224 results on '"Ming Mu"'
Search Results
2. Fluorescence Spectral Characteristics of Soil Dissolved Organic Matter in Zhengyangguan, Middle Reaches of Huaihe River Basin
- Author
-
Juan Ge, Liangmin Gao, Leilei Luan, Zhen Zhang, Haiqiang Zhang, Xinglan Zhao, and Ming Mu
- Subjects
Environmental Chemistry ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An Innovative Collaborative Design of Shape and Performance for Super-High-Contact-Ratio Spiral Bevel Gear
- Author
-
Yan-ming Mu, Xiang-ying Hou, Si-wei Yang, and Xue-ming He
- Subjects
Mechanical Engineering ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. <scp>Blue‐green</scp> emission of <scp>pepsin‐stabilized</scp> copper nanoclusters ultrafast detection of hemoglobin in human urine
- Author
-
Wei‐Bin Tseng, Ing‐Ting Wang, Lin Aiyu, Ming‐Mu Hsieh, and Wei‐Lung Tseng
- Subjects
General Chemistry - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Investigation of Sulfur Doping in Mn–Co Oxide Nanotubes on Surface-Enhanced Raman Scattering Properties
- Author
-
Sisi Wen, Ming Mu, Qinhui Xie, Bing Zhao, and Wei Song
- Subjects
Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
Doping engineering is an efficient strategy to manipulate the optoelectronic properties of metal oxides for sensing, catalysis, and energy applications. Herein, we have demonstrated the fabrication of sulfur (S)-doped Mn-Co oxides to regulate their band and surface electronic structures, which is beneficial to enhancing the charge transfer (CT) between the metal oxides and their adsorbed molecules. As expected, significantly enhanced SERS signals are achieved on S-doped Mn-Co oxide nanotubes, and the minimum detection concentration can reach as low as 10
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Relationship among low baseline muscle mass, skeletal muscle quality and mortality in critically ill children
- Author
-
Yang Xue, Tian-Tian Wang, Lei Zhang, Shuang Zheng, Yue-Ming Mu, Fei-Yong Jia, and Lin Du
- Abstract
Background: Adult studies have shown that low baseline muscle mass at ICU admission was associated with poor clinical outcomes. However, no information on the relationship between baseline muscle quality or mass and clinical outcomes in critically ill children was found. In this investigation, the aim was to ascertain the correlation among baseline muscle mass, muscle quality and clinical outcomes in severely ill children. Methods: This is a retrospective observational study. A total of 3775 children were admitted to the PICU of the First Hospital of Jilin University in China during the research period from January 2019 to July 2021, of which 262 patients were eligible for inclusion. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) was performed before or within 72 hours of admission to the PICU to assess skeletal muscle mass and quality Results:. BMI was greater in the normal SMI group than in the low SMI group (P=0.004), the length of PICU stay (P=0.02) was longer in the low SMI group than in the normal SMI group, and the in-PICU mortality rate (P=0.025) in the normal SMI group was superior tothat in the low SMI group. Children with low SMD had a higher in-PICU mortality rate, were younger and weighed less. Mortality was substantially greater in patients with lower SMD and prolonged hospital stay (log-rank, P=0.007). SMD was an independent predictor for length of PICU stay and in-PICU mortality. Conclusions: Low baseline skeletal muscle quality in severely ill children is closely tied with a higher in-PICU mortality rate and longer length of PICU stay, and is an independent risk factor for unfavorable clinical outcomes. However, muscle mass did not show a similar strong association. Therefore, baseline muscle quality in severely ill children need more attention to avoid poor prognosis. Trial registration: ChiCTR1800020196 (19/12/2018).
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Effects of land use on water quality at different spatial scales in the middle reaches of Huaihe River
- Author
-
Ming Mu, Liangmin Gao, Haiqiang Zhang, Juan Ge, Zhen Zhang, Yuhui Qiu, and Xinglan Zhao
- Subjects
Aquatic Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Directed self-assembly of Ag+-deposited MoS2 quantum dots for colorimetric, fluorescent and fluorescence-lifetime sensing of alkaline phosphatase
- Author
-
Manivannan Madhu, Chien-Min Chao, Chen-Yi Ke, Ming-Mu Hsieh, and Wei-Lung Tseng
- Subjects
Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Ultrasensitive Determination of 10 Phenothiazine Enantiomers in Biological Fluids by Capillary Electrophoresis with Contactless Conductivity Detection
- Author
-
Yi-Yang Sung and Ming Mu Hsieh
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Lightweight Many-to-Many Anonymous Authenticated Key Agreement Scheme for Intelligent Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks
- Author
-
Wen-Chen Wang, Xiao-Jun Zhang, Hao Wang, Li-Ming Mu, and Hao-Yu Tang
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Network Meta-analysis of the Therapeutic Effects of Hypoglycemic Drugs and Intensive Lifestyle Modification on Impaired Glucose Tolerance
- Author
-
Yuyan Fu, Yi Ming Mu, J. Xuan, Yue Zhang, and Yushi Huang
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Network Meta-Analysis ,Population ,Type 2 diabetes ,law.invention ,Impaired glucose tolerance ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Glucose Intolerance ,medicine ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Pharmacology (medical) ,education ,Life Style ,Acarbose ,Pharmacology ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine.disease ,Metformin ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose In the Guidelines for the Prevention and Control of Type 2 Diabetes in China (2017 edition), intensive lifestyle interventions are recommended for preventing the progression of impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) to type 2 diabetes mellitus. Acarbose and metformin can also be considered if intensive lifestyle modification has been ineffective for 6 months. But the effects of intensive lifestyle modification and glucose-lowering drug interventions that work best in the population with IGT are unclear. This network meta-analysis assessed the effectiveness of intensive lifestyle modification, acarbose, and metformin in treating populations with IGT. Methods We systematically searched both Chinese- and English-language databases, including China Knowledge, the Cochrane Library, Embase, PubMed, VIP, and Wanfang, for articles published between database inception and September 2019. Randomized, controlled clinical trials in patients with IGT treated with acarbose, metformin, and intensive lifestyle modification were assessed for eligibility. The data from all included studies were evaluated by 2 reviewers independently in accordance with the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Intervention version 6.0. A network meta-analysis was performed by using R software version 3.6.1. Findings The data from 53 randomized controlled trials were included in the review, with a sample size of 21,208 patients. Compared with the control group, the use of acarbose, metformin, and/or intensive lifestyle modification was associated with reduced rates of progression to diabetes (relative risks [RRs] [95% credible intervals]: acarbose, 0.37 [0.29–0.47]; metformin, 0.39 [0.30–0.50]; intensive lifestyle modification, 0.61 [0.50–0.73]). The surface under the cumulative ranking (SUCRA) value of acarbose was 88.35%, supporting that acarbose was more effective in reducing the rate of progression to diabetes compared with controls. With acarbose, metformin, and intensive lifestyle modification, the rates of achieving a normal glucose level were increased by RR = 2.1, 1.7, and 1.2, respectively when compared with control group. The SUCRA value of acarbose was 99.69%, supporting the optimal effect of acarbose in achieving a normal blood glucose level. Implications In this meta-analysis in patients with IGT, compared with controls, acarbose and metformin were associated with decreased rates of progression to diabetes and increased rates of achieving a normal glucose level. Acarbose use was associated with an increased rate of achieving a normal glucose level, while intensive lifestyle modification was not.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Bifunctional porous SnO2/Ag nanofibers for efficient electroreduction of carbon dioxide to formate and its mechanism elucidation by in-situ surface-enhanced Raman scattering
- Author
-
Junjie Chen, Benhua Ma, Zhoubing Xie, Weimo Li, Yumei Yang, Ming Mu, Xiaoxin Zou, Bing Zhao, and Wei Song
- Subjects
Process Chemistry and Technology ,Catalysis ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Ultrasensitive analysis of mirtazapine and its metabolites enantiomers in body fluids using ultrasound-enhanced and surfactant-assisted dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction followed by polymer-mediated stacking in capillary electrophoresis
- Author
-
Qiao-Ting Yan, Meng-Chin Chen, and Ming-Mu Hsieh
- Subjects
Surface-Active Agents ,Liquid Phase Microextraction ,Polymers ,Organic Chemistry ,Electrophoresis, Capillary ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Mirtazapine ,General Medicine ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Body Fluids - Abstract
A simple, rapid, and sensitive technique for measuring mirtazapine and its metabolites enantiomers in human fluids, such as urine and serum, was developed by applying ultrasound-enhanced and surfactant-assisted dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction (USA-DLLME) integrated with poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride) (PDDAC)-mediated stacking in capillary electrophoresis (CE). The parameters that affect extraction and stacking performance, such as the extraction volume, surfactant types, surfactant concentrations, salt additives, extraction time, solution pH, and background electrolytes, were comprehensively studied and optimized to achieve optimal detection performance. Under optimal extraction conditions (injection of 120 µL of C
- Published
- 2022
14. ANALYSIS OF CULTURAL CONFLICTS IN CHINESE STUDENTS OF RUSSIAN LANGUAGE
- Author
-
Ming Mu
- Subjects
Russian language ,Political science ,Cultural conflict ,Linguistics - Abstract
The most important thing in teaching a language is teaching culture. Language teaching and culture are inextricably linked. Although differences between cultures are a prerequisite and basis for cultural exchange, they also cause conflicts and communication barriers when different cultures come into contact with each other. It is an intercultural language teaching activity. Students should not only learn the Russian language itself, but also face various cultural factors in the context of the Russian language, therefore, resolving cultural conflicts is an urgent task for teaching languages. This article summarizes previous research, takes linguistic and cultural studies as a theoretical basis, analyzes cultural conflicts in language teaching, considers cultural conflicts as a research subject, and analyzes and analyzes the causes of conflicts in order to find suitable ways to reduce conflicts and promote healthy development of Russian teaching. language.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Randomised controlled trial: effect of metformin add-on therapy on functional cure in entecavir-treated patients with chronic hepatitis B
- Author
-
Wei Zhang, Yuan-Yuan Li, Qing-Hua Shang, Lin Qi, Mi-Mi Sun, Gang Chen, Yong An, Jing-Xin Li, Wang-Ping Jia, Zhong-An Sun, Hui-Bin Xu, Qing-Mei Gao, Li Tang, Xiao-Wen Wang, Ji-Yuan Zhang, Yi-Ming Mu, and Fu-Sheng Wang
- Subjects
Hepatitis B virus ,Hepatitis B, Chronic ,Hepatitis B Surface Antigens ,Treatment Outcome ,Hepatology ,DNA, Viral ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Hepatitis B e Antigens ,Antiviral Agents ,Metformin - Abstract
Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) clearance, indicating functional cure or resolved chronic hepatitis B (CHB), remains difficult to achieve via nucleos(t)ide analogue monotherapy. We investigated whether metformin add-on therapy could help achieve this goal in entecavir-treated patients with hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-negative CHB.Patients with HBeAg-negative CHB who met eligibility criteria (entecavir treatment forgt; 12 months, HBsAglt; 1000 IU/mL) were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive 24 weeks of either metformin (1000 mg, oral, once a day) or placebo (oral, once a day) add-on therapy. The group allocation was blinded for both patients and investigators. Efficacy and safety analyses were based on the intention-to-treat set. The primary outcome, serum HBsAg level (IU/mL) at weeks 24 and 36, was analysed using mixed models.Sixty eligible patients were randomly assigned to the metformin (n = 29) and placebo (n = 31) groups. There was no substantial between-group difference in the HBsAg level at week 24 (adjusted mean difference 0.05, 95% confidence interval -0.04 to 0.13, p = 0.278) or week 36 (0.06, -0.03 to 0.15, p = 0.187), and no significant effect of group-by-time interaction on the HBsAg level throughout the trial (p = 0.814). The occurrence of total adverse events between the two groups was comparable (9 [31.0%] of 29 vs. 5 [16.1%] of 31, p = 0.227) and no patient experienced serious adverse events during the study.Although it was safe, metformin add-on therapy did not accelerate HBsAg clearance in entecavir-treated patients with HBeAg-negative CHB.
- Published
- 2022
16. Whole fresh fruit intake and risk of incident diabetes in different glycemic stages: a nationwide prospective cohort investigation
- Author
-
Li, Li, Hai-Yan, Yang, Yan, Ma, Xing-Huan, Liang, Min, Xu, Jie, Zhang, Zhen-Xing, Huang, Li-Heng, Meng, Jia, Zhou, Jing, Xian, Ying-Jun, Suo, Song, Huang, Jin-Wei, Cai, Bi-Hui, Meng, Zhi-Yun, Zhao, Jie-Li, Lu, Yu, Xu, Tian-Ge, Wang, Mian, Li, Yu-Hong, Chen, Wei-Qing, Wang, Yu-Fang, Bi, Guang, Ning, Fei-Xia, Shen, Ru-Ying, Hu, Gang, Chen, Li, Chen, Lu-Lu, Chen, Hua-Cong, Deng, Zheng-Nan, Gao, Ya-Nan, Huo, Qiang, Li, Chao, Liu, Yi-Ming, Mu, Gui-Jun, Qin, Li-Xin, Shi, Qing, Su, Qin, Wan, Gui-Xia, Wang, Shuang-Yuan, Wang, You-Min, Wang, Sheng-Li, Wu, Yi-Ping, Xu, Li, Yan, Tao, Yang, Zhen, Ye, Xue-Feng, Yu, Yin-Fei, Zhang, Jia-Jun, Zhao, Tian-Shu, Zeng, Xu-Lei, Tang, Ying-Fen, Qin, and Zuo-Jie, Luo
- Abstract
Fruit intake is beneficial to several chronic diseases, but controversial in diabetes. We aimed to investigate prospectively the associations of whole fresh fruit intake with risk of incident type 2 diabetes (T2D) in subjects with different glucose regulation capacities.The present study included 79,922 non-diabetic participants aged ≥ 40 years from an ongoing nationwide prospective cohort in China. Baseline fruit intake information was collected by a validated food frequency questionnaire. Plasma HbA1c, fasting and 2 h post-loading glucose levels were measured at both baseline and follow-up examinations. Cox proportional hazards models were used to calculate hazard ratio (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for incident diabetes among participants with normal glucose tolerance (NGT) and prediabetes, after adjusted for multiple confounders. Restricted cubic spline analysis was applied for dose-response relation.During a median 3.8-year follow-up, 5886 (7.36%) participants developed diabetes. Overall, we identified a linear and dose-dependent inverse association between dietary whole fresh fruit intake and risk of incident T2D. Each 100 g/d higher fruit intake was associated with 2.8% lower risk of diabetes (HR 0.972, 95%CI [0.949-0.996], P = 0.0217), majorly benefiting NGT subjects with 15.2% lower risk (HR 0.848, 95%CI [0.766-0.940], P = 0.0017), while not significant in prediabetes (HR 0.981, 95%CI 0.957-4.005, P = 0.1268). Similarly, the inverse association was present in normoglycemia individuals with a 48.6% lower risk of diabetes when consuming fruits 7 times/week comparing to those 1 time/week (HR 0.514, 95% CI [0.368-0.948]), but not in prediabetes (HR 0.883, 95% CI [0.762-1.023]).These findings suggest that higher frequency and amount of fresh fruit intake may protect against incident T2D, especially in NGT, but not in prediabetes, highlighting the dietary recommendation of higher fresh fruit consumption to prevent T2D in normoglycemia population.
- Published
- 2022
17. Ultrasensitive Analysis of Mirtazapine and its Metabolites Enantiomers in Body Fluids Using Ultrasound-Enhanced and Surfactant-Assisted Dispersive Liquid–Liquid Microextraction Followed by Polymer-Mediated Stacking in Capillary Electrophoresis
- Author
-
Qiao-Ting Yan and Ming Mu Hsieh
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Immune checkpoint therapy-elicited sialylation of IgG antibodies impairs antitumorigenic type I interferon responses in hepatocellular carcinoma
- Author
-
Rui-Qi Wu, Xiang-Ming Lao, Dong-Ping Chen, Hongqiang Qin, Ming Mu, Wen-Jie Cao, Jia Deng, Chao-Chao Wan, Wan-Yu Zhan, Jun-Cheng Wang, Li Xu, Min-Shan Chen, Qiang Gao, Limin Zheng, Yuan Wei, and Dong-Ming Kuang
- Subjects
Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
The reinvigoration of anti-tumor T cells in response to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapy is well established. Whether and how ICB therapy manipulates antibody-mediated immune response in cancer environments, however, remains elusive. Using tandem mass spectrometric analysis of modification of immunoglobulin G (IgG) from hepatoma tissues, we identified a role of ICB therapy in catalyzing IgG sialylation in the Fc region. Effector T cells triggered sialylation of IgG via an interferon (IFN)-γ-ST6Gal-I-dependent pathway. DC-SIGN
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A survey of caregiver burden for stroke survivors in non-teaching hospitals in Western China
- Author
-
Lu-Lu, Cao, Yu-Feng, Tang, Yan-Qiu, Xia, Ji-Hong, Wei, Gui-Rong, Li, Xiao-Ming, Mu, Cheng-Zhi, Jiang, Qi-Zu, Jin, Mei, He, and Li-Jun, Cui
- Subjects
Stroke ,China ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Caregivers ,Humans ,Caregiver Burden ,Social Support ,Survivors ,General Medicine ,Hospitals - Abstract
The social factors that moderate stroke caregiver burden have been found to be culture- and gender-specific. We examined the factors that influence the social support and self-efficacy of caregivers of stroke survivors and the burden of caregiving in China. To determine the caregiver burden of stroke survivors, their social support, and their self-efficacy. A total of 328 stroke survivors and their caregivers were recruited from 4 tertiary medical centers to participate in this cross-sectional study. The sociodemographic and stroke-related characteristics of the participants were obtained. Perceived social support and self-efficacy were assessed using the Social Support Rating Scale and General Self-efficacy Scale, respectively. Caregiver burden was assessed using the Zarit Burden Interview Scale. Relationships between the variables were assessed using Pearson's correlation, the chi-square test, and a paired t test. A total of 27.4% of the caregivers reported receiving adequate social support, while 20.7% reported high levels of self-efficacy. A total of 67.1% of the caregivers experienced varying degrees of care burden, while the remaining 32.9% felt no burden. Participants' sociodemographic characteristics (age, daily care time, self-rated health, and financial situation) were significantly related to caregiver burden, social support, and self-efficacy (P .001). The findings indicate an inverse relationship between caregiver burden, social support and self-efficacy. Adequate social support and self-efficacy can reduce stroke caregivers' burden. Hospital departments should provide assistance to stroke caregivers through educational programs and group training to increase their social support and self-efficacy, thereby alleviating their burden.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Directed self-assembly of Ag
- Author
-
Manivannan, Madhu, Chien-Min, Chao, Chen-Yi, Ke, Ming-Mu, Hsieh, and Wei-Lung, Tseng
- Subjects
Molybdenum ,Silver ,Quantum Dots ,Animals ,Colorimetry ,Disulfides ,Rabbits ,Alkaline Phosphatase ,Fluorescence - Abstract
We developed a triple-readout probe for colorimetric, fluorescent, and fluorescence-lifetime sensing of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) through the hydrolyzed ascorbic acid phosphate (AAP)-mediated formation of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) on Ag
- Published
- 2021
21. Fast determination of five chiral antipsychotic drugs using dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction combined with capillary electrophoresis
- Author
-
Tai-Chia Chiu, Ming Mu Hsieh, and Szu-Hua Chen
- Subjects
Detection limit ,Aqueous solution ,Chromatography ,010405 organic chemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,General Engineering ,Aqueous two-phase system ,Electrolyte ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Solvent ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Capillary electrophoresis ,chemistry ,Phenothiazine - Abstract
This study developed a new method for the extraction, clean up, chiral separation, and determination of five pairs of phenothiazine drugs using ultrasound-assisted dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction combined with capillary electrophoresis (CE). A mixture of extraction solvent (30 μL of CHCl3) and dispersive solvent (200 μL of tetrahydrofuran) was rapidly injected using a syringe, which formed tiny cloudy droplets of an organic extractant that dispersed entirely into the aqueous phase. After centrifuging, the sediment phase of volume 60 ± 0.5 μL was transferred into a small vial and evaporated to dryness. The residue was reconstituted in 5 μL of aqueous solution, analyzed using CE and then successfully baseline separated in 6 min using a background electrolyte composed of 5 mM hydroxypropyl-γ-cyclodextrin, 0.9% poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride), and 150 mM tris-formate at pH 3.0. The developed method was linear in the 0.01–10 μM range, with R2 ≥ 0.9956 for all target analytes. The limit of detection (S/N = 3) and the limit of quantification (S/N = 10) were 2–4 nM and 10 nM, respectively. Excellent repeatability (RSD ≤ 5.5%, n = 5) was achieved. The recoveries of all phenothiazine drugs from urine were in the 83.5–104.0% range. The advantages of this approach were low cost, versatility, simplicity, and high sensitivity.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Management of fracture risk in patients with diabetes — Chinese Expert Consensus
- Author
-
Dalong Zhu, Jian-min Liu, Wei‐Bo Xia, and Yi‐Ming Mu
- Subjects
Fracture risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Disease Management ,Expert consensus ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Complications ,Fractures, Bone ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Diabetes mellitus ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Bone quality ,Humans ,Medicine ,In patient ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,Expert Testimony - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The local immune landscape determines tumor PD-L1 heterogeneity and sensitivity to therapy
- Author
-
Wei-Ming Lin, Xiang-Ming Lao, Bo Li, Dong-Ping Chen, Chun-Xiang Huang, Ming Mu, Limin Zheng, Zheng-Yu Liu, Dong-Ming Kuang, Qiyi Zhao, Zhi-liang Gao, and Yuan Wei
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Myeloid ,Adolescent ,T-Lymphocytes ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Inflammation ,Mice, SCID ,B7-H1 Antigen ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Cancer immunotherapy ,Mice, Inbred NOD ,Neoplasms ,PD-L1 ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Aged ,biology ,business.industry ,Macrophages ,Cancer ,Hep G2 Cells ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Immune checkpoint ,Neoplasm Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer cell ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Female ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Programmed death-1 receptor ligand 1 (PD-L1) is a promising therapeutic target in aggressive cancers. However, immune landscapes and cancer hallmarks of human PD-L1(+) tumors as well as their roles in determining therapeutic efficacies are unknown. Here, we showed, in detailed studies of gene data regarding 9769 patients of 32 types of human cancers, that PD-L1 could not exclusively represent the IFN-γ signature and potentially signified proinflammatory myeloid responses in a tumor. PD-L1 heterogeneity endowed by local immune landscapes controlled cancer hallmarks and clinical outcomes of patients. Mechanically, NF-κB signal elicited by macrophage inflammatory responses generated PD-L1(+) cancer cells exhibiting capabilities to aggressively survive, support angiogenesis, and metastasize, whereas STAT1 signal triggered by activated T cells induced PD-L1(+) cancer cells susceptive to apoptosis. Importantly, PD-L1(+) cancer cells generated by macrophages established great resistance to conventional chemotherapy, cytotoxicity of tumor-specific effector T cells, and therapy of immune-checkpoint blockade. Therapeutic strategy combining immune-checkpoint blockade with macrophage depletion or NF-κB inhibition in vivo effectively and successfully elicited cancer regression. Our results provide insight into the functional features of PD-L1(+) tumors and suggest that strategies to influence functional activities of inflammatory cells may benefit immune-checkpoint blockade therapy.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Sensitive determination of warfarin and its metabolic enantiomers in body fluids via capillary electrophoresis combined with ultrasound-assisted dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction and online sample stacking
- Author
-
Zheng-Ren Wang, Ming-Mu Hsieh, and Ya-Ting Chang
- Subjects
Detection limit ,Analyte ,Chromatography ,Ethylene oxide ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Stacking ,02 engineering and technology ,Electrolyte ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Capillary electrophoresis ,chemistry ,Enantiomer ,0210 nano-technology ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
A sensitive technique for the measurement of warfarin and its metabolic enantiomers in human fluids such as urine and serum technique was developed by applying ultrasound-assisted dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction linked with poly(ethylene oxide)-mediated stacking in capillary electrophoresis. The parameters that influence extraction and stacking performance-the type of the extraction and dispersive solvents and their volume, extraction time, salt additives, sample matrix, solution pH, and the composition of background electrolyte stacking-were carefully studied and optimized based on the considering of obtaining the best detection sensitivity. Under the optimal extraction (30 μL C2H2Cl4 and 200 μL tetrahydrofuran in 1 mL of sample solution) and separation (0.5% PEO, 200 mM Tris-borate, pH 8.5, and 5 mM dimethyl-β-cyclodextrin) conditions, the enrichment factors of D-/L-warfarins and D-/L-7-OH warfarins covered from 1758 to 1859 and their limits of detection ranged from 0.34 to 0.38 nM. Calibration-related results exhibited acceptable linearity with the coefficient of determination higher than 0.99; the relative standard deviations of the peak area were determined to 4.1%–6.3% (n = 3). The recovery of four separated analytes spiked in samples of urine and serum was found to be 93%–110% and 95%–109%, respectively. We revealed that ultrasound-assisted dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction with poly(ethylene oxide)-mediated stacking in capillary electrophoresis could be a prompt and practical method for quantifying the levels of warfarin and its metabolic enantiomers in real-world samples, especially in biological fluids.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Microarray-based differential expression profiling of long noncoding RNAs and messenger RNAs in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded human papillary thyroid carcinoma samples
- Author
-
Hui-Xian Yan, Jin Du, Jing Fu, Wei Huang, Li-Meng Jia, Pang Ping, Ling Zhao, Ye-Qiong Song, Xiao-Meng Jia, Jing-Tao Dou, Yi-Ming Mu, Fu-Lin Wang, Wen Tian, and Zhao-Hui Lyu
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,endocrine system diseases ,Oncology ,messenger RNA ,Original Article ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) ,microarray ,Long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) - Abstract
Background Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) can regulate the expression of genes at almost every level. The altered expression of lncRNAs was observed in many kinds of cancers. Until recently, few studies have focused on the function of lncRNAs in the context of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC). Methods In the current study, we collected seven PTC and nodular goiter tissue samples and explored mRNA and lncRNA expression patterns in these samples by microarray. Results We observed aberrant expression of 94 lncRNAs and 99 mRNAs in the seven PTC samples as compared to the nodular goiter tissue [fold change (FC) ≥2.0; P
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Inhibition of catalytic activity of fibrinogen-stabilized gold nanoparticles via thrombin-induced inclusion of nanoparticle into fibrin: Application for thrombin sensing with more than 104-fold selectivity
- Author
-
Ming-Mu Hsieh, Wei-Lung Tseng, Shi-Wei Zhan, Jia-Hui Lin, Cheng-Ju Yu, and Kai-Hsin Huang
- Subjects
Aqueous solution ,biology ,Chemistry ,Aptamer ,Nanoparticle ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Fibrinogen ,01 natural sciences ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Fibrin ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Thrombin ,Colloidal gold ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,Naked eye ,0210 nano-technology ,Instrumentation ,Spectroscopy ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Citrate-capped gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) modified with thrombin-binding aptamer are often implemented for colorimetric, fluorescent, and electrochemical detection of thrombin in an aqueous solution. However, researchers have rarely explored the application of fibrinogen-modified AuNPs (F-AuNPs) for thrombin sensing. We present a simple, inexpensive, sensitive, and selective probe for colorimetric assay of thrombin through combining thrombin-induced inclusion of F-AuNPs into Fibrin and F-AuNPs-catalyzed reduction of 4-nitrophenol with an excess amount of NaBH4. Considering that fibrinogen stabilized citrate-capped AuNPs against a high-ionic-strength buffer, F-AuNPs efficiently catalyzed the NaBH4-mediated decrease of yellow 4-nitrophenol to colorless 4-aminophenol. The presence of thrombin converted fibrinogen into fibrin on the nanoparticle surface, leading to the inclusion of nanoparticles into fibrin. The formation of fibrin inhibited that the AuNPs catalyzed the NaBH4-mediated reduction of 4-nitrophenol. Consequently, the color of the solution gradually varied from colorless to yellow with increasing thrombin concentration. The proposed system was shown to be accurate in the quantification of small differences in the concentration of human thrombin over the range of 4–60 pM. The lowest detectable concentration of human thrombin by the naked eye was as low as 16 pM. We demonstrated the practical application of the proposed system in quantifying 1–15 nM human thrombin in human plasma.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Relationship Between Myocardial Perfusion and Myocardial Function in Dilated Cardiomyopathy by Shown Ultrasonography
- Author
-
Yu-ming Mu, Ailiman Mahemuti, Lina Guan, Lingjie Yang, and Juan Ma
- Subjects
Adult ,Cardiomyopathy, Dilated ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Speckle tracking echocardiography ,Microcirculation ,Basal (phylogenetics) ,Internal medicine ,Mitral valve ,medicine ,Humans ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Area under the curve ,Myocardial Perfusion Imaging ,Dilated cardiomyopathy ,Heart ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Echocardiography ,Case-Control Studies ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
Myocardial contrast echocardiography (MCE) and two-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography (2D-STE) were used to detect left ventricular myocardial microcirculation perfusion and myocardial systolic function in dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and to explore the relationship between the two.Conventional ultrasound, MCE, and 2D-STE examinations were performed on 30 patients and 30 controls. Left ventricular microcirculation perfusion, left ventricular longitudinal strain (GLS), and circumferential strain (GCS) were analyzed to further compare the correlation between left ventricular perfusion and myocardial strain parameters.Regional myocardial perfusion was reduced in patients with DCM, manifesting as a decrease in the rising slope (A) of the mid-segment of the posterior septum, the peak intensity (PI) of the mid-segment of the anterior septum and the posterior septum, the apical segment of the lateral wall, the area under the curve (AUC) of the posterior septum, the basal segment of the posterior wall, the anterior septum, posterior septum, posterior wall, mid-segment of the lateral wall, and apical segment of the lateral wall and the overall average PI and AUC of the mid-segment, compared with that in the controls (P < 0.05). The left ventricular systolic function and the strain parameters GLS and GCS of DCM patients were lower than those of the controls (P < 0.001). Correlation analysis revealed a positive correlation between the A of the mitral valve and GCS (r = 0.372, P = 0.043), and MV-E/e' had a positive correlation with the AUC of the basal and intermediate segments (r = 0.379, P = 0.039; r = 0.404, P = 0.027).In patients with DCM, regional myocardial microcirculation perfusion is reduced, and myocardial strain is impaired. Myocardial perfusion has a good positive correlation with myocardial mechanics.
- Published
- 2021
28. The Effects of Gravity on the Response of Centrifugal Pendulum Vibration Absorbers
- Author
-
Bruce Geist, Darryl Tchokogoué, Steven W. Shaw, Brian F. Feeny, and Ming Mu
- Subjects
Vibration ,Physics ,Gravity (chemistry) ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,Steady state (electronics) ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Gravity force ,General Engineering ,Pendulum ,Resonance ,020302 automobile design & engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics - Abstract
This article describes the effects of gravity on the response of systems of identical, cyclically arranged, centrifugal pendulum vibration absorbers (CPVAs) fitted to a rotor spinning about a vertical axis. CPVAs are passive devices composed of movable masses suspended on a rotor, suspended such that they reduce torsional vibrations at a given engine order. Gravitational effects acting on the absorbers can be important for systems spinning at relatively low rotation speeds, for example, during engine idle conditions. The main goal of this study is to predict the response of a CPVA/rotor system in the presence of gravity. A linearized model that includes the effects of gravity and an order n torque acting on the rotor is analyzed by exploiting the cyclic symmetry of the system. The results show that a system of N absorbers responds in one or more groups, where the absorbers in each group have identical waveforms but shifted phases. The nature of the waveforms can have a limiting effect on the absorber operating envelope. The number of groups is shown to depend on the engine order n and the ratio N/n. It is also shown that there are special resonant effects if the engine order is n = 1 or n = 2, the latter of which is particularly important in applications. In these cases, the response of the absorbers has a complicated dependence on the relative levels of the applied torque and gravity. In addition, it is shown that for N > 1, the rotor response is not affected by gravity, at least to leading order, due to the cyclic symmetry of the gravity effects. The linear model and the attendant analytical predictions are verified by numerical simulations of the full nonlinear equations of motion.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Putting surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy to work for nanozyme research: Methods, materials and applications
- Author
-
Ming Mu, Sisi Wen, Saizhen Hu, Bing Zhao, and Wei Song
- Subjects
Spectroscopy ,Analytical Chemistry - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Insulinoma misdiagnosed as epilepsy in 44 Chinese patients
- Author
-
Yu-Qing, Qu, Chao, Zhang, Xian-Ling, Wang, Qing-Hua, Guo, Kang, Chen, Li, Zang, Jin, Du, Wen-Hua, Yan, Yu, Pei, Wei-Jun, Gu, Jing-Tao, Dou, Jian-Ming, Ba, Zhao-Hui, Lyu, and Yi-Ming, Mu
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,China ,Epilepsy ,Humans ,Female ,Insulinoma ,Diagnostic Errors ,Middle Aged ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Insulinoma is a rare pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor that can spontaneously produce excess endogenous insulin, resulting in recurrent and serious hypoglycemia. Patients with insulinoma always have intermittent neuroglycopenia, which has been frequently reported as being misdiagnosed as epilepsy. In this report, we analyzed the clinical data of patients with confirmed insulinoma who had ever been misdiagnosed to have epilepsy.The retrospective review was performed on 266 patients with confirmed insulinoma at the First Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital between January 2000 and July 2020.1. The diagnosis of insulinoma was confirmed in 266 patients. Forty-four patients [male/female=1/1.8, aged (41.25±12.30) years old] were misdiagnosed to have epilepsy, with a misdiagnosis rate of 16.5%. 2. Thirty-eight patients presented with consciousness disorder. Eleven patients presented with palpitation, sweating, and anxiety. Five patients presented with convulsion and 6 patients presented with abnormal behavior and delirium. 3. Twenty-two patients underwent EEG examination. EEG showed spike wave or spike-slow complex wave in 5 patients, decreased α wave and increased slow wave in θ and δ band in 7 patients, and was normal in 10 patients. 4. Thirty-five patients were incorrectly prescribed with AEDs and 22 patients were even misdiagnosed to have refractory epilepsy. 5. All these 44 patients underwent successful surgery, and hypoglycemia symptoms were relieved after insulinoma resection.Patients with insulinoma sometimes share common clinical characteristics with epilepsy. To patients with epilepsy or suspected epilepsy, especially with poor response to ADEs, hypoglycemia caused by insulinoma should be emphasized in the differential diagnosis.
- Published
- 2020
31. Revascularization of Coronary Artery Chronic Total Occlusion by Active Antegrade Reverse Wire Technique
- Author
-
Pei-Pei Hou, Xiao-jiao Zhang, Cheng-fu Wang, De-feng Luo, Yong Wang, Bao-jun Chen, Zhan-Xiu Zhang, Bo Luan, Ai-jie Hou, and Da-Ming Mu
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Article Subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Revascularization ,Total occlusion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Main vessel ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Postoperative Complications ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Circumflex ,Vein ,Aged ,business.industry ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Middle Aged ,Coronary Vessels ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Coronary Occlusion ,RC666-701 ,Conventional PCI ,Chronic Disease ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Artery ,Research Article - Abstract
Objectives. To assess the effectiveness and safety of ARW for vascular recanalization in CTO patients. Background. Chronic total occlusion (CTO) of coronary artery accompanied with large branch distal to the occluded segment (
- Published
- 2020
32. Inverted U-Shaped Associations between Glycemic Indices and Serum Uric Acid Levels in the General Chinese Population: Findings from the China Cardiometabolic Disease and Cancer Cohort (4C) Study
- Author
-
Yuan Yue, Zhu, Rui Zhi, Zheng, Gui Xia, Wang, Li, Chen, Li Xin, Shi, Qing, Su, Min, Xu, Yu, Xu, Yu Hong, Chen, Xue Feng, Yu, Li, Yan, Tian Ge, Wang, Zhi Yun, Zhao, Gui Jun, Qin, Qin, Wan, Gang, Chen, Zheng Nan, Gao, Fei Xia, Shen, Zuo Jie, Luo, Ying Fen, Qin, Ya Nan, Huo, Qiang, Li, Zhen, Ye, Yin Fei, Zhang, Chao, Liu, You Min, Wang, Sheng Li, Wu, Tao, Yang, Hua Cong, Deng, Jia Jun, Zhao, Lu Lu, Chen, Yi Ming, Mu, Xu Lei, Tang, Ru Ying, Hu, Wei Qing, Wang, Guang, Ning, Mian, Li, Jie Li, Lu, and Yu Fang, Bi
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Male ,China ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,Middle Aged ,Uric Acid ,Cohort Studies ,Asian People ,Glycemic Index ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Abstract
The relationship between serum uric acid (SUA) levels and glycemic indices, including plasma glucose (FPG), 2-hour postload glucose (2h-PG), and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), remains inconclusive. We aimed to explore the associations between glycemic indices and SUA levels in the general Chinese population.The current study was a cross-sectional analysis using the first follow-up survey data from The China Cardiometabolic Disease and Cancer Cohort Study. A total of 105,922 community-dwelling adults aged ≥ 40 years underwent the oral glucose tolerance test and uric acid assessment. The nonlinear relationships between glycemic indices and SUA levels were explored using generalized additive models.A total of 30,941 men and 62,361 women were eligible for the current analysis. Generalized additive models verified the inverted U-shaped association between glycemic indices and SUA levels, but with different inflection points in men and women. The thresholds for FPG, 2h-PG, and HbA1c for men and women were 6.5/8.0 mmol/L, 11.0/14.0 mmol/L, and 6.1/6.5, respectively (SUA levels increased with increasing glycemic indices before the inflection points and then eventually decreased with further increases in the glycemic indices).An inverted U-shaped association was observed between major glycemic indices and uric acid levels in both sexes, while the inflection points were reached earlier in men than in women.
- Published
- 2020
33. Functionalized gold nanoparticles for sensing of pesticides: A review
- Author
-
Tai-Chia Chiu, Che-Hsie Chen, Ming-Mu Hsieh, Wei-Lung Tseng, and Wei-Bin Tseng
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Colloidal gold ,Chemistry ,Pesticide ,Colorimetry (chemical method) ,Food Science ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
Pesticides are a family of non-biodegradable chemical compounds which widely used in agriculture to control pests and increase yield production. However, overuse or abuse of pesticides and their metabolites may cause potential toxicity for the environment as well as human health and all other living organisms, even at deficient concentrations. Consequently, the development of sensors for monitoring these compounds is significant. Recently, nanoparticles-based sensors have been extensively employed as a potential alternative or complementary analytical tool to conventional detection methods for pesticides. Among them, gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) owing to their unique optical properties have been developed as smart sensors with high selectivity, sensitivity, simplicity, and portability. These comprehensive reviews have summarized various studies performed based on different detection strategies, i.e., colorimetric, fluorescence, surface-enhanced Raman scattering, and electrochemical, using AuNPs as sensing probes for pesticide analysis in various matrices. Additionally, the current challenges and future trends for developing novel AuNPs-based sensors for the detection of pesticides are also discussed.
- Published
- 2020
34. Novel Z-scheme W
- Author
-
Chun-Hui, Shen, Xiao-Ju, Wen, Zheng-Hao, Fei, Zong-Tang, Liu, and Qi-Ming, Mu
- Abstract
The novel Z-scheme heterojunction photocatalyst W
- Published
- 2020
35. Influence of Buckminsterfullerene Doping on Properties of Phosphorescent Homojunction Organic Light-Emitting Device
- Author
-
Zheng-Ming Mu, Meng Zhou, Tianyu Zhang, Yu Zheng, and Chengming Wang
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Brightness ,business.industry ,Doping ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Spectral line ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Buckminsterfullerene ,chemistry ,0103 physical sciences ,Optoelectronics ,Homojunction ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Phosphorescence ,Luminous efficacy ,Electrical efficiency - Abstract
By p-doping buckminsterfullerene (C60) into a bipolar host 2,7-bis(diphenylphos-phorryl)-9-[4-(N,N-dipheny-lamino)phenyl]-9-phenylfluorene, the device efficiency of the phosphorescent homojunction organic light-emitting device (HJOLED) was pronouncedly enhanced. A two-fold enhancement in luminous efficacy compared with nondoped or MoO3 doped HJOLEDs was observed by employing C60 as the p-dopant. The influence of C60 doping on the device performances of this HJOLED was investigated by carefully analyzing the J-V-L characteristics of HJOLEDs with different hole transporting layer. A white HJOLED was also successfully fabricated. The maximum brightness, current efficiency and power efficiency were 22700 cd m−2, 12.2 cd A−1 and 7.7 lm W, respectively. This device showed a warm EL spectra and the CIE coordinates was (0.41, 0.44) @ 10 V. Besides, this device manifested lower efficiency roll-off.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Enantioseparation of phenothiazines through capillary electrophoresis with solid phase extraction and polymer based stacking
- Author
-
Wei-Bin Tseng, Ming-Mu Hsieh, Po-Lin Yu, Tai-Chia Chiu, and Szu-Hua Chen
- Subjects
Polymers ,lcsh:TX341-641 ,02 engineering and technology ,Electrolyte ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Capillary electrophoresis ,Limit of Detection ,Phenothiazines ,Phenothiazine ,Solid phase extraction ,Pharmacology ,Detection limit ,Chromatography ,Solid Phase Extraction ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Electrophoresis, Capillary ,Stereoisomerism ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,chemistry ,Linear range ,Enantiomer ,0210 nano-technology ,lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,gamma-Cyclodextrins ,Food Science - Abstract
This study developed a sensitive method involving capillary electrophoresis (CE) coupled with ultraviolet absorption for the simultaneous separation of chiral phenothiazine drugs at nanomolar concentration levels. The method consists of hydroxypropyl-γ-cyclodextrin (Hp-γ-CD) as a chiral selector and poly (diallyldimethylammonium chloride) (PDDAC)-based CE. Five pairs of d,l-phenothiazines were baseline separated using a background electrolyte containing 0.9% PDDAC, 5 mM Hp-γ-CD, and 100 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris)-formate (pH 3.0). The five pairs were successfully stacked on the basis of the difference in viscosity between the PDDAC-containing background electrolyte and the sample solution, with almost no loss of resolution. The combination of a solid-phase extraction and PDDAC-mediated CE can efficiently improve the sensitivity of the phenothiazine enantiomers. Under optimal conditions, calibration graphs displayed the linear range between 6 and 1500 nM, with relative standard deviation values lower than 3.5% (n = 5). Detection limit ranged from 2.1 to 6.3 nM for target analytes, and 607- to 1555-fold enhancement was achieved. The practicality of using the proposed method to determine five pairs of d,l-phenothiazines in urine is also validated, in which recoveries between recoveries of all phenothiazines from urine ranged from 89% to 101%. Keywords: Capillary electrophoresis, Chiral separation, On-line concentration, Phenothiazine, Solid phase extraction
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Effect of high dietary starch levels on growth, hepatic glucose metabolism, oxidative status and immune response of juvenile largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides
- Author
-
Shi-Mei Lin, Yong-Jun Chen, Li Luo, Chao-Ming Shi, and Ming-Ming Mu
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Protein efficiency ratio ,Starch ,Aspartate transaminase ,Aquatic Science ,Feed conversion ratio ,Random Allocation ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dietary Carbohydrates ,Animals ,Environmental Chemistry ,Food science ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,biology ,Glycogen ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Animal Feed ,Diet ,Glucose ,030104 developmental biology ,Liver ,chemistry ,040102 fisheries ,biology.protein ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Bass ,Pyruvic acid ,Energy source ,Pyruvate kinase - Abstract
An experimental trial was conducted to investigate the effects of high dietary starch levels on growth, hepatic glucose metabolism enzyme, antioxidant capacity and immune responses of largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides. Fish (initial body weight: 16.9 ± 0.24 g) were fed three isonitrogenous and isoenergetic semi-purified diets containing 5%, 10% and 20% wheat starch, respectively. The results indicated that fish fed 5% and 10% starch diets showed significantly better weight gain, specific growth rate (SGR), protein efficiency ratio (PER) and feed conversion ratio (FCR) compared with that fed 20% starch diet. Meanwhile, fish fed 20% starch diet had a significantly higher hepatic glycogen and muscle glycogen contents than those fed the other diets. The alanine amiotransferase (ALT) and aspartate transaminase (AST) activities, glucose and insulin contents in plasma increased significantly with dietary starch levels, whereas triglyceride content showed the opposite trend. In addition, the highest glucokinase (GK), pyruvate kinase (PK) and phosphofructokinase (PFK) activities in liver were also observed in fish fed 20% starch diet. However, both fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) and pyruvate carboxylase (PC) activities in liver decreased significantly as dietary starch levels increased. Moreover, the lower superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT), the higher malondialdehyde (MDA) contents in liver were observed in fish fed 20% starch diets. Compared to the 5% and 10% starch, the 20% starch could enhance the content of plasma nitric oxide (NO) and the activities of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP). Results demonstrate that the starch levels may affect growth performance and metabolic changes, which suggest that high-starch diets were inefficiently used as an energy source by M. salmoides juveniles. Excessive dietary starch contents could result in oxidative stress, suppress innate immunity, and thus affect the health status of M. salmoides.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Hollow Multi‐Shelled V 2 O 5 Microstructures Integrating Multiple Synergistic Resonances for Enhanced Semiconductor SERS
- Author
-
Wei Song, Bing Zhao, Linfang Li, Lei Sun, Jing Guan, Wei Ji, Ming Mu, and Yukihiro Ozaki
- Subjects
Semiconductor ,Materials science ,Near field scattering ,business.industry ,Optoelectronics ,business ,Microstructure ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Ultrasensitive determination of underivatized adamantane analogs in biological fluids by capillary electrophoresis with contactless conductivity detection
- Author
-
Zheng Ren Wang, Yi-Yang Sung, and Ming-Mu Hsieh
- Subjects
Solvent ,Detection limit ,Analyte ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Capillary electrophoresis ,Chromatography ,chemistry ,Calibration curve ,Adamantane ,Derivatization ,Spectroscopy ,Fluorescence spectroscopy ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
Separation techniques are promising for the detection of adamantane analogs with various functional groups. The derivatization of adamantane analogs with chromophores or fluorophores should be conducted using a separation technique combined with a common ultraviolet–visible or fluorescence detector. However, limited research has been conducted on underivatized adamantane analogs. Therefore, we present a highly rapid and sensitive method for detecting underivatized adamantane analogs by integrating ultrasound-assisted dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction (UADLLME), field-amplified sample stacking (FASS)-related capillary electrophoresis (CE), and capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection (C4D). In the proposed system, UADLLME is used for sample clean up and analyte enrichment, whereas FASS-related CE provides on-line concentration of underivatized adamantane analogs during CE separation. A mixture of memantine (MT), amantadine (AT), and rimantadine (RT) was separated at baseline within 8 min through the application of optimized UADLLME (mixing extraction solvent, 50 μL of 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane (C2H2Cl4) and dispersive solvent, 200 μL of acetonitrile; mixing solution was injected into 1 mL of the sample solution at pH 12.5), FASS (buffer, 1.5 M acetic acid; additive, 0.05 mM β-cyclodextrin; pH 2.5), and C4D (amplitude, 2 Vpp; frequency, 500 kHz). The calibration curve exhibited acceptable linearity, with a coefficient of determination higher than 0.99. The limits of detection (signal-to-noise ratio of 3) were estimated to be 0.9, 1.0, and 1.2 nM for MT, AT, and RT, respectively. The relative standard deviations of peak areas varied from 8.9% to 9.3% (n = 5), whereas the sensitivity improvement of three underivatized adamantane analogs ranged from 1342 to 1766. The feasibility and accuracy of the present method for the determination of MT, AT, and RT in human serum and urine was satisfactorily confirmed by the excellent recovery and relative error. The proposed method exhibited high enrichment factors and offers excellent precision, high accuracy, and a short analysis time.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Solar Irradiance Forecasting Using Intelligent Technology
- Author
-
Yih-Guang Leu, Chou Li-Fen, Ko-Ming Mu, and Yi-Ju Chang
- Subjects
Meteorology ,business.industry ,Physics::Space Physics ,Photovoltaic system ,Comparison results ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Environmental science ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Power output ,Solar irradiance ,business ,Solar power - Abstract
Because solar power is susceptible to clouds and substances in the air, the solar photovoltaic cannot produce stable power output. Solar irradiance is a measurement of the power output of photovoltaic module. Therefore, this paper uses some different combination inputs of the neural network to develop the solar irradiance forecasting with 24 hours ahead. Their forecasting performances are evaluated and some comparison results in Taichung solar farm are given.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Inhibition of Clostridium botulinum in Model Reduced-Sodium Pasteurized Prepared Cheese Products
- Author
-
Kathleen A. Glass, Frank Rossi, Ming Mu, and Brian LeVine
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Botulinum Toxins ,Central composite design ,Potassium ,Sodium ,030106 microbiology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Pasteurization ,Disodium phosphate ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cheese spread ,food ,Cheese ,law ,Food Preservation ,Clostridium botulinum ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Food science ,food.cheese ,Temperature ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Consumer Product Safety ,Food Microbiology ,Sorbic acid ,Food Science - Abstract
The 1986 Food Research Institute-Tanaka et al. model predicts the safety of shelf-stable process cheese spread formulations using the parameters of moisture, pH, NaCl, and disodium phosphate (DSP) to inhibit toxin production by Clostridium botulinum. Although this model is very reliable for predicting safety for standard-of-identity spreads, the effects of additional factors have not been considered. The objective of this study was to create a predictive model to include the interactive effect of moisture, pH, fat, sorbic acid, and potassium-based replacements for NaCl and DSP to reflect modern reduced-sodium recipes. Eighty formulations were identified using a central composite design targeting seven factors: 50 to 60% moisture, pH 5.4 to 6.2, 0 to 0.2% sorbic acid, 10 to 30% fat, 1.7 to 2.4% NaCl, 0.8 to 1.6% DSP, and 0 to 50% potassium replacement for sodium salts. Samples were inoculated with proteolytic C. botulinum spores at 3 log spores per g, hot filled into sterile vials, and stored anaerobically at 27°C. Samples were assayed at 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 8.5, 17.5, 26, and 40 weeks for the presence of botulinum toxin using the mouse bioassay. A parametric survival model was fit to the censored time-to-toxin data. All linear, quadratic, and pairwise effects were considered for model fit. As hypothesized, the effects of pH, sorbate, moisture, DSP, and NaCl were highly significant (P < 0.001). Fat concentration and potassium replacement effects were significant at P < 0.021 and P < 0.057, respectively. The model consistently predicted the safety failure of the toxic samples, but it also predicted failure for some samples that were not toxic. This model is an adjunct to existing models by adding the factors of potassium salts, fat, and sorbic acid to predict the botulinal safety of prepared process cheese products but is not intended to be a substitute for formulation evaluation by a competent process authority.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Prevalence and Antecedents of Nationalism Conspiracy Theories During Covid-19 in China
- Author
-
Ming Mu
- Subjects
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Economic history ,China ,Psychology ,Nationalism - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Improvement of Quantum Genetic Algorithms and Application of DDoS Attack Detection
- Author
-
Han Qi, Changqing Gong, Liang Zhao, Abdullah Gani, Ming Mu, and Tongyao Shi
- Subjects
0209 industrial biotechnology ,Artificial neural network ,Network security ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Denial-of-service attack ,02 engineering and technology ,Backpropagation ,Constant false alarm rate ,Data set ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Logic gate ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,business ,Algorithm ,Quantum - Abstract
Aiming at the problem of insufficient searching ability of Quantum Genetic Algorithms (QGA), this paper proposes a method to improve QGA by dynamically changing the rotation angle of quantum revolving gates. Thirteen typical standard functions are used to test the improved QGA, and to further verify the improved QGA. In this paper, a DDoS attack detection model based on quantum genetic optimization BP neural network (DQGA-BP) is constructed. The model combines improved quantum genetic algorithm with BP neural network, and uses KDD-Cup 1999 data set (9-week network connection collected from the USAF LAN) to detect DDoS attacks. It effectively improves the accuracy of DDoS attack detection. The experimental results show that the improved quantum genetic algorithm has faster convergence speed and stronger optimization ability. Under DDoS attack detection, the average detection rate of DQGA-BP is 0.51491% higher than that of the original quantum genetic optimization BP neural network (QGA-BP), and the average false alarm rate is 0.37%.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. An Improved Quantum Genetic Algorithms and Application for DDoS Attack Detection
- Author
-
Ming Mu, Tongyao Shi, Liang Zhao, Han Qi, Changqing Gong, and Abdullah Gani
- Subjects
Data set ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Artificial neural network ,Computer science ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Denial-of-service attack ,02 engineering and technology ,Rotation (mathematics) ,Quantum ,Algorithm ,Constant false alarm rate - Abstract
Aiming at the problem of insufficient searching ability of Quantum Genetic Algorithms (QGA), this paper proposes a method to improve QGA by dynamically changing the rotation angle of quantum revolving gates. Thirteen typical standard functions are used to test the improved QGA, and to further verify the improved QGA. In this paper, a DDoS attack detection model based on quantum genetic optimization BP neural network (DQGA-BP) is constructed. The model combines improved quantum genetic algorithm with BP neural network, and uses KDD-Cup 1999 data set (9-week network connection collected from the USAF LAN) to detect DDoS attacks. It effectively improves the accuracy of DDoS attack detection. The experimental results show that the improved quantum genetic algorithm has faster convergence speed and stronger optimization ability. Under DDoS attack detection, the average detection rate of DQGA-BP is 0.51491% higher than that of the original quantum genetic optimization BP neural network (QGA-BP), and the average false alarm rate is 0.37%.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Ultrasound-assisted dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction coupled with field-amplified capillary electrophoresis for sensitive and quantitative determination of fluoxetine and norfluoxetine enantiomers in biological fluids
- Author
-
Zheng Ren Wang and Ming Mu Hsieh
- Subjects
Analyte ,Liquid Phase Microextraction ,02 engineering and technology ,Electrolyte ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Sonication ,Capillary electrophoresis ,Limit of Detection ,Fluoxetine ,Acetone ,Humans ,Detection limit ,Chromatography ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Electrophoresis, Capillary ,Stereoisomerism ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Body Fluids ,Solvent ,chemistry ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ,Enantiomer ,0210 nano-technology ,Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors - Abstract
A rapid, simple, and sensitive technique for the quantitative detection of fluoxetine and norfluoxetine enantiomers in biological fluids was developed based on the combination of field-amplified sample stacking (FASS)–related capillary electrophoresis (CE) with ultrasound-assisted dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction (UA-DLLME). The extraction efficiency of UA-DLLME was strongly related to extraction time, salt concentration, type of extraction and dispersion solvents, and volume of extraction and dispersion solvents. The extracted fluoxetine and norfluoxetine enantiomers in a mixture of 50% methanol and 50% deionized water were efficiently stacked using FASS and then separated using cyclodextrin-modified CE. Under optimal conditions of FASS (chiral selector, 3 mM trimethyl-β-cyclodextrin; and background electrolyte, 100 mM phosphate buffer) and UA-DLLME (extraction solvent, 200 μL of acetone; and dispersed solvent, 50 μL of C2H2Cl4 in 1 mL of the sample solution), the obtained enrichment factors of fluoxetine and norfluoxetine enantiomers reached approximately 2000. The linear ranges for the quantification of fluoxetine and norfluoxetine enantiomers were 0.3–150 and 0.6–150 nM, respectively. The relative standard deviations in peak areas and migration time for four analytes were less than 3.3% and 6.3%, respectively. The proposed system provided limits of detection (signal-to-noise ratio of 3) for four analytes corresponding to 0.1 nM. The precision and accuracy for urine and serum samples were less than 6.8 and 8.3%, respectively. These findings suggested that the proposed system exhibited a high potential for the reliable determination of fluoxetine and norfluoxetine enantiomers in clinical samples.
- Published
- 2019
46. Sacrificial template synthesis of ultrathin polyaniline nanosheets and their application in highly sensitive electrochemical dopamine detection
- Author
-
Ce Wang, Ming Mu, Sihui Chen, Xiaofeng Lu, and Na Song
- Subjects
Detection limit ,Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Electrochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Nanomaterials ,Electrochemical gas sensor ,Biomaterials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,chemistry ,Polymerization ,Polyaniline ,Electrode ,Materials Chemistry ,Pentoxide ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Unique functional nanomaterials as electroactive media for efficiently electrochemical biosensing have always been an ever-increasing topic in biotechnology and environmental fields. In this study, we report a simple sacrificial template-guided polymerization strategy to fabricate ultrathin two-dimensional (2D) polyaniline (PANI) nanosheets for electrochemical detection of dopamine (DA). By using vanadium pentoxide nanosheets as both sacrificial templates and oxidants, the resulting PANI nanosheets show an ultrathin thickness of ca. 4 nm with a favorable electrical conductivity of ca. 10 S cm−1. Furthermore, PANI nanosheets have been modified on a glass carbon electrode for highly sensitive DA detection. The proposed DA sensor delivers a linear range of 0.5–300 μM with a low detection limit of 0.118 μM (S/N = 3). In addition, the as-fabricated electrochemical sensor exhibits an outstanding selectivity, stability, reproducibility, and repeatability, enabling its feasible application for DA detection in real samples. Therefore, the ultrathin PANI nanosheets reported here are good candidates as electrodes for the sensitive and selective DA detection.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells ameliorate hyperglycemia through regulating hepatic glucose metabolism in type 2 diabetic rats
- Author
-
Hong Yu Liu, Weidong Han, Min Xie, Zong Yan Xie, Ya Qi Yin, Qi Zhang, Yi Ming Mu, Jie Qing Gao, Hao Jie Hao, and Yu Cheng
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Palmitates ,Biophysics ,Adipose tissue ,Biology ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation ,Biochemistry ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,03 medical and health sciences ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Molecular Biology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Mesenchymal stem cell ,AMPK ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Hep G2 Cells ,Cell Biology ,Metabolism ,Islet ,medicine.disease ,Enzymes ,Metabolism disorder ,Glucose ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Adipose Tissue ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Liver ,Hyperglycemia ,Glycogen - Abstract
Infusion of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) has been identified in the rapid alleviation in hyperglycemia of diabetic individuals, but the mechanism involved has not been adequately explained by these cells' potential role in modulating system insulin sensitivity and islet regeneration. In this study, we demonstrated adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ASCs) produced significantly lower blood glucose via promoting hepatic glycogen synthesis and inhibiting hepatic glucose production within 24 h after infusion in T2DM rats. In vitro, HepG2 cells treated with palmitate (PA) were used as a model of hepatic glucose metabolism disorder to confirm that ASCs stimulates the phosphorylation of hepatic AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) to restores hepatic glucose metabolism in type 2 diabetes. In summary, this study indicated that ASCs improve hyperglycemia via regulating hepatic glucose metabolism. Additionally, the effect of ASCs on hepatic glucose metabolism depended on the AMPK signaling pathway. Thus, this is the new research of the molecular mechanisms of MSCs administration to improve glucose metabolism, and it may indicate a new treatment target of MSCs in T2DM.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction combined with acetonitrile stacking through capillary electrophoresis for the determination of three selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor drugs in body fluids
- Author
-
Ming-Mu Hsieh, En-Ping Lin, and Tai-Chia Chiu
- Subjects
Detection limit ,Analyte ,Chromatography ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Stacking ,Filtration and Separation ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Solvent ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Electrophoresis ,Capillary electrophoresis ,chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Acetonitrile - Abstract
Dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction was combined with acetonitrile stacking in capillary electrophoresis for the identification of three selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (citalopram, fluoxetine, and fluvoxamine) in human fluids such as urine and plasma. Parameters that affect the extraction and stacking efficiency, such as the type and volume of the extraction and disperser solvent, extraction time, salt addition for dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction, and sample matrices, pH, and concentration of the separation buffer for stacking, were investigated and optimized. Under optimum conditions, the enrichment factors were in the range of 1195-1441. Limits of detection ranged from 1.4 to 1.7 nM for the target analytes. Calibration graphs displayed satisfied linearity with R2 greater than or equal to 0.9978, and relative standard deviations of the peak area analysis were in the range of 2.9-5.0% (n = 3). The recoveries of all tricyclic antidepressant drugs from urine and plasma were in the range of 77-117 and 79-106%, respectively. The findings of this study show that dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction acetonitrile-stacking capillary electrophoresis is a rapid and convenient method for identifying tricyclic antidepressant drugs in urine and plasma.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Oligonucleotide-Based Fluorescent Probe for Sensing of Cyclic Diadenylate Monophosphate in Bacteria and Diadenosine Polyphosphates in Human Tears
- Author
-
Kai-Cheng Lin, Wei-Lung Tseng, Wei-Bin Tseng, Shanmugam Chandirasekar, Ming-Mu Hsieh, Chih-Yi Lee, and Jia-Hui Lin
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Fluorophore ,Human metabolism ,Bioengineering ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Nucleotide ,Instrumentation ,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Chemistry ,Oligonucleotide ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,biology.organism_classification ,Adenosine ,Fluorescence ,Random coil ,0104 chemical sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Biochemistry ,Biophysics ,Bacteria ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cyclic diadenylate monophosphate (c-di-AMP) and P1,P5-diadenosine-5′ pentaphosphate (Ap5A) have been determined to play important roles in bacterial physiological processes and human metabolism, respectively. However, few, if any, methods have been developed that use fluorescent sensors to sense c-di-AMP and Ap5A in the real world. To address this challenge, this study presents a fast, convenient, selective, and sensitive assay for quantifying c-di-AMP and Ap5A fluorescence based on the competitive binding of diadenosine nucleotides and a polyadenosine probe to coralyne. The designed probe consists of a 20-mer adenosine base (A20), a fluorophore unit at the 5′-end, and a quencher unit at the 3′-end. Through A2–coralyne–A2 coordination, coralyne causes a change in the conformation of A20 from that of a random coil to a folded structure, thus enabling the fluorophore to be close to the quencher. As a result, fluorescence quenching occurs between the two organic dyes. When the A20·coralyne probe encounters t...
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Identifying the representative flow unit for capillary dominated two-phase flow in porous media using morphology-based pore-scale modeling
- Author
-
Jonas Toelke, Yao-Ming Mu, and Radompon Sungkorn
- Subjects
Capillary action ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,020801 environmental engineering ,Fluid dynamics ,Representative elementary volume ,Geotechnical engineering ,Imbibition ,Two-phase flow ,Wetting ,Porous medium ,Saturation (chemistry) ,Geology ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
In this paper, we extend pore-morphology-based methods proposed by Hazlett (1995) and Hilpert and Miller (2001) to simulate drainage and imbibition in uniformly wetting porous media and add an (optional) entrapment of the (non-)wetting phase. By improving implementation, this method allows us to identify the statistical representative elementary volume and estimate uncertainty by computing fluid flow properties and saturation distributions of hundreds of subsamples within a reasonable time-frame. The method was utilized to study three different porous medium systems and results demonstrate that morphology-based pore-scale modeling is a viable approach to assess the representative elementary volume with respect to capillary dominated two-phase flow. The focus of this paper is the determination of the representative elementary volume for multiphase-flow properties for a digital representation of a rock.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.