8,076 research outputs found
Infectious Bovine Rhinotracheitis Virus of Cattle and Buffaloes
Infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus infection in cattle
has been reported throughout the world. The study of infectious bovine rhinotracheitis in buffalo was very limited. There was no report on infectious bovine rhinotracheitis in cattle and buffalo in Malaysia. A serological study on the prevalence of infectious bovine
rhinotracheitis in cattle and buffalo in 10 states of Peninsular Malaysia showed that 52.52 per cent of the cattle and 65.07 per cent of the buffaloes had neutralizing antibodies to infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus. Neutralizing antibodies were detected in 532 out of the 1013 serum samples from cattle and in 298 out of the 458
serum samples from buffaloes. The titre of the serum neutralizing antibodies ranged from 1:4 to 1:256. Four cattle and four buffaloes with neutralizing antibodies to infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus were treated with
dexamethazone at 0.1mg. per kilogram of body weight for 7
consecutive days. Treatment of these animals with dexamethazone resulted in shedding of virus. Viruses were isolated from nasal cavities and vaginas of the cattle and buffaloes in bovine embryonic kidney cells. The isolates were identified as infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus by virus neutralizationtest. The viruses isolated from nasal cavity and vaginal mucosa of buffaloes were designated UPM BB 1 and UPM BB 2 respectively while the viruses isolated from nasal cavity and vaginal mucos a of cattle were designated UPM Be 1 and UPM Be 2 respectively. The 4 virus isolates had infective titres ranging from 10^6.8 to 10^7.8 Pfu per mL. The four infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus isolates were then subjected to 3 cycles of plaque purification. The cloned infectious bovine rhino tracheitis viruses were further purified by
rate zonal ultracentrifugat ion in 10 to 40 percent potassium tartrate. Examination of purified viruses under the electron microscope revealed virus morphology similar to that of herpes virus. The four purified virus preparations were also identified as infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus by immune electron microscopy
Bondi mass with a cosmological constant
The mass loss of an isolated gravitating system due to energy carried away by
gravitational waves with a cosmological constant was recently
worked out, using the Newman-Penrose-Unti approach. In that same article, an
expression for the Bondi mass of the isolated system, , for the
case was proposed. The stipulated mass would ensure
that in the absence of any incoming gravitational radiation from elsewhere, the
emitted gravitational waves must carry away a positive-definite energy. That
suggested quantity however, introduced a -correction term to the Bondi
mass (where is the usual Bondi mass for asymptotically flat
spacetimes) which would involve not just information on the state of the system
at that moment, but ostensibly also its past history. In this paper, we derive
the identical mass-loss equation using an integral formula on a hypersurface
formulated by Frauendiener based on the Nester-Witten identity, and argue that
one may adopt a generalisation of the Bondi mass with
\emph{without any correction}, viz. for any .
Furthermore with , we show that for \emph{purely quadrupole
gravitational waves} given off by the isolated system (i.e. when the "Bondi
news" comprises only the components of the "spherical
harmonics with spin-weight 2"), the energy carried away is \emph{manifestly
positive-definite} for the case. For a general having
higher multipole moments, this perspicuous property in the case
still holds if those contributions are weak --- more precisely, if they
satisfy any of the inequalities given in this paper.Comment: 29 pages, accepted for publication by Physical Review
Characterization and flow of food and mineral powders : a thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Engineering at Massey University, Manawatū, New Zealand
Powders are important commodities across different industries, such as the food and
pharmaceutical industries. In these industries, powders are usually made, mixed, milled,
packaged, and stored; these operations require the powders to move and flow under desired
conditions and different stress levels. Failure to flow will cause hindrances to production;
therefore knowledge of powder flow or flowability is important. There is a constant demand for
accurate, reliable, and robust measurement and characterization methods for powder flowability.
Powders behave differently under varying conditions; the behaviour of a powder is
influenced by particle size distribution, and powder handling and processing conditions. There is
to date no one “standard” method to characterize powder flowability; it is common to use a
variety of methods and devices to measure flow properties and provide insight into the behaviour
and flow characteristics of powders under different conditions.
The flow properties of model food and mineral powders were measured and assessed by
shear testing, compression via tapping, fluidization, and powder tumbling. Shear testing was
done with an annular shear cell following Jenike (1964) and Berry, Bradley and McGregor
(2014). Compression via tapping was performed according to a procedure in the dairy industry
(Niro, 1978) and the European Pharmacopoeia (Schüssele & Bauer-Brandl, 2003). Fluidization
was used to measure powder bed expansion and bed collapse following the powder classification
framework provided by Geldart and co-workers (Geldart, 1973; Geldart, Harnby, & Wong, 1984;
Geldart & Wong, 1984, 1985). Powder tumbling was performed in a novel Gravitational
Displacement Rheometer, GDR, which measured the motion and avalanche activity of powders
that moved under their own weight when rotated in a cylinder at different drum speed levels.
The flow data from each characterization method were evaluated individually with regards to
particle size distribution and then assessed collectively. The findings presented and discussed
include the i) demonstration of the dominant influence of surface-volume mean particle diameter
on powder flow properties, ii) characterization of flowability based on Jenike’s arbitrary flow
divisions, iii) development of new correlations for the estimation of powder cohesion and bulk
density at low preconsolidation stresses, iv) demonstration of hopper outlet diameter as a
measure of flowability, v) demonstration of the limited utility of Hausner ratio as a flowability
index, vi) substantiation of von Neumann ratio as a sensitive and useful indicator for identifying
the onset of bubbling in fluidized beds using bed pressure fluctuation data, and vii) demonstration
of the utility of standard deviation of the GDR load cell signal as an indicator of powder
avalanche activity. These findings provide improved understanding and knowledge of powder
flowability; they can be used to assist and facilitate the development of new techniques and
solutions relevant to the handling and processing of powders especially in the food and
pharmaceutical industries
An investigation of some reactions applicable to inorganic spectrofluorimetric analysis
Imperial Users onl
Spontaneous coronary artery dissection: A single-center case series and literature review
BACKGROUND:
Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) is an unusual cause of acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Better recognition and diagnosis has raised awareness of this condition. However, the pathophysiology of SCAD and its prognosis are still little understood. We aimed to investigate the characteristics and prognosis of patients with SCAD, and subsequently performed a review of literature.
METHODS:
Single-center, retrospective study performed in patients hospitalized from January 2010 to December 2016 with suspected ACS (n=5002) whose final diagnosis was SCAD (n=27; 0.5%).
RESULTS:
Patients with SCAD were mainly female (81.5%; n=22), with median age of 56. Predisposing factors were identified in 12 (44%) patients and precipitating factors in three (11.1%). Non-ST elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) was the main form of presentation (51.9%). The left anterior descending artery (LAD) territory was the most commonly involved (n=12, 44.4%). Type 2 dissection was the most prevalent angiographic pattern (n=17, 63%). The majority of patients (n=15; 55.6%) were managed medically and the remaining patients underwent percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with drug-eluting stents. Seven patients re-infarcted while in the hospital. Over the median follow-up period of 20 months, 7.4% of patients (n=2) had symptoms of heart failure (HF) and 14.8% developed ACS (in three patients the event occurred in a coronary territory other than that of the index case, and in one patient it occurred in the previously affected territory). There were no deaths.
CONCLUSION:
In the studied population, SCAD was more prevalent in middle-aged women. Despite the high prevalence of in-hospital re-infarction or during follow-up, the prognosis was good overall.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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