Monday, October 20, 2025

 

Genes on the move: Ecologists report spread of disease-carrying mosquitoes and their hybrids



Norah Saarman of Utah State University and colleagues report range expansion of insects capable of spreading West Nile Virus and other mosquito-borne illnesses in North America, including the U.S. state of Utah, in the journal 'One Health.'





Utah State University

Utah State University ecologists study range expansion of C. quinquefasciatus and C. pipiens hybrids across North America 

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From left, Utah State University ecologists Emily Calhoun, Norah Saarman and Katelyn Graybeal, with colleagues report the spread of disease-carrying mosquitoes in North America, including Utah, in the journal 'One Health.'

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Credit: M. Muffoletto, Utah State University





LOGAN, UTAH, USA -- West Nile Virus was once a nominal concern for Utahns but since August 2003, when it was first detected in the Beehive State, infections in Utah residents have steadily risen.

“West Nile Virus or WNV is mainly spread to humans through the bite of an infected mosquito,” says Utah State University ecologist Norah Saarman. “Unfortunately, populations of mosquitoes capable of spreading the virus are increasing in our state and throughout the United States.”

Saarman and her students, Katelyn Graybeal, Tyler Seeley, Emily Calhoun and Eric Jenkins; USU Department of Watershed Sciences faculty member Andre De Lima Moraes, along with colleagues at VecTech, Inc. and the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Research Station, recently published findings about the expanding range of the Southern House Mosquito, Culex quinquefasciatus, also known as “Quinx,” along with hybrids resulting from interbreeding among Quinx and the Northern House Mosquito, Culex pipiens, across mid-latitudes of North America, including Utah, in the Science Direct publication One Health.

“Both of these species spread West Nile Virus, but Quinx, which is newer to Utah, is better at it,” says Saarman, assistant professor in USU’s Department of Biology and the USU Ecology Center.

With AI-fueled identification tools, coupled with DNA technology, Saarman and her team are improving the ability to identify mosquito species and monitor their range. They report Quinx is not just spreading into new areas; an advance guard of its hybrids, also capable of spreading diseases, are moving ahead of Quinx in hybrid zone boundaries.

“Essentially, disease-carrying genes from Quinx, within hybrid mosquitoes, can spread ahead of the actual species like outriders or scouts, especially if they provide a selective advantage to the mosquitoes carrying them,” she says.

Climate change and land use change are the main drivers behind mosquitoes’ forward migration.

“Mosquitoes need at least two things for survival and those are blood from vertebrate hosts and water,” Saarman says. “As Utah’s population grows and our state becomes increasingly urbanized, mosquitoes flock to welcoming habitats, including watered lawns, storm drains and households with pets, unintentionally created by human development.”

The team’s study provides critical data for tracking range shifts, improving vector surveillance and improving understanding of West Nile Virus and other mosquito-borne disease risks.

In Utah, WNV is the most prevalent human illness spread by mosquitoes. According to the Centers for Disease Control, more than 47 people in the state have become seriously ill from the virus in 2025, including three Utah residents who died from the viral infection.

“It’s well known that West Nile Virus is highly underreported, with only one in more than 112 infections detected in case counts,” Saarman says. “This means the 2025 case estimate in Utah could be well over 5,000.”

As Cache Valley and the rest of Utah present dazzling autumn hues and temperatures cool, the risk of unwelcome mosquito-borne diseases wanes. But the cold-blooded fliers remain active until after the first hard freeze. The risk of illness from the virus remains worrisome, Saarman says, as WNV is a serious neuroinvasive disease that can progress to dangerous and lingering complications, including meningitis, encephalitis, Acute Flaccid Paralysis and death.

Cases of WNV usually spike in early September in Utah, she says, which is what happened this year.

“Despite our state’s dry summers, we think mosquitoes are finding the water they need from human sources,” Saarman says. “We think the timing of the spike is because it takes from around May to August for the virus to amplify in the bird-to-mosquito and mosquito-to-bird transmission cycle to a high enough rate to cause spillover to humans and human companion mammals, including dogs, cats and horses.”

She says the evidence-based information her team is gathering will advance integrated approaches to public health by linking ecology and evolution to emerging disease risk in both human and wildlife populations.

 “Our targeted approach will also help mosquito abatement managers minimize off-target impacts of insecticide and other interventions,” Saarman says. “Being able to monitor the level of insecticide resistance, in which species it’s occurring and where it’s taken place is a management challenge. Our data will help to counter this challenge.”

 

Adverse, positive childhood experience levels in US haven’t changed much



Study suggests efforts to support families aren’t moving the needle nationally





Ohio State University





COLUMBUS, Ohio – New research shows that overall, the prevalence of adverse and positive childhood experiences reported by parents of teenagers hasn’t changed substantially in the United States in recent years.

The findings suggest that interventions designed to boost positive family experiences and shield children from negative experiences may not be hitting the mark on a national scale, the study’s authors say.

In all, the study examined the prevalence of 11 adverse and seven positive childhood experiences reported by parents of adolescents between 2016 and 2023 in a large national survey. Adverse experiences included parental divorce, death or incarceration, witnessing violence and facing discrimination. Positive experiences included being mentored by an adult, family resilience in the face of difficulties, participating in organized or service activities, and neighborhood safety and support.

Senior author Susie Breitenstein, a professor of nursing at The Ohio State University, develops research-based parent training programs designed to improve the social and emotional well-being of parents and children.

“I do early intervention parenting work, and the goal really is to decrease the incidence of adverse childhood experiences and increase the incidence of positive childhood experiences. So this really connects with the work of our lab in terms of early intervention and prevention through strength-based approaches in parenting,” Breitenstein said.

“I think at a local level we have had some success, but at a national level it doesn’t seem like we’ve really moved the needle a lot on some of these experiences,” she said. “This was kind of surprising to us.”

The study is published today (Oct. 20, 2025) in JAMA Pediatrics.

Previous research has shown that adverse childhood experiences can raise the risk for disease, mental illness and substance misuse in adulthood, and positive childhood experiences may help prevent kids from having psychological and relationship problems as adults.

Most additional research has focused on identifying segments of the population at highest risk for adverse childhood experience or estimating how many adverse or positive life events the average child will experience.

The Ohio State team took a different approach, aiming to describe the percentage of teens who experienced specific adverse and positive childhood experiences, and whether the prevalence changed over eight years spanning the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020. Data on 125,564 adolescents aged 12 to 17 came from the National Survey of Children’s Health.

“We predicted that we might see pretty dramatic changes in direction around 2020 or 2021. And one of the surprising things we found was that, with a couple of exceptions that make a lot of sense, things were actually pretty stable,” said co-author and lead statistician Nathan Helsabeck, a research assistant professor of nursing at Ohio State.

“We saw a decrease in economic hardship in the first couple of years as the country was coming out of the 2008 financial crisis, and then directly following COVID in 2021, we saw a decrease in participation in activities, which is thought to be a positive childhood experience.”

Economic hardship showed the sharpest drop among adverse childhood experiences, decreasing in prevalence by about 25% from 2016 to 2023. The most common adverse experience, affecting at least 30% of teens but declining by about 1% during the study period, was having divorced parents. The adverse experience with the steepest increase, of about 6% overall, was racial discrimination.

There was a bright spot: Among this national sample, positive childhood experiences were far more common than adverse experiences, with positives reported by between roughly 40% and 90% of parents compared to all negative experiences affecting fewer than 35% of adolescents.

Adverse childhood experiences have had a prominent role in influencing policy, Breitenstein said – but positive experiences are gaining traction among researchers exploring whether positive childhood experiences may buffer the effects of negative events.

“There are complex dynamics across experiences that intersect across family, community and the broader society,” she said. “And in our work, we constantly talk about strength-based approaches and the importance of propping those up, and how to do that. Because sometimes you can’t avoid these adverse experiences, especially when we talk about something like divorce.”

Using national data to detail the overall prevalence of childhood experiences at a population level has accomplished a central goal for the team: providing a baseline to inform future studies.

“This is a really clear, straightforward baseline that other researchers or policymakers could use to build a case for an intervention or other work,” Helsabeck said.

Breitenstein and her colleagues, who study how social and community support influence outcomes for youth experiencing homelessness and psychiatric treatment, plan to put the data to use.

“There are a lot of things that help strengthen children’s experiences, but they don’t always cross paths or build on each other,” Breitenstein said. “We know these things matter, so we’ll use the data to shore up the resources we can to help support others.”

This work was supported by the Ohio State College of Nursing Martha S. Pitzer Center for Women, Children and Youth; the National Institute of Nursing Research; and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences.

First author Jack Krupa, who led the research project, worked in Breitenstein’s lab through the former Discovery Postbaccalaureate Research Education Program, an Ohio State College of Medicine initiative funded by the National Institutes of Health. He is now a PhD student at the University of Illinois Chicago.

Additional co-authors, all from Ohio State, were Jodi Ford, Kayla Herbell, Margaret Fitzpatrick, Lia Pinkus, Stephanie Hosley and Barbara Warren.

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Contacts:

Susie Breitenstein, Breitenstein.5@osu.edu 
Nathan Helsabeck, Helsabeck.1@osu.edu

Written by Emily Caldwell, Caldwell.151@osu.edu

 

IgNobel ‘Butt Breathing’ idea from 2024 moves closer to real treatment



Enteral ventilation concept from scientist at Cincinnati Children’s passes first stage of human testing in Japan



Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

How the enteral ventilation process works 

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Visual abstract shows highlights of first human clinical trial to evaluate the safety of enteral ventilation concept developed by Takanori Takebe, MD, PhD, and colleagues.

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Credit: Cincinnati Children's and the journal Med.





The technique sounds so outlandish that it won an IgNobel prize in 2024. But the science behind rescuing people with blocked airways and clogged lungs by rectally delivering oxygen to the body is no joke.

In fact, positive results were published Oct. 20, 2025, in the journal Med regarding the first human clinical trial to evaluate the potential benefits of “enteral ventilation.”

“This is the first human data, and the results are limited solely to demonstrating the safety of the procedure and not its effectiveness. But now that we have established tolerance, the next step will be to evaluate how effective the process is for delivering oxygen to the bloodstream,” says Takanori Takebe, MD, PhD, a leading expert in organoid medicine with dual appointments at Cincinnati Children’s and the University of Osaka in Japan.

What is enteral ventilation?

This concept envisions an enema-like process that uses a super-oxygenated liquid to deliver life-supporting oxygen to the bloodstream by absorbing it through the colon. 

A key paper detailing initial findings in a porcine model was featured on the cover of Med in 2021 and later in the popular Canada-based science television show, “The Nature of Things.” That early work led to Takebe and colleagues receiving an IgNobel Prize in 2024.

If successful in ongoing human trials, the relatively low-tech process may allow hospitals to rescue people when airways are blocked by injury or inflammation, or when lung function is severely limited by infections and other complications.

A new idea with decades-old roots

The inspiration for the procedure comes in part from observing the abilities of the loach, a bottom-feeding fish that can swallow air from the surface and absorb the oxygen through its gut, thus supplementing its gills to survive in low-oxygen conditions.

It also builds upon the work of former Cincinnati Children’s researcher Leland Clark, PhD, (b.1918, d.2005) who years ago invented a perfluorocarbon liquid, now called Oxycyte. Although the product did not move forward as a potential form of artificial blood, the 1989 movie “The Abyss” included a famous scene in which a rat was shown "breathing" the special liquid.  

Findings and next steps

The new study recaps findings from 27 healthy men in Japan who were asked to hold varying amounts of the perfluorocarbon liquid (without the liquid being oxygenated) for 60 minutes.

Twenty held the liquid for the entire 60 minutes, including amounts up to 1,500 ml. At the largest volumes, participants reported abdominal bloating and discomfort, but no serious adverse events were reported.

A key next step will be to repeat the evaluation using the oxygenated liquid to measure how much of the liquid is needed, and for how long, to improve blood oxygen levels. Eventually, Takebe and colleagues hope to expand the technology for use in newborn care.

Takebe – who has launched a company called EVA Therapeutics to pursue this project – says the timing of a future clinical trial will depend on the pace of fundraising.