1,164 research outputs found

    Trace Element Composition of Stream Sediments an Integrating Factor for Water Quality

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    Bottom sediments, suspended sediments, and water were sampled along 130 miles of the Buffalo River in northern Arkansas. The water and acid extracts of the suspended sediments and the minus 95 mesh fraction of the bottom sediments were analyzed by atomic absorption spectrometry. All samples were analyzed for Na, K, Mg, Ca, Zn, Cd, Cu, Pb, Fe, Co, Cr, Ni, and Mn. Selected bottom samples also were analyzed by As, Hg, and Zr. Zr was determined by x-ray fluorescence. Li and Sr were determined for selected water and suspended sediment samples. There is a general decrease downstream in Fe, Cu, Cr, Ni, Mn, Pb, K, and Na in the bottom sediments as the drainage area increases in carbonate rock and decreases in shale. The elements Mg, Ca, Zn, and Cd increase in bottom sediments downstream. The values for these elements in the water, especially the major elements, also correspond closely with the geology of the region. Tributaries are sites of abrupt rise and fall of metal values, within a few miles, from background to anomalously high values to background, especially tributaries draining Zn and Pb mineralized areas. The bottom sediments are mainly quartz and chert grains. These grains apparently are coated with hydrous iron oxide which acts as a sorbent for many of the elements and is a dominant transport mechanism for acid extractable Co, Cr, Ni, Cu, Mn, and K. Other acid extractable metals, particularly Mg, Ca, Zn, Cd, and Pb, are mostly in clastic grains. Graphic representation of the Langmuir equation for Mn is consistent with adsorption of Mn by iron in both bottom sediments and suspended sediments. On the basis of the volume of water collected, all the elements except Fe are more concentrated in the water than in the suspended sediments. Fe concentration of the suspended sediments increases with increasing flow because the suspended load is increased. The Mn/Fe ratio of the suspended sediments is approximately equal to or greater than that of the bottom sediments. The Mn/Fe ratio of suspended sediments relative to that of the bottom sediments increases downstream, possibly because of an autocatalytic effect of Mn precipitation. The relationship between sediment and water concentrations is not clear from the data because of the restricted concentration ranges for some elements in the suspended sediment and water. The sediment from the Buffalo River can be used to estimate grossly the concentration of elements in the water

    Mermithid Nematodes: SEM Observations Comparing Hexamethyldisilazane and Critical Point Drying Methods

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    Morphological features of mermithid nematodes (Mermithidae) were studied with scanning electron microscopy, using hexamethyldisilazane-air drying in comparison with critical point drying via liquid carbon dioxide. Although general morphologic preservation of both HMDS-dried and CP-dried specimens was similar, structural features of the complex cuticle and internal organization were more easily resolved at higher magnifications in the HMDS-dried nematodes. These features include the superficial cuticular annulations, the fibrillar inner cuticle and peg-like microtrabeculae. The previously undescribed microtrabeculae are of special interest since they may facilitate an interaction of the mermithid (and perhaps nameatodes in general) musculature with its body wall that, at least in part, may account for the unique thrashing locomotion so characteristic of these organisms

    A Hypothesis to Account for Unusual Leaf Variation in Viola pedata L.

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    Viola pedata L., the birdfoot violet, occasionally displays unusual variation in leaf shape in the southeastern United States. No satisfactory explanation for this has yet been provided. Analyses of variation in a colony with normal leaf shapes, one with the unusual leaf variants, and a neighboring population of Viola primulifolia L. subsp. villosa (Eaton) Russell leads to the hypothesis that the leaf variation is due to hybridization and subsequent introgression between V. pedata and V. primulifolia subsp. villosa

    There is no “I” in TEAM: Players, Leaders, and Team Performance in Public Health Emergency Response

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    Research Objective: Research objectives are to: 1) assess effect of controller-led in situ simulation on emergency response capacity of state health department; 2) study effects of training on team function, dynamics, and communications among staff responsible for emergency operations at state health department; and 3) train public health teams for high reliability. Data Sets and Sources: Thirty trials (one-hour functional exercises) conducted in the state department operations center over a 16-month period (May 2010 to September 2011). Data gathered using in situ simulation methodology (recording, live viewing, playback analysis). Behavioral markers data collected using event set observational tool (24 recordings analyzed); decision-making data collected using decision taxonomy tool (22 recordings analyzed). Study Design: This quasi-experimental intervention with time-series analysis and comparison group determined effects of the intervention on participants. The study measured team performance in public health preparedness context; examined impact of intervention to achieve high reliability in emergency operations center; and looked at relationship among behavioral markers, decision-making, and team performance. Analysis: Using a descriptive, longitudinal analysis, we examined the frequency and distribution of behavioral markers to identify and describe: distinct phases of team formation and reformation during incident response; patterns and distribution of team behaviors across phases; and relationship among behavioral markers (non-technical skills), leaders, and team effectiveness/performance. Principal Findings: Data indicate that leader’s experience, training, expertise impacts team performance positively (in case of strong leader), as measured by trial scores. Converse is also true – poor leader, negative impact. We infer that team behavior dependent on/associated with leader behavior, and identifiable behaviors of leaders exist based on leadership skills. Conclusion: Our research shows that public health emergency response team performance depends to a certain degree on who the leader is during the response/exercise. To effectively train and prepare response teams, it is essential to understand how non-technical skills, behavioral markers, and leadership interact and impact team performance and high reliability. Implications for The Field of PHSSR: The intervention may be less important in improving response team performance than the leader and his training and experience. No study of leaders at the micro-system level exists with respect to behavioral markers necessary to achieve high reliability in crisis settings. Our data and findings provide insight into that process

    Book Reviews

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66290/1/j.1752-7325.1985.tb01140.x.pd

    Ribosomal Proteins RPS11 and RPS20, Two Stress-Response Markers of Glioblastoma Stem Cells, Are Novel Predictors of Poor Prognosis in Glioblastoma Patients.

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    Glioblastoma stem cells (GSC) co-exhibiting a tumor-initiating capacity and a radio-chemoresistant phenotype, are a compelling cell model for explaining tumor recurrence. We have previously characterized patient-derived, treatment-resistant GSC clones (TRGC) that survived radiochemotherapy. Compared to glucose-dependent, treatment-sensitive GSC clones (TSGC), TRGC exhibited reduced glucose dependence that favor the fatty acid oxidation pathway as their energy source. Using comparative genome-wide transcriptome analysis, a series of defense signatures associated with TRGC survival were identified and verified by siRNA-based gene knockdown experiments that led to loss of cell integrity. In this study, we investigate the prognostic value of defense signatures in glioblastoma (GBM) patients using gene expression analysis with Probeset Analyzer (131 GBM) and The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) data, and protein expression with a tissue microarray (50 GBM), yielding the first TRGC-derived prognostic biomarkers for GBM patients. Ribosomal protein S11 (RPS11), RPS20, individually and together, consistently predicted poor survival of newly diagnosed primary GBM tumors when overexpressed at the RNA or protein level [RPS11: Hazard Ratio (HR) = 11.5, p<0.001; RPS20: HR = 4.5, p = 0.03; RPS11+RPS20: HR = 17.99, p = 0.001]. The prognostic significance of RPS11 and RPS20 was further supported by whole tissue section RPS11 immunostaining (27 GBM; HR = 4.05, p = 0.01) and TCGA gene expression data (578 primary GBM; RPS11: HR = 1.19, p = 0.06; RPS20: HR = 1.25, p = 0.02; RPS11+RPS20: HR = 1.43, p = 0.01). Moreover, tumors that exhibited unmethylated O-6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) or wild-type isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) were associated with higher RPS11 expression levels [corr (IDH1, RPS11) = 0.64, p = 0.03); [corr (MGMT, RPS11) = 0.52, p = 0.04]. These data indicate that increased expression of RPS11 and RPS20 predicts shorter patient survival. The study also suggests that TRGC are clinically relevant cells that represent resistant tumorigenic clones from patient tumors and that their properties, at least in part, are reflected in poor-prognosis GBM. The screening of TRGC signatures may represent a novel alternative strategy for identifying new prognostic biomarkers

    WAO guideline for the management of hereditary angioedema

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    Hereditary Angioedema (HAE) is a rare disease and for this reason proper diagnosis and appropriate therapy are often unknown or not available for physicians and other health care providers. For this reason we convened a group of specialists that focus upon HAE from around the world to develop not only a consensus on diagnosis and management of HAE, but to also provide evidence based grades, strength of evidence and classification for the consensus. Since both consensus and evidence grading were adhered to the document meets criteria as a guideline. The outcome of the guideline is to improve diagnosis and management of patients with HAE throughout the world and to help initiate uniform care and availability of therapies to all with the diagnosis no matter where the residence of the individual with HAE exists

    Formation of a rotating hole from a close limit head-on collision

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    Realistic black hole collisions result in a rapidly rotating Kerr hole, but simulations to date have focused on nonrotating final holes. Using a new solution of the Einstein initial value equations we present here waveforms and radiation for an axisymmetric Kerr-hole-forming collision starting from small initial separation (the ``close limit'' approximation) of two identical rotating holes. Several new features are present in the results: (i) In the limit of small separation, the waveform is linear (not quadratic) in the separation. (ii) The waveforms show damped oscillations mixing quasinormal ringing of different multipoles.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
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