126 research outputs found

    2-(2-Nitro­anilino)-4,5,6,7-tetra­hydro­benzo[b]thio­phene-3-carbonitrile

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    The title compound, C15H13N3O2S, was synthesized by the reaction of 2-amino-5,6,7,8-tetra­hydro-4H-cyclo­hepta­[b]thio­phene-3-carbonitrile and o-fluoro­nitro­benzene. The dihedral angle between the thio­phene and nitro­phenyl rings is 75.15 (2)°. In the crystal, inter­molecular N—H⋯N and C—H⋯O inter­actions lead to the formation of a supra­molecular chain extending along the c-axis direction

    2-Amino-4,5,6,7-tetra­hydro­benzo[b]thio­phene-3-carbonitrile

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    The title compound, C9H10N2S, was synthesized according to Gewald procedures by the reaction of cyclo­hexa­none with malonitrile and sulfur in the presence morpholine. The cyclo­hexane ring adopts a half-chair conformation and the thio­phene ring is essentially planar (r.m.s. deviation = 0.05 Å). The crystal packing is stabilized by two inter­molecular N—H⋯N hydrogen bonds, which link the mol­ecules into centrosymmetric rings with graph-set motif R 2 2(12)

    2-(2-Nitro­anilino)-5,6,7,8-tetra­hydro-4H-cyclo­hepta­[b]thio­phene-3-carbonitrile

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    The title compound, C16H15N3O2S, was synthesized by the reaction of 2-amino-5,6,7,8-tetra­hydro-4H-cyclo­hepta­[b]thio­phene-3-carbonitrile and o-fluoro­nitro­benzene. The thio­phene and nitro­phenyl rings and amino and carbonitrile groups are coplanar with a maximum deviation of 0.046 (2) Å and a dihedral angle of 0.92 (6)° between the rings. The cyclo­hepta ring adopts a chair conformation. Intra­molecular N—H⋯O and C—H⋯S inter­actions occur. In the crystal, the mol­ecules form layers that are linked by π–π stacking inter­actions between the thio­phene and benzene rings [centroid–centroid distances = 3.7089 (12) and 3.6170 (12) Å]

    Physical and Functional Clinical Profile of Older Adults in Specialized Geriatric Rehabilitation Care Services in Saguenay-Québec: A Retrospective Study at La Baie Hospital

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    Musculoskeletal disorders, cardiovascular and neurological diseases were the most commonly debilitating conditions and risk factors associated with pain, mobility limitations, increased risk of falls and disability. Studies barely address the profile of older adults in care within a specialized geriatric rehabilitation service (SGRS) to provide subsidies for new actions within the public healthcare to reduce falls and improve management in health investments. This study aimed to establish a clinical physical and functional profile of the patients with neuromusculoskeletal and cognitive disorders and fallers in interventions within SGRS. From a retrospective study design, 127 medical records were compiled and analyzed to determine the physical and functional profile of older adults and differences according to sex, age groups and the benefits for local physical therapy intervention. The users were between 76 and 85 years of age, with diverse clinical diagnoses and debilitating conditions and impairments. A higher proportion presented gait and balance impairments and had two or more falls in 12 months. A significant effect for advanced age was observed. Overall, real benefits were reported with intervention for functional improvement, although the absence of a control group. These results have direct implications for a better understanding of a local SGRS and provide subsidies for developing new approaches for the assessment and treatment of older adults with high a risk of falls in order to reduce costs for the public health system

    Prevalence of dementia subtypes in a developing country: a clinicopathological study

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    OBJECTIVES: To assess the distribution of dementia subtypes in Brazil using a population-based clinicopathological study. METHOD: Brains from deceased individuals aged ≥50 years old were collected after the next of kin signed an informed consent form and provided information through standardized questionnaires. Post-mortem clinical diagnoses were established in consensus meetings, and only cases with moderate or severe dementia or without cognitive impairment were included in the analysis. Immunohistochemical neuropathological examinations were performed following the universally accepted guidelines. A diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease was made when there were at least both a moderate density of neuritic plaques (Consortium to Establish a Register for Alzheimer's disease B or C) and Braak stage III for neurofibrillary tangle distribution. For the diagnosis of vascular dementia, at least three zones or strategic areas had to be affected by infarcts, lacunae, or microinfarcts. RESULTS: From 1,291 subjects, 113 cases were classified as having moderate or severe dementia, and 972 cases were free of cognitive impairment. The neuropathological diagnoses of the dementia sub-group were Alzheimer's disease (35.4%), vascular dementia (21.2%), Alzheimer's disease plus vascular dementia (13.3%), and other causes of dementia (30.1%). Small-vessel disease, which alone was not considered sufficient for a vascular dementia diagnosis, was present in 38.9% of all of the dementia cases and in 16.8% of the group without cognitive impairment (odds ratio = 2.91; 95% confidence interval, 1.53-5.51), adjusted for age, sex, and education. CONCLUSIONS: The relatively high frequencies of vascular dementia and small-vessel disease in the dementia sub-group constitute relevant findings for public health initiatives because control of vascular risk factors could decrease the prevalence of dementia in developing countries

    Cytotoxic and Schistosomidal Activities of Extract, Fractions and Isolated Compounds from Zanthoxylum Leprieurii (Rutaceae)

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    Schistosomiasis is a major and chronic neglected tropical disease. The existing treatment does not kill immature schistosomes and have serious adverse side effect.  It is well known that some parasites are responsible for causing specific cancers in humans including bladder cancer from Schistosoma haematobium infection. So, novel drugs discovery is an urgent need. In this study, were evaluated in vitro the cytotoxic on human hepatocarcinoma (HepG2) and normal cells (Chang liver), and the schistosomicidal properties of crude extract, fractions and isolated compounds (1-Hydroxy-3-methoxy-N-methylacridone (1) described in this species from Cameroon for the first time, Scoparone (2), and Arborinine (3)) from powdered fruits of Zanthoxylum leprieurii (Rutaceae). All fractions: hexanic (FH), methylene chloride (FC), ethyl acetate (FA) and methanolic (FM) killed all the cercariae within 2 hours exposure and presents LC50 values between 2 and 3 μg/ml; Compounds 1 and 3 also displayed a good in vitro schistosomicidal activity against cercariae with LC50 values of 78.78 and 6.98 μg/mL, respectively. For antitumor activity compounds 1-3 and fraction FC presents good activity with IC50 values range 18.27 - 74.61 μg/mL on HepG2 cells, however most of these were more toxic on Chang cells than to HepG2 cells, with only exception for compound 2. The acridone Arborinine (3) can constitute a good lead for the research of schistosomiasis alternative therapy, and the coumarin Scoparone (2) can be used in drug design as scaffold for design new potential anticancer agents

    Wild dogs at stake: deforestation threatens the only Amazon endemic canid, the short-eared dog (Atelocynus microtis)

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    The persistent high deforestation rate and fragmentation of the Amazon forests are the main threats to their biodiversity. To anticipate and mitigate these threats, it is important to understand and predict how species respond to the rapidly changing landscape. The short-eared dog Atelocynus microtis is the only Amazon-endemic canid and one of the most understudied wild dogs worldwide. We investigated short-eared dog habitat associations on two spatial scales. First, we used the largest record database ever compiled for short-eared dogs in combination with species distribution models to map species habitat suitability, estimate its distribution range and predict shifts in species distribution in response to predicted deforestation across the entire Amazon (regional scale). Second, we used systematic camera trap surveys and occupancy models to investigate how forest cover and forest fragmentation affect the space use of this species in the Southern Brazilian Amazon (local scale). Species distribution models suggested that the short-eared dog potentially occurs over an extensive and continuous area, through most of the Amazon region south of the Amazon River. However, approximately 30% of the short-eared dog's current distribution is expected to be lost or suffer sharp declines in habitat suitability by 2027 (within three generations) due to forest loss. This proportion might reach 40% of the species distribution in unprotected areas and exceed 60% in some interfluves (i.e. portions of land separated by large rivers) of the Amazon basin. Our local-scale analysis indicated that the presence of forest positively affected short-eared dog space use, while the density of forest edges had a negative effect. Beyond shedding light on the ecology of the short-eared dog and refining its distribution range, our results stress that forest loss poses a serious threat to the conservation of the species in a short time frame. Hence, we propose a re-assessment of the short-eared dog's current IUCN Red List status (Near Threatened) based on findings presented here. Our study exemplifies how data can be integrated across sources and modelling procedures to improve our knowledge of relatively understudied species
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