57 research outputs found

    Using of nontraditional raw materials in beer production

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    Given the highly competitive environment of brewing industry today, businesses need to constantly develop new products of high quality and nutritional value that meet consumer and sanitary requirements. Therefore, the production of beer-based mixed beverages using nontraditional raw plant materials is gaining popularity. It is quite possible to produce these types of beverages at brewing facilities of Almaty and the Almaty region since it presents a favorable climate to develop agricultural businesses producing fruits and berries and has a large potential for using wild crops. Using of these plants will keep the enterprise economically viable by expanding the assortment of products and increasing the share of low-alcohol beverages in total production. In this study, the purpose is to select the optimum method for the production of special beer based on apple and grape juice. The choice of these particular types of raw plant materials was due to their wide availability and suitability for juice processing. The methods of introducing juice into young beer after the post-fermentation stage, as well as the introduction of fermented juice into young beer, were applied in the production of a mixed beverage. The organoleptic, physicochemical properties of the finished beer made using two methods have been studied. As a result, the optimal beer to juice ratio of 70:30 was selected according to the first method. This method resulted in the most balanced combination in terms of organoleptic characteristics, but colloidal instability was observed. For the second method of special beer production, the Oettinger Pils yeast race was used for fermentation of the juice base that was introduced into young beer after the post-fermentation stage. The resulting beverage at the 50:50 ratio of beer to juice was highly stable and had the highest organoleptic and physicochemical qualities

    DUSHA (“SOUL”) and TELO (“BODY”) in the Aspect of Contrastive Analysis of Cultural Concepts: Materials for the Linguo-Cultorological Phraseological Dictionary of Russian-Kazakh Correlations

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    Some preliminary results of joint research lexicographic project of Russian and Kazakh linguists on linguo-cultorological contrastive analysis of Russian-Kazakh phraseological correlations are discussed in the article. The work presents the experience of contrastive lexicographic description of the concepts ZHAN - DUSHA (“SOUL”) and DENE / BOY - TELO (“BODY”) in the aspect of their language objectification in Russian and Kazakh phraseologisms. The purpose is to give contrastive analysis of the opposite concepts ZHAN - DUSHA (“SOUL”) and DENE / BOY - TELO (“BODY”) in their phraseological representation in Russian and Kazakh. The material for the study is the data of Russian and Kazakh phraseological dictionaries. The theoretical basis of the work is the ideas of language conceptualization of the world, the principles cognitive interpretation of elements of “a language of culture” and the methodology of linguo-cultorological study in phraseologisms. The standard method of conceptual analysis and the method of contrastive phraseological analysis are used un the article. It is shown that there are a lot of substantial resemblances in phraseological representations of the concepts in Russian and Kazakh lingual cultures resulting from general principles of language conceptualization of reality in languages of the world. On the other side, some conceptual divergences between compared languages are also revealed: they are caused by peculiarities of nature and culture environment as well as by diversity in changing of nominations for imaginative denotation of approximately analogous substance. The authors come at a conclusion that the contrary concepts ZHAN - DUSHA (“SOUL”) and DENE / BOY - TELO (“BODY”) are revealed in the mirror of each other in phraseology of compared languages

    BioTIME: A Database of Biodiversity Time Series for the Anthropocene

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    Motivation: The BioTIME database contains raw data on species identities and abundances in ecological assemblages through time. These data enable users to calculate temporal trends in biodiversity within and amongst assemblages using a broad range of metrics. BioTIME is being developed as a community-led open-source database of biodiversity time series. Our goal is to accelerate and facilitate quantitative analysis of temporal patterns of biodiversity in the Anthropocene. Main types of variables included: The database contains 8,777,413 species abundance records, from assemblages consistently sampled for a minimum of 2 years, which need not necessarily be consecutive. In addition, the database contains metadata relating to sampling methodology and contextual information about each record. Spatial location and grain: BioTIME is a global database of 547,161 unique sampling locations spanning the marine, freshwater and terrestrial realms. Grain size varies across datasets from 0.0000000158 km(2) (158 cm(2)) to 100 km(2) (1,000,000,000,000 cm(2)). Time period and grainBio: TIME records span from 1874 to 2016. The minimal temporal grain across all datasets in BioTIME is a year. Major taxa and level of measurement: BioTIME includes data from 44,440 species across the plant and animal kingdoms, ranging from plants, plankton and terrestrial invertebrates to small and large vertebrates

    The progressive control of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in the Republic of Kazakhstan: Successes and challenges

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    Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) has historically caused far-reaching economic losses to many regions worldwide. FMD control has been problematic, and the disease is still prevalent in many West and Central Asia countries. Here, we review the progress made by Kazakhstan in achieving freedom from FMD and discuss some of the challenges associated with maintaining the FMD-free status, as evidenced by the occurrence of an outbreak in 2022. A combination of zoning, movement control, vaccination, and surveillance strategies led to eliminating the disease in the country. However, the circulation of the FMD virus in the region still imposes a risk for Kazakhstan, and coordinated strategies are ultimately needed to support disease elimination. The results presented here may help design effective pathways to progressively eliminate the disease in West and Central Asia while promoting the design and implementation of regional actions to support FMD control

    Primary stroke prevention worldwide : translating evidence into action

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    Funding Information: The stroke services survey reported in this publication was partly supported by World Stroke Organization and Auckland University of Technology. VLF was partly supported by the grants received from the Health Research Council of New Zealand. MOO was supported by the US National Institutes of Health (SIREN U54 HG007479) under the H3Africa initiative and SIBS Genomics (R01NS107900, R01NS107900-02S1, R01NS115944-01, 3U24HG009780-03S5, and 1R01NS114045-01), Sub-Saharan Africa Conference on Stroke Conference (1R13NS115395-01A1), and Training Africans to Lead and Execute Neurological Trials & Studies (D43TW012030). AGT was supported by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council. SLG was supported by a National Heart Foundation of Australia Future Leader Fellowship and an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council synergy grant. We thank Anita Arsovska (University Clinic of Neurology, Skopje, North Macedonia), Manoj Bohara (HAMS Hospital, Kathmandu, Nepal), Denis ?erimagi? (Poliklinika Glavi?, Dubrovnik, Croatia), Manuel Correia (Hospital de Santo Ant?nio, Porto, Portugal), Daissy Liliana Mora Cuervo (Hospital Moinhos de Vento, Porto Alegre, Brazil), Anna Cz?onkowska (Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, Warsaw, Poland), Gloria Ekeng (Stroke Care International, Dartford, UK), Jo?o Sargento-Freitas (Centro Hospitalar e Universit?rio de Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal), Yuriy Flomin (MC Universal Clinic Oberig, Kyiv, Ukraine), Mehari Gebreyohanns (UT Southwestern Medical Centre, Dallas, TX, USA), Ivete Pillo Gon?alves (Hospital S?o Jos? do Avai, Itaperuna, Brazil), Claiborne Johnston (Dell Medical School, University of Texas, Austin, TX, USA), Kristaps Jurj?ns (P Stradins Clinical University Hospital, Riga, Latvia), Rizwan Kalani (University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA), Grzegorz Kozera (Medical University of Gda?sk, Gda?sk, Poland), Kursad Kutluk (Dokuz Eylul University, ?zmir, Turkey), Branko Malojcic (University Hospital Centre Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia), Micha? Maluchnik (Ministry of Health, Warsaw, Poland), Evija Migl?ne (P Stradins Clinical University Hospital, Riga, Latvia), Cassandra Ocampo (University of Botswana, Princess Marina Hospital, Botswana), Louise Shaw (Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust, Bath, UK), Lekhjung Thapa (Upendra Devkota Memorial-National Institute of Neurological and Allied Sciences, Kathmandu, Nepal), Bogdan Wojtyniak (National Institute of Public Health, Warsaw, Poland), Jie Yang (First Affiliated Hospital of Chengdu Medical College, Chengdu, China), and Tomasz Zdrojewski (Medical University of Gda?sk, Gda?sk, Poland) for their comments on early draft of the manuscript. The views expressed in this article are solely the responsibility of the authors and they do not necessarily reflect the views, decisions, or policies of the institution with which they are affiliated. We thank WSO for funding. The funder had no role in the design, data collection, analysis and interpretation of the study results, writing of the report, or the decision to submit the study results for publication. Funding Information: The stroke services survey reported in this publication was partly supported by World Stroke Organization and Auckland University of Technology. VLF was partly supported by the grants received from the Health Research Council of New Zealand. MOO was supported by the US National Institutes of Health (SIREN U54 HG007479) under the H3Africa initiative and SIBS Genomics (R01NS107900, R01NS107900-02S1, R01NS115944-01, 3U24HG009780-03S5, and 1R01NS114045-01), Sub-Saharan Africa Conference on Stroke Conference (1R13NS115395-01A1), and Training Africans to Lead and Execute Neurological Trials & Studies (D43TW012030). AGT was supported by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council. SLG was supported by a National Heart Foundation of Australia Future Leader Fellowship and an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council synergy grant. We thank Anita Arsovska (University Clinic of Neurology, Skopje, North Macedonia), Manoj Bohara (HAMS Hospital, Kathmandu, Nepal), Denis Čerimagić (Poliklinika Glavić, Dubrovnik, Croatia), Manuel Correia (Hospital de Santo António, Porto, Portugal), Daissy Liliana Mora Cuervo (Hospital Moinhos de Vento, Porto Alegre, Brazil), Anna Członkowska (Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, Warsaw, Poland), Gloria Ekeng (Stroke Care International, Dartford, UK), João Sargento-Freitas (Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal), Yuriy Flomin (MC Universal Clinic Oberig, Kyiv, Ukraine), Mehari Gebreyohanns (UT Southwestern Medical Centre, Dallas, TX, USA), Ivete Pillo Gonçalves (Hospital São José do Avai, Itaperuna, Brazil), Claiborne Johnston (Dell Medical School, University of Texas, Austin, TX, USA), Kristaps Jurjāns (P Stradins Clinical University Hospital, Riga, Latvia), Rizwan Kalani (University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA), Grzegorz Kozera (Medical University of Gdańsk, Gdańsk, Poland), Kursad Kutluk (Dokuz Eylul University, İzmir, Turkey), Branko Malojcic (University Hospital Centre Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia), Michał Maluchnik (Ministry of Health, Warsaw, Poland), Evija Miglāne (P Stradins Clinical University Hospital, Riga, Latvia), Cassandra Ocampo (University of Botswana, Princess Marina Hospital, Botswana), Louise Shaw (Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust, Bath, UK), Lekhjung Thapa (Upendra Devkota Memorial-National Institute of Neurological and Allied Sciences, Kathmandu, Nepal), Bogdan Wojtyniak (National Institute of Public Health, Warsaw, Poland), Jie Yang (First Affiliated Hospital of Chengdu Medical College, Chengdu, China), and Tomasz Zdrojewski (Medical University of Gdańsk, Gdańsk, Poland) for their comments on early draft of the manuscript. The views expressed in this article are solely the responsibility of the authors and they do not necessarily reflect the views, decisions, or policies of the institution with which they are affiliated. We thank WSO for funding. The funder had no role in the design, data collection, analysis and interpretation of the study results, writing of the report, or the decision to submit the study results for publication. Funding Information: VLF declares that the PreventS web app and Stroke Riskometer app are owned and copyrighted by Auckland University of Technology; has received grants from the Brain Research New Zealand Centre of Research Excellence (16/STH/36), Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC; APP1182071), and World Stroke Organization (WSO); is an executive committee member of WSO, honorary medical director of Stroke Central New Zealand, and CEO of New Zealand Stroke Education charitable Trust. AGT declares funding from NHMRC (GNT1042600, GNT1122455, GNT1171966, GNT1143155, and GNT1182017), Stroke Foundation Australia (SG1807), and Heart Foundation Australia (VG102282); and board membership of the Stroke Foundation (Australia). SLG is funded by the National Health Foundation of Australia (Future Leader Fellowship 102061) and NHMRC (GNT1182071, GNT1143155, and GNT1128373). RM is supported by the Implementation Research Network in Stroke Care Quality of the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (project CA18118) and by the IRIS-TEPUS project from the inter-excellence inter-cost programme of the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic (project LTC20051). BN declares receiving fees for data management committee work for SOCRATES and THALES trials for AstraZeneca and fees for data management committee work for NAVIGATE-ESUS trial from Bayer. All other authors declare no competing interests. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 licenseStroke is the second leading cause of death and the third leading cause of disability worldwide and its burden is increasing rapidly in low-income and middle-income countries, many of which are unable to face the challenges it imposes. In this Health Policy paper on primary stroke prevention, we provide an overview of the current situation regarding primary prevention services, estimate the cost of stroke and stroke prevention, and identify deficiencies in existing guidelines and gaps in primary prevention. We also offer a set of pragmatic solutions for implementation of primary stroke prevention, with an emphasis on the role of governments and population-wide strategies, including task-shifting and sharing and health system re-engineering. Implementation of primary stroke prevention involves patients, health professionals, funders, policy makers, implementation partners, and the entire population along the life course.publishersversionPeer reviewe

    Современный взгляд на проблему постхолецистэктомического синдрома (по материалам Экспертного совета, состоявшегося 4 мая 2019 г. в городе Алматы, Казахстан)

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    Gallstone disease is revealed in 10–20% of the population with a clear tendency to affect the younger population. In a clinically manifested course, cholecystectomy remains the treatment of choice. Symptoms and signs persist or even become more severe after gallbladder surgery in 10-15% of cases (“postcholecystectomy syndrome”). Postcholecystectomy syndrome includes heterogeneous disorders of liver, pancreas, duodenum, sphincter of Oddi, etc. that can be associated with errors or negative consequences of surgical intervention. Often, symptoms may persist because of previously unrecognized chronic diseases of neighboring organs. The spectrum of effective conservative measures is rather limited. The Advisory Board was held on May 4, 2019, in Almaty (Kazakhstan) to re-estimate the definitions and categories related to the issue of the postcholecystectomy syndrome and to develop the diagnostic and treatment algorithm for patients with the postcholecystectomy dysfunction of the sphincter of Oddi. The statements discussed by the interdisciplinary team of gastroenterologists and surgeons were addressed to general practitioners, therapists, gastroenterologists, and surgeons. The Advisory Board emphasized that organic and functional biliary diseases manifest mainly by biliary pain, main characteristics of which were defined in the Rome IV consensus based on the statistical analysis of a large pool of clinical data. For a more accurate bile duct system assessment and the exclusion of cholelithiasis, the examination algorithm was proposed, which included abdominal ultrasound investigation, endoscopic ultrasound investigation of the pancreatobiliary area, and magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography. Diagnostic algorithm for differentiation of functional biliary disorders from organic gastrointestinal pathology was developed. Sphincter of Oddi dysfunction may be considered as a postcholecystectomy syndrome manifestation in 1.5-3% of cases. Apart from rational nutrition, conservative management of functional gastrointestinal diseases implies  pharmacological therapy. The efficacy of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, prokinetics, nitrates, antispasmodics, calcium channel antagonists, botulinum toxin, and hymecromone was demonstrated in previous studies. Papillosphincterotomy is not effective in relieving biliary pain in cases of the sphincter of Oddi dysfunction. The proposed algorithm for the management of patients with the postcholecystectomy syndrome was presented.Желчнокаменная болезнь выявляется у 10–20% населения и имеет четкую тенденцию к «омоложению». При наличии клинических симптомов основным методом лечения остается холецистэктомия, после которой у 10–15% пациентов клинические проявления сохраняются либо усиливаются (для обозначения таких ситуаций применяют термин «постхолецистэктомический  синдром»). Постхолецистэктомический синдром объединяет неоднородные расстройства, включая  нарушения функции печени, поджелудочной железы, двенадцатиперстной кишки, сфинктера Одди  пр., которые могут быть связаны с погрешностями или последствиями хирургических манипуляций. Зачастую причиной сохранения жалоб оказываются ранее нераспознанные хронические заболевания других органов. Арсенал эффективных средств медикаментозной и  немедикаментозной коррекции относительно невелик. С целью стандартизировать определения и  категории, касающиеся проблемы постхолецистэктомического синдрома, и разработать алгоритм обследования и лечения пациентов с постхолецистэктомической дисфункцией сфинктера  Одди 4 мая 2019 г. в городе Алматы (Казахстан) состоялся совет экспертов – представителей  междисциплинарной команды из гастроэнтерологов и хирургов. Целевая аудитория – врачи общей  практики, терапевты, гастроэнтерологи, хирурги. Согласно решению Экспертного совета, основным  клиническим проявлением органических и функциональных заболеваний желчных путей  является билиарная боль, подробные характеристики которой были выделены в материалах IV Римского консенсуса на основании статистического анализа большого объема клинических данных. Для более точной оценки состояния протоковой системы и исключения желчнокаменной болезни в план обследования включают ультразвуковое исследование органов брюшной полости,  эндоскопическое ультразвуковое исследование панкреато-билиарной зоны, магнитно-резонансную  холангиопанкреатографию. Функциональные билиарные расстройства необходимо дифференцировать с органическими заболеваниями органов пищеварения; с этой целью  рекомендован план обследования пациентов. Дисфункцию сфинктера Одди можно рассматривать как вариант постхолецистэктомического синдрома; на долю таких случаев приходится 1,5–3%. Консервативное ведение при функциональных заболеваниях органов пищеварения, помимо  рационального питания, подразумевает лекарственную терапию. Показана эффективность  нестероидных противовоспалительных препаратов, прокинетиков, нитратов, спазмолитиков, антагонистов кальциевых каналов, ботулотоксина и гимекромона. Папиллосфинктеротомия при  дисфункции сфинктера Одди не обладает должной эффективностью в купировании билиарной  боли. Разработан алгоритм ведения пациентов при появлении билиарной боли и другой  симптоматики после холецистэктомии
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