15 research outputs found

    Landslide initiation and runout susceptibility modeling in the context of hill cutting and rapid urbanization: a combined approach of weights of evidence and spatial multi-criteria

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    Rainfall induced landslides are a common threat to the communities living on dangerous hill-slopes in Chittagong Metropolitan Area, Bangladesh. Extreme population pressure, indiscriminate hill cutting, increased precipitation events due to global warming and associated unplanned urbanization in the hills are exaggerating landslide events. The aim of this article is to prepare a scientifically accurate landslide susceptibility map by combining landslide initiation and runout maps. Land cover, slope, soil permeability, surface geology, precipitation, aspect, and distance to hill cut, road cut, drainage and stream network factor maps were selected by conditional independence test. The locations of 56 landslides were collected by field surveying. A weight of evidence (WoE) method was applied to calculate the positive (presence of landslides) and negative (absence of landslides) factor weights. A combination of analytical hierarchical process (AHP) and fuzzy membership standardization (weighs from 0 to 1) was applied for performing a spatial multi-criteria evaluation. Expert opinion guided the decision rule for AHP. The Flow-R tool that allows modeling landslide runout from the initiation sources was applied. The flow direction was calculated using the modified Holmgren’s algorithm. The AHP landslide initiation and runout susceptibility maps were used to prepare a combined landslide susceptibility map. The relative operating characteristic curve was used for model validation purpose. The accuracy of WoE, AHP, and combined susceptibility map was calculated 96%, 97%, and 98%, respectively

    Effect of intracoronary bone marrow-derived mononuclear cell injection early and late after myocardial infarction on CMR-derived myocardial strain

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    BACKGROUND: Studies indicate no clear impact of intracoronary injection of bone-marrow unselected mononuclear cells (BM-MNC) after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) on left-ventricular function (LVEF). Strain parameters by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) have been proposed to be more sensitive to functional changes of the heart. The aim of the present study was to assess changes of global longitudinal (GLS) and circumferential strain (GCS) in a group of patients treated with BM-MNC after AMI. METHODS: One-hundred and forty-nine patients with successfully reperfused AMI and LV dysfunction (LVEF<45%) were retrospectively included into this sub-study of the SWISS-AMI multicentre trial. Patients were divided into control (N = 54), early (5-7 days after AMI, N = 51) and late BM-MNC treatment groups (3-4 weeks, N = 44). The endpoint was the change of GLS and GCS as obtained from cine sequences 4 and 12 months after AMI using feature tracking algorithm. RESULTS: In unadjusted analyses, the absolute change of GLS for the early treatment group from baseline to 4 months was 2.5 ± 4.3 (p < 0.01), to 12 months 2.7 ± 5.7% (p = 0.004). For late treatment, it was 1.5 ± 4.0% (p = 0.039, 4 months) and 2.5 ± 5.6% (p = 0.015, 12 months). For controls 0.7 ± 4.7% (p = 0.378), 0.8 ± 3.9% (p = 0.253) respectively. Adjusting for different baseline values, neither an overall treatment effect (both time-points) of BM-MNC nor a treatment time-related (only early or late) effect could be shown for all functional parameters. CONCLUSIONS: Among patients after AMI with successful reperfusion and LV dysfunction, intracoronary infusion of BM-MNC early or late after AMI did not improve global strain parameters at 4- or 12-months follow-up. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00355186

    In vitro antimicrobial assessment of Cuban propolis extracts

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    Propolis is a resinous mixture of different plant exudates collected by honeybees. Currently, propolis is widely used as a food supplement and in folk medicine. We have evaluated 20 Cuban propolis extracts of different chemical types, brown (BCP), red and yellow (YCP), with respect to their in vitro antibacterial, antifungal and antiprotozoal properties. The extracts inhibited the growth of Staphylococcus aureus and Trichophyton rubrum at low µg/mL concentrations, whereas they were not active against Escherichia coli and Candida albicans. The major activity of the extracts was found against the protozoa Leishmania, Trypanosoma and Plasmodium, although cytotoxicity against MRC-5 cells was also observed. The BCP-3, YCP-39 and YCP-60 extracts showed the highest activity against P. falciparum, with 50% of microbial growth (IC50) values of 0.2 µg/mL. A positive correlation between the biological activity and the chemical composition was observed for YCP extracts. The most promising antimicrobial activity corresponds to YCP subtype B, which contains acetyl triterpenes as the main constituents. The present in vitro study highlights the potential of propolis against protozoa, but further research is needed to increase selectivity towards the parasite. The observed chemical composition-activity relationship of propolis can contribute to the identification of the active principles and standardisation of this bee product
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