4,973 research outputs found
Balancing selection response and inbreeding by including predicted stabilised genetic contributions in selection decisions
International audienc
Recommended from our members
Intentional and unintentional non-adherence in community dwelling people with type 2 diabetes: the effect of varying numbers of medicines
People with type 2 diabetes are often prescribed multiple medicines which can be difficult to manage. Nonadherence to medicines can be intentional (e.g. active decision) or unintentional (e.g. forgetting). The objective of this study was to measure intentional and unintentional non-adherence to differing numbers of medicines prescribed in type 2 diabetes. A cross sectional survey using the Morisky medication adherence scale (with intentional and unintentional non-adherence subscales) was completed by 480 people prescribed oral antidiabetic drugs (OADs), antihypertensive agents and statins. A within-subject analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed that intentional non-adherence did not vary between OADs, anti-hypertensives and statins. Intentional non-adherence to statins significantly increased when the number of medicines prescribed was included as a between-subjects variable (p<0.05). Another within-subject ANOVA on unintentional non-adherence found a significant difference between OADs, anti-hypertensives and statins; unintentional non-adherence to OADs was significantly higher (p<0.05). When the number of medicines was added as a between-subject variable unintentional non-adherence was associated with higher numbers of medicines. This study shows the difference between intentional and unintentional non-adherence behaviours, and the effect that varying numbers of medicines can have on these behaviours
Lifetime and predissociation yield of N-14(2) b (1)Pi(u)(v=1) revisited: Effects of rotation
The lifetime and predissociation yield o
A comparison between direct and pan-derived measurements of the isotopic composition of atmospheric waters
The stable isotopes of water can be used to examine and quantify the contribution to atmospheric moisture from evaporation, transpiration and surface-waters. However, obtaining extensive and ongoing time series data of the isotopic composition of atmospheric moisture has been difficult. Presented here is an alternate method using an isotope mass balance approach to estimate the isotopic composition of
atmospheric moisture using water samples collected from class A evaporation pans. While this evaporation pan method does not provide the high-resolution time series data that can be obtained from an isotope
analyser taking in-situ measurements of atmospheric moisture, the method is relatively simple and inexpensive to set-up and maintain.
In this preliminary investigation, a comparison between the isotopic composition of atmospheric moisture
estimated from the evaporation pan method and in-situ measurements of the isotopic composition of water vapour using a Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectrometer deployed at the Lucas Heights weather station in New South Wales is undertaken. Through comparison of the two series of hydrogen isotope data, an assessment of the evaporation pan method can be made. Although there was some agreement between the isotopic composition of vapour measured by the FTIR spectrometer and the estimation for the atmospheric moisture (R2 = 0.49), the comparison is sensitive to climatic parameters that vary significantly within a 24-hour period such as the relative humidity of air and the air and pan temperatures. Inverting the model to use
the FTIR spectrometer measurements at an hourly resolution improved the performance of the model (R2 =0.57). However, this also revealed that the model produced more depleted values of the evaporation pan
water isotopes than those observed. In contrast, there was a variable relationship between the modelled and
observed isotope values of atmospheric moisture. These conflicting results will need to be resolved before the evaporation pan method is broadly applied in isotope hydrology. © 2011 The Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand Inc
Impacts of Co-Solvent Flushing on Microbial Populations Capable of Degrading Trichloroethylene
With increased application of co-solvent flushing technologies for removal of nonaqueous phase liquids from groundwater aquifers, concern over the effects of the solvent on native microorganisms and their ability to degrade residual contaminant has also arisen. This study assessed the impact of ethanol flushing on the numbers and activity potentials of trichloroethylene (TCE)-degrading microbial populations present in aquifer soils taken immediately after and 2 years after ethanol flushing of a former dry cleaners site. Polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed soluble methane monooxygenase genes in methanotrophic enrichments, and 16S rRNA analysis identified Methylocystis parvus with 98% similarity, further indicating the presence of a type II methanotroph. Dissimilatory sulfite reductase genes in sulfate-reducing enrichments prepared were also observed. Ethanol flushing was simulated in columns packed with uncontaminated soils from the dry cleaners site that were dosed with TCE at concentrations observed in the field; after flushing, the columns were subjected to a continuous flow of 500 pore volumes of groundwater per week. Total acridine orange direct cell counts of the flushed and nonflushed soils decreased over the 15-week testing period, but after 5 weeks, the flushed soils maintained higher cell counts than the nonflushed soils. Inhibition of methanogenesis by sulfate reduction was observed in all column soils, as was increasing removal of total methane by soils incubated under methanotrophic conditions. These results showed that impacts of ethanol were not as severe as anticipated and imply that ethanol may mitigate the toxicity of TCE to the microorganisms
Recommended from our members
The effects of severe myopia on the properties of sampling units in peripheral retina
Significance: Poor peripheral visual acuity in myopia may reflect, in part, photoreceptor misalignment with the exit pupil of the eye. We speculate that if such misalignment causes sufficient visual deprivation and/or disrupts retinal feedback processes, it may influence eye growth itself. Purpose: It is known that myopic eyes have a reduced peripheral resolution acuity relative to emmetropic eyes, though it remains unclear how mechanical stretching of the retina in myopia impacts on peripheral visual performance. Our aim was to determine how retinal stretching affects the properties of sampling units in peripheral vision. Methods: Three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging provided a depiction in vivo of ocular shape, allowing the inter-eye ratio of retinal image surface areas and the relative alignment of surfaces to be determined in our observer, who was unique in having severe myopia in the right eye (~21D) but only modest myopia in the left (~3D). Visual performance was assessed for the detection and direction discrimination of drifting sinusoids positioned 40º in the temporal retina. Applying the sampling theorem to our measures, we estimated the density and cut-off frequency of the underlying sampling units. Results: The retinal image surface area of the right eye was 40% larger than that of the left, and was rotated 8.9º anticlockwise relative to the left eye’s image surface. In agreement with a linear stretch model of myopia, the sampling density of the right eye was reduced by approximately the same ratio as that predicted from the inter-eye MRI data, namely 1.18. However, the cut-off frequency (cycles/mm) of the right eye was approximately half that of the left, a reduction that cannot be explained solely by a linear areal expansion of retinal sampling units. Conclusions: Poor peripheral acuity in severe myopia may be caused, at least in part, by receptoral misalignment with the exit pupil
Changes in iron-regulatory gene expression occur in human cell culture models of Parkinson's disease.
BACKGROUND: Neuronal iron accumulation is thought to be relevant to the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD), although the mechanism remains elusive. We hypothesized that neuronal iron uptake may be stimulated by functional mitochondrial iron deficiency. OBJECTIVE: To determine firstly whether the mitochondrial toxin, 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium iodide (MPP(+)), results in upregulation of iron-import proteins and transporters of iron into the mitochondria, and secondly whether similar changes in expression are induced by toxins with different mechanisms of action. METHODS: We used quantitative PCR and Western blotting to investigate expression of the iron importers, divalent metal transporter, transferrin receptor 1 and 2 (TfR1 and TfR2) and mitoferrin-2 and the iron exporter ferroportin in differentiated SH-SY5Y cells exposed to three different toxins relevant to PD, MPP(+), paraquat (a free radical generator) and lactacystin (an inhibitor of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS)). RESULTS: MPP(+) resulted in increased mRNA and protein levels of genes involved in cellular iron import and transport into the mitochondria. Similar changes occurred following exposure to paraquat, another inducer of oxidative stress. Lactacystin also resulted in increased TfR1 mRNA levels, although the other changes were not found. CONCLUSION: Our results support the hypothesis of a functional mitochondrial iron deficit driving neuronal iron uptake but also suggest that differences exist in neuronal iron handling induced by different toxins
- …