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The study evaluated the effectiveness of a computer-based Multi-Sensory Program (MSP) on English reading skills as a second language of fourth-grade students with reading difficulties and Dyslexia in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Pretest-Posttest experimental design was used in this study. The analysis showed that average pretest score in both the experimental and control groups was almost the same and the average post-test score was much higher in the experimental group as compared to the control group. Moreover, results also reveal statistically significant difference in the students' mean scores between the experimental and control groups after the MSP intervention. The study has implications in the UAE and Arab countries and everywhere in the world for students who are learning English as a second language and facing reading difficulties. Besides, the modified MSP used in this study can be adopted and imitated to create a local version in the Arabic language in the Middle East and in other countries that are teaching Arabic as a second language.Zanthoxylum pistaciifolium Griseb. is a tree endemic to Cuba, occasionally used in herbal medicine. Previously, the antitrypanosomal activity of a n-hexane-2-butanone extract of Z. pistaciifolium leaves and of its constituent skimmianine were published. In the current study a more thorough examination of the respective extract is performed, which led to the isolation and identification of three flavonoids, more specifically, the flavonol-3-O-methylethers kaempferol-3-O-methylether (1) and novel compounds kaempferol-3-O-methylether-5-O-β-D-glucoside (2) and kaempferol-8-hydroxy-3,7-O-dimethylether-5-O-β-D-glucoside (3). All compounds were screened for their antimicrobial and antiprotozoal activity and cytotoxicity towards MRC-5 SV2 cells. GDC-0077 in vitro Compound 1 showed a moderate to weak activity against Trypanosoma cruzi (IC50 30.8 μM), T. brucei (IC50 15.4 μM) and Plasmodium falciparum (IC50 53.8 μM), but also showed cytotoxicity (CC50 19.0 μM). Compounds 2 and 3 did not display activity in any of the assays (IC50 and CC50 > 64 μM).Mauriac syndrome is rare; we share our experience of nine patients who presented at a young age with malnutrition, short stature, abdominal distention and deranged liver function.

A retrograde approach of the celiac trunk (CT) and superior mesenteric artery (SMA) to catheterize the visceral vessels during a fenestrated endovascular aortic reparation (FEVAR) is a feasible option when standard access techniques have failed.

In this report we describe a patient with a previous endoluminal repair of an infrarenal aortic aneurysm, complicated by a persistent type 1a endoleak despite treatment with endoanchor fixation. A decision was made to proceed with a proximal 4 vessel FEVAR to treat the type 1a endoleak. Due to angulation of the mesenteric vessels, and a rotation of the fenestrated stent graft during deployment, the CT and SMA were unable to be catheterized. A decision was made to perform a median laparotomy for retrograde access of the aforementioned vessels, allowing successful catheterization and stenting. The patient was discharged 30 days following the procedure, without any major post-operative complications. Follow up at 6 weeks with a contrasted enhanced computerized tomogronged surgical time in an attempt to catheterize the vessels can result in increased morbidity for the patient, and ultimately may result in the procedure being abandoned or conversion to an open repair of the aneurysm. Retrograde access of the target vessels as a bailout measure during fenestrated stent graft repair due to failure of an antegrade approach has rarely been reported in the literature. Only a few cases are described in the available literature, however, none of them describe retrograde approach of both the CT and SMA as described in this case. A median laparotomy for retrograde access is a feasible alternative in these situations, and should be considered if the patient is suitable.The present study used a cross-sectional survey design to explore the role of ego-depletion in the relationship between self-control and health-promoting behaviors in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD). This study recruited 277 patients with CHD to measure the levels of ego-depletion, self-control and health-promotion (HP) behavior using Self-Regulatory Fatigue Scale (SRF-s), Dual-Mode of Self-Control Scale (DMSD-s) and Health Promotion Lifestyle Profile-II (HPLP-II) to examine the relationship between the three. Study found that self-control improved the patients' HP behaviors to some extent. Self-control in patients with CHD uses ego-depletion as the mediating variable to indirectly and positively predict the level of HP behavior, and the mediating effects account for 47.76% (impulsive system) and 15.6% (control system) of the total effects, respectively.Citizen and stakeholder engagement is frequently portrayed as vital for socially accountable science policy but there is a growing understanding of how institutional dynamics shape engagement exercises in ways that prevent them from realising their full potential. Limited attention has been devoted to developing the means to expose institutional features, allow policy-makers to reflect on how they will shape engagement and respond appropriately. Here, therefore, we develop and test a methodological framework to facilitate pre-engagement institutional reflexivity with one of the United Kingdom's eminent science organisations as it grappled with a new, high-profile and politicised technology, genome editing. We show how this approach allowed policy-makers to reflect on their institutional position and enrich decision-making at a time when they faced pressure to legitimate decisions with engagement. Further descriptions of such pre-engagement institutional reflexivity are needed to better bridge theory and practice in the social studies of science.In the present study, a synergistic effect between cationic methylene blue (MB) and anionic acid red 1 (AR1) on their concurrent adsorptive removal from aqueous binary solution onto durian rind (DR) was systematically investigated in batch mode across different parameters. The concurrent adsorption was pseudo-second-order kinetics and followed the Langmuir isotherm model, similar to their respective single component. The kinetics and intraparticle diffusion analyses demonstrated that the adsorption rate of MB was a 15-fold faster than AR1, and mass transports were governed by a combination of intraparticle and film diffusion. The synergistic effect was evidenced by an enhanced adsorption efficiency of AR1 from 27 to 42%, while that of MB was almost unchanged (97-98%). By changing the molar ratios of MB and AR1, it was found that the maximum adsorption capacity of MB and AR1 was 249 and 200 mg g-1, respectively, in the binary system higher compared with those in their respective single system (108 and 16 mg g-1).

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