487 research outputs found

    Stabilization of a Highly Concentrated Colloidal Suspension of Pristine Metallic Nanoparticles

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    A colloidal suspension containing a high concentration of metallic nanoparticles (NPs) finds potential applications in flexible electronic printing, nanofluids, healthcare, antifouling coating, and so on. Here, we demonstrate a generic, easily scalable, simple, and contamination-free cryogenic temperature grinding method, which can effectively be used to prepare pristine NPs that can be stabilized in polar liquids in high concentrations. These surfactant-free pristine NPs have been found to remain dispersed in different polar liquids (CH3OH, C2H5OH, glycol, etc.) for weeks. The long-term stability of the NPs in these liquids has been investigated using zeta potential, in situ Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, indicating electrostatic stabilization for ultrapure, surfactant-free NPs. Furthermore, stabilization of the NPs has been probed with detailed calculations using the Derjaguin Landau Verwey Overbeek theory as well as atomistic molecular dynamics simulation (MD). Experimental measurements along with theoretical calculations categorically indicate that the electrostatic energy is helping these NPs to be stabilized in a polar liquid

    Complexity dichotomy on partial grid recognition

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    Deciding whether a graph can be embedded in a grid using only unit-length edges is NP-complete, even when restricted to binary trees. However, it is not difficult to devise a number of graph classes for which the problem is polynomial, even trivial. A natural step, outstanding thus far, was to provide a broad classification of graphs that make for polynomial or NP-complete instances. We provide such a classification based on the set of allowed vertex degrees in the input graphs, yielding a full dichotomy on the complexity of the problem. As byproducts, the previous NP-completeness result for binary trees was strengthened to strictly binary trees, and the three-dimensional version of the problem was for the first time proven to be NP-complete. Our results were made possible by introducing the concepts of consistent orientations and robust gadgets, and by showing how the former allows NP-completeness proofs by local replacement even in the absence of the latter

    Standardization of a SYBR Green Based Real-Time PCR System for Detection and Molecular Quantification of Babesia bovis and B. bigemina in Water Buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis)

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    Water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) is a potential reservoir for Babesia bovis and B. bigemina in tropical regions, but the epidemiological evidence of their reservoir competence is limited, especially due to the lack of diagnostic tests capable of detecting and quantifying the low-level parasitemia present in the carrier animals. In this paper we present the standardization process of a SYBR Green based real-time PCR system (qPCR), consisting of two single qPCR assays, for the detection and quantification of B. bovis and/or B. bigemina. Both assays were optimized in similar protocols, including reagent concentrations and thermocycling parameters, so it is possible its use as a multiple qPCR in a single run. Both single assays showed a suitable analytical performance, especially by allowing detection of a greater number of carrier animals when compared with nested PCR assays (nPCR) against a reference panel of 60 DNA samples extracted from blood of both, infected- and non-infected buffaloes. Furthermore, a mathematical algorithm to convert the qPCR outcomes in percent of infected red blood cell was used, and was found that the estimated parasitemia in carrier buffaloes within the reference sample panels were close to those described in carrier cattle. This method could be a useful tool for epidemiological studies on the participation of the bubaline specie in the epidemic process of bovine babesiosis

    Comprometimentos cognitivos em pacientes com gliomas de baixo grau e gliomas de alto grau

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    OBJECTIVE: The relationship between brain tumors and cognitive deficits is well established in the literature. However, studies investigating the cognitive status in low and high-grade gliomas patients are scarce, particularly in patients with average or lower educational level. This study aimed at investigating the cognitive functioning in a sample of patients with low and high-grade gliomas before surgical intervention. METHOD: The low-grade (G1, n=19) and high-grade glioma (G2, n=8) patients underwent a detailed neuropsychological assessment of memory, executive functions, visuo-perceptive and visuo-spatial abilities, intellectual level and language. RESULTS: There was a significant impairment on verbal and visual episodic memory, executive functions including mental flexibility, nominal and categorical verbal fluency and speed of information processing in G2. G1 showed only specific deficits on verbal and visual memory recall, mental flexibility and processing speed. CONCLUSION: These findings demonstrated different levels of impairments in the executive and memory domains in patients with low and high grade gliomas.OBJETIVO: A associação entre tumores cerebrais e dĂ©ficits cognitivos Ă© bem estabelecida na literatura. No entanto, estudos sobre a cognição de pacientes com gliomas de baixo e alto grau sĂŁo escassos, especialmente, em sujeitos com baixa escolaridade. Este estudo investigou o funcionamento cognitivo de uma amostra de pacientes com gliomas de baixo e alto grau antes da intervenção cirĂșrgica. MÉTODO: Os pacientes com glioma de baixo grau (G1, n=19) e alto grau (G2, n=8) foram avaliados quanto Ă  memĂłria, funçÔes executivas, habilidades visuo-perceptivas e visuo-espaciais, nĂ­vel intelectual e linguagem. RESULTADOS: Houve prejuĂ­zo significativo em G2 na memĂłria episĂłdica verbal e visual, funçÔes executivas incluindo flexibilidade mental, fluĂȘncia verbal nominal e categĂłrica e velocidade de processamento de informaçÔes. G1 demonstrou apenas dĂ©ficits especĂ­ficos de evocação verbal e visual, flexibilidade mental e velocidade de processamento. CONCLUSÃO: Estes achados demonstraram nĂ­veis diferenciados de comprometimento nos domĂ­nios executivos e mnĂ©sticos de pacientes com gliomas de baixo e alto grau

    On star and biclique edge-colorings

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    A biclique of G is a maximal set of vertices that induces a complete bipartite subgraph Kp,q of G with at least one edge, and a star of a graph G is a maximal set of vertices that induces a complete bipartite graph K1,q. A biclique (resp. star) edge-coloring is a coloring of the edges of a graph with no monochromatic bicliques (resp. stars). We prove that the problem of determining whether a graph G has a biclique (resp. star) edgecoloring using two colors is NP-hard. Furthermore, we describe polynomial time algorithms for the problem in restricted classes: K3-free graphs, chordal bipartite graphs, powers of paths, and powers of cycles

    Cage transplant experiment shows weak transport effect on relative abundance of fish community composition as revealed by eDNA metabarcoding

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    Protection of freshwater fish diversity is a global conservation priority in face of its alarming decline in the last decades. A crucial step to protect freshwater fish diversity is the production of prompt and precise evaluation of community composition and spatial distribution. Metabarcoding of environmental DNA (eDNA metabarcoding) generally surpasses traditional methods for documenting diversity and community composition in aquatic environments. Nevertheless, empirical evidence evaluating how eDNA transportation in water affect community composition and structure via eDNA metabarcoding data remains scarce. Using a brown trout (Salmo trutta) cage transplant experiment in the St. Lawrence River (Canada), a large fluvial system, we tested the detection and relative abundance of species’ eDNA along 15 sampling locations. We detected brown trout eDNA in five localities up to 5,000 m from the cage, but only one sampling location situated 10 m downstream and in the direct line of the cage was affected at the community composition level. This locality showed a relative abundance of brown trout eDNA of 13.1%, while the four others showed a relative abundance under 1.0%. K-means cluster analysis confirmed the impact of brown trout eDNA on community composition by separating this locality from all others. Based on species loading of a redundancy analysis, we showed that this different k-means group was associated with the high relative abundance of brown trout. No evidence of transport effect of brown trout eDNA on fish community composition was observed in any other sampling locations. Together, our results support the view that eDNA metabarcoding can be both a conveyor belt of biodiversity information and a precise tool to study the composition and structure of fish communities in river

    A prospective cohort study of digital cushion and corium thickness, Part 1: associations with body condition, lesion incidence and proximity to calving

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    Claw horn disruption lesions (CHDL) are a major cause of lameness in dairy cattle and are likely a result of excessive forces being applied to the germinal epithelium that produces claw horn. The digital cushion is a connective tissue structure, containing depots of adipose tissue, that sits beneath the distal phalanx and has been shown to be thicker in fatter cows. Body condition score (BCS) loss is a risk factor for CHDL, and one possible explanation is that fat is mobilised from the digital cushion during negative energy balance, causing the digital cushion to thin and lose force dissipating capacity, leading to disruption of claw horn growth. This prospective cohort study investigated the association between measures of body fat and sole soft tissues (SST) thickness (a combined measure of the corium and digital cushion beneath the distal phalanx) in a longitudinal manner. SST of 179 cows in two high yielding dairy herds were measured at five assessment points between 8 weeks prior to and 35 weeks post calving. BCS, back fat thickness (BFT) and lesion incidence were recorded. Data were analysed in a 4-level mixed effects regression model, with the outcome being SST thickness beneath the flexor tuberosity of the distal phalanx. Data from 827 assessment points were available for analysis. The overall mean of SST was 4.99 mm (SD: 0.95). SST was thickest 8 weeks prior to calving (5.22 mm, SD: 0.91) and thinnest one week post-calving (4.68 mm, SD: 0.87), suggesting that there was an effect of calving on SST. BFT was positively correlated with SST in the model with a small effect size (a 10 mm decrease in BFT corresponded with a 0.13 mm decrease in SST), yet the nadir of BFT was 11.0 mm at 9-17 weeks post calving (when SST was ~4.95 mm), rather than occurring with the nadir of SST immediately after calving. SST also varied with other variables, e.g. cows that developed a sole ulcer or severe sole haemorrhage during the study had thinner SST (-0.24 mm), except when a sole ulcer was present, when it was thicker (+0.53 mm). Cows that developed lesions had a thinner digital cushion prior to the lesion occurrence, which became thickened with sole ulcer presence, perhaps representing inflammation. Further, whilst BFT was correlated with SST over time, SST may also have been influenced by other factors such as integrity of the suspensory apparatus, which could have a major effect on CHDL. Measures of body fat likely contributed to having thin SST, but other factors including calving, herd and lesion presence also had an effec
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