21 research outputs found
Friendly Fire and the Sustained Attention to Response Task
Objective: We investigated whether losses of inhibitory control could be responsible for some friendly-fire incidents.
Background: Several factors are commonly cited to explain friendly-fire incidents, but failure of inhibitory control has not yet been explored. The Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) could be a valid model for inhibition failures in some combat scenarios.
Method: Participants completed small-arms simulations using near infrared emitter guns, confronting research assistants acting as friends or foes. In Experiment 1, seven participants completed three conditions with three different proportions of foes (high, medium, low). In Experiment 2, 13 participants completed high-foe (high-go) and low-foe (low-go) versions of a small-arms simulation as well as comparative computer tasks.
Results: Participants made more friendly-fire errors (errors of commission) when foe proportion was high. A speed–accuracy trade-off was apparent, with participants who were faster to fire on foes also more likely to accidentally shoot friends. When foe proportion was higher, response times to foe stimuli were faster, and subjective workload ratings were higher.
Conclusion: Failures of inhibitory control may be responsible for some friendly-fire incidents and the SART could be a suitable empirical model for some battlefield environments. The effect appears to be disproportionately greater at higher foe proportions. The exact nature of performance reductions associated with high-foe proportions requires further investigation.
Application: The SART may be a useful model of friendly-fire scenarios. It could be used to indicate a soldier’s likelihood to commit a friendly-fire mistake and to identify high-risk environments
Anti-mycobacterium tuberculosis activity of polyherbal medicines used for the treatment of tuberculosis in Eastern Cape, South Africa.
Background: The emergence of drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium
tuberculosis has become a global public health problem. Polyherbal
medicines offer great hope for developing alternative drugs for the
treatment of tuberculosis. Objective: To evaluate the anti-tubercular
activity of polyherbal medicines used for the treatment of
tuberculosis. Methods: The remedies were screened against Mycobacterium
tuberculosis H37Rv using Middlebrook 7H9 media and MGIT BACTEC 960
system. They were liquid preparations from King Williams Town site A
(KWTa), King Williams Town site B (KWTb), King Williams Town site C
(KWTc), Hogsback first site (HBfs), Hogsback second site (HBss),
Hogsback third site (HBts), East London (EL), Alice (AL) and Fort
Beaufort (FB). Results: The susceptibility testing revealed that all
the remedies contain anti-tubercular activity with KWTa, KWTb, KWTc,
HBfs, HBts, AL and FB exhibiting more activity at a concentration below
25 \ub5l/ml. Furthermore, MIC values exhibited inhibitory activity
with the most active remedies from KWTa, HBfs and HBts at 1.562
\ub5g/ml. However, isoniazid showed more inhibitory activity against
M. tuberculosis at 0.05 \ub5g/ml when compare to the polyherbal
remedies. Conclusion: This study has indicated that these remedies
could be potential sources of new anti-mycobacterial agents against M.
tuberculosis. However, the activity of these preparations and their
active principles still require in vivo study in order to assess their
future as new anti-tuberculosis agents
Anti-mycobacterium tuberculosis activity of polyherbal medicines used for the treatment of tuberculosis in Eastern Cape, South Africa
CITATION: amewo, E. B., et al. 2017. Anti-mycobacterium tuberculosis activity of polyherbal medicines used for the treatment of tuberculosis in Eastern Cape, South Africa. African Health Sciences, 17(3): 780-789, doi:10.4314/ahs.v17i3.21.The original publication is available at https://www.ajol.info/index.php/ahs/indexBackground: The emergence of drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis has become a global public health problem.
Polyherbal medicines offer great hope for developing alternative drugs for the treatment of tuberculosis.
Objective: To evaluate the anti-tubercular activity of polyherbal medicines used for the treatment of tuberculosis.
Methods: The remedies were screened against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv using Middlebrook 7H9 media and MGIT BACTEC
960 system. They were liquid preparations from King Williams Town site A (KWTa), King Williams Town site B (KWTb),
King Williams Town site C (KWTc), Hogsback first site (HBfs), Hogsback second site (HBss), Hogsback third site (HBts), East
London (EL), Alice (AL) and Fort Beaufort (FB).
Results: The susceptibility testing revealed that all the remedies contain anti-tubercular activity with KWTa, KWTb, KWTc,
HBfs, HBts, AL and FB exhibiting more activity at a concentration below 25 μl/ml. Furthermore, MIC values exhibited inhibitory
activity with the most active remedies from KWTa, HBfs and HBts at 1.562 μg/ml. However, isoniazid showed more
inhibitory activity against M. tuberculosis at 0.05 μg/ml when compare to the polyherbal remedies.
Conclusion: This study has indicated that these remedies could be potential sources of new anti-mycobacterial agents against
M. tuberculosis. However, the activity of these preparations and their active principles still require in vivo study in order to assess
their future as new anti-tuberculosis agents.https://www.ajol.info/index.php/ahs/article/view/161253Publishers' Versio