1,041 research outputs found

    Evaluation of the palatability and toxicity of candidate baits and toxicants for mongooses (\u3ci\u3eHerpestes auropunctatus\u3c/i\u3e)

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    The small Indian mongoose (Herpestes auropunctatus) is an invasive pest species responsible for damage to native avian, reptile, and amphibian species on Hawaii, Croatia, Mauritius, and several Caribbean Islands, among other regions.Mongoose control has been pursued through a variety of means, with varying success. One toxicant, diphacinone, has been shown to be effective in mongooses and is co-labeled in a rodenticide bait for mongoose control in Hawaii; however, preliminary observations indicate low performance as a mongoose toxicant due likely to poor consumption. We evaluated the efficacy and palatability of 10 commercial rodenticide baits, technical diphacinone powder, and two alternative acute toxicants against mongooses in laboratory feeding trials. We observed poor acceptance and subsequent low overall mortality, of the hard grain-based pellets or block formulations typical of most of the commercial rodenticide baits. The exception was Tomcat® bait blocks containing 0.1% bromethalin, an acute neurotoxin, which achieved up to 100% mortality. Mortality among all other commercial rodenticide formulations ranged from 10 to 50%. Three-day feedings of 0.005% technical diphacinone formulated in fresh minced chicken achieved 100% mortality. One-day feedings of para-aminopropiophenone (PAPP), a chemical that reduces the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood, achieved 100% mortality at concentrations of 0.10 to 0.15%. Bait acceptance of two sodium nitrite formulations (similar toxic mode of action as PAPP) was relatively poor, and mortality averaged 20%. In general, commercially produced rodenticide baits were not preferred by mongooses and had lower mortality rates compared to freshly prepared meat bait formulations. More palatable baits had higher consumption and achieved higher mortality rates. The diphacinone bait registered for rat and mongoose control in Hawaii achieved 20% mortality and was less effective than some of the other commercial or candidate fresh bait products evaluated in this study

    Recent Cases

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    Laurence M. Hamric The instant decision demonstrates the inability of the Court, on its own or with the meager guidance provided by Congress, to discern a clear standard by which to measure the propriety of union organizational activity in light of current federal labor and antitrust law. Faced with a fact pattern that did not embody an apparent anticompetitive intent, a classic conspiracy between labor and non-labor entities, or activity clearly unrelated to the legitimate union interest in achieving better wages and working conditions, the Court was forced to abandon the clear showing test of Pennington, the intimately related test of Jewel Tea\u27 and, perhaps, even the Allen Bradley doctrine. ============================= William G. Scott By extending federal jurisdiction to encompass all robbery and extortion potentially affecting interstate commerce, the instant decision not only reflects, but substantially contributes to, the increasing federalization of intrastate crime under the commerce clause. In light of the decision\u27s broad rationale, the case may portend virtually unlimited expansion of federal jurisdiction into the field of crime control. At the very least, the decision constitutes authority for extending the jurisdictional range of other affecting commerce statutes to encompass all conduct potentially affecting commerce. It is difficult to conceive of any criminal activity, no matter how localized, that remains beyond the scope of the instant rationale. =========================== Mitchell M. Purvis The instant decision, relying on one side of conflicting precedent from other circuits, does little to reconcile the divergent answers to the issue raised by the Hayden caveat: what limits, if any, on searches and seizures should be developed to replace the discredited categorizations of the mere evidence rule. The Bennett decision,considering whether an item that possessed the requisite characteristics for protection under the privilege against self-incrimination consequently was proscribed as an object of a reasonable search and seizure, began a series of opinions obscuring the focus of this issue by failing to recognize that the amendments jointly protect overlapping substantive values through procedurally distinct mechanisms. =========================== George M. Kryder, III The instant court attempted to resolve the tension between these interests by permitting rejection of the entire agreement only after a substantial showing that continued operations would lead to collapse of the business. The court then would require a debtor-in-possession to bargain with the incumbent employees. A better approach would be to permit rejection of only those portions of the collective bargaining agreement that the court finds onerous and burdensome, while leaving in force the remaining portions of the agreement upon which the employees have relied. Such an analysis would afford employees greater protection than merely imposing an obligation to bargain, while simultaneously allowing the debtor-in-possession to renegotiate the burdensome provisions of the old agreement. ================================ Richard Michael Pitt The instant court recognized at the outset that the proper extraterritorial application of the securities laws was not to be found in the language of the acts. Neither did the court consider the SEC\u27s disclaimer of the applicability of registration requirements to be controlling. Rather, the court looked to case law and foreign relations policy in determining subject matter jurisdiction. The court analyzed, one at a time, the jurisdictional bases relied upon by the lower court. Considering first the defendants\u27 activities within the United States, the court noted its holding in IT v. Vencap, Ltd., that the United States was not to be a breeding ground for fraud

    Investigating the mechanism of acoustically activated uptake of drugs from Pluronic micelles

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    BACKGROUND: This paper examines the mechanism of ultrasonic enhanced drug delivery from Pluronic micelles. In previous publications by our group, fluorescently labeled Pluronic was shown to penetrate HL-60 cells with and without the action of ultrasound, while drug uptake was increased with the application of ultrasound. METHODS: In this study, the amount of uptake of two fluorescent probes, Lysosensor Green (a pH-sensitive probe) and Cell Tracker Orange CMTMR (a pH-independent probe), was measured in HL-60 and HeLa cells. RESULTS: The results of our experiments show that the increase in drug accumulation in the cells as a result of ultrasonication is not due to an increase in endocytosis due to ultrasonication. CONCLUSIONS: We hypothesize that sonoporation plays an important role in the acoustically activated drug delivery of chemotherapy drugs delivered from Pluronic micelles

    Visual group theory

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    Deweyan tools for inquiry and the epistemological context of critical pedagogy

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    This article develops the notion of resistance as articulated in the literature of critical pedagogy as being both culturally sponsored and cognitively manifested. To do so, the authors draw upon John Dewey\u27s conception of tools for inquiry. Dewey provides a way to conceptualize student resistance not as a form of willful disputation, but instead as a function of socialization into cultural models of thought that actively truncate inquiry. In other words, resistance can be construed as the cognitive and emotive dimensions of the ongoing failure of institutions to provide ideas that help individuals both recognize social problems and imagine possible solutions. Focusing on Dewey\u27s epistemological framework, specifically tools for inquiry, provides a way to grasp this problem. It also affords some innovative solutions; for instance, it helps conceive of possible links between the regular curriculum and the study of specific social justice issues, a relationship that is often under-examined. The aims of critical pedagogy depend upon students developing dexterity with the conceptual tools they use to make meaning of the evidence they confront; these are background skills that the regular curriculum can be made to serve even outside social justice-focused curricula. Furthermore, the article concludes that because such inquiry involves the exploration and potential revision of students\u27 world-ordering beliefs, developing flexibility in how one thinks may be better achieved within academic subjects and topics that are not so intimately connected to students\u27 current social lives, especially where students may be directly implicated

    Measurement of Angular Distributions and R= sigma_L/sigma_T in Diffractive Electroproduction of rho^0 Mesons

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    Production and decay angular distributions were extracted from measurements of exclusive electroproduction of the rho^0(770) meson over a range in the virtual photon negative four-momentum squared 0.5< Q^2 <4 GeV^2 and the photon-nucleon invariant mass range 3.8< W <6.5 GeV. The experiment was performed with the HERMES spectrometer, using a longitudinally polarized positron beam and a ^3He gas target internal to the HERA e^{+-} storage ring. The event sample combines rho^0 mesons produced incoherently off individual nucleons and coherently off the nucleus as a whole. The distributions in one production angle and two angles describing the rho^0 -> pi+ pi- decay yielded measurements of eight elements of the spin-density matrix, including one that had not been measured before. The results are consistent with the dominance of helicity-conserving amplitudes and natural parity exchange. The improved precision achieved at 47 GeV, reveals evidence for an energy dependence in the ratio R of the longitudinal to transverse cross sections at constant Q^2.Comment: 15 pages, 15 embedded figures, LaTeX for SVJour(epj) document class Revision: Fig. 15 corrected, recent data added to Figs. 10,12,14,15; minor changes to tex

    Value of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty after unsuccessful intravenous streptokinase therapy in acute myocardial infarction

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    The effect of sequential high-dose intravenous streptokinase (SK) (1.5 million units) followed by emergency percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) on preserving left ventricular function was assessed prospectively in 34 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Intravenous SK therapy was initiated 2.6 +/- 1.3 hours (mean +/- standard deviation) after the onset of chest pain. Urgent coronary angiography showed persistent total occlusion in 13 patients, significant diameter stenosis (70 to 99%) in 18 patients and a widely patent artery (less than 50% stenosis) in 3 patients. Emergency PTCA was performed in 29 patients 5.0 +/- 2.1 hours after symptom onset. Successful recanalization was achieved in 33 of the 34 patients (97%) treated with sequential therapy. Repeat contrast ventriculograms recorded 7 to 10 days after intervention in 23 patients showed that the left ventricular ejection fraction increased from 53 +/- 12% to 59 +/- 13% (area-length method, p &lt; 0.002). Regional wall motion of the infarcted segments improved from - 2.7 +/- 1.1 to - 1.5 +/- 1.7 SD/chord (centerline method, p &lt; 0.003). In the subgroup of patients with an occluded artery on initial angiography (group A, N = 10), both global left ventricular ejection fraction (49 +/- 12% vs 59 +/- 12%, p &lt; 0.002) and regional wall motion (-3.2 +/- 1.0 vs -1.9 +/- 1.7 SD/chord, p &lt; 0.002) improved significantly. In contrast, no significant improvement was seen in patients with a patent artery on initial angiography (n = 13). Thus, sequential intravenous SK and emergency PTCA is efficacious in achieving coronary reperfusion and in improving both global and regional left ventricular function. When thrombolytic therapy fails, successful recanalization can be achieved by emergency PTCA, resulting in significant myocardial salvage.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26031/1/0000104.pd

    Determination of the Deep Inelastic Contribution to the Generalised Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn Integral for the Proton and Neutron

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    The virtual photon absorption cross section differences [sigma_1/2-sigma_3/2] for the proton and neutron have been determined from measurements of polarised cross section asymmetries in deep inelastic scattering of 27.5 GeV longitudinally polarised positrons from polarised 1H and 3He internal gas targets. The data were collected in the region above the nucleon resonances in the kinematic range nu < 23.5 GeV and 0.8 GeV**2 < Q**2 < 12 GeV**2. For the proton the contribution to the generalised Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn integral was found to be substantial and must be included for an accurate determination of the full integral. Furthermore the data are consistent with a QCD next-to-leading order fit based on previous deep inelastic scattering data. Therefore higher twist effects do not appear significant.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, revte

    Red Blood Cell Fatty Acid Patterns and Acute Coronary Syndrome

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    BACKGROUND:Assessment of coronary heart disease (CHD) risk is typically based on a weighted combination of standard risk factors. We sought to determine the extent to which a lipidomic approach based on red blood cell fatty acid (RBC-FA) profiles could discriminate acute coronary syndrome (ACS) cases from controls, and to compare RBC-FA discrimination with that based on standard risk factors. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:RBC-FA profiles were measured in 668 ACS cases and 680 age-, race- and gender-matched controls. Multivariable logistic regression models based on FA profiles (FA) and standard risk factors (SRF) were developed on a random 2/3(rds) derivation set and validated on the remaining 1/3(rd). The area under receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves (c-statistics), misclassification rates, and model calibrations were used to evaluate the individual and combined models. The FA discriminated cases from controls better than the SRF (c = 0.85 vs. 0.77, p = 0.003) and the FA profile added significantly to the standard model (c = 0.88 vs. 0.77, p<0.0001). Hosmer-Lemeshow calibration was poor for the FA model alone (p = 0.01), but acceptable for both the SRF (p = 0.30) and combined models (p = 0.22). Misclassification rates were 23%, 29% and 20% for FA, the SRF, and the combined models, respectively. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:RBC-FA profiles contribute significantly to the discrimination of ACS cases, especially when combined with standard risk factors. The utility of FA patterns in risk prediction warrants further investigation
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