562 research outputs found
Appraisal of ethnobotanical uses of the wetland plants of Punjab, Pakistan
Background: Aquatic and semiaquatic plants have a multiplicity of traditional and ethnopharmacological uses ranging from medicinal, famine food to fodder and others. Therefore, the present study was carried out during the years 2008-2011 to document the locally used medicinal, ethnobotanical and traditional data of aquatic and semiaquatic plants of the Punjab, Pakistan.Material and Method: Various visits of the study area were made to collect the data of these plants included local name, habit and habitat with special emphasis on their therapeutic uses against different human ailments. The local elderly, knowledgable people and herbal healers were also interviewed during the visits.Results: A total of thirty-four aquatic and semiaquatic plants were collected and out of these, eighteen plants belonging to the three monocotyledonous and fourteen dicotyledonous families were reported to medicinal and food value as well as found useful in making ropes, mats, baskets and soil binding.Conclusion: The wetland of Punjab (Pakistan) possesses a variety of medicinal plants that are being utilized against various human diseases, e.g.Respiratorial, dermatological, gastrontological, neurological and cardio-vascular diseases.Key Words: Ethnobotanical uses, wetland plants, and herbal medicines
Analysis of temperature variations in fixed-bed columns using non-isothermal and non-equilibrium transport model
A non-isothermal and non-equilibrium two-component lumped kinetic model of fixed-bed column liquid chromatography is formulated with the linearized isotherm and solved analytically to study the influence of temperature variations on the process. The model equations constitute a system of convection-diffusion PDE for mass and energy balances in the bulk phase coupled with differential equations for mass and energy balances in the stationary phase. The analytical solutions are derived for Dirichlet boundary conditions by implementing the Laplace transformation, Tschirnhaus-Vieta approach, the linear decomposition technique and an elementary solution technique of ODE. An efficient and accurate numerical Laplace inversion technique is applied to bring back the solution in the actual time domain. In order to validate the derived analytical solutions for concentration and temperature fronts, the high resolution upwind finite volume scheme is applied to approximate the model equations numerically. Various case studies are carried out assuming realistic model parameters. The results obtained will be beneficial for interpreting mass and energy profiles in non-equilibrium and non-isothermal liquid chromatographic columns and provide deeper insight into the sensitivity of the separation process without performing costly and time-consuming laboratory experiments
Smoking among males in a low socioeconomic area of Karachi
Approximately half of the families in Pakistan reported having at least one smoker in 1992. Smokers were less educated, poorer and more likely to come from a rural background than non-smokers. The proportion of family earnings in poor families with marginal incomes, may be substantial. We conducted this survey to determine the prevalence of cigarette smoking in males over 15 years of age in Azam Basti, an urban squatter settlement of Karachi where 31% of the children less than 5 years old were malnourished. A pretested, structured questionnaire was administered to males aged fifteen years and above, from randomly selected homes in Azam Basti. In our sample of 102 persons the respondents were 38 years old on average, and earned about Rs. 4,500 (US 140) (OR = 2.4, 95% confidence interval 0.8, 7.3). Smoking is common in urban squatter settlements in Pakistan. Parental smoking and its relationship with malnutrition in children under five is not well documented or publicized, even though there is evidence that it has a contribution. We propose that primary health care programs consider smoking prevention and cessation as community based interventions
Preculturing effect of thidiazuron on in vitro shoot multiplication and micropropagation round in Capparis decidua (Forsk.) an important multipurpose plant
An efficient protocol was developed for clonal multiplication of an important shrub: Capparis decidua (Forsk.) Edgew, through in vitro shoot induction and multiplication from nodal explants. Pretreatment of nodal explants in a liquid Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium augmented with various thidiazuron (TDZ) concentrations at relatively high levels (5–100 μM) for different time duration (4, 8, 12 and 16 d), proved a significant approach for in vitro shoot production. After an initial exposure time to TDZ, nodal explants were inoculated onto a MS basal medium devoid of TDZ for further induction and proliferation. The highest regeneration rate (85%), average number of shoots/explant (8.7 ± 0.22) and maximum shoot length (3.9 ± 0.33 cm) were obtained from the nodal explants exposed to 50 μM TDZ for 8 d. The nodal explants excised from the proliferated cultures of TDZ (50 μM) for 8 d were used as explants and showed an enhancement rate after next three round of in vitro propagation. Best results for rooting was obtained by ex vitro treatment of shoots with 200 μM indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) for 20 min. as it produced an average of 5.7 ± 0.41 roots per microshoot with 4.4 ± 0.39 cm root length in 84% shoots. Different planting substrates was tested for maximum survival of hardening off micropropagated plantlets and soilrite proved most effective than others as 97.1 ± 7.21 plantlets survived. All micropropagated plants grew well in natural conditions and showed similar morphology to the mother plant
Black Gold\u27s Price Plunge: Are Conventional and Islamic Banks Equally Vulnerable?
Regarding the vulnerability of the banking industry to oil price plunges, we investigate the effects of oil price declines on credit and insolvency risks for the banking industry within specific bank specializations (conventional, Islamic, and conventional banks with Islamic windows), from 2000 through 2016, at both the aggregate and country levels in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Our findings show that falling oil prices significantly increase the credit risk for the banking industry, particularly for banks operating in Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Commercial banks with Islamic windows are also prone to oil price shocks. However, falling oil prices do not affect the credit risk of Islamic banks. Utilizing accounting-based and marked-based proxies for the insolvency risk, our analysis shows that oil price plunges do not increase the insolvency risk of the banking industry or bank specializations. We argue that bailout packages given by the wealth funds to GCC banks is a probable cause for counter intuitive results with respect to solvency risk. Our research findings will be of interest to various stakeholders, particularly the regulators who look for empirical evidence to develop deeper insights to the sound functioning of the banking systems
Synthesis, spectral characterization and antioxidant activity of a supramolecular copper (II) complex obtained from pyridine-2, 6- dicarboxylic acid and 3,5-diamino - 1, 2, 4-triazole.
A supramolecular copper (II) compound, (HdatrzH)[Cu (Hdipic) (dipic)].3H2O (1) (Hdatrz = 3,5-diamino-1,2,4- triazole, dipic = pyridine- 2,6-dicarboxylic acid) was synthesized and characterized by elemental analysis, Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), UV-Visible spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR), thermal analysis, and magnetic susceptibility measurement. The room temperature magnetic susceptibility measurement showed a magnetic moment of 1.67 BM for compound 1, deviating slightly from the spin-only magnetic moment value for Cu (II) ion. Thermogravimetric analysis revealed three decomposition stages for compound 1. The compound showed no activity against all the tested microorganisms. Interestingly, compound 1 exhibited a significant radical scavenging activity (RSA)
Sterol composition of marine algae from Karachi coast of Arabian Sea
During the course of chemical investigation of marine algae collected from Karachi coast of Arabian Sea, five sterols named as sarangosterol(1), 23-methyl cholesta-5, 25-dien-3ß-ol(2) from Endarachne binghamiae (brown alga), sargasterol(3) from Dictyota indica (brown alga), cholesterol(4) from Laurencia obtusa (red alga) and clerosterol(5) from Codium iyengarii (green alga) have been isolated. Their structures were elucidated with the help of spectroscopic means
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