104 research outputs found

    Calcium analysis and sensory evaluation of amaranth-enriched corn tortillas

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    Tortillas represent 67% of the daily calories consumed in some countries. Increasing lime level for soaking corn and adding amaranth (high-calcium, high-protein) to tortillas should improve nutritional value. The objectives of this research were to evaluate the nutritive content and sensory acceptability of amaranth-enriched corn tortillas. Corn (yellow or white) was soaked for 24 hr in limewater (1, 2, or 3% corn weight basis), ground with a stone grinder, formed into masa balls containing 0, 15, or 30% amaranth, pressed into tortillas with a hydraulic laboratory press, and baked on a griddle (236°C). Judges (25) evaluated texture, color, flavor, and overall acceptability of tortillas on 9-point hedonic scales (9=like extremely) in a laboratory study. Panelists (28) also evaluated texture, color, flavor, and overall acceptability of a laboratory-produced and a commercially-produced tortilla in a home placement study. Proximate composition and calcium levels were determined. All data were analyzed by ANOVA. Texture acceptability increased as lime level increased but was not affected by amaranth level or corn cultivar. Color acceptability decreased as lime level and amaranth level increased. Flavor acceptability was not affected by amaranth level but decreased as lime level increased. Overall acceptability of the tortillas increased with lime level but was not affected by amaranth. Yellow corn tortillas were more acceptable than white corn tortillas for all attributes except texture. No significant differences were found between the acceptability of the laboratory produced and the commercially-produced tortilla. Tortilla moisture increased as lime increased and as amaranth decreased. Fat content was approximately 7% (dry matter basis) and did not vary with treatment. Protein increased with amaranth content and was higher for white corn tortillas. The pH increased as lime level increased but was not affected by amaranth level or corn cultivar. Ash increased with lime level and amaranth level and was significantly higher in white corn. Experimental methodology made it hard to accurately measure the contribution of the amaranth to the calcium levels of the tortillas. However, an interaction between amaranth and lime for calcium indicated that amaranth might contribute to calcium content in low-lime (\u3c 1%) tortillas

    Comparison of Four Commercially Available Group B Streptococcus Molecular Assays Using Remnant Rectal-Vaginal Enrichment Broths

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    The incidence of neonatal Group B streptococcal (GBS) disease has significantly declined since the widespread implementation of prenatal screening of expectant mothers for urogenital and gastrointestinal tract GBS colonization. Screening methods have evolved from exclusively culture-based approaches to more rapid and highly sensitive molecular methods. We chose to evaluate the performance of four commercially available GBS molecular tests for detection of GBS colonization using 299 antepartum rectal-vaginal specimens submitted to our laboratory for routine GBS screening. In 97% of instances, there was agreement between all three systems. When testing 1, 6, and 12 samples simultaneously, all methods performed comparably, but the ARIES® GBS assay required the least total hands-on time and the illumigene® Group B Streptococcus assay required the most hands-on time

    Concert recording 2018-04-07

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    [Track 1]. A musical joke. I. Allegro II. Menuetto and trio III. Adagio cantabile IV. Presto / W.A. Mozart -- [Track 2]. Piano quintet, op. 87. I. Allegro [Track 3]. II. Menuetto and trio [Track 4]. III. Largo IV. Allegro agitato / J.N. Hummel -- [Track 5]. Piano sextet, op. 110 (Allegro vivace) / F. Mendelssohn

    Designing the Arriving Refugee Informatics Surveillance and Epidemiology (ARIVE) System: A Web-based Electronic Database for Epidemiological Surveillance

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    Objectives: We design and implement the Arriving Refugee Informatics surVeillance and Epidemiology (ARIVE) system to improve the health of refugees undergoing resettlement and enhance existing health surveillance networks. Materials and Methods: Using the REDCap electronic data capture software as a basis we create a refugee health database incorporating data from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s Electronic Disease Notification (EDN) system and domestic screening data from refugee health care providers. Results: Domestic screening and EDN refugee health data have been integrated for 13,824 refugees resettled from 35 different countries into the state of Kentucky from the years 2013-2016. Discussion: A flexible software solution like REDCap provides a way to implement the core of a health surveillance network in a way that is sustainable and cost-effective and REDCap’s data dictionary standard provides an easy way to share and improve the database structure of a health surveillance network

    Multicenter Evaluation of Candida QuickFISH BC for Identification of Candida Species Directly from Blood Culture Bottles

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    Candida species are common causes of bloodstream infections (BSI), with high mortality. Four species cause >90% of Candida BSI: C. albicans, C. glabrata, C. parapsilosis, and C. tropicalis. Differentiation of Candida spp. is important because of differences in virulence and antimicrobial susceptibility. Candida QuickFISH BC, a multicolor, qualitative nucleic acid hybridization assay for the identification of C. albicans (green fluorescence), C. glabrata (red fluorescence), and C. parapsilosis (yellow fluorescence), was tested on Bactec and BacT/Alert blood culture bottles which signaled positive on automated blood culture devices and were positive for yeast by Gram stain at seven study sites. The results were compared to conventional identification. A total of 419 yeast-positive blood culture bottles were studied, consisting of 258 clinical samples (89 C. glabrata, 79 C. albicans, 23 C. parapsilosis, 18 C. tropicalis, and 49 other species) and 161 contrived samples inoculated with clinical isolates (40 C. glabrata, 46 C. albicans, 36 C. parapsilosis, 19 C. tropicalis, and 20 other species). A total of 415 samples contained a single fungal species, with C. glabrata (n = 129; 30.8%) being the most common isolate, followed by C. albicans (n = 125; 29.8%), C. parapsilosis (n = 59; 14.1%), C. tropicalis (n = 37; 8.8%), and C. krusei (n = 17; 4.1%). The overall agreement (with range for the three major Candida species) between the two methods was 99.3% (98.3 to 100%), with a sensitivity of 99.7% (98.3 to 100%) and a specificity of 98.0% (99.4 to 100%). This study showed that Candida QuickFISH BC is a rapid and accurate method for identifying C. albicans, C. glabrata, and C. parapsilosis, the three most common Candida species causing BSI, directly from blood culture bottles

    Investigating hyper-vigilance for social threat of lonely children

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    The hypothesis that lonely children show hypervigilance for social threat was examined in a series of three studies that employed different methods including advanced eye-tracking technology. Hypervigilance for social threat was operationalized as hostility to ambiguously motivated social exclusion in a variation of the hostile attribution paradigm (Study 1), scores on the Children’s Rejection-Sensitivity Questionnaire (Study 2), and visual attention to socially rejecting stimuli (Study 3). The participants were 185 children (11 years-7 months to 12 years-6 months), 248 children (9 years-4 months to 11 years-8 months) and 140 children (8 years-10 months to 12 years-10 months) in the three studies, respectively. Regression analyses showed that, with depressive symptoms covaried, there were quadratic relations between loneliness and these different measures of hypervigilance to social threat. As hypothesized, only children in the upper range of loneliness demonstrated elevated hostility to ambiguously motivated social exclusion, higher scores on the rejection sensitivity questionnaire, and disengagement difficulties when viewing socially rejecting stimuli. We found that very lonely children are hypersensitive to social threat

    Positive Affect Predicts Cerebral Glucose Metabolism in Late Middle-aged Adults.

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    Positive affect is associated with a number of health benefits; however, few studies have examined the relationship between positive affect and cerebral glucose metabolism, a key energy source for neuronal function and a possible index of brain health. We sought to determine if positive affect was associated with cerebral glucose metabolism in late middle-aged adults (n = 133). Participants completed the positive affect subscale of the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale at two time points over a two-year period and underwent 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography scanning. After controlling for age, sex, perceived health status, depressive symptoms, anti-depressant use, family history of Alzheimer’s disease, APOE ε4 status and interval between visits, positive affect was associated with greater cerebral glucose metabolism across para-/limbic, frontal, temporal and parietal regions. Our findings provide evidence that positive affect in late midlife is associated with greater brain health in regions involved in affective processing and also known to be susceptible to early neuropathological processes. The current findings may have implications for interventions aimed at increasing positive affect to attenuate early neuropathological changes in at-risk individuals
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