4,830 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
14C-Cobalamin Absorption from Endogenously Labeled Chicken Eggs Assessed in Humans Using Accelerator Mass Spectrometry.
Traditionally, the bioavailability of vitamin B-12 (B12) from in vivo labeled foods was determined by labeling the vitamin with radiocobalt (57Co, 58Co or 60Co). This required use of penetrating radioactivity and sometimes used higher doses of B12 than the physiological limit of B12 absorption. The aim of this study was to determine the bioavailability and absorbed B12 from chicken eggs endogenously labeled with 14C-B12 using accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). 14C-B12 was injected intramuscularly into hens to produce eggs enriched in vivo with the 14C labeled vitamin. The eggs, which provided 1.4 to 2.6 Ī¼g of B12 (~1.1 kBq) per serving, were scrambled, cooked and fed to 10 human volunteers. Baseline and post-ingestion blood, urine and stool samples were collected over a one-week period and assessed for 14C-B12 content using AMS. Bioavailability ranged from 13.2 to 57.7% (mean 30.2 Ā± 16.4%). Difference among subjects was explained by dose of B12, with percent bioavailability from 2.6 Ī¼g only half that from 1.4 Ī¼g. The total amount of B12 absorbed was limited to 0.5-0.8 Ī¼g (mean 0.55 Ā± 0.19 Ī¼g B12) and was relatively unaffected by the amount consumed. The use of 14C-B12 offers the only currently available method for quantifying B12 absorption in humans, including food cobalamin absorption. An egg is confirmed as a good source of B12, supplying approximately 20% of the average adult daily requirement (RDA for adults = 2.4 Ī¼g/day)
Pregnancy has a minimal impact on the acute transcriptional signature to vaccination.
Vaccination in pregnancy is an effective tool to protect both the mother and infant; vaccines against influenza, pertussis and tetanus are currently recommended. A number of vaccines with a specific indication for use in pregnancy are in development, with the specific aim of providing passive humoral immunity to the newborn child against pathogens responsible for morbidity and mortality in young infants. However, the current understanding about the immune response to vaccination in pregnancy is incomplete. We analysed the effect of pregnancy on early transcriptional responses to vaccination. This type of systems vaccinology approach identifies genes and pathways that are altered in response to vaccination and can be used to understand both the acute inflammation in response to the vaccine and to predict immunogenicity. Pregnant women and mice were immunised with Boostrix-IPV, a multivalent vaccine, which contains three pertussis antigens. Blood was collected from women before and after vaccination and RNA extracted for analysis by microarray. While there were baseline differences between pregnant and non-pregnant women, vaccination induced characteristic patterns of gene expression, with upregulation in interferon response and innate immunity gene modules, independent of pregnancy. We saw similar patterns of responses in both women and mice, supporting the use of mice for preclinical screening of novel maternal vaccines. Using a systems vaccinology approach in pregnancy demonstrated that pregnancy does not affect the initial response to vaccination and that studies in non-pregnant women can provide information about vaccine immunogenicity and potentially safety
The Indian family on UK reality television: Convivial culture in salient contexts
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below, copyright 2012 @ the author.This article demonstrates how The Family (2009), a fly-on-the wall UK reality series about a British Indian family, facilitates both current public service broadcasting requirements and mass audience appeal. From a critical cultural studies perspective, the author examines the journalistic and viewer responses to the series where authenticity, universality, and comedy emerge as major themes. Textual analysis of the racialized screen representations also helps locate the series within the contexts of contested multiculturalism, genre developments in reality television and public service broadcasting. Paul Gilroyās concept of convivial culture is used as a frame in understanding how meanings of the series are produced within a South Asian popular representational space. The author suggests that the social comedy taxonomy is a prerequisite for the making of this particular observational documentary. Further, the popular (comedic) mode of conviviality on which the series depends is both expedient and necessary within the various sociopolitical contexts outlined
Stereolithography for 3D photoelasticity
Recently, the use of photoelasticity has become more widespread due to the development of digital methods of fringe analysis [1] that allow a significant reduction in the time taken to achieve a stress map for any given model, particularly when only fractional fringe orders are displayed. However, in order for the full potential of the photoelastic method to be realised, a technique for rapidly producing complex 3-dimensional photoelastic models must be developed. Stereolithography is one so-called ārapid-prototypeā method that works by building a laminar model from a tank of photo-curing resin. A perforated metal plate is submerged in the liquid resin to a depth of typically around 0.1mm. A laser then traces the shape of the first layer of the component onto the plate, curing a thin layer of the resin. The plate is lowered by 0.1mm, and a further layer of resin cured by the laser. By this method, complex structures may be ālaid-upā in a matter of hours.
Previous studies concerned with the use of stereolithography for the production of photoelastic models [2] have noted that unacceptable levels of residual birefringence and stress have remained in the photoelastic model even after conventional annealing methods. Thus the use of such methods has been limited. If the stereolithographic method were developed for photoelasticity, one possible area of interest would be the design and analysis of orthopedic implants.
This paper outlines a series of studies looking at the requirements of photoelastic materials for three-dimensional stress analysis
Relationship between ferromanganese nodule compositions and sedimentation in a small survey area of the equatorial Pacific
The bulk chemical compositions of ferromanganese nodules recovered from 14 of 38 sediment cores collected from a 230 km2 area of abyssal hill topography in the northern equatorial Pacific (8Ā°20\u27N; 153W; regional depth 5000m) vary nonrandornly between fairly wide limits. The nodules have Mn/Fe ratios ranging from 2.60 to 5.38 and all samples contain todorokite and 8-MnO2. The variation in the Mn/Fe ratio is governed by the total Fe contents of the nodules; Mn varies to a much smaller extent. Cu and Ni contents average about 1% and vary independently of the Mn contents...
Using e-mail recruitment and an online questionnaire to establish effect size: A worked example
Background\ud
Sample size calculations require effect size estimations. Sometimes, effect size estimations and standard deviation may not be readily available, particularly if efficacy is unknown because the intervention is new or developing, or the trial targets a new population. In such cases, one way to estimate the effect size is to gather expert opinion. This paper reports the use of a simple strategy to gather expert opinion to estimate a suitable effect size to use in a sample size calculation.\ud
\ud
Methods\ud
Researchers involved in the design and analysis of clinical trials were identified at the University of Birmingham and via the MRC Hubs for Trials Methodology Research. An email invited them to participate.\ud
\ud
An online questionnaire was developed using the free online tool 'Survey MonkeyĀ©'. The questionnaire described an intervention, an electronic participant information sheet (e-PIS), which may increase recruitment rates to a trial. Respondents were asked how much they would need to see recruitment rates increased by, based on 90%. 70%, 50% and 30% baseline rates, (in a hypothetical study) before they would consider using an e-PIS in their research.\ud
\ud
Analyses comprised simple descriptive statistics.\ud
\ud
Results\ud
The invitation to participate was sent to 122 people; 7 responded to say they were not involved in trial design and could not complete the questionnaire, 64 attempted it, 26 failed to complete it. Thirty-eight people completed the questionnaire and were included in the analysis (response rate 33%; 38/115). Of those who completed the questionnaire 44.7% (17/38) were at the academic grade of research fellow 26.3% (10/38) senior research fellow, and 28.9% (11/38) professor. Dependent upon the baseline recruitment rates presented in the questionnaire, participants wanted recruitment rate to increase from 6.9% to 28.9% before they would consider using the intervention.\ud
\ud
Conclusions\ud
This paper has shown that in situations where effect size estimations cannot be collected from previous research, opinions from researchers and trialists can be quickly and easily collected by conducting a simple study using email recruitment and an online questionnaire. The results collected from the survey were successfully used in sample size calculations for a PhD research study protocol.\ud
\u
Heterogeneous processes: Laboratory, field, and modeling studies
The efficiencies of chemical families such as ClO(x) and NO(x) for altering the total abundance and distribution of stratospheric ozone are controlled by a partitioning between reactive (active) and nonreactive (reservoir) compounds within each family. Gas phase thermodynamics, photochemistry, and kinetics would dictate, for example, that only about 1 percent of the chlorine resident in the lower stratosphere would be in the form of active Cl or ClO, the remainder existing in the reservoir compounds HCl and ClONO2. The consistency of this picture was recently challenged by the recognition that important chemical transformations take place on polar regions: the Airborne Antarctic Ozone Experiment (AAOE) and the Airborne Arctic Stratospheric Expedition (AASA). Following the discovery of the Antarctic ozone hole, Solomon et al. suggested that the heterogeneous chemical reaction: ClONO2(g)+HCl(s) yields Cl2(g)+HNO3(s) could play a key role in converting chlorine from inactive forms into a species (Cl2) that would rapidly dissociate in sunlight to liberate atomic chlorine and initiate ozone depletion. The symbols (s) and (g) denote solid phase, or adsorbed onto a solid surface, and gas phase, respectively, and represent the approach by which such a reaction is modeled rather than the microscopic details of the reaction. The reaction was expected to be most important at altitudes where PSC's were most prevalent (10 to 25 km), thereby extending the altitude range over which chlorine compounds can efficiently destroy ozone from the 35 to 45 km region (where concentrations of active chlorine are usually highest) to lower altitudes where the ozone concentration is at its peak. This chapter will briefly review the current state of knowledge of heterogeneous processes in the stratosphere, emphasizing those results obtained since the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) conference. Sections are included on laboratory investigations of heterogeneous reactions, the characteristics and climatology of PSC's, stratospheric sulfate aerosols, and evidence of heterogeneous chemical processing
A comparison of the development of audiovisual integration in children with autism spectrum disorders and typically developing children
This study aimed to investigate the development of audiovisual integration in children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Audiovisual integration was measured using the McGurk effect in children with ASD aged 7ā16 years and typically developing children (control group) matched approximately for age, sex, nonverbal ability and verbal ability. Results showed that the children with ASD were delayed in visual accuracy and audiovisual integration compared to the control group. However, in the audiovisual integration measure, children with ASD appeared to ācatch-upā with their typically developing peers at the older age ranges. The suggestion that children with ASD show a deficit in audiovisual integration which diminishes with age has clinical implications for those assessing and treating these children
Mechanisms of Manganese-Assisted Nonradiative Recombination in Cd(Mn)Se/Zn(Mn)Se Quantum Dots
Mechanisms of nonradiative recombination of electron-hole complexes in
Cd(Mn)Se/Zn(Mn)Se quantum dots accompanied by interconfigurational excitations
of Mn ions are analyzed within the framework of single electron model of
deep {\it 3d}-levels in semiconductors. In addition to the mechanisms caused by
Coulomb and exchange interactions, which are related because of the Pauli
principle, another mechanism due to {\it sp-d} mixing is considered. It is
shown that the Coulomb mechanism reduces to long-range dipole-dipole energy
transfer from photoexcited quantum dots to Mn ions. The recombination
due to the Coulomb mechanism is allowed for any states of Mn ions and
{\it e-h} complexes. In contrast, short-range exchange and
recombinations are subject to spin selection rules, which are the result of
strong {\it lh-hh} splitting of hole states in quantum dots. Estimates show
that efficiency of the {\it sp-d} mechanism can considerably exceed that of the
Coulomb mechanism. The phonon-assisted recombination and processes involving
upper excited states of Mn ions are studied. The increase in PL
intensity of an ensemble of quantum dots in a magnetic field perpendicular to
the sample growth plane observed earlier is analyzed as a possible
manifestation of the spin-dependent recombination.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
- ā¦