Confirman que la inflamación de las encías es un factor de riesgo para el infarto

74190 Tan importante como el tabaco, la obesidad, el sedentarismo o la diabetes. Así debería ser considerada la inflamación de las encías o periodontitis por las guías de prevención del riesgo cardiovascular de acuerdo con los resultados del primer estudio que ha demostrado científicamente que es un «factor de riesgo de la gravedad del infarto». Lo explica a ABC Francisco Mesa, de la de la Universidad de Granada, uno de los autores del trabajo que se publica en «Journal of Dental Research». 

Hasta ahora ya sabía que existía una asociación entre la periodontitis y la enfermedad cardiovascular, pero no se había demostrado, señala el investigador. Ahora, apunta Mesa, hemos demostrado que la periodontitis crónica, una enfermedad inflamatoria de las encías que provoca la pérdida gradual de los dientes, guarda relación con la gravedad del infarto agudo de miocardio. Es decir, «a mayor gravedad de la infección en las encías, peor es el resultado del ataque cardíaco».

Los investigadores han demostrado que la extensión y la severidad de la periodontitis crónica se relaciona con el tamaño del infarto agudo de miocardio determinado por niveles séricos de troponina I y mioglobina (biomarcadores de necrosis miocárdica).

Recomendaciones

Explica Mesa que la información demuestra que si se «elimina la periodontitis con los tratamientos existentes, se reduce la gravedad del infarto y de sus consecuencias». Por eso, destaca, la periodontitis debería incluirse como un «factor de riesgo cardiovascular como lo son la diabetes, el colesterol elevado, la obesidad, el sedentarismo o el tabaco». En este sentido, Asociación Americana de Cardiología ya lo incluye en las suyas y la Sociedad Española de Cardiología está sensibilizada con este problema y está trabajando con la Sociedad Española de Periodoncia (SEPA).

La investigación, es parte de los resultados de la tesis doctoral de Rafael Martín Marfil Álvarez, dirigida por los profesores de la UGR Francisco Mesa (departamento de Estomatología), José Antonio Ramírez Hernández (departamento de Medicina) y Andrés Catena Martínez (departamento de Psicología Experimental). En ella, se han analizado 112 pacientes que habían sufrido un infarto agudo de miocardio, pertenecientes a la Unidad de Gestión Clínica de Cardiología del Hospital Universitario Virgen de las Nieves de Granada. A todos ellos se les realizó una valoración cardiológica, bioquímica y de salud periodontal.

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Más de 600 científicos andaluces participan en ‘La Noche Europea de los Investigadores’

74180 Un total de 633 investigadores -370 científicos y 263 científicas- que desarrollan su labor científica en Andalucía participará el próximo 26 de septiembre en La Noche Europea de los Investigadores, que anualmente convoca la Comisión Europea y que celebran más de 350 ciudades de la Unión. 

Andalucía presentará así el trabajo que habitualmente desarrollan las personas que investigan en las Universidades de Almería, Cádiz, Córdoba, Granada, Huelva, Sevilla, Pablo de Olavide, Málaga y Jaén, el Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas –concretamente en la Casa de la Ciencia, la Estación Experimental del Zaidín, el Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía y el Instituto de Estudios Sociales Avanzados- el Instituto Andaluz de Investigación y Formación Agraria, Pesquera, Alimentaria y de la Producción Ecológica (IFAPA) y los jardines botánicos de Málaga y Córdoba.

Para ello se ha organizado un amplio programa de actividades lúdicas de divulgación científica con el que se pretende acercar la figura de los hombres y mujeres que hacen ciencia en la Comunidad Autónoma y mostrar la utilidad social de su trabajo.

Ocupando la calle

Éste es el tercer año que las instituciones científicas andaluzas se unen, bajo la coordinación de la Fundación Descubre, para celebrar «La Noche de los Investigadores» y será el primero en el que los científicos ocupen literalmente plazas, calles y monumentos como la Mezquita-Catedral de Córdoba, la Alcazaba de Málaga o los Claustros de Santo Domingo de Jerez, en los que se desarrollarán más de 200 talleres prácticos y algo más de 100 microencuentros.

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Melilla Hoy

Pág. 14: Promesa invierte 100.000 euros en tres cursos para 60 graduados de la ugr en paro

Pág. 18: El día 24, acto de presentación del nuevo curso de la universidad de mayores de 50 años

Pág. 21: Un informe plantea propuestas de futuro para Melilla a partir de opiniones de 30 mujeres

Descarga por URL: http://sl.ugr.es/06OD

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El Telegrama de Melilla

Pág. 13: «Pensar Melilla» con perspectiva de género, propuestas para una ciudad mejor

Pág. 15: Cuarenta jóvenes desempleados comienzan los cursos de experto de Promesa y la UGR

Contraportada: Nuevos servicios de las TIC de la UGR

Descarga por URL: http://sl.ugr.es/06OC

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Scientists obtain new data on the weather 10,000 years ago from sediments of a lake in Sierra Nevada

73073 A research project which counts with the participation of the University of Granada has revealed new data on the climate change that took place in the Iberian Peninsula around the mid Holocene (around 6.000 years ago), when the amount of atmospheric dust coming from the Sahara increased. The data came from a study of the sediments found in an Alpine lake in Sierra Nevada (Granada)

 

This study, published in the journal Chemical Geology, is based on the sedimentation of from the Sahara, a very frequent phenomenon in the South of the Iberian Peninsula. This phenomenon is easily identified currently, for instance, when a thin layer of can be occasionally found on vehicles.

Scientists have studied an Alpine lake in Sierra Nevada, 3020 metres above sea level, called Rio Seco lake. They collected samples from sediments 1,5 metres deep, which represent approximately the last 11.000 years (a period known as Holocene), and they found, among other paleoclimate indicators, evidence of atmospheric dust coming from the Sahara. According to one of the researchers in this study, Antonio García-Alix Daroca, from the University of Granada, «the sedimentation of this atmospheric dust over the course of the Holocene has affected the vital cycles of the lakes in Sierra Nevada, since such dust contains a variety of nutrients and / or minerals which do not abound at such heights and which are required by certain organisms which dwell there.»

More atmospheric dust from the Sahara
This study has also revealed the existence of a relatively humid period during the early phase of the Holocene (10.000 – 6.000 years approximately). This period witnessed the onset of an aridification tendency which has lasted until our days, and it has coincided with an increase in the fall of atmospheric dust in the South of the Ibeian Peninsula, as a result of African dust storms.

«We have also detected certain climate cycles ultimately related to solar causes or the North Atlantic Oscillacion (NAO)», according to García-Alix. «Since we do not have direct indicators of these climate and environmental changes, such as humidity and temperature data, in order to conduct this research we have resorted to indirect indicators, such as fossil polen, carbons and organic and inorganic geochemistry within the sediments».

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Scientists obtain new data on the weather 10,000 years ago from sediments of a lake in Sierra Nevada

73073 A research project which counts with the participation of the University of Granada has revealed new data on the climate change that took place in the Iberian Peninsula around the mid Holocene (around 6.000 years ago), when the amount of atmospheric dust coming from the Sahara increased. The data came from a study of the sediments found in an Alpine lake in Sierra Nevada (Granada)

 

This study, published in the journal Chemical Geology, is based on the sedimentation of from the Sahara, a very frequent phenomenon in the South of the Iberian Peninsula. This phenomenon is easily identified currently, for instance, when a thin layer of can be occasionally found on vehicles.

Scientists have studied an Alpine lake in Sierra Nevada, 3020 metres above sea level, called Rio Seco lake. They collected samples from sediments 1,5 metres deep, which represent approximately the last 11.000 years (a period known as Holocene), and they found, among other paleoclimate indicators, evidence of atmospheric dust coming from the Sahara. According to one of the researchers in this study, Antonio García-Alix Daroca, from the University of Granada, «the sedimentation of this atmospheric dust over the course of the Holocene has affected the vital cycles of the lakes in Sierra Nevada, since such dust contains a variety of nutrients and / or minerals which do not abound at such heights and which are required by certain organisms which dwell there.»

More atmospheric dust from the Sahara
This study has also revealed the existence of a relatively humid period during the early phase of the Holocene (10.000 – 6.000 years approximately). This period witnessed the onset of an aridification tendency which has lasted until our days, and it has coincided with an increase in the fall of atmospheric dust in the South of the Ibeian Peninsula, as a result of African dust storms.

«We have also detected certain climate cycles ultimately related to solar causes or the North Atlantic Oscillacion (NAO)», according to García-Alix. «Since we do not have direct indicators of these climate and environmental changes, such as humidity and temperature data, in order to conduct this research we have resorted to indirect indicators, such as fossil polen, carbons and organic and inorganic geochemistry within the sediments».

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El Faro de Melilla

Pág. 6: Promesa invierte 100.000 euros en tres cursos de experto con la Fundación UGR

Pág. 20: Mención especial para un libro de la Universidad de Granada

Pág. 22: El Cicode recoge en un libro ideas de 30 mujeres para mejorar la movilidad local

Descarga por URL: http://sl.ugr.es/06OB

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Schizophrenia Not a Single Disease but Multiple Genetically Distinct Disorders

74041

74041 Newswise — New research shows that schizophrenia isn’t a single disease but a group of eight genetically distinct disorders, each with its own set of symptoms. The finding could be a first step toward improved diagnosis and treatment for the debilitating psychiatric illness.
The research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis is reported online Sept. 15 in The American Journal of Psychiatry.
About 80 percent of the risk for schizophrenia is known to be inherited, but scientists have struggled to identify specific genes for the condition. Now, in a novel approach analyzing genetic influences on more than 4,000 people with schizophrenia, the research team has identified distinct gene clusters that contribute to eight different classes of schizophrenia.
«Genes don’t operate by themselves,» said C. Robert Cloninger, MD, PhD, one of the study’s senior investigators. «They function in concert much like an orchestra, and to understand how they’re working, you have to know not just who the members of the orchestra are but how they interact.»
Cloninger, the Wallace Renard Professor of Psychiatry and Genetics, and his colleagues matched precise DNA variations in people with and without schizophrenia to symptoms in individual patients. In all, the researchers analyzed nearly 700,000 sites within the genome where a single unit of DNA is changed, often referred to as a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). They looked at SNPs in 4,200 people with schizophrenia and 3,800 healthy controls, learning how individual genetic variations interacted with each other to produce the illness.
In some patients with hallucinations or delusions, for example, the researchers matched distinct genetic features to patients’ symptoms, demonstrating that specific genetic variations interacted to create a 95 percent certainty of schizophrenia. In another group, they found that disorganized speech and behavior were specifically associated with a set of DNA variations that carried a 100 percent risk of schizophrenia.
«What we’ve done here, after a decade of frustration in the field of psychiatric genetics, is identify the way genes interact with each other, how the ‘orchestra’ is either harmonious and leads to health, or disorganized in ways that lead to distinct classes of schizophrenia,» Cloninger said.
Although individual genes have only weak and inconsistent associations with schizophrenia, groups of interacting gene clusters create an extremely high and consistent risk of illness, on the order of 70 to 100 percent. That makes it almost impossible for people with those genetic variations to avoid the condition. In all, the researchers identified 42 clusters of genetic variations that dramatically increased the risk of schizophrenia.
«In the past, scientists had been looking for associations between individual genes and schizophrenia,» explained Dragan Svrakic, PhD, MD, a co-investigator and a professor of psychiatry at Washington University. «When one study would identify an association, no one else could replicate it. What was missing was the idea that these genes don’t act independently. They work in concert to disrupt the brain’s structure and function, and that results in the illness.»
Svrakic said it was only when the research team was able to organize the genetic variations and the patients’ symptoms into groups that they could see that particular clusters of DNA variations acted together to cause specific types of symptoms.
Then they divided patients according to the type and severity of their symptoms, such as different types of hallucinations or delusions, and other symptoms, such as lack of initiative, problems organizing thoughts or a lack of connection between emotions and thoughts. The results indicated that those symptom profiles describe eight qualitatively distinct disorders based on underlying genetic conditions.
The investigators also replicated their findings in two additional DNA databases of people with schizophrenia, an indicator that identifying the gene variations that are working together is a valid avenue to explore for improving diagnosis and treatment.
By identifying groups of genetic variations and matching them to symptoms in individual patients, it soon may be possible to target treatments to specific pathways that cause problems, according to co-investigator Igor Zwir, PhD, research associate in psychiatry at Washington University and associate professor in the Department of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence at the University of Granada, Spain.
And Cloninger added it may be possible to use the same approach to better understand how genes work together to cause other common but complex disorders.
«People have been looking at genes to get a better handle on heart disease, hypertension and diabetes, and it’s been a real disappointment,» he said. «Most of the variability in the severity of disease has not been explained, but we were able to find that different sets of genetic variations were leading to distinct clinical syndromes. So I think this really could change the way people approach understanding the causes of complex diseases.»
This work was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), through funding provided to the Molecular Genetics of Schizophrenia Consortium. Other funding was provided by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology, by an R.L. Kirchstein National Research Award and by the Genetic Association Information Network. NIH grant numbers R01MH06879, R01MH067257, R01MH059588, R01MH059571, R01MH059565, R01MH059587, R01MH060870, R01MH059566, R01MH059586, R01MH061675, R01MH081800, U01MH046276, U01MH046289, U01MH046318, U01MH079469, U01MH079470, 5K08MH077220, 5R01MH052618-05, 5R01MH058693-06, and 3R01MH085548-05S1.
Arnedo J, Svrakic DM, del Val C, Romero-Zaliz R, Hernandez-Cuervo H, Fanous AH, Pato MT, Pato CN, de Erausquin GA, Cloninger CR, Zwir I. Uncovering the hidden risk architecture of the schizophrenias: Confirmation in three independent genome-wide association studies. The American Journal of Psychiatry. vol. 172 (2), 2014. Published online Sept. 15, 2014. www.ajp.psychiatryonline.org
Washington University School of Medicine’s 2,100 employed and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient-care institutions in the nation, currently ranked sixth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.
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Schizophrenia Not a Single Disease but Multiple Genetically Distinct Disorders

74041

74041 Newswise — New research shows that schizophrenia isn’t a single disease but a group of eight genetically distinct disorders, each with its own set of symptoms. The finding could be a first step toward improved diagnosis and treatment for the debilitating psychiatric illness.
The research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis is reported online Sept. 15 in The American Journal of Psychiatry.
About 80 percent of the risk for schizophrenia is known to be inherited, but scientists have struggled to identify specific genes for the condition. Now, in a novel approach analyzing genetic influences on more than 4,000 people with schizophrenia, the research team has identified distinct gene clusters that contribute to eight different classes of schizophrenia.
«Genes don’t operate by themselves,» said C. Robert Cloninger, MD, PhD, one of the study’s senior investigators. «They function in concert much like an orchestra, and to understand how they’re working, you have to know not just who the members of the orchestra are but how they interact.»
Cloninger, the Wallace Renard Professor of Psychiatry and Genetics, and his colleagues matched precise DNA variations in people with and without schizophrenia to symptoms in individual patients. In all, the researchers analyzed nearly 700,000 sites within the genome where a single unit of DNA is changed, often referred to as a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). They looked at SNPs in 4,200 people with schizophrenia and 3,800 healthy controls, learning how individual genetic variations interacted with each other to produce the illness.
In some patients with hallucinations or delusions, for example, the researchers matched distinct genetic features to patients’ symptoms, demonstrating that specific genetic variations interacted to create a 95 percent certainty of schizophrenia. In another group, they found that disorganized speech and behavior were specifically associated with a set of DNA variations that carried a 100 percent risk of schizophrenia.
«What we’ve done here, after a decade of frustration in the field of psychiatric genetics, is identify the way genes interact with each other, how the ‘orchestra’ is either harmonious and leads to health, or disorganized in ways that lead to distinct classes of schizophrenia,» Cloninger said.
Although individual genes have only weak and inconsistent associations with schizophrenia, groups of interacting gene clusters create an extremely high and consistent risk of illness, on the order of 70 to 100 percent. That makes it almost impossible for people with those genetic variations to avoid the condition. In all, the researchers identified 42 clusters of genetic variations that dramatically increased the risk of schizophrenia.
«In the past, scientists had been looking for associations between individual genes and schizophrenia,» explained Dragan Svrakic, PhD, MD, a co-investigator and a professor of psychiatry at Washington University. «When one study would identify an association, no one else could replicate it. What was missing was the idea that these genes don’t act independently. They work in concert to disrupt the brain’s structure and function, and that results in the illness.»
Svrakic said it was only when the research team was able to organize the genetic variations and the patients’ symptoms into groups that they could see that particular clusters of DNA variations acted together to cause specific types of symptoms.
Then they divided patients according to the type and severity of their symptoms, such as different types of hallucinations or delusions, and other symptoms, such as lack of initiative, problems organizing thoughts or a lack of connection between emotions and thoughts. The results indicated that those symptom profiles describe eight qualitatively distinct disorders based on underlying genetic conditions.
The investigators also replicated their findings in two additional DNA databases of people with schizophrenia, an indicator that identifying the gene variations that are working together is a valid avenue to explore for improving diagnosis and treatment.
By identifying groups of genetic variations and matching them to symptoms in individual patients, it soon may be possible to target treatments to specific pathways that cause problems, according to co-investigator Igor Zwir, PhD, research associate in psychiatry at Washington University and associate professor in the Department of Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence at the University of Granada, Spain.
And Cloninger added it may be possible to use the same approach to better understand how genes work together to cause other common but complex disorders.
«People have been looking at genes to get a better handle on heart disease, hypertension and diabetes, and it’s been a real disappointment,» he said. «Most of the variability in the severity of disease has not been explained, but we were able to find that different sets of genetic variations were leading to distinct clinical syndromes. So I think this really could change the way people approach understanding the causes of complex diseases.»
This work was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), through funding provided to the Molecular Genetics of Schizophrenia Consortium. Other funding was provided by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology, by an R.L. Kirchstein National Research Award and by the Genetic Association Information Network. NIH grant numbers R01MH06879, R01MH067257, R01MH059588, R01MH059571, R01MH059565, R01MH059587, R01MH060870, R01MH059566, R01MH059586, R01MH061675, R01MH081800, U01MH046276, U01MH046289, U01MH046318, U01MH079469, U01MH079470, 5K08MH077220, 5R01MH052618-05, 5R01MH058693-06, and 3R01MH085548-05S1.
Arnedo J, Svrakic DM, del Val C, Romero-Zaliz R, Hernandez-Cuervo H, Fanous AH, Pato MT, Pato CN, de Erausquin GA, Cloninger CR, Zwir I. Uncovering the hidden risk architecture of the schizophrenias: Confirmation in three independent genome-wide association studies. The American Journal of Psychiatry. vol. 172 (2), 2014. Published online Sept. 15, 2014. www.ajp.psychiatryonline.org
Washington University School of Medicine’s 2,100 employed and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient-care institutions in the nation, currently ranked sixth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.
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20 Minutos

Pág. 13: LOS TÍTULOS CON MÁS OPCIONES DE FUTURO

Descarga por la URL: http://sl.ugr.es/06OA

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El País

Pág. 35: Los ‘erasmus’ registran un 23% menos de paro que el resto de universitarios

Descarga por URL: http://sl.ugr.es/06Oz

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Encuentran la fórmula para reunir a 50.000 personas

74180 La Noche de los Investigadores pone a prueba su nueva ‘fórmula secreta’ para pasar de los 5.000 visitantes del año pasado a los 50.000 que espera recibir para la edición que se celebra este viernes y que, como novedad, ocupará toda la tarde el Paseo del Salón con actividades como aprender a tirar un cohete, astronomía para abuelos o talleres que miden el ADN. Serán cerca de cien científicos los que saquen sus batas blancas a la calle en una iniciativa apoyada por 22 departamentos de 12 universidades y escuelas de la ciudad. «Va a ser una fiesta y vamos a mostrar una ciencia rigurosa, puesta al día, lo último de lo último de lo que se está haciendo en nuestros centros de investigación», explicó ayer en la presentación del programa Matilde Barón, directora de la Estación Experimental del Zaidín. 

La Noche de los Investigadores está organizada por la Junta de Andalucía a través de la Fundación Descubre y se celebra al unísono en 350 ciudades de Europa para llevar la divulgación a la calle. Pero también pretende que se conozcan «los nombres y los apellidos de los científicos, que sepamos qué hacen y lo que traen a Andalucía», señaló por su parte Teresa Cruz, la representante de la Fundación Descubre, quien defendió que a la noche del viernes están invitados desde el superexperto en informática hasta el que abandonó la escuela hace años.

Por su parte, la delegada de la Junta de Andalucía en Granada, Sandra García, defendió la tradición de Granada respecto a la divulgación con proyectos como el Parque de las Ciencias y la importancia que este sector estratégico puede tener en la economía en el futuro, «El 10% del PIB se puede generar a través de la industria del conocimiento», resaltó la delegada en un acto en el que Miguel Vílchez, del Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA), auguró el «éxito» de la iniciativa. Por último, , María Teresa Soriano Vallejo, directora del Centro Camino de Purchil del Instituto de Fomento Agrario y Pesquero de Andalucía en Granada (IFAPA), afirmó que esta cita es una oportunidad para que su institución sea conocida en la ciudad. Para ello, tienen previsto realizar un taller para enseñar a diferenciar entre el aceite lampante y el virgen extra y se presentará su proyecto de ‘verduras ecológicas de picoteo’ para máquinas expendedoras, para matar el gusanillo con una fruta antes que con una chocolatina. «Los avances de los últimos años permiten una agricultura ecológica con productos asequibles para el ciudadano», defendió la representante de IFAPA.

A nivel andaluz, la Noche Europea de los Investigadores reunirá a casi un millar de investigadores con la ciudadanía en lo que será la cita simultánea más importante en el ámbito científico andaluz de los últimos años, con 181 talleres prácticos y experiencias interactivas, algo más de 200 microencuentros con equipos de investigación y casi 40 actividades lúdicas que incluyen rutas, espectáculos, monólogos…

En Granada tendrán lugar más de 80 actividades gratuitas y abiertas al público en general, con las que se persigue acercar la ciencia y la investigación a todos los públicos y edades. Y además del Paseo del Salón, también se celebrarán actividades en los propios centros de investigación, es decir, en el Biobanco del Sistema Público de Andalucía, en el Centro Andaluz de Medio Ambiente, en la Estación Experimental del Zaidín, o en la Facultad de Ciencias de Granada.

Los asistentes a las actividades podrán descubrir el lado más humano de la investigación a través de un contacto directo y de la conversación con los propios expertos. Serán los llamados ‘microencuentros’, en los que los participantes pueden plantear todas las dudas y preguntas acerca del proyecto de investigación que han conocido. La Noche de los Investigadores es un proyecto europeo de divulgación científica promovido por la Comisión Europea dentro de las acciones Marie Sktodowska-Curie del programa Horizonte 2020.

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