1,240 results on '"EELS - Earth"'
Search Results
2. Approaches to assess IgE mediated allergy risks (sensitization and cross-reactivity) from new or modified dietary proteins
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Bioinformatics ,Basophil activation test ,RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,Review ,Antigen binding ,Sensitization ,EELS - Earth ,Exposure ,Clinical study ,Health hazard ,In vivo study ,Computer model ,Life ,Enzymatic degradation ,Food allergy ,Hazard analysis ,Protein analysis ,Food and Nutrition ,Nutrition ,Risk assessment ,Cross reaction ,Allergen ,Methodology ,In vitro study ,Immunoglobulin E ,Nonhuman ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Immunogenicity ,Prick test ,Outcome assessment ,Allergenicity ,Protein intake ,IgE ,Risk factor ,Novel proteins ,DNA modification ,Healthy Living ,Human - Abstract
The development and introduction of new dietary protein sources has the potential to improve food supply sustainability. Understanding the potential allergenicity of these new or modified proteins is crucial to ensure protection of public health. Exposure to new proteins may result in de novo sensitization, with or without clinical allergy, or clinical reactions through cross-reactivity. In this paper we review the potential of current methodologies (in silico, in vitro degradation, in vitro IgE binding, animal models and clinical studies) to address these outcomes for risk assessment purposes for new proteins, and especially to identify and characterise the risk of sensitization for IgE mediated allergy from oral exposure. Existing tools and tests are capable of assessing potential crossreactivity. However, there are few possibilities to assess the hazard due to de novo sensitization. The only methods available are in vivo models, but many limitations exist to use them for assessing risk. We conclude that there is a need to understand which criteria adequately define allergenicity for risk assessment purposes, and from these criteria develop a more suitable battery of tests to distinguish between proteins of high and low allergenicity, which can then be applied to assess new proteins with unknown risks. © 2017 The Authors Chemicals/CAS: immunoglobulin E, 37341-29-0
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- 2018
3. Triage in preventive child healthcare: a prospective cohort study of care use and referral rates for children at risk
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Male ,Service supply and distribution ,Registration ,Major clinical study ,School health services ,EELS - Earth ,Life ,CH - Child Health ,Cost benefit analysis ,Prospective study ,Child ,Emergency health service ,Netherlands ,Risk assessment ,Prevention ,Task shifting ,Patient referral ,Primary care ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Social status ,Outcome assessment ,Preschool child ,Health ,Female ,Triage ,Cohort analysis ,Healthy for Life ,Healthy Living ,Human - Abstract
Objectives A novel triage approach to routine assessments was introduced to improve the efficiency of Preventive Child Healthcare (PCH): PCH assistants carried out pre-assessments of all children and sent the children with suspected health problems to follow-up assessments conducted by a physician or nurse. This two-step approach differed from the usual approach, in which physicians or nurses assessed all children. This study was aimed to examine the impact of triage and task shifting on care for children at risk identified by PCH or parents and schools. Design and participants An observational prospective cohort design was used, with an analysis of the basic registration data from the preventive health assessments for 1897 children aged 5 to 6, and 10 to 11, years from a sample of 41 schools stratified by socioeconomic status, region of PCH service and urbanisation. Setting A comparison was made between two PCH services in the Netherlands that used the triage approach and two PCH services that provided the usual approach. Main outcome measures The primary outcome measures were the referral rates to either additional PCH assessments or external services. The secondary outcome measures were the rates of PCH assessments requested by, for example, parents and schools. Results Overall, a higher referral rate to additional PCH assessments was found for the triage approach than for the usual approach (OR 1.3, 95% CI 1.0 to 1.6), mainly in the age group of 5 to 6 years (OR 1.9, 95% CI 1.3 to 2.7). We found a lower rate of referral to external services in the triage approach (OR 0.4, 95% CI 0.3 to 0.7) and a higher referral rate to PCH assessments on request (OR=4.6, 95% CI 3.0 to 7.0). Conclusions The triage approach provides extra opportunities to deliver PCH assessments and PCH assessments on request for children at risk. Further research is needed into the cost benefits of the triage approach.
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- 2017
4. Preventive child health care at elementary school age: The costs of routine assessments with a triage approach
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Primary school ,Cost control ,Nurse ,Questionnaire ,Follow up ,Major clinical study ,Patient referral ,Child health care ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,EELS - Earth ,Preschool child ,Life ,Health ,Physician ,CH - Child Health ,School child ,Healthy for Life ,Child ,Controlled study ,Healthy Living ,Emergency health service ,Human ,Netherlands - Abstract
Background. Triage in Preventive Child Health Care (PCH) assessments could further the efficient use of human resources and budgets and therefore make extra care possible for children with specific needs. We assessed the costs of routine PCH assessments with and without triage for children aged 5/6 years and 10/11 years. In a triage approach, PCH assistants conduct pre-assessments to identify children requiring follow-up assessments by a physician or nurse. In the usual approach, all children are assessed by a physician and an assistant (children aged 5/6 years) or a nurse (children aged 10/11 years). Methods. All the direct costs of conducting routine PCH assessments with the triage and usual approach were assessed using a bottom-up micro-costing approach. In four PCH services in the Netherlands, two using triage and two the usual approach, professionals completed questionnaires about time spent on assessments, including time related to non-attendance at assessments, the referral of children and administration. Results. The projected costs for PCH professionals working on PCH assessments amounted to €5.2 million per cohort of 100,000 children aged 5/6 years in the triage approach, and €7.6 million in the usual approach. The projected costs in both approaches for children aged 10/11 years were about €4 million per 100,000 children. Conclusion. The triage approach to PCH resulted in a projected cost reduction of about one-third, compared with usual practice, for routine assessments by physicians of children aged 5/6 years. There are minimal cost savings in the group of children aged 10/11 years when nurses are involved and so other considerations such as workforce shortages would be required to justify a change to a triage approach. Further research is needed to investigate the differences in costs of care after the completion of the routine assessments.
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- 2017
5. Perspective: A Definition for Whole-Grain Food Products—Recommendations from the Healthgrain Forum
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Food regulation ,Food labelling ,Dietary guidelines ,Food guidelines ,Life ,Public policy ,Dietary intake ,Cereal ,FI - Functional Ingredients ,Whole grains ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,EELS - Earth ,Nutrition - Abstract
Whole grains are a key component of a healthy diet, and enabling consumers to easily choose foods with a high whole-grain content is an important step for better prevention of chronic disease. Several definitions exist for whole-grain foods, yet these do not account for the diversity of food products that contain cereals. With the goal of creating a relatively simple whole-grain food definition that aligns with whole-grain intake recommendations and can be applied across all product categories, the Healthgrain Forum, a not-for-profit consortium of academics and industry working with cereal foods, established a working group to gather input from academics and industry to develop guidance on labeling the whole-grain content of foods. The Healthgrain Forum recommends that a food may be labeled as “whole grain” if it contains $30% whole-grain ingredients in the overall product and contains more whole grain than refined grain ingredients, both on a dry-weight basis. For the purposes of calculation, added bran and germ are not considered refined-grain ingredients. Additional recommendations are also made on labeling whole-grain content in mixed-cereal foods, such as pizza and ready meals, and a need to meet healthy nutrition criteria. This definition allows easy comparison across product categories because it is based on dry weight and strongly encourages a move from generic whole-grain labels to reporting the actual percentage of whole grain in a product. Although this definition is for guidance only, we hope that it will encourage more countries to adopt regulation around the labeling of whole grains and stimulate greater awareness and consumption of whole grains in the general population. Adv Nutr 2017;8:525–31.
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- 2017
6. Exploring the potential of triage and task-shifting in preventive child health care
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Preventive child health care ,School health services ,Health service supply and distribution ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Task-shifting ,Preventive health assessment ,Specific needs ,EELS - Earth ,Life ,Health ,CH - Child Health ,Triage ,Efficient organization ,Healthy for Life ,Children ,Healthy Living ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
We studied a novel triage approach to the organisation of routine assessments by Preventive Child Health care (PCH), including task-shifting among professionals. In the triage approach, access to PCH, and the detection of the health problems studied, were comparable with the usual approach. The efficient deployment of PCH professionals using triage and task-shifting reduced the costs and involvement of PCH physicians and nurses in routine assessments, particularly in the youngest age group (5 to 6 years). The associated release of workforce and budgets may create more opportunities for the delivery of care to children and their families with specific health-care needs. In our study, in the triage approach PCH physicians and nurses provided more demand-driven care at the request of parents and others such as school professionals. We have emphasised the importance of making the PCH programme more flexible to create time for PCH professionals to collaborate with professionals from the school system, and from the youth care and primary care systems, with the aim of improving joint commitment to early detection, and the delivery of more coordinated care. More research is needed into the outcomes of referral to extra care and into the cost benefits of the triage approach.
- Published
- 2017
7. Dose-dependent prebiotic effect of lactulose in a computer-controlled in vitro model of the human large intestine
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MSB - Microbiology and Systems Biology ADME - ADME/DMPK ,Biomedical Innovation ,Butyrate ,Life Triskelion BV ,Environmental and Life Sciences TNO Bedrijven ,Lactulose ,EELS - Earth ,Bifidobacteria ,Ammonia ,Lactobacilli ,Microbial fermentation ,Anaerostipes ,Biology ,Healthy Living - Abstract
Lactulose, a disaccharide of galactose and fructose, used as a laxative or ammonia-lowering drug and as a functional food ingredient, enhances growth of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus at clinically relevant dosages. The prebiotic effect of subclinical dosages of Lactulose, however, remains to be elucidated. This study analyses changes in the microbiota and their metabolites after a 5 days Lactulose treatment using the TIM-2 system, a computer-controlled model of the proximal large intestine representing a complex, high density, metabolically active, anaerobic microbiota of human origin. Subclinical dosages of 2-5 g Lactulose were used. While 2 g Lactulose already increased the short-chain fatty acid levels of the intestinal content, 5 g Lactulose were required daily for 5 days in this study to exert the full beneficial prebiotic effect consisting of higher bacterial counts of Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus, and Anaerostipes, a rise in acetate, butyrate and lactate, as well as a decrease in branched-chain fatty acids, pH (suggested by an increase in NaOH usage), and ammonia. © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
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- 2017
8. Flooding in The Netherlands : How people's interpretation of personal, social and institutional resources influence flooding preparedness
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HOI - Human Behaviour & Organisational Innovations ,2015 Human & Operational Modelling ,Dual processing ,Preparedness ,Flooding ,Participation ,Environment and Life Sciences ,Trust ,health care economics and organizations ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Worldwide there is a growing need for citizens to prepare for environmental risks to mitigate potential adversity. In order to predict preparedness, behavioral models typically used variables at an individual level of analysis, such as risk perception and assessment of the effectiveness of possible actions (response-efficacy). The present study elaborated on these findings by also incorporating affect and social (participation and community efficacy) and institutional (trust and empowerment) level variables. The goal of the research was to examine to what extent these different variables could predict flood preparedness of 629 Dutch citizens resident in The Hague (an area below sea level). The results showed that affect had both a direct and an indirect effect on level of preparedness. The indirect pathway was mediated by people's assessment of the probability of a future event. This supports the notion that preparatory behavior is influenced by both a cognitive and an affective route. At the social level, a direct effect for participation was found: the more residents participated in their community the more they prepared. At the institutional level, the influence of empowerment on preparedness was mediated by participation. Overall, the results point to the need to address both cognition and affect in communicating risks and to make better use of social networks in facilitating citizen preparedness for hazards. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
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- 2017
9. Improving access to school health services as perceived by school professionals
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Male ,education ,Clinical assessment ,Health assessments ,Doctor nurse relation ,School health services ,complex mixtures ,EELS - Earth ,Life ,CH - Child Health ,Child ,Cross-sectional study ,Emergency health service ,Primary school ,Consultation ,Questionnaire ,Teacher ,Preventive child health care ,Follow up ,School health service ,Accessibility ,Child health care ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Specific needs ,Task-shifting ,humanities ,Health ,Human experiment ,Randomized controlled trial ,Female ,Perception ,Healthy for Life ,Controlled study ,Healthy Living ,Human - Abstract
Background The organisation of health assessments by preventive health services focusing on children’s health and educational performance needs to be improved due to evolving health priorities such as mental health problems, reduced budgets and shortages of physicians and nurses. We studied the impact on the school professionals’ perception of access to school health services (SHS) when a triage approach was used for population-based health assessments in primary schools. The triage approach involves pre-assessments by SHS assistants, with only those children in need of follow-up being assessed by a physician or nurse. The triage approach was compared with the usual approach in which all children are assessed by physicians and nurses. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional study, comparing school professionals’ perceptions of the triage and the usual approach to SHS. The randomly selected school professionals completed digital questionnaires about contact frequency, the approachability of SHS and the appropriateness of support from SHS. School care coordinators and teachers were invited to participate in the study, resulting in a response of 444 (35.7%) professionals from schools working with the triage approach and 320 (44.6%) professionals working with the usual approach. Results Respondents from schools using the triage approach had more contacts with SHS and were more satisfied with the appropriateness of support from SHS than respondents in the approach-as-usual group. No significant differences were found between the two groups in terms of the perceived approachability of SHS. Conclusions School professionals were more positive about access to SHS when a triage approach to routine assessments was in place than when the usual approach was used. Countries with similar population-based SHS systems could benefit from a triage approach which gives physicians and nurses more opportunities to attend schools for consultations and assessments of children on demand.
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- 2017
10. Atorvastatin accelerates clearance of lipoprotein remnants generated by activated brown fat to further reduce hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis
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Mouse ,Hypercholesterolemia ,Drug potentiation ,Biomedical Innovation ,Brown adipose tissue ,Triacylglycerol ,5 [2 [[2 (3 chlorophenyl) 2 hydroxyethyl]amino]propyl] 1 ,Animal tissue ,EELS - Earth ,Life ,Atorvastatin ,Cholesterol metabolism ,Lipid and lipoprotein metabolism ,Animal model ,cardiovascular diseases ,Animal experiment ,Western diet ,Lipoprotein ,Biology ,High density lipoprotein cholesterol ,Lipoprotein metabolism ,Lipid liver level ,Lipid composition ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Atherosclerosis ,Fatty acid ,Proprotein convertase 9 ,Lipid transport ,Nonhuman ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Lipid oxidation ,Triacylglycerol blood level ,Drug effect ,2 dicarboxylic acid ,Cholesterol ,Cholesterol blood level ,Lipid metabolism ,3 benzodioxole 2 ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Energy expenditure ,Female ,Gene expression ,MHR - Metabolic Health Research ,Controlled study ,Healthy Living - Abstract
Background and aims Activation of brown adipose tissue (BAT) reduces both hyperlipidemia and atherosclerosis by increasing the uptake of triglyceride-derived fatty acids by BAT, accompanied by formation and clearance of lipoprotein remnants. We tested the hypothesis that the hepatic uptake of lipoprotein remnants generated by BAT activation would be accelerated by concomitant statin treatment, thereby further reducing hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis. Methods APOE*3-Leiden.CETP mice were fed a Western-type diet and treated without or with the selective β3-adrenergic receptor (AR) agonist CL316,243 that activates BAT, atorvastatin (statin) or both. Results β3-AR agonism increased energy expenditure as a result of an increased fat oxidation by activated BAT, which was not further enhanced by statin addition. Accordingly, statin treatment neither influenced the increased uptake of triglyceride-derived fatty acids from triglyceride-rich lipoprotein-like particles by BAT nor further lowered plasma triglyceride levels induced by β3-AR agonism. Statin treatment increased the hepatic uptake of the formed cholesterol-enriched remnants generated by β3-AR agonism. Consequently, statin treatment further lowered plasma cholesterol levels. Importantly, statin, in addition to β3-AR agonism, also further reduced the atherosclerotic lesion size as compared to β3-AR agonism alone, without altering lesion severity and composition. Conclusions Statin treatment accelerates the hepatic uptake of remnants generated by BAT activation, thereby increasing the lipid-lowering and anti-atherogenic effects of BAT activation in an additive fashion. We postulate that, in clinical practice, combining statin treatment with BAT activation is a promising new avenue to combat hyperlipidemia and cardiovascular disease.
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- 2017
11. Spontaneous ultra-weak photon emission in correlation to inflammatory metabolism and oxidative stress in a mouse model of collagen-induced arthritis
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Ultra-weak photon emission ,MSB - Microbiology and Systems Biology ,Life ,Collagen-induced arthritis ,Metabolomics ,Biomedical Innovation ,Correlation networks ,Systems biology ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Biology ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
The increasing prevalence of rheumatoid arthritis has driven the development of new approaches and technologies for investigating the pathophysiology of this devastating, chronic disease. From the perspective of systems biology, combining comprehensive personal data such as metabolomics profiling with ultra-weak photon emission (UPE) data may provide key information regarding the complex pathophysiology underlying rheumatoid arthritis. In this article, we integrated UPE with metabolomics-based technologies in order to investigate collagen-induced arthritis, a mouse model of rheumatoid arthritis, at the systems level, and we investigated the biological underpinnings of the complex dataset. Using correlation networks, we found that elevated inflammatory and ROS-mediated plasma metabolites are strongly correlated with a systematic reduction in amine metabolites, which is linked to muscle wasting in rheumatoid arthritis. We also found that increased UPE intensity is strongly linked to metabolic processes (with correlation co-efficiency | r | value > 0.7), which may be associated with lipid oxidation that related to inflammatory and/or ROS-mediated processes. Together, these results indicate that UPE is correlated with metabolomics and may serve as a valuable tool for diagnosing chronic disease by integrating inflammatory signals at the systems level. Our correlation network analysis provides important and valuable information regarding the disease process from a system-wide perspective.
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- 2017
12. TNO I-Screen: Intestinal Microbiotica Screening Platform for Functional Ingredients
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Identification ,Ingredients ,Life ,Food ,Models ,Food and Nutrition ,FI - Functional Ingredients ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Biology ,Healthy Living ,Components ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
TNO’s intestinal screening model (TNO i-screen) helps to quickly identify food ingredients that modulate the intestinal microbiota composition. For manufacturers, searching for health-promoting ingredients is a complex and time-consuming process. Large numbers of substances have to be screened, while for some components almost no proper identification methods are available. When a functional ingredient has finally been selected, extensive in vitro and human volunteer studies are required to demonstrate its safety and to validate its efficacy prior to marketing it as beneficial to health.
- Published
- 2016
13. Actuele ontwikkelingen in leugendetectie
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Safety and Security ,Defence ,Psychology ,Human & Operational Modelling ,Lying ,NO - Networked Organisations ,Safety ,Detecting ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Lying detectors ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Leugendetectie is een multidisciplinair onderzoeksveld dat zich op dit moment snel ontwikkelt dankzij technologische ontwikkelingen en interesse uit verschillende vakgebieden zoals informatica en behavioral economics. Door leugenonderzoekers wordt onder liegen verstaan het bewust creëren van een verkeerd beeld bij een ander, zonder waarschuwing vooraf (in tegenstelling tot bijvoorbeeld het bijwonen van een goochelshow). Dit beeld kan zowel gecreëerd worden door het fabriceren van onjuiste informatie, als door het weglaten van essentiële informatie. Onderzoek laat zien dat mensen niet zo goed zijn in het detecteren van leugens in het lab. Uit een meta-analyse van ruim 200 leugenonderzoeken bleek dat mensen niet veel beter scoren dan kans niveau1. Om detectieaccuraatheden te verhogen hebben in het afgelopen decennium verschillende ontwikkelingen plaatsgevonden die de betrouwbaarheid van leugendetectie kunnen verhogen of die ervoor zorgen dat leugendetectie beter in de praktijk kan worden toegepast. De belangrijkste recente ontwikkelingen zijn te groeperen rondom vier thema’s die hieronder worden besproken.
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- 2016
14. TNO i-screen intestinal microbiota screening platform for determining metabolism of drugs
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Metabolism ,MSB - Microbiology and Systems Biology ,Intestinal ,Life ,Drugs ,Biomedical Innovation ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Biology ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth ,Absorption - Abstract
TNO’s intestinal screening model (TNO i-screen) helps to quickly identify pharmacological compounds that are metabolized by intestinal microbiota. For pharmaceutical companies, searching for novel pharmaceuticals is a complex and time-consuming process. When a novel drug has been selected, extensive in vitro and clinical studies are required to demonstrate its metabolism, safety and efficacy prior to releasing it to the market. Increasing evidence has shown that gut microbiota are involved in the metabolic transformation of many drugs, influencing drug pharmacokinetics and thus, efficacy and safety profiles.
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- 2016
15. Estimation of volcanic ash emissions through assimilating satellite data and ground‐based observations
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CAS - Climate ,Urban Development ,Earth & Environment ,Environment ,Built Environment ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
In this paper, we reconstruct the vertical profile of volcanic ash emissions by assimilating satellite data and ground‐based observations using a modified trajectory‐based 4D‐Var (Trj4DVar) approach. In our previous work, we found that the lack of vertical resolution in satellite ash column data can result in a poor estimation of the injection layer where the ash is emitted into the atmosphere. The injection layer is crucial for the forecast of volcanic ash clouds. To improve estimation, Trj4DVar was implemented, and it has shown increased performance in twin experiments using synthetic observations. However, there are some cases with real satellite data where Trj4DVar has difficulty in obtaining an accurate estimation of the injection layer. To remedy this, we propose a modification of Trj4DVar, test it with synthetic twin experiments, and evaluate real data performance. The results show that the modified Trj4DVar is able to accurately estimate the injection height (location of the maximal emission rate) by incorporating the plume height (top of the ash plume) and mass eruption rate data obtained from ground‐based observations near the source into the assimilation system. This will produce more accurate emission estimations and more reliable forecasts of volcanic ash clouds. Also provided are two strategies on the preprocessing and proper use of satellite data.
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- 2016
16. Aureobasidium melanogenum: a native of dark biofinishes on oil treated wood
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Linseed oil ,MSB - Microbiology and Systems Biology ,Life ,Mould staining ,Pine Sustainable ,Wood protection ,Healthy for Life ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Aureobasidium pullulans ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
The genus Aureobasidium, which is known as a wood staining mould, has been detected on oil treated woods in the specific stain formation called biofinish. This biofinish is used to develop a new protective, self-healing and decorative biotreatment for wood. In order to understand and control biofinish formation on oil treated wood, the occurrence of different Aureobasidium species on various wood surfaces was studied. Phenotypic variability within Aureobasidium strains presented limitations of morphological identification of Aureobasidium species. PCR amplification and Sanger sequencing of ITS and RPB2 were used to identify the culturable Aureobasidium species composition in mould stained wood surfaces with and without a biofinish. The analysed isolates showed that several Aureobasidium species were present and that Aureobasidium melanogenum was predominantly detected, regardless of the presence of a biofinish and the type of substrate. A. melanogenum was detected on wood samples exposed in the Netherlands, Cameroon, South Africa, Australia and Norway. ITS-specific PCR amplification, cloning and sequencing of DNA extracted from biofinish samples confirmed results of the culturing based method: A. melanogenum is predominant within the Aureobasidium population of biofinishes on pine sapwood treated with raw linseed oil and the outdoor placement in the Netherlands.
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- 2016
17. Viability, function and morphological integrity of precision-cut liver slices during prolonged incubation: Effects of culture medium
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Life ,RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,Biomedical Innovation ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Biology ,Healthy Living ,Prolonged incubation ,EELS - Earth ,Precision-cut liver slices - Abstract
Precision-cut liver slices (PCLS) are an ex vivo model for metabolism and toxicity studies. However, data on the maintenance of the morphological integrity of the various cell types in the slices during prolonged incubation are lacking. Therefore, our aims were to characterize morphological and functional changes in rat PCLS during five days of incubation in a rich medium, RegeneMed®, and a standard medium, Williams' Medium E. Although cells of all types in the slices remain viable, profound changes in morphology were observed, which were more prominent in RegeneMed®. Slices underwent notable fibrosis, bile duct proliferation and fat deposition. Slice thickness increased, resulting in necrotic areas, while slice diameter decreased, possibly indicating cell migration. An increased proliferation of parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells (NPCs) was observed. Glycogen, albumin and Cyp3a1 were maintained albeit to a different level in two media. In conclusion, both hepatocytes and NPCs remain viable and functional, enabling five-day toxicity studies. Tissue remodeling and formation of a new capsule-like cell lining around the slices are evident after 3-4 days. The differences in effects between media emphasize the importance of media selection and of the recognition of morphological changes in PCLS, when interpreting results from toxicological or pharmacological studies. © 2015 Elsevier B.V.
- Published
- 2015
18. InTESTine™ study processes that determine intestinal absorption
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Metabolism ,MSB - Microbiology and Systems Biology ,Intestinal ,Life ,Biomedical Innovation ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth ,Absorption - Published
- 2015
19. Computational design of safer nanomaterials
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Life ,RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,Nanotechnology ,Biomedical Innovation ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Nanomaterials are expected to find applications in numerous consumer products, posing the challenge to guarantee their safety and environmental sustainability before they can be transferred from research labs to end-consumer products. One emerging solution, called safe design, relies on the implementation, throughout the R&D phase, of key aspects related to the safety and sustainability of nanomaterials, in this way anticipating potential negative health effects. This article proposes a computational screening approach to design safer nanomaterials. The work is based on the calculation of key physicochemical properties of nanomaterials that are related to their safety, functionality and synthetic feasibility. These properties are then used to select a pool of promising structures for further experimental testing and development. The concept is demonstrated on a set of core@shell metal oxide nanoparticles for transparent UV-protecting coating applications. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.
- Published
- 2015
20. Analogieen met verkeersmanagement
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Traffic ,Urbanisation ,Mobility & Logistics ,STL - Sustainable Transport & Logistics PCS - Perceptual and Cognitive Systems ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,EELS - Earth ,2013 Organisation 2013 Human - Abstract
TrafficQuest ziet het als een van haar opgaven om het verkeersmanagementproces zo goed mogelijk te doorgronden en op basis van het begrip van het proces sturingsprincipes te traceren en uit te werken die toegepast kunnen worden bij het (beter) managen van verkeer in een wegennetwerk”. Eén van de manieren om meer inzicht in de processen te krijgen is een vergelijking met andere domeinen waarin zich soortgelijke processen afspelen. We doen dit in de vorm van een workshop “Analogieën voor Verkeersmanagement”. De gekozen aanpak houdt in dat het domein verkeersmanagement wordt vergeleken met een aantal andere domeinen waarin zich vergelijkbare processen afspelen. We zijn hier op zoek naar analogieën met het verkeersmanagement proces. De gevonden analogieën worden vervolgens gebruikt om: • Processen te analyseren en onderling te vergelijken • Mogelijkheden om processen aan te sturen te inventariseren en te beoordelen • Op basis daarvan het inzicht in het verkeersmanagement proces te vergroten Door het onderling vergelijken van de wijze waarop systemen functioneren en ook door te kijken en te vergelijken hoe het functioneren van deze systemen extern en intern wordt beïnvloed, kunnen interessante parallellen worden getrokken in het functioneren van systemen. In deze studie staat verkeersmanagement/netwerkmanagement centraal (het focus systeem). Verkeersmanagement (ook wel DVM genoemd) heeft als doel verkeersstromen zo te beïnvloeden dat de kwaliteit van de verkeersafwikkeling – gegeven een aantal doelstellingen en randvoorwaarden – optimaal is. Bij verkeersmanagement zijn het de voertuigen en in het bijzonder de bestuurders van die voertuigen die via een reeks van maatregelen geïnformeerd, geadviseerd en gestuurd worden. In andere systemen is vaak ook sprake van stromen die (extern en intern) beïnvloed worden. De wijze waarop deze stromen worden afgewikkeld kan interessante ideeën opleveren voor het management van verkeer en omgekeerd. Kortom analogieën met andere disciplines kunnen helpen om problemen in het eigen vakgebied beter te duiden en processen beter te begrijpen en aan te sturen.
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- 2015
21. Unlocking our microbiome
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Life ,Food and Nutrition ,FI - Functional Ingredients ,Microbiome ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Biology ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
TNO combines state of the art technologies, such as organoids, high throughput sequencing and computational modelling to gain insight and discover functionalities in complex biological systems, to unlock our microbiome for your applications. Our microbiome analysis and modelling techniques can help in solving questions, such as: How does this ingredient influence the microbiome composition? Can my ingredient suppress outgrowth of pathogens? Will these fibers be metabolized by our microbiome?
- Published
- 2014
22. Simulating organic aerosol over Europe: Concentration, chemical composition and sources
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CAS - Climate ,Earth / Environmental ,Urbanisation ,Environment ,Environment & Sustainability ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
PMCAMx-2008, a detailed three-dimensional chemical transport model, was applied for the first time in Europe to simulate fine organic aerosol concen-trations during the months of May 2008, February 2009, July 2009 and January 2010. The model includes a state-of-the-art organic aerosol module which is based on the volatility basis set framework treating both primary and secondary organic components as semivolatile and photochemically reactive. The model predicts that fresh primary OA (POA) is a small contributor to organic PM concentrations in Europe during the summer and spring, and that oxygenated species (oxidized primary and biogenic secondary) dominate the ambient OA. During the winter model results suggest a significant underestimation of OA emissions from wood burning. Use of very high resolution emissions inventory does not result in a significant improvement of the predictions of the model over the Megacity of Paris.
- Published
- 2014
23. Modelling clean air
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CAS - Climate ,Earth / Environmental ,Urbanisation ,Environment ,Chemical transport modeling ,Environment & Sustainability ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth ,Biogenic and anthropogenic emissions ,Clean air - Abstract
An attempt has been made by a combination of theory, observations, and especially modeling to determine the concentrations of trace gases and aerosols in the troposphere, without the influence of human beings.
- Published
- 2014
24. Indicatie van de zorgvraag in 2030 : prognoses van functioneren en chronische aandoeningen : Rotterdam
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Behavioural Changes ,Health ,Chronisch zieken ,Healthy for Life ,LS - Life Style ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth ,Zorg - Abstract
In deze rapportage wordt een indicatie van de zorgvraag in 2030 van de gemeente Rotterdam beschreven. Hiertoe zijn prognoses gemaakt van het functioneren, het voorkomen van chronische aandoeningen, psychosociale problematiek en verstandelijke beperkingen in de toekomstige bevolking van Rotterdam.
- Published
- 2014
25. The antimicrobial peptide LL-37 facilitates the formation of neutrophil extracellular traps
- Subjects
Cell death ,Male ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Fluorescence microscopy cell ,Mouse ,Hydrophobicity ,Biomedical Innovation ,Immunofluorescence microscopy ,EELS - Earth ,Life ,Electron microscopy ,Nuclear membrane ,Beta defensin 1 ,Cell nucleus membrane ,Polymyxin B ,Bacterial membrane ,Neutrophil ,CBRN - CBRN Protection ,NETosis ,Cathelicidin ,Cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide LL 37 ,Extracellular matrix ,Nonhuman ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,1404-26-8 ,Normal human ,Phenotype ,Lamin B ,1405-20-5 ,Animal cell ,Neutrophil extracellular trap ,Controlled study ,Healthy Living - Abstract
NETs (neutrophil extracellular traps) have been described as a fundamental innate immune defence mechanism. Duringformation of NETs, the nuclear membrane is disrupted by an asyet unknown mechanism. In the present study we investigated the role of human cathelicidin LL-37 in nuclear membrane disruption and formation of NETs. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that 5 μMLL-37 significantly facilitated NET formation by primary human blood-derived neutrophils alone, in the presence of the classical chemical NET inducer PMA or in the presence of Staphylococcus aureus. Parallel assays with a random LL-37 fragment library indicated that the NET induction is mediated by the hydrophobic character of the peptide. The translocalization of LL-37 towards the nucleus and the disruption of the nuclear membrane were visualized using confocal fluorescence microscopy. In conclusion, the present study demonstrates a novel role for LL-37 in the formation of NETs.
- Published
- 2014
26. Indicatie van de zorgvraag in 2030 : prognoses van functioneren en chronische aandoeningen : Friesland
- Subjects
Behavioural Changes ,Health ,Chronisch zieken ,Healthy for Life ,LS - Life Style ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth ,Zorg - Abstract
In deze rapportage wordt een indicatie van de zorgvraag in 2030 van de provincie Friesland beschreven. Hiertoe zijn prognoses gemaakt van het functioneren, het voorkomen van chronische aandoeningen, psychosociale problematiek en verstandelijke beperkingen in de toekomstige bevolking van de provincie Friesland.
- Published
- 2014
27. Synergistic use of Lotos-Euros and NO2 tropospheric columns to evaluate the Nox emission trends over Europe
- Subjects
Emission trends ,CAS - Climate ,Earth / Environmental ,Lotos-Euros ,Urbanisation ,Environment ,NO2 ,Environment & Sustainability ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
The NOx-emission trend has been evaluated over Europe using the LOTOS-EUROS model and the NO2 tropospheric columns from OMI.
- Published
- 2014
28. Novel role of the antimicrobial peptide LL-37 in the protection of neutrophil extracellular Traps against degradation by bacterial nucleases
- Subjects
Life ,Nucleases ,CBRN - CBRN Protection ,Antimicrobial peptides ,Cathelicidin ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Neutrophil extracellular traps ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) have been described as a fundamental innate immune defence mechanism. They consist of a nuclear DNA backbone associated with different antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) which are able to engulf and kill pathogens. The AMP LL-37, a member of the cathelicidin family, is highly present in NETs. However, the function of LL-37 within NETs is still unknown because it loses its antimicrobial activity when bound to DNA in the NETs. Using im-munofluorescence microscopy, we demonstrate that NETs treated with LL-37 are distinctly more resistant to S. aureus nuclease degradation than nontreated NETs. Biochemical assays utilising a random LL-37-fragment library indicated that the blocking effect of LL-37 on nuclease activity is based on the cationic character of the AMP, which facilitates the binding to neutrophil DNA, thus protecting it from degradation by the nuclease. In good correlation to these data, the cationic AMPs human beta defensin-3 and human neutro-phil peptide-1 showed similar protection of neutrophil-de-rived DNA against nuclease degradation. In conclusion, this study demonstrates a novel role of AMPs in host immune defence: beside its direct antimicrobial activity against various pathogens, cationic AMPs can stabilise neutrophil-de-rived DNA or NETs against bacterial nuclease degradation.
- Published
- 2014
29. Erratum : Identification of humic-like substances (HULIS) in oxygenated organic aerosols using NMR and AMS factor analyses and liquid chromatographic techniques (Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (2014) 14 (25-45))
- Subjects
CAS - Climate ,Urban Development ,Earth / Environmental ,Environment ,Built Environment ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Published
- 2014
30. Prenatale zorg minder vroeggeboorte dankzij groepsconsult
- Subjects
Behavioural Changes ,Health ,CH - Child Health ,Healthy for Life ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Bij een tiental verloskundigenpraktijken in Nederland krijgen zwangere vrouwen geen een-op-eenconsulten, maar informatie en medische zorg in een groep. Deze methodiek, CenteringPregnancy, lijkt vroeggeboorte tegen te gaan.
- Published
- 2014
31. Geogenic and agricultural controls on the geochemical composition of European agricultural soils
- Subjects
GM - Geomodelling ,Agricultural impact ,Energy / Geological Survey Netherlands ,Earth / Environmental ,Geological Survey Netherlands ,Soil geochemistry ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Geosciences ,Robust factor analysis ,EELS - Earth ,GEMAS - Abstract
Purpose: Concern about the environmental impact of agriculture caused by intensification is growing as large amounts of nutrients and contaminants are introduced into the environment. The aim of this paper is to identify the geogenic and agricultural controls on the elemental composition of European, grazing and agricultural soils. Materials and methods: Robust factor analysis was applied to data series for Al, B, Ca, Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Na, Ni, P, S, Se, Sr, U, Zn (ICP-MS) and SiO2, K2O, Na2O, Fe2O3, Al2O3 (XRF) based on the European GEMAS dataset. In addition, the following general soil properties were included: clay content, pH, chemical index of alteration (CIA), loss on ignition (LOI), cation exchange capacity (CEC), total organic carbon (TOC) and total carbon and total sulfur. Furthermore, this dataset was coupled to a dataset containing information of historic P2O5 fertilization across Europe. Also, a mass balance was carried out for Cd, Cu and Zn to determine if concentrations of these elements found in the soils have their origin in historic P2O5 fertilization. Results and discussion: Seven geogenic factors and one agricultural factor were found of which four prominent ones (all geogenic): chemical weathering, reactive iron-aluminum oxide minerals, clay minerals and carbonate minerals. Results for grazing and agricultural soils were near identical, which further proofs the prominence of geogenic controls on the elemental composition. When the cumulative amount of P2O5 fertilization was considered, no extra agriculture-related factors became visible. The mass balance confirms these observations. Conclusions: Overall, the geological controls are more important for the soil chemistry in agricultural and grazing land soils than the anthropogenic controls. © 2013 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
- Published
- 2014
32. Urban background noise mapping: The multiple-reflection correction term
- Subjects
Urban Development ,Earth & Environment ,UES - Urban Environment & Safety ,Built Environment ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Acoustics and Audiology ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Mapping of road traffic noise in urban areas according to standardized engineering calculation methods systematically results in an underestimation of noise levels at areas shielded from direct exposure to noise, such as inner yards. In most engineering methods, road traffic lanes are represented by point sources and noise levels are computed utilizing point-to-point propagation paths. For a better prediction of noise levels in shielded urban areas, an extension of engineering methods by an attenuation term Acan has been proposed, including multiple reflections of the urban environment both in the source and in the receiver area. The present work has two main contributions for the ease of computing Acan. Firstly, it is shown by numerical calculations that Acan may be divided into independent source and receiver environment terms, As and Ar. Based on an equivalent free field analogy, the distance dependence of these terms may moreover be expressed analytically. Secondly, an analytical expression is proposed to compute As and Ar for 3D configurations from using 2D configurations only. The expression includes dependence of the street width-to-height ratio, the difference in building heights and the percentage of facade openings in the horizontal plane. For the expression to be valid, the source should be separated from the receiver environment by at least four times the street width. © S. Hirzel Verlag EAA.
- Published
- 2014
33. Feasibility of a 3D human airway epithelial model to study respiratory absorption
- Subjects
TARA - Toxicology and Risk Assessment PHS - Pharmacokinetics & Human Studies (tot 2013 daarna KFP) ,Respiratory absorption ,Biomedical Innovation ,3D human airway model ,Life Triskelion BV ,Environmental and Life Sciences TNO Bedrijven ,Biology ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
The respiratory route is an important portal for human exposure to a large variety of substances. Consequently, there is an urgent need for realistic in vitro strategies for evaluation of the absorption of airborne substances with regard to safety and efficacy assessment. The present study investigated feasibility of a 3D human airway epithelial model to study respiratory absorption, in particular to differentiate between low and high absorption of substances. Bronchial epithelial models (MucilAir™), cultured at the air–liquid interface, were exposed to eight radiolabeled model substances via the apical epithelial surface. Absorption was evaluated by measuring radioactivity in the apical compartment, the epithelial cells and the basolateral culture medium. Antipyrine, caffeine, naproxen and propranolol were highly transported across the epithelial cell layer (>5%), whereas atenolol, mannitol, PEG-400 and insulin were limitedly transported (
- Published
- 2014
34. Robot mood is contagious : Effects of robot body language in the imitation game
- Subjects
PCS - Perceptual and Cognitive Systems ,Body language ,Human Performances ,mental disorders ,Nonverbal cues ,Mood expression ,Human Robot Interaction (HRI) ,Behavioral cues ,Social robots ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Mood contagion is an automatic mechanism that induces a congruent mood state by means of the observation of another person's emotional expression. In this paper, we address the question whether robot mood displayed during an imitation game can (a) be recognized by participants and (b) produce contagion effects. Robot mood was displayed by applying a generic framework for mood expression using body language. By modulating the set of available behavior parameters in this framework for controlling pose and motion dynamics, the gestures performed by the humanoid robot NAO were adjusted to display either a positive or negative mood. In the study performed, we varied both mood as well as task difficulty. Our results show that participants are able to differentiate between positive and negative robot mood. Moreover, self-reported mood matches the mood of the robot in the easy task condition. Additional evidence for mood contagion is provided by the fact that we were able to replicate an expected effect of negative mood on task performance: in the negative mood condition participants performed better on difficult tasks than in the positive mood condition, even though participants' self-reported mood did not match that of the robot.
- Published
- 2014
35. Indicatie van de zorgvraag in 2030 : prognoses van functioneren en chronische aandoeningen : Amstelveen
- Subjects
Behavioural Changes ,Health ,Chronisch zieken ,Healthy for Life ,LS - Life Style ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth ,Zorg - Abstract
In deze rapportage wordt een indicatie van de zorgvraag in 2030 van de gemeente Amstelveen beschreven. Hiertoe zijn prognoses gemaakt van het functioneren, het voorkomen van chronische aandoeningen, psychosociale problematiek en verstandelijke beperkingen in de toekomstige bevolking van Amstelveen.
- Published
- 2014
36. Ecodriver. D32.1: Individual Use Cases and Test Scenarios Definition
- Subjects
Mobility ,Traffic ,Operations Modelling ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,SMb - Smart Mobility ,EELS - Earth - Published
- 2014
37. Response of SIA concentrations across Germany to emission changes during PM10 episodes in Spring 2009
- Subjects
CAS - Climate ,Earth / Environmental ,Urbanisation ,Environment ,Environment & Sustainability ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
The Chemistry Transport Model (CTM) REM-Calgrid (RCG) has been applied to investigate the non-linear relationship between emission changes and modelled SIA (=SO4 + NO3 + NH4) concentrations for a high PM10 episode in spring 2009. Emissions were reduced for the model domain only and the model domain including Boundary Conditions. It was found that the effectiveness of emission reductions increases with increasing emission reduction area whereas results were least dependent on the size of emission reduction area for ammonia emission changes.
- Published
- 2014
38. Sensitivity of PM assimilation results to Key parameters in the Ensemble Kalman filter
- Subjects
CAS - Climate ,PM ,Data assimilation ,Earth / Environmental ,Urbanisation ,Environment ,Lotos-Euros model ,Environment & Sustainability ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Physics::Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
To study and forecast atmospheric tracer concentrations at ground level, an assimilation system is available around the LOTOS-EUROS model based on the Ensemble Kalman filter technique. For applications focusing on air-quality related to aerosols, the available observation data is usually limited to ground based observations of total PM2.5 or PM10, and model uncertainty is specified for the emissions. In this study, the key parameters of the assimilation system have been varied: the assumed temporal variation in the emission uncertainty, the amplitude of the representation error, the localization length of the analysis, the averaging period of the observations, and the number of ensemble members in the filter. Although in theory these parameters are all important, the most important parameters are those related to the representation error between simulations and observations
- Published
- 2014
39. Indicatie van de zorgvraag in 2030 : prognoses van functioneren en chronische aandoeningen : Amsterdam
- Subjects
Behavioural Changes ,Health ,Chronisch zieken ,Healthy for Life ,LS - Life Style ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,EELS - Earth ,Zorg - Abstract
In deze rapportage wordt een indicatie van de zorgvraag in 2030 van de gemeente Amsterdamn. Hiertoe zijn prognoses gemaakt van het functioneren, het voorkomen van chronische aandoeningen, psychosociale problematiek en verstandelijke beperkingen in de toekomstige bevolking van Amsterdam.
- Published
- 2014
40. Modeling the European nitrogen budget: Effects of including the bi-directional surface-atmosphere exchange of ammonia
- Subjects
Surface-atmosphere exchange ,CAS - Climate ,Ammonia ,Earth / Environmental ,Urbanisation ,Environment ,Environment & Sustainability ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Modelling has been performed of the European nitrogen budget, and the effects of including the bi-directional surface-atmosphere exchange of ammonia have been investigated
- Published
- 2014
41. Sub-chronic toxicity study in rats orally exposed to nanostructured silica
- Subjects
Toxicity ,Urban Development ,In vivo ,Earth / Environmental ,AEC - Applied Environmental Chemistry ,Silica ,Synthetic amorphous silica ,Nano ,Built Environment ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Biology ,Oral exposure ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Background: Synthetic Amorphous Silica (SAS) is commonly used in food and drugs. Recently, a consumer intake of silica from food was estimated at 9.4 mg/kg bw/day, of which 1.8 mg/kg bw/day was estimated to be in the nano-size range. Food products containing SAS have been shown to contain silica in the nanometer size range (i.e. 5 - 200 nm) up to 43% of the total silica content. Concerns have been raised about the possible adverse effects of chronic exposure to nanostructured silica.Methods: Rats were orally exposed to 100, 1000 or 2500 mg/kg bw/day of SAS, or to 100, 500 or 1000 mg/kg bw/day of NM-202 (a representative nanostructured silica for OECD testing) for 28 days, or to the highest dose of SAS or NM-202 for 84 days.Results: SAS and NM-202 were extensively characterized as pristine materials, but also in the feed matrix and gut content of the animals, and after in vitro digestion. The latter indicated that the intestinal content of the mid/high-dose groups had stronger gel-like properties than the low-dose groups, implying low gelation and high bioaccessibility of silica in the human intestine at realistic consumer exposure levels. Exposure to SAS or NM-202 did not result in clearly elevated tissue silica levels after 28-days of exposure. However, after 84-days of exposure to SAS, but not to NM-202, silica accumulated in the spleen. Biochemical and immunological markers in blood and isolated cells did not indicate toxicity, but histopathological analysis, showed an increased incidence of liver fibrosis after 84-days of exposure, which only reached significance in the NM-202 treated animals. This observation was accompanied by a moderate, but significant increase in the expression of fibrosis-related genes in liver samples. Conclusions: although only few adverse effects were observed, additional studies are warranted to further evaluate the biological relevance of observed fibrosis in liver and possible accumulation of silica in the spleen in the NM-202 and SAS exposed animals respectively. In these studies, dose-effect relations should be studied at lower dosages, more representative of the current exposure of consumers, since only the highest dosages were used for the present 84-day exposure study. © 2014 van der Zande et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
- Published
- 2014
42. Measurement of the oxidative potential of PM2.5 and its constituents: The effect of extraction solvent and filter type
- Subjects
Urban Development ,Earth & Environment ,AEC - Applied Environmental Chemistry ,Environment ,Built Environment ,Particulate matter ,Reactive oxygen species ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Oxidative potential ,EELS - Earth ,Ascorbate acid depletion ,DTT ,ESR - Abstract
The capacity of Particulate Matter (PM) to oxidise target molecules, defined as its oxidative potential (OP), has been proposed as a biologically more relevant metric than PM mass. Different assays exist for measuring OP and their methodologies vary in the choice of extraction solvent and filter type. Little is known about the impact of extraction and filter type on reported OP. Four a-cellular assays; electron spin resonance (ESR), dithiothreitol (DTT), ascorbate acid depletion (AA) and reductive acridinium triggering (CRAT) assay were chosen to evaluate whether these differences affect the OP measurement, the correlation between OP from different assays and the association with PM chemical composition. We analysed 15 urban 48-72h PM2.5 samples collected on quartz and Teflon filters. The choice of extraction solvent had only a significant effect on OPDTT, while all OP measures for quartz filters were heavily attenuated. OP values derived from quartz were, however, highly correlated with those derived from Teflon. OPDTT correlated highly with OPCRAT, and OPESR correlated highly with OPAA. These correlations were affected by the choice of filter type. Correlations between OP and PM chemical composition were not affected by filter type and extraction solvent. These findings indicate that the measurement of relative OP reactivity is not greatly influenced by filter type and extraction solvent for the investigated assays. This robustness is also promising for exploratory use in monitoring and subsequent epidemiological studies. © 2013 The Authors.
- Published
- 2014
43. Civil military collaboration: Innovative approach for detection, protection and decontamination of CWAs and TICs. Implementing research into procurement
- Subjects
Warfare ,Life ,CBRN - CBRN Protection ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,EELS - Earth - Published
- 2014
44. From Laboratory to Road. A 2014 update of official and real-world fuel concumption and CO2 values for passenger cars in Europe
- Subjects
Emission ,Urbanisation ,Mobility & Logistics ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,2014 Operations Modelling ,STL - Sustainable Transport & Logistics ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Europe’s passenger-car efficiency regulation has very effectively driven down the official average CO2 emissions and fuel consumption of new passenger cars in the EU. The 2015 target of 130 grams of CO2 per kilometer (g/km) was met two years ahead of schedule and manufacturers are making good progress towards the 2020/21 target of 95 g/km. But beneath this apparent success there is cause for concern. The basis for the regulation are results obtained under laboratory conditions using the New European Driving Cycle (NEDC)—the so-called certification or “type-approval” values. To make real progress, however, the results recorded in the laboratory must translate dependably into CO2 reductions and fuel-consumption savings experienced on the road. This study, which builds on and extends the analysis begun in 2012 and continued in 2013, demonstrates that the year-over-year improvements reported via the type-approval tests are not reliably matched in everyday driving—and that the gap between the vehicle emissions testing laboratory and the real world of the road is getting wider.
- Published
- 2014
45. Osteoarthritis development is induced by increased dietary cholesterol and can be inhibited by atorvastatin in APOE*3Leiden.CETP mice, a translational model for atherosclerosis
- Subjects
Mouse ,Monocyte chemotactic protein 1 ,Biomedical Innovation ,Animal tissue ,Cholesterol intake ,EELS - Earth ,Endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule 1 ,Life ,Transgenic mouse ,Atorvastatin ,Animal model ,Animal experiment ,Biology ,Priority journal ,Atherosclerosis ,Nonhuman ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Cholesterol blood level ,Very low density lipoprotein ,Alanine aminotransferase ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Female ,Apolipoprotein E ,Knee osteoarthritis ,Cholesterol ester transfer protein ,MHR - Metabolic Health Research ,Etimibe ,Controlled study ,Healthy Living ,Serum amyloid A - Abstract
Objective Hypercholesterolaemia, a risk factor for atherosclerosis (ATH), has been suggested to have a role in the development of osteoarthritis (OA). To test this hypothesis, the effect of cholesterol and different cholesterol-lowering treatments on OA was investigated in a mouse model resembling human lipoprotein metabolism. Methods Female ApolipoproteinE*3Leiden.human Cholesteryl Ester Transfer Protein mice received a westerntype diet with 0.1% (w/w) cholesterol (LC), 0.3% (w/w) cholesterol alone (HC) or treated with 3 mg/kg/day atorvastatin or 0.3 mg/kg/day ezetimibe. One group remained on chow (control). After 39 weeks, OA grades of the knees and the extent of ATH were determined. Plasma cholesterol levels were measured throughout the study. Results LC and HC groups developed significantly more OA at the medial side than the control group in a dosedependent manner. Atorvastatin but not ezetimibe treatment significantly suppressed OA development. As expected, features of ATH were significantly increased in the LC and HC groups compared with the control group and suppressed by atorvastatin (48%) and ezetimibe (55%) treatment. There were significant correlations between the development of OA on the medial side of the joint and cholesterol exposure (r=0.4) or ATH features (r=0.3). Conclusions Dietary cholesterol and accordingly increased plasma levels play a role in the development of OA. The correlation found between OA, cholesterol and ATH demonstrates that these variables are connected, but indicates the contribution of other ongoing processes in the development of OA. The suppressive effect on OA development of atorvastatin but not of ezetimibe, which had similar cholesterol exposure levels, corroborates these findings.
- Published
- 2014
46. Do labour market reforms reduce labour productivity growth? A panel data analysis of 20 OECD countries (1960–2004)
- Subjects
Work and Employment ,Resilient Organisations ,OECD countries ,SP - Sustainable Productivity and Employability ,Workplace ,Low income ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Healthy Living ,health care economics and organizations ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Labour productivity ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Based on comprehensive regression analysis, the authors find that weak wage growth and a smaller labour share of national income significantly reduce labour productivity growth. They conclude that supply-side labour market reforms have contributed to reducing labour productivity growth: this cannot be explained by a deregulation-induced inflow of low-productivity labour as proposed by OECD researchers. They also discuss why deregulation, easier firing and higher labour turnover may damage learning and knowledge accumulation in companies, notably by weakening the functioning of the “routinized” innovation model (“Schumpeter II”). Finally, their findings raise doubts about the relevance of Baumol's law and Verdoorn's law.
- Published
- 2014
47. Intercomparison and evaluation of aerosol microphysical properties among AeroCom global models of a range of complexity
- Subjects
Industrial Innovation ,CAS - Climate ,Sustainable Chemical Industry ,Earth & Environment ,respiratory system ,Environment ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
This study examines the global variation in particle size distribution simulated by twelve global aerosol microphysics models to quantify model diversity and to identify any common biases against observations. Evaluation against size distribution measurements from a new European network of aerosol supersites shows that the mean model agrees quite well with the observations at many sites on the annual mean, but there are some seasonal biases common to many sites. TNO contributed to this study with aerosol observations from supersite Cabauw.
- Published
- 2013
48. Development of detection techniques for monitoring and optimizing biocide dosing in seawater flooding systems
- Subjects
Thiocholine ,Biomedical Innovation ,PHS - Pharmacokinetics & Human Studies RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,EELS - Earth ,Real-time detection ,Life ,Biocide residuals ,Acetylcholinesterase ,Seawater ,Biology ,Healthy Living ,Benzyl-dimethyldecylammonium ,Colorimetric - Abstract
Anaerobic microorganisms which are frequently associated with corrosion fail Control of bacterial activity are posing major challenge in Saudi Arabia's massive seawater flooding systems. Biocides are used to control bacteria throughout the oil industry. A study to explore the feasibility to develop a detection technique for biocide batch treatments, preferably on-line and in real time, for their potential use in seawater flooding system network is described. Several methods to measure key components of the biocide composition were investigated in the initial stage. Three different techniques were explored during the feasibility phase study to detect and measure concentrations of biocide in seawater. This helped our plans for designing a sensor based on such detection techniques. The techniques explored were to monitor change in temperature, change in pH, and change in chromophore concentration (colorimetric) in the enzymatic reaction. The investigated methods included the use of acetylcholine esterase, based on the pH change as a result of acetate formation, the production of reaction heat (thermal) or on the colorimetric detection of the chromophore concentration based on the conversion of acetylthiocholine in combination with a chromophore. It was found that the colorimetric system was the most versatile system to perform the measurement to be able to show the feasibility of the method in real sea water samples and to demonstrate the effects of the biocides on the measurement system.
- Published
- 2013
49. Differences in particulate matter concentrations between urban and rural regions under current and changing climate conditions
- Subjects
Climate Environment ,PM10 ,CAS - Climate ,Urban Development ,Earth & Environment ,Measurements ,Urban increment ,Climate change ,Chemistry transport model ,Built Environment ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Air and Sustainability ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
Pollution levels in urban areas and their surrounding rural regions differ due to different sources and density of emissions, different composition of pollutants as well as specific meteorological effects. These concentration differences for PM10 are investigated and compared in this study for three different north-west European urban agglomerations: The German Ruhr area, the Dutch Randstad and the German city of Berlin. Measurement data for PM10 for the years 2003-2008 at urban and rural background stations are selected from the AirBase database to specify the PM10 concentration difference between these urban areas and their surrounding rural regions, here defined as the urban increment. Whereas the absolute and relative measured urban increment averaged over the years 2003-2008 for the Ruhr area (7.4μgm-3, 35%) and Berlin (8.5μgm-3, 46%) are comparable in magnitude, a significantly smaller value is found for the Randstad (3.1μgm-3, 12%). To analyze whether the regional chemistry transport model LOTOS-EUROS is able to reproduce the measured urban increment simulation runs were performed for 2003-2008 on a 0.5°×0.25° lon-lat grid covering Europe and for the year 2008 on a finer grid of 0.125°×0.0625° covering the Netherlands and Germany, both with ECMWF meteorology as input. Although the model underestimates the absolute PM10 urban increment averaged over the years 2003-2008 for the Ruhr area (3.3μgm-3, 33%), the Randstad (1.5μgm-3, 12%) and Berlin (1.7μgm-3, 27%), the relative urban increment for the Ruhr area and the Randstad is in general agreement with the measurements. The tested increase of the horizontal resolution gives no systematic improvement of the simulated urban increment. However, an even higher resolution than used here seems to be more appropriate to capture the urban increment (especially for Berlin).The variability of the PM10 urban increment with weather is tested by means of the summer 2003, such an extreme synoptic situation is expected to occur more often in future. Measured and simulated PM10 concentrations in summer 2003 were compared to the summer average of 2003-2008. The response of the observed urban increment was found to depend on the urban area. In general the model reproduces the main features for the Randstad and Berlin.In order to investigate the impact of a changing climate on the PM10 urban increment, simulations were performed with the off-line coupled model system RACMO2 (regional climate model) - LOTOS-EUROS (air quality model) over Europe. Different sets of simulations were carried out using RACMO2 meteorology with ECHAM5 A1B and with MIROC3.2-hires A1B boundary conditions for the time period 1970-2060, as well as with ERA-interim boundary conditions for the time period 1989-2009. Anthropogenic emissions were kept constant in the LOTOS-EUROS simulations. Simulated concentrations differ between the runs using ECHAM and MIROC boundary conditions and both runs differ from the present-day simulations with ERA-interim forcing. The impact of climate change on the modeled PM10 concentrations and the urban increment was found to be small in both scenario runs. However the concentration differences between the simulations forced by either ECHAM or MIROC indicate that PM10 concentration levels are sensitive to circulation patterns rather than temperature change alone, and that PM10 concentration levels may thus change when circulation patterns change in the future. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd.
- Published
- 2013
50. Zeitliche und räumliche Verteilung der Grundwasser-Oberflächenwasser-Interaktion in den Niederlanden
- Subjects
GM - Geomodelling ,Earth & Environment ,Energy / Geological Survey Netherlands ,Geological Survey Netherlands ,Environmental and Life Sciences ,Geosciences ,EELS - Earth - Abstract
In the Netherlands the groundwater-surface water interaction processes vary spatially and temporarily. In this article we present maps of the spatial distribution of monthly water exchange modelled with the National Hydrological Instrument of the Netherlands (NHI) for three years that represent a dry, an average and a wet year. Additionally, for five characteristic regions we present the exchange in more detail, both the temporal variability and the origin of water fluxes. The simulation results provide a better understanding of the hydrogeological system. The Dutch water authorities use the maps in the planning process of measures to fulfil the framework directive of the European Union.
- Published
- 2013
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