5,920 research outputs found
Extra-hepatic fascioliasis with peritoneal malignancy tumor feature
Fascioliasis is a zoonose parasitic disease
caused by Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola gigantica and is
widespread in most regions of the world. Ectopic fascioliasis
usually caused by juvenile Fasciola spp., but in
recent years a few cases of tissue-embedded ova have been
reported from different endemic areas. A 79-year-old Iranian
man resident in Eird-e-Mousa village from Ardabil
Province, north-west of Iran, complained with abdominal
pain, nausea, and intestinal obstruction symptoms referred
to Ardabil Fatemi hospital. In laparotomy multiple intestinal
masses with peritoneal seeding resembling of a
malignant lesion were seen. After appendectomy and peritoneal
mass biopsy with numerous intraperitoneal adenopathy,
paraffin embedded blocks were prepared from
each tissues. A blood sample was taken from the patient
5 months later for serological diagnosis. Histopathological
examination of sections showed fibrofatty stroma with
dense mixed inflammatory cells infiltration and fibrosis in
peritoneal masses. Large numbers of ova of Fasciola spp.
were noted with typical circumscribed granulomas. Despite
of anti-fasciola treatment, IHA test for detecting anti F.
hepatica antibodies was positive 5 months after surgery
with a titer of 1/128. Due to multiple clinical manifestation
of extra-hepatic fascioliasis, its differential diagnosis from
intraperitoneal tumors or other similar diseases should be
considered
Health literacy, health status, and healthcare utilization of Taiwanese adults: results from a national survey
Abstract Background Low health literacy is considered a worldwide health threat. The purpose of this study is to assess the prevalence and socio-demographic covariates of low health literacy in Taiwanese adults and to investigate the relationships between health literacy and health status and health care utilization. Methods A national survey of 1493 adults was conducted in 2008. Health literacy was measured using the Mandarin Health Literacy Scale. Health status was measured based on self-rated physical and mental health. Health care utilization was measured based on self-reported outpatient clinic visits, emergency room visits, and hospitalizations. Results Approximately thirty percent of adults were found to have low (inadequate or marginal) health literacy. They tended to be older, have fewer years of schooling, lower household income, and reside in less populated areas. Inadequate health literacy was associated with poorer mental health (OR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.35-0.91). No association was found between health literacy and health care utilization even after adjusting for other covariates. Conclusions Low (inadequate and marginal) health literacy is prevalent in Taiwan. High prevalence of low health literacy is not necessarily indicative of the need for interventions. Systematic efforts to evaluate the impact of low health literacy on health outcomes in other countries would help to illuminate features of health care delivery and financing systems that may mitigate the adverse health effects of low health literacy.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/78252/1/1471-2458-10-614.xmlhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/78252/2/1471-2458-10-614.pdfPeer Reviewe
FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS ON THE RANDOM CHOPPED FIBER COMPOSITES
ABSTRACT A micro-mechanics based finite element analysis method for random chopped fiber composites is applied. A modified random sequential adsorption technique is developed to generate representative volume elements of the composites so to overcome the "jamming limit" in the existing techniques. A homogenization scheme is applied to acquire the effective elastic constants of the composite. Two damage mechanisms are considered, matrix cracking and interfacial debonding, which occur prior to fiber breakage and consequentially leading to catastrophic failure. The incremental plastic model and the cohesive zone model are adopted to account for matrix plasticity and interfacial debonding, respectively. The finite element analysis results are validated by experimental data
The core Planar Cell Polarity gene, Vangl2, maintains apical-basal organisation of the corneal epithelium
This work was performed under Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) research grant BB/J015237/1 to JMC. DAP was funded by an Anatomical Society PhD Studentship whose support is gratefully acknowledged. ASF was funded by a BBSRC DTG PhD Studentship. We thank staff at the Medical Research Facility and Aberdeen Microscopy Services for technical assistance.Peer reviewedPostprin
Tag-Aware Recommender Systems: A State-of-the-art Survey
In the past decade, Social Tagging Systems have attracted increasing
attention from both physical and computer science communities. Besides the
underlying structure and dynamics of tagging systems, many efforts have been
addressed to unify tagging information to reveal user behaviors and
preferences, extract the latent semantic relations among items, make
recommendations, and so on. Specifically, this article summarizes recent
progress about tag-aware recommender systems, emphasizing on the contributions
from three mainstream perspectives and approaches: network-based methods,
tensor-based methods, and the topic-based methods. Finally, we outline some
other tag-related works and future challenges of tag-aware recommendation
algorithms.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
Self-assembly of Microcapsules via Colloidal Bond Hybridization and Anisotropy
Particles with directional interactions are promising building blocks for new
functional materials and may serve as models for biological structures.
Mutually attractive nanoparticles that are deformable due to flexible surface
groups, for example, may spontaneously order themselves into strings, sheets
and large vesicles. Furthermore, anisotropic colloids with attractive patches
can self-assemble into open lattices and colloidal equivalents of molecules and
micelles. However, model systems that combine mutual attraction, anisotropy,
and deformability have---to the best of our knowledge---not been realized.
Here, we synthesize colloidal particles that combine these three
characteristics and obtain self-assembled microcapsules. We propose that mutual
attraction and deformability induce directional interactions via colloidal bond
hybridization. Our particles contain both mutually attractive and repulsive
surface groups that are flexible. Analogous to the simplest chemical bond,
where two isotropic orbitals hybridize into the molecular orbital of H2, these
flexible groups redistribute upon binding. Via colloidal bond hybridization,
isotropic spheres self-assemble into planar monolayers, while anisotropic
snowman-like particles self-assemble into hollow monolayer microcapsules. A
modest change of the building blocks thus results in a significant leap in the
complexity of the self-assembled structures. In other words, these relatively
simple building blocks self-assemble into dramatically more complex structures
than similar particles that are isotropic or non-deformable
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