1,103 research outputs found

    Pengaruh Oralit Who Terhadap Kadar Natrium Dan Kalium Plasma Pada Anak Diare Akut Dengan Dehidrasi

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    : Acute diarrhea causes loss of large amounts of water and electrolytes especially sodium and potassium, which if not replaced can cause dehydration. In 2006, WHO recommended ORS with osmolarity 245 mmol/l as the administration of acute diarrhea with mild to moderate dehydration. The research objective is to determine the effect of WHO ORS to plasma sodium and potassium levels in children with acute diarrheal dehydration.Pre-experimental study with pre-post test approach absence of a control group, was conducted from November, 2012 until January, 2013 at Pediatric section RSUP.Prof.DR.RD.Kandou Manado. Sample 20 patients acute diarrhea mild to moderate dehydration. Pasien blood samples were taken to measure sodium and potassium plasma level before and after treatment with WHO ORS 75 cc/kg for three hours. Results electrolyte levels when dehydration 60% isonatremia and 85% isokalemia Electrolyte level when rehydration 70% isonatremia and 70% isokalemia. Sodium mean levels when dehydration 136.1±5.2 mmol/l and when rehydration 136.1±3.45 mmol/l with p=0.5. Potassium mean levels when dehydration 3.99±0.78 mmol/l and when rehydration 3.84±0.85 mmol/l with p=0.183. Conclusions: Most electrolyte levels before and after rehydration isonatremia and isokalemia. There is no significant differences in plasma sodium and potassium levels before and after rehydration with WHO ORS. Keywords Dehydration, Diarrhea, Potassium, Sodium, WHO OR

    A Multifaceted Approach to Treatment of Recalcitrant Cutaneous Periorbital Juvenile Xanthogranuloma

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    Purpose: To demonstrate novel treatments for patients with high juvenile xanthogranuloma ( JXG) eyelid lesion burden. Case Report: A 14-year-old girl was referred to the oculoplastic surgery service for management of worsening extensive bilateral eyelid and adnexal lesions in the setting of JXG. The patient underwent intra-lesional steroid injections, serial excisions, and reconstruction with skin grafts. She was subsequently treated with CO2 laser-assisted topical steroid application, which resulted in lesion regression. Conclusion: A novel multimodal approach to treatment of severe periocular JXG, incorporating surgical debulking, skin autograft, CO2 laser, and intra-lesional steroids, can be effective for lesion control

    Primers for Castilleja and their Utility Across Orobanchaceae: II. Single‐copy nuclear loci

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    Premise of the study: We developed primers targeting nuclear loci in Castilleja with the goal of reconstructing the evolutionary history of this challenging clade. These primers were tested across other major clades in Orobanchaceae to assess their broader utility.Methods and Results: We assembled low-coverage genomes for three taxa in Castilleja and developed primer combinations for the single-copy conserved ortholog set (COSII) and the pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) gene family. These primer combinations were designed to take advantage of the Fluidigm microfluidic PCR platform and are well suited for high-throughput sequencing applications. Eighty-seven primers were designed for Castilleja, and 27 were found to have broader utility in Orobanchaceae.Conclusions: These results demonstrate the utility of these primers, not only across Castilleja, but for other lineages within Orobanchaceae as well. This expanded molecular toolkit will be an asset to future phylogenetic studies in Castilleja and throughout Orobanchaceae

    Incongruence in molecular species delimitation schemes: What to do when adding more data is difficult

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    Using multiple, independent approaches to molecular species delimitation is advocated to accommodate limitations and assumptions of a single approach. Incongruence in delimitation schemes is a potential byâ product of employing multiple methods on the same data, and little attention has been paid to its reconciliation. Instead, a particular scheme is prioritized, and/or molecular delimitations are coupled with additional, independent lines of evidence that mitigate incongruence. We advocate that incongruence within a line of evidence should be accounted for before comparing across lines of evidence that can themselves be incongruent. Additionally, it is not uncommon for empiricists working in nonmodel systems to be dataâ limited, generating some concern for the adequacy of available data to address the question of interest. With conservation and management decisions often hinging on the status of species, it seems prudent to understand the capabilities of approaches we use given the data we have. Here, we apply two molecular species delimitation approaches, spedeSTEM and BPP, to the Castilleja ambigua (Orobanchaceae) species complex, a relatively young plant lineage in western North America. Upon finding incongruence in our delimitation, we employed a post hoc simulation study to examine the power of these approaches to delimit species. Given the data we collected, we find that spedeSTEM lacks the power to delimit while BPP is capable, thus allowing us to address incongruence before proceeding in delimitation. We suggest post hoc simulation studies like this compliment empirical delimitation and serve as a means of exploring conflict within a line of evidence and dealing with it appropriately.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144255/1/mec14590_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144255/2/mec14590.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144255/3/mec14590-sup-0001-DataS1-S7.pd

    Primers for Castilleja and their Utility Across Orobanchaceae: I. Chloroplast Primers

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    Premise of the study: Chloroplast primers were developed from genomic data for the taxonomically challenging genus Castilleja. We further tested the broader utility of these primers across Orobanchaceae, identifying a core set of chloroplast primers amplifying across the clade.Methods and Results: Using a combination of three low-coverage Castilleja genomes and sequence data from 12 Castilleja plastomes, 76 primer combinations were specifically designed and tested for Castilleja. The primers targeted the most variable portions of the plastome and were validated for their applicability across the clade. Of these, 38 primer combinations were subsequently evaluated in silico and then validated across other major clades in Orobanchaceae.Conclusions: These results demonstrate the utility of these primers, not only across Castilleja, but for other clades in Orobanchaceae— particularly hemiparasitic lineages—and will contribute to future phylogenetic studies of this important clade of parasitic plants
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