1,145 research outputs found
Study of Histamine Forming Bacteria in Commercial fish samples of Kalyan city
Histamine food poisoning is found to be associated with consumption of scombroid fish containing unusually high levels of histamine. Fish belonging to non-scombroid group may also cause histamine poisoning. In this study, histamine forming bacteria in the commercial fish samples of local markets of Kalyan region were investigated. Among 54 isolates 24 were found to be prominent histamine producers. A simple and rapid colorimetric method for the quantification of histamine in fish was used. Histamine level in fresh mackerel samples was found to be around 20 mg/100 g, which was much above the defect action level (5 mg/100 g) given by FDA indicating potential risk for histamine poisoning. The study suggest that practice of more hygienic and sanitary conditions during handling and processing of fish are required to minimize the contamination of such histamine producing bacteri
The common and uncommon cestodal infestation encountered in routine histopathological practice from a semi-urban population in south India and their public health importance.
Parasites are encountered uncommonly in routine histopathologic practice. Among them, cestodes form a major bulk. Cysticercosis heads the list forming the bulk of cases followed by Hydatidosis and Sparganosis. Microscopic identification of inflammation with surrounding reactions along with other morphological features forms the mainstay of diagnosis of parasitic diseases on histopathology. Identification of the parasites on histopathological examination would reduce the cost-diagnosis ratio avoiding expensive serological investigation
On the Corrections to Dashen's Theorem
The electromagnetic corrections to the masses of the pseudoscalar mesons
and are considered. We calculate in chiral perturbation theory the
contributions which arise from resonances within a photon loop at order . Within this approach we find rather moderate deviations to Dashen's
theorem.Comment: 14 pages, sligthly enlarged version; a numerical error is corrected
and the embedding of the figures is improved. The complete paper, including
figures, is also available via anonymous ftp at
ftp://www-ttp.physik.uni-karlsruhe.de/ , or via www at
http://www-ttp.physik.uni-karlsruhe.de/cgi-bin/preprints/; to be published in
Phys.Rev.
The Effective Particle-Hole Interaction and the Optical Response of Simple Metal Clusters
Following Sham and Rice [L. J. Sham, T. M. Rice, Phys. Rev. 144 (1966) 708]
the correlated motion of particle-hole pairs is studied, starting from the
general two-particle Greens function. In this way we derive a matrix equation
for eigenvalues and wave functions, respectively, of the general type of
collective excitation of a N-particle system. The interplay between excitons
and plasmons is fully described by this new set of equations. As a by-product
we obtain - at least a-posteriori - a justification for the use of the TDLDA
for simple-metal clusters.Comment: RevTeX, 15 pages, 5 figures in uufiles format, 1 figure avaible from
[email protected]
Kinetic Roughening in Surfaces of Crystals Growing on Disordered Substrates
Substrate disorder effects on the scaling properties of growing crystalline
surfaces in solidification or epitaxial deposition processes are investigated.
Within the harmonic approach there is a phase transition into a low-temperature
(low-noise) superrough phase with a continuously varying dynamic exponent z>2
and a non-linear response. In the presence of the KPZ nonlinearity the disorder
causes the lattice efects to decay on large scales with an intermediate
crossover behavior. The mobility of the rough surface hes a complex dependence
on the temperature and the other physical parameters.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures (not included). Submitted to Phys. Rev. Letts.
Use Latex twic
Orthogonal methods based ant colony search for solving continuous optimization problems
Research into ant colony algorithms for solving continuous optimization problems forms one of the most
significant and promising areas in swarm computation. Although traditional ant algorithms are designed for combinatorial
optimization, they have shown great potential in solving a wide range of optimization problems, including continuous
optimization. Aimed at solving continuous problems effectively, this paper develops a novel ant algorithm termed "continuous orthogonal ant colony" (COAC), whose pheromone deposit mechanisms would enable ants to search for
solutions collaboratively and effectively. By using the orthogonal design method, ants in the feasible domain can explore
their chosen regions rapidly and e±ciently. By implementing an "adaptive regional radius" method, the proposed
algorithm can reduce the probability of being trapped in local optima and therefore enhance the global search capability and accuracy. An elitist strategy is also employed to reserve the most valuable points. The performance of the COAC is
compared with two other ant algorithms for continuous optimization of API and CACO by testing seventeen functions
in the continuous domain. The results demonstrate that the proposed COAC algorithm outperforms the others
Extension of the Chiral Perturbation Theory Meson Lagrangian to Order
We have derived the most general chirally invariant Lagrangian
for the meson sector at order . The result provides an extension of the
standard Gasser-Leutwyler Lagrangian to one higher order,
including as well all the odd intrinsic parity terms in the Lagrangian. The
most difficult part of the derivation was developing a systematic strategy so
as to get all of the independent terms and eliminate the redundant ones in an
efficient way. The 'equation of motion' terms, which are redundant in the sense
that they can be transformed away via field transformations, are separated out
explicitly. The resulting Lagrangian has been separated into groupings of terms
contributing to increasingly more complicated processes, so that one does not
have to deal with the full result when calculating contributions to
simple processes.Comment: 59 pages in LaTex, using RevTex macro, TRIUMF preprint TRI-PP-94-6
Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless Transition in Spin-Charge Separated Superconductor
A model for spin-charge separated superconductivity in two dimensions is
introduced where the phases of the spinon and holon order parameters couple
gauge-invariantly to a statistical gauge-field representing chiral
spin-fluctuations. The model is analyzed in the continuum limit and in the
low-temperature limit. In both cases we find that physical electronic phase
correlations show a superconducting-normal phase transition of the
Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless type, while statistical gauge-field excitations
are found to be strictly gapless. The normal-to-superconductor phase boundary
for this model is also obtained as a function of carrier density, where we find
that its shape compares favorably with that of the experimentally observed
phase diagram for the oxide superconductors.Comment: 35 pages, TeX, CSLA-P-93-
The hypertension cascade of care in the midst of conflict: the case of the Gaza Strip
Although hypertension constitutes a substantial burden in conflict-affected areas, little is known about its prevalence, control, and management in Gaza. This study aims to estimate the prevalence and correlates of hypertension, its diagnosis and control among adults in Gaza. We conducted a representative, cross-sectional, anonymous, household survey of 4576 persons older than 40 years in Gaza in mid-2020. Data were collected through face-to-face interviews, anthropometric, and blood pressure measurements. Hypertension was defined in anyone with an average systolic blood pressure ≥140 mmHg or average diastolic blood pressure ≥90 mmHg from two consecutive readings or a hypertension diagnosis. The mean age of participants was 56.9 ± 10.5 years, 54.0% were female and 68.5% were Palestinian refugees. The prevalence of hypertension was 56.5%, of whom 71.5% had been diagnosed. Hypertension was significantly higher among older participants, refugees, ex-smokers, those who were overweight or obese, and had other co-morbidities including mental illnesses. Two-thirds (68.3%) of those with hypertension were on treatment with one in three (35.6%) having their hypertension controlled. Having controlled hypertension was significantly higher in females, those receiving all medications for high blood pressure and those who never or rarely added salt to food. Investing in comprehensive but cost-effective initiatives that strengthen the prevention, early detection and timely treatment of hypertension in conflict settings is critical. It is essential to better understand the underlying barriers behind the lack of control and develop multi-sectoral programs to address these barriers
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