5,711 research outputs found
Ion Pair-Directed Regiocontrol in Transition-Metal Catalysis: A Meta-Selective C-H Borylation of Aromatic Quaternary Ammonium Salts
The use of noncovalent interactions to direct transition-metal catalysis is a potentially powerful yet relatively underexplored strategy, with most investigations thus far focusing on using hydrogen bonds as the controlling element. We have developed an ion pair-directed approach to controlling regioselectivity in the iridium-catalyzed borylation of two classes of aromatic quaternary ammonium salts, leading to versatile meta-borylated products. By examining a range of substituted substrates, this provides complex, functionalized aromatic scaffolds amenable to rapid diversification and more broadly demonstrates the viability of ion-pairing for control of regiochemistry in transition-metal catalysis.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and Pfizer (CASE studentship), AstraZeneca (AZ-Cambridge Ph.D. Program studentship), Royal Society (University Research Fellowship), Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council U.K. National Mass Spectrometry Facility (Swansea University
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Palladium-Catalyzed Cross Coupling of Benzylammonium Salts with Boronic Acids under Mild Conditions
Herein, we give a full account of the development of the palladiumÂ-catalysed cross-coupling of benzylammonium salts with boronic acids. A range of benzylamine-derived quaternary ammonium salts can be coupled with boronic acids under relatively mild conditions. Our optimization has identified ligands that can be used to chemoselectively cross-couple at the ammonium in the presence of chlorides. We demonstrate that intramolecular palladium-catalysed C–H activation is also a viable pathway for the putative benzyl-Pd(II) intermediate obtained upon oxidative addition and have optimised this to obtain fluorene in good yield.We are grateful to the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC, Grant Number EP/N005422/1) and Pfizer for a CASE studentship (H.J.D.), the EPSRC and the Royal Society for a University Research Fellowship (R.J.P.). P.L.T. thanks the Swiss-European Mobility Programme for Traineeships for funding his stay in Cambridge
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meta-Selective C−H Borylation of Benzylamine-, Phenethylamine-, and Phenylpropylamine-Derived Amides Enabled by a Single Anionic Ligand
Selective functionalization at the meta position of arenes remains a significant challenge. In this work, we demonstrate that a single anionic bipyridine ligand bearing a remote sulfonate group enables selective iridium-catalyzed borylation of a range of common amine-containing aromatic molecules at the arene meta position. We propose that this selectivity is the result of a key hydrogen bonding interaction between the substrate and catalyst. The scope of this meta-selective borylation is demonstrated on amides derived from benzylamines, phenethylamines and phenylpropylamines; amine-containing building blocks of great utility in many applications.We are grateful to the EPSRC and Pfizer for a CASE studentship (H.J.D.), the EPSRC (EP/N005422/1, G.R.G.) and the Royal Society for a University Research Fellowship (R.J.P.)
What you need to know about: delirium in older adults in hospital
Delirium is a clinical syndrome characterised by a disturbance of perception, consciousness and/or cognitive function, with an acute onset, fluctuating course and a severe deterioration arising over hours or days. Delirium is usually triggered by a combination of influences including acute illness, surgery, drugs and environmental factors. It is commonly seen in older people presenting to hospital, but can also develop during hospitalisation. There are three types of delirium: hypoactive, hyperactive and mixed. All patients over 65 years old presenting to hospital should be screened for delirium using the ‘4AT’ tool. An alternate method for diagnosing hospital-acquired delirium is described.
This article outlines a 10-stage method for diagnosing, managing and preventing delirium, with emphasis on which areas of the history and examination should be prioritised, what the salient investigations are and both non-pharmacological and pharmacological approaches to preventing and treating delirium. Finally, this article explores which patients require specialist referrals or investigations and how to best follow up patients with delirium
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Ion Pair-Directed C-H Activation on Flexible Ammonium Salts: Meta-Selective Borylation of Quaternized Phenethylamines and Phenylpropylamines
Ion pairing has unexplored potential as a key catalyst-substrate interaction for controlling regioselectivity and site-selectivity in transition metal catalysis, particularly in the area of C-H activation. However, there is a significant perceived challenge that has meant that few have investigated this approach to date – that of the low directionality, which could present an insurmountable challenge if seeking positional selectivity on flexible substrates. Herein, we demonstrate that even flexible substrates with several freely rotatable bonds undergo ion pair-directed CH borylation with good to excellent levels of regiocontrol for the arene meta position. Furthermore, we demonstrate that in specially designed competition substrates, ion pair direction prevails over competing hydrogen bond direction. We anticipate that these findings will inspire the greater incorporation of ion-pairing into site-selective catalytic strategies
The viscosity of a dilute suspension of rough spheres
We consider the flow of a dilute suspension of equisized solid spheres in a viscous fluid. The viscosity of such a suspension is dependent on the volume fraction, c, of solid particles. If the particles are perfectly smooth, then solid spheres will not come into contact, because lubrication forces resist their approach. In this paper, however, we consider particles with microscopic surface asperities such that they are able to make contact. For straining motions we calculate the O(c²) coefficient of the resultant viscosity, due to pairwise interactions. For shearing motions (for which the viscosity is undetermined because of closed orbits on which the probability distribution is unknown) we calculate the c² contribution to the normal stresses N1 and N2. The viscosity in strain is shown to be slightly lower than that for perfectly smooth spheres, though the increase in the O(c) term caused by the increased effective radius due to surface asperities will counteract this decrease. The viscosity decreases with increasing contact friction coefficient. The normal stresses N1 and N2 are zero if the surface roughness height is less than a critical value of 0.000211 times the particle radius, and then become negative as the roughness height is increased above this value. N1 is larger in magnitude than N2
Early diagnosis and treatment of HIV infection: magnitude of benefit on short-term mortality is greatest in older adults.
BACKGROUND: the number and proportion of adults diagnosed with HIV infection aged 50 years and older has risen. This study compares the effect of CD4 counts and anti-retroviral therapy (ART) on mortality rates among adults diagnosed aged ≥50 with those diagnosed at a younger age. METHODS: retrospective cohort analysis of national surveillance reports of HIV-diagnosed adults (15 years and older) in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The relative impacts of age, CD4 count at diagnosis and ART on mortality were determined in Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: among 63,805 adults diagnosed with HIV between 2000 and 2009, 9% (5,683) were aged ≥50 years; older persons were more likely to be white, heterosexual and present with a CD4 count <200 cells/mm(3) (48 versus 32% P < 0.01) and AIDS at diagnosis (19 versus 9%, P < 0.01). One-year mortality was higher in older adults (10 versus 3%, P < 0.01) and especially in those diagnosed with a CD4 <200 cells/mm(3) left untreated (46 versus 15%, P < 0.01). While the relative mortality risk reduction from ART initiation at CD <200 cells/mm(3) was similar in both age groups, the absolute risk difference was higher among older adults (40 versus 12% fewer deaths) such that the number needed to treat older adults to prevent one death was two compared with eight among younger adults. CONCLUSIONS: the magnitude of benefit from ART is greater in older adults than younger adults. Older persons should be considered as a target for HIV testing. Coupled with prompt treatment, earlier diagnosis is likely to reduce substantially deaths in this group
Neural regions associated with gain-loss frequency and average reward in older and younger adults
Research on the biological basis of reinforcement-learning has focused on how brain regions track expected value based on average reward. However, recent work suggests that humans are more attuned to reward frequency. Furthermore, older adults are less likely to use expected values to guide choice than younger adults. This raises the question of whether brain regions assumed to be sensitive to average reward, like the medial and lateral PFC, also track reward frequency, and whether there are age-based differences. Older (60-81 years) and younger (18-30 years) adults performed the Soochow Gambling task, which separates reward frequency from average reward, while undergoing fMRI. Overall, participants preferred options that provided negative net payoffs, but frequent gains. Older adults improved less over time, were more reactive to recent negative outcomes, and showed greater frequency-related activation in several regions, including DLPFC. We also found broader recruitment of prefrontal and parietal regions associated with frequency value and reward prediction errors in older adults, which may indicate compensation. The results suggest greater reliance on average reward for younger adults than older adults
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