29 research outputs found

    A cautionary tale from the Adriatic Palaeolithic: reassessing the stratigraphic reliability of Sandalja II cave (Istria, Croatia)

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    Šandalja II has been a reference site for numerous decades for the definition and study of the Eastern Adriatic Upper Palaeolithic and corresponding techno-complexes. This is due both to its extensive material record, and the purported presence of some otherwise elusive techno-complexes in the area, such as the Aurignacian and the Early Epigravettian. In this paper, we present two new series of C14-AMS dates (from layers H, E, C/d and A/d) to assess the validity of its archaeological sequence, together with previously obtained radiocarbon dates, both AMS and conventional. The results show, unambiguously, the lack of reliability of the stratigraphy defined for the site during the excavation. A simple chronometric deconstruction reveals, at the very least, that the assemblages from Šandalja II can no longer be considered and used as an example of the diachronic evolution within the Aurignacian and Epigravettian of the Eastern Adriatic, thus calling for a further reevaluation of features defined for the Adriatic Upper Palaeolithic on the basis on the assemblages from Šandalja II. Hence Šandalja II joins an increasing list of so-called reference sites which must not be considered as “referential” anymore

    Novel methodology for determining the effect of adsorbates on human enamel acid dissolution

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    Objective: The effect of various interventions on enamel demineralisation can be determined by chemically measuring mineral ions dissolved by the attacking acid. Results are usually expressed as mineral loss per surface area of enamel exposed. Acid resistant varnish or adhesive tape are typically used to delineate an area of enamel. However, enamel surface curvature, rugosity and porosity reduce the reliability of simple area measurements made at the macro scale. Our aim was to develop a simple method for investigating the effect of adsorbates on enamel demineralisation that does not rely on knowing the area of enamel exposed. As an exemplar we have used salivary proteins as a model adsorbate. Design: Natural human tooth enamel surfaces were subjected to five sequential acid challenges and then incubated in adsorbate (whole clarified saliva) followed by a further 15 acid challenges. Demineralisation was determined by measuring the phosphate released into the acid during each exposure by a spectrophotometric assay. The initial five challenges established a mean baseline mineral loss for each tooth against which the effect of subsequently adsorbed proteins could be compared. Results: Salivary proteins significantly reduced the acid demineralisation of human enamel by 43% (p < 0.01). Loss of proteins during each challenge corresponded to a gradual reduction in the degree of protection afforded. Conclusions: The methodology provides a simple and flexible means to investigate the effect of any adsorbate on enamel acid dissolution. Knowledge of the area of exposed enamel is irrelevant as each tooth acts as its own negative control

    New herbal bitter liqueur with high antioxidant activity and lower sugar content: innovative approach to liqueurs formulations

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    Herbal liqueurs are spirits with numerous functional properties, due to the presence of bioactive extractable compounds deriving from herbs. The aim of this study was to obtain new herbal bitter liqueur (HBL) on the basis of twelve selected bitter and aromatic plants extracts, with an optimal sensory profile for consumer acceptance. Also, the determination of optimal sugar content in HBL was done. Furthermore, antioxidant (AO) capacity and total phenolic content (TPC) of HBL was evaluated and compared to similar commercial herbal spirits. Among five tested formulations, assessed by 9-point hedonic scale, HBL with the ratio of bitter and aromatic plants 1:4 was the most acceptable. Ideal concentration of sugar in HBL, determined using a just-about-right scale, was found to be 80.32 g/l of sucrose, which is approximately 20% less than the minimum stipulated by European Union Regulation and several times lower than in the majority of commercial liqueurs. Obtained result indicates the possibility of sugar reduction in liqueurs, and suggests the need to carry out sensory analysis before production of these high-calorie beverages. Radical scavenging ability against DPPH and ABTS radicals, as well as ferric reducing antioxidant power and TPC of HBL were convincingly superior in comparison to similar commercial herbal alcoholic beverages. High correlation coefficients between TPC and other assays applied strongly support the significant role of the polyphenols in the total AO capacity of the HBL and other tested commercial herbal spirits. Headspace GC/MS revealed that the most abundant terpenes were menthone (3.75%), eucalyptol (3.42%) and menthol (3.10%), whereas methanol was present in a small amount (4.97 mg/l)

    Supplementing essential amino acids with the nitric oxide precursor, l-arginine, enhances skeletal muscle perfusion without impacting anabolism in older men

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    Postprandial limb blood flow and skeletal muscle microvascular perfusion reduce with aging. Here we tested the impact of providing bolus essential amino acids (EAA) in the presence and absence of the nitric oxide precursor, l-Arginine (ARG), upon skeletal muscle blood flow and anabolism in older men. Healthy young (YOUNG: 19.7 ± 0.5 y, N = 8) and older men (OLD, 70 ± 0.8 y, N = 8) received 15 g EAA or (older only) 15 g EAA +3 g ARG (OLD-ARG, 69.2 ± 1.2 y, N = 8). We quantified responses in muscle protein synthesis (MPS; incorporation of 13C phenylalanine into myofibrillar proteins), leg and muscle microvascular blood flow (Doppler/contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEUS)) and insulin/EAA in response to EEA ± ARG. Plasma EAA increased similarly across groups but argininemia was evident solely in OLD-ARG (∼320 mmol, 65 min post feed); increases in plasma insulin (to ∼13 IU ml−1) were similar across groups. Increases in femoral flow were evident in YOUNG >2 h after feeding; these effects were blunted in OLD and OLD-ARG. Increases in microvascular blood volume (MBV) occurred only in YOUNG and these effects were isolated to the early postprandial phase (+45% at ∼45 min after feeding) coinciding with detectable arterio-venous differences in EAA reflecting net uptake by muscle. Increases in microvascular flow velocity (MFV) and tissue perfusion (MBV × MFV) occurred (∼2 h) in YOUNG and OLD-ARG, but not OLD. Postprandial protein accretion was greater in YOUNG than OLD or OLD-ARG; the latter two groups being indistinguishable. Therefore, ARG rescues aspects of muscle perfusion in OLD without impacting anabolic blunting, perhaps due to the “rescue” being beyond the period of active EAA-uptake

    Training and Capacity Building for Peacebuilding and Development

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    Measuring the Amount of Concomitant Firing during Neural Development

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    The aim of this work was to estimate and compare the amount of concomitant firing in the neural dynamics of dissociated in-vitro cultures analyzed across various stages of development. To this end, we used a recently proposed index to estimate the degree of concomitant neural activity (denoted as CFIMI), which computes the mutual information between pairs of state flows extracted from neural spiking activities. The state-flow representation was obtained classifying the spiking activity of each neural unit into three states which differentiate the inter-spike intervals on the basis of their duration using percentile statistics. We show that the CFIMI index detects a significant increase of synchronous (concomitant) firing patterns between pairs of neurons, moving from the early stage of development to intermediate and full maturation in population of thirteen analyzed cultures. Furthermore, the use of the CFIMI index as an estimate of the neural interactions facilitates effective characterization of the functional organization of developing neural networks by graph-theoretic measures

    Plasma TGF-beta 1-related survival of postmenopausal metastatic breast cancer patients

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    A pilot study was conducted to assess whether plasma levels of transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) might facilitate biological subgrouping of postmenopausal metastatic breast cancer patients, and, accordingly, its applicability in clinical oncology. This study included 29 postmenopausal metastatic breast cancer patients. Plasma TGF-beta 1 levels were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Estrogen and progesterone receptors were assayed by radioligand binding, in accordance with the recommendation of the EORTC. Concentrations of 17-beta estradiol were determined by using ELISA-microwell method (DIALAB). Overall survival was followed for 24 months for each individual patient. Stratification of the patients by ER/PR status showed that 14 patients with estrogen receptor-negative, progesterone receptor-negative carcinomas displayed a statistically significant increase in plasma TGF-beta 1 levels when compared to plasma TGF-beta 1 levels of 6 patients with ER-positive, PR-positive carcinomas (P=0.04). In this study, 7 out of 14 patients with negative receptors status had no plasma TGF-beta 1 values overlapping with patients having positive receptors status. The TGF-beta 1 cut-off value was defined as the highest plasma TGF-beta 1 level of ER-positive, PR-positive patients: 3.28 ng/ml. This plasma TGF-beta 1 cut-off value defined low-risk subgroup of 19 patients (! 3.28 ng/ml) and high-risk subgroup of 10 patients ( GT 3.28 ng/ml) (P=0.047). Plasma TGF-beta 1-related survival was independent of the classical prognostic factors of metastatic breast cancer. Accordingly, a clinical significance of elevated plasma TGF-beta 1 levels may be suggested
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