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Plants that experience a lack of sufficient irrigation undergo hydric stress, which causes the modification of their mechanical properties. These changes include a complex network of chemical and physical signals that interact between plant-plant and plant-environment systems in a mechanism that is still not well understood, and that differs among species. This mechanical response implies different levels of vibration when the plant experiences structural modifications from self-hydraulic adjustments of flux exchange at specific frequencies, with these carrying behavioral information. To measure these signals, highly sensitive instrumentation that allows the decoding of displacement velocity and displacement of plants, which is possible through calibrated equipment such as 3D scanning laser vibrometers, is necessary. Laser vibrometry technology allows for noninvasive measurements in real-time. Physiological changes could reasonably affect the biomechanical condition of plants in terms of the frequency (hertz) and intensity of the plant's vibration. In this research, it is proposed that the frequency changes of a plant's vibration are related to the plant's hydric condition and that these frequency vibrations have the ecological potential to communicate water changes and levels of hydric stress. The peak of the velocity of plant displacements was found to vary from 0.079 to 1.74 mm/s, and natural frequencies (hertz) range is between 1.8 and 2.6 Hz for plants with low hydric stress (LHS), between 1.3 and 1.6 Hz for plants with medium hydric stress (MHS), and between 6.7 and 7.8 Hz for plants with high hydric stress. These values could act as preliminary references for water management using noninvasive techniques and, knowledge of the range of natural frequencies of hydric stress risk in chili pepper crops can be applied in precision agriculture practices.Surgical site infection risk continues to increase due to lack of efficacy in current standard of care drugs. New methods to treat or prevent antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections are needed. Multivalent Adhesion Molecules (MAM) are bacterial adhesins required for virulence. We developed a bacterial adhesion inhibitor using recombinant MAM fragment bound to polymer scaffold, mimicking MAM7 display on the bacterial surface. Here, we test MAM7 inhibitor efficacy to prevent Gram-positive and Gram-negative infections. Using a rodent model of surgical infection, incision sites were infected with antibiotic-resistant bioluminescent strains of Staphylococcus aureus or Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Infections were treated with MAM7 inhibitor or control suspension. Bacterial abundance was quantified for nine days post infection. Inflammatory responses and histology were characterized using fixed tissue sections. MAM7 inhibitor treatment decreased burden of S. aureus and P. aeruginosa below detection threshold. Bacterial load of groups treated with control were significantly higher than MAM7 inhibitor-treated groups. Treatment with inhibitor reduced colonization of clinically-relevant pathogens in an in vivo model of surgical infection. Use of MAM7 inhibitor to block initial adhesion of bacteria to tissue in surgical incisions may reduce infection rates, presenting a strategy to mitigate overuse of antibiotics to prevent surgical site infections.Neural oscillations are observed ubiquitously in the mammalian brain, but their stability is known to be rather variable. Some oscillations are tonic and last for seconds or even minutes. Other oscillations appear as unstable bursts. Likewise, some oscillations rely on excitatory AMPAergic synapses, but others are GABAergic and inhibitory. Why this diversity exists is not clear. We hypothesized Ca2+-dependent homeostasis could be important in finding an explanation. We tested this hypothesis in a highly simplified model of hippocampal neurons. In this model homeostasis profoundly alters the modulatory effect of neural oscillations. Under homeostasis, tonic AMPAergic oscillations actually decrease excitability and desynchronize firing. Tonic oscillations that are synaptically GABAergic-like those in real hippocampus-don't provoke a homeostatic response, however. If our simple model is correct, homeostasis can explain why the theta rhythm in the hippocampus is synaptically inhibitory GABA has little to no intrinsic homeostatic response, and so can preserve the pyramidal cell's natural dynamic range. Based on these results we can also speculate that homeostasis may explain why AMPAergic oscillations in cortex, and hippocampus, often appear as bursts. Bursts do not interact with the slow homeostatic time constant, and so retain their normal excitatory effect.The term overkill identifies the infliction of massive injuries that greatly exceed those needed to kill the victim both in number and intensity. We present the case of a Peruvian transsexual, who was choked and hit by 11 sharp-force wounds all in the facial area. The scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersion X-ray analysis carried out on the skin of the facial wounds proved crucial in proving that two different point-and-edge weapons were used, following the finding of metallic micro-traces of heterogeneous composition. This discovery and the autopsy highlighted the use of two distinct types of injury (mechanical asphyxia and sharp-force trauma) showed that this murder amounted to overkill.Conventional explanations of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) and eye and head movements are revisited by considering two alternative frameworks addressing the question of how the brain controls motor actions. Traditionally, biomechanical and/or computational frameworks reflect the views of several prominent scholars of the past, including Helmholtz and von Holst, who assumed that the brain directly specifies the desired motor outcome and uses efference copy to influence perception. However, empirical studies resulting in the theory of referent control of action and perception (an extension of the equilibrium-point hypothesis) revealed that direct specification of motor outcome is inconsistent with nonlinear properties of motoneurons and with the physical principle that the brain can control motor actions only indirectly, by changing or maintaining the values of neurophysiological parameters that influence, but can remain independent of, biomechanical variables. Some parameters are used to shift the origin (referent) points of spatial frames of reference (FRs) or system of coordinates in which motor actions emerge without being predetermined. Parameters are adjusted until the emergent motor actions meet the task demands. Several physiological parameters and spatial FRs have been identified, supporting the notion of indirect, referent control of movements. Instead of integration of velocity-dependent signals, position-dimensional referent signals underlying head motion can likely be transmitted to motoneurons of extraocular muscles. This would produce compensatory eye movement preventing shifts in gaze during head rotation, even after bilateral destruction of the labyrinths. The referent control framework symbolizes a shift in the paradigm for the understanding of VOR and eye and head movement production.We report on a 31-year-old male patient with non-invasive papillary urothelial carcinoma, low grade of the renal pelvis disguised as xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis. The only symptom of the patient was lower back pain. The initial renal-enhanced computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and contrast-enhanced ultrasonography showed that the right kidney had a benign lesion and this inflammatory lesion might be xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis. A percutaneous renal biopsy was performed and histopathologic examination revealed a xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis. Initially, we diagnosed it as xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis and treated it with antibiotics. One and a half years later, the patient suffered from back pain again. The lesion increased significantly and a right renal pelvic lesion with retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy was considered a malignant lesion on computed tomography scan. Therefore, radical resection of right renal pelvis carcinoma was performed under retroperitoneal laparoscopy. Intraoperative frozen section was reported as right renal urothelial carcinoma with no metastasis in renal hilar lymph node. Postoperative histopathologic examination revealed non-invasive papillary urothelial carcinoma, low grade of renal pelvis.Purpose To describe and evaluate an adapted physical activity-based program (APA-program) designed for community-dwelling patients with neurological diseases in local fitness centers.Materials and methods The APA-program consisted of individual and group activities supervised by an adapted physical activity (APA) instructor twice a week for 6 months. Clinical evaluations before and after the APA-program included strength tests on gym machines, the six-minute walk test (6MWT), the single-leg stance test, and the Short Form-36 (SF-36).Results Between January 2017 and May 2019, 79 individuals participated in the APA-program (33 women, mean age 59 ± 14 years, 47 stroke, 13 multiple sclerosis, and 19 other neurological diseases). All physical outcomes improved significantly upper body strength increased by 49%, lower body strength by 37%, 6MWT by 22%, single-leg stance time by 86%, and SF-36 Mental and Physical scores by 23%. Sixty-eight percent of participants completed the 6-month program and 83% of completers then purchased a one-year subscription in the fitness center.Conclusions The 6-month APA-program improved participant's physical abilities and quality of life. More than half of participants decided to subscribe personally to the fitness center at the end of the program, supporting the development of community APA-programs for people with chronic neurological diseases, in collaboration with rehabilitation hospitals.Implications for rehabilitationA physical activity-based-program implemented in a fitness center is effective in improving physical fitness and quality of life in people suffering from neurological disorders such as stroke and multiple sclerosis.Close coordination between rehabilitation hospitals and local fitness centers, training by skilled adapted physical activity instructors and group activities are critical determinants of successful participation.Aim We aimed to improve the success rate of NGS (next-generation sequencing) analysis through improved strategies of lung cancer sampling. Materials & methods The improvement strategies are as follows. Surgically resected specimens were preferentially submitted in cooperation with pathologists and surgeons. In bronchoscopic samples, the size of the sample collection device and the number of samples collected was increased. Results The strategies increased the success rate of NGS analysis of DNA from 69.3 to 91.1%, and that of RNA from 64.6 to 90.0%. Discussion The introduction of strategies aimed at improving the success of NGS analysis resulted in an improvement in the success rate and brought us closer to the delivery of effective precision medicine in cancer therapy.In recent years, the advent of the so-called silicon probes has made it possible to homogeneously sample spikes and local field potentials (LFPs) from a regular grid of cortical recording sites. In principle, this allows inferring the laminar location of the sites based on the spatiotemporal pattern of LFPs recorded along the probe, as in the well-known current source-density (CSD) analysis. This approach, however, has several limitations, since it relies on visual identification of landmark features (i.e., current sinks and sources) by human operators - features that can be absent from the CSD pattern if the probe does not span the whole cortical thickness, thus making manual labelling harder. Furthermore, as any manual annotation procedure, the typical CSD-based workflow for laminar identification of recording sites is affected by subjective judgment undermining the consistency and reproducibility of results. To overcome these limitations, we developed an alternative approach, based on finding the optimal match between the LFPs recorded along a probe in a given experiment and a template LFP profile that was computed using 18 recording sessions, in which the depth of the recording sites had been recovered through histology. We show that this method can achieve an accuracy of 79 µm in recovering the cortical depth of recording sites and a 76% accuracy in inferring their laminar location. As such, our approach provides an alternative to CSD that, being fully automated, is less prone to the idiosyncrasies of subjective judgment and works reliably also for recordings spanning a limited cortical stretch.Background . Intravitreal administration of topotecan shows activity against tumor vitreous seeding in the conservative treatment of retinoblastoma, a malignant tumor originated in the retina of small children. Adequate storage of the intravitreal topotecan solution would allow immediate availability for patients at health care institutions. The goal of the work was to address the stability of the intravitreal topotecan formulation upon reconstitution. Materials and methods . Intravitreal topotecan solutions were reconstituted (at a concentration of 0.2 mg topotecan in 1 mL saline solution vehicle, aliquoted in 1 mL plastic syringes) and stored either frozen or at room temperature for different times. Topotecan content was analyzed at time zero and at different conditions using a high performance liquid chromatography method to quantify topotecan lactone (active) and to detect its pH-dependent hydrolysis product, the open carboxylate. Results . We found that intravitreal topotecan syringes remained stable at room temperature at least for 24 h, at least for 167 days upon stored frozen at -20°C, and up to 8 h after thawing at day 6. The degradation carboxylate product did not appear in the analyzed thawed samples during the whole study. Conclusions . This study confirms the stability of frozen intravitreal topotecan syringes and will help optimize the use of this chemotherapy modality at institutions with low resources. Storage of aliquots will also help reduce personnel exposure to chemotherapy at hospital pharmacies.Background Studies suggest associations between oil and gas development (OGD) and adverse birth outcomes, but few epidemiological studies of oil wells or inactive wells exist, and none in California. Objective Our study aimed to investigate the relationship between residential proximity to OGD and birth outcomes in California. Methods We conducted a retrospective cohort study of 2,918,089 births to mothers living within 10 km of at least one production well between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2015. We estimated exposure during pregnancy to inactive wells count (no inactive wells, 1 well, 2-5 wells, 6+ wells) and production volume from active wells in barrels of oil equivalent (BOE) (no BOE, 1-100 BOE/day, >100 BOE/day). We used generalized estimating equations to examine associations between overall and trimester-specific OGD exposures and term birth weight (tBW), low birth weight (LBW), preterm birth (PTB), and small for gestational age birth (SGA). We assessed effect modification by urban/rural community type. Results Adjusted models showed exposure to active OGD was associated with adverse birth outcomes in rural areas; effect estimates in urban areas were close to null. In rural areas, increasing production volume was associated with stronger adverse effect estimates. High (>100 BOE/day) vs. no production throughout pregnancy was associated with increased odds of LBW [odds ratio (OR)=1.40, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.14, 1.71] and SGA (OR=1.22, 95% CI 1.02, 1.45), and decreased tBW (mean difference = -36 grams, 95% CI -54, -17), but not with PTB (OR=1.03, 95% CI 0.91, 1.18). Conclusion Proximity to higher production OGD in California was associated with adverse birth outcomes among mothers residing in rural areas. Future studies are needed to confirm our findings in other populations and improve exposure assessment measures. https//doi.org/10.1289/EHP5842.A strategy to address challenges in sourcing and maintaining produce in tiendas is to build a new localized food economy. Key informant interviews were conducted with tienda owners and managers and small produce farmers to understand produce distribution and sourcing behaviors, and to identify the potential to connect tiendas with small produce farmers. Interviews were analyzed using an inductive coding approach and were summarized into three themes people, place, and product. Results provide context for understanding factors that affect access to local produce in Latino communities. Future research should be conducted with produce distributors, and policy-level strategies should be considered.Spinosad and temefos are widely used pesticides for chemical control of dengue vector-borne disease (Aedes aegypti). The aim of this study was to compare the effect of acute exposure (7 days) to spinosad (0.5 mg A.I. L-1) and temefos (10 mg A.I. L-1), concentrations used by the Mexican Ministry of Health, on phagocytic capacity (PC) of mononuclear cells of guppies fish (Poecilia reticulata), as well as to assess PC in fish, at 96 days after exposure to those pesticides. Obtained results indicated that spinosad did not alter PC, while an acute exposure to temefos significantly affected phagocytosis and this parameter was maintained downed even 96 days after the acute exposure, suggesting that the immunotoxic effects of temefos may be chronic.Aim The aim of our study was to describe the characteristics of postinfectious inflammatory response syndrome (PIIRS) in HIV-uninfected and nontransplant men after cryptococcal meningitis (CM). Patients & methods A case-control study was designed to compare HIV-uninfected and nontransplant male CM patients with and without PIIRS. Results CM-PIIRS patients had increased rates of hearing loss, V-P shunt placement, amphotericin B treatment, higher cerebrospinal fluid pressures and Cryptococcus counts in the first CM episode. CM-PIIRS episode was characterized by higher frequencies of headache and fever, higher C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, cerebrospinal fluid white blood cell (WBC) counts and modified Rankin Score. Brain MRI scans revealed the high signal lesions on axial flair imaging. Receipt of corticosteroid therapy was associated with lower rates of fever and better modified Rankin Score scores at 1 month after treatment. Conclusion CM-PIIRS episode differs to the initial presentation, may help to identify which patients are at risk to develop PIIRS. Steroids therapy could be beneficial.Objectives Clinically useful predictors of response to electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) are warranted, especially in the case of bipolar depression. The aim of this study was to explore the associations between response and its known and putative correlates.Methods Six hundred seventy bipolar depressive patients treated with ECT were included in the study. The association between response (CGI-I ≤ 2) and mean seizure duration, number of treatments, age, sex, bipolar subtype, episode duration, HAM-D and YMRS scores, psychomotor disturbances and psychotic symptoms assessed through BPRS-EV were evaluated by means of univariate and multivariate logistic regression models, including quadratic and/or linear effects of continuous variables.Results Four hundred eighty three patients (72%) were responders. Among known correlates of response, significant quadratic effects were found for seizure duration and number of treatments, while a linear association was confirmed for episode duration. Among putative correlates, severe motor retardation, tension or agitation, hyperactivity and delusions of guilt were significantly associated with response (p less then .01) and a significant quadratic effect was found for YMRS score (p less then .01).Conclusion Bipolar depressive patients with severe psychomotor disturbances, mood-congruent delusions and severe mixed features are highly responsive to ECT. A significant improvement in response prediction is expected when considering those clinical characteristics.Introduction Diet and physical activity are cornerstones in prevention and treatment of Gestational Diabetes (GDM) though some caution may be required under specific circumstances. The aims of this study were to evaluate activity habits during pregnancy and contraindications to physical activity in women at risk for GDM.Methods 536 pregnant women (age 35 ± 5 years; gestation week 25 ± 4; pre-pregnancy BMI 24.6 ± 12.9 kg/m2), selective screened for GDM, filled out a standardized questionnaire recording physical activity during pregnancy.Results Of 536 women, 73.4% reported regular exercise before pregnancy and 95.5% of them continued during pregnancy. 8.2% had absolute contraindications to exercise, such as placenta praevia /vaginal bleeding and incompetent cervix/cerclage. Physical activity during the last month was reported by 66.2% of women; frequency was 1-2 times/week (44%); intensity was light (83%) and duration on average (44%) 20-40 min/day. 48% of women spent most of their time in sedentary behaviors (sitting). Among women with GDM, physical activity was associated with better metabolic profile and lower needed of insulin therapy.Conclusion Women at risk for GDM spent most of their time in sedentary behaviors, despite a low prevalence of contraindications to exercise. Therefore, our data call for the need of motivational counseling aimed to implement physical activity during pregnancy.From the Vietnamese plant Macrosolen tricolor (Lecomte) Danser, one new diarylpropanoid, named macrotricolorin A (1) together with three diarylheptanoids including bisdemethoxycurcumin (2), demethoxycurcumin (3) and curcumin (4), were isolated. Their structures were elucidated by intensive analyses of their IR, UV, HR-ESI-MS and NMR (1 D & 2 D) spectra. It is the first time that diarylalkanoids have been reported from the genus Macrosolen. Compound 1 exhibited anti-inflammatory activity against the nitric oxide (NO) production in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced RAW264.7 with an IC50 value of 27.54 ± 1.75 μM.Aim Here, we hypothesize that dysbiotic gut microbiota might contribute to the development of Kawasaki disease (KD), a pediatric disease with unknown etiology. This is the second report on gut microbiota composition in KD patients. Materials & results 16S amplicon sequencing was performed on fecal DNA samples and revealed predominance of bacterial pathogens, such as Fusobacterium, Neisseria, Shigella and Streptococcus, in the gut of KD patients, but absent or suppressed after immunoglobulin/antibiotics therapy. In addition, beneficial bacteria propagated after the therapy. Conclusion We conclude that prevalence of Fusobacteria, Shigella and Streptococcus might contribute to KD pathogenesis.Introduction Allergic contact dermatitis is an inflammatory skin disease which accounts for up to 20% of all childhood dermatitis. Childhood allergic contact dermatitis is more frequent than previously thought and today early diagnosis is considered very important. Patch testing represents the gold standard method used to confirm the diagnosis of allergic contact dermatitis. The knowledge of the most common allergens involved in allergic contact dermatitis in pediatric age is important considering that the first-line management of allergic contact dermatitis in children is to avoid the involved allergens. Areas covered We reviewed the literature on PubMed® and SciVerse Scopus® medical database about allergic contact dermatitis and emerging contact allergens in children. In this review, we summarize the clinical characteristics, differential diagnoses, and epidemiology of allergic contact dermatitis in children, underlying the most recent pieces of evidence about the most frequent and emerging contact allergens. Expert opinion We believe that persistent, well localized and recurrent eczematous lesions in children should suggest an allergic contact dermatitis, inducing physicians to refer patients for patch testing. Physicians should be acquainted with the current trends and the emerging contact allergens in children, in order to provide not only the best treatment but also the best management and prevention.Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption is a high-risk dietary behaviour and represents a pressing public health concern.Objective The present research aimed to utilize temporal self-regulation theory to explore the intention-behaviour gap in SSB consumption in adults.Design A prospective correlational design (two data collection points) was used.Main outcome measures A convenience sample of 387 Australian adults completed online questionnaires measuring intention, habit strength, environmental cues, past behaviour and self-control. One week later, 292 participants (76% female), aged 17 to 72 years (M = 24.72, SD = 7.98) completed a self-report measure of SSB intake over the previous week (attrition 23.8%).Results Hierarchical multiple regression analysis revealed partial support for temporal self-regulation theory, with the model predicting 32.9% of the variance in consumption, and a large effect size (f2 = 0.53). Intention accounted for 17.9% (ΔR2 = .19, p less then .001) variance in behaviour. Habit and environmental cues together accounted for an additional 13.8% (ΔR2 = .32, p less then .001). Self-control did not predict consumption, and no interaction effects were found on the intention-behaviour relationship.Conclusion Reflective and automatic processes were both important predictors of consumption. Intention, habit, and environmental cues may be suitable intervention targets to reduce consumption.Objectives Yttrium-90 transarterial radioembolization (TARE) is a safe, effective modality of locoregional therapy for intermediate and advanced-stage hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We aim to identify novel predictors of important outcomes of TARE therapy. Methods A single-center retrospective study of 166 patients treated with TARE for HCC at Mayo Clinic Rochester between 2005-2015 and followed until December 2017. Multivariate logistic and stepwise regression analysis models were used to identify variables associated with overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS). Results The median OS and the median PFS were12.9 (95% CI 11.0-17.3), and 8 months (95% CI 6-11), respectively. Macrovascular invasion (HR 1.9 [1.3-2.8]), Child-Pugh score (CPS) B or C vs. A (HR 1.8 [1.2-2.7]), Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance status (ECOG-PS) 2 or 1 vs. 0 (HR 1.6 [1.1-2.4]) and activity (A) of administered radiation dose (HR 1.005[1.00-1.010), independently correlated with poorer OS. Infiltrative HCC (HR 2.4 [1.3-4.5), macrovascular invasion (HR 1.6 [1.1-2.7]), and high activity of administered radiation dose (HR 1.005 [1.00-1.010) were associated with worse PFS. Conclusion In HCC patients treated with TARE; macrovascular invasion, the activity of radiation dose, CPS, ECOG-PS, and infiltrative HCC predict OS and PFS.Background - Brugada syndrome (BrS) is an oligogenic arrhythmic disease with increased risk of sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). Several BrS or ECG traits-related single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified through previous genome-wide association studies in Caucasian patients. We aimed to validate these SNPs in BrS patients in the Taiwanese population, assessing the cumulative effect of risk alleles and the BrS polygenic risk score (BrS-PRS) in predicting cardiac events. Methods - We genotyped 190 unrelated BrS patients using the TWB Array, and Taiwan Biobank was used as controls. SNPs not included in the array were imputed by IMPUTE2. Cox's proportional hazards model was utilized to evaluate the associations between each particular SNP, the collective BrS-PRS, and clinical outcomes. Results - Of the 88 previously reported SNPs, 22 were validated in Taiwanese BrS patients (P less then 0.05). Of the 22 SNPs, 2 (rs10428132, rs9388451) were linked with susceptibility to BrS, 10 were SNPs previously reaching genome-wide significance, and 10 were SNPs associated with electrocardiogram traits. For the 3 most commonly reported SNPs, disease risk increased consistently with the number of risk alleles (OR 3.54, Ptrend = 1.38 * 10-9 for 5 risk alleles versus 1). Similar patterns were observed in both SCN5A mutation+ (OR 3.66, Ptrend = 0.049) and SCN5A mutation- (OR 3.75, Ptrend = 8.54 * 10-9) subgroups. Furthermore, BrS patients without SCN5A mutations had more risk alleles than BrS patients with SCN5A mutations regardless of the range of PRS. Three SNPs (rs4687718, rs7784776, rs2968863) showed significant associations with the composite outcome (SCA plus syncope, HR 2.13, 1.48, 0.41; P=0.02, 0.006, 0.008, respectively). Conclusions - Our findings suggested that some SNPs associated with BrS or electrocardiogram traits exist across multiple populations. The cumulative risk of the BrS-related SNPs is similar to that in Caucasian BrS patients, but it appears to correlate with the absence of SCN5A mutations.The world has been under the negative effect of the COVID-19 pandemic for the last few months. While people may take many preventive behaviours to minimize the risk, very little is known about the factors that can increase preventive behaviours during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study examined the effects of vulnerability, perceived risk, and fear on preventive behaviours of COVID-19. The study used a sample of 4,536 Turkish adults (M = 30.33 ± 10.95 years) recruited from 17 March through 1 April 2020. Vulnerability, perceived risk, fear, and preventive behaviours were measured with self-rating scales. Participants mostly engaged in avoidance of public transportation and frequent handwashing as preventive behaviours. Women had a significantly higher vulnerability to, perceived risk, and fear of new coronavirus compared to men. Correlation results indicated that age, gender, education level, vulnerability, perceived risk, and fear were related to preventive behaviours. Regression results demonstrated that vulnerability, perceived risk, and fear accounted for a significant amount of variance in preventive behaviours over and above the effects of demographic variables. The results suggest that vulnerability, perceived risk, and fear can significantly increase engagement in preventive behaviours during the novel coronavirus pandemic. The results have important implications for research and practice.Aim Establishing an optimal diagnostic policy for patients with respiratory tract infections, at the emergency department (ED) of a university hospital in The Netherlands. Methods Adult patients were sampled at admission, during the respiratory season (2014-2015). The FilmArray-RP was implemented at the clinical virology laboratory. Diagnostics were provided from 8 am to 10 pm, weekends included. Results 436/492 (89%) results were available while patients were still at the ED. Median TAT from admission to test result was 165 min (IQR138-214). No antibiotics were prescribed in 94/207 (45%) patients who tested positive for a virus. 185/330 (56%) hospitalized patients did not need admission with isolation measures. The value-based measure, expressed in euro-hour (€hr), increased to tenfold compared with previous policy. Conclusion An optimal policy is essential for patient management, by providing timely, reliable diagnostics.To explore the influence of sexuality-related factors on recent two-week morbidity and annual hospitalization in female migrant workers, 880 Chinese rural-to-urban female migrant workers aged 16-57 years were studied. Clustered logistic regression analyses revealed that women who never or seldom experienced lubrication difficulties had a lower risk of recent two-week morbidity (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 0.32, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.17-0.60, P less then 0.001; adjusted OR = 0.35, 95% CI = 0.18-0.69, P= 0.003) than those who always experienced lubrication difficulties; women who never felt a lack of sexual interest had a significantly lower risk of annual hospitalization (adjusted OR = 0.40, 95% CI = 0.20-0.79, P= 0.009) than those who always or seldom lacked sexual interest, and women who never felt sexual satisfaction had a higher risk of annual hospitalization (adjusted OR = 3.08, 95% CI = 1.75-5.42, P less then 0.001) than those who always or seldom experienced sexual satisfaction. The independent contributions of sexuality-related factors to the risk of recent two-week morbidity and annual hospitalization were 5.8% and 29.5%, respectively. This study suggests that sexuality may have a modest influence on recent two-week morbidity and a dominant impact on annual hospitalization.Current treatment guidelines for patients with locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) recommend multimodal treatment, including chemoradiation therapy (CRT) or surgery followed by radiation, with or without chemotherapy. The immune checkpoint inhibitor pembrolizumab has previously demonstrated antitumor activity in recurrent and/or metastatic HNSCC in large Phase III trials. For patients with locally advanced disease, Phase Ib data on the use of pembrolizumab in combination with chemoradiation have shown the approach to be safe and feasible. We describe here the design and rationale for KEYNOTE-412, a randomized, double-blind, Phase III trial investigating pembrolizumab or placebo administered concurrently with CRT and as maintenance treatment in patients with locally advanced HNSCC. Clinical Trial Registration NCT03040999 (ClinicalTrials.gov).Antiretroviral medications are expensive, and people living with HIV often experience challenges accessing and paying for medication due to various obstacles. We used concept mapping to explore the challenges people living with HIV in Ontario, Canada, face when accessing medication. In brainstorming, 68 participants generated 447 statements in response to the focus prompt "Some people living with HIV have trouble getting and paying for prescription drugs because … ". These were consolidated into 77 statements, which were sorted (n = 30) and rated (n = 32) on importance and commonality. A ten-cluster concept map consisting of individual- and health system-related clusters was generated. Clusters included (1) Stigma, (2) Medication-Related Issues, (3) Individual Challenges, (4) Basic Needs, (5) Immigration, (6) Coverage, (7) Trillium Drug Program, (8) Access to Services, (9) System-Level Issues and (10) Access to Professional Services. Statements in Coverage and Basic Needs were rated most important and common although there was variability by Ontario residence and drug coverage mechanisms. Strategies to address challenges were generated in Interpretation (n = 25 participants). Given that continuous access to antiretroviral therapy is necessary to fully realize treatment benefits, policies and interventions that address these challenges are needed.Prunella vulgaris L. is one of the therapeutic herbs containing various polyphenolics, which is used for multiple medicinal purposes. In this study, plant growth regulators (PGRs)-induced calli cultures from seed-derived leaf explants were exploited for the production of stress enzymes and polyphenolics. A growth curve was plotted for each PGR for 49 days period, which showed a distinct lag, log and decline phases. Here, the combination of naphthalene acetic acid (NAA) and 6-benzyleadenine (BA; 0.5 and 2.0 mg l-1) produced maximum fresh (6.32 FW-g/100 ml) and dry biomass (0.75 DW-g/100 ml) in contrast to control. The maximum synthesis of SOD (0.0154 FW-nM/min/mg) was detected on media comprising mixture of NAA and BA (1.5 mg l-1), while POD enzyme (0.366 FW-nM/min/mg) was higher at 0.5 mg l-1 NAA and 2, 4-dichlorophenoxy acetic acid. Further, NAA and BA (1.5 and 2.0 mg l-1) boosted up the synthesis of phenolics (18.83 GAE-mg/g-DW) and flavonoids content (18.05 RE-mg/g-DW) than control. Moreover, NAA of 1.0 and 2.0 mg l-1 were found supportive for maximum antioxidant activity (87.4%) and total protein (716 µg BSAE/mg-DW). This study will contribute in the development of cell culture in fermenter and synthesis of antioxidant secondary metabolites for commercial uses.Background and objectives Anxiety and depression are prevalent psychopathologies that affect twice as many women than men. Although the role of biological factors has been investigated, it has been argued that gender roles - defined by the feminine and masculine characteristics that society attributes to men and women - should also be considered. Gender roles are dynamic and shaped by life experiences. To date, most studies investigating the impact of gender roles on depressive and anxiety symptoms have recruited students. Here, we examined the impact of gender roles on depression and anxiety in healthy students and workers.Methods Pooled data combining the Bem Sex-Role Inventory, State and Trait Anxiety Inventory and Beck Depression Inventory-II from 108 students (50 men) and 151 workers (75 men) aged 18-65 years old were analyzed. Gender roles were operationalized using continuous and categorical methods.Results Higher masculinity predicted lower anxiety and depressive symptoms. The relationship between masculinity and anxiety was however only present for students. Higher feminity was associated with higher anxiety and lower depressive symptoms, and these relationships were not moderated by the student/worker status.Conclusion Gender roles may relate to mental health differently according to the student/worker status.Aim To illustrate that bias associated with indirect treatment comparison and network meta-analyses can be reduced by adjusting for outcomes on common reference arms. Materials & methods Approaches to adjusting for reference-arm effects are presented within a causal inference framework. Bayesian and Frequentist approaches are applied to three real data examples. Results Reference-arm adjustment can significantly impact estimated treatment differences, improve model fit and align indirectly estimated treatment effects with those observed in randomized trials. Reference-arm adjustment can possibly reverse the direction of estimated treatment effects. Conclusion Accumulating theoretical and empirical evidence underscores the importance of adjusting for reference-arm outcomes in indirect treatment comparison and network meta-analyses to make full use of data and reduce the risk of bias in estimated treatments effects.Aim We investigated the effect of the combination of heat shock protein 90α (HSP90α), alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and thymidine kinase 1 (TK1) in the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Methods & results A total of 409 patients with HCC, 101 patients with benign liver disorder and 78 healthy individuals were retrospectively analyzed. HSP90α level was higher in HCC patients than in controls. The expression of HSP90α showed a positive correlation with tumor stage, differentiation, lymph node metastasis and tumor thrombus formation. The combination of HSP90α, AFP and TK1 improved the diagnostic sensitivity (89.24%) and the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (0.919). Conclusion The detection of HSP90α, AFP and TK1 is more efficient than a single tumor marker for the diagnosis of HCC.Aim We aimed to explore the biomarkers for disease progression or the risk of nonsurvivors. Materials & methods This study included 134 hospitalized patients with confirmed COVID-19 infection. The outcome of moderate versus severe versus critically ill patients and survivors versus nonsurvivors were compared. Results An increase in the severity of COVID-19 pneumonia was positively associated with lower levels of platelets and albumin (all p less then 0.05). In the critical group, the plasma levels of albumin continued to have a significant association for the risk of nonsurvivors (p less then 0.05), even after adjusting for confounding factors. Conclusion Albumin levels could be used as an independent predictor of the risk of nonsurvivors in critically ill patients with COVID-19.Highly arylated α-alkenyl-β-diketones are synthesized via a two-step sequence consisting of (i) potassium tert-butoxide/DMSO-catalyzed (E)-stereoselective C-H functionalization of ketones with acetylenes followed by (ii) magnesium bromide etherate/DIPEA-soft enolization of the formed β,γ-unsaturated ketones and regioselective acylation with acyl chlorides. The method is compatible with a broad range of substrates and shown to be applicable as an intermediate stage in the construction of polyarylated heterocycles.The recent Ebola epidemics in West Africa underscore the great need for effective and practical therapies for future Ebola virus outbreaks. We have discovered a new series of remarkably potent small molecule inhibitors of Ebola virus entry. These 4-(aminomethyl)benzamide-based inhibitors are also effective against Marburg virus. Synthetic routes to these compounds allowed for the preparation of a wide variety of structures, including a conformationally restrained subset of indolines (compounds 41-50). Compounds 20, 23, 32, 33, and 35 are superior inhibitors of Ebola (Mayinga) and Marburg (Angola) infectious viruses. Representative compounds (20, 32, and 35) have shown good metabolic stability in plasma and liver microsomes (rat and human), and 32 did not inhibit CYP3A4 nor CYP2C9. These 4-(aminomethyl)benzamides are suitable for further optimization as inhibitors of filovirus entry, with the potential to be developed as therapeutic agents for the treatment and control of Ebola virus infections.We investigated the self-assembly of surfactin (SFNa), a cyclic peptide amphiphile produced by Bacillus subtilis, in a nonpolar organic solvent, namely, cyclohexane (CHx). The CHx solution of SFNa formed a thermoreversible organogel. Transmission electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) analyses showed that gelation of the CHx solution of SFNa was caused by physical cross-linking of SFNa nanofibers. Wide-angle X-ray diffraction and Fourier-transform infrared analyses showed that the SFNa nanofibers were formed by one-dimensional stacking of SFNa rings with a period of 0.48 nm corresponding to the length of inter-ring hydrogen bonds between amide groups. A combination of SAXS and small-angle neutron scattering investigations of CHx and deuterated CHx solutions of SFNa nanofibers containing H2O or D2O showed that the SFNa nanofibers had a hydrophilic interior and formed water channels by water incorporation in this region.The low quantum yield of photoformation of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers and pyrimidine-pyrimidone (6-4) adducts in DNA bases is usually associated with the presence of more favorable nonreactive decay paths and with the unlikeliness of exciting the system in a favorable conformation. Here, we prove that the ability of the reactive conical intersection to bring the system either back to the absorbing conformation or to the photoproduct must be considered as a fundamental factor in the low quantum yields of the mentioned photodamage. In support of the proposed model, the one order of magnitude difference in the quantum yield of formation of the cyclobutane thymine dimer with respect to the thymine-thymine (6-4) adduct is rationalized here by comparing the reactive ability of the seam of intersections leading respectively to the cyclobutane thymine dimer and the oxetane precursor of the thymine-thymine (6-4) adduct at the CASPT2 level of theory.In this work, a new Cu(I) cluster is synthesized and structurally characterized [Cu11(TBBT)9(PPh3)6](SbF6)2 (where TBBT = 4-tert-butylbenzenethiol). This Cu(I) cluster exhibits good stability and a bright-red emission both in solution (685 nm) and in the solid state (675 nm) with a large Stokes shift (∼280 nm) under ambient conditions. Its absolute quantum yield is 0.22 in the solid state. Temperature-dependent emissions and theoretical calculations suggest that the origin of this cluster luminescence mainly results from a mixture of the metal-ligand charge transfer and the cluster-centered triplet excited states. This work not only opens new opportunities for functional applications of copper clusters but also sheds light on the structure-luminescence relationship.Very high spatially resolved satellite-derived ground-level concentrations of particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of less than 2.5 μm (PM2.5) have multiple potential applications, especially in air quality modeling and epidemiological and climatological research. Satellite-derived aerosol optical depth (AOD) and columnar water vapor (CWV), meteorological parameters, and land use data were used as variables within the framework of a linear mixed effect model (LME) and a random forest (RF) model to predict daily ground-level concentrations of PM2.5 at 1 km × 1 km grid resolution across the Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP) in South Asia. The RF model exhibited superior performance and higher accuracy compared with the LME model, with better cross-validated explained variance (R2 = 0.87) and lower relative prediction error (RPE = 24.5%). The RF model revealed improved performance metrics for increasing averaging periods, from daily to weekly, monthly, seasonal, and annual means, which supported its use in estimating PM2.5 exposure metrics across the IGP at varying temporal scales (i.e., both short and long terms). The RF-based PM2.5 estimates showed high PM2.5 levels over the middle and lower IGP, with the annual mean exceeding 110 μg/m3. As for seasons, winter was the most polluted season, while monsoon was the cleanest. Spatially, the middle and lower IGP showed poorer air quality compared to the upper IGP. In winter, the middle and lower IGP experienced very poor air quality, with mean PM2.5 concentrations of >170 μg/m3.Ocean acidification (OA) is caused by changes in ocean carbon chemistry due to increased atmospheric pCO2 and is predicted to have deleterious effects on marine ecosystems. While the potential impacts of OA on many marine species have been studied, the multi-generational effects on asexual organisms remain unknown. We found that low seawater pH induced oxidative stress and DNA damage, decreasing growth rates, fecundity, and lifespans in the parental generation, whereas deleterious effects on in vivo endpoints in F1 and F2 offspring were less evident. The findings suggest multi-generational adaptive effects play a role in antioxidant abilities and other defenses mechanisms. OA-induced DNA damage, including double-strand breaks (DSBs), was fully repaired in F1 offspring of parents exposed to OA for 7 days, indicating that an adaptation mechanism may be the major driving force behind multi-generational adaptive effects. Analysis of epigenetic modification in response to OA involved examination of histone modification of DNA repair genes and a chromatin immunoprecipitation assay, as B. koreanus has no methylation pattern for CpG in its genome. We conclude that DSBs, DNA repair, and histone modification play important roles in multi-generational plasticity in response to OA in an asexual monogonont rotifer.Here, we demonstrate mimicking of photophysical properties of native green fluorescent protein (gfp) by immobilizing the gfp chromophore analogues in nanoscale MOF-808 and further exploring the bioimaging applications. The two virtually nonfluorescent gfp chromophore analogues carrying different functionalities, BDI-AE (COOH/COOMe) and BDI-EE (COOMe/COOMe) were immobilized in nanosized MOF-808 via postsynthetic modification. An 1H NMR and IR study confirms that BDI-AE was coordinated in NMOF-808, whereas BDI-EE was just noncovalently encapsulated. Interestingly, the extremely weakly fluorescent monomers BDI-AE and BDI-EE (QY = 0.01-0.03%, lifetime = 0.01-0.03 ns) showed a 102-fold increase in quantum efficiency with a significantly longer excited-state lifetime (QY = 1.8-5.6%, lifetime 0.89-1.49 ns) after immobilization in the NMOF-808 scaffold. Moreover, BDI-AE@MOF-808 has 4 times higher quantum efficiency as well as longer excited-state lifetime in comparison to BDI-EE@NMOF-808 due to the rigidity imposed in the chromophore upon coordination with Zr4+ in the former case. Further, a cell viability test performed for BDI-AE@NMOF-808 in HeLa cells confirmed the nontoxic nature of the material and, more importantly, bioimaging applications have also been explored successfully.We investigated the potential effects of different land use and other environment factors on animals living in a contaminated environment. The study site in Kabwe, Zambia, is currently undergoing urban expansion, while lead contamination from former mining activities is still prevalent. We focused on a habitat-generalist lizards (Trachylepis wahlbergii). The livers, lungs, blood and stomach contents of 224 lizards were analyzed for their lead, zinc, cadmium, copper, nickel and arsenic concentrations. Habitat types were categorized based on vegetation data obtained from satellite images. Multiple regression analysis revealed that land use categories of habitats and three other factors significantly affected lead concentrations in the lizards. Further investigation suggested that the lead concentrations in lizards living in bare fields were higher than expected based on distance from the contaminant source, while those in lizards living in green fields were lower than expected. In addition, lead concentration of lungs were higher than that of liver in 19% of the lizards, implying direct exposure to lead via dust inhalation besides digestive exposure. Since vegetation reduces the production of dust from surface soil, it is plausible that dust from the mine is one of the contamination sources, and that vegetation can reduce exposure to this.Converting polycarbonate (PC) plastic waste into value-added chemicals and/or fuel additives by catalytic pyrolysis is a promising approach to dispose of solid wastes. In this study, a series of Fe-Ce@Al2O3 metal oxides were prepared by coprecipitation, impregnation, and a direct mixing method. The synthesized catalysts were then employed to investigate the catalytic conversion of PC wastes to produce aromatic hydrocarbons. Experimental results indicated that Fe-Ce@Al2O3 prepared by coprecipitation possessed superior catalytic activity because of its high content of weak acid sites, large pore volume, high surface area, and well dispersion of Fe and Ce active species, leading to an ∼3-fold increase in targeted monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons compared to that achieved noncatalytically. Moreover, an increase in the catalyst to feedstock (C/F) mass ratio was beneficial to the production of aromatic hydrocarbons at the expense of phenolic products, and elevating the C/F ratio from 11 to 31 considerably increased the benzene formation as the enhancement factor was increased from 2.

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