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pulation of patients.The heavy metal pollution level in soils is heavily affected by the soil particle size distribution. However, the heavy metal loss during particle size extraction and the effect of calcite on the heavy metals removal in terms of the particle size are unclear. In this study, the distribution of heavy metals (Cu, Cd, Cr, Co, Ni, Zn, Pb, U, and V) was determined in five particle fractions (> 2, 2-0.25, 0.25-0.02, 0.02-0.002, and Cr6+, while the removal rate of Pb (93.13%) is much higher than that of Cu (24.56%) and Cr (10.71%), which increase with the calcite particle size decreasing. The stabilization of carbonate minerals in soils is crucial for heavy metal pollution control in floodplain soils with high carbonate concentrations in Dongchuan, China.In this short paper we analyse some paradoxical aspects of France's Foucauldian heritage (1) while several French scholars claim the COVID-19 pandemic is a perfect example of what Foucault called biopolitics, popular reaction instead suggests a biopolitical failure on the part of the government; (2) One of these failures concerns the government's inability to produce reliable biostatistical data, especially regarding health inequalities in relation to COVID-19. We interrogate whether Foucaldianism contributed, in the past as well today, towards a certain myopia in France regarding biostatistics and its relation to social inequalities in health. One might ask whether this very data could provide an appropriate response to the Foucauldian question What kind of governance of life is the pandemic revealing to us?Abductive reasoning describes the process of deriving an explanation from given observations. The theory of abductive reasoning (TAR; Johnson and Krems, Cognitive Science 25903-939, 2001) assumes that when information is presented sequentially, new information is integrated into a mental representation, a situation model, the central data structure on which all reasoning processes are based. Because working memory capacity is limited, the question arises how reasoning might change with the amount of information that has to be processed in memory. Thus, we conducted an experiment (N = 34) in which we manipulated whether previous observation information and previously found explanations had to be retrieved from memory or were still visually present. Our results provide evidence that people experience differences in task difficulty when more information has to be retrieved from memory. This is also evident in changes in the mental representation as reflected by eye tracking measures. However, no differences are found between groups in the reasoning outcome. These findings suggest that individuals construct their situation model from both information in memory as well as external memory stores. The complexity of the model depends on the task when memory demands are high, only relevant information is included. With this compensation strategy, people are able to achieve similar reasoning outcomes even when faced with tasks that are more difficult. This implies that people are able to adapt their strategy to the task in order to keep their reasoning successful.We have developed a hydrodynamically levitated centrifugal blood pump. In the blood pump having hydrodynamic bearings, the narrow bearing gap has a potential for high hemolysis. The purpose of the this study is to improve hemolysis performance in a hydrodynamically levitated centrifugal blood pump by optimizing a shroud size. The impeller was levitated passively at the position where the thrust forces acting on the impeller were balanced. We focused on a size of a bottom shroud with a hydrodynamic bearing that could change the bottom hydrodynamic force to balance the thrust force at the wide bearing gap for reducing hemolysis. Five test models with various shroud size were compared 989 mm2 (HH-10.5), 962 mm2 (HH-12), 932 mm2 (HH-13.5), 874 mm2 (HH-16), and 821 mm2 (HH-18). A numerical analysis was first performed to estimate the bearing gaps in the test model. The bearing gaps were then measured to validate the numerical analysis. Finally, an in vitro hemolysis test was performed. The numerical analysis revealed that the HH-13.5 model had the widest bearing gap of 129 µm. In the measurement test, the estimation error for the bearing gap was less than 10%. In the hemolysis test, the HH-13.5 model achieved the lowest hemolysis level among the five models. The present study demonstrated that the numerical analysis was found to be effective for determining the optimal should size, and the HH-13.5 model had the optimal shroud size in the developed hydrodynamically levitated centrifugal blood pump to reduce hemolysis.
Dual antiplatelet therapy is the current standard of care after acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). We intended to study the pattern of use of ticagrelor in patients with acute coronary syndrome undergoing PCI and the effect of switching over to other P2Y12 receptor inhibition on clinical outcomes.
All patients aged > 18 years who had been admitted with acute coronary syndrome and had been provided ticagrelor as the second antiplatelet agent were included as study participants. The primary outcome of the study was the composite outcome of death, recurrent myocardial infarctions, re-intervention, and major bleeding. We studied 321 patients (54 female patients, 16.82%). The mean age of the patients was 56.65 ± 11.01 years. Ticagrelor was stopped in 76.7% on follow-up. It was stopped in 6.3%, 13.5%, 13.1%, 21.9%, and 45.1% of patients during the first month but after discharge, between first and third months, between 3 and 6 months, between 6 and 12 months, and afteid not affect clinical outcomes.Although, yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is expected to be used as a host for lactic acid production, improvement of yeast lactic acid tolerance is required for efficient non-neutralizing fermentation. In this study, we optimized the expression levels of various transcription factors to improve the lactic acid tolerance of yeast by a previously developed cocktail δ-integration strategy. By optimizing the expression levels of various transcription factors, the maximum D-lactic acid production and yield under non-neutralizing conditions were improved by 1.2. and 1.6 times, respectively. Furthermore, overexpression of PDR3, which is known as a transcription factor involved in multi-drug resistance, effectively improved lactic acid tolerance in yeast. In addition, we clarified for the first time that high expression of PDR3 contributes to the improvement of lactic acid tolerance. PDR3 is considered to be an excellent target gene for studies on yeast stress tolerance and further researches are desired in the future.Searching for novel enzymes that could be active in organic solvents has become an area of interest in recent years. Olive brine naturally provides a suitable environment for the survival of halophilic and acidophilic microorganisms and the resulting genome is thought to be a gene source for determining the halophilic and acidophilic proteins that are active in a non-aqueous organic solvent medium, and so it has been used in several biotechnological and industrial applications. In this study, microbial analysis of natural, cracked green olive brine from the southern region of Turkey has been made by next-generation sequencing of the brine metagenome for the first time in the literature. The number of reads assigned to fungal operational taxonomic units was the highest percentage (73.04%) with the dominant representation of Ascomycota phylum (99% of fungi). Bacterial OTU was 3.56% of the reads and Proteobacteria phylum was 65% of the reads. The lipase production capacity of the yeasts that were grown on the media containing elevated concentrations of NaCl (1-3 M) was determined on a Rhodamine B-including medium. Molecular identification of the selected yeasts was performed and 90% of sequenced yeasts had a high level of similarity with Candida diddensiae, whereas 10% showed similarity to Candida boidinii. learn more The hydrolytic lipase activities using olive oil were analyzed and both yeasts showed cell-bound lipase activity at pH 3.0.
Although COPD patients are at higher risk for aspiration when breathing spontaneously, no information is available on the risk for microaspiration in invasively ventilated COPD patients. The aim of our study was to determine the relationship between COPD and abundant microaspiration in intubated critically ill patients.
This was a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data, provided by 3 randomized controlled trials on microaspiration in critically ill patients receiving invasive mechanical ventilation for more than 48h. Abundant microaspiration was defined as the presence of pepsin and or alpha-amylase at significant levels in tracheal aspirates. In all study patients, pepsin and alpha-amylase were quantitatively measured in all tracheal aspirates collected during a 48-h period. COPD was defined using spirometry criteria.
Among the 515 included patients, 70 (14%) had proven COPD. Pepsin and alpha-amylase were quantitatively measured in 3873 and 3764 tracheal aspirates, respectively. No significant difference was found in abundant microaspiration rate between COPD and non-COPD patients (62 of 70 patients (89%) vs 366 of 445 (82%) patients, p = 0.25). Similarly, no significant difference was found in abundant microaspiration of gastric contents (53% vs 45%, p = 0.28), oropharyngeal secretions (71% vs 71%, p = 0.99), or VAP (19% vs 22%, p = 0.65) rates between the two groups. No significant difference was found between COPD and non-COPD patients in duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU length of stay, or ICU mortality.
Our results suggest that COPD is not associated with increased risk for abundant microaspiration in intubated critically ill patients.
Our results suggest that COPD is not associated with increased risk for abundant microaspiration in intubated critically ill patients.
Injury risk in elite youth soccer players is high. Implementing an optimal training load is of utmost importance to reduce the risk of injuries.
To conduct a systematic review and best evidence synthesis to explore the effects of internal and external training load on injury risk in elite youth soccer players.
MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, CENTRAL, and CINAHL were searched up until 17 January 2020. Each article had to meet all of the following criteria (1) the study population consisted of male elite youth soccer players aged between 12 and 21 years; (2) a longitudinal, prospective study design was used; (3) soccer-related injuries were registered (i.e., self-reported or by medical staff); (4) external and/or internal load parameters were described; and (5) the article was published in an English peer-reviewed scientific journal. The quality of the included articles was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale (NOS). A best evidence synthesis was performed to rank the level of evidence.
Five studies (2 high quality, 3 low quality) were included. Best evidence synthesis highlighted that there was moderate evidence for (1) no association between 2-, 3-, and 4-week cumulative loads for total distance covered; (2) no association between 1-week workloads (sRPE × duration); and (3) no association between AC workload ratios (4 weeks) and injury risk. For all other comparisons, only insufficient or conflicting evidence was found.
There is a paucity of evidence for an association between internal and external training load parameters and injury risk in elite youth soccer players.
There is a paucity of evidence for an association between internal and external training load parameters and injury risk in elite youth soccer players.