1,756 research outputs found

    The Impact Of Sustainability On Global Trade: A Cross-Curricular Project

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    One of the challenges in higher education is leading students in the application of information from one course to learning material in subsequent coursework.  The authors have devised a joint project for courses in Logistics and Administrative Law to assist students in correlation of material in courses of two business majors, with emphasis on sustainability and college-identified core competencies.  Goals and construction of the project are discussed, with post-project feedback from students participating in the project, and assessment by the authors

    Leveraging High Performance CIP Processes to Reduce Water Usage in the Beverage Industry

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    The beverage industry around the world has been water-intensive, traditionally involving significant water usage, resulting in conflict over the viability of water sourcing vis-à-vis the respective surrounding ecosystems. Much of the usage has been related to the cleaning and sanitizing of manufacturing lines. With the advent of “clean-in-place” systems (CIP), it is possible to clean these lines in one minute in an environmentally friendly manner.This article discusses the use of advanced CIP to improve the beverage production process through reduction of water consumption, and how continuous improvement will assist in solving a critical problem in food manufacture. The legal ramifications of treatment of water with a concentrated food cleaner will be discussed, as well as an investigation of attaining and exceeding established regulatory standards

    Malignant transformation of hepatic adenoma with recurrence after resection

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    Subclinical hepatitis E virus infection in laboratory ferrets in the UK

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    Ferrets are widely used for experimental modelling of viral infections. However, background disease in ferrets could potentially confound intended experimental interpretation. Here we report the detection of a subclinical infection of ferret hepatitis E virus (FRHEV) within a colony sub-group of female laboratory ferrets that had been enrolled on an experimental viral infection study (non-hepatitis). Lymphoplasmacytic cuffing of periportal spaces was identified on histopathology but was negative for the RNA and antigens of the administered virus. Follow-up viral metagenomic analysis conducted on liver specimens revealed sequences attributed to FRHEV and these were confirmed by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Further genomic analysis revealed contiguous sequences spanning 79-95 % of the FRHEV genome and that the sequences were closely related to those reported previously in Europe. Using in situ hybridization by RNAScope, we confirmed the presence of HEV-specific RNA in hepatocytes. The HEV open reading frame 2 (ORF2) protein was also detected by immunohistochemistry in the hepatocytes and the biliary canaliculi. In conclusion, the results of our study provide evidence of background infection with FRHEV in laboratory ferrets. As this infection can be subclinical, we recommend routine monitoring of ferret populations using virological and liver function tests to avoid incorrect causal attribution of any liver disease detected in in vivo studies

    Abstract

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    BackgroundThe current study sought to define the impact of lymph node metastasis (LNM) relative to tumor size on tumor recurrence after curative resection for nonfunctional pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (NF-pNETs) -2-cm.MethodsPatients who underwent curative resection for -2-cm NF-pNETs were identified from a multi-institutional database. Risk factors associated with tumor recurrence as well as LNM were identified. Recurrence-free survival (RFS) was compared among patients with or without LNM.ResultsA total of 392 -2-cm NF-pNETs patients were identified. Among the 328 patients who had lymph node dissection and evaluation, 42 (12.8%) patients had LNM. LNM was associated with tumor recurrence (hazard ratio, 3.06; P-=-.026) after surgery. RFS was worse among LNM vs no LNM patients (5-year RFS, 81.7% vs 94.1%; P-=-.019). Patients with tumors measuring 1.5-2-cm had a two-fold increase in the incidence of LNM vs patients with tumors <1.5-cm (17.9% vs 8.7%, odds ratio, 2.59; P-=-.022), as well as a higher risk of advanced tumor grade and higher Ki-67 levels (both P-<-.01). After curative resection, a total of 14 (8.0%) patients with a tumor of 1.5-2-cm and 10 (4.5%) patients with tumor <1.5-cm developed tumor recurrence.ConclusionSurgical resection with lymphadenectomy should be considered for patients with NF-pNETs -1.5-2.0-cm.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151963/1/jso25716.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151963/2/jso25716_am.pd

    The acheulean handaxe : More like a bird's song than a beatles' tune?

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    © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. KV is supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research. MC is supported by the Canada Research Chairs Program, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research of Canada, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, the British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund, and Simon Fraser UniversityPeer reviewedPublisher PD

    Therapeutic index of lymphadenectomy among patients with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors: A multi‐institutional analysis

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    BackgroundThe benefit derived from lymph node dissection (LND) in patients with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNETs) based on clinicopathological characteristics remains unclear.MethodsPatients undergoing surgery for pNET between 1997 and 2016 were identified using a multi‐institutional dataset. The therapeutic index of LND relative to patient characteristics was calculated.ResultsAmong 647 patients, the median number of lymph nodes (LNs) evaluated was 10 (interquartile range: 4‐16) and approximately one quarter of patients had lymph node metastasis (LNM) (N = 159, 24.6%). Among patients with LNM, 5‐year recurrence‐free survival was 56.0%, reflecting a therapeutic index value of 13.8. The therapeutic index was highest among patients with a moderately/poorly‐differentiated pNET (21.5), Ki‐67 ≄ 3% (20.1), tumor size ≄2.0 cm (20.0), and tumor location at the head of the pancreas (20.0). Patients with ≄8 LNs evaluated had a higher therapeutic index than patients who had 1 to 7 LNs evaluated (≄8: 17.9 vs 1‐7: 7.5; difference of index: 11.4).ConclusionLND was mostly beneficial among patients with pNETs >2 cm, Ki‐67 ≄ 3%, and lesions located at the pancreatic head as identification of LNM was most common among individuals with these tumor characteristics. Evaluation of ≄8 LNs was associated with a higher likelihood of identifying LNM as well as a higher therapeutic index, and therefore this number of LNs should be considered the goal.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151957/1/jso25689_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/151957/2/jso25689.pd

    Nitrate-Stimulated Release of Naturally Occurring Sedimentary Uranium

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    Groundwater uranium (U) concentrations have been measured above the U.S. EPA maximum contaminant level (30 ÎŒg/L) in many U.S. aquifers, including in areas not associated with anthropogenic contamination by milling or mining. In addition to carbonate, nitrate has been correlated to uranium groundwater concentrations in two major U.S. aquifers. However, to date, direct evidence that nitrate mobilizes naturally occurring U from aquifer sediments has not been presented. Here, we demonstrate that the influx of high-nitrate porewater through High Plains alluvial aquifer silt sediments bearing naturally occurring U(IV) can stimulate a nitrate-reducing microbial community capable of catalyzing the oxidation and mobilization of U into the porewater. Microbial reduction of nitrate yielded nitrite, a reactive intermediate, which was further demonstrated to abiotically mobilize U from the reduced alluvial aquifer sediments. These results indicate that microbial activity, specifically nitrate reduction to nitrite, is one mechanism driving U mobilization from aquife

    Metabolic therapy with PEG-arginase induces a sustained complete remission in immunotherapy-resistant melanoma

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    Background Metastatic melanoma is an aggressive skin cancer with a poor prognosis. Current treatment strategies for high-stage melanoma are based around the use of immunotherapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors such as anti-PDL1 or anti-CTLA4 antibodies to stimulate anti-cancer T cell responses, yet a number of patients will relapse and die of disease. Here, we report the first sustained complete remission in a patient with metastatic melanoma who failed two immunotherapy strategies, by targeting tumour arginine metabolism. Case presentation A 65-year-old patient with metastatic melanoma who progressed through two immunotherapy strategies with immune checkpoint inhibitor antibodies was enrolled in a phase I study (NCT02285101) and treated with 2 mg/kg intravenously, weekly pegylated recombinant arginase (BCT-100). The patient experienced no toxicities > grade 2 and entered a complete remission which is sustained for over 30 months. RNA-sequencing identified a number of transcriptomic pathway alterations compared to control samples. The tumour had absent expression of the recycling enzymes argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS) and ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) indicating a state of arginine auxotrophy, which was reconfirmed by immunohistochemistry, and validation in a larger cohort of melanoma tumour samples. Conclusions Targeting arginine metabolism with therapeutic arginase in arginine auxotrophic melanoma can be an effective salvage for the treatment of patients who fail immunotherapy

    The Orphan Receptor CRF2-4 Is an Essential Subunit of the Interleukin 10 Receptor

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    The orphan receptor CRF2-4 is a member of the class II cytokine receptor family (CRF2), which includes the interferon receptors, the interleukin (IL) 10 receptor, and tissue factor. CRFB4, the gene encoding CRF2-4, is located within a gene cluster on human chromosome 21 that comprises three interferon receptor subunits. To elucidate the role of CRF2-4, we disrupted the CRFB4 gene in mice by means of homologous recombination. Mice lacking CRF2-4 show no overt abnormalities, grow normally, and are fertile. CRF2-4 deficient cells are normally responsive to type I and type II interferons, but lack responsiveness to IL-10. By ∌12 wk of age, the majority of mutant mice raised in a conventional facility developed a chronic colitis and splenomegaly. Thus, CRFB4 mutant mice recapitulate the phenotype of IL-10–deficient mice. These findings suggest that CRF2-4 is essential for IL-10–mediated effects and is a subunit of the IL-10 receptor
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