9,137 research outputs found

    Antipyretic and Analgesic Effects of the Aqueous Extract of the Fruit Pulp of Hunteria umbellata K Schum (Apocynaceae)

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    Purpose: The aqueous fruit pulp extract of Hunteria umbellata K. Schum is used traditionally for the treatment of various fevers. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the extract for antipyretic and analgesic activity, and determine its probable mechanism of action.Methods: Pyrexia was induced in rabbits by intravenous injection of 105 CFU of E. coli/kg. Rectal temperature was monitored at 30, 60, and 90 min post-administration of 250 and 500 mg/kg of the extract. The analgesic effect of the extract was evaluated using acetic acid-induced mouse writhing test.  The extract was tested for antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pnuemoniae, Escherichia coli, and Psuedomonas aeruginosa using agar diffusion method. Phytochemical screening of the plant extract was also carried out.Results: Phytochemical screening revealed the presence of simple sugars, saponins, flavonoids, alkaloids and steroidal compounds. The extract (250, 500 mg/kg) and aspirin produced comparable antipyretic effects up to 60 min. The extract did not inhibit the growth of the microorganisms butsignificantly reduced the number of writhes in mice at 250 and 500 mg/kg with results comparable to ASA.Conclusion: The extract possesses antipyretic and analgesic activities which validate its use in the treatment of pains and fevers

    Comparison of Multi-Channel Nonlinear Equalization using Inverse Volterra Series versus Digital Backpropagation in 400 Gb/s Coherent Superchannel

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    We investigate the performance of a Volterra-based nonlinear equalizer and the digitalbackpropagation (DBP) method in multi-channel nonlinear equalization after 20×80 km transmission distance. The Volterra equalizer, which operates with single-step-per-span, performs similarly compared to DBP with 40 steps-per-span

    Extramural venous invasion is a potential imaging predictive biomarker of neoadjuvant treatment in rectal cancer

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    BACKGROUND: Extramural venous invasion (EMVI) is a poor prognostic factor in rectal cancer and identified on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (mrEMVI). The clinical relevance of improvement in mrEMVI following neoadjuvant therapy is unknown. This study aimed to demonstrate that regression of mrEMVI following neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT) results in improved outcomes and mrEMVI can be used as an imaging biomarker METHODS: Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data was conducted examining the staging and post-treatment MRIs of patients who had presented with EMVI-positive rectal cancer. All patients had undergone neoadjuvant CRT and curative surgery. Changes in mrEMVI were graded with a new MRI-based TRG scale–mr-vTRG; and related to disease-free survival (DFS). The study fulfilled Reporting Recommendations for Tumour Marker Prognostic Studies criteria for biomarkers. RESULTS: Sixty-two patients were included. Thirty-five patients showed more than 50% fibrosis of mrEMVI (mr-vTRG 1-3); 3-year DFS 87.8% and 9% recurrence. Twenty-seven patients showed less than 50% fibrosis (mr-vTRG 4-5); 3-year DFS 45.8% with 44% recurrence – P<0.0001. On multivariate Cox-regression, only mr-vTRG 4-5 increased risk of disease recurrence – HR=5.748. CONCLUSION: Patients in whom there has been a significant response of EMVI to CRT show improved DFS. Those patients with poor response should be considered for intensive treatment. As an imaging biomarker in rectal cancer, mrEMVI can be used

    Evaluation of herbal ointment formulation of Milicia excelsa (Welw) C.C berg for wound healing

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    The wound healing effect of Milicia excelsa ointment was evaluated in three groups of rats using the excision wound model. Also the antibacterial effect of M. excelsa extract on Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus was investigated. The result of the study showed that the ointment of M. excelsa significantly enhanced wound contraction and epithelialization. The epithelialization time in the M. excelsa ointment treated group was significantly shorter than time of epithelialization in the base treated group. On day 7, wound sections of rats treated with M. excelsa ointment showed abundant neutrophils, few macrophages and few fibroblasts while in the base treated rats, abundant neutrophils, few macrophages and few fibroblasts were seen. By day 14, wound sections of M. excelsa ointment treated rats showed abundant fibroblasts, mild collagenization, moderate macrophages and vascularization whereas moderate neutrophils, few macrophages and few fibroblasts were seen in the sections of base treated rats. M. excelsa extract at 100, 50, 25 and 12.5 mg/ml inhibited the growth of S. aureus but not P. aeruginosa. In this study, daily application of M. excelsa ointment enhanced wound contraction, epithelialization and fibroplasia. These results provide scientific evidence showing the efficacy of M. excelsa leaves in wound healing.Keywords: Milicia excelsa, ointment, excision wounds, contraction, epithelializationAfrican Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 12(21), pp. 3351-335

    First report on Meloidogyne chitwoodi hatching inhibition activity of essential oils and essential oils fractions

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    The Columbia root-knot nematode (CRKN), Meloidogyne chitwoodi, is an EPPO A2 type quarantine pest since 1998. This nematode causes severe damage in economically important crops such as potato and tomato, making agricultural products unacceptable for the fresh market and food processing. Commonly used nematicidal synthetic chemicals are often environmentally unsafe. Essential oils (EOs) may constitute safer alternatives against RKN. EOs, isolated from 56 plant samples, were tested against CRKN hatching, in direct contact bioassays. Some of the most successful EOs were fractionated and the hydrocarbon molecules (HM) and oxygen-containing molecules (OCM) fractions tested separately. 24 EOs displayed very strong hatching inhibitions (≥90 %) at 2 µL mL−1 and were further tested at lower concentrations. Dysphaniaambrosioides, Filipendula ulmaria, Ruta graveolens, Satureja montana and Thymbra capitata EOs revealed the lowest EC50 values (<0.15 µL mL−1). The main compounds of these EOs, namely 2-undecanone, ascaridol, carvacrol, isoascaridol, methyl salicylate, p-cymene and/or γ-terpinene, were putatively considered responsible for CRKN hatching inhibition. S. montana and T. capitata OCM fractions showed hatching inhibitions higher than HM fractions. The comparison of EO and corresponding fractions EC50 values suggests interactions between OCM and HM fractions against CRKN hatching. These species EOs showed to be potential environmentally friendly CRKN hatching inhibitors; nonetheless, bioactivity should be considered globally, since its HM and OCM fractions may contribute, diversely, to the full anti-hatching activity

    Deuteronomy and Numbers

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    Four light isotopes - D, ^3He, ^4He and ^7Li - were produced by nuclear reactions a few seconds after the big bang. New measurements of ^3He in the ISM by Gloeckler and Geiss and of deuterium in high redshift hydrogen clouds by Tytler and his collaborators provide further confirmation of big-bang nucleosynthesis and new insight about the density of ordinary matter (baryons).Comment: 6 pages LaTeX with 1 eps Figur

    A DIRECT METHOD FOR BLOCH WAVE EXCITATION BY SCATTERING AT THE EDGE OF A LATTICE. PART I: POINT SCATTERER PROBLEM

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    A new method for determining the reflection and transmission properties of lattices is developed. The method uses multipole expansions, and certain transformations of the algebraic equation systems that appear when boundary conditions are applied. It is more direct, and much simpler, than earlier approaches based on integral transforms and the Wiener–Hopf technique. The method is demonstrated for the case of a semi-infinite lattice of sound soft acoustic point scatterers, but can easily be generalised to account for finite size effects, and more general boundary conditions

    Algorithmic decidability of Engel's property for automaton groups

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    We consider decidability problems associated with Engel's identity ([⋯[[x,y],y],…,y]=1[\cdots[[x,y],y],\dots,y]=1 for a long enough commutator sequence) in groups generated by an automaton. We give a partial algorithm that decides, given x,yx,y, whether an Engel identity is satisfied. It succeeds, importantly, in proving that Grigorchuk's 22-group is not Engel. We consider next the problem of recognizing Engel elements, namely elements yy such that the map x↦[x,y]x\mapsto[x,y] attracts to {1}\{1\}. Although this problem seems intractable in general, we prove that it is decidable for Grigorchuk's group: Engel elements are precisely those of order at most 22. Our computations were implemented using the package FR within the computer algebra system GAP
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