20 research outputs found

    High-K volcanism in the Afyon region, western Turkey: from Si-oversaturated to Si-undersaturated volcanism

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    Volcanic rocks of the Afyon province (eastern part of western Anatolia) make up a multistage potassic and ultrapotassic alkaline series dated from 14 to 12 Ma. The early-stage Si-oversaturated volcanic rocks around the Afyon city and further southward are trachyandesitic volcanic activity (14.23 ± 0.09 Ma). Late-stage Si-undersaturated volcanism in the southernmost part of the Afyon volcanic province took place in three episodes inferred from their stratigraphic relationships and ages. Melilite– leucitites (11.50 ± 0.03 Ma), spotted rachyandesites, tephryphonolites and lamproites (11.91 ± 0.13 Ma) formed in the first episode; trachyandesites in the second episode and finally phonotephrites, phonolite, basaltic trachyandesites and nosean-bearing trachyandesites during the last episode. The parameter Q [normative q-(ne + lc + kls + ol)] of western Anatolia volcanism clearly decreased southward with time becoming zero in the time interval 10–15 Ma. The magmatism experienced a sudden change in the extent of Si saturation after 14 Ma, during late-stage volcanic activity of Afyon volcanic province at around 12 Ma, though there was some coexistence of Si-oversaturated and Si-undersaturated magmas during the whole life of Afyon volcanic province

    Actos Now for the prevention of diabetes (ACT NOW) study

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    Abstract Background Impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) is a prediabetic state. If IGT can be prevented from progressing to overt diabetes, hyperglycemia-related complications can be avoided. The purpose of the present study was to examine whether pioglitazone (ACTOS®) can prevent progression of IGT to type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in a prospective randomized, double blind, placebo controlled trial. Methods/Design 602 IGT subjects were identified with OGTT (2-hour plasma glucose = 140–199 mg/dl). In addition, IGT subjects were required to have FPG = 95–125 mg/dl and at least one other high risk characteristic. Prior to randomization all subjects had measurement of ankle-arm blood pressure, systolic/diastolic blood pressure, HbA1C, lipid profile and a subset had frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test (FSIVGTT), DEXA, and ultrasound determination of carotid intima-media thickness (IMT). Following this, subjects were randomized to receive pioglitazone (45 mg/day) or placebo, and returned every 2–3 months for FPG determination and annually for OGTT. Repeat carotid IMT measurement was performed at 18 months and study end. Recruitment took place over 24 months, and subjects were followed for an additional 24 months. At study end (48 months) or at time of diagnosis of diabetes the OGTT, FSIVGTT, DEXA, carotid IMT, and all other measurements were repeated. Primary endpoint is conversion of IGT to T2DM based upon FPG ≥ 126 or 2-hour PG ≥ 200 mg/dl. Secondary endpoints include whether pioglitazone can: (i) improve glycemic control (ii) enhance insulin sensitivity, (iii) augment beta cell function, (iv) improve risk factors for cardiovascular disease, (v) cause regression/slow progression of carotid IMT, (vi) revert newly diagnosed diabetes to normal glucose tolerance. Conclusion ACT NOW is designed to determine if pioglitazone can prevent/delay progression to diabetes in high risk IGT subjects, and to define the mechanisms (improved insulin sensitivity and/or enhanced beta cell function) via which pioglitazone exerts its beneficial effect on glucose metabolism to prevent/delay onset of T2DM. Trial Registration clinical trials.gov identifier: NCT0022096

    Iron-induced oxidative stress in haemodialysis patients: a pilot study on the impact of diabetes

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    Background: Administration of intravenous iron preparations in haemodialysis patients may lead to the appearance of non-transferrin bound iron which can catalyse oxidative damage. We investigated this hypothesis by monitoring the oxidative stress of haemodialysis patients and the impact of iron and diabetes mellitus herein.\ud \ud Materials and methods: Baseline values of serum iron and related proteins, transferrin glycation, non-transferrin bound iron, antioxidant capacity and lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde) of 11 haemodialysis patients (six non-diabetic and five type 2 diabetes) were compared to those of non-haemodialysis control subjects (non-diabetic and type 2 diabetes). Changes in these parameters were monitored during haemodialysis before and after iron administration.\ud \ud Results: Baseline values of malondialdehyde correlated with ferritin concentration (r = 0.664, P = 0.036) and were elevated to the same extent in non-diabetic and diabetic haemodialysis patients (median of 1.09 compared to 0.60 μmol/l in control persons, P < 0.02). After iron infusion, transferrin saturation increased more markedly in non-diabetic subjects from 28% to 185% vs. from 33% to 101% in diabetic patients (P = 0.008). This increase was accompanied by the appearance of non-transferrin bound iron (5.91 ± 1.33 μmol/l), a loss in plasma iron-binding antioxidant capacity and a further increase in malondialdehyde which was more pronounced in diabetic patients (from 0.93 ± 0.30 μmol/l to 2.21 ± 0.69 μmol/l vs. from 1.21 ± 0.42 μmol/l to 1.86 ± 0.56 μmol/l in the non-diabetic subjects, P = 0.046).\ud \ud Conclusions: In haemodialysis patients, higher lipid peroxidation is determined by higher body iron stores. The increase induced by iron infusion is accompanied by a loss in iron-binding antioxidant capacity and is more pronounced in diabetes mellitus

    The Politics of Emergence: Public-Private Partnerships and the Conflictive Timescapes of Apomixis Technology Development

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    How are ‘conflicts in time’ in technoscientific practices effectively theorised from a social scientific perspective? What are the ramifications for critique of the complex relations between ‘public’ and ‘private’ sectors in the global bioeconomy? This article furnishes a case study drawn from frontier research in agricultural biotechnology development, as this field is confronted with the challenges of global food security and climate change. ‘Apomixis’, the capacity of certain plants to ‘self-clone’, would arguably comprise a revolutionary tool for agriculture. Public–private partnerships (PPPs) are a leading template for innovation, yet their hybrid character poses special challenges to stakeholders for the resource-poor. Through historical anthropological study of a PPP incorporating key players from the public sector and seed industry, I analyse the conflictive temporal politics of project planning and management, co-innovation, and frontier research; their impacts on technology development; and highlight implications for production of public goods. The article illustrates how such conflicts are illuminated by a temporal analysis informed by the anthropology of time, science and technology studies, and the philosophy of Deleuze. It presents a theoretical model for wider critique of how significant research and development trajectories go undeveloped or are impeded, which it terms ‘sideshadows’

    Share price formation, market exuberance and financial stability under alternative accounting regimes

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    This paper develops a theoretical analysis of share market price formation driven by accounting and market structures. Heterogeneous investors are assumed to discover and process fundamental information disclosed by accounting system of share-issuing entity. Information set available to share market investors for decision-making comprises then market-driven and firm-specific (non-market) information. On the one side, accounting system provides collective signal of fundamental information; on the other side, price system provides collective signal of market-driven information over time. Both jointly drive the formation of aggregate share market prices through limited knowledge, hazard, and social interaction. Numerical simulations are provided under alternative accounting designs (namely, historical cost and fair value accounting regimes), to derive implications and recommendations for the concept and occurrence of speculative bubbles and herd behavior; the cyclical effects of accounting regime on share market dynamics; and the \u201cvalue relevance\u201d of accounting information and its role in the formation of share market prices over time. This numerical statistical analysis contributes to shed light on accounting anomalies and fundamental analysis
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