Krausestafford2210
The disorders of cartilage homeostasis and chondrocyte apoptosis are major events in the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA). Herein, we aim to assess the chondroprotective effect and underlying mechanisms of a novel chemically modified curcumin, CMC2.24, in modulating extracellular matrix (ECM) homeostasis and inhibiting chondrocyte apoptosis. Rats underwent the anterior cruciate ligament transection, and medial menisci resection was treated by intra-articular injection with CMC2.24. In an in vitro study, rat chondrocytes were pretreated with CMC2.24 before stimulation with sodium nitroprusside (SNP). Results from in vivo studies demonstrated that the intra-articular administration of CMC2.24 ameliorated osteoarthritic cartilage destruction by promoting collagen 2a1 production and inhibited cartilage degradation and apoptosis by suppressing hypoxia-inducible factor-2a (Hif-2α), matrix metalloproteinase-3, runt-related transcription factor 2, cleaved caspase-3, and vascular endothelial growth factor and the ps NF-κB/Hif-2α axis activation to modulate ECM homeostasis and inhibit chondrocyte apoptosis.Urban health inequities often reflect and follow the geographic patterns of inequality in the social, economic and environmental conditions within a city-the so-called determinants of health. Evidence of patterns within these conditions can support decision-making by identifying where action is urgent and which policies and interventions are needed to mitigate negative impacts and enhance positive impacts. Within the scope of the EU-funded project EURO-HEALTHY (Shaping EUROpean policies to promote HEALTH equitY), the City of Lisbon was selected as a case study to apply a multidimensional and participatory assessment approach of urban health whose purpose was to inform the evaluation of policies and interventions with potential to address local health gaps. In this paper, we present the set of indicators identified as drivers of urban health inequities within the City of Lisbon, exploring the added value of using a spatial indicator framework together with a participation process to orient a place-based assesstuations showed that all 24 city neighbourhoods presented one or more problems. A group of neighbourhoods systematically perform worse in most indicators from different intervention axes, requiring not only priority action but mainly a multi- and intersectoral policy response. The indicator matrices and maps have provided a snapshot of urban inequities across different intervention axes, making a compelling argument for boosting intersectoral work across municipal departments and local stakeholders in the City of Lisbon. This study, by integrating local evidence in combination with social elements, pinpoints the importance of a place-based approach for assessing urban health equity.Comparative research involving consensually non-monogamous (CNM) relationships and outcomes related to well-being continues to grow as an area of interest within sexual science. However, claims of sameness and/or difference between groups rely on two critical, yet widely under-appreciated assumptions that the concepts being compared between groups are the same (i.e., measurement invariance), and that logically and statistically coherent procedures are used for evaluating sameness (i.e., equivalence testing). We evaluated the state of measurement invariance and equivalence across three studies, involving different types of CNM comparisons (i.e., relationship types, partner types) and designs (analysis of primary individual data, primary dyadic data, and secondary data). Our invariance tests of CNM compared to monogamous individuals (Study 1) and "primary" compared to "secondary" partners in dyadic appraisal of CNM individuals (Study 2) revealed that many measures of well-being failed to replicate their measurement models and were not generalizable across relationship types or partner types. Our reanalyses of existing comparative CNM effects using individual and meta-analyzed equivalence tests (Study 3), meanwhile, indicated that this literature requires more consistent reporting practices and larger samples, as most studies produced uninformative tests of equivalence. Our results illustrate the importance of auxiliary hypothesis evaluation and statistical procedure selection for generating informative comparative tests. Our findings also highlight potential divergences in social construction of well-being. We offer suggestions for researchers, reviewers, and editors in terms of needed methodological reforms for future comparative CNM research.The following article was unintentionally published twice in European Journal of Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics.The areal biomass productivities (g-1 m-2 day-1) of Nannochloropsis oceanica between different sizes of way ponds were compared. Sequential batch cultivation using 2-m2, 20-m2, and 200-m2 raceway ponds with an industrial scale 4000-m2 raceway as the main culture was conducted in summer and autumn during 2017 at Whyalla, Australia. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/reversan.html Areal productivities of sequential batch cultivation during the same culture period were 8.4 g ± 0.9 g-1 m-1 day-1 in the 2-m2 ponds, 9.3 g-1 m-1 day-1 in the 20-m2 ponds, and 8.0 g-1 m-1 day-1 in the 200-m2 ponds respectively. In parallel with the operation of the main 4000-m2 pond, some smaller scale ponds of 2, 20, and 200 m2 were operated at the same site under the same conditions. Areal productivity data of dry biomass of Nannochloropsis oceanica in each pond are very similar between industrial 4000-m2 pond and other smaller ponds. In this work, the authors demonstrate that using the growth rate and productivities of Nannochloropsis from smaller scale open ponds with the same depth is valid to estimate for large-scale ponds in excess of 4000 m2.
Web-based surveys are increasingly utilized for health valuation studies but may be more prone to lack of engagement and, therefore, poor data validity. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of imposed engagement (i.e., at least three trade-offs) in the composite time trade-off (cTTO) task.
The EQ-5D-5L valuation study protocol and study design were adapted for online, unsupervised completion in two arms base case and engagement. Validity of preferences was assessed using the prevalence of inconsistent valuations and expected patterns of TTO values. Respondent task engagement was measured using time per task. Value sets were generated using linear regression with a random intercept (RILR).
The base case (n = 501) and engagement arms (n = 504) clustered at different TTO values [base case] 0, 1; [engagement] -0.5, 0.45, 0.6. Mean TTO values were lower for the engagement arm. Engagement respondents did not spend more time per TTO task [base case] 63.3s (SD 77.9s); [engagement] 64.7s (SD 73.3s); p = 0.36. No significant difference was found between arms for prevalence of respondents with at least one inconsistent TTO value [base case] 61.1%; [engagement] 63.5%; p = 0.43. Both value sets had significant intercepts far from 1 [base case] 0.846; [engagement] 0.783. The relative importance of the EQ-5D dimensions also differed between arms.
Both online arms had poor quality data. A minimum trade-off threshold did not improve engagement nor face validity of the data, indicating that modifications to the number of iterations are insufficient alone to improve data quality/validity of online TTO studies.
Both online arms had poor quality data. A minimum trade-off threshold did not improve engagement nor face validity of the data, indicating that modifications to the number of iterations are insufficient alone to improve data quality/validity of online TTO studies.Lateral flow immunoassays (LFIAs) are widely used for rapid food safety screening analysis. Thanks to simplified protocols and smartphone readouts, LFIAs are expected to be increasingly used on-site, even by non-experts. As a typical follow-up in EU regulatory settings, suspect samples are sent to laboratories for confirmatory analysis by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). However, re-analysis by LC-MS/MS is laborious and time-consuming. In this work, an identification LFIA (ID-LFIA) approach followed by quadrupole-orbitrap MS or triple quadrupole MS/MS analysis is presented. As a proof of concept, a dedicated ID-LFIA strip was developed for the mycotoxin deoxynivalenol (DON) following its initial screening by a commercial smartphone LFIA. The ID-LFIA strip can be simply immersed in the same sample extract used for the smartphone LFIA screening, and next, DON is retrieved from the monoclonal antibody with a dissociation solution consisting of methanol/ammonia. The solution thus obtained was analyzed directly in MS in order to rapidly confirm the presence of DON and any cross-reacting species. The protocol developed is capable of coping with severe ion suppression caused by LFIA buffers and nitrocellulose substrate residues. Initial analysis of blank, spiked, and incurred samples showed that the newly developed ID-LFIA-MS method was able to confirm the presence or absence of mycotoxins in the samples previously analyzed by LFIA and also differentiate between DON and DON 3-glucoside yielding the positive screening result. The concept and technique developed are envisaged to complement on-site screening and confirmation of any low molecular weight contaminant in future food control frameworks. Graphical abstract.Shortening the turnaround time of antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) of bacteria permits a significant reduction of patient morbidity, mortality, and cost. Conventional blood culture methods are the gold standard diagnostic test to guide management of patient with sepsis, but the conventional process requires at least 12 to 24 h after the blood culture has been flagged as positive due to requirement for pure colonies. We describe a simple and inexpensive method to obtain faster AST with MicroScan system (Beckman Coulter) directly from positive blood cultures. Conventional and direct identification and AST were performed simultaneously by both methods in 1070 blood cultures, and 9106 MICs were determinated. About 96.5% were correctly identified with the direct method. Overall, categorical agreement was 92.86%. We found 46 very major errors, but globally the results showed a good correlation with the standard method, particularly favorable for E. coli and K. pneumoniae, except amoxicillin-clavulanate and piperacillin-tazobactam. For P. mirabilis, betalactams antibiotics (except second- and third-generation cephalosporines) showed a good correlation, and also a good correlation was found for ciprofloxacine and gentamicine in P. aeruginosa and amoxicillin-clavulanate, ciprofloxacine, gentamicine, and cotrimoxazole in E. cloacae. This method has the main advantage of providing reliable results 1 day earlier, being a simple, fast, and cheap method for identification and antimicrobial susceptibility testing results from positive blood cultures.Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a highly morbid and prevalent cancer globally. While high quality evidence for mortality benefit of HCC surveillance is lacking, early detection of HCC is likely beneficial as prognosis is highly correlated with tumor stage. High risk populations, including patients with cirrhosis and subgroups with Hepatitis B, should undergo surveillance with ultrasound ± alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) at 6-month intervals. In addition, emerging data suggest that patients with Hepatitis C cirrhosis who achieve sustained virologic response should continue surveillance. Further research is needed to determine the value of surveillance in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in the absence of cirrhosis or with advanced fibrosis of other etiologies. Newer biomarkers and models such as Lens culinaris agglutinin-reactive fraction of AFP, des-γ-carboxy prothrombin, and the GALAD score are increasingly utilized in the diagnosis and prognostication of HCC. The role of these biomarkers in surveillance is still under investigation but may potentially offer a more practical alternative to traditional image-based surveillance.