3,861 research outputs found
Seasonal patterns of oral antihistamine and intranasal corticosteroid purchases from Australian community pharmacies : a retrospective observational study
Acknowledgments The abstract of this paper was presented at the Respiratory Effectiveness Group 2016 Annual Summit as a poster presentation with interim findings. The poster’s abstract was published in “Poster Abstracts” in The Journal of Thoracic Disease (Vol. 8, Supplement 5, 5 July 2016). http://jtd.amegroups.com/article/view/8504.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Gas Chromatography–Olfactometry Analyses of Volatiles Produced by ‘Fallglo’ and ‘US Early Pride’ Tangerines
‘Fallglo’ is a popular tangerine (Citrus reticulata Blanco) cultivar with high eating quality. However, ‘Fallglo’ may contain as many as 30–40 seeds per fruit. ‘US Early Pride’ is a seedless mutation of ‘Fallglo’ with similar quality attributes. The objective of the current study was to determine if ‘Fallglo’ and ‘US Early Pride’ fruit differed in the composition or quantity of aroma-active volatiles produced over time. Fruit were harvested bi-weekly from October to December. Juice was carefully extracted from 50 fruit, and volatiles were analyzed using gas chromatography (GC). Two subjects evaluated the GC effluents by olfactometry in triplicate runs for each sample. Volatile identification was done by GC-mass spectrometry and confirmed by sniffing of authentic standards. The same 32 aroma-active compounds were perceived in ‘Fallglo’ and ‘US Early Pride’, of which 25 were identified. Compounds were classified in odor descriptor groups: fatty (10 compounds), plastic or rubber (seven compounds), fruity or citrus (four compounds), floral (four compounds), mushroom (two compounds), green (two compounds) and other (one compound). ‘Fallglo’ and ‘US Early Pride’ had similar aroma intensities for the three first harvests (26 Oct., 3 Nov., 17 Nov.), but ‘Fallglo’ had higher levels of two fruity odorous peaks (E-2-pentenal and the coeluting compounds E-2-hexenal and ethyl 2 methyl butanoate) than did ‘US Early Pride’ at the December harvest. The last harvest showed significantly higher aroma intensity for six peaks in each cultivar, with only two peaks in common in both cultivars
Geomorphology of the upper Mkhomazi River basin, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, with emphasis on late Pleistocene colluvial deposits
We present a 1:50 000 scale geomorphological map of the upper Mkhomazi River basin, located in the foothills of the Drakensberg mountains in KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa. The sub-horizontal strata of the Permo-Triassic Beaufort Group forms plateau interfluves with a concave valley slope morphology. Locally, thick sequences of late Pleistocene colluvial deposits and associated buried paleosols (Masotcheni Formation) infill first-order tributary stream valleys and extend across the adjacent lower slopes. Surface runoff processes preferentially incise into the poorly consolidated, highly erodible sediments causing severe gully erosion that is responsible for widespread land degradation and desertification phenomena. The main purpose of this work is to derive a geomorphological map of the study area focussing on the erosional landforms to understand their spatial distribution and their relation to the colluvial deposits. Finally, a local and regional stratigraphic correlation of colluvial deposits and associated buried palaeosol profiles is proposed
Limiting dynamics for spherical models of spin glasses at high temperature
We analyze the coupled non-linear integro-differential equations whose
solutions is the thermodynamical limit of the empirical correlation and
response functions in the Langevin dynamics for spherical p-spin disordered
mean-field models. We provide a mathematically rigorous derivation of their FDT
solution (for the high temperature regime) and of certain key properties of
this solution, which are in agreement with earlier derivations based on
physical grounds
Analysing diet of small herbivores: the efficiency of DNA barcoding coupled with high-throughput pyrosequencing for deciphering the composition of complex plant mixtures
Background
In order to understand the role of herbivores in trophic webs, it is essential to know what they feed on. Diet analysis is, however, a challenge in many small herbivores with a secretive life style. In this paper, we compare novel (high-throughput pyrosequencing) DNA barcoding technology for plant mixture with traditional microhistological method. We analysed stomach contents of two ecologically important subarctic vole species, Microtus oeconomus and Myodes rufocanus, with the two methods. DNA barcoding was conducted using the P6-loop of the chloroplast trnL (UAA) intron.
Results
Although the identified plant taxa in the diets matched relatively well between the two methods, DNA barcoding gave by far taxonomically more detailed results. Quantitative comparison of results was difficult, mainly due to low taxonomic resolution of the microhistological method, which also in part explained discrepancies between the methods. Other discrepancies were likely due to biases mostly in the microhistological analysis.
Conclusion
We conclude that DNA barcoding opens up for new possibilities in the study of plant-herbivore interactions, giving a detailed and relatively unbiased picture of food utilization of herbivores
Effect of Arteriovenous Anastomosis on Blood Pressure Reduction in Patients With Isolated Systolic Hypertension Compared With Combined Hypertension
Background: Options for interventional therapy to lower blood pressure (BP) in
patients with treatment‐resistant hypertension include renal denervation and
the creation of an arteriovenous anastomosis using the ROX coupler. It has
been shown that BP response after renal denervation is greater in patients
with combined hypertension (CH) than in patients with isolated systolic
hypertension (ISH). We analyzed the effect of ROX coupler implantation in
patients with CH as compared with ISH. Methods and Results: The randomized,
controlled, prospective ROX Control Hypertension Study included patients with
true treatment‐resistant hypertension (office systolic BP ≥140 mm Hg, average
daytime ambulatory BP ≥135/85 mm Hg, and treatment with ≥3 antihypertensive
drugs including a diuretic). In a post hoc analysis, we stratified patients
with CH (n=31) and ISH (n=11). Baseline office systolic BP (177±18 mm Hg
versus 169±17 mm Hg, P=0.163) and 24‐hour ambulatory systolic BP (159±16 mm Hg
versus 154±11 mm Hg, P=0.463) did not differ between patients with CH and
those with ISH. ROX coupler implementation resulted in a significant reduction
in office systolic BP (CH: −29±21 mm Hg versus ISH: −22±31 mm Hg, P=0.445) and
24‐hour ambulatory systolic BP (CH: −14±20 mm Hg versus ISH: −13±15 mm Hg,
P=0.672), without significant differences between the two groups. The
responder rate (office systolic BP reduction ≥10 mm Hg) after 6 months was not
different (CH: 81% versus ISH: 82%, P=0.932). Conclusions: Our data suggest
that creation of an arteriovenous anastomosis using the ROX coupler system
leads to a similar reduction of office and 24‐hour ambulatory systolic BP in
patients with combined and isolated systolic hypertension. Clinical Trial
Registration: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier:
NCT01642498
Unveiling the gut microbiota composition and functionality associated with constipation through metagenomic analyses
Functional constipation (FC) is a gastrointestinal disorder with a high prevalence among the general population. The precise causes of FC are still unknown and are most likely multifactorial. Growing evidence indicates that alterations of gut microbiota composition contribute to constipation symptoms. Nevertheless, many discrepancies exist in literature and no clear link between FC and gut microbiota composition has as yet been identified. In this study, we performed 16 S rRNA-based microbial profiling analysis of 147 stool samples from 68 FC individuals and compared their microbial profiles with those of 79 healthy subjects (HS). Notably, the gut microbiota of FC individuals was shown to be depleted of members belonging to Bacteroides, Roseburia and Coprococcus 3. Furthermore, the metabolic capabilities of the gut microbiomes of five FC and five HS individuals were evaluated through shotgun metagenomics using a MiSeq platform, indicating that HS are enriched in pathways involved in carbohydrate, fatty acid and lipid metabolism as compared to FC. In contrast, the microbiomes corresponding to FC were shown to exhibit high abundance of genes involved in hydrogen production, methanogenesis and glycerol degradation. The identified differences in bacterial composition and metabolic capabilities may play an important role in development of FC symptoms
Exploring Amino Acid Auxotrophy in Bifidobacterium bifidum PRL2010
The acquisition and assimilation strategies followed by members of the infant gut microbiota to retrieve nitrogen from the gut lumen are still largely unknown. In particular, no information on these metabolic processes is available regarding bifidobacteria, which are among the first microbial colonizers of the human intestine. Here, evaluation of amino acid auxotrophy and prototrophy of Bifidobacterium bifidum, with particular emphasis on B. bifidum strain PRL2010 (LMG S-28692), revealed a putative auxotrophy for cysteine. In addition, we hypothesized that cysteine plays a role in the oxidative stress response in B. bifidum. The use of glutathione as an alternative reduced sulfur compound did not alleviate cysteine auxotrophy of this strain, though it was shown to stimulate expression of the genes involved in cysteine biosynthesis, reminiscent of oxidative stress response. When PRL2010 was grown on a medium containing complex substrates, such as whey proteins or casein hydrolysate, we noticed a distinct growth-promoting effect of these compounds. Transcriptional analysis involving B. bifidum PRL2010 cultivated on whey proteins or casein hydrolysate revealed that the biosynthetic pathways for cysteine and methionine are modulated by the presence of casein hydrolysate. Such findings support the notion that certain complex substrates may act as potential prebiotics for bifidobacteria in their ecological niche
Face mask recognition from audio: the MASC database and an overview on the mask challenge
The sudden outbreak of COVID-19 has resulted in tough challenges for the field of biometrics due to its spread via physical contact, and the regulations of wearing face masks. Given these constraints, voice biometrics can offer a suitable contact-less biometric solution; they can benefit from models that classify whether a speaker is wearing a mask or not. This article reviews the Mask Sub-Challenge (MSC) of the INTERSPEECH 2020 COMputational PARalinguistics challengE (ComParE), which focused on the following classification task: Given an audio chunk of a speaker, classify whether the speaker is wearing a mask or not. First, we report the collection of the Mask Augsburg Speech Corpus (MASC) and the baseline approaches used to solve the problem, achieving a performance of [Formula: see text] Unweighted Average Recall (UAR). We then summarise the methodologies explored in the submitted and accepted papers that mainly used two common patterns: (i) phonetic-based audio features, or (ii) spectrogram representations of audio combined with Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) typically used in image processing. Most approaches enhance their models by adapting ensembles of different models and attempting to increase the size of the training data using various techniques. We review and discuss the results of the participants of this sub-challenge, where the winner scored a UAR of [Formula: see text]. Moreover, we present the results of fusing the approaches, leading to a UAR of [Formula: see text]. Finally, we present a smartphone app that can be used as a proof of concept demonstration to detect in real-time whether users are wearing a face mask; we also benchmark the run-time of the best models
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