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Malnutrition is estimated to affect over three million people in the UK resulting in serious consequences on both the individuals' health and healthcare system. While dietitians are uniquely qualified to provide nutritional interventions, they have one of the lowest workforce numbers in the NHS making it difficult to tackle the malnutrition burden alone. Thus, innovative ways of working are needed. Non-dietetic health care professionals are often involved in the identification, assessment and treatment of malnutrition and research has shown benefits of their involvement in identification and management of nutritional issues, however their role in delivering nutritional interventions has not yet been evaluated. The aim of this systematic review is to collate evidence on the potential roles and effectiveness of non-dietetic healthcare professionals in providing nutritional interventions and their impact on patient-centred outcomes in malnourished or at-risk individuals.

Three electronic databases were searcgh-quality research such as feasibility studies in this area, for the effective management of malnutrition within clinical and community practice.Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) were generated from erythroblasts (EBLs) obtained from a patient diagnosed with Chédiak-Higashi Syndrome (CHS), caused by mutations in LYST (c.4322_4325delAGAG and c.10127A>G). EBLs were reprogrammed with CytoTune-iPS 2.0 Sendai Reprogramming Kit, where the generated iPSCs showed normal karyotype, expression of pluripotency associated markers and in vitro spontaneous differentiation towards the three germ layers. The generated iPSCs can be used to study CHS pathophysiology and the role of LYST in different cell types.Skeletal muscle stem cells (MuSCs) are essential for efficacious muscle repair, making MuSCs promising therapeutic targets for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. MuSCs are presented with a diverse and temporally defined set of cues from their microenvironment during regeneration that direct stem cell expansion, differentiation, and return to quiescence. Understanding the complex interplay among these biophysical and biochemical cues is necessary to develop therapies targeting or employing MuSCs. To probe the role of mechanical cues presented by the extracellular matrix, we leverage chemically defined hydrogel substrates with controllable stiffness and adhesive ligand composition to characterize the MuSC response to matrix cues presented during early and late phases of regeneration. We demonstrate that relatively soft hydrogels recapitulating healthy muscle stiffness promote MuSC activation and expansion, while relatively stiff hydrogels impair MuSC proliferation and arrest myogenic progression. Thernessed to improve regenerative medicine approaches to restore skeletal muscle tissue.Cluster and continuum solvation computational models are employed to model the effect of hydrogen bonding interactions on the vibrational modes of lumiflavin. Calculated spectra were compared to experimental Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectra in the diagnostic 1450-1800 cm-1 range, where intense νC=C, νC=N, [Formula see text] , and [Formula see text] stretching modes of flavin's isoalloxazine ring are found. Local mode analysis is used to describe the strength of hydrogen-bonding in cluster models. The computations indicate that νC=C and νC=N mode frequencies are relatively insensitive to intermolecular interactions while the [Formula see text] and [Formula see text] modes are sensitive to direct (and also indirect for [Formula see text] ) hydrogen-bonding interactions. Although flavin is neutral, basis sets without the diffuse functions provide incorrect relative frequencies and intensities. The 6-31+G* basis set is found to be adequate for this system, and there is limited benefit to considering larger basis sets. Calculated vibrational mode frequencies agree with experimentally determined frequencies in solution when cluster models with multiple water molecules are used. Accurate simulation of relative FTIR band intensities, on the other hand, requires a continuum (or possibly quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical) model that accounts for long-range electrostatic effects. Finally, an experimental peak at ca. 1624 cm-1 that is typically assigned to the [Formula see text] vibrational stretching mode has a complicated shape that suggests multiple underlying contributions. Our calculations show that this band has contributions from both the C6-C7 and C2 = O stretching vibrations.A comparative study of the luminescence properties and crystal structure of boron difluoride 1-(anthracen-9-yl)butane-1,3-dionate (1) and their nitrogen-containing analogs with hydrogen and methyl substituents (2 and 3) has been performed. For boron difluoride beta-diketonate (1) and beta-ketoiminate with a hydrogen substituent (2), which does not create significant steric difficulties, the luminescence of crystals is determined by that of excimers and aggregates based on them. For the compounds 1-3, mechanofluorochromism has been observed, the spectral manifestation of which is different at grinding the crystals of 1 and 2, a hypsochromic shift of the excitation and luminescence bands occurs, whereas in the case of crystals of 3, a bathochromic shift takes place. Dual luminescence has been detected for the solutions of 1. During the relaxation in the excited state of a molecule of 1 (S1 → S'1), TICT is formed. It was possible to register the short-wavelength luminescence from the LE state in the dilute solutions of 1. TICT or LE luminescence can be excited, in the case of 1, by varying the wavelength of the exciting light.Corticosterone (CORT)-mediated adaptive plasticity improves animal fitness in stressful environments. Although it brings ecological benefits, the cost potentially constrains its expression and evolution. Revealing the factors affecting plasticity costs is of great ecological and evolutionary significance. Evidence indicates that both CORT and background colour can induce metabolic changes in animals, which in turn determine phenotypic plasticity. However, whether and/or how CORT and background colour jointly act on plastic responses has not been studied. Here, this question has been investigated in amphibian tadpoles (Microhyla fissipes) exposed to CORT at different background colours (white or black) using integrated morphological, histological, and transcriptomic analyses. The results showed that CORT exposure increased relative tail length, immune function, and metabolic maintenance (i.e., transcription of substrate catabolism and oxidative phosphorylation) at the expense of reduction in growth rate and skin melanin level. The black background also increased relative tail length and metabolic maintenance (i.e., transcription of oxidative phosphorylation) at the cost of reduction in growth rate, but increased skin melanin level. The expression of critical pigmentation genes indicated that black background activated a distinct and opposite pigmentation regulating route to CORT. Although there was no interactive effect of background colour and CORT on phenotypic and metabolic variations, their additive effects further impact the trade-off between somatic growth, metabolic maintenance, and pigmentation in terms of resource allocation. In conclusion, the individual and additive effects of background colour and CORT exposure on tadpole plasticity were revealed. These results likely provide new insights into the environmental adaptation of animals.

The incidence of malnutrition in developing countries, such as many of those located in Sub-Saharan Africa, is still high, especially in vulnerable categories such as women of childbearing age. Among the several factors influencing dietary intake and eating habits, evidence shows the importance of food knowledge (FK), essential in establishing and maintaining strategies aimed at reducing the burden of disease and promoting wellbeing. PCB chemical cost The present research was aimed at describing the methodology for designing a questionnaire to investigate Food Knowledge in Tanzania women of childbearing age.

The Food Knowledge Questionnaire (FKQ) was developed by adapting items from the Ugandan questionnaire to cultural background and food habits of Tanzanian women of childbearing age. A pilot version of the FKQ was tested on a small sample of respondents, 83 women of childbearing age living in the region of Arusha. After describing the sample and the scorings, the pilot version of the questionnaire was analysed through Mup consisting of five sections Section A, about social and economic information (17 questions); Section B, related to health experts advice (5 questions); Section C1 and C2 about food groups (7+7 questions); Section D about diseases and nutrition (6 questions). The questionnaire includes 114 close-ended questions in total. The exploratory analyses performed have led to define the relationships between items and latent constructs, allowing to identify of "correct food knowledge" and "incorrect food knowledge" archetypals.When we say or understand verbal numbers, a major challenge to the cognitive system is the need to process the number's syntactic structure. Several studies showed that number syntax is handled by dedicated processes, however, it is still unclear how precisely these processes operate, whether the number's syntactic structure is represented explicitly, and if it is - what this representation looks like. Here, we used a novel experimental paradigm, syntactic priming of numbers, which can examine in detail the syntactic representation of multi-digit verbal numbers. In each trial, the participants - Arabic-Hebrew bilinguals and Hebrew monolinguals - heard a multi-digit number and responded orally with a random number. The syntactic structure of their responses was similar to that of the targets, showing that they represented the verbal number's syntax. This priming effect was genuinely syntactic, and could not be explained as lexical - repeating words from the target; as phonological - responding with words phonologically-similar to the target; or as a numerical distance effect - producing responses numerically close to the target. The syntactic priming effect was stronger for earlier words in the verbal number and weaker for later words, suggesting that the syntactic representation is capped by working-memory limits. We propose that syntactic priming could become a useful method to examine various aspects of the syntactic representation of numbers.Information is more likely believed to be true when it feels easy rather than difficult to process. An ecological learning explanation for this fluency-truth effect implicitly or explicitly presumes that truth and fluency are positively associated. Specifically, true information may be easier to process than false information and individuals may reverse this link in their truth judgments. The current research investigates the important but so far untested precondition of the learning explanation for the fluency-truth effect. In particular, five experiments (total N = 712) test whether participants experience information known to be true as easier to process than information known to be false. Participants in Experiment 1a judged true statements easier to read than false statements. Experiment 1b was a preregistered direct replication with a large sample and again found increased legibility for true statements-importantly, however, this was not the case for statements for which the truth status was unknown. Experiment 1b thereby shows that it is not the actual truth or falsehood of information but the believed truth or falsehood that is associated with processing fluency.

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