1,550 research outputs found

    Oleuropein and Antibacterial Activities of Olea europaea L. Leaf Extract

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    In this study, we reported the determination of phenolic compounds in olive leaves by reversed phase HPLC/DAD and the evaluation of their in vitro activity against several microorganisms. These organisms might however, be causal agents of human intestinal and respiratory tract infections. Extract of the leaves of two varieties of Olea europaea L. (Chemlel and Dathier) was investigated for antibacterial activity against four pathogenic bacteria. Leaves extract was prepared using water and methanol (20/80) in a cold extraction process. The tested bacteria were Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus .The extracts were found to be effective against all isolates tests. Ethanolic extract at a concentration of 100 % presented the highest potential of inhibiting variety of Dathier against S.aureus .This is with an inhibition zone of 17.49 mm and 15.66 mm for the variety Chemlel against S.aureus. The high Oleuropein content and the important antibacterial activities of olive leaves extract could be useful sources for industrial extraction and pharmacological application

    How small is too small? A systematic review of center volume and outcome after cardiac transplantation

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    Background—The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between the volume of cardiac transplantation procedures performed in a center and the outcome after cardiac transplantation. Methods and Results—PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane library were searched for articles on the volume–outcome relationship in cardiac transplantation. Ten studies were identified, and all adopted a different approach to data analysis and varied in adjustment for baseline characteristics. The number of patients in each study ranged from 798 to 14401, and observed 1-year mortality ranged from 12.6% to 34%. There was no association between the continuous variables of center volume and observed mortality. There was a weak association between the continuous variables of center volume and adjusted mortality up to 1 year and a stronger association at 5 years. When centers were grouped in volume categories, low-volume centers had the highest adjusted mortality, intermediate-volume centers had lower adjusted mortality, and high-volume centers had the lowest adjusted mortality but were not significantly better than intermediate-volume centers. Category limits were arbitrary and varied between studies. Conclusions—There is a relationship between center volume and mortality in heart transplantation. The existence of a minimum acceptable center volume or threshold is unproven. However, a level of 10 to 12 heart transplants per year corresponds to the upper limit of low-volume categories that may have relatively higher mortality. It is not known whether outcomes for patients treated in low-volume transplant centers would be improved by reorganizing centers to ensure volumes in excess of 10 to 12 heart transplants per year

    Visualization of Some Energy Levels of Even-Even Nuclei

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    The properties of the lowest excited states of atomic nuclei offer a very sensitive test for nuclear structure theories. To identify and distinguish the shape phase transitions, one needs the variation behaviors of the energy ratios with respect to the neutron or proton number of the nuclei. The possibility of generating images of the variation behaviors of energy levels and energy ratios by exploiting the large body of data on stable and near-stable nuclei, whose accumulation over the past decades now permits, prompted us to produce this atlas which illustrates in a simple and effective way these behaviors. The atlas represents the experimental data of the energy levels and energy ratios of the 2_1^+, 4_1^+, 2_2^+ and 4_2^+ states of 645 even-even nuclei. The interpolation surfaces of the values of energy levels and energy ratios, E(2,1+), E(2,2+), E(4,1+), E(4,2+), E(4,1+)/E(2,1+), E(4,2+)/E(2,2+), E(2,2+)/E(2,1+), E(4,2+)/E(4,1+), E(4,2+)/E(2,1+) and E(4,1+)/E(2,2+), through all points of the even-even nuclear landscape are presented. The variation of these values with respect to each chain of isotopes and isotones are displayed using two-dimensional figures. Visualization of the data through visual imagery has been considered an effective way for connecting abstract and concrete ideas as well as allowing the emergence of the significant patterns. Moreover, we will see that it is possible, in many if not most cases, to understand the detailed results of complex calculations of the nuclear structure theories with an absolute minimum of formalism and often by inspection. The introduction of this atlas contains a brief account of some topics of present-day interest in theoretical nuclear structure. These topics can be used to explain the existence of a few typical patterns of nuclear spectra as well as some of the systematic changes in these patterns over sequences of nuclei. Researchers working on nuclear theory will ïŹnd this atlas handy to understand the nuclear structure theories

    SODA: an OWL-DL based ontology matching system

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    International audienc

    Estimation of Bone Marrow DNA Damage Induced by Lambda cyhalothrin and Dimethoate Insecticides using Alkaline Comet Assay

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    Dimethoate (DM) and Lambda cyhalothrin (LCT) are commonly used insecticides. Human being and farm animals are expected to have acute toxicity. The present work aimed to explore the effect of acute exposure to DM and LCT on hematological parameters and to detect DNA damage in bone marrow of Sprague Dawley rats using the alkaline single cell gel electrophoresis assay (comet assay). Thirty animals were divided into three groups of ten rats each. LCT group administered 26 mg/kg body weight, DM group administered 103 mg/kg body weight orally for 24 and 48 hours, while the control group received the vehicle only. Blood samples were collected for hematological analysis, bone marrow was flushed from the femur bone for comet assay and spleen samples were preserved in formalin for histopathological examination.  Results showed minor changes in blood profile in all exposed groups associated with mild changes in histology of spleen tissue. Alkaline single cell gel electrophoresis assay in bone marrow cells showed that LCT and DM caused extensive and severe DNA damage after 48 h exposure expressed as significant increases in all comet parameters (% DNA in tail, tail length, tail moment and Olive tail moment). The results concluded that LCT and DM induced DNA damage in bone marrow of rats, LCT showed higher degree of DNA damage in comparison with DM

    MTEDS: Multivariant Time Series-Based Encoder-Decoder System for Anomaly Detection

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    Intrusion detection systems examine the computer or network for potential security vulnerabilities. Time series data is real-valued. The nature of the data influences the type of anomaly detection. As a result, network anomalies are operations that deviate from the norm. These anomalies can cause a wide range of device malfunctions, overloads, and network intrusions. As a result of this, the network\u27s normal operation and services will be disrupted. The paper proposes a new multi-variant time series-based encoder-decoder system for dealing with anomalies in time series data with multiple variables. As a result, to update network weights via backpropagation, a radical loss function is defined. Anomaly scores are used to evaluate performance. The anomaly score, according to the findings, is more stable and traceable, with fewer false positives and negatives. The proposed system\u27s efficiency is compared to three existing approaches: Multiscaling Convolutional Recurrent Encoder-Decoder, Autoregressive Moving Average, and Long Short Term Medium-Encoder-Decoder. The results show that the proposed technique has the highest precision of 1 for a noise level of 0.2. Thus, it demonstrates greater precision for noise factors of 0.25, 0.3, 0.35, and 0.4, and its effectiveness

    Jellyfish stings trigger gill disorders and increased mortality in farmed sparus aurata (linnaeus, 1758) in the mediterranean sea

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    Jellyfish are of particular concern for marine finfish aquaculture. In recent years repeated mass mortality episodes of farmed fish were caused by blooms of gelatinous cnidarian stingers, as a consequence of a wide range of hemolytic, cytotoxic, and neurotoxic properties of associated cnidocytes venoms. The mauve stinger jellyfish Pelagia noctiluca (Scyphozoa) has been identified as direct causative agent for several documented fish mortality events both in Northern Europe and the Mediterranean Sea aquaculture farms. We investigated the effects of P. noctiluca envenomations on the gilthead sea bream Sparus aurata by in vivo laboratory assays. Fish were incubated for 8 hours with jellyfish at 3 different densities in 300 l experimental tanks. Gill disorders were assessed by histological analyses and histopathological scoring of samples collected at time intervals from 3 hours to 4 weeks after initial exposure. Fish gills showed different extent and severity of gill lesions according to jellyfish density and incubation time, and long after the removal of jellyfish from tanks. Jellyfish envenomation elicits local and systemic inflammation reactions, histopathology and gill cell toxicity, with severe impacts on fish health. Altogether, these results shows P. noctiluca swarms may represent a high risk for Mediterranean finfish aquaculture farms, generating significant gill damage after only a few hours of contact with farmed S. aurata. Due to the growth of the aquaculture sector and the increased frequency of jellyfish blooms in the coastal waters, negative interactions between stinging jellyfish and farmed fish are likely to increase with the potential for significant economic losses
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