118 research outputs found

    Production and Characterization of Energy Materials with Adsorbent Properties by Hydrothermal Processing of Corn Stover with Subcritical H2O

    Get PDF
    This work aims to investigate the effect of temperature on the process performance of hydrothermal processing (HTC) of corn Stover with subcritical H2O and on the morphology of solid products. The experiments were carried out at 200, 225 and 250 ºC, reaction time of 240 minutes, heating rate of 2.0 ºC/min, and biomass to water ratio of 1:10, using a pilot scale stirred tank reactor (STR) of 5 gallon, operating in batch mode. The process performance analyzed by computing the yields of solid and liquid reaction products (RLP). The aqueous phase (H2O + RLP) was physicochemical analyzed for pH and total carboxylic acids, expressed as total acetic acid content. The chemical compositions of carboxylic acids, furfural, and hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) in the aqueous phase determined by GC-MS and HPLC. The results showed solid yields ranging from 57.39 to 35.82% (wt.), and liquid reaction products (RLP) yields ranging from 39.53 to 54.59% (wt.). The solid phase products were characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), and X-ray diffraction (XRD). The chemically activated (2.0 M NaOH) solid phase energy material obtained by HTC at 250 °C, applied as adsorbent to investigate the capacity and/or efficiency to adsorb acetic acid from 1.0 to 4.0 g/L model solutions at 25 °C. The solid phase yield decreases along with the temperature, showing an inflection region between 200 and 225 °C, whereas a drastic change takes place, while that of liquid phase increases, showing also a drastic change between 200 and 225 °C. The total acetic acid content of aqueous phase varied from 4064 to 5387 mg/L, while the pH from 3.77 to 3.91. The GC analysis identified the presence of volatile carboxylic acids, particularly acetic acid, in concentrations between 4020 and 5040 mg/L. HPLC identified the presence of furfural and hydroxymethylfurfural, whose concentrations decrease exponentially and linearly along with the temperature between 686.7 and 0.0, and 443.9 and 0.0 mg/L, respectively, being both compounds not detectable at 250 °C. The elemental/ultimate analysis of solid products shows that carbon content increases, while the oxygen and hydrogen contents decrease, along with the temperature. The H/C and O/C ratios decrease linearly as process temperature increases, and the high heating value (HHV) of solid reaction products, an energy densified material, changes sharply between 200 and 225 °C, showing an increase with temperature. The SEM, EDX, and XDR indicates a change on the morphology and mineralogical phases present in solid reaction products with temperature, particularly at 250 °C. The activated solid phase has proven to be very selective to adsorb acetic acid, showing that recovery of acetic acid from hydrothermal carbonization/liquefaction aqueous solutions is feasible by using a multistage-stage adsorption process in series

    Acceptance of fermented anchovy (Engraulis anchoita)

    Get PDF
    The objective of this study was to evaluate the acceptance of fermented anchovy (Engraulis anchoita) by consumers aged 18–67 (n=100) from two experiments, first using preference test and then by acceptance of formulation preference. Anchovy fillets were fermented with added NaCl and glucose with 4 different treatments: A (NaCl 1% and glucose 4%), B (NaCl 1% and glucose 6%), C (NaCl 1.5% and glucose 4%), and D (NaCl 1.5% and glucose 6% glucose). At first, the preference of fermented anchovy fillets with samples prepared in the form of pizza was assessed by applying a preference ranking test to 75 consumers. The results indicated the sample with 1% NaCl and 6% glucose as the preferred (P>0.05). Later in the second stage, the preferred fermented fillet was subjected to acceptance by 100 consumers who have the consumption habit of such product by using a hedonic scale of 9 points. The results indicated an acceptance rate of 79.8%. This work aimed to call attention to the importance of the acceptance of this food

    Meningite crônica, hidrocefalia e paraplegia medular em histoplasmose não-sistêmica

    Get PDF
    [No abstract available]sem informação746514515sem informaçãosem informaçã

    Whipple's Disease With Neurological Manifestations: Case Report

    Get PDF
    Whipple's disease (WD) is an uncommon multisystem condition caused by the bacillus Tropheryma whipplei. Central nervous system involvement is a classical feature of the disease observed in 20 to 40% of the patients. We report the case of a 62 yeards old man with WD that developed neurological manifestations during its course, and discuss the most usual signs and symptoms focusing on recent diagnostic criteria and novel treatment regimens.622 A342346Whipple, G.H., A hitherto undescribed disease characterized anatomically by deposits of fat and fatty acids in the intestinal and mesenteric lymphatic tissues (1907) Johns Hopkins Hosp Bull, 18, pp. 382-391Marth, T., Raoult, D., Whipple's disease (2003) Lancet, 36, pp. 239-246Gerard, A., Sarrot-Reynauld, F., Liozon, E., Neurologic presentation of Whipple disease: Report of 12 cases and review of the literature (2002) Medicine (Baltimore), 81, pp. 443-457Brown, A.P., Lane, J.C., Murayama, S., Vollmer, D.G., Whipple's disease presenting with isolated neurological symptoms: Case report (1990) J Neurosurg, 73, pp. 623-627Bostwick, D.G., Bensch, K.G., Burke, J.S., Whipple's disease presenting as aortic insufficiency (1981) N Engl J Med, 305, pp. 995-998Raoult, D., A febrile, blood culture-negative endocarditis (1999) Ann Intern Med, 131, pp. 144-146Chan, R.Y., Yannuzzi, L.A., Foster, C.S., Ocular Whipple's disease: Earlier definitive diagnosis (2001) Ophthalmology, 108, pp. 2225-2231Louis, E.D., Lynch, T., Kaufmann, P., Fahn, S., Odel, J., Diagnostic guidelines in central nervous system Whipple's disease (1996) Ann Neurol, 40, pp. 561-568Sieracki, J.C., Whipple's disease: Observations on systemic involvement (1958) Amer Med Asso Arch Pathol, 66, pp. 464-467Anderson, M., Neurology of Whipple's disease (2000) J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry, 68, pp. 2-5De Coene, B., Gilliard, C., Indekeu, P., Whipple's disease confined to the central nervous system (1996) Neuroradiology, 38, pp. 325-327Verhagen, W.I.M., Huygen, P.L.M., Dalman, J.E., Schuurmans, M.M.J., Whipple's disease and the central nervous system: A case report and a review of the literature (1996) Clin Neurol Neurosurg, 98, pp. 299-304Feldman, M., Hendler, R.S., Morrison, E.B., Acute meningoencephalitis after withdrawal of antibiotics in Whipple's disease (1980) Ann Intern Med, 93, pp. 709-711Schwartz, M.A., Selhorst, J.B., Ochs, A.L., Oculomasticatory myorhythmia: A unique movement disorder occurring in Whipple's disease (1986) Ann Neurol, 20, pp. 677-683Manzel, K., Tranel, D., Cooper, G., Cognitive and behavioral abnormalities in a case of central nervous system Whipple disease (2000) Arch Neurol, 57, pp. 399-403Halperin, J.J., Landis, D.M., Kleinman, G.M., Whipple's disease of the nervous system (1982) Neurology, 32, pp. 612-617Feurle, G.E., Volk, B., Waldherr, R., Cerebral Whipple's disease with negative jejunal histology (1979) N Engl J Med, 300, pp. 907-908Madoule, P., Ciaudio-Lacroix, C., Halimi, P., Osteoarticular lesions in Whipple's disease, a propos of a destructive form and review of the literature (1985) J Radiol, 66, pp. 345-350Brändle, M., Ammann, P., Spinas, G.A., Relapsing Whipple's disease presenting with hypopituitarism (1999) Clin Endocrinol, 50, pp. 399-403Topper, R., Gartung, C., Block, F., Neurologic complications in inflammatory bowel diseases (2002) Nervenarzt, 73, pp. 489-499Clarke, C.E., Falope, Z.F., Abdelhadi, H.A., Cervical myelopathy caused by Whipple's disease (1998) Neurology, 50, pp. 1505-1506Ramzan, N.N., Loftus, E., Burgart, L.J., Diagnosis and monitoring of Whipple disease by polymerase chain reaction (1997) Ann Intern Med, 126, pp. 520-527Von Herbay, A., Ditton, H.J., Scuhmacher, F., Whipple's disease: Staging and monitoring by cytology and polymerase chain reaction analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (1997) Gastroenterology, 113, pp. 434-441Kremer, S., Besson, G., Bonaz, B., Pasquier, B., Le Bas, J.F., Grand, S., Diffuse lesions in the CNS revealed by MR imaging in a case of Whipple disease (2001) Am J Neuroradiol, 22, pp. 493-495Romanul, F.C., Radvany, J., Rosales, R.K., Whipple's disease confined to the brain: A case studied clinically and pathologically (1977) J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry, 40, pp. 901-909Thompson, D.G., Leidingham, J.M., Howard, A.J., Brown, C.L., Meningitis in Whipple's disease (1978) BMJ, 2, pp. 14-15Feurle, G.E., Marth, T., An evaluation of antimicrobial treatment for Whipple's disease: Tetracycline versus trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (1994) Dig Dis Sci, 39, pp. 1642-1648Misbah, S.A., Mapstone, N.P., Whipple's disease revisited (2000) J Clin Pathol, 53, pp. 750-755Schnider, P.J., Reisinger, E.C., Berger, T., Krejs, G.J., Auff, E., Treatment guidelines in central nervous system Whipple's disease (1997) Ann Neurol, 41, pp. 561-56

    Neurocitoma central: relato de dois casos

    Get PDF
    Neurocitoma central é um tumor neuroectodérmico raro, geralmente localizado nos ventrículos laterais. Uma mulher de 26 anos e um homem de 33 anos apresentaram-se com hipertensão intracraniana. Exames de imagem revelaram tumor intraventricular heterogêneo, que impregnava por contraste, ocupando os ventrículos laterais e causando hidrocefalia. A mulher faleceu no pós-operatório e o homem está livre de recidiva após três anos. Ambos os tumores eram sólidos, com células arredondadas, lembrando oligodendroglia, positivas para sinaptofisina, cromogranina e NSE e algumas para GFAP, vimentina e proteína S-100. Microscopia eletrônica mostrou neurópilo entre os corpos celulares, mas sinapses eram raras63410841089Central neurocytomas are rare neuroectodermal tumors believed to arise from the subependymal matrix of the lateral ventricles. Case reports: A 26-year-old woman and a 33-year-old man each had a large, heterogeneous, contrast enhancing mass in the lateral ventricles at the foramen of Monro causing bilateral hydrocephalus. The woman died after surgery, but the man is asymptomatic after three years. Histopathology: Both tumors were composed of isomorphic rounded cells positive for synaptophysin, chromogranin and NSE, while some reacted for GFAP, vimentin and S-100 protein. Electron microscopy revealed neuropil-like tissue between cells, but synapses were rar
    corecore