783 research outputs found
Arsenic in the Water, Soil Bedrock, and Plants of the Ester Dome Area of Alaska
Concentrations of arsenic as large as 10 ppm (200 times the safe
limit for drinking water) occur in the groundwater of a mineralized
residential area near Fairbanks. Bedrock of the area contains 750 ppm
As, primarily as arsenopyrite and scorodite. The oxygen-poor groundwater
is enriched in As(III) and ferrous iron while the surface waters
are iron free and contain less than 50 ppb As(V). Arsenic is removed
from the water by coprecipitation with ferric hydroxide. Some iron-rich
stream sediments contain as much as 1,400 ppm arsenic.
The distribution of arsenic in the groundwater is controlled by the
distribution of arsenic in the bedrock. The arsenic content of the B soil
horizon over mineralized veins is about 150 ppm, while that over barren
rock is 30 ppm. The vegetation over the veins is not significantly
enriched in arsenic.
Lettuce, radishes and tomatoes grown with arsenic-rich water (5 ppm) contain 16, 8 and 1 ppm As, respectively; these amounts are significantly
greater than plants not treated with arsenic.
Preliminary studies by state and federal health agencies show no
detrimental effects on the health of persons drinking these arsenic-rich
waters.The work upon which this publication is based was supported in part by
funds provided by the Office of Water Research and Technology (Project
B-037-ALAS, Agreement No. 14-34-0001-8056), U.S. Department of the
Interior, Washington, D.C., as authorized by the Water Research and
Development Act of 1978
Healthcare Costs of Acute and Chronic Pain Associated with a Diagnosis of Herpes Zoster
To determine the healthcare costs of acute and chronic pain associated with herpes zoster. DESIGN : Retrospective cohort analysis. SETTING : Inpatient and outpatient care. PARTICIPANTS : Patients were selected from Medicare, commercial insurance, and Medicaid claims databases if they had a diagnosis of herpes zoster or postherpetic neuralgia (PHN) or were prescribed analgesics after a diagnosis of herpes zoster (possible PHN) and were matched to controls for demographic and clinical factors using propensity scores. MEASUREMENTS : One-year excess healthcare expenditures attributable to herpes zoster pain or PHN were calculated for inpatient, outpatient, and prescription drug services. RESULTS : For the Medicare cohort, the average excess cost per patient was 2,200 to $2,300 per patient with PHN or possible PHN. Patients with possible PHN were 53% more prevalent than patients with PHN in the Medicare cohort and accounted for half of all excess expenditures. Findings were similar in the younger cohorts with commercial insurance and Medicaid except that costs attributable to PHN and possible PHN were higher, and patients with possible PHN were three to five times as prevalent as patients with PHN. CONCLUSION : Healthcare costs associated with PHN were substantially greater than those associated with herpes zoster pain that resolved within 30 days. The data suggest that as many as 80% of patients with PHN may not be diagnosed with PHN and that these patients account for at least half of PHN expenditures.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66349/1/j.1532-5415.2007.01231.x.pd
The North Wyke Farm Platform: Methodologies Used in the Remote Sensing of the Quantity and Quality of Drainage Water
The North Wyke Farm Platform(NWFP) for agri-environmental research in temperate grassland was established in the UK in 2010 (Orr et al. 2011). Here we describe the instrumentation and methodologies used to monitor the quantity and quality of drainage water at a total of 15 H-flumes draining 5 sub-catchments within three farmlets. Each of 15 flume laboratories is supplied with 3 kW of mains power and connected to both fibre optic and UHF (Ultra High Frequency) radio networks for data exchange. The radio data network also provides telemetry for rain gauges and soil temperature/moisture probes located away from the flumes and within the catchment blocks. Water flow is measured using bubbler flow meters and when flow is above a defined threshold level, water is pumped into bespoke 13-litre stainless steel bypass cells on a 15-minute cycle using bi-directional peristaltic pumps. A range of sensors located within the bypass cells measure the following water quality parameters: nitrate, ammonium, dissolved organic carbon, temperature, conductivity, turbidity, pH and dissolved oxygen. Total phosphorus and ortho phosphorus are measured at one flume in each farmlet. Networked auto-samplers are also provided at each flume site for the measurement of other wa-ter quality parameters as required. All data are logged and sent to a dedicated server at a 15 min resolution while a web front end allows advanced visualization capabilities and remote control of the entire system. The system is configured to allow for flexibility and future expansion to a wider range of parameters
The North Wyke Farm Platform: A New UK National Capability for Research into Sustainability of Agricultural Temperate Grassland Management
The North Wyke Farm Platform is a new UK National Capability that will enable studies that can be closely monitored and controlled under different land-use options at the farm-scale. As a Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council-funded National Capability, the Farm Platform provides centralised scientific facilities including core data (field and water chemistry, water flow rates, greenhouse gas emissions from soils, livestock and agronomic data, and farm management records). Access to the Farm Platform for experimental work or to data will be available to other research users and collaborators. This shared approach will enhance the depth and breadth of information gained for the benefit of the wider community
The novel sigma-2 receptor ligand SW43 stabilizes pancreas cancer progression in combination with gemcitabine
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Sigma-2 receptors are over-expressed in proliferating cancer cells, making an attractive target for the targeted treatment of pancreatic cancer. In this study, we investigated the role of the novel sigma-2 receptor ligand SW43 to induce apoptosis and augment standard chemotherapy.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The binding affinity for sigma-2 ligands is high in pancreas cancer, and they induce apoptosis with a rank order of SV119 < SW43 < SRM <it>in vitro</it>. Combining these compounds with gemcitabine further increased apoptosis and decreased viability. Our <it>in vivo </it>model showed that sigma-2 ligand treatment decreased tumor volume to the same extent as gemcitabine. However, SW43 combination treatment with gemcitabine was superior to the other compounds and resulted in stabilization of tumor volume during treatment, with minimal toxicities.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This study shows that the sigma-2 ligand SW43 has the greatest capacity to augment gemcitabine in a pre-clinical model of pancreas cancer and has provided us with the rationale to move this compound forward with clinical investigations for patients with pancreatic cancer.</p
Book Reviews
Book reviews of:
Song of My Life: A Biography of Margaret Walker. By Carolyn J. Brown Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2014. Author’s note, afterword, acknowledgements, illustrations, appendices, notes, bibliography, index. Pp. xi, 147. 34.95 cloth, 65 Cloth, 35 cloth. 32.50 paper, 59.95 cloth, 29.95 cloth. ISBN: 9780199977536.)
One Nation Under God: How Corporate America Invented Christian America. By Kevin M. Kruse. (New York: Basic Books, 2015. Acknowledgements, notes, index. Pp. xvi, 352. 54.95 cloth. ISBN: 9781572338661.)
Agriculture and the Confederacy: Policy, Productivity, and Power in the Civil War South. By R. Douglas Hurt. (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2015. Acknowledgements, maps, tables, notes, index. Pp. xi, 349. 69.95 cloth, $24.95 paper. ISBN: 0820347302.
Binary Quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: Evidence for Excess Clustering on Small Scales
We present a sample of 218 new quasar pairs with proper transverse
separations R_prop < 1 Mpc/h over the redshift range 0.5 < z < 3.0, discovered
from an extensive follow up campaign to find companions around the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey and 2dF Quasar Redshift Survey quasars. This sample includes
26 new binary quasars with separations R_prop < 50 kpc/h (theta < 10
arcseconds), more than doubling the number of such systems known. We define a
statistical sample of binaries selected with homogeneous criteria and compute
its selection function, taking into account sources of incompleteness. The
first measurement of the quasar correlation function on scales 10 kpc/h <
R_prop < 400 kpc/h is presented. For R_prop < 40 kpc/h, we detect an order of
magnitude excess clustering over the expectation from the large scale R_prop >
3 Mpc/h quasar correlation function, extrapolated down as a power law to the
separations probed by our binaries. The excess grows to ~ 30 at R_prop ~ 10
kpc/h, and provides compelling evidence that the quasar autocorrelation
function gets progressively steeper on sub-Mpc scales. This small scale excess
can likely be attributed to dissipative interaction events which trigger quasar
activity in rich environments. Recent small scale measurements of galaxy
clustering and quasar-galaxy clustering are reviewed and discussed in relation
to our measurement of small scale quasar clustering.Comment: 25 pages, 12 figures, 9 tables. Submitted to the Astronomical Journa
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The inositol-3-phosphate synthase biosynthetic enzyme has distinct catalytic and metabolic roles
Inositol levels, maintained by the biosynthetic enzyme inositol-3-phosphate synthase (Ino1), are altered in a range of disorders including bipolar disorder and Alzheimer's disease. To date, most inositol studies have focused on the molecular and cellular effects of inositol depletion without considering Ino1 levels. Here we employ a simple eukaryote, Dictyostelium, to demonstrate distinct effects of loss of Ino1 and inositol depletion. We show that loss of Ino1 results in inositol auxotrophy that can only be partially rescued by exogenous inositol. Removal of inositol supplementation from the ino1- mutant results in a rapid 56% reduction in inositol levels, triggering the induction of autophagy, reduced cytokinesis and substrate adhesion. Inositol depletion also caused a dramatic generalised decrease in phosphoinositide levels that was rescued by inositol supplementation. However, loss of Ino1 triggered broad metabolic changes consistent with the induction of a catabolic state that was not rescued by inositol supplementation. These data suggest a metabolic role for Ino1 independent of inositol biosynthesis. To characterise this role, an Ino1 binding partner containing SEL1L1 domains (Q54IX5) was identified with homology to mammalian macromolecular complex adaptor proteins. Our findings therefore identify a new role for Ino1, independent of inositol biosynthesis, with broad effects on cell metabolism
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