17 research outputs found

    Capacitating Community: The Writing Innovation Symposium

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    The topic of this symposium, capacitating community, invites CLJ readers to consider what makes a community possible. This piece showcases one means, small conferences, via a retrospective on the Writing Innovation Symposium (WIS), a regional event with national scope that has hosted writers and writing educators annually in Milwaukee, WI, since 2018. Through a quilted conversation pieced from hours of small-group discussion, twenty-nine participants across academic and nonacademic ranks, roles, and ranges of experience offer insight into the WIS as well as the nature and value of professional community

    Effective monitoring of freshwater fish

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    Freshwater ecosystems constitute only a small fraction of the planet’s water resources, yet support much of its diversity, with freshwater fish accounting for more species than birds, mammals, amphibians, or reptiles. Fresh waters are, however, particularly vulnerable to anthropogenic impacts, including habitat loss, climate and land use change, nutrient enrichment, and biological invasions. This environmental degradation, combined with unprecedented rates of biodiversity change, highlights the importance of robust and replicable programmes to monitor freshwater fish assemblages. Such monitoring programmes can have diverse aims, including confirming the presence of a single species (e.g. early detection of alien species), tracking changes in the abundance of threatened species, or documenting long-term temporal changes in entire communities. Irrespective of their motivation, monitoring programmes are only fit for purpose if they have clearly articulated aims and collect data that can meet those aims. This review, therefore, highlights the importance of identifying the key aims in monitoring programmes, and outlines the different methods of sampling freshwater fish that can be used to meet these aims. We emphasise that investigators must address issues around sampling design, statistical power, species’ detectability, taxonomy, and ethics in their monitoring programmes. Additionally, programmes must ensure that high-quality monitoring data are properly curated and deposited in repositories that will endure. Through fostering improved practice in freshwater fish monitoring, this review aims to help programmes improve understanding of the processes that shape the Earth's freshwater ecosystems, and help protect these systems in face of rapid environmental change

    Cardiac Hypoxia Imaging: Second-Generation Analogues of 64

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    Myocardial hypoxia is an attractive target for diagnostic and prognostic imaging, but current approaches are insufficiently sensitive for clinical use. The PET tracer copper(II)-diacetyl-bis(N4-methylthiosemicarbazone) (64Cu-ATSM) has promise, but its selectivity and sensitivity could be improved by structural modification. We have therefore evaluated a range of 64Cu-ATSM analogs for imaging hypoxic myocardium. Methods: Isolated rat hearts (n = 5/group) were perfused with normoxic buffer for 30 min and then hypoxic buffer for 45 min within a custom-built triple-γ-detector system to quantify radiotracer infusion, hypoxia-dependent cardiac uptake, and washout. A 1-MBq bolus of each candidate tracer (and 18F-fluoromisonidazole for comparative purposes) was injected into the arterial line during normoxia, and during early and late hypoxia, and their hypoxia selectivity and pharmacokinetics were evaluated. The in vivo pharmacokinetics of promising candidates in healthy rats were then assessed by PET imaging and biodistribution. Results: All tested analogs exhibited hypoxia sensitivity within 5 min. Complexes less lipophilic than 64Cu-ATSM provided significant gains in hypoxic-to-normoxic contrast (14:1 for 64Cu-2,3-butanedione bis(thiosemicarbazone) (ATS), 17:1 for 64Cu-2,3-pentanedione bis(thiosemicarbazone) (CTS), 8:1 for 64Cu-ATSM, P < 0.05). Hypoxic first-pass uptake was 78.2% ± 7.2% for 64Cu-ATS and 70.7% ± 14.5% for 64Cu-CTS, compared with 63.9% ± 11.7% for 64Cu-ATSM. Cardiac retention of 18F-fluoromisonidazole increased from 0.44% ± 0.17% during normoxia to 2.24% ± 0.08% during hypoxia. In vivo, normoxic cardiac retention of 64Cu-CTS was significantly lower than that of 64Cu-ATSM and 64Cu-ATS (0.13% ± 0.02% vs. 0.25% ± 0.04% and 0.24% ± 0.03% injected dose, P < 0.05), with retention of all 3 tracers falling to less than 0.7% injected dose within 6 min. 64Cu-CTS also exhibited lower uptake in liver and lung. Conclusion: 64Cu-ATS and 64Cu-CTS exhibit better cardiac hypoxia selectivity and imaging characteristics than the current lead hypoxia tracers, 64Cu-ATSM and 18F-fluoromisonidazole

    Capacitating Community: The Writing Innovation Symposium

    No full text
    The topic of this symposium, capacitating community, invites CLJ readers to consider what makes a community possible. This piece showcases one means, small conferences, via a retrospective on the Writing Innovation Symposium (WIS), a regional event with national scope that has hosted writers and writing educators annually in Milwaukee, WI, since 2018. Through a quilted conversation pieced from hours of small-group discussion, twenty-nine participants across academic and nonacademic ranks, roles, and ranges of experience offer insight into the WIS as well as the nature and value of professional community
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