231 research outputs found

    Role of In-Service Teacher Training in the Professional Development of Prospective Teachers

    Get PDF
    The aim of this study is to study the importance of in-service teaching training program in teacher’s professional development. Continuous Professional development of teacher is the key factor in successful teaching and learning process. It helps teachers to keep abreast of changes in teaching learning process. It enables teacher to have awareness of the advancement in technologies and the development of curricula and instructional mode. In-service teacher training programs play significant role in teacher continuous professional development. It is systematic attempt to bring about changes in the classroom practices and also in teacher’s beliefs and attitude. It includes all the practices and experiences that teacher undergo after joining teaching profession. It is one of the important ways  to develop quality education system. Keywords: Professionalism, teacher, in-service training, professional developmen

    Cryptococcus neoformans and streptococcus pneumoniae co-infection in post-traumatic meningitis in a patient with unknown HIV status

    Get PDF
    Meningitis is a serious disease associated with considerable morbidity and mortality. Mixed meningeal infections due to bacteria and fungi are exceptionally rare. Here we report a case of meningeal co-infection with cryptococcus neoformans and streptococcus pneumoniae in a patient with unknown human immunodeficiency virus status. Because of the rarity of such cases, stringent screening of every cerebrospinal fluid specimen to exclude the presence of multiple pathogens is imperative. Assessment of patients for immunodeficiencies in case of isolation of an opportunistic organism like cryptococcus is also needed

    Gastric teratoma: A rare benign tumour of neonates

    Get PDF
    We describe our experience of two neonates with gastric teratoma, one a low-birthweight, premature baby who had a massive, immature teratoma. Complete excision is the appropriate treatment

    Susceptibility pattern of methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus to vancomycin and other alternate agents: report from a private sector hospital laboratory

    Get PDF
    With increasing prevalence of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus in clinical settings and injudicious use of antibiotics, resistance among MRSA against commonly used antibiotics is increasing. To assess the susceptibility pattern of MRSA against vancomycin, linezolid, tigecycline, rifampicin, fosfomycin fusidic acid, clindamycin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and teicoplanin, minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) for given antimicrobials were performed on 234 MRSA clinical isolates using automated VITEK 2 system. Vancomycin, linezolid, rifampicin, clindamycin, co-trimoxazole and teicoplanin susceptibilities were interpreted according to CLSI breakpoints, while tigecycline, fosfomycin and fusidic acid were interpreted according to BSAC breakpoints. All isolates were found susceptible to vancomycin, tigecycline, teicoplanin and linezolid. Non-susceptibility of the isolates for rifampicin, fusidic acid and fosfomycin was noted for 58(25%). Co-trimoxazole and clindamycin were found less susceptible showing high resistance rates of 61.5% and 42.3%, respectively. Vancomycin resistance was not found, however an increased MIC of 1 mg/ml was observed in about 25% of clinical strains. Increase in vancomycin MICs in MRSA is of concern and alternative antimicrobial options must be evaluated and considered for treatment of MRSA infections. Continuous antimicrobial surveillance is needed to monitor resistance patterns and detect possible emergence of vancomycin non-susceptible isolates

    Assessment of genetic diversity among different indigenous Xanthomonas isolates via RAPD and ISSR

    Get PDF
    The genetic diversity among seven Xanthomonas isolates representing four species was assessed using RAPD and ISSR PCR-based techniques. Both techniques revealed high degrees of polymorphisms among the studied isolates. A cluster dendrogram based on the combined data of RAPD and ISSR showed that genetic diversity exists in local isolates of Xanthomonas. In terms of percentage similarity values, the genomic variation was found to be in the range of 29.29% - 100% among the isolates. X. campestris (Mangifera indica) remained unclustered in cluster dendrogram and revealed a unique genomic profile compared to other isolates used in this study

    Knowledge, attitudes and practices of medical students regarding needle stick injuries

    Get PDF
    Objective: To ascertain knowledge, attitude and practices of medical students regarding needle stick injuries. Methods: A cross sectional survey was conducted among the consenting medical students of 3rd, 4th and 5th years at a teaching hospital of Karachi, Pakistan. Convenience sampling was used. Pre-tested questionnaires were administered to approximately 70% of each class. Data was analyzed using SPSS version 16.0. Associations were assessed using chi-square test and Fisher\u27s exact test. A p-value of \u3c0.05 was considered as significant. Results: The response rate of the survey was 85.7%. Sixty one students (33.9%) were from 3rd and 4th year each while 58 students (32.2%) were from 5th year. More than 85% students from each class were aware of the possibility of acquisition of Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C and HIV from needle stick injuries. Only 16.4% 3rd year students, 29.5% 4th year students and 36.2% final year students knew the full details of needle stick injury prevention protocols. Curriculum was cited as an important source of information regarding needle stick injuries. Forty seven (26.1%) students had received a needle stick injury in the past; however, only 14 students (29.7%) had reported the incident either to their consultant or the Infection Control Office. Conclusion: Overall knowledge of medical students regarding various aspects of needle stick injuries improved with seniority in medical college. However, the domains of attitude and practices need to be improved as the frequency of needle stick injuries was also observed to increase with the increasing year of medical education (JPMA 60:151; 2010

    DNA Barcoding: Amplification and sequence analysis of rbcl and matK genome regions in three divergent plant species

    Get PDF
    Background: DNA barcoding is a novel method of species identification based on nucleotide diversity of conserved sequences. The establishment and refining of plant DNA barcoding systems is more challenging due to high genetic diversity among different species. Therefore, targeting the conserved nuclear transcribed regions would be more reliable for plant scientists to reveal genetic diversity, species discrimination and phylogeny.Methods: In this study, we amplified and sequenced the chloroplast DNA regions (matk+rbcl) of Solanum nigrum, Euphorbia helioscopia and Dalbergia sissoo to study the functional annotation, homology modeling and sequence analysis to allow a more efficient utilization of these sequences among different plant species. These three species represent three families; Solanaceae, Euphorbiaceae and Fabaceae respectively. Biological sequence homology and divergence of amplified sequences was studied using Basic Local Alignment Tool (BLAST).Results: Both primers (matk+rbcl) showed good amplification in three species. The sequenced regions reveled conserved genome information for future identification of different medicinal plants belonging to these species. The amplified conserved barcodes revealed different levels of biological homology after sequence analysis. The results clearly showed that the use of these conserved DNA sequences as barcode primers would be an accurate way for species identification and discrimination.Conclusion: The amplification and sequencing of conserved genome regions identified a novel sequence of matK in native species of Solanum nigrum. The findings of the study would be applicable in medicinal industry to establish DNA based identification of different medicinal plant species to monitor adulteration

    Automatic User Preferences Selection of Smart Hearing Aid Using BioAid

    Get PDF
    Noisy environments, changes and variations in the volume of speech, and non-face-to-face conversations impair the user experience with hearing aids. Generally, a hearing aid amplifies sounds so that a hearing-impaired person can listen, converse, and actively engage in daily activities. Presently, there are some sophisticated hearing aid algorithms available that operate on numerous frequency bands to not only amplify but also provide tuning and noise filtering to minimize background distractions. One of those is the BioAid assistive hearing system, which is an open-source, freely available downloadable app with twenty-four tuning settings. Critically, with this device, a person suffering with hearing loss must manually alter the settings/tuning of their hearing device when their surroundings and scene changes in order to attain a comfortable level of hearing. However, this manual switching among multiple tuning settings is inconvenient and cumbersome since the user is forced to switch to the state that best matches the scene every time the auditory environment changes. The goal of this study is to eliminate this manual switching and automate the BioAid with a scene classification algorithm so that the system automatically identifies the user-selected preferences based on adequate training. The aim of acoustic scene classification is to recognize the audio signature of one of the predefined scene classes that best represent the environment in which it was recorded. BioAid, an open-source biological inspired hearing aid algorithm, is used after conversion to Python. The proposed method consists of two main parts: classification of auditory scenes and selection of hearing aid tuning settings based on user experiences. The DCASE2017 dataset is utilized for scene classification. Among the many classifiers that were trained and tested, random forests have the highest accuracy of 99.7%. In the second part, clean speech audios from the LJ speech dataset are combined with scenes, and the user is asked to listen to the resulting audios and adjust the presets and subsets. A CSV file stores the selection of presets and subsets at which the user can hear clearly against the scenes. Various classifiers are trained on the dataset of user preferences. After training, clean speech audio was convolved with the scene and fed as input to the scene classifier that predicts the scene. The predicted scene was then fed as input to the preset classifier that predicts the user’s choice for preset and subset. The BioAid is automatically tuned to the predicted selection. The accuracy of random forest in the prediction of presets and subsets was 100%. This proposed approach has great potential to eliminate the tedious manual switching of hearing assistive device parameters by allowing hearing-impaired individuals to actively participate in daily life by automatically adjusting hearing aid settings based on the acoustic scen

    Rapid RNA Extraction from Eucalyptus tree and its down processing for cloning of dehydrin genes

    Get PDF
    Background: RNA extraction from tree species like Eucalyptus is very tedious and difficult task. In this study a very short and efficient method of RNA extraction from Eucalyptus has been described.Methods: A very short and efficient protocol of two steps RNA extraction has been optimized for obtaining high quality and pure RNA from different tissue types of Eucalyptus tree. In first step whole nucleic acid was extracted from plant tissues and in second step RNA was purified from nucleic acid mixture. The newly optimized rapid CTAB RNA extraction method was compared with trizol extraction method for efficiency and quality of extracted RNA.Results: The newly optimized rapid CTAB RNA extraction method was found highly efficient and suitable over the trizol method. Three Eucalyptus dehydrin genes the dehydrin-10 (DHN-10), dehydrin-1 (DHN-1), and dehydrin-2 (DHN-2) were successfully amplified, TA cloned into pTZ57/RT vector, and transformed into Top10F’ strain of E.coli. These three Eucalyptus dehydrin genes have been reported for conferring abiotic stress tolerance to the Eucalyptus plant yet have not been reported to be cloned. These cloned genes would be further manipulated for developing abiotic stress tolerance in plants of interest.Conclusion: Rapid CTAB RNA extraction method is a brief and reproducible methodology for a hard job of RNA extraction from tree plants with high phenolic contents. Keywords: Dehydrin proteins, Eucalyptus abiotic stress tolerance proteins, cloning of dehydrin genes, DHN-1, DHN-2, DHN-1
    • …
    corecore