413 research outputs found

    Negative pressures in full-scale distribution system: field investigation, modelling, estimation of intrusion volumes and risk for public health

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    International audienceVarious investigations encompassing microbial characterization of external sources of contamination (soil and trenchwater surrounding water mains, flooded air-valve vaults), field pressure monitoring, and hydraulic and transient analyses were conducted in the same distribution system where two epidemiological studies showing an increase in gastrointestinal illness for people drinking tap water were conducted in the 1990's. Interesting results include the detection of microorganisms indicators of fecal contamination in all external sources investigated but at a higher frequency in the water from flooded air-valve vaults, and the recording of 18 negative pressure events in the distribution system during a 17-month monitoring period. Transient analysis of this large and complex distribution system was challenging and highlighted the need to consider field pressure data in the process

    Modelling the impacts of ammonia emissions reductions on North American air quality

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    A unified regional air-quality modelling system (AURAMS) was used to investigate the effects of reductions in ammonia emissions on regional air quality, with a focus on particulate-matter formation. Three simulations of one-year duration were performed for a North American domain: (1) a base-case simulation using 2002 Canadian and US national emissions inventories augmented by a more detailed Canadian emissions inventory for agricultural ammonia; (2) a 30% North-American-wide reduction in agricultural ammonia emissions; and (3) a 50% reduction in Canadian beef-cattle ammonia emissions. The simulations show that a 30% continent-wide reduction in agricultural ammonia emissions lead to reductions in median hourly PM<sub>2.5</sub> mass of <1 ÎŒg m<sup>−3</sup> on an annual basis. The atmospheric response to these emission reductions displays marked seasonal variations, and on even shorter time scales, the impacts of the emissions reductions are highly episodic: 95th-percentile hourly PM<sub>2.5</sub> mass decreases can be up to a factor of six larger than the median values. <br><br> A key finding of the modelling work is the linkage between gas and aqueous chemistry and transport; reductions in ammonia emissions affect gaseous ammonia concentrations close to the emissions site, but substantial impacts on particulate matter and atmospheric deposition often occur at considerable distances downwind, with particle nitrate being the main vector of ammonia/um transport. Ammonia emissions reductions therefore have trans-boundary consequences downwind. Calculations of critical-load exceedances for sensitive ecosystems in Canada suggest that ammonia emission reductions will have a minimal impact on current ecosystem acidification within Canada, but may have a substantial impact on future ecosystem acidification. The 50% Canadian beef-cattle ammonia emissions reduction scenario was used to examine model sensitivity to uncertainties in the new Canadian agricultural ammonia emissions inventory, and the simulation results suggest that further work is needed to improve the emissions inventory for this particular sector. It should be noted that the model in its current form neglects coarse mode base cation chemistry, so the predicted effects of ammonia emissions reductions shown here should be considered upper limits

    Production of Heparin-Binding Epidermal Growth Factor–like Growth Factor (HB-EGF) at Sites of Thermal Injury in Pediatric Patients

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    Fluids that accumulate at wound sites may be an important reservoir of growth factors that promote the normal wound healing response. The presence of heparin-binding growth factors was studied in burn wound fluid (BWF) from 45 pediatric patients who had sustained partial thickness burns. One of the growth factors present was similar to platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) based on its heparin affinity, inhibition of bioactivity by a PDGF antiserum, and detection in a PDGF-AB enzyme-linked iminunosorbent assay. A second growth factor was identified as heparin-binding epidermal growth factor–like growth factor (HB-EGF) based on its heparin affinity, competition with 125I-labeled epidermal growth factor (EGF) for EGF receptor binding, and recognition in biological assays and Western blots by two HB-EGF antisera. Amino acid sequence analysis of one form of this second growth factor verified its identity as an N-terminally truncated form of HB-EGF. Immunohistochemical analysis of partial thickness burns demonstrated the presence of HB-EGF in the advancing epithelial margin, islands of regenerating epithelium within the burn wound, and in the duct and proximal tubules of eccrine sweat glands. HB-EGF in the surface epithelium of burn wounds was uniformally distributed, whereas it was restricted to the basal epithelium in nonburned skin. These data support a role for PDGF and HB-EGF in burn wound healing and suggest that the response to injury includes deposition of HB-EGF and PDGF into blister fluid and a redistribution of HB-EGF in the surface epithelium near the wound site

    K-ras Mutation Targeted to Gastric Tissue Progenitor Cells Results in Chronic Inflammation, an Altered Microenvironment, and Progression to Intraepithelial

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    Chronic infectious diseases, such as Helicobacter pylori infection, can promote cancer in a large part through induction of chronic inflammation. Oncogenic K-ras mutation in epithelial cells activates inflammatory pathways, which could compensate for a lack of infectious stimulus. Gastric histopathology and putative progenitor markers [doublecortin and calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase-like 1 (Dcamkl1) and keratin 19 (K19)] in K19-K-ras-V12 (K19-kras) transgenic mice were assessed at 3, 6, 12, and 18 months of age, in comparison with Helicobacter felis–infected wild-type littermates. Inflammation was evaluated by reverse transcription–PCR of proinflammatory cytokines, and K19-kras mice were transplanted with green fluorescent protein (GFP)–labeled bone marrow. Both H. felis infection and K-ras mutation induced upregulation of proinflammatory cytokines, expansion of Dcamkl1+ cells, and progression to oxyntic atrophy, metaplasia, hyperplasia, and high-grade dysplasia. K19-kras transgenic mice uniquely displayed mucous metaplasia as early as 3 months and progressed to high-grade dysplasia and invasive intramucosal carcinoma by 20 months. In bone marrow–transplanted K19-kras mice that progressed to dysplasia, a large proportion of stromal cells were GFP+ and bone marrow–derived, but only rare GFP+ epithelial cells were observed. GFP+ bone marrow–derived cells included leukocytes and CD45− stromal cells that expressed vimentin or α smooth muscle actin and were often found surrounding clusters of Dcamkl1+ cells at the base of gastric glands. In conclusion, the expression of mutant K-ras in K19+ gastric epithelial cells can induce chronic inflammation and promote the development of dysplasia.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant NIH 5R01 CA120979-02)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01 DK060694)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant U01 CA143056)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant P30 DK050306)Uehara Memorial Foundatio

    Risk response strategies for collaborative university-industry R&D funded programs

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    Universities are centers of knowledge in our societies and their role when it comes to innovation has become more important over the years. Companies have several reasons to engage in research collaborations with universities, namely to gain access to innovative technologies. University-Industry R&D collaborations are expected to play an important role in regional economies, and to fulfill the industry’s demand for innovative products, technologies and processes. However, the knowledge on what are the potential risks resulting from these collaborations and the risk response strategies to reduce the negative risk impacts and to enhance positive risk impacts is still limited. Thus, this paper aims to fill the gap in literature when it comes to risk identification and risk responses’ planning, by identifying, based on a case study analysis, 19 potential risks and 53 potential risk response strategies.INCT-EN - Instituto Nacional de CiĂȘncia e Tecnologia para Excitotoxicidade e Neuroproteção(SFRH/BPD/111033/2015

    Attentional demand influences strategies for encoding into visual working memory

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    Visual selective attention and visual working memory (WM) share the same capacity-limited resources. We investigated whether and how participants can cope with a task in which these 2 mechanisms interfere. The task required participants to scan an array of 9 objects in order to select the target locations and to encode the items presented at these locations into WM (1 to 5 shapes). Determination of the target locations required either few attentional resources (“popout condition”) or an attention-demanding serial search (“non pop-out condition”). Participants were able to achieve high memory performance in all stimulation conditions but, in the non popout conditions, this came at the cost of additional processing time. Both empirical evidence and subjective reports suggest that participants invested the additional time in memorizing the locations of all target objects prior to the encoding of their shapes into WM. Thus, they seemed to be unable to interleave the steps of search with those of encoding. We propose that the memory for target locations substitutes for perceptual pop-out and thus may be the key component that allows for flexible coping with the common processing limitations of visual WM and attention. The findings have implications for understanding how we cope with real-life situations in which the demands on visual attention and WM occur simultaneously

    Nanofabrication with Pulsed Lasers

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    An overview of pulsed laser-assisted methods for nanofabrication, which are currently developed in our Institute (LP3), is presented. The methods compass a variety of possibilities for material nanostructuring offered by laser–matter interactions and imply either the nanostructuring of the laser-illuminated surface itself, as in cases of direct laser ablation or laser plasma-assisted treatment of semiconductors to form light-absorbing and light-emitting nano-architectures, as well as periodic nanoarrays, or laser-assisted production of nanoclusters and their controlled growth in gaseous or liquid medium to form nanostructured films or colloidal nanoparticles. Nanomaterials synthesized by laser-assisted methods have a variety of unique properties, not reproducible by any other route, and are of importance for photovoltaics, optoelectronics, biological sensing, imaging and therapeutics

    Femtosecond pulsed laser deposition of silicon thin films

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    Optimisation of femtosecond pulsed laser deposition parameters for the fabrication of silicon thin films is discussed. Substrate temperature, gas pressure and gas type are used to better understand the deposition process and optimise it for the fabrication of high-quality thin films designed for optical and optoelectronic applications
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