528 research outputs found

    EFFECTS OF FUNCTIONAL KNEE BRACE ON LOWER EXTREMITY MUSCLE ACTIVATIONS AFTER ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT RECONSTRUCTION

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    The purpose of this study was to analyze effects of functional knee brace on muscular activation of lower extremity for the ACLR athletes during single leg drop landing. Marker trajectories, ground reaction forces and EMG signals were collected and synchronized by Vicon Nexus software. Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare muscle activations of ACLR athletes when wearing knee brace verses no knee brace, and the significance level was set at a = .05. The results showed that the GM, RF and BF muscle activation levels were significant increased when wearing knee brace than no knee brace at singleleg drop jump. Wearing knee brace for ACLR athletes can help to increase activation of knee flexors and help to stabilize knee joint during dynamic situation. We suggest that knee brace could help ACLR athlete to maintain better knee stability

    Research on the Cleaning Efficacy of Micro-bubbles on Dental Plaque

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    AbstractLong-term bed-ridden patients do not usually have the same opportunity for proper dental hygiene as normal individuals, as they often have difficulty using toothbrushes to clean their teeth. Patients with periodontal disease are also at risk of increased bacterial infection due to the propensity for teeth brushing causing bleeding of the gums. Therefore, an alternative method of dental hygiene maintenance is required for these individuals. Our study proposed a method to clean dental plaque through a tooth tray with micro-bubbles and verified its cleaning efficacy through experiment. A cleaning device that produces micro bubbles (Braun MD20) was used in the study with five separately modified nozzle diameters as the independent variable: 0.16mm, 0.30mm, 0.63mm, 0.8mmand 1.2mm. The five different rotation speed settings of the device act as the other independent variable, with the resulting flow volume, velocity and the diameter of the micro-bubbles as the intermediate variables. The effects of these variables on cleaning dental plaque were investigated. Our results showed that an average of 45%āˆ¼75% cleaning rate of dental plaque was achieved under all combinations of the variables. The best dental plaque removal variable combination was nozzle diameter 0.8mm with speed of 3527rpm, in which 98% dental plaque removal was achieved. The dimension of the nozzle exerted greater influence on flow volume, flow velocity and bubble diameter than rotation speed. The effect of the control variables on plaque removal was also more significant than intermediate variables, with the nozzle dimension influencing plaque removal at 0.05 significance level

    Infectious Alopecia in a Dog Breeder After Renal Transplantation

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    Tinea capitis rarely occurs in renal transplant recipients. We report this living-related renal transplant patient receiving cyclosporine-based therapy who initially presented with severe exfoliation of the scalp with yellowish-white scales and marked hair loss. The lesions extended to the frontal area and both cheeks, resulting in several skin ulcers with perifocal erythematous inflammatory changes, and palpable cervical lymph nodes. A biopsy of a skin lesion revealed fungal infection and culture yielded Microsporum canis. The patient mentioned an outbreak of ringworm in her breeding dogs during this period. After adequate treatment of the patient and her infected animals with griseofulvin and disinfection of the environment, her skin lesions resolved dramatically, with regrowth of hair

    All-electric all-semiconductor spin field-effect transistors.

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    The spin field-effect transistor envisioned by Datta and Das opens a gateway to spin information processing. Although the coherent manipulation of electron spins in semiconductors is now possible, the realization of a functional spin field-effect transistor for information processing has yet to be achieved, owing to several fundamental challenges such as the low spin-injection efficiency due to resistance mismatch, spin relaxation and the spread of spin precession angles. Alternative spin transistor designs have therefore been proposed, but these differ from the field-effect transistor concept and require the use of optical or magnetic elements, which pose difficulties for incorporation into integrated circuits. Here, we present an all-electric and all-semiconductor spin field-effect transistor in which these obstacles are overcome by using two quantum point contacts as spin injectors and detectors. Distinct engineering architectures of spin-orbit coupling are exploited for the quantum point contacts and the central semiconductor channel to achieve complete control of the electron spins (spin injection, manipulation and detection) in a purely electrical manner. Such a device is compatible with large-scale integration and holds promise for future spintronic devices for information processing.We thank C.-W. Chang, C.-C. Cheng, M. Fletcher, S. N. Holmes, C.-T. Liang, S.-T. Lo and J. R. Petta for discussion and/or technical assistance on device fabrication and measurements. This work was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology (Taiwan), the Headquarters of University Advancement at the National Cheng Kung University, and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (UK).This is the accepted manuscript. The final version is available at http://www.nature.com/nnano/journal/v10/n1/full/nnano.2014.296.htm

    Honokiol Eliminates Human Oral Cancer Stem-Like Cells Accompanied with Suppression of Wnt/ Ī²

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    Honokiol, an active compound of Magnolia officinalis, exerted many anticancer effects on various types of cancer cells. We explored its effects on the elimination of cancer stem-like side population (SP) cells in human oral squamous cell carcinoma SAS cells. The sorted SP cells possessed much higher expression of stemness genes, such as ABCG2, ABCC5, EpCAM, OCT-4, CD133, CD44, and Ī²-catenin, and more clonogenicity as compared with the Non-SP cells. After 48ā€‰h of treatment, honokiol dose dependently reduced the proportion of SP from 2.53% to 0.09%. Apoptosis of honokiol-treated SP cells was evidenced by increased annexin V staining and cleaved caspase-3 as well as decreased Survivin and Bcl-2. Mechanistically, honokiol inhibited the CD44 and Wnt/Ī²-catenin signaling of SP cells. The Wnt signaling transducers such as Ī²-catenin and TCF-4 were decreased in honokiol-treated SP cells, while the Ī²-catenin degradation promoting kinase GSK-3Ī±/Ī² was increased. Consistently, the protein levels of Ī²-catenin downstream targets such as c-Myc and Cyclin D1 were also downregulated. Furthermore, the Ī²-catenin-related EMT markers such as Slug and Snail were markedly suppressed by honokiol. Our findings indicate honokiol may be able to eliminate oral cancer stem cells through apoptosis induction, suppression of Wnt/Ī²-catenin signaling, and inhibition of EMT

    Down-regulation of PKCĪ¶ in renal cell carcinoma and its clinicopathological implications

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is highly resistant to systemic chemotherapy. Unfortunately, nearly all patients die of the metastatic and chemoresistant RCC. Recent studies have shown the atypical PKCĪ¶ is an important regulator of tumorigenesis. However, the correlation between PKC<b>Ī¶ </b>expression and the clinical outcome in RCC patients is unclear. We examined the level of PKCĪ¶ expression in human RCC.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>PKCĪ¶ mRNA and protein expressions were examined by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) respectively in RCC tissues of 144 patients. Cellular cytotoxicity and proliferation were assessed by MTT.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>PKCĪ¶ expression was significantly higher in normal than in cancerous tissues (<it>P </it>< 0.0001) by real-time PCR and IHC. Similarly, PKCĪ¶ expression was down-regulated in four renal cancer cell lines compared to immortalized benign renal tubular cells. Interestingly, an increase of PKCĪ¶ expression was associated with the elevated tumor grade (<it>P </it>= 0.04), but no such association was found in TNM stage (<it>P </it>= 0.13). Tumors with higher PKCĪ¶ expression were associated with tumor size (<it>P </it>= 0.048). Expression of higher PKCĪ¶ found a poor survival in patients with high tumor grade. Down-regulation of PKCĪ¶ showed the significant chemoresistance in RCC cell lines. Inactivation of PKCĪ¶ expression enhanced cellular resistance to cisplatin and paclitaxel, and proliferation in HK-2 cells by specific PKC<b>Ī¶ </b>siRNA and inhibitor.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>PKCĪ¶ expression was associated with tumorigenesis and chemoresistance in RCC.</p

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    To evaluate the relationship between circulating adiponectin and insulin sensitivity in patients with hyperthyroid Graves&apos; disease, we studied 19 adult patients with this disease and 19 age-and sex-matched euthyroid controls. All hyperthyroid patients were treated with antithyroid drugs and were re-evaluated after thyroid function normalized. Before antithyroid treatment, the adiponectin plasma concentrations were not different comparing with those in control group. The adiponectin levels remained unchanged after treatment. The homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) in hyperthyroid group was higher before treatment than after treatment. There was no significant difference in serum glucose and insulin levels between hyperthyroid and control groups and in the hyperthyroid group before and after treatment. BMI-adjusted adiponectin levels were not different among three groups. On the other hand, BMI-adjusted insulin levels and HOMA-IR values were significantly decreased after management of hyperthyroidism. Pearson&apos;s correlation revealed that insulin and HOMA-IR values positively correlated with triiodothyronine (T3) and free thyroxine (FT4) levels. However, adiponectin did not correlate with T3, FT4, insulin, HOMA-IR and thyrotropin receptor autoantibody (TRAb) levels. In conclusion, insulin resistance associated with hyperthyroidism is not mediated by the levels of plasma adiponectin

    In vitro ruminal fermentation and cow-to-mouse fecal transplantations verify the inter-relationship of microbiome and metabolome biomarkers: potential to promote health in dairy cows

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    IntroductionThere are differences in the gut microbiome and metabolome when the host undergoes different physical or pathological conditions. However, the inter-relationship of microbiome and metabolome biomarkers to potentially promote the health of dairy cows needs to be studied. Further, the development of next-generation probiotics for dairy cattle health promotion has not been demonstrated.ObjectiveIn the present study, we identified the microbiome and metabolome biomarkers associated with healthy cows.MethodsWe analyzed the relationships of the ruminal microorganism profile and metabolites between healthy and mastitis lactating dairy cows. The roles of bacterial biomarker were further verified by in vitro fermentation and cow-to-mouse fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT).ResultsTwo species, Ruminococcus flavefaciens and Bifidobacterium longum subsp. longum, and six rumen metabolites were positively correlated with healthy cows by Spearmanā€™s correlation analysis. Through in vitro ruminal fermentation, inoculating R. flavefaciens and B. longum subsp. longum showed the upregulation of the levels of putrescine, xanthurenic acid, and pyridoxal in the mastitis ruminal fluid, which confirmed the inter-relationships between these microbiota and metabolites associated with healthy cows. Further, we verified the role of R. flavefaciens and B. longum subsp. longum in promoting health by FMT. The administration of R. flavefaciens and B. longum subsp. longum reduced the death rate and recovered the bodyweight loss of germ-free mice caused by FMT mastitis feces.DiscussionWe provided evidence that the bacterial biomarkers alter downstream metabolites. This could indirectly indicate that the two bacterial biomarkers have the potential to be used as next-generation probiotics for dairy cattle, although it needs more evidence to support our hypothesis. Two species, R. flavefaciens and B. longum subsp. longum, with three metabolites, putrescine, xanthurenic acid, and pyridoxal, identified in the ruminal fluid, may point to a new health-promoting and disease-preventing approach for dairy cattle
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