181 research outputs found

    Antimicrobial Resistance of Channel Catfish Intestinal Microflora in the Arkansas and Ninnescah Rivers in Kansas

    Get PDF
    Antimicrobial compounds have been used by humans to counteract bacterial infections since 1910. Overuse of these compounds in clinical and agricultural applications has led to rapid evolution and global spread of antimicrobial resistance and rivers are the main receiving body for antimicrobials and resistant bacteria from urban effluents and agricultural runoff. When antimicrobial-resistant bacteria enter the aquatic environment, water acts as a physical pathway for their distribution. Subsequently, resistance genes become established in natural systems and pose threats to human health and ecological processes. Due to these potential threats, antimicrobial resistance in the aquatic environment should be closely monitored. To improve the understanding of antimicrobial resistance in two river systems in Kansas, intestinal contents from 20 Channel Catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) and water samples were taken at eight sites on the Arkansas and South Fork Ninnescah rivers during the spring of 2012. These samples were examined for resistance to six compounds representing major classes of antimicrobials and resistance was observed in 94 isolates. From these isolates, 39 bacteria species were identified by partial sequencing of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene. Resistant species included common isolates from the environment and pathogens of humans and fish. Minimum inhibitory concentrations were determined for bacteria resistant to azithromycin, ciprofloxacin, and tetracycline. Several isolates exhibited no zone of inhibition, indicating they were resistant to the maximum concentration of the assay. Multi-drug resistance was also observed in eight species

    CBT4BN: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Online Chat and Face-to-Face Group Therapy for Bulimia Nervosa

    Get PDF
    Although cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) represents the first-line evidence-based psychotherapy for bulimia nervosa (BN), most individuals seeking treatment do not have access to this specialized intervention. We compared an Internet-based manualized version of CBT group therapy for BN conducted via a therapeutic chat group (CBT4BN) to the same treatment conducted via a traditional face-to-face group therapy (CBTF2F)

    Adolescent Girls and Their Mothers Talk About Experiences of Binge and Loss of Control Eating

    Get PDF
    Evidence suggests that adolescents’ experience of binge eating (BE) might differ in important ways from that of adults. Moreover, although BE appears more common in African American women than other disordered eating behaviors, little is known about the influence of cultural factors on this behavior in adolescents. The current investigation used qualitative methodology to examine the perceptions of White and African American adolescent girls and their mothers regarding experiences of binge and loss of control eating. Five focus groups were completed with 19 adolescent girls (aged 13–17, 58 % African American, 41 % White) who endorsed loss of control eating behaviors. Their mothers (N = 19) also completed separate, concurrent focus groups addressing food and eating behaviors. Responses to focus group questions were analyzed using thematic qualitative analysis. Adolescents’ awareness of their eating behaviors varied greatly. Girls reported some awareness of how emotions influence their eating behaviors, and described using food to achieve autonomy. Mothers evidenced awareness of their daughters’ problematic eating behaviors, the effects of emotions on eating for both their daughters and themselves, and sociocultural factors influencing diet. Data from these focus groups can inform the development of innovative interventions for adolescent girls engaging in loss of control eating

    Novel methodology for predicting the critical salt concentration of bubble coalescence inhibition

    Get PDF
    Bubble coalescence in some salt solutions can be inhibited if the salt concentration reaches a critical concentration Ccr. There are three models available for Ccr in the literature, but they fail to predict Ccr correctly. The first two models employ the van der Waals attraction power laws to establish Ccr from the discriminant of quadratic or cubic polynomials. To improve the two models, the third model uses the same momentum balance equation of the previous models but different intermolecular force generated by water hydration with exponential decaying. The third prediction for Ccr requires the experimental input for film rupture thickness and is incomplete. We show further in this paper that the third model is incorrect. We propose a novel methodology for determining C cr which resolves the mathematical uncertainties in modeling C cr and can explicitly predict it from any relevant intermolecular forces. The methodology is based on the discovery that Ccr occurs at the local maximum of the balance equation for the capillary pressure, disjoining pressure, and pressure of the Gibbs-Marangoni stress. The novel generic approach is successfully validated using nonlinear equations for complicated disjoining pressure

    7th Drug hypersensitivity meeting: part two

    Get PDF
    No abstract availabl

    Beitr�ge zur Kenntnis des elektromotorischen Verhaltens tern�rer Legierungen

    No full text

    Das tern�re System Silber-Zink-Blei

    No full text

    �ber die Hydrate der Selens�ure

    No full text

    �ber das L�sungsgleichgewicht zwischen Phenanthren und 2, 4-Dinitrophenol

    No full text
    corecore