402 research outputs found

    Laju Pertumbuhan Udang Windu (Penaeus Monodon), Ikan Bandeng (Chanos Chanos), Dan Rumput Laut (Eucheuma Cottonii, Gracilaria SP) Pada Budidaya Polikultur Dengan Padat Tebar Yang Berbeda Di Desa Sungai Lumpur Kabupaten OKI Sumatera Selatan

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    Pengembangan USAha perikanan di Kabupaten Ogan Komering Ilir sangat prospektif ditinjau dari segi aspek teknis, sosial, ekonomi, maupun sumberdaya yang tersedia. Kabupaten Ogan Komering Ilir khususnyadesa Simpang Tiga Kecamatan Tulung Selapan telah mengembangkan budidaya udang dan bandeng secara polikultur. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui laju pertumbuhan pada Udang Windu (Penaeus monodon), Ikan Bandeng (Chanos-chanos),dan Rumpu Laut Eucheumacotonii,Gracilaria sp) pada budidaya polikultur dengan padat tebar yang berbeda. Metode pengumpulan data yang diterapkan dalam penelitian ini adalah metode eksperimental dengan menggunakan rancangan acak kelompok (RAK) dengan menggunakan uji One Away Anova dengan 2 perlakuan dan 9 pengulangan. Data yang digunakan adalah data yang didapat langsung dari lapangan, dengan pengukuran yang dilakukan 10 hari sekali dan penimbangan berat selama 80 hari kedepan. Lajupertumbuhan berat rata-rata udang windu tertinggi dengan nilai 7,963% pada perlakuan A dan pada perlakuan B dengan nilai 7,667%. Laju pertumbuhan berat rata-rata ikan bandeng lebih tinggi pada perlakuan A dengan nilai 6,867%. Hal ini disebabkan karena dilakukan pemberian pakan, sedangkan perlakuan B dengannilai 6,528%. Laju pertumbuhan panjang udang windu telihat pada Tabel 7, terlihat jelas padat tebar yang tinggi memiliki panjang rata-rata yang lebih tinggi dengannilai 0,288 cm dan diikuti perlakuan B dengan nilai 0,236 cm. Laju pertumbuhan panjang rata-rata ikan bandengpadaTambak A lebih tinggi dengan nilai 0,284 cm dari perlakuan B dengannilai 0,231 cm

    Subject-Specific Ablation of Pathologic Conduction Patterns Beyond the Pulmonary Veins: A Personalised Modelling Approach

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    Improving patient outcomes with ablation of non-paroxysmal AF (PsAF) has proved challenging using a population-based treatment approach due to large interindividual variability in the underlying electroanatomical substrate. Ablation of pathologic conduction patterns outside of pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) has recently shown encouraging results in PsAF patients returning for their first or second retreatment (76% freedom from AF recorded in the RECOVER AF trial). However, the optimal targets and best sequence of ablation lesions are still unknown, and testing different sequences, types, and methods of ablation cannot be performed clinically on a single patient or patient cohort. Considering the predictive potential of computational modelling, a small exploratory subset of patients (N=4) enrolled in the ongoing DISCOVER trial was used to create patient-specific models of left atrial electrophysiology. The subject-specific models displayed a high correlation between simulated targets and clinical targets. AF complexity was highest in all patients prior to therapy. PVI caused a marginal decrease in complexity across the cohort whereas PVI+PCP showed an extensive decrease in the AF complexity across the patients and resulted in AF termination in all patients

    Care of Mechanical Ventilated Patients in General Ward: Nurses Perspective

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    Aim: This study aimed to explore the care of mechanically ventilated patients in general wards from the nurses' perspective.Methodology: A cross-sectional descriptive study using a self administered questionnaire was given to the nurses with a purposive convenient sampling method in adult patients from medical, surgical and isolation units in studied hospital in KSA. Results: 149 participants from general units represents various years of experiences shared their perception on the knowledge and competencies (M= 3.38±.62) the support they received (M= 2.41±.78), their satisfaction and confidence (M= 2.86±.81) and the resources provided (M= 2.44 ±.69) for caring MV patients in their general unit revealed the total mean in each categories were in the state of either neutral or disagree with the items given. The participants admitted that the found themselves are competent in performing suctioning with aseptic technique and ability to identify the possible complications confidently. However the participant concluded that it was inadequate support for them, staffing ratio, equipment and facilities was inappropriate which leads to dissatisfaction and less confident in caring for MV patients.Conclusion: This study concludes that caring for patients in general ward causing dissatisfaction among the staff and place patients in risk. Hospital administration needs to ensure that general ward nurses are trained accordingly, provide adequate staffing ratio, and prepare the physical environment and suitable equipment to care for MV patients in general ward

    Research Priorities on the Role of α-Synuclein in Parkinson\u27s Disease Pathogenesis

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    \ua9 2024 The Author(s). Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.Various forms of Parkinson\u27s disease, including its common sporadic form, are characterized by prominent α-synuclein (αSyn) aggregation in affected brain regions. However, the role of αSyn in the pathogenesis and evolution of the disease remains unclear, despite vast research efforts of more than a quarter century. A better understanding of the role of αSyn, either primary or secondary, is critical for developing disease-modifying therapies. Previous attempts to hone this research have been challenged by experimental limitations, but recent technological advances may facilitate progress. The Scientific Issues Committee of the International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society (MDS) charged a panel of experts in the field to discuss current scientific priorities and identify research strategies with potential for a breakthrough. \ua9 2024 The Author(s). Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society

    Modeling oscillatory Microtubule--Polymerization

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    Polymerization of microtubules is ubiquitous in biological cells and under certain conditions it becomes oscillatory in time. Here simple reaction models are analyzed that capture such oscillations as well as the length distribution of microtubules. We assume reaction conditions that are stationary over many oscillation periods, and it is a Hopf bifurcation that leads to a persistent oscillatory microtubule polymerization in these models. Analytical expressions are derived for the threshold of the bifurcation and the oscillation frequency in terms of reaction rates as well as typical trends of their parameter dependence are presented. Both, a catastrophe rate that depends on the density of {\it guanosine triphosphate} (GTP) liganded tubulin dimers and a delay reaction, such as the depolymerization of shrinking microtubules or the decay of oligomers, support oscillations. For a tubulin dimer concentration below the threshold oscillatory microtubule polymerization occurs transiently on the route to a stationary state, as shown by numerical solutions of the model equations. Close to threshold a so--called amplitude equation is derived and it is shown that the bifurcation to microtubule oscillations is supercritical.Comment: 21 pages and 12 figure

    YB-1 promotes microtubule assembly in vitro through interaction with tubulin and microtubules

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>YB-1 is a major regulator of gene expression in eukaryotic cells. In addition to its role in transcription, YB-1 plays a key role in translation and stabilization of mRNAs.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We show here that YB-1 interacts with tubulin and microtubules and stimulates microtubule assembly <it>in vitro</it>. High resolution imaging via electron and atomic force microscopy revealed that microtubules assembled in the presence of YB-1 exhibited a normal single wall ultrastructure and indicated that YB-1 most probably coats the outer microtubule wall. Furthermore, we found that YB-1 also promotes the assembly of MAPs-tubulin and subtilisin-treated tubulin. Finally, we demonstrated that tubulin interferes with RNA:YB-1 complexes.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These results suggest that YB-1 may regulate microtubule assembly <it>in vivo </it>and that its interaction with tubulin may contribute to the control of mRNA translation.</p

    Prevalence of Mood Disorders and Associated Factors at the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic: Potocol for a Community Survey in La Manouba Governorate, Tunisia

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    Aims: The present survey aims to assess the overall mood disorder prevalence and identify associated socio-demographic and clinical factors in a Tunisian community sample, with special attention to the COVID-19 pandemic. Background: Mood disorders are one of the leading causes of all non-fatal burdens of disease, with depression being at the top of the list. The COVID-19 pandemic may have increased the prevalence of mood disorders, especially in Low and Middle-income countries (LMICs) and in vulnerable populations. Objective: 1/ Assess point and lifetime prevalence of depressive and bipolar disorders as well as subthreshold bipolarity in a representative population sample of La Manouba governorate and assess treatment patterns for these disorders; 2/Study socio-demographic and clinical correlates of mood disorders 3/ Assess the association between mood disorders and quality of life 4/ Study the impact of the COVID-pandemic on the prevalence of mood disorders 5/ Assess coping mechanisms to the COVID-pandemic and whether these mechanisms moderate the appearance of mood disorders or symptoms since the beginning of the pandemic Methods: This is a household cross-sectional observational survey to be conducted in La Manouba Governorate in a sample of 4540 randomly selected individuals aged ≥ 15 years. Data collection will be carried out by trained interviewers with clinical experience, through face-to-face interviews and the use of the computer assisted personal interviewing approach (CAPI). The following assessment tools are administered: Results: Structured clinical Interview for DSM IV-TR (Mood disorder section and Screening questions on Anxiety), Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ), Suicide Behaviors Questionnaire-Revised (SBQ), 12-item Short Form Survey (SF-12), the Brief-COPE, and a questionnaire about a headache. In addition, socio-demographic and clinical data will be collected. Conclusion: This will be one of the very few household surveys in a general population sample to assess mental health problems and COVID-19-related variables since the beginning of the pandemic. Through this research, we aim to obtain an epidemiological profile of mood disorders in Tunisia and an estimation of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their prevalence. Results should contribute to improving mental health care in Tunisia

    Fast spin echo sequences for BOLD functional MRI

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    At higher field strengths, spin echo (SE) functional MRI (fMRI) is an attractive alternative to gradient echo (GE) as the increased weighting towards the microvasculature results in intrinsically better localization of the BOLD signal. Images are free of signal voids but the commonly used echo planar imaging (EPI) sampling scheme causes geometric distortions, and T2* effects often contribute considerably to the signal changes measured upon brain activation. Multiply refocused SE sequences such as fast spin echo (FSE) are essentially artifact free but their application to fast fMRI is usually hindered due to high energy deposition, and long sampling times. In the work presented here, a combination of parallel imaging and partial Fourier acquisition is used to shorten FSE acquisition times to near those of conventional SE-EPI, permitting sampling of eight slices (matrix 64  ×  64) per second. Signal acquisition is preceded by a preparation experiment that aims at increasing the relative contribution of extravascular dynamic averaging to the BOLD signal. Comparisons are made with conventional SE-EPI using a visual stimulation paradigm. While the observed signal changes are approximately 30% lower, most likely due to the absence of T2* contamination, activation size and t-scores are comparable for both methods, suggesting that HASTE fMRI is a viable alternative, particularly if distortion free images are required. Our data also indicate that the BOLD post-stimulus undershoot is most probably attributable to persistent elevated oxygen metabolism rather than to delayed vascular compliance

    Long-range epigenetic silencing at 2q14.2 affects most human colorectal cancers and may have application as a non-invasive biomarker of disease

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    Large chromosomal regions can be suppressed in cancer cells as denoted by hypermethylation of neighbouring CpG islands and downregulation of most genes within the region. We have analysed the extent and prevalence of long-range epigenetic silencing at 2q14.2 (the first and best characterised example of coordinated epigenetic remodelling) and investigated its possible applicability as a non-invasive diagnostic marker of human colorectal cancer using different approaches and biological samples. Hypermethylation of at least one of the CpG islands analysed (EN1, SCTR, INHBB) occurred in most carcinomas (90%), with EN1 methylated in 73 and 40% of carcinomas and adenomas, respectively. Gene suppression was a common phenomenon in all the tumours analysed and affected both methylated and unmethylated genes. Detection of methylated EN1 using bisulfite treatment and melting curve (MC) analysis from stool DNA in patients and controls resulted in a predictive capacity of, 44% sensitivity in positive patients (27% of overall sensitivity) and 97% specificity. We conclude that epigenetic suppression along 2q14.2 is common to most colorectal cancers and the presence of a methylated EN1 CpG island in stool DNA might be used as biomarker of neoplastic disease
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