161 research outputs found

    Physicochemical and Phytochemical Examination of Medicinal Plants Used in Indigenous System of Medicine

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    The present paper deals with the physicochemical and phytochemical examination of seventy-six medicinal plants belonging to thirty-six dicot and six monocot families. These are used in indigenous system of medicine as well as local inhabitants either as single drugs or in combination, for the cure of various ailments. In physicochemical study, the parameters such as moisture content, pH (1% aqueous), total ash, acid insoluble ash, water-soluble extractive and alcohol soluble extractive were carried out. The preliminary phytochemical study was done for the detection of secondary metabolites such as alkaloid, flavonoid, glycoside, phenol, saponin, resin, steroid and tannin. The preliminary phytochemical study revealed the presence of alkaloid and saponin in 68.4%; flavonoid in 44.7%; glycoside, phenol and steroid in 72.37%; resin in 60.5% and tannin in 71% of selected medicinal plants

    Event-related potentials in relation to risk-taking: a systematic review

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    Event-related potentials (ERPs) have been used to investigate neural mechanisms underlying risk-related decisions over the last 16 years. We aimed to systematically evaluate associations between risk-taking and ERP components elicited during decisions and following feedback. A total of 79 articles identified from PsychINFO and PubMed databases met the inclusion criteria. Selected articles assessed early ERP components (feedback-related negativity/FRN, error-related negativity/ERN, and medial frontal negativity/MFN) and the mid-latency P3 component, all using gambling paradigms that involved selecting between choices of varying risk (e.g., Iowa Gambling Task, Balloon Analogue Risk Task, and two-choice gambling tasks). The P3 component was consistently enhanced to the selection of risky options and when positive feedback (as compared to negative feedback) was provided. Also consistently, the early negative components were found to be larger following feedback indicating monetary losses as compared to gains. In the majority of studies reviewed here, risk was conceptualized in the context of simple economical decisions in gambling tasks. As such, this narrow concept of risk might not capture the diversity of risky decisions made in other areas of everyday experience, for example, social, health, and recreational risk-related decisions. It therefore remains to be seen whether the risk-sensitivity of the ERP components reviewed here generalizes to other domains of life.Dilushi Chandrakumar, Daniel Feuerriegel, Stefan Bode, Megan Grech and Hannah A. D. Keag

    A Case Study

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    OK Publisher Copyright: © 2023 American Academy of OphthalmologyPurpose: To investigate intraretinal neovascularization and microvascular anomalies by correlating in vivo multimodal imaging with corresponding ex vivo histology in a single patient. Design: A case study comprising clinical imaging from a community-based practice, and histologic analysis at a university-based research laboratory (clinicopathologic correlation). Participants: A White woman in her 90s treated with numerous intravitreal anti-VEGF injections for bilateral type 3 macular neovascularization (MNV) secondary to age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Methods: Clinical imaging comprised serial infrared reflectance, eye-tracked spectral-domain OCT, OCT angiography, and fluorescein angiography. Eye tracking, applied to the 2 preserved donor eyes, enabled the correlation of clinical imaging signatures with high-resolution histology and transmission electron microscopy. Main Outcome Measures: Histologic/ultrastructural descriptions and diameters of vessels seen in clinical imaging. Results: Six vascular lesions were histologically confirmed (type 3 MNV, n = 3; deep retinal age-related microvascular anomalies [DRAMAs], n = 3). Pyramidal (n = 2) or tangled (n = 1) morphologies of type 3 MNV originated at the deep capillary plexus (DCP) and extended posteriorly to approach without penetrating persistent basal laminar deposit. They did not enter the subretinal pigment epithelium (RPE)–basal laminar space or cross the Bruch membrane. Choroidal contributions were not found. The neovascular complexes included pericytes and nonfenestrated endothelial cells, within a collagenous sheath covered by dysmorphic RPE cells. Deep retinal age-related microvascular anomaly lesions extended posteriorly from the DCP into the Henle fiber and the outer nuclear layers without evidence of atrophy, exudation, or anti-VEGF responsiveness. Two DRAMAs lacked collagenous sheaths. External and internal diameters of type 3 MNV and DRAMA vessels were larger than comparison vessels in the index eyes and in aged normal and intermediate AMD eyes. Conclusions: Type 3 MNV vessels reflect specializations of source capillaries and persist during anti-VEGF therapy. The collagenous sheath of type 3 MNV lesions may provide structural stabilization. If so, vascular characteristics may be useful in disease monitoring in addition to fluid and flow signal detection. Further investigation with longitudinal imaging before exudation onset will help determine if DRAMAs are part of the type 3 MNV progression sequence. Financial Disclosure(s): Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found after the references.publishersversionpublishe

    A framework for Operational Security Metrics Development for industrial control environment

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    Security metrics are very crucial towards providing insights when measuring security states and susceptibilities in industrial operational environments. Obtaining practical security metrics depend on effective security metrics development approaches. To be effective, a security metrics development framework should be scope-definitive, objective-oriented, reliable, simple, adaptable, and repeatable (SORSAR). A framework for Operational Security Metrics Development (OSMD) for industry control environments is presented, which combines concepts and characteristics from existing approaches. It also adds the new characteristic of adaptability. The OSMD framework is broken down into three phases of: target definition, objective definition, and metrics synthesis. A case study scenario is used to demonstrate an instance of how to implement and apply the proposed framework to demonstrate its usability and workability. Expert elicitation has also be used to consolidate the validity of the proposed framework. Both validation approaches have helped to show that the proposed framework can help create effective and efficient ICS-centric security metrics taxonomy that can be used to evaluate capabilities or vulnerabilities. The understanding from this can help enhance security assurance within industrial operational environments

    Profiling leucocyte subsets in tuberculosis-diabetes co-morbidity

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    The immune system plays an important role in the pathogenesis of pulmonary tuberculosis–type 2 diabetes mellitus (PTB-DM) co-morbidity. However, the phenotypic profile of leucocyte subsets at homeostasis in individuals with active or latent tuberculosis (LTB) with coincident diabetes is not known. To characterize the influence of diabetes on leucocyte phenotypes in PTB or LTB, we examined the frequency (F(o)) of leucocyte subsets in individuals with TB with (PTB-DM) or without (PTB) diabetes; individuals with latent TB with (LTB-DM) or without (LTB) diabetes and non-TB-infected individuals with (NTB-DM) or without (NTB) diabetes. Coincident DM is characterized by significantly lower F(o) of effector memory CD4(+) T cells in LTB individuals. In contrast, DM is characterized by significantly lower F(o) of effector memory CD8(+) T cells and significantly higher F(o) of central memory CD8(+) T cells in PTB individuals. Coincident DM resulted in significantly higher F(o) of classical memory B cells in PTB and significantly higher F(o) of activated memory and atypical B cells in LTB individuals. Coincident DM resulted in significantly lower F(o) of classical and intermediate monocytes in PTB, LTB and NTB individuals. Finally, DM resulted in significantly lower F(o) of myeloid and plasmacytoid dendritic cells in PTB, LTB and NTB individuals. Our data reveal that coincident diabetes alters the cellular subset distribution of T cells, B cells, dendritic cells and monocytes in both individuals with active TB and those with latent TB, thus potentially impacting the pathogenesis of this co-morbid condition

    DFT Study of Planar Boron Sheets: A New Template for Hydrogen Storage

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    We study the hydrogen storage properties of planar boron sheets and compare them to those of graphene. The binding of molecular hydrogen to the boron sheet (0.05 eV) is stronger than that to graphene. We find that dispersion of alkali metal (AM = Li, Na, and K) atoms onto the boron sheet markedly increases hydrogen binding energies and storage capacities. The unique structure of the boron sheet presents a template for creating a stable lattice of strongly bonded metal atoms with a large nearest neighbor distance. In contrast, AM atoms dispersed on graphene tend to cluster to form a bulk metal. In particular the boron-Li system is found to be a good candidate for hydrogen storage purposes. In the fully loaded case this compound can contain up to 10.7 wt. % molecular hydrogen with an average binding energy of 0.15 eV/H2.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, and 3 table

    Subjective hunger, gastric upset, and sleepiness in response to altered meal timing during simulated shiftwork

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    Shiftworkers report eating during the night when the body is primed to sleep. This study investigated the impact of altering food timing on subjective responses. Healthy participants (n = 44, 26 male, age Mean ± SD = 25.0 ± 2.9 years, BMI = 23.82 ± 2.59kg/m2) participated in a 7-day simulated shiftwork protocol. Participants were randomly allocated to one of three eating conditions. At 00:30, participants consumed a meal comprising 30% of 24 h energy intake (Meal condition; n = 14, 8 males), a snack comprising 10% of 24 h energy intake (Snack condition; n = 14; 8 males) or did not eat during the night (No Eating condition; n = 16, 10 males). Total 24 h individual energy intake and macronutrient content was constant across conditions. During the night, participants reported hunger, gut reaction, and sleepiness levels at 21:00, 23:30, 2:30, and 5:00. Mixed model analyses revealed that the snack condition reported significantly more hunger than the meal group (p < 0.001) with the no eating at night group reporting the greatest hunger (p < 0.001). There was no difference in desire to eat between meal and snack groups. Participants reported less sleepiness after the snack compared to after the meal (p < 0.001) or when not eating during the night (p < 0.001). Gastric upset did not differ between conditions. A snack during the nightshift could alleviate hunger during the nightshift without causing fullness or increased sleepiness.Charlotte C Gupta, Stephanie Centofanti, Jillian Dorrian , Alison M Coates, Jacqueline M Stepien, David Kennaway, Gary Wittert, Leonie Heilbronn, Peter Catcheside, Manny Noakes, Daniel Coro, Dilushi Chandrakumar and Siobhan Bank

    Prevalence of Tuberculosis Infection and Disease Among Homeless Persons Staying in NGO Shelters in Chennai

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    Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) is a inactive stage after being infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis and it reactivates into pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB). This study was to estimate the prevalence of LTBI in homeless persons staying in 13 shelters run by NGOs in Chennai metro city, India. A cross-sectional survey was conducted from January to April 2018. All inmates aged 15 years and above were screened for PTB infection using tuberculin skin test (TST) and disease smear and culture examinations. Out of a total of 1,068 registered, 1,016 persons were screened for PTB disease and 818 persons for LTBI. Among them, PTB was detected in two persons and TST was positive in 275 persons. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to find out the factors associated with LTBI. It was found that LTBI is significantly associated with male gender, aged more than 40 years and with chest X-ray TB lesions. This study finding highlights that low prevalence of TB disease and one third of homeless persons infected with tuberculosis. Our finding suggests that there is a need for prevention interventions to eliminate TB in this key populatio

    Ab initio studies of structures and properties of small potassium clusters

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    We have studied the structure and properties of potassium clusters containing even number of atoms ranging from 2 to 20 at the ab initio level. The geometry optimization calculations are performed using all-electron density functional theory with gradient corrected exchange-correlation functional. Using these optimized geometries we investigate the evolution of binding energy, ionization potential, and static polarizability with the increasing size of the clusters. The polarizabilities are calculated by employing Moller-Plesset perturbation theory and time dependent density functional theory. The polarizabilities of dimer and tetramer are also calculated by employing large basis set coupled cluster theory with single and double excitations and perturbative triple excitations. The time dependent density functional theory calculations of polarizabilities are carried out with two different exchange-correlation potentials: (i) an asymptotically correct model potential and (ii) within the local density approximation. A systematic comparison with the other available theoretical and experimental data for various properties of small potassium clusters mentioned above has been performed. These comparisons reveal that both the binding energy and the ionization potential obtained with gradient corrected potential match quite well with the already published data. Similarly, the polarizabilities obtained with Moller-Plesset perturbation theory and with model potential are quite close to each other and also close to experimental data.Comment: 33 pages including 10 figure
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