203 research outputs found

    Prevention of Fungal Growth on Rubber Earpads of Telecommunication Equipments

    Get PDF
    This paper recommends an addition of 100% zinc oxide to the rubber composition during its manufacture to effectively prevent fungal growth on the earpads without producing any adverse on its materials/performance or the user

    The relationship between person-centered care in nursing homes and COVID-19 infection, hospitalization, and mortality rates

    Get PDF
    Objectives: This cohort study compared rates of COVID-19 infections, admissions/readmissions, and mortality among a statewide person-centered model known as PEAK and non-PEAK NHs. Methods: Rates per 1000 resident days were derived for COVID-19 cases and admissions/readmissions, and per 100 positive cases for mortality. A log-rank test compared rates between PEAK (n = 109) and non-PEAK NHs (n = 112). Results: Rates of COVID-19 cases, admission, and mortality were higher in non-PEAK compared to PEAK NHs. The median rates for all indicators had a zero value for all NHs, but in NHs above 90th percentiles, the non-PEAK case rate was 3.9 times more and the admission/readmission rate was 2.5 times more. Conclusions and implications: COVID-19 case, and mortality rates were lower in PEAK than non-PEAK NHs. Although PEAK and non-PEAK NHs may differ in other ways as well, person-centered care may be advantageous to promote infection control and improve outcomes. © 2023 Elsevier Inc

    Reversal of subclinical adrenal insufficiency through antituberculosis treatment in TB patients: a longitudinal follow up

    Get PDF
    Background & Objective: Subclinical adrenal insufficiency has been shown to occur in patients with tuberculosis. Whether this insufficiency can be reversed with therapy and on long-term follow up, is not known. We studied the effect of antituberculosis treatment (ATT) with respect to reversal of the adrenal insufficiency, as assessed by response to standard dose adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) stimulation test in TB patients. Methods: One hundred and five HIV-negative tuberculosis patients were studied. Of these, 72 patients had pulmonary and 33 had extrapulmonary forms of the disease. Baseline (pre-treatment) standard-dose ACTH stimulation test was done on all the subjects, following which, they were put on standard antituberculosis therapy, depending on the type of disease and were followed up for a period of 30 months. ACTH stimulation tests were performed at follow up, every 6 months. Results: Baseline (pre-treatment) standard-dose ACTH stimulation test revealed an impaired response in 52 of 105 patients (49.5%). At 6 months, the percentage of responders had increased to 71 per cent with a gradual increasing trend noted thereafter. At 24 months, 31 of the 32 patients (97%) who were followed up demonstrated a normal response to ACTH stimulation. The percentage of responders was comparable in both pulmonary [21 of 22 patients (95%)] and extrapulmonary TB [10 of 10 patients (100%)] groups at follow up. Interpretation & Conclusion: Our study shows that nearly half of patients with active tuberculosis had a subclinical adrenal insufficiency indicated by an impaired response to ACTH stimulation test. This insufficiency reverse with therapy in most patients on long-term follow up

    Tulžies latakų akmenligė: ligos įtarimas, diagnozė, gydymas

    Get PDF
    Bile duct stones are a quite common (10–18%) complication of gallstone disease or an autonomous condition. New noninvasive diagnostic methods established in the last decades allow to confirm suspected choledocholithiasis with minimal risk of iatrogenic complications.In this literature review we discuss various scores for choledocholithiasis risk degree, different diagnostic investigations and management approaches including timing for invasive procedures.Tulžies latakų akmenys – gana dažna (10–18 %) tulžies pūslės akmenligės komplikacija ar savarankiška patologija. Pastaraisiais dešimtmečiais atsiradę nauji neinvaziniai diagnostikos metodai leidžia patikslinti įtariamą tulžies latakų akmenligės diagnozę minimalizavus jatrogeninių komplikacijų riziką.Šioje literatūros apžvalgoje aptariamos rizikos vertinimo sistemos, leidžiančios apsispręsti dėl papildomų tyrimų tikslingumo, pristatomi įvairūs diagnostiniai metodai, skirtingos gydymo ir tyrimo taktikos, aptariamas gydymo laiko pasirinkimas

    Wild-type and mutant SOD1 share an aberrant conformation and a common pathogenic pathway in ALS.

    Get PDF
    Many mutations confer one or more toxic function(s) on copper/zinc superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) that impair motor neuron viability and cause familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS). Using a conformation-specific antibody that detects misfolded SOD1 (C4F6), we found that oxidized wild-type SOD1 and mutant SOD1 share a conformational epitope that is not present in normal wild-type SOD1. In a subset of human sporadic ALS (SALS) cases, motor neurons in the lumbosacral spinal cord were markedly C4F6 immunoreactive, indicating that an aberrant wild-type SOD1 species was present. Recombinant, oxidized wild-type SOD1 and wild-type SOD1 immunopurified from SALS tissues inhibited kinesin-based fast axonal transport in a manner similar to that of FALS-linked mutant SOD1. Our findings suggest that wild-type SOD1 can be pathogenic in SALS and identify an SOD1-dependent pathogenic mechanism common to FALS and SALS

    1H-NMR-Based Metabolomic Profiling of CSF in Early Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

    Get PDF
    Background: Pathophysiological mechanisms involved in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) are complex and none has identified reliable markers useful in routine patient evaluation. The aim of this study was to analyze the CSF of patients with ALS by 1 H NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) spectroscopy in order to identify biomarkers in the early stages of the disease, and to evaluate the biochemical factors involved in ALS. Methodology: CSF samples were collected from patients with ALS at the time of diagnosis and from patients without neurodegenerative diseases. One and two-dimensional 1 H NMR analyses were performed and metabolites were quantified by the ERETIC method. We compared the concentrations of CSF metabolites between both groups. Finally, we performed principal component (PCA) and discriminant analyses. Principal Findings: Fifty CSF samples from ALS patients and 44 from controls were analyzed. We quantified 17 metabolites including amino-acids, organic acids, and ketone bodies. Quantitative analysis revealed significantly lower acetate concentrations (p = 0.0002) in ALS patients compared to controls. Concentration of acetone trended higher (p = 0.015), and those of pyruvate (p = 0.002) and ascorbate (p = 0.003) were higher in the ALS group. PCA demonstrated that the pattern of analyzed metabolites discriminated between groups. Discriminant analysis using an algorithm of 17 metabolites reveale

    Calcineurin Controls Voltage-Dependent-Inactivation (VDI) of the Normal and Timothy Cardiac Channels

    Get PDF
    Ca2+-entry in the heart is tightly controlled by Cav1.2 inactivation, which involves Ca2+-dependent inactivation (CDI) and voltage-dependent inactivation (VDI) components. Timothy syndrome, a subtype-form of congenital long-QT syndrome, results from a nearly complete elimination of VDI by the G406R mutation in the α11.2 subunit of Cav1.2. Here, we show that a single (A1929P) or a double mutation (H1926A-H1927A) within the CaN-binding site at the human C-terminal tail of α11.2, accelerate the inactivation rate and enhances VDI of both wt and Timothy channels. These results identify the CaN-binding site as the long-sought VDI-regulatory motif of the cardiac channel. The substantial increase in VDI and the accelerated inactivation caused by the selective inhibitors of CaN, cyclosporine A and FK-506, which act at the same CaN-binding site, further support this conclusion. A reversal of enhanced-sympathetic tone by VDI-enhancing CaN inhibitors could be beneficial for improving Timothy syndrome complications such as long-QT and autism

    Corticosteroids for severe sepsis: an evidence-based guide for physicians

    Get PDF
    Septic shock is characterized by uncontrolled systemic inflammation that contributes to the progression of organ failures and eventually death. There is now ample evidence that the inability of the host to mount an appropriate hypothalamic-pituitary and adrenal axis response plays a major in overwhelming systemic inflammation during infections. Proinflammatory mediators released in the inflamed sites oppose to the anti-inflammatory response, an effect that may be reversed by exogenous corticosteroids. With sepsis, via nongenomic and genomic effects, corticosteroids restore cardiovascular homeostasis, terminate systemic and tissue inflammation, restore organ function, and prevent death. These effects of corticosteroids have been consistently found in animal studies and in most recent frequentist and Bayesian meta-analyses. Corticosteroids should be initiated only in patients with sepsis who require 0.5 μg/kg per minute or more of norepinephrine and should be continued for 5 to 7 days except in patients with poor hemodynamic response after 2 days of corticosteroids and with a cortisol increment of more than 250 nmol/L after a standard adrenocorticotropin hormone (ACTH) test. Hydrocortisone should be given at a daily dose of 200 mg and preferably combined to enteral fludrocortisone at a dose of 50 μg. Blood glucose levels should be kept below 150 mg/dL
    corecore