to a small extent by an increase in ocean N2O emissions. We identify four important feedbacks in the ocean atmosphere nitrogen system that need to be better quantified to improve our understanding of the perturbation of ocean biogeochemistry by atmospheric nitrogen inputs. These feedbacks are recycling of (1) ammonia and (2) organic nitrogen from the ocean to the atmosphere and back, (3) the suppression of nitrogen fixation by increased nitrogen concentrations in surface waters from atmospheric deposition, and (4) increased loss of nitrogen from the ocean by denitrification due to increased productivity stimulated by atmospheric inputs.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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