1,032 research outputs found
Influence of chlorhexidine and zinc oxide in calcium hydroxide pastes on pH changes in external root surface
The objective of this study was to assess the influence of chlorhexidine (liquid and gel) and zinc oxide in calcium hydroxide (CH) pastes on root pH in simulated external resorption. One hundred human anterior teeth with a single root canal were selected. After decoronation and root canal instrumentation, the specimens were divided into 4 experimental groups and 1 control group (without intracanal paste): CH + saline (CH+S), CH + 2% chlorhexidine liquid (CH+ CHX), CH + 2% chlorhexidine gel (CH+ CHXg), and CH + 2% chlorhexidine gel + zinc oxide (CH+ CHXg+ZnO). pH was measured using a microelectrode at 3 and 24 h, and 1, 2, 3, and 4 weeks after inserting intracanal pastes. Data were analyzed statistically using an ANOVA and Tukey's test (p < 0.05). The CH+CHXg+ZnO group had the highest pH values throughout (p < 0.05). The CH+S and CH+ CHX groups had the highest pH values after 1 week and the CH+ CHXg group after 2 weeks. CH+ CHXg maintained the highest pH until the fourth week compared with CH+ CHX (p < 0.05). The control group remained at a neutral pH at all evaluated times. It can be concluded that chlorhexidine solution or gel maintained the alkaline pH of CH, and chlorhexidine gel allowed a slower decrease in pH over time. CH+ CHXg+ZnO showed the highest pH values and was an effective intracanal medication for maintaining alkaline root pH in the area of resorption3
Stability of Closed Timelike Curves in Goedel Universe
We study, in some detail, the linear stability of closed timelike curves in
the Goedel metric. We show that these curves are stable. We present a simple
extension (deformation) of the Goedel metric that contains a class of closed
timelike curves similar to the ones associated to the original Goedel metric.
This extension correspond to the addition of matter whose energy-momentum
tensor is analyzed. We find the conditions to have matter that satisfies the
usual energy conditions. We study the stability of closed timelike curves in
the presence of usual matter as well as in the presence of exotic matter
(matter that does satisfy the above mentioned conditions). We find that the
closed timelike curves in Goedel universe with or whithout the inclusion of
regular or exotic matter are also stable under linear perturbations. We also
find a sort of structural stability.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, RevTex, several typos corrected. GRG, in pres
Revision of the life history parameters (proportion of mature and mean weights at age) for the Iberian (south) sardine stock (ICES 8c and 9a)
Maturity and stock weights at age used in sardine assessment up to 2012 were obatined from (Portuguese and Spanish) spring acoustic surveys biological data. Following a recommendation of the WGANSA, the possible alternative use of the Daily Egg Production Method (DEPM) surveys to estimate maturity at age was evaluated, and a revision of these maturity ogives was undertaken for the last benchmark assessment
(Silva et al. 2011, WKPELA 2012), the WG having decided that DEPM maturity ogives should be used in the assessment, and for years with no DEPM survey, 80% of fish mature would be assumed at age 1 (corresponding approximately to the historical mean of DEPM ogives), and for simplicity, 100% of fish are mature at age 2. But these estimates were obtained including information from both DEPM and acoustic surveys: maturity data from the DEPM for each stratum and year were combined to obtain stock estimates, using abundances at age from acoustic surveys as weighting factors; however, in most years, 1-2 months lagged between the two surveys in W and S strata. Revision of weights at age could not be carried out in 2012 due to time constraints, but the WGHANSA believes that it makes more sense that both life history parameters be derived from the same surveys. This WD describes the revision of both maturity and stock weights at age estimates, based uniquely on the DEPM surveys
Spinning Strings, Black Holes and Stable Closed Timelike Geodesics
The existence and stability under linear perturbation of closed timelike
curves in the spacetime associated to Schwarzschild black hole pierced by a
spinning string are studied. Due to the superposition of the black hole, we
find that the spinning string spacetime is deformed in such a way to allow the
existence of closed timelike geodesics.Comment: 5 pages, RevTex4, some corrections and new material adde
An alternative order parameter for the 4-state Potts model
We have investigated the dynamic critical behavior of the two-dimensional
4-state Potts model using an alternative order parameter first used by
Vanderzande [J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. \textbf{20}, L549 (1987)] in the study of
the Z(5) model. We have estimated the global persistence exponent by
following the time evolution of the probability that the considered
order parameter does not change its sign up to time . We have also obtained
the critical exponents , , , and using this alternative
definition of the order parameter and our results are in complete agreement
with available values found in literature.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Stellar Inversion Techniques
Stellar seismic inversions have proved to be a powerful technique for probing
the internal structure of stars, and paving the way for a better understanding
of the underlying physics by revealing some of the shortcomings in current
stellar models. In this lecture, we provide an introduction to this topic by
explaining kernel-based inversion techniques. Specifically, we explain how
various kernels are obtained from the pulsation equations, and describe
inversion techniques such as the Regularised Least-Squares (RLS) and Optimally
Localised Averages (OLA) methods.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Lecture presented at the IVth Azores
International Advanced School in Space Sciences on "Asteroseismology and
Exoplanets: Listening to the Stars and Searching for New Worlds"
(arXiv:1709.00645), which took place in Horta, Azores Islands, Portugal in
July 201
Food authentication by molecular methods
Quality and authenticity evaluation of foods encompasses many issues, such as the entire or partial fraudulent substitution
of higher commercial value constituents by others
with lower value and the presence of undeclared
constituents/ingredients. To protect consumers from misleading labeling, regulations issued across the world have
implemented specific guidelines and listed particular foods that sh
ould be declared on the label. Particularly in the case of
genetically modified foods, the introduc
tion of specific regulations for labeling
and traceability of genetically modified
organisms (GMO) aimed to protect human health and environment and to give the consumer an informed choice. To
address the referred food authenticity/safety problems, several analytical methodologies have been developed, particularly
in processed foods, including refined oil matrices. For the first
time, monitoring of amplifiable DNA in all the stages of a
chemical refining industrial unit of soyb
ean oil was succeeded by PCR techniques. Mo
reover, we have also proved that it
is possible to detect GM soybean along
the refining process of crude oil. The
study was also extended with success to
commercial refined oils produced from blends and pure soybean
A noninvasive eDNA tool for detecting sea lamprey larvae in river sediments: Analytical validation and field testing in a low-abundance ecosystem.
Anthropogenic activities are increasingly threatening aquatic biodiversity, especially anadromous species. Monitoring and conservation measures are thus required to protect, maintain and restore imperilled populations. While many species can be surveyed using traditional capture and visual census techniques, species that use riverine habitats in a less conspicuous manner, such as sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus, can be more challenging to monitor. Sea lamprey larvae (ammocoetes) can spend several years in freshwater burrowed within soft sediments, inhibiting their detection and assessment. Here, we present a qPCR assay based on the detection of environmental DNA (eDNA) to identify the presence of ammocoetes burrowed in the sediment. We present an extensively validated method that ensured both species-specificity of the assay as well as the capacity to detect ammocoetes when abundances are low. Experiments on burrowing activity suggested that most of the DNA released into the sediment occurs during burrowing. Overall, we demonstrate this new molecular-based tool is an efficient and effective complement to traditional monitoring activities targeting larval stages of sea lampreys
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