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Δευτέρα 26 Δεκεμβρίου 2016

A case study: using microbial abundance data to mathematically calculate organic acid production by human faecal microbiota within an in vitro batch fermentation

Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Bioactive Carbohydrates and Dietary Fibre
Author(s): Douglas I. Rosendale, Indrakumar Vetharaniam, William J Kelly, Martin Upsdell, Adrian L Cookson, Nicole Roy
The amount and ratio of organic acids from carbohydrate fermentation by the gut microbiota is dependent upon both the ability of members of the microbiota to exploit undigested dietary carbohydrate and the type of organic acids they have the capability to generate. Additionally, some bacteria feed upon carbohydrate degradation products, as well as organic acids produced by other bacteria, further affecting the overall organic acid profile. Experimentally unentangling these complex trophic food webs is challenging.Here we demonstrate a mathematical model that calculates the organic acid profile resulting from an in vitro human faecal microbial fermentation of kiwifruit cell wall polysaccharides, parameterised with organic acid and microbial abundance data. The model was based on our hypothesis that in conditions of carbohydrate excess, changes in the abundance of members of the microbiota will be reflected in an equivalent change in those organic acids they have the capability to produce. We used microbial abundance data to calculate changes in organic acids over time, and the resulting data was shown to recapitulate the measured organic acid profiles. We also demonstrate here the successful mathematical simulation of the metabolic cross-feeding which occurs upon simulated digestion and fermentation of a fresh whole fruit carbohydrate. We assign the relative propensity of various members of a complex microbial community to generate selected acids within the organic acid profiles. We anticipate this case study to be a starting point for more sophisticated research and clinical tools to investigate and predict the interactions with food, the microbiota and the host.

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Effects of orally administered Augmentin on glutamate transporter 1, cystine-glutamate exchanger expression and ethanol intake in alcohol-preferring rats

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Publication date: 1 March 2017
Source:Behavioural Brain Research, Volume 320
Author(s): Alqassem Y. Hakami, Fahad S. Alshehri, Yusuf S. Althobaiti, Youssef Sari
Alcohol dependence is associated with deficits in glutamate uptake and impairment of glutamate homeostasis in different brain reward regions. Glutamate transporter subtype 1 (GLT-1), cystine-glutamate exchanger (xCT) and glutamate/aspartate transporter (GLAST) are one of the key players in regulating extracellular glutamate concentration in the brain. Parenteral treatment with ceftriaxone, β-lactam antibiotic, has been reported to attenuate ethanol consumption and reinstatement to cocaine-seeking behavior, in part, by restoring the expression of GLT-1 and xCT in mesocorticolimbic brain regions in rats. In this study, we focused to test Augmentin (amoxicillin/clavulanate), which can be administered orally to subjects. Therefore, we examined the effects of orally administered Augmentin on ethanol intake as well as GLT-1, xCT and GLAST expression in male alcohol-preferring (P) rats. We found that orally administered Augmentin significantly attenuated ethanol consumption in P rats as compared to the vehicle-treated group. Importantly, the attenuation in ethanol consumption was associated with a significant upregulation of GLT-1 and xCT expression in nucleus accumbens (NAc) and prefrontal cortex (PFC). There was no effect of orally administered Augmentin on GLAST expression in either NAc or PFC. These findings present strong evidence that oral administration of Augmentin can be used as an alternative to parenteral treatment.



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Integrative therapy decreases the risk of lupus nephritis in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus: A population-based retrospective cohort study

Publication date: 20 January 2017
Source:Journal of Ethnopharmacology, Volume 196
Author(s): Ching-Mao Chang, Po-Chang Wu, Jen-Huai Chiang, Yau-Huei Wei, Fang-Pey Chen, Tzeng-Ji Chen, Tai-Long Pan, Hung-Rong Yen, Hen-Hong Chang
Ethnopharmacological relevanceEvidence on alleviating the risk of lupus nephritis by integrative therapy with conventional medicine (CM) and herbal medicine (HM) had not been addressed.Aim of the studyWe investigated the integrative effect associated the risk by a retrospective Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) cohort from Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD).Materials and methodsSLE patients with a catastrophic illness certificate (CIC) were retrospectively enrolled from the SLE cohort of the Taiwan NHIRD between 1997 and 2011. The patients were divided into an integrative medicine (IM: integrated CM plus HM) and a non-IM (CM only) group with 1:1 propensity score matching. Cox proportional regression model and the Kaplan-Meier method were conducted to estimate the hazard ratio (HR) for lupus nephritis in the cohort.ResultsAmong 16,645 newly diagnosed SLE patients holding a CIC (SLE/CIC), 1933 had received HM and 1571 had received no HM treatment. After propensity score matching, there were 273 patients with lupus nephritis-120 in the IM group and 153 in the non-IM group. The adjusted HR (0.68, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.54–0.87, p<0.01) for lupus nephritis was lower in the IM group than in the non-IM group. The adjusted HR (0.69, 95% CI: 0.54–0.88, p<0.001) for lupus nephritis was also lower in the group of patients who had received CM plus HM than in the group that received CM only. The core pattern of HM prescriptions, which were integrated with CM for preventing lupus nephritis, was "Sheng-Di-Huang" (raw Rehmannia glutinosa Libosch.), "Mu-Dan-Pi" (Paeonia suffruticosa Andr.), "Dan-Shan" (Salvia miltiorrhiza Bge.), "Zhi-Bo-Di-Huang-Wan.", and "Chi-Shao" (Paeoniae lactiflorae Rubra).ConclusionIntegrative therapy decreased the risk of lupus nephritis among SLE patients in Taiwan. Further investigation of the pharmacological mechanism and clinical efficacy are warranted.

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Davallia bilabiata exhibits anti-angiogenic effect with modified MMP-2/TIMP-2 secretion and inhibited VEGF ligand/receptors expression in vascular endothelial cells

Publication date: 20 January 2017
Source:Journal of Ethnopharmacology, Volume 196
Author(s): Chun-Ting Liu, Kuo-Wei Bi, Chao-Chun Huang, Hsiao-Ting Wu, Hui-Ya Ho, Jong-Hwei S. Pang, Sheng-Teng Huang
Ethnopharmacological relevanceDavallia bilabiata Hosokawa (D. bilabiata), also called GuSuiBu, is popularly used as a substitute for Drynaria fortunei J. Sm for rheumatoid and degenerative arthritis in traditional Chinese medicine. Little is known about the underlying mechanisms of anti-angiogenesis responsible for arthritis in D. bilabiata which needs to be elucidated.Aim of the studyThe present study is intended to investigate the anti-angiogenic effect of D. bilabiata associated with the modulation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and down regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) ligand/receptors both in vivo and in vitro.Materials and methodsWe investigated the potential anti-angiogenic effect of D. bilabiata by the in vivo neovascularization of chick chorioallantoic membranes (CAM) assay, and the in vitro migration and matrix-induced tube formation assay using human umbilical vascular endothelial cells (HUVECs). The expressions of MMP-2, TIMP-2, RECK and VEGF/VEGFR were analyzed by real-time RT-PCR or Western blot method.ResultsOne major compound from water extract of D. bilabiata was identified as Epicatechin 3-O-β-D-allopyranoside. D. bilabiata was confirmed to inhibit in vivo angiogenesis by CAM assay. D. bilabiata also exhibited in vitro anti-angiogenic and anti-regrowth effects as demonstrated by tube formation assay, transwell migration assay and wound healing assay. The mRNA expressions of MMP-2, and MMP-14 were decreased. On the contrary, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-2 (TIMP-2), reversion-inducing cysteine-rich protein with kazal motifs (RECK) were increased by D. bilabiata. The extracellular MMP-2 activity was found to be reduced both in vitro and in vivo by D. bilabiata as determined by gelatin zymography. Results from western blot analysis and ELISA further demonstrated the decrease of MMP-2 and increase of TIMP-2 secretion after D. bilabiata treatment. The gene expressions of VEGF-A, -B, -C, -D and VEGFR-1, -2, -3 were all inhibited by D. bilabiata.ConclusionWe concluded that the anti-angiogenic effect of D. bilabiata was associated with the decreased MMP-2 activity mediated by the upregulation of TIMP-2 and RECK, and the suppression of VEGF/VEGFRs expression.

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Editorial board

Publication date: February 2017
Source:The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Volume 166





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Polyacrylamide-phytic acid-polydopamine conducting porous hydrogel for rapid detection and removal of copper (II) ions

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Publication date: 15 May 2017
Source:Biosensors and Bioelectronics, Volume 91
Author(s): Zhen Zhao, Hongda Chen, Hua Zhang, Lina Ma, Zhenxin Wang
In this work, a conducting porous polymer hydrogel-based electrochemical sensor has been developed for rapid detection of copper (II) ions (Cu2+). The polymer (termed as PAAM/PA/PDA) hydrogel is prepared through multi-interactions of the monomers dopamine (DA), acrylamide (AAM) and phytic acid (PA) under mild ambient conditions: the AAM polymerizes through free-radical polymerization, DA occurs poly coupling reaction, and PA crosslinks polydopamine (PDA) and polyacrylamide (PAAM) by hydrogen bonds. The three dimensional (3D) network nanostructured PAAM/PA/PDA hydrogel not only provides a large surface area for increasing the amount of immobilized molecules/ions, but also exhibits a good conductivity. The PAAM/PA/PDA hydrogel-based electrochemical sensor exhibits a low detection limit (1nmolL1, S/N=3) and wide linear range (from 1nmolL1 to 1µmolL−1) for Cu2+ detection in aqueous samples. Furthermore, the Cu2+ can be sensitively detected by the electrochemical sensor in different sample matrices, indicating that the electrochemical sensor could be used to monitor Cu2+ with reasonable assay performance in practical samples. The PAAM/PA/PDA hydrogel also exhibits a good capacity to remove Cu2+(231.36±4.70mgg−1), which is superior to those of other adsorption materials reported in the literature. The facile synthesized PAAM/PA/PDA hydrogel provides a novel and regenerable platform for monitoring and removing Cu2+ in real samples.



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DNA sequence functionalized with heterogeneous core–satellite nanoassembly for novel energy-transfer-based photoelectrochemical bioanalysis

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Publication date: 15 May 2017
Source:Biosensors and Bioelectronics, Volume 91
Author(s): Yuan-Cheng Zhu, Fei Xu, Nan Zhang, Wei-Wei Zhao, Jing-Juan Xu, Hong-Yuan Chen
This work reports the use of compositionally heterogeneous asymmetric Ag@Au core–satellite nanoassembly functionalized with DNA sequence as unique signaling nanoprobes for the realization of new energy-transfer-based photoelectrochemical (PEC) immunoassay of prostate- specific antigen (PSA). Specifically, the Ag@Au asymmetric core–satellite nanoassemblies (Ag@Au ACS) were fabricated on a two-dimensional glass substrate by a modified controlled assembly technique, and then functionalized with DNA sequences containing PSA aptamers as signaling nanoprobes. Then, the sandwich complexing between the PSA, its antibodies, and the signaling nanoprobes was performed on a CdS QDs modified indium tin oxide (ITO) electrode. The single stranded DNA can server as a facile mediator that place the Ag@Au ACS in proximity of CdS QDs, stimulating the interparticle exciton–plasmon interactions between Ag@Au ACS and CdS QDs and thus quenching the excitonic states in the latter. Since the damping effect is closely related to the target concentration, a novel energy-transfer-based PEC bioanalysis could be achieved for the sensitive and specific PSA assay. The developed biosensor displayed a linear range from 1.0×10−11gmL−1 to 1.0×10−7gmL−1 and the detection limit was experimentally found to be of 0.3×10–13gmL−1. This strategy used the Ag@Au ACS-DNA signaling nanoprobes and overcame the deficiency of short operating distance of the energy transfer process for feasible PEC immunoassay. More significantly, it provided a way to couple the plasmonic properties of the Ag NPs and Au NPs in a single PEC bioanalytical system. We expected this work could inspire more interests and further investigations on the advanced engineering of the core–satellite or other judiciously designed nanostructures for new PEC bioanalytical uses with novel properties.



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Electrochemical bioassay development for ultrasensitive aptasensing of prostate specific antigen

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Publication date: 15 May 2017
Source:Biosensors and Bioelectronics, Volume 91
Author(s): Esmaeil Heydari-Bafrooei, Nazgol Sadat Shamszadeh
A densely packed gold nanoparticles on the rGO-MWCNT platform was used as the basis for an ultrasensitive label-free electrochemical aptasensor to detect the biomarker prostate specific antigen (PSA) in serum. The detection was based on that the variation of electron transfer resistance (Rct) and differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) current were relevant to the formation of PSA–aptamer complex at the modified electrode surface. Compared with pure AuNPs, rGO-MWCNT and MWCNT/AuNPs, the rGO-MWCNT/AuNPs nanocomposite modified electrode was the most sensitive aptasensing platform for the determination of PSA. Two calibration curves were prepared from the data obtained from the DPV and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) by plotting the peak current and Rct against PSA concentration, respectively. The proposed aptasensor had an extremely low LOD of 1.0pgmL−1 PSA within the detection range of 0.005–20ngmL−1 and 0.005–100ngmL−1 for DPV and EIS calibration curves, respectively. This sensor exhibited outstanding anti-interference ability towards co-existing molecules with good stability, sensitivity, and reproducibility. Clinical application was performed with analysis of the PSA levels in serum samples obtained from patients with prostate cancer using both the aptasensor and Immunoradiometric assay. The results revealed the proposed system to be a promising candidate for clinical analysis of PSA.



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Multiple signal amplification strategies for ultrasensitive label-free electrochemical immunoassay for carbohydrate antigen 24-2 based on redox hydrogel

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Publication date: 15 May 2017
Source:Biosensors and Bioelectronics, Volume 91
Author(s): Zhongxue Tang, Yuanyuan Fu, Zhanfang Ma
In this work, multiple signal amplification strategies for ultrasensitive label-free electrochemical immunoassay for carbohydrate antigen 24-2 (CA242) were developed using redox sodium alginate-Pb2+-graphene oxide (SA-Pb2+-GO) hydrogel. The SA-Pb2+-GO hydrogel was synthesised by simply mixing SA, GO, and Pb2+ and then implemented as a novel redox species with a strong current signal at −0.46V (vs. Ag/AgCl). After the three-dimensional and porous SA-Pb2+-GO hydrogel was in situ generated on a glassy carbon electrode (GCE), chitosan was adsorbed on the obtained electrode to further enrich Pb2+. When chitosan-Pb2+/SA-Pb2+-GO/GCE was incubated with anti-CA242 using glutaraldehyde and blocked by bovine serum albumin, the immunoassay platform for CA242 was obtained. Owing to the addition of GO, the obtained conductive SA-GO/GCE was beneficial for signal amplification. After incubating SA-GO/GCE with excessive amounts of Pb2+, the resistance of SA-Pb2+-GO/GCE further decreased and a strong redox signal was obtained. The chitosan fixed by electrostatic adsorption resulted in further adsorption of Pb2+, behaving as further amplifying the signal and improving conductivity. In this case, multiple signal amplification strategies were involved in the proposed immunosensor for the ultrasensitive detection of CA242. Under the optimal conditions, the proposed immunosensor exhibited a wide linear range from 0.005UmL−1 to 500UmL−1 with an ultralow detection limit of 0.067mUmL−1. In comparison to previous works, the sensitivity of this method was 32.98μA (log10CCA242)−1, which was a five-fold increase from the previous works.



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Editorial Board

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Publication date: 15 April 2017
Source:Biosensors and Bioelectronics, Volume 90





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Autonomous assembly of ordered metastable DNA nanoarchitecture and in situ visualizing of intracellular microRNAs

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Publication date: March 2017
Source:Biomaterials, Volume 120
Author(s): Jianguo Xu, Zai-Sheng Wu, Zhenmeng Wang, Jingqing Le, Tingting Zheng, Lee Jia
Facile assembly of intelligent DNA nanoobjects with the ability to exert in situ visualization of intracellular microRNAs (miRNAs) has long been concerned in the fields of DNA nanotechnology and basic medical study. Here, we present a driving primer (DP)-triggered polymerization-mediated metastable assembly (PMA) strategy to prepare a well-ordered metastable DNA nanoarchitecture composed of only two hairpin probes (HAPs), which has never been explored by assembly methods. Its structural features and functions are characterized by atomic force microscope (AFM) and gel electrophoresis. Even if with a metastable molecular structure, this nanoarchitecture is relatively stable at physiological temperature. The assembly strategy can be expanded to execute microRNA-21 (miRNA-21) in situ imaging inside cancer cells by labelling one of the HAPs with fluorophore and quencher. Compared with the conventional fluorescence probe-based in situ hybridization (FISH) technique, confocal images revealed that the proposed DNA nanoassembly can not only achieve greatly enhanced imaging effect within cancer cells, but also reflect the miRNA-21 expression level sensitively. We believe that the easily constructed DNA nanoarchitecture and in situ profiling strategy are significant progresses in DNA assembly and molecule imaging in cells.



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Re-assessing acalculia: Distinguishing Spatial and purely Arithmetical deficits in right-hemisphere damaged patients

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Cortex
Author(s): S. Benavides-Varela, D. Piva, F. Burgio, L. Passarini, G. Rolma, F. Meneghello, C. Semenza
Arithmetical deficits in right-hemisphere damaged patients have been traditionally considered secondary to visuo-spatial impairments, although the exact relationship between the two deficits has rarely been assessed. The present study implemented a voxelwise lesion analysis among 30 right-hemisphere damaged patients and a controlled, matched-sample, cross-sectional analysis with 35 cognitively normal controls regressing three composite cognitive measures on standardized numerical measures. The results showed that patients and controls significantly differ in Number comprehension, Transcoding, and Written operations, particularly subtractions and multiplications. The percentage of patients performing below the cutoffs ranged between 27% and 47% across these tasks. Spatial errors were associated with extensive lesions in fronto-temporo-parietal regions -frequently leading to neglect-whereas pure arithmetical errors appeared related to more confined lesions in the right angular gyrus and its proximity. Stepwise regression models consistently revealed that spatial errors were primarily predicted by composite measures of visuo-spatial attention/neglect and representational abilities. Conversely, specific errors of arithmetic nature linked to representational abilities only. Crucially, the proportion of arithmetical errors (ranging from 65% to 100% across tasks) was higher than that of spatial ones. These findings thus suggest that unilateral right hemisphere lesions can directly affect core numerical/arithmetical processes, and that right-hemisphere acalculia is not only ascribable to visuo-spatial deficits as traditionally thought.



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Using MutPred derived mtDNA load scores to evaluate mtDNA variation in hypertension and diabetes in a two-population cohort: The SABPA study

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Journal of Genetics and Genomics
Author(s): Marianne Venter, Leone Malan, Etresia van Dyk, Joanna L. Elson, Francois H. van der Westhuizen
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation has been implicated in many common complex diseases, but inconsistent and contradicting results are common. Here we introduce a novel mutational load hypothesis, which also considers the collective effect of mainly rare variants, utilising the MutPred Program. We apply this new methodology to investigate the possible role of mtDNA in two cardiovascular disease (CVD) phenotypes (hypertension and hyperglycaemia), within a two-population cohort (n = 363; mean age 45 ± 9 yrs.). Very few studies have looked at African mtDNA variation in the context of complex disease, and none using complete sequence data in a well-phenotyped cohort. As such, our study will also extend our knowledge of African mtDNA variation, with complete sequences of Southern Africans being especially under-represented. The cohort showed prevalence rates for hypertension (58.6%) and prediabetes (44.8%). We could not identify a statistically significant role for mtDNA variation in association with hypertension or hyperglycaemia in our cohort. However, we are of the opinion that the method described will find wide application in the field, being especially useful for cohorts from multiple locations or with a variety of mtDNA lineages, where the traditional haplogroup association method has been particularly likely to generate spurious results in the context of association with common complex disease.



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CAMSAP3-dependent microtubule dynamics regulates Golgi assembly in epithelial cells

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Journal of Genetics and Genomics
Author(s): Jing Wang, Honglin Xu, Yuqiang Jiang, Mikiko Takahashi, Masatoshi Takeichi, Wenxiang Meng
The Golgi assembly pattern varies among cell types. In fibroblastic cells, the Golgi apparatus concentrates around the centrosome that radiates microtubules; whereas in epithelial cells, whose microtubules are mainly noncentrosomal, the Golgi apparatus accumulates around the nucleus independently of centrosomes. Little is known about the mechanisms behind such cell type-specific Golgi and microtubule organization. Here, we show that the microtubule minus-end binding protein Nezha/CAMSAP3 plays a role in translocation of Golgi vesicles in epithelial cells. This function of CAMSAP3 (calmodulin-regulated spectrin-associated protein 3) is supported by CG-NAP (centrosome and Golgi localized PKN-associated protein) through their binding. Depletion of either one of these proteins similarly induces fragmentation of Golgi membranes. Furthermore, we find that stathmin-dependent microtubule dynamics is graded along the radial axis of cells with highest activity at the perinuclear region, and inhibition of this gradient disrupts perinuclear distribution of the Golgi apparatus. We propose that the assembly of the Golgi apparatus in epithelial cells is induced by a multi-step process, which includes CAMSAP3-dependent Golgi vesicle clustering and graded microtubule dynamics.



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ONGene: A literature-based database for human oncogenes

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Journal of Genetics and Genomics
Author(s): Yining Liu, Jingchun Sun, Min Zhao




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Single-Spin Magnetic Resonance in the Nitrogen-Vacancy Center of Diamond

Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Progress in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
Author(s): Dieter Suter, Fedor Jelezko
Magnetic resonance of single spins has flourished mostly because of the unique properties of the NV center in diamond. This review covers the basic physics of this defect center, introduces the techniques for working with single spins and gives an overview of some applications like quantum information and sensing.

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Isothermal crystallization fractionation and fraction characterization of trans-1,4-poly(isoprene-co-butadiene)

Publication date: 27 January 2017
Source:Polymer, Volume 109
Author(s): Qingtao Niu, Chen Zou, Xiangyu Liu, Riguo Wang, Aihua He
Polymer chain structural factors, like chain microstructure, comonomer content in copolymer, dyad sequence distribution, molecular weight (MW) and molecular weight distribution (MWD), etc. have a great influence on the properties and applications of polymer materials. In this paper, chain structural factors and thermal behaviors of novel trans-1,4-poly (isoprene-co-butadiene) copolymers (TBIR-15, TBIR-20, TBIR-40) with various comonomer contents synthesized by TiCl4/MgCl2-Al (i-Bu)3 catalyst system were studied by 13C-NMR, GPC, DSC and WAXD. Eight fractions for each TBIR sample were obtained through isothermal crystallization fractionation of TBIR in dilute solution. It is proved that all fractions in the TBIR samples were high trans-1,4-configuration copolymers (>89 mol%). The TBIR copolymers were mainly composed by G fractions (44∼76 wt%), which cannot be crystallized from the dilute solutions at −20 °C. The G fractions of the TBIR-15 and TBIR-20 were multi-block copolymers composed by short trans-1,4-polyisoprene (TPI) blocks with the number-average sequence length of isoprene units (nIp)∼6. The G fraction of TBIR-40 was random copolymer with the melting temperature (Tm) as low as −3.4 °C and the crystallinity (Xc) as low as 4.4%. Fractions D and E in TBIR-15 and TBIR-20 were multi-block copolymers with long TPI blocks (nIp = 6∼24) and the above two fractions show decreased Tm (29∼38 °C) from imperfect TPI crystals. A special fraction A in TBIR-40 was random copolymer containing a few TPI and trans-1,4-polybutadiene (TPB) blocks, and both TPI and TPB blocks had the ability to crystallize. The Mw for each fraction was in the range of 2–6 × 105 and Mw/Mn was in the range of 2–6. Based on the analysis, the possible chain sequence distribution model for each fraction was proposed. It was expected that this research would provide a further understanding about the TBIR copolymer chain structures and inspire the copolymer synthesis with ideal structure and composition as high performance rubber material.

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Editorial Board ((ofc))

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Publication date: January 2017
Source:Acta Histochemica, Volume 119, Issue 1





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Corrigendum to “Acute effects of stretching exercise on the soleus muscle of female aged rats” [Acta Histochem. 118 (1) (2016) 1–9]

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Acta Histochemica
Author(s): Talita Gianello Gnoato Zotz, Luiz Guilherme A. Capriglione, Rafael Zotz, Lucia Noronha, Marina Louise Viola De Azevedo, Hilana Rickli Fiuza Martins, Anna Raquel Silveira Gomes




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Synchronous pediatric supratentorial glioblastoma multiforme with noncontiguous infratentorial pilocytic astrocytoma: A rare event

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Jitender Chaturvedi, Bevinahalli N Nandeesh, Dwarakanath Srinivas, Anita Mahadevan, S Sampath

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):120-122



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Using multistate observational studies to determine role of hypertension and diabetes as risk factors for dementia

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Mitasha Singh, Des Raj, Sunil Kumar Raina, Manoj Kumar Gandhi, Vishav Chander

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):3-6

Background: Evidence suggests that modifiable risk factors which can be targeted by prevention are vascular diseases, such as diabetes, midlife hypertension (HTN), midlife obesity, midlife cholesterol, mid- and late-life depression as well as lifestyle factors such as smoking, physical inactivity, and poor diet. Methods: A comprehensive search of the National Library of Medicine's PubMed database and Google Scholar was conducted. A combinations of medical subject headings and free text words that included search terms related to the exposure (e.g., prevalence, HTN, raised BP, high BP, diabetes, high blood sugar, DM, India, state), were combined with search terms related to the outcomes (e.g., prevalence, disease burden, estimate, dementia, India). The filters included were English for the language category and humans for the study category. Results: The PubMed search initially identified 269 references, and a total of 204 abstracts were screened by inclusion criteria. Full-text assessment of 136 articles on prevalence of dementia resulted in 20 relevant articles from which the different regions of the country were identified. Based on the search conducted according to the regions; 287abstracts of the prevalence of HTN and 577 on the prevalence of diabetes mellitus were screened. There were 43 full-text articles on the prevalence of HTN and diabetes from the regions where the prevalence of dementia was available. Of these potentially relevant articles were 14 in number. Conclusion: Despite the uncertainty in the role, the data analysis, therefore, points to a role in the prevention of HTN and diabetes to prevent dementia.

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Occipital falcine anaplastic hemangiopericytoma mimicking meningioma

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Davendran Kanesen, Regunath Kandasamy, Zamzuri Idris

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):95-98

The rarity of hemangiopericytoma (HPC) and its controversial histological classification result in its frequent misdiagnosis and thus make the treatment quite challenging. It is often difficult to distinguish these tumors from meningiomas based on clinical features and radiological findings. This is a case report of a man, diagnosed clinically and radiologically as meningioma, which turned out to be anaplastic HPC on histological examination. A 30-year-old man presented with 3 months of progressively worsening of headache and blurring of vision. Clinical examination revealed the right homonymous hemianopia with reduced visual acuity and papilledema bilaterally. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a multilobulated and heterogenous extraaxial lesion attached to the occipital falx. It measured 9.0 cm (AP) × 5.5 cm (W) × 5.8 cm (CC) and expands bilaterally with major bulk on the left. An occipital craniotomy followed by a subtotal tumor excision was only achieved due to profuse bleeding intraoperatively. Histopathology confirmed an anaplastic HPC (WHO Grade 3). The importance of differentiation between HPCs and meningiomas cannot be overemphasized. A preoperative correct diagnosis is difficult, but it is important that it should be made. Multilobulated (mushroom appearance), prominent internal signal voids, relatively narrow dural attachment, and lytic destruction without calcifications are useful findings to distinguish HPCs from meningiomas.

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Association of cognitive and noncognitive symptoms of delirium: A study from consultation-liaison psychiatry set-up

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Sandeep Grover, Aseem Mehra, Subho Chakrabarti, Ajit Avasthi

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):7-12

Aims: This study aims to evaluate the cognitive functions of patients with delirium using Hindi Mental Status Examination (HMSE), to study the correlation of cognitive functions assessed by HMSE with noncognitive symptoms as assessed using Delirium Rating Scale-Revised 1998 (DRS-R-98) and to study the association of cognitive functions assessed using HMSE and DRS-R98. Methods: A total of 76 consecutive patients fulfilling the diagnosis of delirium were evaluated on DRS-R-98, HMSE, and Short Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (retrospective IQCODE). Results: The mean DRS-R-98 score 33.9 (standard deviation [SD] - 7.2) and the mean DRS-R-98 severity score was 25.9 (SD - 7.2). The mean score on HMSE was 19.3 (7.98). There were significant correlations of all the domains of HMSE with DRS-R-98 total score, DRS-R-98 severity score, DRS-R-98 cognitive subscale score, DRS-R-98 noncognitive domain subscale score, and DRS severity score without attention score. When the association of each item of DRS-R-98 and HMSE was evaluated, except for the items of delusions, lability of affect and motor retardation, there were significant negative association between all the items of DRS-R-98 and HMSE, indicating that higher severity of cognitive symptoms as assessed on HMSE is associated with higher severity of all the cognitive symptoms and most of the noncognitive symptoms as assessed by DRS-R-98. Conclusion: The present study suggests that attention deficits in patients with delirium influence the severity of cognitive and noncognitive symptoms of delirium. Further, the present study suggests an increase in the severity of cognitive symptoms in other domains is also associated with an increase in the severity of noncognitive symptoms of delirium.

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Embolization of a complex posterior fossa dural arteriovenous fistula with precipitating hydrophobic injectable liquid

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Dale Ding, Ben McGuinness, Stefan Brew

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):135-137



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Successful endovascular neurosurgical practice in resource-poor exclusive rural neuro-hospital setup

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Kamble Jayaprakash Harsha

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):13-17

Aim: The aim of this study to evaluate the feasibility of establishing endovascular neurosurgery in remote resource-poor neuro-hospital setup and evaluate its outcome. Materials and Methods: Retrospective analysis of diagnostic and therapeutic endovascular neurosurgical procedures performed during September 2013–June 2016. Results: A total of 174 diagnostic cerebral and spinal digital subtraction angiograms and 70 major endovascular neurosurgeries were performed during the period. The endovascular neurosurgical procedures included 54 aneurysms coiled, 4 cerebral arteriovenous malformation embolization, 2 dural arteriovenous fistulas embolization, 2 cerebral tumor embolizations, 2 intracranial stentings, 5 extracranial carotid stentings, 1 transverse sinus stenting. No complications were seen during diagnostic procedures. Operation related morbidity of 1.4% and mortality of 1.4% seen, with a procedural success rate of 97.2%. Conclusion: Endovascular neurosurgery is feasible in resource-poor remote rural exclusive neuro-hospital setup with procedural success rate and outcomes comparable to existing literature.

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Commentary

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Atsushi Sano

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):108-108



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Psychometric properties and correlates of the beck hopelessness scale in family caregivers of Nigerian patients with psychiatric disorders in Southwestern Nigeria

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Olutayo Aloba, Olayinka Ajao, Taiwo Alimi, Olufemi Esan

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):18-25

Objectives: To examine the construct and correlates of hopelessness among family caregivers of Nigerian psychiatric patients. Materials and Methods: This is a cross-sectional, descriptive study involving 264 family caregiver-patients' dyads recruited from two university teaching hospitals psychiatric clinics in Southwestern Nigeria. Results: Exploratory factor analysis revealed a two-factor 9-item model of the Beck Hopelessness Scale (BHS) among the family caregivers. Confirmatory factor analysis of the model revealed satisfactory indices of fitness (goodness of fit index = 0.97, comparative fit index = 0.96, Chi-square/degree of freedom (CMIN/DF) = 1.60, root mean square error of approximation = 0.048, expected cross-validation index = 0.307, and standardized root mean residual = 0.005). Reliability of the scale was modestly satisfactory (Cronbach's alpha 0.72). Construct validity of scale was supported by significant correlations with the family caregivers' scores on the Zarit Burden Interview, mini international neuropsychiatric interview suicidality module, General Health Questionnaire-12 (GHQ-12), and Patient Health Questionnaire-9. The greatest variance in the family caregivers' scores on the BHS was contributed by their scores on the psychological distress scale (GHQ-12). Conclusions: The BHS has adequate psychometric properties among Nigerian psychiatric patients' family caregivers. There is the need to pay attention to the psychological well-being of the family caregivers of Nigerian psychiatric patients.

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Lumbar annular tear in the absence of nerve root compression: Is discectomy useful?

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Lorenzo Nigro, Alessandro Landi, Nicola Marotta, Roberto Delfini

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):126-128



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Long-term benzodiazepine treatment in patients with psychotic disorders attending a mental health service in rural Greece

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Vaios Peritogiannis, Thiresia Manthopoulou, Venetsanos Mavreas

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):26-30

Introduction: Long-term benzodiazepine (BZD) treatment in patients with mental disorders is widespread in clinical practice, and this is also the case of patients with schizophrenia, although the evidence is weak and BZD prescription is discouraged by guidelines and medical authorities. Data on BZD prescription are usually derived from national or regional databases whereas information on the use of BZD by patients with schizophrenia and related psychoses in general population-based samples is limited. Materials and Methods: Information for 77 patients with psychotic disorders who were regularly attending follow-up appointments with the multidisciplinary Mobile Mental Health Unit of the prefectures of Ioannina and Thesprotia, Northwest Greece, during 1-year period (2015) was obtained from our database. Results: From the total of 77 engaged patients, 30 (39%) were regularly prescribed BZDs in the long term, as part of their treatment regimen. Prescribed BZDs were mostly diazepam and lorazepam, in 43.3% of cases each. The mean daily dose of these compounds was 13 mg and 3.77 mg, respectively. Statistical analysis showed a correlation of long-term BZD use with the history of alcohol/substance abuse. Most patients were receiving BZD continuously for several years, and the mean dose was steady within this interval. Conclusions: A large proportion of patients with psychotic disorders were regularly prescribed BZD in long term. It appears that when BZDs are prescribed for some period in the course of a psychotic disorder, their use commonly exceeds the recommended interval and then becomes a regular part of the chronic treatment regimen. Future research should address the factors that may be related to the long-term BZD use by patients with psychotic disorders. Interventions for the reduction of regular BZD prescription should target the primary care setting and all those who treat first episode patients.

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Frontal bone hemangioma in an 8-year-old female: A common tumor in a rare location

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Abhimanyu Sharma, Usha Rani Singh, Prateek Sihag

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):91-93

Intraosseous hemangioma is a rare bone tumor accounting for 0.7%–1.0% of all bone tumors. In the skull, frontal bone is the commonly involved bone. An 8-year-old female presented to our outpatient department with complaints of pain and swelling over forehead for 4 months. X-ray revealed a lytic expansile lesion involving frontal bone with sunburst pattern of bony spicules radiating to periphery of the lesion. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed the presence of a well-circumscribed lesion with both intra as well as extracranial components. Histopathology revealed a vascular tumor consisting of both small (capillary) and large (cavernous) sized vessels. A diagnosis of mixed type of hemangioma of the frontal bone was given. Recognition of hemangioma on radiology and confirmation by histopathology is essential for proper management as it might be confused clinically with other locally aggressive/malignant lesions.

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An analytical study to correlate serum levels of levetiracetam with clinical course in patients with epilepsy

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Varun Gupta, Kanchan Gupta, Gagandeep Singh, Sandeep Kaushal

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):31-36

Introduction: With the advancement of therapeutics, newer antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) like Levetiracetam (LEV), with good therapeutic efficacy and tolerability are available. But unfortunately, therapeutic drug monitoring is not routinely done in India for these drugs. Objectives: The objective of this study is to determine the range of serum levels of LEV in patients at stabilized doses and correlate them with their clinical course. Materials and Methods: Patients with epilepsy and started on LEV were enrolled from the Neurology Department after the Ethics Committee approval. Serum levels of LEV were estimated using high-performance liquid chromatography and correlated with patient demographics, dosage, dosage forms, concomitant AEDs, compliance of the patient, therapeutic effect, adverse drug reactions (ADRs), and suspected toxicity. Results: Serum levels of LEV ranged from 0.4 to 102.2 μg/ml at different time points and demonstrated a negligible positive correlation with age of the patients (r = 0.12) but negligible negative correlation with bodyweight (r = −0.19). No conclusive relationship could be established for dose, gender, dosage forms, clinical efficacy (seizure frequency), ADRs, and toxicity. Compliance was verified in all the patients. Levels were found to reduce with the use of concomitant enzyme inducer drugs (56.78%) whereas increase with valproic acid (7.8%). Conclusion: These findings emphasize the need for monitoring the serum levels of newer AEDs like LEV considering the various parameters studied here, so as to maintain the therapeutic efficacy by preventing under or over dosage and to generate a broader database of serum levels of LEV in the Indian population to help appropriate prescribing with more confidence.

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Telescoping dual covered stent graft construct for endovascular treatment of a giant extracranial carotid artery pseudoaneurysm

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Dale Ding, Robert M Starke, Maurice Moriarty, Stefan Brew

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):103-105

Large pseudoaneurysms which compress the parent vessel are challenging lesions to successfully treat with endovascular therapy. We describe the endovascular treatment of a giant extracranial carotid artery (ECCA) pseudoaneurysm resulting in substantial mass effect on the common carotid artery (CCA) bifurcation using a telescoping dual covered stent graft construct. A 56-year-old male was diagnosed with an 8.5 cm × 13 cm pseudoaneurysm arising from the left CCA bifurcation, which was causing luminal narrowing of the CCA and proximal internal carotid artery (ICA). The patient underwent endovascular intervention, during which a balloon-expandable covered stent was deployed within a heparin-bonded covered stent, such that the overall construct spanned from the CCA to the lower cervical ICA. The employment of a telescoping dual covered stent technique can successfully treat appropriately selected patients with large or giant ECCA pseudoaneurysms, with the concomitant goals of excluding the pseudoaneurysm and restoring the luminal caliber of the parent artery.

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Relationship between pelvic alignment and weight-bearing asymmetry in community-dwelling chronic stroke survivors

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Suruliraj Karthikbabu, Mahabala Chakrapani, Sailakshmi Ganesan, Ratnavalli Ellajosyula

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):37-40

Background and Purpose: Altered pelvic alignment and asymmetrical weight bearing on lower extremities are the most common findings observed in standing and walking after stroke. The purpose of this study was to find the relationship between pelvic alignment and weight-bearing asymmetry (WBA) in community-dwelling chronic stroke survivors. Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted in tertiary care rehabilitation centers. In standing, the lateral and anterior pelvic tilt angle of chronic stroke survivors was assessed using palpation (PALM™) meter device. The percentage of WBA was measured with two standard weighing scales. Pearson correlation coefficient (r) was used to study the correlation between pelvic tilt and WBA. Results: Of 112 study participants, the mean (standard deviation) age was 54.7 (11.7) years and the poststroke duration was 14 (11) months. The lateral pelvic tilt on the most affected side and bilateral anterior pelvic tilt were 2.47 (1.8) and 4.4 (1.8) degree, respectively. The percentage of WBA was 23.2 (18.94). There was a high correlation of lateral pelvic tilt with WBA (r = 0.631; P< 0.001) than anterior pelvic tilt (r = 0.44; P< 0.001). Conclusion: Excessive lateral pelvic tilt toward the most affected side in standing may influence the weight-bearing ability of the ipsilateral lower extremity in community-dwelling chronic stroke survivors.

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Primary sacral hydatid cyst mimicking a neurogenic tumor in chronic low back pain: Case report and review of the literature

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Manuel Segura-Trepichio, Jose Manuel Montoza-Nuñez, David Candela-Zaplana, Josefa Herrero-Santacruz, Fernando Pla-Mingorance

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):112-116

Hydatid disease is caused by infection of Echinococcus granulosus. Bone hydatid cyst presentation without hepatic affectation is infrequent and occurs in 0,5-2% of cases. This rare condition makes clinicians not always aware of the disease, and as a result, misdiagnosis of spinal echinococcosis is common. We present a case of a 48-year-old female patient with primary sacral hydatidosis. Chronic low back pain radiating to the left buttock was the only symptom. The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) suggested a neurogenic tumor versus giant cell tumor. Biopsy and pathological study revealed a hydatid cyst. Anthelmintic and surgical treatment was performed. At 12 months after surgery, the patient is free of recurrence. In patients with chronic low back pain and a MR suggestive of neurogenic tumor, spinal hydatid cyst should be considered in the differential diagnosis. It is recommended the assistance of an anesthesiologist during biopsy to avoid an anaphylactic shock.

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Association of serum calcium levels with infarct size in acute ischemic stroke: Observations from Northeast India

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Meghna Borah, Sriparna Dhar, Dipankar Mall Gogoi, Alice Abraham Ruram

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):41-45

Background: Calcium is known to be major mediator in ischemic neuronal cell death. Recent studies have shown that elevated serum calcium levels at admission in patients with stroke have been associated with less severe clinical deficits and with better outcomes. Aim: The aim of this to determine the correlation between serum calcium (total, corrected, and ionized) and infarct size (IS) in patients with acute ischemic stroke. Materials and Methods: Data were collected from 61 patients presenting with acute ischemic stroke from May 2015 to April 2016 at a tertiary care institute in Northeast India. Only patients aged ≥40 years and diagnosed as having acute ischemic cerebrovascular stroke with clinical examination and confirmed by a computed tomography scan were included in the study. Serum calcium levels (total, albumin corrected, and ionized) were collapsed into quartiles, and these quartile versions were used for calculating correlation. Pearson's correlation coefficient was used for comparing calcium levels with IS. Results: Total calcium, albumin-corrected calcium, and ionized calcium had a statistically significant negative correlation with IS with r = −0.578, −0.5396, and −0.5335, respectively. Total and ionized calcium showed a significant negative correlation with IS across all four quartiles. Albumin-corrected calcium levels showed a significant negative correlation with IS only across the lowest and highest quartiles. Conclusion: The findings in our study suggest that serum calcium can be used as a prognostic indicator in ischemic stroke as its levels directly correlates with the IS.

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Beyond bounds of reality: Acute stress disorder presenting with delusional misidentification syndromes

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Karthick Subramanian, Vikas Menon, Tess Maria Rajan

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):124-125



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Pattern reversal visual evoked potential and cognitive functions in subclinical hypothyroid subjects

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Pooja Jaiswal, Yogesh Saxena, Rani Gupta, Rajeev Mohan Kaushik

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):46-51

Background: Central nervous system (CNS) involvement is insidious and may occur early in subclinical hypothyroid (SCH) state which can be picked up by electrophysiological study. This study aims to record visual evoked potential (VEP), event-related latency and cognitive functions, and find their association with the levels of serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) in patients with SCH. Materials and Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 36 adult SCH patients and an equal number of age- and sex-matched euthyroid controls were included. Pattern reversal VEP, visual reaction time (RT), digit spanning test, and AB clock test (ABCT) were done in both SCH cases and euthyroid controls. The observed values were analyzed for comparison of mean values between the groups and correlation of recorded variables with the levels of serum TSH. Results: SCH cases showed a higher P100 (VEP) latency in both the right (103.2 ± 12.3 vs. 102.7 ± 6.8 ms) and left eye (101.1 ± 9.1 vs. 96.2 ± 10.7 ms) as compared to controls, but the difference was statistically insignificant. A significant delay in RT was observed on visible spectra of light in SCH cases (P < 0.001). Digit spanning score (forward and backward) in SCH cases was significantly lower than controls (P < 0.001), and a lower standardized score (<124 or <95th percentile) was significantly associated with SCH state (P = 0.027). No significant difference was observed in visuospatial domain by ABCT between both the groups although the median score was lower in SCH cases. Only digit spanning score showed a significant negative correlation with TSH levels (r = −0.4; P = 0.001). Conclusion: Decline in working memory and RT to visual stimuli is an evidence of the involvement of CNS in SCH. Prolonged latency in VEP may depend on the duration of SCH.

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Alternating hemiplegia of childhood in a child misdiagnosed as intractable epilepsy

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Faruk Incecik, Ozlem M Herguner

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):130-131



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Main neurosurgical pathologies in Benin Republic

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Hugues Jean Thierry Gandaho, Madougou Soumaila, Isaac Hoinsou-Hans, Gautier M. M. Djrolo, Audrey A. S. Zevounou, Amos O Adeleye

Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice 2016 7(5):52-56

Background: Benin republic is a very low-income French-speaking country in West Africa The development of Neurosurgery in the Republic of Benin took off with the arrival of the first Beninese neurosurgeons in the year 2003. Aims: This study aims to evaluate patients' attendance in a public neurosurgical center, and appreciate populations' affordability to a new specialty. Settings and Design: In the year 2004, the Benin Armed Forces established the first Department of Neurosurgery in the Nation's Military Teaching Hospital. From the public authorities, that was a proof of motivation to develop this specialty in the Benin Republic. Materials and Methods: A retrospective cross-sectional survey (September 2003 to December 2009) of the total neurosurgical patient population managed in a public pioneer hospital in a developing country. Statistical Analysis Used: Data were captured and analyzed with the SPSS software (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) and presented in descriptive statistics such as frequencies and proportions. Results: 2908 new patients, civilians, and militaries were registered. The surgical treatment was offered adult (86%) as well as pediatric (14%) patients. Spinal degenerative diseases (52.1%) were the most common pathology; neurotraumatology emergency cases (8.4%) appeared low in representation. Three-quarters of patients experienced financial difficulties to procure the required radiologic investigations and although 609 (20.94%) benefited from surgery, most patients could not pay for the surgical operations as well as the perioperative care. Conclusions: In spite of the great constraints of this country's privately-funded health-care delivery system on the affordability of neurosurgical treatment for the average Beninese, this study demonstrates a globally increasing attendance of the department.

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Application of fractal analysis of the midpalatal suture for estimation of pubertal growth spurts

Abstract

Objective

To evaluate the potential clinical application of fractal analysis of midpalatal suture fusion for prediction of pubertal growth spurts.

Methods

Cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) scans and hand-wrist radiographs were obtained for 165 subjects (81 males, 84 females; mean age 15.5 ± 7.6 years). From the CBCT image of the midpalatal suture, the region of interest was obtained according to a previously described protocol. The fractal dimension (FD) of the midpalatal suture was calculated. Spearman's correlation coefficients were estimated to investigate the associations among age, skeletal maturation index (SMI), and FD of the midpalatal suture. Receiver-operating characteristic curves were used to determine the cutoff values for identification of pubertal growth spurts.

Results

Significant correlations were observed among age, SMI, and FD of the midpalatal suture (P < 0.05). The optimal cutoff value of the FD for evaluation of a pubertal growth spurt was 0.9484 in males and 1.1205 in females. Fractal analysis of the midpalatal suture on CBCT images might be a clinically meaningful, objective, and quantitative method for evaluating pubertal growth spurts.

Conclusions

The present results suggest that fractal analysis of the midpalatal suture could be useful for decision-making on treatments involving growth modification in growing children with a skeletal discrepancy.



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Nasal Unit Transplantation: A Cadaveric Anatomical Feasibility Study

J reconstr Microsurg
DOI: 10.1055/s-0036-1597693

Background The science and technical acumen in the field of vascularized composite allotransplantation has progressed rapidly over the past 15 years, and transplantation of specialized units of the face, such as the nose, appears possible. No study to date has evaluated the technical feasibility of isolated nasal unit transplantation (NUT). In this study, we explore the anatomy and technical specifics of NUT. Methods In this study, four fresh cadaver heads were studied. Bilateral vascular pedicle dissections were performed in each cadaver. The facial artery was cannulated and injected with food dye under physiologic pressure in two cadavers, and with lead oxide mixture in two cadavers to evaluate perfusion territories supplied by each vascular pedicle. Results The facial artery and vein were found to be adequate pedicles for NUT. Divergent courses of the vein and artery were consistently identified, which made for a bulky pedicle with necessary inclusion of large amounts of subcutaneous tissue. In all cases, the artery remained superficial, while the vein coursed in a deeper plane, and demonstrated consistent anastomoses with the superior transverse orbital arcade. While zinc oxide injection of the facial artery demonstrated filling of the nasal vasculature across the midline, dye perfusion studies suggested that unilateral arterial inflow may be insufficient to perfuse contralateral NUT components. Discrepancies in these two studies underscore the limitations of nondynamic assessment of nutritive perfusion. Conclusion NUT based on the facial artery and facial vein is technically feasible. Angiosome evaluation suggests that bilateral pedicle anastomoses may be required to ensure optimal perfusion.
[...]

Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.

Article in Thieme eJournals:
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Lower Extremity Reconstruction with Free Gracilis Flaps

J reconstr Microsurg
DOI: 10.1055/s-0036-1597568

Background There have been significant advancements in lower extremity reconstruction over the last several decades, and the plastic surgeon's armamentarium has grown to include free muscle and fasciocutaneous flaps along with local perforator and propeller flaps. While we have found a use for a variety of techniques for lower extremity reconstruction, the free gracilis has been our workhorse flap due to the ease of harvest, reliability, and low donor site morbidity. Methods This is a retrospective review of a single surgeon's series of free gracilis flaps utilized for lower extremity reconstruction. Demographic information, comorbidities, outcomes, and secondary procedures were analyzed. Results We identified 24 free gracilis flaps. The duration from injury to free flap coverage was ≤ 7 days in 6 patients, 8–30 days in 11 patients, 31–90 days in 4 patients, and > 90 days in 3 patients. There were 22 (92%) successful flaps and an overall limb salvage rate of 92%. There was one partial flap loss. Two flaps underwent incision and drainage in the operating room for infection. Two patients developed donor site hematomas. Four patients underwent secondary procedures for contouring. Our subset of pediatric patients had 100% flap survival and no secondary procedures at a mean 30-month follow-up. Conclusion This study demonstrates the utility of the free gracilis flap in reconstruction of small- to medium-sized defects of the lower extremity. This flap has a high success rate and a low donor site morbidity. Atrophy of the denervated muscle over time allows for good shoe fit, often obviating the need for secondary contouring procedures.
[...]

Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.

Article in Thieme eJournals:
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Immediate effect of mental practice with and without mirror therapy on muscle activation in hemiparetic stroke patients

Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies
Author(s): Tamise Aguiar Caires, Luciane Fernanda Rodrigues Matinho Fernandes, Lislei Jorge Patrizzi, Rafael de Almeida Oliveira, Luciane Aparecida Pascucci Sande de Souza
Mental practice (MP) consists of the repeated mental rehearsal of a physical skill without movement, called motor imagery (MI). Studies show that MP and MI associated mirror therapy (MPMT) may improve muscle control of the upper limbs in hemiparesis. This study aimed to evaluate muscle activation during active flexion of the wrist (MA), MP, and MPMT in patients with history of stroke and hemiparesis. Individuals diagnosed with stroke showing sequelae of upper limb hemiparesis were enrolled. The flexor carpi ulnaris was analyzed using electromyography during tasks (MA, MP, MPMT) involving wrist flexion. Greater electromyographic activity was detected during MP and MPMT techniques compared to active movement (p = 0.02). There was no significant difference between MP and MPMT (p = 0.56). These results were found in both the affected limb and unaffected limb. Immediate effects on muscle activation are experienced during MP and MPMT, and muscle activity was similar with both therapies.



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Spanish Broom (Spartium junceum L.) fibers impregnated with vancomycin-loaded chitosan nanoparticles as new antibacterial wound dressing: Preparation, characterization and antibacterial activity

Publication date: 1 March 2017
Source:European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Volume 99
Author(s): Teresa Cerchiara, Angela Abruzzo, Rogers Alberto Ñahui Palomino, Beatrice Vitali, Renata De Rose, Giuseppe Chidichimo, Luca Ceseracciu, Athanassia Athanassiou, Bruno Saladini, Francesco Dalena, Federica Bigucci, Barbara Luppi
In this work, we propose as new wound dressing, the Spanish Broom fibers impregnated with vancomycin (VM) loaded chitosan nanoparticles. Spanish Broom fibers were extracted by patented method DiCoDe and the morphological, physical and mechanical properties were investigated. Chitosan nanoparticles were prepared by ionic gelation using different weight ratios between chitosan (CH) and tripolyphosphate (TPP). Nanoparticles were characterized in terms of size, zeta potential, yield, encapsulation efficiency, stability and drug release. Finally, the antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus as well as in vitro cytotoxicity on HaCaT cells were evaluated.The best formulation CH/TPP 4:1 was selected based on the encapsulation efficiency and yield. Spanish Broom fibers impregnated with loaded nanoparticles showed an increased antibacterial activity against S. aureus compared to the same fibers containing VM without nanoparticles. Moreover, these fibers were not toxic to HaCaT keratinocytes cells. In conclusion, Spanish Broom fibers impregnated with VM loaded CH/TPP nanoparticles would appear to be a promising candidate for wound dressing application.

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Molecular mobility in the supercooled and glassy states of nizatidine and perphenazine

Publication date: 1 March 2017
Source:European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Volume 99
Author(s): U. Sailaja, M. Shahin Thayyil, N.S. Krishna Kumar, G. Govindaraj, K.L. Ngai
The dielectric properties of two pharmaceuticals nizatidine and perphenazine were investigated in the supercooled liquid and glassy states by broadband dielectric spectroscopy. Two relaxation processes were observed in both the pharmaceuticals. The relaxation process observed above the glass transition temperature is the structural alpha relaxation and below the glass transition temperature is the gamma relaxation of intramolecular origin. The Johari-Goldstein beta relaxation coming from the motion of the entire molecule is found to be hidden under the structural relaxation peak in both the pharmaceuticals.

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Modified mesoporous silica nanoparticles for enhancing oral bioavailability and antihypertensive activity of poorly water soluble valsartan

Publication date: 1 March 2017
Source:European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Volume 99
Author(s): Nikhil Biswas
The aim was to improve the oral bioavailability and antihypertensive activity of poorly soluble drug valsartan (VAL) by modifying the design and delivery of mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs). The synthesized MSNs were functionalized with aminopropyl groups (AP-MSN) through postsynthesis and coated with pH sensitive polymer Eudragit L100-55 (AP-MSN-L100-55) for pH dependant sustain release of anionic VAL. MSNs were characterized by Brauner-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area analyzer, zeta sizer, Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscope (FESEM), Powder X-Ray Diffraction (PXRD) and Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC). Functionalized MSNs showed highest entrapment efficiency (59.77%) due to strong ionic interaction with VAL. In vitro dissolution of M-MSN [MSN-VAL and AP-MSN-VAL-L100-55 mixed equally] at physiological conditions demonstrated immediate release (MSN-VAL fraction) followed by sustained release (AP-MSN-VAL-L100-55 fraction) of 96% VAL in 960min. The dramatic improvement in dissolution was attributed to the amorphization of crystalline VAL by MSNs as evidenced by DSC and PXRD studies. No noticeable cytotoxicity was observed for MSN, AP-MSN and AP-MSN-L100-55 in MTT assay. Pharmacokinetic study of M-MSN confirmed 1.82 fold increases in bioavailability compared to commercial Diovan tablet in fasted male rabbits. Blood pressure monitoring in rats showed that the morning dosing of Diovan tablet efficiently controlled BP for just over 360min whereas the effect of M-MSN lasted for >840min.

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Sucrose esters as biocompatible surfactants for penetration enhancement: An insight into the mechanism of penetration enhancement studied using stratum corneum model lipids and Langmuir monolayers

Publication date: 1 March 2017
Source:European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Volume 99
Author(s): Marija N. Todosijević, Gerald Brezesinski, Snežana D. Savić, Reinhard H.H. Neubert
Up to now, the molecular mechanism of the penetration enhancing effect of sucrose esters (SEs) on stratumcorneum (SC) has not been explained in details. In this study, variety of surface sensitive techniques, including surface pressure-area (π-A) isotherms, infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS), and Brewster angle microscopy (BAM), have been used to investigate interactions between SEs and SC intercellular lipids. A monolayer of the mixture of ceramide AS C18:18, stearic acid and cholesterol in the molar ratio of 1:1:0.7 on an aqueous subphase is a good model to mimic a single layer of intercellular SC lipids. The π-A isotherms of mixed monolayers and parameters derived from the curves demonstrated the interaction between nonionic surfactants such as SEs and SC lipids. With increasing SE concentration, the resultant monolayer films became more fluid and better compressible. IRRAS measurements showed that SEs disordered the acyl chains of SC lipids, and the BAM images demonstrated the modification of the domain structures in SC monolayers. Longer chain-SE has a stronger disordering effect and is better miscible with ceramides in comparison to SE with a shorter hydrophobic part. In conclusion, this study demonstrates the disordering effect of SEs on the biomimetic SC model, pointing out that small changes in the structure of surfactant may have a strong influence on a penetration enhancement of lipophilic drugs through intercellular lipids of skin.

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Expression profile of rrbp1 genes during embryonic development and in adult tissues of Xenopus laevis

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:Gene Expression Patterns
Author(s): Guang-Hui Liu, Cheng-Zhou Mao, Hai-Yan Wu, Deng-Cheng Zhou, Jing-Bo Xia, Soo-Ki Kim, Dong-Qing Cai, Hui Zhao, Xu-Feng Qi
Recent studies suggest that ribosome-binding protein 1 (RRBP1) is involved in multiple diseases such as tumorigenesis and cardiomyopathies. However, its function during embryonic development remains largely unknown. We searched Xenopus laevis database with human RRBP1 protein sequence and identified two cDNA sequences encoding Xenopus orthologs of RRBP1 including rrbp1a (NM_001089623) and rrbp1b (NM_001092468). Both genes were firstly detected at blastula stage 8 with weak signals in animal hemisphere by whole mount in situ hybridization. Evident expression of rrbp1 was mainly detected in cement gland and notochord at neurula and tailbud stages. Heart expression of rrbp1 was detected at stage 36. RT-PCR results indicated that very weak expression of rrbp1a was firstly detected in oocytes, followed by increasing expression until stage 39. Differently, very weak expression of rrbp1b was firstly observed at stage 2, and then maintained at a lower level to stage 17 followed by an intense expression from stages 19–39. Moreover, both expression profiles were also different in adult tissues. This study reports Xenopus rrbp1 expression during early embryonic development and in adult tissues. Our study will facilitate the functional analysis of Rrbp1 family during embryonic development.



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Lodging stress in cereal—effects and management: an overview

Abstract

Uncertainty in climatic and weather conditions may result in lodging. Lodging is a most chronic constraint, which is causing tremendous yield reduction in crop plants; therefore, better understanding to control lodging-induced adversities or to enhance lodging resistance in cereals is imperative. In this review, we presented a contemporary synthesis of the existing data regarding the effects of lodging on growth and yield of cereals. Moreover, we highlighted key factors which trigger the detrimental effects of lodging in cereals. Numerous morphological, anatomical, and biochemical traits in plants that can influence lodging risk have also been discussed. These traits showed significant correlation with lodging resistance in cereals. At end, we tried to link our hypothetical concepts with previous evidences and provided a comprehensive summary of all the possible management approaches that can be used to further control lodging effects on cereals. The selection of a management option though is based on cereal type and genotype; nonetheless, different agronomic approaches including seeding rate, sowing time, tillage system, crop rotation, and fertilizer application help in reducing lodging risk in cereals.



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Nutrient leaching, soil pH and changes in microbial community increase with time in lead-contaminated boreal forest soil at a shooting range area

Abstract

Despite the known toxicity of lead (Pb), Pb pellets are widely used at shotgun shooting ranges over the world. However, the impacts of Pb on soil nutrients and soil microbes, playing a crucial role in nutrient cycling, are poorly understood. Furthermore, it is unknown whether these impacts change with time after the cessation of shooting. To shed light on these issues, three study sites in the same coniferous forest in a shooting range area were studied: an uncontaminated control site and an active and an abandoned shooting range, both sharing a similar Pb pellet load in the soil, but the latter with a 20-year longer contamination history. Soil pH and nitrate concentration increased, whilst soil phosphate concentration and fungal phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) decreased due to Pb contamination. Our results imply that shooting-derived Pb can influence soil nutrients and microbes not only directly but also indirectly by increasing soil pH. However, these mechanisms cannot be differentiated here. Many of the Pb-induced changes were most pronounced at the abandoned range, and nutrient leaching was increased only at that site. These results suggest that Pb disturbs the structure and functions of the soil system and impairs a crucial ecosystem service, the ability to retain nutrients. Furthermore, the risks of shooting-derived Pb to the environment increase with time.



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Benzo( a )pyrene degradation and microbial community responses in composted soil

Abstract

Benzo(a)pyrene degradation was compared in soil that was either composted, incubated at a constant temperature of 22 °C, or incubated under a temperature regime typical of a composting process. After 84 days, significantly more (61%) benzo(a)pyrene was removed from composted soil compared to soils incubated at a constant temperature (29%) or at composting temperatures (46%). Molecular fingerprinting approaches indicated that in composted soils, bacterial community changes were driven by both temperature and organic amendment, while fungal community changes were primarily driven by temperature. Next-generation sequencing data revealed that the bacterial community in composted soil was dominated by Actinobacteria (order Actinomycetales), Firmicutes (class Bacilli), and Proteobacteria (classes Gammaproteobacteria and Alphaproteobacteria), regardless of whether benzo(a)pyrene was present or not. The relative abundance of unclassified Actinomycetales (Actinobacteria) was significantly higher in composted soil when degradation was occurring, indicating a potential role for these organisms in benzo(a)pyrene metabolism. This study provides baseline data for employing straw-based composting strategies for the removal of high molecular weight PAHs from soil and contributes to the knowledge of how microbial communities respond to incubation conditions and pollutant degradation.



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Bentonite supplementation can improve performance and fermentation parameters of chronic lead-exposed lambs

Abstract

Two experiments were conducted to investigate the effect of supplemental bentonite on performance, blood, and fermentation characteristics in Zandi lambs. In experiment 1, 20 Zandi male lambs (initial BW, 17.5 ± 1.6 kg and 110 ± 5 days old) were randomly assigned into four groups of five animals in each. The experimental treatments were (1) control (no Pb and bentonite), (2) 15 mg/kg DM Pb as Pb acetate and no bentonite, (3) 15 mg/kg DM Pb as Pb acetate and 1.5% bentonite, and (4) 15 mg/kg DM Pb as Pb acetate and 3% bentonite. The dietary treatments had no significant effect on dry matter intake of experimental lambs. Feed required per unit of weight gain was more (P < 0.05) in lead-exposed lambs in group 2 compared to the control and bentonite supplemented groups. Serum glucose, urea nitrogen, cholesterol, HDL, and LDL concentrations was similar among the treatments. In experiment 2, an in vitro gas production technique was used to evaluate the effects of bentonite supplementation on the gas production parameters of lead-polluted diets. The rate and amount of gas production was higher for bentonite supplemented groups (P < 0.01). Asymptotic gas production (b), metabolizable energy, and concentration of short chain fatty acids were lower (P < 0.05) for lead-polluted non-supplemented diet (group 2) as compared to the bentonite supplemented and control groups. It was concluded that bentonite supplementation favorably modified ruminal fermentation pattern and improved feed conversion ratio in growing lead-exposed lambs.



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Duodenoscope hang time does not correlate with risk of bacterial contamination

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:American Journal of Infection Control
Author(s): Riley Heroux, Michelle Sheppard, Sharon B. Wright, Mandeep Sawhney, Elizabeth B. Hirsch, Robin Kalaidjian, Graham M. Snyder
BackgroundCurrent professional guidelines recommend a maximum hang time for reprocessed duodenoscopes of 5-14 days. We sought to study the association between hang time and risk of duodenoscope contamination.MethodsWe analyzed cultures of the elevator mechanism and working channel collected in a highly standardized fashion just before duodenoscope use. Hang time was calculated as the time from reprocessing to duodenoscope sampling. The relationship between hang time and duodenoscope contamination was estimated using a calculated correlation coefficient between hang time in days and degree of contamination on the elevator mechanism and working channel.ResultsThe 18 study duodenoscopes were cultured 531 times, including 465 (87.6%) in the analysis dataset. Hang time ranged from 0.07-39.93 days, including 34 (7.3%) with hang time ≥7.00 days. Twelve cultures (2.6%) demonstrated elevator mechanism and/or working channel contamination. The correlation coefficients for hang time and degree of duodenoscope contamination were very small and not statistically significant (−0.0090 [P = .85] for elevator mechanism and −0.0002 [P = 1.00] for working channel). Odds ratios for hang time (dichotomized at ≥7.00 days) and elevator mechanism and/or working channel contamination were not significant.ConclusionsWe did not find a significant association between hang time and risk of duodenoscope contamination. Future guidelines should consider a recommendation of no limit for hang time.



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Antimicrobial stewardship practices in Virginia

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:American Journal of Infection Control
Author(s): Kimberly B. Lee, Jesus Aaron Ramirez, Rebeccah Collins, John Bucheit, Kakotan Sanogo, Michael P. Stevens
The Society of Healthcare Epidemiology of America, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology recognize the need to combat antimicrobial resistance through the promotion of antimicrobial stewardship programs. Health care facilities in Virginia were surveyed using a 23-item survey focused on facility characteristics and antimicrobial stewardship strategies. Antimicrobial stewardship activities were highly variable and many are missing key personnel and resources.



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An outbreak of surgical site infections following craniotomy procedures associated with a change in the ultrasonic surgical aspirator decontamination process

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:American Journal of Infection Control
Author(s): Caroline Sheitoyan-Pesant, Isabelle Alarie, Christian Iorio-Morin, David Mathieu, Alex Carignan
We investigated an outbreak of surgical site infections that occurred in a tertiary care hospital in Quebec, Canada. This investigation revealed that a change in the sterilization process of the ultrasonic surgical aspirator may have caused this outbreak. It emphasizes the fact that the complex designs of surgical power tools may restrict access to cleaning and sterilization agents. Health care professionals should review manufacturers' assembly/disassembly instructions and sterilization/decontamination procedures before use of such tools.



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Journal club: Social media as an antimicrobial stewardship tool

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Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:American Journal of Infection Control
Author(s): Laurie J. Conway, Shanina C. Knighton




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Reduction of health care–associated infection indicators by copper oxide–impregnated textiles: Crossover, double-blind controlled study in chronic ventilator-dependent patients

Publication date: Available online 26 December 2016
Source:American Journal of Infection Control
Author(s): Esther-Lee Marcus, Hana Yosef, Gadi Borkow, Yehezkel Caine, Ady Sasson, Allon E. Moses
BackgroundCopper oxide has potent wide-spectrum biocidal properties. The purpose of this study is to determine if replacing hospital textiles with copper oxide–impregnated textiles reduces the following health care–associated infection (HAI) indicators: antibiotic treatment initiation events (ATIEs), fever days, and antibiotic usage in hospitalized chronic ventilator-dependent patients.MethodsA 7-month, crossover, double-blind controlled trial including all patients in 2 ventilator-dependent wards in a long-term care hospital. For 3 months (period 1), one ward received copper oxide–impregnated textiles and the other received untreated textiles. After a 1-month washout period of using regular textiles, for 3 months (period 2) the ward that received the treated textiles received the control textiles and vice versa. The personnel were blinded to which were treated or control textiles. There were no differences in infection control measures during the study.ResultsThere were reductions of 29.3% (P = .002), 55.5% (P < .0001), 23.0% (P < .0001), and 27.5% (P < .0001) in the ATIEs, fever days (>37.6°C), days of antibiotic treatment, and antibiotic defined daily dose per 1,000 hospitalization days, respectively, when using the copper oxide–impregnated textiles.ConclusionsUse of copper oxide–impregnated biocidal textiles in a long-term care ward of ventilator-dependent patients was associated with a significant reduction of HAI indicators and antibiotic utilization. Using copper oxide–impregnated biocidal textiles may be an important measure aimed at reducing HAIs in long-term care medical settings.

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Comparison of fMRI analysis methods for heterogeneous BOLD responses in block design studies

Publication date: 15 February 2017
Source:NeuroImage, Volume 147
Author(s): Jia Liu, Ben A. Duffy, David Bernal-Casas, Zhongnan Fang, Jin Hyung Lee
A large number of fMRI studies have shown that the temporal dynamics of evoked BOLD responses can be highly heterogeneous. Failing to model heterogeneous responses in statistical analysis can lead to significant errors in signal detection and characterization and alter the neurobiological interpretation. However, to date it is not clear that, out of a large number of options, which methods are robust against variability in the temporal dynamics of BOLD responses in block-design studies. Here, we used rodent optogenetic fMRI data with heterogeneous BOLD responses and simulations guided by experimental data as a means to investigate different analysis methods' performance against heterogeneous BOLD responses. Evaluations are carried out within the general linear model (GLM) framework and consist of standard basis sets as well as independent component analysis (ICA). Analyses show that, in the presence of heterogeneous BOLD responses, conventionally used GLM with a canonical basis set leads to considerable errors in the detection and characterization of BOLD responses. Our results suggest that the 3rd and 4th order gamma basis sets, the 7th to 9th order finite impulse response (FIR) basis sets, the 5th to 9th order B-spline basis sets, and the 2nd to 5th order Fourier basis sets are optimal for good balance between detection and characterization, while the 1st order Fourier basis set (coherence analysis) used in our earlier studies show good detection capability. ICA has mostly good detection and characterization capabilities, but detects a large volume of spurious activation with the control fMRI data.



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Towards a Holistic Cortical Thickness Descriptor: Heat Kernel-Based Grey Matter Morphology Signatures

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Publication date: 15 February 2017
Source:NeuroImage, Volume 147
Author(s): Gang Wang, Yalin Wang
In this paper, we propose a heat kernel based regional shape descriptor that may be capable of better exploiting volumetric morphological information than other available methods, thereby improving statistical power on brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) analysis. The mechanism of our analysis is driven by the graph spectrum and the heat kernel theory, to capture the volumetric geometry information in the constructed tetrahedral meshes. In order to capture profound brain grey matter shape changes, we first use the volumetric Laplace-Beltrami operator to determine the point pair correspondence between white-grey matter and CSF-grey matter boundary surfaces by computing the streamlines in a tetrahedral mesh. Secondly, we propose multi-scale grey matter morphology signatures to describe the transition probability by random walk between the point pairs, which reflects the inherent geometric characteristics. Thirdly, a point distribution model is applied to reduce the dimensionality of the grey matter morphology signatures and generate the internal structure features. With the sparse linear discriminant analysis, we select a concise morphology feature set with improved classification accuracies. In our experiments, the proposed work outperformed the cortical thickness features computed by FreeSurfer software in the classification of Alzheimer's disease and its prodromal stage, i.e., mild cognitive impairment, on publicly available data from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative. The multi-scale and physics based volumetric structure feature may bring stronger statistical power than some traditional methods for MRI-based grey matter morphology analysis.



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A multi-centre evaluation of eleven clinically feasible brain PET/MRI attenuation correction techniques using a large cohort of patients

Publication date: 15 February 2017
Source:NeuroImage, Volume 147
Author(s): Claes N. Ladefoged, Ian Law, Udunna Anazodo, Keith St. Lawrence, David Izquierdo-Garcia, Ciprian Catana, Ninon Burgos, M. Jorge Cardoso, Sebastien Ourselin, Brian Hutton, Inés Mérida, Nicolas Costes, Alexander Hammers, Didier Benoit, Søren Holm, Meher Juttukonda, Hongyu An, Jorge Cabello, Mathias Lukas, Stephan Nekolla, Sibylle Ziegler, Matthias Fenchel, Bjoern Jakoby, Michael E. Casey, Tammie Benzinger, Liselotte Højgaard, Adam E. Hansen, Flemming L. Andersen
AimTo accurately quantify the radioactivity concentration measured by PET, emission data need to be corrected for photon attenuation; however, the MRI signal cannot easily be converted into attenuation values, making attenuation correction (AC) in PET/MRI challenging. In order to further improve the current vendor-implemented MR-AC methods for absolute quantification, a number of prototype methods have been proposed in the literature. These can be categorized into three types: template/atlas-based, segmentation-based, and reconstruction-based. These proposed methods in general demonstrated improvements compared to vendor-implemented AC, and many studies report deviations in PET uptake after AC of only a few percent from a gold standard CT-AC. Using a unified quantitative evaluation with identical metrics, subject cohort, and common CT-based reference, the aims of this study were to evaluate a selection of novel methods proposed in the literature, and identify the ones suitable for clinical use.MethodsIn total, 11 AC methods were evaluated: two vendor-implemented (MR-ACDIXON and MR-ACUTE), five based on template/atlas information (MR-ACSEGBONE (Koesters et al., 2016), MR-ACONTARIO (Anazodo et al., 2014), MR-ACBOSTON (Izquierdo-Garcia et al., 2014), MR-ACUCL (Burgos et al., 2014), and MR-ACMAXPROB (Merida et al., 2015)), one based on simultaneous reconstruction of attenuation and emission (MR-ACMLAA (Benoit et al., 2015)), and three based on image-segmentation (MR-ACMUNICH (Cabello et al., 2015), MR-ACCAR-RiDR (Juttukonda et al., 2015), and MR-ACRESOLUTE (Ladefoged et al., 2015)). We selected 359 subjects who were scanned using one of the following radiotracers: [18F]FDG (210), [11C]PiB (51), and [18F]florbetapir (98). The comparison to AC with a gold standard CT was performed both globally and regionally, with a special focus on robustness and outlier analysis.ResultsThe average performance in PET tracer uptake was within ±5% of CT for all of the proposed methods, with the average±SD global percentage bias in PET FDG uptake for each method being: MR-ACDIXON (−11.3±3.5)%, MR-ACUTE (−5.7±2.0)%, MR-ACONTARIO (−4.3±3.6)%, MR-ACMUNICH (3.7±2.1)%, MR-ACMLAA (−1.9±2.6)%, MR-ACSEGBONE (−1.7±3.6)%, MR-ACUCL (0.8±1.2)%, MR-ACCAR-RiDR (−0.4±1.9)%, MR-ACMAXPROB (−0.4±1.6)%, MR-ACBOSTON (−0.3±1.8)%, and MR-ACRESOLUTE (0.3±1.7)%, ordered by average bias. The overall best performing methods (MR-ACBOSTON, MR-ACMAXPROB, MR-ACRESOLUTE and MR-ACUCL, ordered alphabetically) showed regional average errors within ±3% of PET with CT-AC in all regions of the brain with FDG, and the same four methods, as well as MR-ACCAR-RiDR, showed that for 95% of the patients, 95% of brain voxels had an uptake that deviated by less than 15% from the reference. Comparable performance was obtained with PiB and florbetapir.ConclusionsAll of the proposed novel methods have an average global performance within likely acceptable limits (±5% of CT-based reference), and the main difference among the methods was found in the robustness, outlier analysis, and clinical feasibility. Overall, the best performing methods were MR-ACBOSTON, MR-ACMAXPROB, MR-ACRESOLUTE and MR-ACUCL, ordered alphabetically. These methods all minimized the number of outliers, standard deviation, and average global and local error. The methods MR-ACMUNICH and MR-ACCAR-RiDR were both within acceptable quantitative limits, so these methods should be considered if processing time is a factor. The method MR-ACSEGBONE also demonstrates promising results, and performs well within the likely acceptable quantitative limits. For clinical routine scans where processing time can be a key factor, this vendor-provided solution currently outperforms most methods. With the performance of the methods presented here, it may be concluded that the challenge of improving the accuracy of MR-AC in adult brains with normal anatomy has been solved to a quantitatively acceptable degree, which is smaller than the quantification reproducibility in PET imaging.



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Failure to retreat: Blunted sensitivity to negative feedback supports risky behavior in adolescents

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Publication date: 15 February 2017
Source:NeuroImage, Volume 147
Author(s): Ethan M. McCormick, Eva H. Telzer
Decision-making processes rarely occur in isolation. Rather, representations are updated constantly based on feedback to past decisions and actions. However, previous research has focused on the reaction to feedback receipt itself, instead of examining how feedback information is integrated into future decisions. In the current study, we examined differential neural sensitivity during risk decisions following positive versus negative feedback in a risk-taking context, and how this differential sensitivity is linked to adolescent risk behavior. Fifty-eight adolescents (ages 13–17 years) completed the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART) during an fMRI session and reported on their levels of risk-taking behavior. Results show that reduced medial PFC (mPFC) response following negative versus positive feedback is associated with fewer reductions in task-based risky decisions following negative feedback, as well as increased self-reported risk-taking behavior. These results suggest that reduced neural integration of negative feedback into during future decisions supports risky behavior, perhaps by discounting negative relative to positive feedback information when making subsequent risky decisions.



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