2,611 research outputs found

    La discreción de Cipión

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    Soil Chemical Attributes Of A Dystroferric Red Latosol (oxisol) Treated With An Alkaline Effluent From A Pharmaceutical Industry

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    Effluents from different industrial supply conglomerates are often discarded in the environment without proper treatment. The concern for an economically viable industrial production line, which is both environmentally sound and socially acceptable, is increasing. Some of these effluents are alkaline in nature and may be used as an alternative to chemical conditioners for acidic soils in agricultural systems. This research aimed to evaluate changes in the chemical attributes of a Dystroferric Red Latosol (Oxisol) after application of an effluent from a pharmaceutical industry. The experiment was conducted in a greenhouse using PVC tubes of 1-m length and a 0.2-m diameter filled with soil and different doses of the effluent. After 3 days, 100 mm of water was applied to each treatment. The PVC tubes were incubated for 30 days; thereafter, the tubes disassembled, and soil chemical analysis were made at different soil depths: 0-0.2, 0.2-0.4, 0.4-0.6, 0.6-0.8, and 0.8-1.0 m. The effluent applications significantly altered the soil elements in the 0-0.2 m layer, increasing the concentrations of K+, P, Mn2+, Na+, Cu2+, H+, Ca2+, Al3+ and the soil pH. In the subsurface layers, the concentration of the elements Zn2+, Cu2+, K+, and Na+ also changed significantly. In general, the application of pharmaceutical industry residue improved soil chemical attributes.3753037304

    El Quijote y los saberes humanísticos

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    Physician Assessment and Feedback During Quality Circle to Reduce Low-Value Services in Outpatients: a Pre-Post Quality Improvement Study.

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    The impact of the Choosing Wisely (CW) campaign is debated as recommendations alone may not modify physician behavior. The aim of this study was to assess whether behavioral interventions with physician assessment and feedback during quality circles (QCs) could reduce low-value services. Pre-post quality improvement intervention with a parallel comparison group involving outpatients followed in a Swiss-managed care network, including 700 general physicians (GPs) and 150,000 adult patients. Interventions included performance feedback about low-value activities and comparison with peers during QCs. We assessed individual physician behavior and healthcare use from laboratory and insurance claims files between August 1, 2016, and October 31, 2018. Main outcomes were the change in prescription of three low-value services 6 months before and 6 months after each intervention: measurement of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and prescription rates of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and statins. Among primary care practices, a QC intervention with physician feedback and peer comparison resulted in lower rates of PPI prescription (pre-post mean prescriptions per GP 25.5 ± 23.7 vs 22.9 ± 21.4, p value<0.01; coefficient of variation (Cov) 93.0% vs 91.0%, p=0.49), PSA measurement (6.5 ± 8.7 vs 5.3 ± 6.9 tests per GP, p<0.01; Cov 133.5% vs 130.7%, p=0.84), as well as statins (6.1 ± 6.8 vs 5.6 ± 5.4 prescriptions per GP, p<0.01; Cov 111.5% vs 96.4%, p=0.21). Changes in prescription of low-value services among GPs who did not attend QCs were not statistically significant over this time period. Our results demonstrate a modest but statistically significant effect of QCs with educative feedback in reducing low-value services in outpatients with low impact on coefficient of variation. Limiting overuse in medicine is very challenging and dedicated discussion and real-time review of actionable data may help

    The double Caldeira-Leggett model: Derivation and solutions of the master equations, reservoir-induced interactions and decoherence

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    In this paper we analyze the double Caldeira-Leggett model: the path integral approach to two interacting dissipative harmonic oscillators. Assuming a general form of the interaction between the oscillators, we consider two different situations: i) when each oscillator is coupled to its own reservoir, and ii) when both oscillators are coupled to a common reservoir. After deriving and solving the master equation for each case, we analyze the decoherence process of particular entanglements in the positional space of both oscillators. To analyze the decoherence mechanism we have derived a general decay function for the off-diagonal peaks of the density matrix, which applies both to a common and separate reservoirs. We have also identified the expected interaction between the two dissipative oscillators induced by their common reservoir. Such reservoir-induced interaction, which gives rise to interesting collective damping effects, such as the emergence of relaxation- and decoherence-free subspaces, is shown to be blurred by the high-temperature regime considered in this study. However, we find that different interactions between the dissipative oscillators, described by rotating or counter-rotating terms, result in different decay rates for the interference terms of the density matrix.Comment: 42 pages, 7 figures, new discussion added, typos adde

    O Sistema Endocanabinóide – uma perspetiva terapêutica

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    Although the medicinal use of Cannabis sativa derivatives is well known since antiquity, the study of their properties expanded recently with the discovery of an endogenous cannabinoid system, which comprises the endogenous cannabis-like ligands (endocannabinoids), the cannabinoid receptors (CB1 and CB2) and the enzymes involved in their metabolism. Since the discovery of the endocannabinoid system (ECS), the scientific community focused on research of its clinical use and achieved important findings during the last decade. In some countries, cannabis derivatives are a pharmacological option for appetite stimulation and pain treatment. However, the first ECS-based drug rimonabant (a CB1 antagonist), approved for the treatment obesity with associated risk factors, was withdrawn due to safety concerns. Nowadays, based on the growing evidences resulting from preclinical and clinical studies of ECS modulators, these drugs are currently pointed out as novel therapeutic approaches for several pathophysiological conditions. Here, we review the potential role of (endo)cannabinoid system in therapeutics and the recent designed strategies for the development of drugs that target this system. A utilização terapêutica da Cannabis sativa ou seus derivados é conhecida há muitos anos, no entanto, o estudo das suas propriedades despontou recentemente com a descoberta de um sistema canabinóide endógeno (ECS). O ECS compreende os compostos endógenos similares ao tetrahidrocanabinol (endocanabinóides), os recetores canabinóides (CB1 e CB2) e as enzimas envolvidas no seu metabolismo. Desde a descoberta do ECS, a comunidade científica focou-se na investigação do seu potencial clínico com resultados encorajadores. Em alguns países, os derivados da cannabis constituem uma opção farmacológica na estimulação do apetite e tratamento da dor. O primeiro medicamento baseado no ECS, o rimonabant (um antagonista CB1), foi aprovado para o tratamento da obesidade associada a outros fatores de risco, no entanto foi retirado por questões de segurança. Atualmente, e baseadas nos estudos pré-clínicos e clínicos, existem várias evidências do seu interesse clínico na modulação de diversas condições fisiopatológicas. Neste artigo discutimos o papel potencial do sistema (endo)canabinóide na terapêutica e as recentes estratégias desenvolvidas na modulação do sistema.

    Structural characterisation of a MAPR-related archaeal cytochrome b(5M) protein

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    First published: 09 August 2022We recently reported that the membrane-associated progesterone receptor(MAPR) protein family (mammalian members: PGRMC1, PGRMC2,NEUFC and NENF) originated from a new class of prokaryotic cytochromeb5(cytb5) domain proteins, called cytb5M(MAPR-like). Relative to classicalcytb5proteins, MAPR and ctyb5Mproteins shared unique sequence elementsand a distinct heme-binding orientation at an approximately 90°rotation rel-ative to classical cytb5, as demonstrated in the archetypal crystal structure ofa cytb5Mprotein (PDB accession number6NZX). Here, we present the crys-tal structure of an archaeal cytb5Mdomain (Methanococcoides burtoniiWP_011499504.1, PDB:6VZ6). It exhibits similar heme binding to the 6NZXcytb5M, supporting the deduction that MAPR-like heme orientation wasinherited from the prokaryotic ancestor of the original eukaryotic MAPRgene.Sarah Teakel, Michealla Marama, David Aragao, Sofiya Tsimbalyuk, Emily R. R. Mackie, Tatiana P. Soares da Costa, Jade K. Forwood and Michael A. Cahil

    Node-weighted measures for complex networks with spatially embedded, sampled, or differently sized nodes

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    When network and graph theory are used in the study of complex systems, a typically finite set of nodes of the network under consideration is frequently either explicitly or implicitly considered representative of a much larger finite or infinite region or set of objects of interest. The selection procedure, e.g., formation of a subset or some kind of discretization or aggregation, typically results in individual nodes of the studied network representing quite differently sized parts of the domain of interest. This heterogeneity may induce substantial bias and artifacts in derived network statistics. To avoid this bias, we propose an axiomatic scheme based on the idea of node splitting invariance to derive consistently weighted variants of various commonly used statistical network measures. The practical relevance and applicability of our approach is demonstrated for a number of example networks from different fields of research, and is shown to be of fundamental importance in particular in the study of spatially embedded functional networks derived from time series as studied in, e.g., neuroscience and climatology.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
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