280 research outputs found
Physico-chemical characterization of nano-emulsions in cosmetic matrix enriched on omega-3
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Nano-emulsions, as non-equilibrium systems, present characteristics and properties which depend not only on composition but also on their method of preparation. To obtain better penetration, nanocosmeceuticals use nano-sized systems for the delivery of active ingredients to targeted cells. In this work, nano-emulsions composed of miglyol, rapeseed oil and salmon oil were developed as a cosmetic matrix. Measurements of different physico-chemical properties of nano-emulsions were taken according to size, electrophoretic mobility, conductivity, viscosity, turbidity, cristallization and melting point. The RHLB was calculated for each formulation in order to achieve maximum stability.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Both tween 80 and soya lecithin were found to stabilize formulations. The results showed that rapeseed oil and miglyol are the predominant parameters for determining the expression of results concerning the characterization of emulsion. Based on the mixture design, we achieved the optimal point using the following formulation: 56.5% rapessed oil, 35.5% miglyol, and 8% salmon oil. We considered this formulation to be the best as a nanocosmeceutical product due to the small size, good turbidity, and average HLB.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This study demonstrates the influence of formulation on the physico-chemical properties of each nano-emulsion obtained by the mixture design.</p
Irvingia gabonensis fat: nutritional properties and effect of increasing amounts on the growth and lipid metabolism of young rats wistar sp
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Dietary saturated fatty acids (SFAs) are generally considered to increase plasma cholesterol. It has also been claimed that they increase cardio-vascular disease, although the claim that some of SFAs can increase HDL-cholesterol is poorly documented. <it>Irvingia gabonensis </it>kernels after being dried and crushed they are generally used to prepare a sticky and aromatic soup very much consumed in Cameroun and West Africa countries. This study was therefore aimed at evaluating the effects of dika nut fat on the growing and lipids metabolism of young rats.</p> <p>Method</p> <p>For The nutritional evaluation related to the performances of growth and the analysis of increasing amounts of dika nut fat (0; 5.1; 7.34 and 13.48%) in young rats of <it>wistar sp</it>. The animals were taken individually out of metabolic cage for each ration 5 repetitions per sex (males and females) were carried out.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The results obtained during the 3 weeks of treatment shows that the performances of consumption were positive. A highly significant increase (P < 0,01) of serum cholesterol and triglycerides in the high dose fat groups (13,48%) of dika fat were observed compared to control groups. However, this rise of cholesterol is due to that of HDL-cholesterol without any change in the quantity of LDL-Receptor. In parallel, the weight of the vital organ did not vary much compared to control, except for males where we observed a significantly reduction (P < 0,01) in the weight of the liver for the three diet tests.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This study shows that the increasing amount of dika nut fat alter significantly cholesterol and triglyceride at high dose diet, but also increase HDL-cholesterol.</p
Quality of life, patient preferences, and implant survival and success of tapered implant-retained mandibular overdentures as a function of the attachment system
Funding Information: The author would like to thank Leticia Grize from the University of Basel (Switzerland) for the statistical analysis, Novonexile AG (Switzerland) for writing assistance and editorial support in preparing the manuscript, and Dr. med. Dent. Pedro Gonçalves for assisting in the planning of the study Funding Information: The study was supported by Institut Straumann AG, Basel, Switzerland. Publisher Copyright: © 2022. Korean Academy of PeriodontologyPurpose: A novel attachment system for implant-retained overdentures (IRODs) with novel material combinations for improved mechanical resilience and prosthodontic success (Novaloc) has been recently introduced as an alternative to an existing system (Locator). This study investigated whether differences between the Novaloc and Locator attachment systems translate into differences in implant survival, implant success, and patient-centered outcomes when applied in a real-world in-practice comparative setting in patients restored with mandibular IRODs supported by 2 interforaminal implants (2-IRODs). Methods: This prospective, intra-subject crossover comparison compared 20 patients who received 2 intra-foraminal bone level tapered implants restored with full acrylic overdentures using either the Locator or Novaloc attachment system. After 6 months of function, the attachment in the corresponding dentures was switched, and the definitive attachment system type was delivered based on the patient's preference after 12 months. For the definitive attachment system, implant survival was evaluated after 24 months. The primary outcomes of this study were oral health-related quality of life and patient preferences related to prosthetic and implant survival. Secondary outcomes included implant survival rate and success, prosthetic survival, perceived general health, and patient satisfaction. Results: Patient-centered outcomes and patient preferences between attachment systems were comparable, with relatively high overall patient satisfaction levels for both attachment systems. No difference in the prosthetic survival rate between study groups was detected. The implant survival rate over the follow-up period after 24 months in both groups was 100%. Conclusions: The results of this in-practice comparison indicate that both attachment systems represent comparable candidates for the prosthodontic retention of 2-IRODs. Both systems showed high rates of patient satisfaction and implant survival.publishersversionPeer reviewe
Morphological and Physical Analysis of Natural Phospholipids-Based Biomembranes
Background: Liposomes are currently an important part of biological, pharmaceutical, medical and nutritional research, as they are considered to be among the most effective carriers for the introduction of various types of bioactive agents into target cells. Scope of Review In this work, we study the lipid organization and mechanical properties of biomembranes made of marine and plant phospholipids. Membranes based on phospholipids extracted from rapeseed and salmon are studied in the form of liposome and as supported lipid bilayer. Dioleylphosphatidylcholine (DOPC) and dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) are used as references to determine the lipid organization of marine and plant phospholipid based membranes. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging and force spectroscopy measurements are performed to investigate the membranes' topography at the micrometer scale and to determine their mechanical properties. Major Conclusions The mechanical properties of the membranes are correlated to the fatty acid composition, the morphology, the electrophoretic mobility and the membrane fluidity. Thus, soft and homogeneous mechanical properties are evidenced for salmon phospholipids membrane containing various polyunsaturated fatty acids. Besides, phase segregation in rapeseed membrane and more important mechanical properties were emphasized for this type of membranes by contrast to the marine phospholipids based membranes. General Significance This paper provides new information on the nanomechanical and morphological properties of membrane in form of liposome by AFM. The originality of this work is to characterize the physico-chemical properties of the nanoliposome from the natural sources containing various fatty acids and polar head
The Positive Role of Curcumin-Loaded Salmon Nanoliposomes on the Culture of Primary Cortical Neurons
Curcumin (diferuloylmethane) is a natural bioactive compound with many health-promoting benefits. However, its poor water solubility and bioavailability has limited curcumin’s biomedical application. In the present study, we encapsulated curcumin into liposomes, formed from natural sources (salmon lecithin), and characterized its encapsulation efficiency and release profile. The proposed natural carriers increased the solubility and the bioavailability of curcumin. In addition, various physico-chemical properties of the developed soft nanocarriers with and without curcumin were studied. Nanoliposome-encapsulated curcumin increased the viability and network formation in the culture of primary cortical neurons and decreased the rate of apoptosis
Plaskett's Star: Analysis of the CoRoT photometric data
The SRa02 of the CoRoT space mission for Asteroseismology was partly devoted
to stars belonging to the Mon OB2 association. An intense monitoring was
performed on Plaskett's Star (HD47129) and the unprecedented quality of the
light curve allows us to shed new light on this very massive, non-eclipsing
binary system. We particularly aimed at detecting periodic variability which
might be associated with pulsations or interactions between both components. We
also searched for variations related to the orbital cycle which could help to
constrain the inclination and the morphology of the binary system. A
Fourier-based prewhitening and a multiperiodic fitting procedure were applied
to analyse the time series and extract the frequencies of variations. We
describe the noise properties to tentatively define an appropriate significance
criterion, to only point out the peaks at a certain significance level. We also
detect the variations related to the orbital motion and study them by using the
NIGHTFALL program. The periodogram exhibits a majority of peaks at low
frequencies. Among these peaks, we highlight a list of about 43 values,
including notably two different sets of harmonic frequencies whose fundamental
peaks are located at about 0.07 and 0.82d-1. The former represents the orbital
frequency of the binary system whilst the latter could probably be associated
with non-radial pulsations. The study of the 0.07d-1 variations reveals the
presence of a hot spot most probably situated on the primary star and facing
the secondary. The investigation of this unique dataset constitutes a further
step in the understanding of Plaskett's Star. These results provide a first
basis for future seismic modelling. The existence of a hot region between both
components renders the determination of the inclination ambiguous.Comment: Accepted in A&A, 13 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
Superconductivity-induced change in magnetic anisotropy in epitaxial ferromagnet-superconductor hybrids with spin-orbit interaction
The interaction between superconductivity and ferromagnetism in thin film
superconductor/ferromagnet heterostructures is usually reflected by a change in
superconductivity of the S layer set by the magnetic state of the F layers.
Here we report the converse effect: transformation of the magnetocrystalline
anisotropy of a single Fe(001) layer, and thus its preferred magnetization
orientation, driven by the superconductivity of an underlying V layer through a
spin-orbit coupled MgO interface. We attribute this to an additional
contribution to the free energy of the ferromagnet arising from the controlled
generation of triplet Cooper pairs, which depends on the relative angle between
the exchange field of the ferromagnet and the spin-orbit field. This is
fundamentally different from the commonly observed magnetic domain modification
by Meissner screening or domain wall-vortex interaction and offers the ability
to fundamentally tune magnetic anisotropies using superconductivity - a key
step in designing future cryogenic magnetic memories.Comment: Submitted for publicatio
Superconductivity assisted change of the perpendicular magnetic anisotropy in V/MgO/Fe junctions
Controlling the perpendicular magnetic anisotropy (PMA) in thin films has
received considerable attention in recent years due to its technological
importance. PMA based devices usually involve heavy-metal
(oxide)/ferromagnetic-metal bilayers, where, thanks to interfacial spin-orbit
coupling (SOC), the in-plane (IP) stability of the magnetization is broken.
Here we show that in V/MgO/Fe(001) epitaxial junctions with competing in-plane
and out-of-plane (OOP) magnetic anisotropies, the SOC mediated interaction
between a ferromagnet (FM) and a superconductor (SC) enhances the effective PMA
below the superconducting transition. This produces a partial magnetization
reorientation without any applied field for all but the largest junctions,
where the IP anisotropy is more robust; for the smallest junctions there is a
reduction of the field required to induce a complete OOP transition
() due to the stronger competition between the IP and OOP
anisotropies. Our results suggest that the degree of effective PMA could be
controlled by the junction lateral size in the presence of superconductivity
and an applied electric field. We also discuss how the field
could be affected by the interaction between magnetic stray fields and
superconducting vortices. Our experimental findings, supported by numerical
modelling of the ferromagnet-superconductor interaction, open pathways to
active control of magnetic anisotropy in the emerging dissipation-free
superconducting spin electronics.Comment: Submitte
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