22 research outputs found

    Antidiabetic Effects of Momordica charantia (Karela) in Male long Evans Rat

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    The hypoglycemic effect of Momordica charantia (Karela) has been reported from many laboratories. To our knowledge, the underlying biochemical mechanism of action of this important clinical effect has not been reported. During the course of investigation of this aspect of the herbal fruit, it was reported from our laboratory that ethanolic extract of Momordica charantia suppressed gluconeogenesis in normal and streptozotocin (STZ) induced diabetic rats by depressing the hepatic gluconeogenic enzymes fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and glucose-6-phosphatase. The herbal extract had also enhanced the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, the rate-limiting enzyme of hexose monophosphate shunt (a pathway for the oxidation of glucose)

    An Efficient Solution to Travelling Salesman Problem using Genetic Algorithm with Modified Crossover Operator

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    The traveling salesman problem (TSP) is a famous NP-hard problem in the area of combinatorial optimization. It is utilized to locate the shortest possible route that visits every city precisely once and comes back to the beginning point from a given set of cities and distance. This paper proposes an efficient and effective solution for solving such a query. A modified crossover method using Minimal Weight Variable, Order Selection Crossover operator, a modified mutation using local optimization and a modified selection method using KMST is proposed. The crossover operator (MWVOSX) chooses a particular order from multiple orders which have the minimum cost and takes the remaining from the other parent in backward and forward order. Then it creates two new offspring. Further, it selects the least weight new offspring from those two offspring. The efficiency of the proposed algorithm is compared to the classical genetic algorithm. Comparisons show that our proposed algorithm provides much efficient results than the existing classical genetic algorithm

    In silico Analysis of the Functional and Structural Impacts of Non-synonymous Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in the Human Paraxonase 1 Gene

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    Computational approaches could help in identifying deleterious non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (nsSNPs) in a disease related gene which is a difficult and laborious task through laboratory experiments. In the present study, we analyzed the impacts of nsSNPs on structure and function of Paraxonase 1 (PON1) using different bioinformatics tools. The human PON1 protein sequence and its corresponding gene's SNP information were collected from UniProt and dbSNP databases, respectively. We utilized SIFT, Polyphen, I-Mutant 2.0, MutPred, SNP and GO, PhD-SNP and PANTHER tools in order to examine the total 39 nsSNPs occurring in the PON1 coding region. We filtered the most pathological mutations by combining the scores of the aforementioned servers and found 8 SNPs (G344C, S302L, W281C, D279Y, H134R, F120S, L90P, C42R) as deleterious and disease causing. The PDB structure of PON1 protein was obtained from RCSB Protein Data Bank (PDB ID: 1V04). The deleterious SNPs in native PON1 were introduced using Swiss-PDB Viewer package and changes in free energy were observed for six out of eight mutant structures. Two SNPs, S302L (substitution of serine to leucine at 302 position in amino acid sequence) and L90P (substitution of leucine to proline at 90 position in amino acid sequence) caused the highest energy increase amongst all. The findings implicate that these nsSNPs would be analyzed further in detail to enumerate their possible association with the protein deteriorating and disease causal potentialities

    Assessment of Serum Electrolytes, Biochemical, and Inflammatory Markers in Predicting COVID-19 Severity in COPD Patients

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    Background: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the most prevalent long-term respiratory condition. Patients with COPD experience detrimental effects of COVID-19 infection. Objective: To figure out whether COPD is a risk factor influencing the progression of COVID-19 and to explore the clinical value of laboratory biomarkers to assess the severity of COVID-19 in patients with COPD comorbidity. Methods: In total, 1572 participants aged 35 to 70 years were enrolled to a tertiary hospital in Bangladesh between March 2022 and October 2022. Participants were categorized into four groups: (1) control, (2) COPD, (3) COVID-19, and (4) COVID-19 with COPD, and blood levels of clinical laboratory markers were assessed to analyze how these markers differ among the study groups. Results: COVID-19 patients with COPD had a significantly lower level of sodium (131.81 ± 2.8 mmol/L) and calcium (1.91 ± 0.28 mmol/L), and a significantly higher level of NT-proBNP (568.45 ± 207.40 pg/mL), bilirubin (1.34 ± 0.54 mg/dL), fibrinogen (577.27 ± 145.24 mg/dL), D-dimer (2.97 ± 2.25 μg/mL), C-reactive protein (71.08 ± 62.42 mg/L), interleukin-6 (166.47 ± 174.39 pg/mL), and procalcitonin (0.25 ± 0.30 ng/mL) compared to other study groups patients (p p < 0.0001). Conclusions: NT-proBNP, interleukin 6, D-dimer, C-reactive protein, and fibrinogen are the most potential parameters for differentiating severe cases of COVID-19

    Obesity and Hypertension in Students of Jahangirnagar University: Alarming Issues

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    The prevalence of obesity and hypertension (HTN) in university students of Bangladesh has not reported yet. Considering the proper health maintenance of this population in mind, the study was aimed to determine the prevalence of obesity and HTN as well as relationship among them in the students of a residential university of Bangladesh, Jahangirnagar University. This descriptive cross sectional study included 500 randomly selected students (250 males and 250 females). Participants completed a questionnaire on physical activity, sedentary behaviour, dietary factors, smoking and family history of obesity, HTN, and coronary artery disease. Blood pressure and anthropometric parameters such as height, weight, waist and hip circumferences were measured following standard procedure. The Statistical analyses were performed using the software SPSS.The prevalence of overweight was 25% (31.1% males, 15.6% females) and obesity 7.2% (9.4% males, 4% females). Pre-HTN was found at 27.1% (38% males, 11.2% females) and HTN at 2.2% (3.3% males, 0.4% females). A high rate of smoking, sedentary behavior, physical inactivity, excessive consumption of unhealthy food, and caffeine-rich drinks was also observed. Significant correlation was found between parameters of obesity and HTN. High prevalence of pre-HTN in males and central obesity in females were found which is immediately needed to control for better health maintenance of this population

    <i>Learn2Write</i>: Augmented Reality and Machine Learning-Based Mobile App to Learn Writing

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    Augmented reality (AR) has been widely used in education, particularly for child education. This paper presents the design and implementation of a novel mobile app, Learn2Write, using machine learning techniques and augmented reality to teach alphabet writing. The app has two main features: (i) guided learning to teach users how to write the alphabet and (ii) on-screen and AR-based handwriting testing using machine learning. A learner needs to write on the mobile screen in on-screen testing, whereas AR-based testing allows one to evaluate writing on paper or a board in a real world environment. We implement a novel approach to use machine learning for AR-based testing to detect an alphabet written on a board or paper. It detects the handwritten alphabet using our developed machine learning model. After that, a 3D model of that alphabet appears on the screen with its pronunciation/sound. The key benefit of our approach is that it allows the learner to use a handwritten alphabet. As we have used marker-less augmented reality, it does not require a static image as a marker. The app was built with ARCore SDK for Unity. We further evaluated and quantified the performance of our app on multiple devices

    Purslane Weed ( Portulaca oleracea

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    Purslane (Portulaca oleracea L.) is an important plant naturally found as a weed in field crops and lawns. Purslane is widely distributed around the globe and is popular as a potherb in many areas of Europe, Asia, and the Mediterranean region. This plant possesses mucilaginous substances which are of medicinal importance. It is a rich source of potassium (494 mg/100 g) followed by magnesium (68 mg/100 g) and calcium (65 mg/100 g) and possesses the potential to be used as vegetable source of omega-3 fatty acid. It is very good source of alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) and gamma-linolenic acid (LNA, 18 : 3 w3) (4 mg/g fresh weight) of any green leafy vegetable. It contained the highest amount (22.2 mg and 130 mg per 100 g of fresh and dry weight, resp.) of alpha-tocopherol and ascorbic acid (26.6 mg and 506 mg per 100 g of fresh and dry weight, resp.). The oxalate content of purslane leaves was reported as 671–869 mg/100 g fresh weight. The antioxidant content and nutritional value of purslane are important for human consumption. It revealed tremendous nutritional potential and has indicated the potential use of this herb for the future
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