530 research outputs found

    Treatment for Condyloma Acuminatum with Graves’ disease

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    SAS Publisher's journals are open access journals.A rare case of external genital condylomata acuminatum with Graves’ disease was reported. The cauliflower warts were observed on glans penis and foreskin of a 40-year-old man, who had typical Graves’ symptoms. After combining treatment of laser, intramuscular injection interferon, and orally administered Acyclovir or Tamciclovir tablets, Amoxicilline capsules or phenoxy mephyl penicillin potassium tablets, vitamin C and vitamin B1 of multiple courses (weeks), the condylomata acuminatum recurred, the warts grew again, and Graves’ disease worsened. However, after integrated treatment of laser, orally administered transfer factor, antibiotics and vitamins of three courses, the patient recovered fully and Graves’ symptoms alleviated. The venereal warts have not recurred within six months

    A new species of Coccus (Hemiptera, Coccoidea, Coccidae) from China

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    A new species of soft scale, Coccus multisetus Wang & Feng, sp. n. is described and illustrated from Yunnan, China. A key to adult females of all Coccus known from China is provided

    DNA Interactions with Ruthenium(ll) Polypyridine Complexes Containing Asymmetric Ligands

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    In an attempt to probe nucleic acid structures, numerous Ru(II) complexes with different ligands have been synthesized and investigated. In this contribution we focus on the DNA-binding properties of ruthenium(II) complexes containing asymmetric ligands that have attracted little attention in the past decades. The influences of the shape and size of the ligand on the binding modes, affinity, enantioselectivities and photocleavage of the complexes to DNA are described

    PINPOINT: Efficient and Effective Resource Isolation for Mobile Security and Privacy

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    Virtualization is frequently used to isolate untrusted processes and control their access to sensitive resources. However, isolation usually carries a price in terms of less resource sharing and reduced inter-process communication. In an open architecture such as Android, this price and its impact on performance, usability, and transparency must be carefully considered. Although previous efforts in developing general-purpose isolation solutions have shown that some of these negative sideeffects can be mitigated, doing so involves overcoming significant design challenges by incorporating numerous additional platform complexities not directly related to improved security. Thus, the general purpose solutions become inefficient and burdensome if the end-user has only specific security goals. In this paper, we present PINPOINT, a resource isolation strategy that forgoes general-purpose solutions in favor of a “building block” approach that addresses specific end-user security goals. PINPOINT embodies the concept of Linux Namespace lightweight isolation, but does so in the Android Framework by guiding the security designer towards isolation points that are contextually close to the resource(s) that need to be isolated. This strategy allows the rest of the Framework to function fully as intended, transparently. We demonstrate our strategy with a case study on Android System Services, and show four applications of PINPOINTed system services functioning with unmodified market apps. Our evaluation results show that practical security and privacy advantages can be gained using our approach, without inducing the problematic side-effects that other general-purpose designs must address
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