64 research outputs found

    Emerging applications of fluorescence spectroscopy in medical microbiology field

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    There are many diagnostic techniques and methods available for diagnosis of medically important microorganisms like bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites. But, almost all these techniques and methods have some limitations or inconvenience. Most of these techniques are laborious, time consuming and with chances of false positive or false negative results. It warrants the need of a diagnostic technique which can overcome these limitations and problems. At present, there is emerging trend to use Fluorescence spectroscopy as a diagnostic as well as research tool in many fields of medical sciences. Here, we will critically discuss research studies which propose that Fluorescence spectroscopy may be an excellent diagnostic as well as excellent research tool in medical microbiology field with high sensitivity and specificity

    Solving large 0–1 multidimensional knapsack problems by a new simplified binary artificial fish swarm algorithm

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    The artificial fish swarm algorithm has recently been emerged in continuous global optimization. It uses points of a population in space to identify the position of fish in the school. Many real-world optimization problems are described by 0-1 multidimensional knapsack problems that are NP-hard. In the last decades several exact as well as heuristic methods have been proposed for solving these problems. In this paper, a new simpli ed binary version of the artificial fish swarm algorithm is presented, where a point/ fish is represented by a binary string of 0/1 bits. Trial points are created by using crossover and mutation in the different fi sh behavior that are randomly selected by using two user de ned probability values. In order to make the points feasible the presented algorithm uses a random heuristic drop item procedure followed by an add item procedure aiming to increase the profit throughout the adding of more items in the knapsack. A cyclic reinitialization of 50% of the population, and a simple local search that allows the progress of a small percentage of points towards optimality and after that refines the best point in the population greatly improve the quality of the solutions. The presented method is tested on a set of benchmark instances and a comparison with other methods available in literature is shown. The comparison shows that the proposed method can be an alternative method for solving these problems.The authors wish to thank three anonymous referees for their comments and valuable suggestions to improve the paper. The first author acknowledges Ciˆencia 2007 of FCT (Foundation for Science and Technology) Portugal for the fellowship grant C2007-UMINHO-ALGORITMI-04. Financial support from FEDER COMPETE (Operational Programme Thematic Factors of Competitiveness) and FCT under project FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-022674 is also acknowledged

    3H-Desmethylphalloin

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    Durch Reduktion der Ketogruppe des Ketophalloidins (1) mit 3H-haltigen NaBH4 wird ein radioaktives Desmethylphalloin (2) erhalten, das etwa dieselbe Toxizität wie Phalloidin besitzt. Infolge der hohen spezif. Aktivität (220 μCi/mg) entsteht beim Lagern aus 2 ein chromatographisch an Sephadex G-25 oder LH-20 in Wasser abtrennbares Zersetzungsprodukt, dessen UV-Absorptionskurve auf das Vorliegen einer Sulfoxid-Struktur hindeutet

    Suche nach einem Metaboliten bei Vergiftung mit Desmethylphalloin (DMP)

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    Various observations cited at the beginning of this paper and in the Discussion suggested that phalloidine, a poisonous constituent of the green mushroom Amanita phalloides, would not be toxic by itself, but would be rendered toxic previously in the liver. Using a tritiated toxic derivative of phalloidine ([3H]desmethylphalloin) we found that: (a) in rats, 60% of the administered substance are excreted unchanged in the urine within the first day. A second radioactive substance of low concentration, moving more slowly in paper chromatography, turned out as a product of the self-degradation of [3H]desmethylphalloin; (b) respectively 98% and 99,9% of the radioactivity were extracted with methanol from homogenates of livers of rats or mice which had received [3H]desmethylphalloin 1 to 2 hours before. Aqueous homogenates of liver of poisened rats also contained radioactivity firmly bound to a high molecular weight substance, as shown by gel chromatography. The radioactive substance was totally removed from the carrier, presumably ribosomal material, by adding methanol, and was identified as [3H]desmethylphalloin; (c) [3H]desmethylphalloin was not metabolized on incubation with oxygen and rat liver ribosomes in a NADPH-regenerating system. A radioactive substance extracted from liver microsomes of a poisoned rat also proved to be original toxin. As a result of these experiments it can be concluded that [3H]desmethylphalloin and most probably also phalloidine are not metabolized in the livers of rats and mice

    Preoperative Phase Angle as a Risk Indicator in Cardiac Surgery—A Prospective Observational Study

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    Background: The phase angle (PhA) can be used for prognostic assessments in critically ill patients. This study describes the perioperative course of PhA and associated risk indicators in a cohort of elective cardiac surgical patients. Methods: The PhA was measured in 168 patients once daily until postoperative day (POD) seven. Patients were split into two groups depending on their median preoperative PhA and analyzed for several clinical outcomes; logistic regression models were used. Results: The PhA decreased from preoperative (6.1° ± 1.9°) to a nadir on POD 2 (3.5° ± 2.5°, mean difference −2.6° (95% CI, −3.0°; −2.1°; p < 0.0001)). Patients with lower preoperative PhA were older (71.0 ± 9.1 vs. 60.9 ± 12.0 years; p < 0.0001) and frailer (3.1 ± 1.3 vs. 2.3 ± 1.1; p < 0.0001), needed more fluids (8388 ± 3168 vs. 7417 ± 2459 mL, p = 0.0287), and stayed longer in the ICU (3.7 ± 4.5 vs. 2.6 ± 3.8 days, p = 0.0182). Preoperative PhA was independently influenced by frailty (OR 0.77; 95% CI 0.61; 0.98; p = 0.0344) and cardiac function (OR 1.85; 95%CI 1.07; 3.19; p = 0.028), whereas the postoperative PhA decline was independently influenced by higher fluid balances (OR 0.86; 95% CI 0.75; 0.99; p = 0.0371) and longer cardiopulmonary bypass times (OR 0.99; 95% CI 0.98; 0.99; p = 0.0344). Conclusion: Perioperative PhA measurement is an easy-to-use bedside method that may critically influence risk evaluation for the outcome of cardiac surgery patients

    Decoding of interleaved alternant codes

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