5,519 research outputs found
Influence of temperature on Saccharomyces cerevisiae UE-ME3 response to titanium dioxide nanoparticles
Titanium dioxide is a polymorphic material which can be found in nature in three mineral phases: rutile, anatase and brookite, the most unstable and of less interest. The form of NP-rutile TiO2 (<100 nm) is described as one of the most toxic compound. While living organisms have been exposed with nanoparticles from millions of years ago and may be adapted to low levels of these materials, the increase of industrial capacity of synthesis, manipulation and massive use in electronic, energy and catalysis processes has increase the environmental levels of nanomaterials in several regions of the planet. The nanotoxicology is an emerging field for research, since fixed mass, density and surface reactivity are features of nanoparticles that contribute for the generation of ROS. The main intention of this work was to determine the influence of temperature and titanium dioxide nanoparticles on the growth of S. cerevisiae UE-ME3, a wine wild-type strain of Alentejo, Portugal
Adaptive introgression underlies polymorphic seasonal camouflage in snowshoe hares
Snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) maintain seasonal camouflage by molting to a white winter coat, but some hares remain brown during the winter in regions with low snow cover. We show that cis-regulatory variation controlling seasonal expression of the Agouti gene underlies this adaptive winter camouflage polymorphism. Genetic variation at Agouti clustered by winter coat color across multiple hare and jackrabbit species, revealing a history of recurrent interspecific gene flow. Brown winter coats in snowshoe hares likely originated from an introgressed black-tailed jackrabbit allele that has swept to high frequency in mild winter environments. These discoveries show that introgression of genetic variants that underlie key ecological traits can seed past and ongoing adaptation to rapidly changing environments. (c) The Authors, Some Rights Reserved
Spin Discrimination in Three-Body Decays
The identification of the correct model for physics beyond the Standard Model
requires the determination of the spin of new particles. We investigate to
which extent the spin of a new particle can be identified in scenarios
where it decays dominantly in three-body decays . Here we
assume that is a candidate for dark matter and escapes direct detection at
a high energy collider such as the LHC. We show that in the case that all
intermediate particles are heavy, one can get information on the spins of
and at the LHC by exploiting the invariant mass distribution of the two
standard model fermions. We develop a model-independent strategy to determine
the spins without prior knowledge of the unknown couplings and test it in a
series of Monte Carlo studies.Comment: 31+1 pages, 4 figures, 8 tables, JHEP.cls include
Wake-up Stroke and Stroke within the Therapeutic Window for Thrombolysis Have Similar Clinical Severity, Imaging Characteristics, and Outcome
BACKGROUND:
Wake-up stroke (WUS) represents 25% of all ischemic strokes. There is conflicting evidence concerning clinical severity, imaging characteristics, and outcome when WUS is compared with stroke of known time of onset. Our aim was to compare WUS patients with patients with ischemic stroke within the therapeutic window (STW) for thrombolysis.
METHODS:
This is a retrospective hospital-based study of all consecutive patients hospitalized for acute ischemic stroke during 2013. Patients with STW, WUS, and WUS with computed tomography (CT) at 3 hours or less after awakening (WUS≤3h) were selected for the study. The methods used include a review of clinical records, an independent quantification of early signs of ischemia on admission CT scan, and determination of functional outcome on follow-up.
RESULTS:
Of 554 patients evaluated, 190 had STW, 113 had WUS (20.4%), and 25 had WUS≤3h. Among all WUS patients, 33.6% did not have any other formal contraindication for thrombolysis besides undetermined time of onset. WUS patients had demographic characteristics, vascular risk factors, and clinical severity similar to STW patients. Mild or absent early signs of ischemia on admission CT in WUS≤3h patients were similar to those in STW patients when adjusted for clinical severity (odds ratio [OR] = .50, 95% confidence interval [CI]=.17-1.47). Favorable prognosis in WUS≤3h was similar to STW when adjusted for age, clinical severity, and thrombolysis (OR = .53, 95% CI=.09-3.14).
CONCLUSIONS:
This study strengthens the evidence that clinical and early imaging characteristics of WUS patients are similar to those of patients with stroke who are eligible for thrombolysis based on the time window criteria, and patients with WUS do not have a worse short outcome
Paraquat Intoxication – experience of an Internal Medicine ward for 18 years
Introduction: Paraquat is a contact herbicide commercially available
since 1962. Paraquat intoxication (PI) is usually voluntary
and highly lethal, since there is no effective antidote. Toxicity
occurs through cyclic redox reactions, damaging mainly the
kidneys and lungs.
Aim, material and methods: featuring the clinical presentation,
management and outcome of patients with PI over an 18 years
period (from the 01st January 1993 to the 31st December 2010)
through the retrospective analysis of clinical files and comparing
the survivors and the deceased.
Results: Thirty-one cases of Paraquat intoxication were included,
with a male: female ratio 1:1. Age range from 13 to 80 years,
mean age 42.4years (±18.7).All intoxications were voluntary and
by oral route. There was statistical difference in the amount ingested
(22.1 mL vs. 72.7 mL, p<0.0005). A non-significant trend
to a longer delay until getting medical attention in the deceased
group (1.6 h vs. 3.2 h, p=0.091). Statistical significance was found
between mortality and leukocytosis, hypocapnea, hypoxemia, LDH,
alkaline phosphatase and AST. There was no difference between
groups according to treatment options, although hemocarboperfusion
was used more often in the deceased group (53.9%
vs. 66.7%, p=0.471) and corticosteroids in the survivor group
(61.5% vs. 44.4%, p=0.350). Mortality rate was 58.1% (66.7%
in the first 72 hours), due to respiratory insufficiency and multiple
organ failure. Variable levels of pulmonary fibrosis occurred in
38.5% of the survivors.
Discussion & Conclusion: Paraquat intoxication has a poor
prognosis with limited efficiency of treatment approaches. The
relation between Paraquat in the urine and the time elapsed after
ingestion is the main determinant factor in the prognosis. In this
study the presence of dyspnea, hypocapnea and hypoxemia was
linked to a bad prognosis. There was no statistical difference
between the available treatment options
Combined tools for Surgical Case Packages contents and cost optimization: a preliminary study
This paper presents a solution proposal based on mathematical and statistical tools to optimize Surgical Case Packages of an Operating Room (OR) in a Portuguese public hospital that it is the most complex environment in a hospital. In this particular hospital, more than 27000 surgeries/year are performed, employing, sometimes, misadjusted composition of standard surgical packages and non-optimized grouping of surgical instruments. Problem consequences are, among others, high transport of
various surgical cases packages; high number of open cases and delays in surgical times following surgery. These type of problems are waste that do not add value to the service in the context of Lean Healthcare and must be eliminated using the most suitable tools. After the analysis, different tools were used: combinatorial analysis to optimize surgical cases composition and statistical analysis to identify the instruments usage and surgical basic case patterns. An optimization model was developed which produced a sterilizing initial solution of 135.24€. By identifying the most commonly employed instruments, it was concluded that some instruments have never been used and others rarely and some patterns were identified. The results achieved
were based on minor sample and in a form of data collection that needs some adjustment
Bioorthogonal Strategy for Bioprocessing of Specific-Site-Functionalized Enveloped Influenza-Virus-Like Particles
Virus-like particles (VLPs) constitute a promising platform in vaccine development and targeted drug delivery. To date, most applications use simple nonenveloped VLPs as human papillomavirus or hepatitis B vaccines, even though the envelope is known to be critical to retain the native protein folding and biological function. Here, we present tagged enveloped VLPs (TagE-VLPs) as a valuable strategy for the downstream processing and monitoring of the in vivo production of specific-site-functionalized enveloped influenza VLPs. This two-step procedure allows bioorthogonal functionalization of azide-tagged nascent influenza type A hemagglutinin proteins in the envelope of VLPs through a strain-promoted [3 + 2] alkyne-azide cycloaddition reaction. Importantly, labeling does not influence VLP production and allows for construction of functionalized VLPs without deleterious effects on their biological function. Refined discrimination and separation between VLP and baculovirus, the major impurity of the process, is achieved when this technique is combined with flow cytometry analysis, as demonstrated by atomic force microscopy. TagE-VLPs is a versatile tool broadly applicable to the production, monitoring, and purification of functionalized enveloped VLPs for vaccine design trial runs, targeted drug delivery, and molecular imaging.The authors acknowledge funding from the European Union (EDUFLUVAC project FP7-HEALTH-2013-INNOVATION), the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT, Portugal; project HIVERA/0002/2013 and FCT Investigator to G.J.L.B.), EPSRC (to G.J.L.B.), the European Commission, Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA), and RISE project grant 644167. S. B. C., J. M. F., F. M., and D. G. acknowledge FCT for fellowships SFRH/BD/52302/2013, SFRH/BD/70423/2010, SFRH/BD/70139/2010, and SFRH/BPD/73500/2010, respectively. The authors acknowledge Ricardo Silva for all his help in fluorescence analysis implementation and fruitful discussions. The authors also acknowledge Patrícia Gomes-Alves for her help for mass spectrometry analysis. Mass spectrometry data was obtained by the Mass Spectrometry Unit (UniMS), ITQB/iBET, Oeiras, Portugal. G. J. L. B. is a Royal Society University Research Fellow and the recipient of a European Research Council Starting Grant (TagIt)
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