94 research outputs found
Governmental Public Policy Making necessities in Agri-Business Partnerships
One of the main sector in every country is agriculture and its management is very vital for every government and every government’s wants to manage it well, because it
is interrelated with lots of branches fir example citizens’ health. Another related part is corporate social responsibility and its relation with public policy and agri-business SMEs is again vital too. This paper investigates the accountants’ integrity, responsibility, compassion and forgiveness on CSR in Iranian private sector in east and west of Azerbaijan in Iran
Implementing corporate social responsibilityas a dynamic capability in recent modern agri-business smes’ concerns
The globalizing market economy is not a homogeneous structure. It seeks the emergence of a decentralized regulation of markets coupled with a cosmopolitan and liberal democracy provided by transnational institutions. During this process agricultural sector cannot be hidden and should choose the best practical strategies but in the area
of globalized agricultural economy, how should corporate social responsibility (CSR), of agriculture should be managed?This paper investigates the global economy and corporate social responsibility in the
context of agricultural sector
Increasing the Production of Carotenoids in Chlorella sorokiniana IG-W-96 by Changing the Concentration of Nutrients and Phytohormones
Introduction
Carotenoids have many effects on human health. These compounds are produced by plants and microalgae. The extraction of carotenoids from microalgae such as Chlorella has received much attention, since microalgae grow all year round (regardless of the season) and at a much faster rate than plants in non-arable lands. The aim of this research was to optimize the concentrations of nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorous) in the growth medium of microalgae with the objective of maximizing carotenoids content. At the optimized nutrient conditions, the effect of phytohormones on production of carotenoids using Chlorella sorokiniana IG-W-96 was investigated.
Materials and Methods
Chlorella sorokiniana IG-W-96 was cultivated in BG11 growth medium with light intensity of 25000 lux and light: dark cycle of 16: 8 supplied with compressed air flow of 0.5 vvm containing 6% vol carbon dioxide. Under three concentrations of nitrate (0.04, 0.25, 1.5 ) and three concentrations of phophate (0.01, 0.04, 0.16 ) and carotenoid concentration was measured. Full factorial experimnetal design was performed and the resuts of the experiments were analyzed using Minitab (ver. 21.01.1). Finally, the best concentrations of nitrate and phosphate were chosen for pigments production, and at that concentration, naphthalene acetic acid (0, 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10 and 12 ppm) was added to the culture medium to check its effect on pigments production. By measuring the dry weight of C. sorokiniana, its growth rate was determined. After extracting the pigments with solvent, the concentration of the pigments was determined by measuring the amount of light absorption.
Results and Discussion
Dry weight
The results showed that the highest amount of dry weight was related to the treatment with nitrate amount of 0.25 , and nitrate more and less than this amount caused a decrease in growth. This result was not dependent on the amount of phosphate and was true for all phosphate concentrations. Nitrate reduction from 1.5 to 0.25 increased the growth of microalgae up to 81.8%, so that the dry weight of 0.88 reached 1.6 . However, reduction of nitrate from 0.25 to 0.04 decreased the dry weight by 65.6%. In order to reach the maximum growth rate, it is necessary to determine the appropriate concentration of each nutrient.
Carotenoids
Unlike the dry weight, not only the pigment production did not decrease with the excessive of nitrate concentration, but also the maximum amount of pigment production was related to the treatment with the maximum amount of nitrate concentration. Based on the results obtained, the concentration of carotenoids was higher in the concentration of 1.5 of nitrate and 0.04 of phosphate (6.7 ).
When the nitrate concentration was very low (0.04 ), changing the phosphate concentration had no significant effect on the production rate of any of the pigments. Only when the nitrate concentration was high (1.5 ), change in phosphate concentration caused a change in pigments concentration. The increase of phosphate concentration from 0.01 to 0.04 increased the carotenoids concentration to 1.65-fold. Of course, increasing phosphate concentration to 0.16 did not affect the pigments concentration.
Based on the statistical analysis, the P-value<0.05 indicated that the effect of the factors and the model was significant. In this situation, in order to increase the production of carotenoids, naphthalene acetic acid was added to the phytohormone culture medium. At the optimal concentration of 2.5 ppm of naphthalene acetic acid, the concentration of carotenoids increased by 26.71% and reached 8.49 . However, phytohormone had no significant effect on dry weight.
Conclusion
Carotenoid production using microalgae could be maximized through optimization of nutrients concentrations (nitrate and phosphate) in the growth medium. Phytohormones could further increase the prodcution of carotenoids at optimum concnetrations
The role of fibromodulin in cancer pathogenesis: Implications for diagnosis and therapy
Fibromodulin (FMOD) is known as one of very important extracellular matrix small leucine-rich proteoglycans. This small leucine-rich proteoglycan has critical roles in the extracellular matrix organization and necessary for repairing of tissue in many organs. Given that the major task of FMOD is the modulation of collagen fibrillogenesis. However, recently observed that FMOD plays very important roles in the modulation of a variety of pivotal biological processes including angiogenesis, regulation of TGF-β activity, and differentiation of human fibroblasts into pluripotent cells, inflammatory mechanisms, apoptosis and metastatic related phenotypes. Besides these roles, FMOD has been considered as a new tumor-related antigen in some malignancies such as lymphoma, leukemia, and leiomyoma. Taken together, these findings proposed that FMOD could be introduced as diagnostic and therapeutic biomarkers in treatment of various cancers. Herein, for first time, we highlighted the various roles of FMOD in the cancerous conditions. Moreover, we summarized the diagnostic and therapeutic applications of FMOD in cancer therapy. © 2019 The Author(s)
A Pathology of Economic Support with Focus On Financial Assistance for Social Workers in Medical Centers
One of the most important responsibilities of social workers is economic support of the needy patients based on professional evaluation and diagnosis. The present research is a qualitative contractual content analysis. Data was collected from 18 social workers of the headquarters, universities of medical sciences, and medical centers, following focused group discussion (FGD) method with multiple-question design. The findings obtained from analyzing the codes, subcategories, and themes/category were grouped as poor intra-organizational cooperation and collaboration and irresponsible inter-organizational challenges influential on the discount topic. The inter-organizational dimension involved topics such as the weakness of hospital HIS system, interference of others in recording the discounts, poor instructions, occupation of social work posts by graduates of other majors, poor documentation, lack of personnel and facilities, lack balance between the authorities and responsibilities, and the unfamiliarity of health workers with the nature of social work. The inter-organizational dimension included the poor performance of other supporting organizations, growing social paths and undocumented immigrants, insurance role, lack of attention to some of the vulnerable groups, imposed expenses, growing visits to public hospitals, and the culture of using public resources. According to the findings of the study, different factors influence the amount and type of the economic support that the social workers provide for the needy patients and this fact imposes a great expense into the healthcare system of the country. On the other hand, it has deprofessionalized the social work profession and created a negative and low level perception towards it in the society
Three options for citation tracking: Google Scholar, Scopus and Web of Science
BACKGROUND: Researchers turn to citation tracking to find the most influential articles for a particular topic and to see how often their own published papers are cited. For years researchers looking for this type of information had only one resource to consult: the Web of Science from Thomson Scientific. In 2004 two competitors emerged – Scopus from Elsevier and Google Scholar from Google. The research reported here uses citation analysis in an observational study examining these three databases; comparing citation counts for articles from two disciplines (oncology and condensed matter physics) and two years (1993 and 2003) to test the hypothesis that the different scholarly publication coverage provided by the three search tools will lead to different citation counts from each. METHODS: Eleven journal titles with varying impact factors were selected from each discipline (oncology and condensed matter physics) using the Journal Citation Reports (JCR). All articles published in the selected titles were retrieved for the years 1993 and 2003, and a stratified random sample of articles was chosen, resulting in four sets of articles. During the week of November 7–12, 2005, the citation counts for each research article were extracted from the three sources. The actual citing references for a subset of the articles published in 2003 were also gathered from each of the three sources. RESULTS: For oncology 1993 Web of Science returned the highest average number of citations, 45.3. Scopus returned the highest average number of citations (8.9) for oncology 2003. Web of Science returned the highest number of citations for condensed matter physics 1993 and 2003 (22.5 and 3.9 respectively). The data showed a significant difference in the mean citation rates between all pairs of resources except between Google Scholar and Scopus for condensed matter physics 2003. For articles published in 2003 Google Scholar returned the largest amount of unique citing material for oncology and Web of Science returned the most for condensed matter physics. CONCLUSION: This study did not identify any one of these three resources as the answer to all citation tracking needs. Scopus showed strength in providing citing literature for current (2003) oncology articles, while Web of Science produced more citing material for 2003 and 1993 condensed matter physics, and 1993 oncology articles. All three tools returned some unique material. Our data indicate that the question of which tool provides the most complete set of citing literature may depend on the subject and publication year of a given article
Health outcomes of 1000 children born to mothers with inflammatory bowel disease in their first 5 years of life
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to describe the long-term health outcomes of children born to mothers with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and to assess the impact of maternal IBD medication use on these outcomes. DESIGN: We performed a multicentre retrospective study in The Netherlands. Women with IBD who gave birth between 1999 and 2018 were enrolled from 20 participating hospitals. Information regarding disease characteristics, medication use, lifestyle, pregnancy outcomes and long-term health outcomes of children was retrieved from mothers and medical charts. After consent of both parents, outcomes until 5 years were also collected from general practitioners. Our primary aim was to assess infection rate and our secondary aims were to assess adverse reactions to vaccinations, growth, autoimmune diseases and malignancies. RESULTS: We included 1000 children born to 626 mothers (381 (61%) Crohn's disease, 225 (36%) ulcerative colitis and 20 (3%) IBD unclassified). In total, 196 (20%) had intrauterine exposure to anti-tumour necrosis factor-α (anti-TNF-α) (60 with concomitant thiopurine) and 240 (24%) were exposed to thiopurine monotherapy. The 564 children (56%) not exposed to anti-TNF-α and/or thiopurine served as control group. There was no association between adverse long-term health outcomes and in utero exposure to IBD treatment. We did find an increased rate of intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP) in case thiopurine was used during the pregnancy without affecting birth outcomes and long-term health outcomes of children. All outcomes correspond with the general age-adjusted population. CONCLUSION: In our study, we found no association between in utero exposure to anti-TNF-α and/or thiopurine and the long-term outcomes antibiotic-treated infections, severe infections needing hospital admission, adverse reactions to vaccinations, growth failure, autoimmune diseases and malignancies
Biosynthesis of highly monodispersed, spherical gold nanoparticles of size 4–10 nm from spent cultures of Klebsiella pneumoniae
The development of eco-friendly approach for the preparation of monodispersed gold nanoparticles (GNPs) has received much attention for their easy application. Most of the current methods involve known protocols which employ toxic chemicals and hazardous byproducts. This greatly limits their use in biomedical fields, particularly in clinical applications. Recent research has been focused on green synthesis methods to produce different nanoparticles with suitable commercial viability. The biosynthesis of monodispersed GNPs using the spent cultures of Klebsiella pneumoniae as reducing and stabilizing agent has been reported. The gold salt concentration to improve monodispersity and stability of GNPs has been optimized. Synthesized GNPs were characterized by UV–Visible spectroscopy showed absorption spectra in the range of 530–560 nm at different concentrations of HAuCl(4). At the optimum reaction concentration of 1.5 mM HAuCl(4), absorption peak was obtained at 535 nm. The GNPs have been further characterized by X-ray diffraction, FTIR, DLS and TEM analysis. The DLS graph showed that the particles were more monodispersed. The TEM image showed the formation of spherical shaped GNPs in the range of 4–10 nm. The effect of gold salt concentration on dispersity, size and stability of the biosynthesized GNPs has been reported
Nanotechnology in peripheral nerve repair and reconstruction
The recent progress in biomaterials science and development of tubular conduits (TCs) still fails in solving the current challenges in the treatment of peripheral nerve injuries (PNIs), in particular when disease-related and long-gap defects need to be addressed. Nanotechnology-based therapies that seemed unreachable in the past are now being considered for the repair and reconstruction of PNIs, having the power to deliver bioactive molecules in a controlled manner, to tune cellular behavior, and ultimately guide tissue regeneration in an effective manner. It also offers opportunities in the imaging field, with a degree of precision never achieved before, which is useful for diagnosis, surgery and in the patientâ s follow-up. Nanotechnology approaches applied in PNI regeneration and theranostics, emphasizing the ones that are moving from the lab bench to the clinics, are herein overviewed.The authors acknowledge the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology
(FCT) for the financial support provided to Joaquim M. Oliveira (IF/01285/2015) and
Joana Silva-Correia (IF/00115/2015) under the program “Investigador FCT”.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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