216 research outputs found
Optical properties of Ge-oxygen defect center embedded in silica films
The photo-luminescence features of Ge-oxygen defect centers in a 100nm thick
Ge-doped silica film on a pure silica substrate were investigated by looking at
the emission spectra and time decay detected under synchrotron radiation
excitation in the 10-300 K temperature range. This center exhibits two
luminescence bands centered at 4.3eV and 3.2eV associated with its
de-excitation from singlet (S1) and triplet (T1) states, respectively, that are
linked by an intersystem crossing process. The comparison with results obtained
from a bulk Ge-doped silica sample evidences that the efficiency of the
intersystem crossing rate depends on the properties of the matrix embedding the
Ge-oxygen defect centers, being more effective in the film than in the bulk
counterpart.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, in press on J. Non cryst. solids (2007
Apparent digestibility of insect protein meals for rainbow trout
Insect meals are considered to be promising future ingredients for aquaculture feeds. In past feeding trials in rainbow trout, insect meals were included in diets only on the basis of their nutrients content and energy density without taking into account their biological availability due to the lack of their digestible values. Apparent digestibility (ADC) provides good indication of the bioavailability of nutrients and energy thus providing rational basis for the correct inclusion of feedstuffs. The aim of this research was to assess, in an in vivo trial on rainbow trout, the ADC of five full fat insect meals: one Tenebrio molitor (TM), two Hermetia illucens obtained through two different process (HI1 and HI2), one Musca domestica (MD), and one Alphitobius diaperinus (AD). Fish were fed a high-quality reference diet (R) and test diets obtained mixing the R diet with each of the test ingredients at a ratio of 70:30. Diets contained 1% celite as inert marker. Fish were fed to visual satiety twice a day and faecal samples collected using a continuous automatic device. Faeces were freeze dried and frozen (-20 \ub0C) until analyses. The ADC of dry matter, crude protein and ether extract of each insect meal diet were calculated. ADC for dry matter varied between 70.07 (HI1) and 80.85 (TM). ADC for protein was above 84% in all treatments and resulted the highest in MD, TM and AD treatments. Ether extract apparent digestibility significantly differed among diets with the highest value reported for TM treatment. All treatments reported values higher than 96%. Observed differences could be due to the insect species and meal treatment but in general, tested insect meals were highly digestible for rainbow trout. The results from this research could be useful to optimize the diet formulation
Bullous pemphigoid triggered by COVID-19 vaccine: Rapid resolution with corticosteroid therapy
Seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in unselected surgical patients: An update from an unicentric regional study
Balanced replacement of fish meal with Hermetia illucens meal allows efficient hepatic nutrient metabolism and increases fillet lipid quality in gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata)
In the present study, gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata) was reared using sustainable feeds containing insect meal
from Hermetia illucens larvae. Proteomics and proton nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabolomics analysis
were used to assess the metabolic impact of the tested feeds in sea bream liver, whereas the composition of
muscle fillets was characterized by means of metabolomics and gas chromatography of fatty acid methyl esters.
Including 10% of insect meal while correspondingly reducing fish meal did not substantially alter the metabolism
of dietary nutrients, leading to small but significant effects solely on lauric acid content of sea bream fillets.
Furthermore, a few alterations in some markers of immune response, such as leukocyte elastase inhibitor-like,
granzyme B (G, H)-like, and two associated ortholog groups, serpin B and chymase, were found. In the fish
group fed with insect meal, liver morphology analysis showed no structural damage or inflammation and a lower
amount of hepatic lipid deposition and accumulation
Bioaerosol emissions during organic waste treatment for biopolymer production: A case study
Environmentally sustainable methods of waste disposal are a strategic priority. For organic waste management and innovative biological treatments present advantageous opportunities, although organic waste treatment also includes environmental drawbacks, such as bioaerosol pro-duction. This study aims to evaluate bioaerosol spread during an innovative experimental treatment. The process consists of two anaerobic steps: acidogenesis, which includes polyhydroxyalkanoate accumulation, followed by methanogenesis. Bioaerosol, PM10, and endotoxin concentrations were measured at three sampling points during different campaigns to evaluate: (1) the background levels, (2) the contamination produced in the pre-treatment stage, and (3) the residual contamination of the outgoing digested sludge. Environmental PM10 seemed to be generally quite contained, while the endotoxin determination was close to 90 EU/m3. Significant microbial concentrations were detected during the loading of the organic fraction of municipal solid waste (fungi > 1300 CFU/m3, Bacillus genus (≈103 CFU/m3), higher Clostridium spp. and opportunistic human pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella pneumoniae), suggesting a significant contamination level. Such results are useful for hazard identification in the risk assessment of innovative processes, as they reveal contaminants potentially harmful to both workers’ health and the environment
Visible Light Activation of Virucidal Surfaces Empowered by Pro-Oxidant Carbon Dots
The scientific community is actively engaged in the development of innovative nanomaterials with broad-spectrum virucidal properties, particularly those capable of producing reactive oxygen species (ROS), to combat upcoming pandemics effectively. The generation of ROS capable of inhibiting viral activity on high-touch surfaces can prove an effective means of reducing pathogenic and viral infections, while avoiding the exacerbation of antibiotic resistance resulting from the extensive use of chemical disinfectants. Carbon dots (C-dots), in particular, are a class of nanomaterials that under specific conditions is able to generate reactive species. They are, therefore, excellent candidates for fabricating light-activated functional antiviral devices. Pro-oxidant C-dots have been developed via microwave synthesis using an amino acid, glycine (Gly), and 1,5-diaminonaphtalene (DAN) as precursors. The formation of C-dots has been obtained by reacting the precursors in microwave using two different acid catalysts, H3BO3 or HCl. The HCl catalyst promotes the formation of a copolymer while using H3BO3 the precursors preferentially self-condense. The boron-catalyzed samples have shown to contain radical centers whose intensity increases upon illumination by UV and also visible light. They also show the capability of generating singlet oxygen through energy transfer to oxygen molecules when irradiated. The C-dots exhibit effective virucidal activity and have been tested in vitro using two different variants of SARS-CoV-2, the original strain, and Omicron. Antiviral C-dots have been finally used to functionalize a model surface, inducing a strong virucidal activity against the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus with both ultraviolet (UV) and visible (VL) light
Clinical and molecular characterization of COVID-19 hospitalized patients
Clinical and molecular characterization by Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) is reported in 35 COVID-19 patients attending the University Hospital in Siena, Italy, from April 7 to May 7, 2020. Eighty percent of patients required respiratory assistance, half of them being on mechanical ventilation. Fiftyone percent had hepatic involvement and hyposmia was ascertained in 3 patients. Searching for common genes by collapsing methods against 150 WES of controls of the Italian population failed to give straightforward statistically significant results with the exception of two genes. This result is not unexpected since we are facing the most challenging common disorder triggered by environmental factors with a strong underlying heritability (50%). The lesson learned from Autism-Spectrum-Disorders prompted us to re-analyse the cohort treating each patient as an independent case, following a Mendelian-like model. We identified for each patient an average of 2.5 pathogenic mutations involved in virus infection susceptibility and pinpointing to one or more rare disorder(s). To our knowledge, this is the first report on WES and COVID-19. Our results suggest a combined model for COVID-19 susceptibility with a number of common susceptibility genes which represent the favorite background in which additional host private mutations may determine disease progression
Ambulatory assessment for physical activity research. State of the science, best practices and future directions
Technological and digital progress benefits physical activity (PA) research. Here we compiled expert knowledge on how Ambulatory Assessment (AA) is utilized to advance PA research, i.e., we present results of the 2nd International CAPA Workshop 2019 "Physical Activity Assessment - State of the Science, Best Practices, Future Directions" where invited researchers with experience in PA assessment, evaluation, technology and application participated. First, we provide readers with the state of the AA science, then we give best practice recommendations on how to measure PA via AA and shed light on methodological frontiers, and we furthermore discuss future directions. AA encompasses a class of methods that allows the study of PA and its behavioral, biological and physiological correlates as they unfold in everyday life. AA includes monitoring of movement (e.g., via accelerometry), physiological function (e.g., via mobile electrocardiogram), contextual information (e.g., via geolocation-tracking), and ecological momentary assessment (EMA; e.g., electronic diaries) to capture self-reported information. The strengths of AA are data assessment that near real-time, which minimizes retrospective biases in real-world settings, consequentially enabling ecological valid findings. Importantly, AA enables multiple assessments across time within subjects resulting in intensive longitudinal data (ILD), which allows unraveling within-person determinants of PA in everyday life. In this paper, we show how AA methods such as triggered e-diaries and geolocation-tracking can be used to measure PA and its correlates, and furthermore how these findings may translate into real-life interventions. In sum, AA provides numerous possibilities for PA research, especially the opportunity to tackle within-subject antecedents, concomitants, and consequences of PA as they unfold in everyday life. In-depth insights on determinants of PA could help us design and deliver impactful interventions in real-world contexts, thus enabling us to solve critical health issues in the 21st century such as insufficient PA and high levels of sedentary behavior. (DIPF/Orig.
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