188 research outputs found

    Analysis of reactive aldehydes in urine and plasma of type-2 diabetes mellitus patients through liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry: Reactive aldehydes as potential markers of diabetic nephropathy

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    IntroductionDiabetes is a major public health issue that is approaching epidemic proportions globally. Diabetes mortality is increasing in all ethnic groups, irrespective of socio-economic class. Obesity is often seen as the main contributor to an increasing prevalence of diabetes. Oxidative stress has been shown to trigger obesity by stimulating the deposition of white adipose tissue. In this study, we measured reactive aldehydes by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS), in the urine and plasma of type-2 diabetic mellitus (T2DM) patients, as potential surrogates of oxidative stress. Our hypothesis was that reactive aldehydes play a significant role in the pathophysiology of diabetes, and these reactive species, may present potential drug targets for patient treatment.Materials and methodsStudy participants [N = 86; control n = 26; T2DM n = 32, and diabetic nephropathy (DN) n = 28] were recruited between 2019 and 2020. Urine and blood samples were collected from all participants, including a detailed clinical history, to include patient behaviours, medications, and co-morbidities. Reactive aldehyde concentrations in urine and plasma were measured using pre-column derivatisation and LC-MS, for control, T2DM and DN patients.ResultsReactive aldehydes were measured in the urine and plasma of control subjects and patients with T2DM and DN. In all cases, the reactive aldehydes under investigation; 4-HNE, 4-ONE, 4-HHE, pentanal, methylglyoxal, and glyoxal, were significantly elevated in the urine and serum of the patients with T2DM and DN, compared to controls (p < 0.001) (Kruskal–Wallis). Urine and serum reactive aldehydes were significantly correlated (≄0.7) (p < 0.001) (Spearman rho). The concentrations of the reactive aldehydes were significantly higher in plasma samples, when compared to urine, suggesting that plasma is the optimal matrix for screening T2DM and DN patients for oxidative stress.ConclusionReactive aldehydes are elevated in the urine and plasma of T2DM and DN patients. Reactive aldehydes have been implicated in the pathobiology of T2DM. Therefore, if reactive aldehydes are surrogates of oxidative stress, these reactive aldehyde species could be therapeutic targets for potential drug development

    Stress in frictionless granular material: Adaptive Network Simulations

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    We present a minimalistic approach to simulations of force transmission through granular systems. We start from a configuration containing cohesive (tensile) contact forces and use an adaptive procedure to find the stable configuration with no tensile contact forces. The procedure works by sequentially removing and adding individual contacts between adjacent beads, while the bead positions are not modified. In a series of two-dimensional realizations, the resulting force networks are shown to satisfy a linear constraint among the three components of average stress, as anticipated by recent theories. The coefficients in the linear constraint remain nearly constant for a range of shear loadings up to about .6 of the normal loading. The spatial distribution of contact forces shows strong concentration along ``force chains". The probability of contact forces of magnitude f shows an exponential falloff with f. The response to a local perturbing force is concentrated along two characteristic rays directed downward and laterally.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure

    Stresses in silos: Comparison between theoretical models and new experiments

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    We present precise and reproducible mean pressure measurements at the bottom of a cylindrical granular column. If a constant overload is added, the pressure is linear in overload and nonmonotonic in the column height. The results are {\em quantitatively} consistent with a local, linear relation between stress components, as was recently proposed by some of us. They contradict the simplest classical (Janssen) approximation, and may pose a rather severe test of competing models.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, final version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Do Human Resource Departments Act as Strategic Partners? Strategic Human Capital Management Adoption by County Governments

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    Drawing on qualitative data from forty counties in New York and North Carolina, this article examines the adoption of strategic human capital management (SHCM) principles and practices at the county level and presents a typology of five levels of SHCM adoption. The level of SHCM implementation in a county depends on: the view of the HR function by executive county leadership, the capacity of the county to engage in strategic planning and management, and the capacity of the HR director to think strategically about the role of HR in the government. The article concludes with recommendations for practice, which focus on educating a diverse set of actors about SHCM, building executive level support, developing HR skill and competencies, and applying basic change management practices

    The ChatGPT Artificial Intelligence Chatbot: How Well Does It Answer Accounting Assessment Questions?

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    ChatGPT, a language-learning model chatbot, has garnered considerable attention for its ability to respond to users’ questions. Using data from 14 countries and 186 institutions, we compare ChatGPT and student performance for 28,085 questions from accounting assessments and textbook test banks. As of January 2023, ChatGPT provides correct answers for 56.5 percent of questions and partially correct answers for an additional 9.4 percent of questions. When considering point values for questions, students significantly outperform ChatGPT with a 76.7 percent average on assessments compared to 47.5 percent for ChatGPT if no partial credit is awarded and 56.5 percent if partial credit is awarded. Still, ChatGPT performs better than the student average for 15.8 percent of assessments when we include partial credit. We provide evidence of how ChatGPT performs on different question types, accounting topics, class levels, open/closed assessments, and test bank questions. We also discuss implications for accounting education and research

    Moderate drinking before the unit: medicine and life assurance in Britain and the US c.1860–1930

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    This article describes the way in which “Anstie’s Limit” – a particular definition of moderate drinking first defined in Britain in the 1860s by the physician Francis Edmund Anstie (1833–1874) – became established as a useful measure of moderate alcohol consumption. Becoming fairly well-established in mainstream Anglophone medicine by 1900, it was also communicated to the public in Britain, North America and New Zealand through newspaper reports. However, the limit also travelled to less familiar places, including life assurance offices, where a number of different strategies for separating moderate from excessive drinkers emerged from the dialogue between medicine and life assurance. Whilst these ideas of moderation seem to have disappeared into the background for much of the twentieth century, re-emerging as the “J-shaped” curve, these early developments anticipate many of the questions surrounding uses of the “unit” to quantify moderate alcohol consumption in Britain today. The article will therefore conclude by exploring some of the lessons of this story for contemporary discussions of moderation, suggesting that we should pay more attention to whether these metrics work, where they work and why
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