4,580,467 results
Search Results
152. Removal of Heavy Metals using the Isolates of Aspergillus sp. Isolated from Contaminated Pulp and Paper Mill Sludge
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M. Ezhilvanan S. F. Lesley Sounderraj and Nancy Lesley
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Aspergillus ,biology ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,Pulp (paper) ,engineering ,Paper mill ,Heavy metals ,engineering.material ,Contamination ,business ,biology.organism_classification ,Pulp and paper industry - Published
- 2021
153. India's need for long-term solutions to COVID-19-like pandemics: A policy paper by Organized Medicine Academic Guild
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Suneela Garg, Raman Kumar, Sunil D Khaparde, Sunil Kumar Raina, Praveen Agarwal, S Natrajan, Sagar Galvankar, Ishwar Gilada, Ramesh Bhatt, A C Dhariwal, and Uday Bodhankar
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Economic growth ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Public health ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,paper ,COVID-19-like pandemics ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Mindset ,Invited Articles ,Term (time) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Organized Medicine Academic Guild ,Guild ,Pandemic ,long-term solutions ,medicine ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,policy - Abstract
The entire world seems to have responded to COVID-19 pandemic in a knee-jerk manner with a short mindset without building on the existing strengths of public health infrastructure. National governments cannot be blamed for this as we are dealing with a crisis that comes once in a lifetime. Realising this, the Organized Medicine Academic Guild (OMAG) an association of major health associations in this country has suggested measures for long-term solutions to COVID-19-like pandemics in the form of a policy paper by OMAG.
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- 2021
154. Multi-tier supply chain sustainability in the pulp and paper industry: a framework and evaluation methodology
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Ifeyinwa Juliet Orji, Xueyan Hu, and Bo Feng
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0209 industrial biotechnology ,021103 operations research ,Supply chain management ,business.industry ,Sustainable supply chain ,Strategy and Management ,education ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Supply chain sustainability ,02 engineering and technology ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Pulp and paper industry ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,stomatognathic system ,Manufacturing ,Sustainability ,Multi tier ,business ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
The pulp and paper industry has significant sustainability implications and necessarily requires a careful consideration of direct and lower-tier suppliers for effective sustainable supply chain ma...
- Published
- 2021
155. Paper-Based Bipolar Electrode Electrochemiluminescence Platform for Detection of Multiple miRNAs
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Lina Zhang, Fangfang Wang, Na Li, Cuiping Fu, Shenguang Ge, Yunqing Liu, Miao Du, and Jinghua Yu
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Paper ,Microfluidics ,Nanoparticle ,Biosensing Techniques ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Signal ,Analytical Chemistry ,Interference (communication) ,Quantum Dots ,Cadmium Compounds ,Humans ,Electrochemiluminescence ,Nitrogen Compounds ,Electrodes ,Fluorescent Dyes ,Detection limit ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Electrochemical Techniques ,0104 chemical sciences ,MicroRNAs ,Luminescent Measurements ,Electrode ,Optoelectronics ,Graphite ,Gold ,Tellurium ,business ,Biosensor - Abstract
This paper introduces a novel potential-resolved paper-based biosensor for simultaneous detection of multiple microRNAs (miRNAs) (taking miRNA-155 and miRNA-126 as examples) based on the bipolar electrode (BPE) electrochemiluminescence (ECL) strategy. The proposed multiple-channel paper-based sensing microfluidic platform was prepared by wax-printing technology, screen-printing method, and in situ Au nanoparticles (AuNPs) growth to form hydrophilic areas, hydrophobic boundaries, waterproof electronic bridge, driving electrode regions, and parallel bipolar electrode regions. CdTe quantum dots (QDs)-H2 and Au@g-C3N4 nanosheets (NSs)-DNA1 were used as dual electrochemiluminescence signal probes, and carboxylated Fe3O4 magnetic nanoparticles existed as carriers. CdTe QDs-H2/S2O82- and Au@g-C3N4 NSs-DNA1/S2O82- could exhibit two strong and stable ECL emissions at a drive voltage of 9 and 12 V, respectively, which can be used as effective potential-resolved signal tags. In addition, the proposed three-dimensional (3D) DNA nanomachine model and the target miRNA cycle strategy were used to achieve double amplification of electrochemiluminescence intensity. More importantly, the combination of the bipolar electrode system and the potential-resolved multitarget electrochemiluminescence method can greatly reduce the spatial interference between substances. The prepared ECL biosensor showed a favorable linear response for the detection of miRNA-155 and miRNA-126 with relatively low detection limits of 5.7 and 4.2 fM, respectively. With excellent sensitivity, the strategy may provide an efficient method for clinical application, especially in detection of trace multiple targets.
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- 2020
156. Imaging the adult with simple shunt lesions: position paper from the EACVI and the ESC WG on ACHD. Endorsed by AEPC (Association for European Paediatric and Congenital Cardiology)
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Katarina Hanseus, Jolien W. Roos-Hesselink, Luc Mertens, Victoria Parish, Sonya V. Babu-Narayan, Gilbert Habib, Thor Edvardsen, Michael A. Gatzoulis, Tarique Hussain, Annemien E. van den Bosch, Emanuela R. Valsangiacomo Buechel, Tal Geva, Alessandra Frigiola, Wei Li, Owen Miller, Giovanni Di Salvo, Beatrice Bonello, Helmut Baumgartner, Laura Dos Subira, Werner Budts, Nankai University (NKU), Department of Interventional Cardiology [Rotterdam, The Netherlands] (Erasmus MC), Erasmus University Medical Center [Rotterdam] (Erasmus MC)-Thorax Center [Rotterdam, The Netherlands], University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center [Dallas], Cardiothoracic Centre, Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital [London], Microbes évolution phylogénie et infections (MEPHI), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Oslo University Hospital [Oslo], Aix Marseille Université (AMU), University Hospital Münster - Universitaetsklinikum Muenster [Germany] (UKM), Royal Brompton Hospital, University of Zurich, Budts, Werner, and Cardiology
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Heart Septal Defects, Ventricular ,shunt lesions ,Heart disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Multimodal Imaging ,Heart Septal Defects, Atrial ,Congenital ,0302 clinical medicine ,[SDV.MHEP.MI]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Infectious diseases ,ACHD ,echocardiography ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Heart Defects ,[SDV.MHEP.ME]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Emerging diseases ,Persistent arterial duct ,imaging ,General Medicine ,GUCH ,Shunt (medical) ,[SDV.MP.VIR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Virology ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Heart Defects, Congenital ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiology ,610 Medicine & health ,cardiac magnetic resonance ,2705 Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,[SDV.MHEP.CSC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Cardiology and cardiovascular system ,adult congenital heart disease ,Medical imaging ,medicine ,Humans ,2741 Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging ,[SDV.MP.PAR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Parasitology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Modalities ,Modality (human–computer interaction) ,computed tomography ,simple ,Atrial ,business.industry ,Heart Septal Defects ,Ventricular ,medicine.disease ,[SDV.MP.BAC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Microbiology and Parasitology/Bacteriology ,10036 Medical Clinic ,Position paper ,business - Abstract
In 2018, the position paper ‘Imaging the adult with congenital heart disease: a multimodality imaging approach’ was published. The paper highlights, in the first part, the different imaging modalities applied in adult congenital heart disease patients. In the second part, these modalities are discussed more detailed for moderate to complex anatomical defects. Because of the length of the paper, simple lesions were not touched on. However, imaging modalities to use for simple shunt lesions are still poorly known. One is looking for structured recommendations on which they can rely when dealing with an (undiscovered) shunt lesion. This information is lacking for the initial diagnostic process, during repair and at follow-up. Therefore, this paper will focus on atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect, and persistent arterial duct. Pre-, intra-, and post-procedural imaging techniques will be systematically discussed. This position paper will offer algorithms that might help at a glance. The document is prepared for general cardiologists, trainees, medical students, imagers/technicians to select the most appropriate imaging modality and to detect the requested information for each specific lesion. It might serve as reference to which researchers could refer when setting up a (imaging) study.
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- 2020
157. Pulp and paper mill sludges decrease soil erodibility
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Krista Peltoniemi, Risto Uusitalo, Hannu Fritze, Kimmo Rasa, Juuso Joona, Taina Pennanen, Sannakajsa Velmala, and Janne Kaseva
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Environmental Engineering ,Technical Reports ,Rain ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,complex mixtures ,01 natural sciences ,Soil ,Nutrient ,Organic matter ,Waste Management and Disposal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology ,2. Zero hunger ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Suspended solids ,Sewage ,business.industry ,Soil organic matter ,Surface Water Quality ,food and beverages ,Agriculture ,Phosphorus ,Paper mill ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,15. Life on land ,Pollution ,6. Clean water ,Soil conditioner ,Agronomy ,chemistry ,Soil water ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Environmental science ,Soil fertility ,business - Abstract
Declining carbon (C) content in agricultural soils threatens soil fertility and makes soil prone to erosion, which could be rectified with organic soil amendments. In a 4‐yr field trial, we made a single application of three different organic sludges from the pulp and paper industry and studied their effects on cereal yield, soil C content, and fungal and bacterial composition. In laboratory rainfall simulations, we also studied the effects of the soil amendments on susceptibility to erosion and nutrient mobilization of a clay‐textured soil by measuring the quality of percolation water passing through 40‐cm intact soil monoliths during 2‐d rainfall simulations over four consecutive years after application. A nutrient‐poor fiber sludge reduced wheat yield in the first growing season, but there were no other significant effects on cereal yield or grain quality. An input of ∼8 Mg ha−1 C with the soil amendments had only minor effects on soil C content after 4 yr, likely because of fast microbe‐mediated turnover. The amendments clearly changed the fungal and bacterial community composition. All amendments significantly reduced suspended solids (SS) and total phosphorus (TP) concentrations in percolation water. The effect declined with time, but the reduction in SS and TP was still >25% 4 yr after application. We attributed the lower tendency for particle detachment in rain simulations to direct interactions of soil minerals with the added particulate organic matter and microbe‐derived compounds that stabilize soil aggregates. In soils with low organic matter content, pulp and paper industry by‐products can be a viable measure for erosion mitigation.
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- 2020
158. White Paper: Bridging the gap between surveillance data and antimicrobial stewardship in the outpatient sector—practical guidance from the JPIAMR ARCH and COMBACTE-MAGNET EPI-Net networks
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Arieti, Fabiana, Göpel, Siri, Sibani, Marcella, Carrara, Elena, Pezzani, Maria Diletta, Murri, Rita, Mutters, Nico T, Lòpez-Cerero, Lorena, Voss, Andreas, Cauda, Roberto, Tacconelli, Evelina, ARCH working group (Collaborators): Ayola Akim Adegnika, Fabiana, Arieti, Nithya Babu Rajendran, Julia, Bielicki, Steffen, Borrmann, Elena, Carrara, Roberto, Cauda, Compri, Monica, Giulia De Angelis, Raquel, Duro, Galia, Liliana, Petra, Gastmeier, Christian, Giske, Siri, Göpel, Herman, Goossens, Gunnar, Kahlmeter, Souha, S Kanj, Tomislav, Kostyanev, Leonard, Leibovici, Jean-Christophe, Lucet, Lorena, López-Cerero, Rodolphe, Mader, Mazzaferri, Fulvia, Elena, Mazzolini, Marc, Mendelson, Rita, Murri, Nico, T Mutters, Mical, Paul, Maria Diletta Pezzani, Elisabeth, Presterl, Hanna, R Enk, Oana, Sandulescu, Le Huu Song, Remco, Schrijver, Luigia, Scudeller, Mike, Sharland, Marcella, Sibani, Evelina, Tacconelli, Didem, Torumkuney, Thirumalaisamy, P Velavan, and Andreas, Voss
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Knowledge management ,ESSENTIAL MEDICINES LIST, ANTIBIOTIC STEWARDSHIP, GENERAL-PRACTICE, CARE, RESISTANCE, PRESCRIPTIONS, PRESCRIBERS, PROVISION, INVENTORY, FEEDBACK ,Computer science ,030106 microbiology ,Delphi method ,INVENTORY ,Settore MED/17 - MALATTIE INFETTIVE ,03 medical and health sciences ,PRESCRIPTIONS ,Antimicrobial Stewardship ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,GENERAL-PRACTICE ,Outpatients ,Antimicrobial stewardship ,AcademicSubjects/MED00740 ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,PRESCRIBERS ,Pharmacology ,Team composition ,Government ,ESSENTIAL MEDICINES LIST ,PROVISION ,FEEDBACK ,business.industry ,CARE ,ANTIBIOTIC STEWARDSHIP ,Checklist ,Hospitals ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Long-term care ,Infectious Diseases ,AcademicSubjects/MED00290 ,Supplement Papers ,Accountability ,Magnets ,Antimicrobial ,business ,AcademicSubjects/MED00230 ,RESISTANCE - Abstract
Background The outpatient setting is a key scenario for the implementation of antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) activities, considering that overconsumption of antibiotics occurs mainly outside hospitals. This publication is the result of a joint initiative by the JPIAMR ARCH and COMBACTE-MAGNET EPI-Net networks, which is aimed at formulating a set of target actions for linking surveillance data with AMS activities in the outpatient setting. Methods A scoping review of the literature was carried out in three research areas: AMS leadership and accountability; antimicrobial usage and AMS; antimicrobial resistance and AMS. Consensus on the actions was reached through a RAND-modified Delphi process involving over 40 experts in infectious diseases, clinical microbiology, AMS, veterinary medicine or public health, from 18 low-, middle- and high-income countries. Results Evidence was retrieved from 38 documents, and an initial 25 target actions were proposed, differentiating between essential or desirable targets according to clinical relevance, feasibility and applicability to settings and resources. In the first consultation round, preliminary agreement was reached for all targets. Further to a second review, 6 statements were re-considered and 3 were deleted, leading to a final list of 22 target actions in the form of a practical checklist. Conclusions This White Paper is a pragmatic and flexible tool to guide the development of calibrated surveillance-based AMS interventions specific to the outpatient setting, which is characterized by substantial inter- and intra-country variability in the organization of healthcare structures, maintaining a global perspective and taking into account the feasibility of the target actions in low-resource settings.
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- 2020
159. Progress in Rapid Detection Techniques Using Paper-Based Platforms for Food Safety
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Dong-Mei Deng, Li-Qiang Luo, Hai-Bo He, Xinxia Fan, and Ji Qi
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business.industry ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,02 engineering and technology ,Paper based ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Food safety ,01 natural sciences ,Rapid detection ,Human being ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Biochemical engineering ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Rapid testing - Abstract
Food safety is always one of the most important issues for human being. With the variety of food, it is required to develop rapid, low-cost and convenient detection techniques for food safety. As a representative, paper-based detection techniques have developed rapidly from simple test papers to various microfluidic paper-based devices. The paper-based analytical devices combining paper platform with a variety of advanced analytical methods have shown great application prospects for rapid testing of food safety. In this review, the surface functionalization and modification of paper are introduced. Then, the construction and development of various detection techniques are discussed, including colorimetric analysis, fluorescent analysis, electrochemical analysis, surface enhanced Raman spectroscopic analysis, and multimethods on paper-based platforms for the application in rapid detection for food safety. Finally, the prospects and future challenges of rapid detection techniques in food safety are also discussed.
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- 2020
160. White Paper by the European Society for Swallowing Disorders: Screening and Non-instrumental Assessment for Dysphagia in Adults
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Margaret Walshe, Eric Verin, Reinie Cordier, Virginie Woisard, Weslania Viviane Nascimento, Daniele Farneti, Renée Speyer, Walmari Pilz, RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience, KNO, and MUMC+: MA Keel Neus Oorheelkunde (9)
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Future studies ,Psychometrics ,ORAL-HEALTH ASSESSMENT ,OF-LIFE QUESTIONNAIRE ,B100 ,ITEM RESPONSE THEORY ,Diagnostic accuracy ,FRAIL OLDER-PEOPLE ,Cerebral palsy ,Validity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,White paper ,PSYCHOMETRIC CHARACTERISTICS ,Swallowing ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,030212 general & internal medicine ,ASPIRATION PNEUMONIA ,Aged ,ASSESSMENT-TOOL ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Swallowing Disorders ,Gastroenterology ,Reproducibility of Results ,Responsiveness ,A300 ,OROPHARYNGEAL DYSPHAGIA ,NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS ,medicine.disease ,Measures ,Reliability ,Dysphagia ,Deglutition ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Physical therapy ,RISK-FACTORS ,Original Article ,medicine.symptom ,Deglutition Disorders ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This White Paper by the European Society for Swallowing Disorders (ESSD) reports on the current state of screening and non-instrumental assessment for dysphagia in adults. An overview is provided on the measures that are available, and how to select screening tools and assessments. Emphasis is placed on different types of screening, patient-reported measures, assessment of anatomy and physiology of the swallowing act, and clinical swallowing evaluation. Many screening and non-instrumental assessments are available for evaluating dysphagia in adults; however, their use may not be warranted due to poor diagnostic performance or lacking robust psychometric properties. This white paper provides recommendations on how to select best evidence-based screening tools and non-instrumental assessments for use in clinical practice targeting different constructs, target populations and respondents, based on criteria for diagnostic performance, psychometric properties (reliability, validity, and responsiveness), and feasibility. In addition, gaps in research that need to be addressed in future studies are discussed. The following recommendations are made: (1) discontinue the use of non-validated dysphagia screening tools and assessments; (2) implement screening using tools that have optimal diagnostic performance in selected populations that are at risk of dysphagia, such as stroke patients, frail older persons, patients with progressive neurological diseases, persons with cerebral palsy, and patients with head and neck cancer; (3) implement measures that demonstrate robust psychometric properties; and (4) provide quality training in dysphagia screening and assessment to all clinicians involved in the care and management of persons with dysphagia.
- Published
- 2022
161. Disinfection of Ultrasound Transducers Using Non-Sterile Tissue Paper in Some Low-Cost Private Ultrasound Centres in Nigeria – Implications for Nosocomial Infection Management
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Obinna Everistus Abonyi, Kingsley Asogwa, Charles Ugwoke Eze, S.W.I. Onwuzu, and Anthony C. Ike
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,medicine ,Medical physics ,business ,Tissue paper - Abstract
Background/Aims: The incidence of disease outbreaks in clinical settings arising from ultrasound examinations is well documented, and is a source of worry. The ultrasound transducers and the coupling gel are potential sources of these infections since they come in direct contact with the patient’s skin. In this study, we examine the efficacy of the widespread practice of the use of plain non-sterile tissue paper in some low-cost private ultrasound centres in our locality as a method of disinfecting ultrasound transducers after each use. Its potential impact on nosocomial infection management in clinical practice is also examined. Methods: Swab samples from convex ultrasound transducers before and after transabdominal scanning of three consecutive patients were obtained from 10 different ultrasound centres in urban and rural areas of Enugu state. Ultrasound coupling gel samples were equally obtained, and all samples cultured for bacteria growth which was quantified in colony-forming units per ml (CFU/ml) and reported in 1000/ml. Paired sampled t-test was used to check for significance in a reduction in a bacterial load before and after the transducer was cleaned. Results: Nine different bacterial strains were isolated. Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella spp had the highest percentage of occurrence in all centres. Significant bacteria growth was recorded in the morning before the examination, and plain tissue paper significantly reduced the bacteria load in the ultrasound transducer. Conclusion: Even though disinfecting ultrasound transducers with non-sterile plain tissue paper alone is statistically effective and has the potential to minimize nosocomial infection, it is however not clinically effective and hence not advised.
- Published
- 2022
162. Valorization of Wheat Straw for the Paper Industry: Pre-extraction of Reducing Sugars and Its Effect on Pulping and Papermaking Properties
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Gyanesh Joshi, Shuank Malik, Praveen Kumar Gupta, Ashish Sharma, and Vikas Rana
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business.industry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Pulp (paper) ,Papermaking ,food and beverages ,General Chemistry ,engineering.material ,Straw ,Pulp and paper industry ,Pre extraction ,Article ,Renewable energy ,stomatognathic diseases ,Chemistry ,stomatognathic system ,engineering ,Environmental science ,Cleaner production ,business ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Cleaner production of sugars and pulp from renewable feedstocks has captured significant scientific attention in the recent past because they can be used for various end applications. In the papermaking industry, a major fraction of hemicellulosic sugars is lost during the pulping. The present study aims at retrieving these hemicellulosic sugars through alkali-, hot-water-, and acid-mediated extraction prior to pulping, which otherwise would have been lost during pulping and washing of pulp. These retrieved sugars can be used as feedstocks for renewable energy and value-added products. Different pretreatments were applied, aided with varying temperature, chemical concentrations, and time. Substantial amounts of total reducing sugars (TRSs) up to 21.98, 13.2, and 15.01% were extracted prior to pulping by acid, alkali, and hot-water pretreatments. Compositions of mono sugars present in the treated liquor were also characterized and confirmed by high-performance liquid chromatography analysis. The morphological changes in the wheat straw after pre-extraction were studied using the field emission gun scanning electron microscopy technique. Pulping of untreated and pretreated wheat straw was carried out at different alkali charges (12, 14, and 16% NaOH). Among all, acid-pretreated straw showed an increase in pulp yield by 10.9% at a 16% alkali charge. Physical strength properties of different pulps were further examined. Alkali- and hot-water-pretreated straw pulp retained 94.26 and 83.16% tensile indices and 92.43 and 87.02% burst indices, respectively. An increase in tear index up to 4.32, 2.01, and 2.30% for alkali-, hot-water-, and acid-pretreated straw pulp was achieved, respectively. Hot-water- and alkali-pretreated wheat straw was observed to be conducive for paper production. The integrated use of wheat straw for extraction of underutilized sugars and pulp production in this way may serve as a key stepping stone for future biorefinery designs in pulp and paper mills.
- Published
- 2020
163. TOGA feature selection and the prediction of mechanical properties of paper from the Raman spectra of unrefined pulp
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Zahra Poursorkh, Najmeh Tavassoli, Edward R. Grant, and Paul Alexandre Bicho
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Discrete wavelet transform ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Pulp (paper) ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Feature selection ,02 engineering and technology ,Limiting ,engineering.material ,Covariance ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,symbols.namesake ,engineering ,symbols ,Process control ,Paper Makers ,0210 nano-technology ,Process engineering ,business ,Raman spectroscopy - Abstract
Process-monitoring laboratories in the pulp and paper industry generally use a combination of wet chemical analyses and physical measurements to certify the fitness of a production pulp for a specific end-use. These laboratory tests require time and the effort of trained personnel, limiting their utility for real-time process control. Here we show that Raman probes of unrefined cellulosic pulps, well-suited to the online measurement of in-process materials, can predict the quality attributes of manufactured papers. The accuracy of prediction improves when the covariance is modelled in a reduced measurement space selected by a data-driven, feature-selection technique referred to as a Template Oriented Genetic Algorithm (TOGA). TOGA, combined with discrete wavelet transform (DWT), isolates functional-group features that correlate best with mechanical properties paper derived from refined pulp. Paper makers refine market pulps to build sheet strength using a beating process that decreases freeness as it increases fibre-fibre bonding. Methods demonstrated here predict manufactured sheet properties obtainable after any specified degree of refining from the Raman spectrum of an unrefined pulp. This analysis capacity will enable both vendors of market pulp and makers of sheet paper to specify in advance the amount of beating required to produce a desired product, thereby saving cost and conserving resources.
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- 2020
164. An Overview on Pulp and Paper Manufacturing Process and its Waste Treatment
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Aravind. G, Harimuthiah. S, S.Sangeetha Gandhi, Arshiya. C, A.Ajay Arokiyaraj, and T.A. Saufishan
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Waste treatment ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,engineering ,engineering.material ,business ,Pulp and paper industry ,Paper manufacturing - Abstract
The pulp and paper industry has a great impact in the world. It has been manufactured for ages and ages, it is still booming up as industry in small scale and large scale levels. Despite the fact that they produce printing and writing papers, paper rolls, packaging material etc. they also produce large amount of waste materials from their Industry by Manufacturing. This when left untreated leads to environmental pollution, harsh contamination and so on. As every industry has its own waste water treatment methods to recycle, reuse and reduce pollution. This Industry also has its own criteria to carry out the process of waste water treatment, yet it lags in being efficient in it. By the sources collected and compared with other kinds of industries it is listed that pulp and paper manufacturing industry is one of the top most industries to produce large volumes of waste water which has degradable organics at higher level. Hence this paper aims to study the manufacturing process, waste water components released and its effect on environment, the treatment methods carried out and how it can be improvised efficiently in forthcoming days
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- 2020
165. Comparative analysis of residual organic pollutants from bleached and unbleached paper mill wastewater and their toxicity on Phaseolus aureus and Tubifex tubifex
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Ram Chandra, Ajay Kumar Singh, and Adarsh Kumar
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Pollutant ,biology ,business.industry ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Industrial scale ,food and beverages ,Paper mill ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Pulp and paper industry ,01 natural sciences ,Soil contamination ,020801 environmental engineering ,Wastewater ,Tubifex tubifex ,Environmental science ,Phaseolus ,business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
The paper industry wastewater even after bio-treatment at industrial scale is a major source of aquatic and soil pollution due to various unknown compounds. Hence, the study has focused on the detection of residual organic pollutants from the bleached and unbleached paper mill wastewater and both sources showed endocrine-disrupting compounds. The toxicity test with Phaseolus aureus seed germination showed inhibition of seed germination and alpha-amylase activity >25% in bleached and unbleached paper mill wastewater. The LC50 of Tubifex tubifex was noted of >50% after 48 hours incubation test. This revealed that the wastewater discharged from bleached paper mill is more toxic than unbleached paper mill waste this might be due to the use of more chemicals during bleaching and pulping process. This study has revealed that there is need to treat both paper mill wastewaters adequately prior to discharge.
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- 2020
166. A Portable Smartphone-based Platform with an Offline Image-processing Tool for the Rapid Paper-based Colorimetric Detection of Glucose in Artificial Saliva
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Tansu Golcez, Volkan Kilic, and Mustafa Şen
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Paper ,Detection limit ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Microfluidics ,Glucose detection ,Saliva, Artificial ,Image processing ,02 engineering and technology ,Paper based ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Glucose ,Smartphone app ,Colorimetry ,Android application ,Smartphone ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Computer hardware - Abstract
In this study, a microfluidic paper-based analytical device (mu PAD) was integrated with a smartphone app capable of offline (without internet access) image processing and analysis for the rapid colorimetric detection of glucose. A self-inking stamp was used to form hydrophobic channels on a piece of paper-towel due to its superior water absorption efficiency. As demonstrated, the developed sensor was employed for the colorimetric detection of glucose in artificial saliva in the linear scope of 0 - 1 mM with a calculated detection limit of 29.65 mu M. The experimental results show that the quantitative analysis of glucose with the proposed smartphone platform could be completed in less than one minute. The app developed for the smartphone platform is capable of extracting the color-changing area with an embedded image processing tool which could address the problem of color uniformity in the detection zones of mu PAD. The integrated platform has great potential to be used for non-invasive measurements of glucose in body fluids, like tears, sweat and saliva.
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- 2020
167. Machine Perfusions in Liver Transplantation: The Evidence‐Based Position Paper of the Italian Society of Organ and Tissue Transplantation
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Paolo Muiesan, Massimo Rossi, Damiano Patrono, F. Melandro, Daniele Pezzati, Markus Selzner, Alberto Zanella, Andrea Lauterio, Riccardo De Carlis, Cristiano Quintini, Stefano Baroni, Domenico Bassi, Davide Ghinolfi, Paolo Magistri, Fabio Ferla, Luca Toti, Marinella Zanierato, Matteo Ravaioli, Quirino Lai, Chiara Lazzeri, Wayel Jassem, Patrizia Burra, Daniele Dondossola, Duilio Pagano, Philippe Dutkowski, Umberto Cillo, Erion Rreka, Salvatore Petta, University of Zurich, Ghinolfi, Davide, Ghinolfi, D, Lai, Q, Dondossola, D, De Carlis, R, Zanierato, M, Patrono, D, Baroni, S, Bassi, D, Ferla, F, Lauterio, A, Lazzeri, C, Magistri, P, Melandro, F, Pagano, D, Pezzati, D, Ravaioli, M, Rreka, E, Toti, L, Zanella, A, Burra, P, Petta, S, Rossi, M, Dutkowski, P, Jassem, W, Muiesan, P, Quintini, C, Selzner, M, Cillo, U, Ghinolfi D., Lai Q., Dondossola D., De Carlis R., Zanierato M., Patrono D., Baroni S., Bassi D., Ferla F., Lauterio A., Lazzeri C., Magistri P., Melandro F., Pagano D., Pezzati D., Ravaioli M., Rreka E., Toti L., Zanella A., Burra P., Petta S., Rossi M., Dutkowski P., Jassem W., Muiesan P., Quintini C., Selzner M., and Cillo U.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Evidence-based practice ,2747 Transplantation ,GRADE ,donor after circulatory death ,donor brain death ,hypothermic machine ,liver transplant ,machine perfusion ,normothermic machine ,normothermic regional perfusion ,position paper ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Delphi method ,MEDLINE ,610 Medicine & health ,liver, perfusion machine ,030230 surgery ,Liver transplantation ,liver ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,10217 Clinic for Visceral and Transplantation Surgery ,HumansItaly ,Transplantation ,Machine perfusion ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Organ Preservation ,perfusion machine ,Institutional review board ,Liver Transplantation ,2746 Surgery ,Perfusion ,Italy ,Position paper ,2721 Hepatology ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Surgery ,business ,Human - Abstract
The use of machine perfusion (MP) in liver transplantation (LT) is spreading worldwide. However, its efficacy has not been demonstrated, and its proper clinical use has far to go to be widely implemented. The Società Italiana Trapianti d’Organo (SITO) promoted the development of an evidence-based position paper. A 3-step approach has been adopted to develop this position paper. First, SITO appointed a chair and a cochair who then assembled a working group with specific experience of MP in LT. The Guideline Development Group framed the clinical questions into a patient, intervention, control, and outcome (PICO) format, extracted and analyzed the available literature, ranked the quality of the evidence, and prepared and graded the recommendations. Recommendations were then discussed by all the members of the SITO and were voted on via the Delphi method by an institutional review board. Finally, they were evaluated and scored by a panel of external reviewers. All available literature was analyzed, and its quality was ranked. A total of 18 recommendations regarding the use and the efficacy of ex situ hypothermic and normothermic machine perfusion and sequential normothermic regional perfusion and ex situ MP were prepared and graded according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) method. A critical and scientific approach is required for the safe implementation of this new technology.
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- 2020
168. Influence of tissue paper converting conditions on finished product softness
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António de Oliveira Mendes, Ana M. M. S. Carta, Ana Paula Cabral Seixas Costa, Joana Vieira, Rogério Simões, Paulo Torrão Fiadeiro, Manuel Santos Silva, and Enrico Galli
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0106 biological sciences ,Grammage ,Environmental Engineering ,business.product_category ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Base (geometry) ,Bioengineering ,01 natural sciences ,Tissue paper ,Product (business) ,Paper machine ,010608 biotechnology ,business ,Process engineering ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Embossing - Abstract
Tissue paper conversion consists of the transformation of base tissue papers into finished tissue products to meet specific demands. When base tissue paper arrives at the converting line, it already holds different requirements that were met during its manufacture in the paper machine (e.g., grammage, bulk, tensile index, etc.). However, what happens during converting can still influence the performance and quality of the finished products. The current work addresses this topic and aims to evaluate the influence of converting conditions on the final softness. For that, two 5-ply finished tissue products were analyzed using different methodologies for their proper characterization in terms of softness and surface analysis. The analyzed products are composed by the same base tissue papers, but some changes were applied on their settings in the converting line. In particular, the base tissue papers arrangement and the embossing pressure affected the finished products, resulting in one of them being softer and more pleasant to touch, with a global handfeel (HF) value of 75.3 units, and the other revealed to be rougher and less pleasant, with a global handfeel (HF) value of 68.0 units.
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- 2020
169. Electronic cigarettes and health with special focus on cardiovascular effects: position paper of the European Association of Preventive Cardiology (EAPC)
- Author
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Pedro Marques-Vidal, Konstantinos C. Koskinas, Jean-Claude Barthélémy, Maryam Kavousi, Delphine De Smedt, Vassilios S. Vassiliou, Charlotta Pisinger, Monica Tiberi, Maja-Lisa Løchen, Demosthenes B. Panagiotakos, and Eva Prescott
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Disease ,tobacco ,law.invention ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,law ,heart rate ,medicine ,Electronic cigarette ,Risk factor ,Intensive care medicine ,VDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Helsefag: 800::Samfunnsmedisin, sosialmedisin: 801 ,business.industry ,cardiovascular ,blood pressure ,Preventive cardiology ,Premature death ,myocardial infarction ,Position paper ,VDP::Medical disciplines: 700::Health sciences: 800::Community medicine, Social medicine: 801 ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Tobacco product - Abstract
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in European Journal of Preventive Cardiology following peer review. The version of record Kavousi, Pisinger, Barthelemy, Smedt, Koskinas, Marques-Vidal, Panagiotakos, Prescott, Tiberi, Vassiliou, Løchen. Electronic cigarettes and health with special focus on cardiovascular effects: position paper of the European Association of Preventive Cardiology (EAPC). European Journal of Preventive Cardiology (EJPC). 2020:2047487320941993, is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1177/2047487320941993. Background - Tobacco use is the single largest preventable risk factor for premature death of non-communicable diseases and the second leading cause of cardiovascular disease. In response to the harmful effects of tobacco smoking, the use of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) has emerged and gained significant popularity over the past 15 years. E-cigarettes are promoted as safe alternatives for traditional tobacco smoking and are often suggested as a way to reduce or quit smoking. However, evidence suggests they are not harmless. Discussion - The rapid evolution of the e-cigarette market has outpaced the legislator’s regulatory capacity, leading to mixed regulations. The increasing use of e-cigarettes in adolescents and young individuals is of concern. While the long-term direct cardiovascular effects of e-cigarettes remain largely unknown, the existing evidence suggests that the e-cigarette should not be regarded as a cardiovascular safe product. The contribution of e-cigarette use to reducing conventional cigarette use and smoking cessation is complex, and the impact of e-cigarette use on long-term cessation lacks sufficient evidence. Conclusion - This position paper describes the evidence regarding the prevalence of e-cigarette smoking, uptake of e-cigarettes in the young, related legislations, cardiovascular effects of e-cigarettes and the impact of e-cigarettes on smoking cessation. Knowledge gaps in the field are also highlighted. The recommendations from the population science and public health section of the European Association of Preventive Cardiology are presented.
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- 2020
170. PCR performance for the diagnosis of cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania viannia complex using biopsy samples, compared with exudate samples from skin lesions on filter paper
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Max Carlos Ramírez-Soto, Mercedes Maritza Quispe-Flórez, Yahanda Gisela Apaza-Castillo, Rosa Luz Pacheco-Venero, and Elsa Gladys Aguilar-Ancori
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Exudate ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,diagnosis ,Biopsy ,030231 tropical medicine ,Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous ,Diagnostic concordance ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,cutaneous leishmaniasis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Leishmania viannia ,Cutaneous leishmaniasis ,Peru ,Skin Ulcer ,medicine ,Humans ,filter paper ,030212 general & internal medicine ,skin biopsy ,Skin ,Leishmania ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Filter paper ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Exudates and Transudates ,General Medicine ,DNA, Protozoan ,medicine.disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Skin biopsy ,Parasitology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Skin lesion ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.06 [https] - Abstract
Background Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is generally diagnosed by molecular methods, including PCR, using biopsy samples, skin scrapings and clinical exudates. In this study, we assessed the PCR performance for diagnosis of CL using skin of biopsy samples vs PCR of skin lesion exudate samples on filter paper and compared the diagnostic concordance of PCR using both sampling methods. Methods We assessed the PCR performance using 80 skin biopsy samples and 80 filter paper samples containing exudates from skin lesions obtained from 74 patients with clinical suspicion of CL in Cusco, Peru. Results : PCR using skin biopsy samples had superior diagnostic accuracy compared with filter paper PCR (62.5% [50/80] vs 38.7% [31/80], respectively; p˂0.005) and the diagnostic concordance between both sampling methods was ‘moderate’ (kappa coefficient=0.50, 95% CI 0.98 to 1.0). Conclusions PCR using biopsy samples remains the standard for diagnosis of CL.
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- 2020
171. Effect of discharged pulp and paper mill effluent on the blood morphology of Heteropneustes fossilis (Singhi)
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Vivek Misra, Gyan Chandra, Shasank Singh, Aradhika Tripathi, C P Singh, and Anup Kumar
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Heteropneustes fossilis ,Veterinary medicine ,biology ,Sickle cells ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,engineering ,Paper mill ,engineering.material ,biology.organism_classification ,business ,Effluent - Abstract
The present study was undertaken to know the effect of common mixed pulp and paper mill effluent discharge released from century pulp and paper mill Lalkuan, Nainital Uttarakhand on the blood morphology of Heteropneustes fossilis (Singhi). The various morphological changes were observed in the specimen, randomly collected with the help of cast net from (3 sites) different locations. The maximum changes were observed in the specimen collected from site 3 in compare to site 1 and 2 respectively. The formation of inclusion bodies, sickle cells, Cabot rings and ovalocytes were recorded along with nuclear fusion, membrane disruption and cell clumping of blood cells in the specimen collected from the site 3 (i.e. nearer to source of discharge) while in the specimen collected from site 2, the formation of tear drop cell, target cells, spherocytes and bi-nucleated cells were recorded along with the activity of cell clumping. The changes were found less in the specimen collected from site 1 in compare to the specimen of site 2 and 3 i.e. formation of ovalocytes, spherocytes and microcytes with the activity of membrane degeneration and agglutination in blood cells.
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- 2020
172. Fundamental Study of the Production of Paper Ash Made from Paper Sludge I : Evaluation of the Characteristics of Paper Ash Made from Paper Sludge in a Specialty Paper Mill
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Hae Min Jo, Su Ho Kim, Ji-Young Lee, and Yeon Hui Lee
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Fundamental study ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Media Technology ,Production (economics) ,Environmental science ,General Materials Science ,Paper mill ,General Chemistry ,business - Published
- 2020
173. Unusual pneumoconiosis in two patients with heavy print toner, and paper dust exposure
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Henry D. Tazelaar, Adela Vrbenska, Kristopher W. Cummings, and Mrinal Sarwate
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung ,pneumoconiosis ,desquamative interstitial pneumonia ,business.industry ,Pneumoconiosis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Case Report ,Desquamative interstitial pneumonia ,medicine.disease ,Asymptomatic ,Dermatology ,Lymphoid hyperplasia ,respiratory tract diseases ,paper dust ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,paper toner ,Lung disease ,Medicine ,giant cell interstitial pneumonia ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Photocopier toner ,Paper dust - Abstract
Workers in a print shop are exposed to photocopier toner dust and paper dust over a prolonged period of time. However, there are only rare case reports of toner and paper dust induced lung damage in humans. We reviewed our consultation files for a period of 30 years from 1987 to 2018 to look for cases with a diagnosis of giant cell interstitial pneumonia (GIP), printer toner exposure and paper dust exposure resulting in lung disease. There were two cases which met our inclusion criteria. Slides, clinical histories and imaging were reviewed. Both the patients had worked in print shops, and had no history of exposure to hard metals. Patient 1 presented with shortness of breath and cough over several months, while patient 2 was asymptomatic at presentation. Both the patients underwent surgical lung biopsies. Histopathologic examination from both the cases showed a spectrum of pathology, including features of GIP, desquamative interstitial pneumonia, chronic bronchiolitis with lymphoid hyperplasia, and particulate matter consistent with toner. Energy dispersive spectroscopy was performed on one case, and it revealed no cobalt or tungsten particles. The unusual combination of findings is very suggestive that toner particles with or without paper dust exposure were responsible for the pathologic changes in the lungs of these patients. This possibility should be explored further with additional patients who work in print shops where they are exposed to paper dust and paper toner and have signs or symptoms of diffuse lung disease.
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- 2020
174. Implementation of paper mill waste as partial replacement material
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Chandandeep Singh Raina, lowast, Anita Jessie J, S. Sankar Ganesh, and Peerzada Danish
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Cement ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Cost effectiveness ,Paper mill ,Pulp and paper industry ,Compressive strength test ,law.invention ,Portland cement ,Compressive strength ,law ,Statistical analysis ,Response surface methodology ,business ,Mathematics - Abstract
Objectives: The objective of the study was to study the compressive strength of the partially replaced paper mill waste in cement. Methods/ Statistical analysis: The concrete cube specimen were prepared for compressive strength test. In this study, the cement has been replaced with 20%, 30%, 40% and 50% of hypo sludge. The specimens were cured for two different ages (7 days and 28 days) and tested for compressive strength. The quadratic polynomial prediction equation was proposed using Response Surface Methodology (RSM). The prediction model was developed using the experimental output results. Thus, the prediction model facilitates the further research work to be conducted by researchers on paper mill waste replacement. The rate analysis was also further carried out to show the cost effectiveness of using the waste replacement in cement. Findings: The test was conducted on the compressive strength (7 days and 28 days) of control specimen (0%) and partial replacement of 20%, 30%, 40% and 50% of cement using the hypo sludge. Thus, 20% replacement of cement using hypo sludge has shown good compressive strength than the control specimen. The cost of 20% paper mill waste was less when compared to the cost of control specimen. Novelty/ Applications: The compressive strength of 20% partial replacement of paper mill waste in cement can be used in further construction. The prediction model can be used to predict the future compressive strength of partially replaced paper mill waste concrete. Keywords: Ordinary Portland cement; Paper mill waste; Hypo sludge; Partial replacement; RSM
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- 2020
175. A paper-based whole-cell screening assay for directed evolution-driven enzyme engineering
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Xian Yang, Tadesse Fantaye Bogale, Ijaz Gul, Yong Chen, Ruiqin Fang, Hui Gao, Lixia Tang, and Juan Feng
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Paper ,Hydrolases ,Computer science ,Halohydrin dehalogenase ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Catalysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Digital image ,Software ,Escherichia coli ,Instrumentation (computer programming) ,Gene Library ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Screening assay ,General Medicine ,Protein engineering ,Paper based ,Directed evolution ,High-Throughput Screening Assays ,Mutagenesis ,Mutation ,Colorimetry ,Smartphone ,Biochemical engineering ,Directed Molecular Evolution ,business ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Directed evolution has become an important method to unleash the latent potential of enzymes to make them uniquely suited for human purposes. However, the need for a large reagent volume and sophisticated instrumentation hampers its broad implementation. In an attempt to address this problem, here we report a paper-based high-throughput screening approach that should find broad application in generating desired enzymes. As an example case, the dehalogenation reaction of the halohydrin dehalogenase was adopted for assay development. In addition to visual detection, quantitative measurements were performed by measuring the color intensity of an image that was photographed by a smartphone and processed using ImageJ free software. The proposed method was first validated using a gold standard method and then applied to mutagenesis library screening with reduced consumption of reagents (i.e., ≤ 10 μl per assay) and a shorter assay time. We identified two active mutants (P135A and G137A) with improved activities toward four tested substrates. The assay not only consumes less reagents but also eliminates the need for expensive instrumentation. The proposed method demonstrates the potential of paper-based whole-cell screening coupled with digital image colorimetry as a promising approach for the discovery of industrially important enzymes.Key Points• A frugal method was developed for directed enzyme evolution.• Mutagenesis libraries were successfully screened on a paper platform.• Smartphone imaging was efficiently used to measure enzyme activities.
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- 2020
176. Joint Statement on the Role of Respiratory Rehabilitation in the COVID-19 Crisis: The Italian Position Paper
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Michele Vitacca, Pierachille Santus, Mara Paneroni, Paolo Banfi, Nicolino Ambrosino, Mauro Carone, Franco Pasqua, Andrea Lanza, Francesco Gigliotti, Enrico Clini, Emilia Privitera, Giorgio Castellana, Enrico Guffanti, and Marta Lazzeri
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Psychological intervention ,Critical care medicine, Position paper, Pulmonary medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Betacoronavirus ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intervention (counseling) ,Intensive care ,Health care ,medicine ,Interventional Pulmonology ,Humans ,Critical care medicine ,Position paper ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pulmonary medicine ,Pandemics ,Physical Therapy Modalities ,Pulmonologists ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Patient Acuity ,COVID-19 ,medicine.disease ,030228 respiratory system ,Italy ,Workforce planning ,Medical emergency ,Respiratory Insufficiency ,business ,Coronavirus Infections - Abstract
Due to the exponential growth of the number of subjects affected by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the entire Italian health care system had to respond promptly and in a very short time with the need of semi-intensive and intensive care units. Moreover, trained dedicated COVID-19 teams consisting of physicians were coming from different specialties (intensivists or pneumologists and infectiologists), while respiratory therapists and nurses have been recruited to work on and on without rest. However, due to still limited and evolving knowledge of COVID-19, there are few recommendations concerning the need in respiratory rehabilitation and physiotherapy interventions. The presentation of this paper is the result of a consensus promoted by the Italian societies of respiratory health care professionals who contacted pulmonologists directly involved in the treatment and rehabilitation of COVID-19. The aim was to formulate the more proper and common suggestions to be applied in different hospital settings in offering rehabilitative programs and physiotherapy workforce planning for COVID-19 patients. Two main areas of intervention were identified: organization and treatment, which are described in this paper to face the emergency.
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- 2020
177. An Ultrasensitive Fluorescent Paper-Based CO2 Sensor
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Bernhard Rieger, Hui Wang, Sergei I. Vagin, and Alkiviathes Meldrum
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Detection limit ,Materials science ,Filter paper ,business.industry ,Response time ,02 engineering and technology ,Paper based ,Chromophore ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Photobleaching ,Fluorescence ,0104 chemical sciences ,Carbon dioxide sensor ,Optoelectronics ,General Materials Science ,InformationSystems_MISCELLANEOUS ,0210 nano-technology ,business - Abstract
We demonstrate a versatile and easily fabricated paper-based CO2 sensor. The sensor consists of a specially designed fluorescent color-shift chromophore infused into standard filter paper. The emission color of the resulting fluorescent paper changes upon exposure to CO2 due to the formation of carbonic acid, which underlies the sensing mechanism. By using a ratiometric method, the undesirable effects of photobleaching can be eliminated, leading to a stable and repeatable sensor performance. These multiuse sensors have a response time on the order of 1 min and feature low detection limits for a paper-based CO2 gas sensor, suggesting possible low-cost applications in smart buildings or other facilities in which CO2 levels are required to be continuously monitored.
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- 2020
178. Treatment of UASB-treated recycled paper wastewater using SBR and SBBR: A comparison
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Fangrui Cai, Lirong Lei, Youming Li, and Han Jun
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Environmental Engineering ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Chemical oxygen demand ,Batch reactor ,Bioengineering ,Paper mill ,Pulp and paper industry ,Wastewater ,Biofilter ,Organic matter ,business ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Effluent ,Total suspended solids - Abstract
Anaerobic-oxic (AO) systems have been extensively adopted for the biological treatment of wastewater from recycled paper mills, which is characterized by high chemical oxygen demand (COD) concentrations and contains hundreds of organic compounds. In this study, an up-flow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) served as the anaerobic treatment of recycled paper mill wastewater. Then, either a sequential batch reactor (SBR) or a sequential batch biofilm reactor (SBBR) were adopted as aerobic treatment to treat the UASB effluent respectively. Parameters such as COD, BOD5, and TSS were measured to compare the treatment performance of SBR and the SBBR. After 80 days’ operation, COD removal efficiency of SBR and SBBR were 21.79 ± 3.4% and 38.38 ± 2.69% respectively; TSS removal efficiencies were 20.84 ± 5.15% and 47.02 ± 5.84% respectively. The results indicated that SBR was effective for removing residual organic matter in UASB effluent. However, SBBR showed significant advantages for the removal of COD and total suspended solids (TSS), which are ascribed to the effective biomass retention and biofiltration of SBBR.
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- 2020
179. Is There Equivalence Between the Electronic and Paper Version of the Questionnaires for Assessment of Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain?
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Diego Giulliano Destro Christofaro, Crystian B. Oliveira, Bruna Rabelo Azevedo, Tatiana M. Damato, Rafael Z. Pinto, Fernanda G. Silva, Giulia Marcondes D Araujo, Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp), and Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Paper ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,Intraclass correlation ,scales ,Random Allocation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rating scale ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Exercise ,Equivalence (measure theory) ,low back pain ,Pain Measurement ,030222 orthopedics ,business.industry ,electronic ,paper ,questionnaire ,Reproducibility of Results ,Fear ,Evidence-based medicine ,Middle Aged ,Confidence interval ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Self Report ,Neurology (clinical) ,Chronic Pain ,business ,Low Back Pain ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Made available in DSpace on 2020-12-10T20:03:52Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2020-03-15 Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) Study Design. Cross-sectional study. Objective. To investigate the equivalence of electronic and paper version of self-report questionnaires for the assessment of disability, pain, fear of movement, depression, and physical activity of patients with chronic low back pain (LBP). Summary of Background Data. Paper and electronic versions of self-report questionnaires are commonly used for assessment of patients with LBP. However, the equivalence of self-report questionnaires commonly used for assessment of patients with chronic LBP remains unclear. Methods. Seventy-nine individuals with chronic LBP seeking physiotherapy care were recruited. Participants attended the clinic twice with an interval of 1 week and completed the self-reported questionnaires in a random order. The following questionnaires were administered: Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ); 11-point numerical rating scale (NRS); Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK); Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression (CES-D), and Baecke Habitual Physical Activity Questionnaire (BPAQ). To investigate the equivalence between the two questionnaire versions, intraclass correlation coefficient with 95% confidence interval and Bland-Altman plotting was used. Results. The paper and electronic versions of the RMDQ, TSK, and CES-D showed good reliability and the showed moderate reliability. In contrast, the NRS showed poor reliability between the electronic and paper versions. Conclusion. Our findings support that the electronic version of the RMDQ, TSK, CES-D, and BPAQ can be administered in clinical and research settings for assessment of patients with chronic LBP. Nevertheless, electronic version of the NRS for assessment of pain intensity should not be used interchangeably in clinical practice in patients with chronic LBP. Univ Estadual Paulista, Dept Fisioterapia, Fac Ciencias & Tecnol, Presidente Prudente, Brazil Univ Fed Minas Gerais UFMG, Dept Phys Therapy, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil Univ Estadual Paulista, Dept Educ Fis, Fac Ciencias & Tecnol, Presidente Prudente, Brazil Univ Estadual Paulista, Dept Fisioterapia, Fac Ciencias & Tecnol, Presidente Prudente, Brazil Univ Estadual Paulista, Dept Educ Fis, Fac Ciencias & Tecnol, Presidente Prudente, Brazil FAPESP: 2017/21336-8 FAPESP: 2016/03826-5 FAPESP: 2017/12246-5
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- 2020
180. Using micro- and nanofibrillated cellulose as a means to reduce weight of paper products: A review
- Author
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Orlando J. Rojas, Heather Starkey, Hasan Jameel, Martin A. Hubbe, Franklin Zambrano, Ronalds Gonzalez, Richard A. Venditti, Yuhan Wang, Lokendra Pal, Camilla Abbati de Assis, North Carolina State University, Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems, Aalto-yliopisto, and Aalto University
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Environmental Engineering ,Paper products ,Bioengineering ,Raw material ,engineering.material ,Micro-and nanofibrillated cellulose (MNFC) ,01 natural sciences ,Fiber reduction ,Retention aids ,Tensile strength ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,010608 biotechnology ,Ultimate tensile strength ,CMF ,Cellulose ,Process engineering ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Mathematics ,Nanofibrillated cellulose (NFC) ,Light-weight paper ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,Production cost ,Papermaking ,Microfibrillated cellulose (MFC) ,Manufacturing cost ,Cellulose fiber ,chemistry ,CNF ,engineering ,Cellulose fibers ,business - Abstract
Based on publications related to the use of micro- and nanofibrillated cellulose (MNFC) in papermaking applications, three sets of parameters (intrinsic and extrinsic variables, furnish composition, and degree of dispersion) were proposed. This holistic approach intends to facilitate understanding and manipulation of the main factors describing the colloidal behavior in systems comprising of MNFC, pulp fibers, and additives, which directly impact paper product performance. A preliminary techno-economic assessment showed that cost reductions driven by the addition of MNFC in paper furnishes could be as high as USD 149 per ton of fiber (up to 20% fiber reduction without adverse effects on paper’s strength) depending on the cost of papermaking fibers. It was also determined that better performance in terms of strength development associated with a higher degree of MNFC fibrillation offset its high manufacturing cost. However, there is a limit from which additional fibrillation does not seem to contribute to further strength gains that can justify the increasing production cost. Further research is needed regarding raw materials, degree of fibrillation, and combination with polyelectrolytes to further explore the potential of MNFC for the reduction of weight of paper products.
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- 2020
181. Pilot study on comparisons between the effectiveness of mobile video-guided and paper-based home exercise programs on improving exercise adherence, self-efficacy for exercise and functional outcomes of patients with stroke with 3-month follow-up: A single-blind randomized controlled trial
- Author
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Claudia Sin Yi Sit, Tak Man Lo, Ka Yan Chan, Titanic Fuk On Lau, Charles Wai Kin Lai, Bryan Ping Ho Chung, Jenny S.W. Lee, Herman Lau, Chau Yee Yeung, Elsie Hui, and Wendy Kam Ha Chiang
- Subjects
030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,020205 medical informatics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,02 engineering and technology ,video ,rehabilitation ,functional outcome ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,adherence ,Physiotherapy ,Stroke ,Self-efficacy ,Rehabilitation ,exercise ,business.industry ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,home ,Paper based ,Exercise adherence ,medicine.disease ,stroke ,lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Physical therapy ,Home exercise ,Single blind ,0305 other medical science ,business ,self-efficacy ,Research Paper - Abstract
Objective: To compare the effectiveness of mobile video-guided home exercise program and standard paper-based home exercise program. Methods: Eligible participants were randomly assigned to either experimental group with mobile video-guided home exercise program or control group with home exercise program in a standard pamphlet for three months. The primary outcome was exercise adherence. The secondary outcomes were self-efficacy for exercise by Self-Efficacy for Exercise (SEE) Scale; and functional outcomes including mobility level by Modified Functional Ambulatory Category (MFAC) and basic activities of daily living (ADL) by Modified Barthel Index (MBI). All outcomes were captured by phone interviews at 1 day, 1 month and 3 months after the participants were discharged from the hospitals. Results: A total of 56 participants were allocated to the experimental group [Formula: see text] and control group [Formula: see text]. There were a significant between-group differences in 3-months exercise adherence (experimental group: 75.6%; control group: 55.2%); significant between-group differences in 1-month SEE (experimental group: 58.4; control group: 43.3) and 3-month SEE (experimental group: 62.2; control group: 45.6). For functional outcomes, there were significant between-group differences in 3-month MFAC gain (experimental group: 1.7; control group: 1.0). There were no between-group differences in MBI gain. Conclusion: The use of mobile video-guided home exercise program was superior to standard paper-based home exercise program in exercise adherence, SEE and mobility gain but not basic ADL gain for patients recovering from stroke.
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- 2020
182. Specific Features of Harmonic Conditions at the Node Connecting a Pulp-And-Paper Mill to a Supply Network
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Lidiia I. Kovernikova, Van Cuong Ngo, and Van Chung Luong
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business.industry ,Computer science ,Pulp (paper) ,Harmonics ,engineering ,Supply network ,Power quality ,Statistical analysis ,Paper mill ,engineering.material ,business ,Topology - Abstract
The paper presents the results of the analysis on measured parameters of harmonics at the node of the high-voltage network. The measurements were made at the node connecting the pulp-and-paper mill to the 220 kV supply network. This load is nonlinear and has a large capacity. Particular attention is paid to the distributions of the current and voltage harmonics. The paper clearly shows probabilistic properties of the measured parameters of harmonics
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- 2020
183. A novel strain of Planomicrobium isolated from paper mill and its capacity of cellulose degradation
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Xiuli Song, Qiang Cheng, Luyu Mei, Rongxia Zhuge, and Liuxin Shi
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Environmental Engineering ,biology ,Filter paper ,Strain (chemistry) ,Starch ,business.industry ,Planomicrobium ,Bioengineering ,Paper mill ,Cellulase ,Biodegradation ,16S ribosomal RNA ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,010608 biotechnology ,biology.protein ,Food science ,business ,Waste Management and Disposal - Abstract
A novel strain, designated WH2-56, was isolated from a slime sample collected from a paper company along the Yangtze River during March, 2018. Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA gene sequences revealed that strain WH2-56 was related to members of the genus Planomicrobium. Cellulolytic activity of the sample was screened and confirmed by Congo red-polysaccharide interactions and examined by broth culture using filter paper (FP) with no starch as the sole carbon source. Field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM) was used to confirm the delicate morphological changes of FP during bio-degradation. Different cellulosic materials were used to measure biodegradation effects and optimum incubation conditions. The activity of FPase and carboxymethyl cellulase (CMCase) were checked by 3,5-dinitrosalicylic acid (DNS agents) with different carbon sources, which showed a peak at 0.62 U/mL of CMCase on day 4, and at 0.38 U/mL of FPase on day 5.
- Published
- 2020
184. Feasibility of transforming lightweight aggregate made of pulp and paper mill sludge into insulating concrete
- Author
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Hua-Shan Tai and Chun-Hao Chen
- Subjects
Pollution ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pulp (paper) ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,General Engineering ,Paper mill ,02 engineering and technology ,engineering.material ,Pulp and paper industry ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,engineering ,Environmental science ,business ,media_common - Abstract
The thriving development of the paper industry leaves behind a great amount of pulp and paper mill sludge (PPMS), which constitutes a considerable source of pollution. Experts estimate that...
- Published
- 2020
185. The Use of Frozen Colloidal Sediments of Sludge-Lignin of OJSC 'Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill' as Soil
- Author
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A.V. Bogdanov, G.G. Popova, A.S. Shatrova, and K.V. Fedotov
- Subjects
0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,engineering.material ,complex mixtures ,050601 international relations ,Colloid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Lignin ,021108 energy ,Ecology ,Precipitation (chemistry) ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,05 social sciences ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,food and beverages ,Paper mill ,Pulp and paper industry ,Pollution ,0506 political science ,Slurry ,engineering ,Soil fertility ,business ,Sludge - Abstract
A series of industrial experimental tests on the freeze treatment of colloidal sludge lignin precipitates was carried out under natural conditions. Changes in the physical and chemical properties of the precipitates were studied. It is established that three fractions are formed following the freeze treatment of colloidal sludge lignin precipitates, including demineralized water (up to 25 %), mineralized water (up to 15 %) and a restructured colloidal precipitate (up to 60 %). The total volume of the precipitate is shown to decrease to 40 %. Freezing precipitation of colloidal lignin slurry of "the Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill" leads to a decrease in toxicity from the third to the fifth class of danger. On the basis of frozen sediments, the lignin sludge of OJSC Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill with the addition of other waste from the Baikal region, a fertile soil was obtained that corresponds to GOST R 54651-2011 "Organic fertilizers on the basis of sewage sludge. Specifications".
- Published
- 2020
186. A Collaborative Approach Toward Scientific Paper Recommendation Using Citation Context
- Author
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Khalid Haruna, Rodina Ahmad, and Nazmus Sakib
- Subjects
contextual information ,Information retrieval ,General Computer Science ,Recall ,Relation (database) ,business.industry ,Computer science ,General Engineering ,Novelty ,Scientific paper recommendation systems ,2-level paper-citation relation matrix ,Recommender system ,citation context ,collaborative filtering ,Collaborative filtering ,Mean reciprocal rank ,General Materials Science ,The Internet ,lcsh:Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,Baseline (configuration management) ,business ,lcsh:TK1-9971 - Abstract
Researchers face difficulties in finding relevant papers to their research interest as the number of scientific publication is rapidly increasing on the web. Scientific paper recommenders have emerged as a leading solution to help researchers by automatically suggesting relevant and useful publications. Several approaches have been proposed on improving recommender systems. However, most existing approaches depend on priori user profiles, and thus they cannot recommend papers to new user. Furthermore, the existing approaches utilize non-public contextual information, and thus it cannot adequately find similarities between papers due to copyright restrictions. Also, the existing approaches consider only single level paper-citation relation to identify similarities between papers. Considering the above challenges, this paper presents a collaborative filtering based recommendation approach for scientific papers that does not depend on priori user profiles and which utilizes only public contextual information. Using citation context, we utilized 2-level paper-citation relations to find hidden associations between papers. The rational underlying this approach is that, two papers are co-occurred with same cited paper(s) and two papers are co-occurring with same citing paper(s) are significantly similar to some extent. To evaluate the performance of the proposed approach, publicly available datasets are used to conduct extensive experiments. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed approach has significantly outperforms the baseline approaches in terms of precision, recall, F1, mean average precision, and mean reciprocal rank, which are commonly used information retrieval metrics. The novelty of this study is that, with the proposed approach, researchers are able to find relevant and useful publications over the internet regardless of their previous research experiences and research area.
- Published
- 2020
187. Coplanar Waveguide Based Sensor Using Paper Superstrate for Non-Invasive Sweat Monitoring
- Author
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Michael M. Y. R. Riad and A. R. Eldamak
- Subjects
Materials science ,General Computer Science ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,re-useable sensor ,Transmission line ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,General Materials Science ,Sensitivity (control systems) ,Transmission coefficient ,hydration sensor ,Filter paper ,business.industry ,Coplanar waveguide ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Non invasive ,General Engineering ,Microwave bio-sensing ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,0104 chemical sciences ,liquid characterization ,cystic fibrosis diagnosis ,Lookup table ,Optoelectronics ,lcsh:Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,business ,paper superstrate ,lcsh:TK1-9971 ,Microwave - Abstract
This paper presents a broadband, simple, re-useable and low-cost approach for noninvasive sweat monitoring using a passive microwave circuit and a cellulose filter paper as a superstrate. The proposed sensor is composed of filter paper with the ability to absorb the sample liquid under test (LUT) placed on top of a coplanar waveguide (CPW) transmission line. Various samples of sodium chloride (NaCl) solutions with concentrations in the range of 0.01-2 mol/L and models of artificial sweat are used to test the proposed sensor. The difference in transmission coefficient (S21) between dry and wet states is used to determine the concentrations of tested solutions in the band of 1-6 GHz. The sensor detects concentrations as low as 0.01 mol/L (0.58 g/L) and quantities as low as 137 μL with a maximum sensitivity of 46.7 dB/g/L. The proposed sensor presents a simple approach to sample and characterize liquids with enhanced sensitivity and consistent performance using microwave signals.
- Published
- 2020
188. MULTI-ELEMENT ANALYSIS OF ABOVE-SLUDGE WATERS IN THE ACCUMULATION CELLS OF BAYKALSK PULP AND PAPER MILL FOR TERRITORY REMEDIATION STRATEGY CHOOSING
- Author
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Yu. A. Dambinov, E. P. Chebykin, and A. N. Suturin
- Subjects
Ecology ,business.industry ,Environmental remediation ,Pulp (paper) ,engineering ,Environmental science ,Paper mill ,engineering.material ,business ,Pulp and paper industry ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Multi element ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Introduction. Pulp and paper enterprises accumulate large volumes of industrial waste buried in special accumulation cells. In order to choose a technology for treating above-sludge waters, we need to monitor their composition, which depends on the history of cells’ filling and their subsequent use. Methods. In the course of the study, we applied inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Results. We determined the content of 72 chemical elements in above-sludge water of 11 cells at Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill and 4 open water flows near industrial waste landfills, and performed a cluster analysis of the sample composition. As a result, we revealed the peculiarities of water composition, related to the history of cell filling and subsequent pilot experiments. It has been found that the cells with non-disturbed sediments have cleaner water. Out of 16 chemical elements subject to limitation (Na, Al, P, S, Cl, K, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Sr, Mo, Cd, Pb), 11 elements exceed the limits established for wastewater discharged into water bodies within the ecological zones of the Baikal Natural Territory. Each cell is characterized by its own set of elements exceeding maximum allowable concentrations (MAC) and by the extent of such excess. Conclusion. Pilot experiments with cell sediments (joint grouting, drying, dewatering in press-filters) result in the disturbance of the “water/sediment” balance and increase the concentrations of most elements in above-sludge waters. The maximum amounts of elements (6–7) exceeding the MAC values are observed in water in the cells with disturbed sediments, water in the zone of ash slurry discharge, ash and sludge-lignin cells with industrial and household waste. When choosing a technology and procedures for treating above-sludge waters, it is necessary to take into account the specifics of their composition. Using the polluted water flow running into Lake Baikal during catastrophic floods in the summer of 2019 as an example, we show that it is possible to use multi-element ICP-MS analysis to search for sources of pollution from industrial facilities.
- Published
- 2020
189. Three-dimensional microfluidic tape-paper-based sensing device for blood total bilirubin measurement in jaundiced neonates
- Author
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Wei Shen, Liyuan Zhang, James C.G. Doery, and Weirui Tan
- Subjects
Paper ,Surface Properties ,Bilirubin ,Point-of-care testing ,Microfluidics ,Biomedical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Lab-On-A-Chip Devices ,medicine ,Humans ,Particle Size ,Whole blood ,Total Bilirubin Measurement ,business.industry ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Infant, Newborn ,General Chemistry ,Paper based ,Jaundice ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,medicine.disease ,Hemolysis ,Jaundice, Neonatal ,3. Good health ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,Point-of-Care Testing ,medicine.symptom ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
More than 60% newborns experience hyperbilirubinemia and jaundice within the initial week after birth due to the accumulation of total bilirubin in blood. Left untreated high levels of bilirubin may result in brain impairment. Simple, fast, accurate, low-cost and timely point-of-care (POC) analysis of total bilirubin is an unmet need especially in resource-limited areas. This work introduces a novel sensing device, named a "tape-paper sensor", capable of separating plasma from whole blood and measuring total bilirubin by a colorimetric diazotization method. The tape-paper sensing method overcomes non-homogeneous color distribution caused by the "coffee stain" effect, which improves the accuracy of colorimetric evaluation on paper-based analytical devices. The level of hemolysis in the plasma extracted by the device is evaluated, confirming no interference in the detection of total bilirubin. The accuracy of the tape-paper sensing approach for neonatal blood sample measurement is verified by comparison with the hospital pathology laboratory method. The small volume of samples and reagents, minimal equipment (an office scanner), fast detection (
- Published
- 2020
190. Effect of HRT on performance of hybrid upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (HUASB) reactor using bio balls in treatment of pulp and paper mill bagasse wash water
- Author
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P. Ravichandran and K. Balaji
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,Paper mill ,02 engineering and technology ,Raw material ,engineering.material ,Biodegradation ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Pulp and paper industry ,01 natural sciences ,Wastewater ,Biogas ,0103 physical sciences ,engineering ,Environmental science ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Bagasse ,Mesophile - Abstract
Enormous quantities of bagasse are being used as raw material in agro based large integrated pulp and paper mills. Anaerobic technology is an effective means of biodegradation of organic substance in wastewater and energy production of biogas that can be used as an alternative fuel. This study illustrates the effect of HRT on performance of lab scale hybrid upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (HUASB) reactor on treatment of pulp and paper mill bagasse wash water. The lab scale HUASB reactor was designed for an effective volume of 0.013 m3 with bio balls as packing media at the top of reactor and operated under mesophilic condition. After startup period, the reactor was operated with HRTs of 23.55, 15.98, 12.00, 10.03 and 7.97 h for the average influent COD concentrations of 2503.6 mg/L, 3918 mg/L, 5432 mg/L, 6608 mg/L and 7996 mg/L respectively. The results showed that the maximum COD removal efficiencies and TSS removal efficiencies were in the range of 68.60–92.19% and 89.56–94.66% respectively. The minimum and maximum biogas yield of 0.32 and 0.53 m3/kg CODa were obtained at influent concentration of 2503.6 mg/L and 7996 mg/L respectively.
- Published
- 2020
191. Biocompatible and flexible paper-based metal electrode for potentiometric wearable wireless biosensing
- Author
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Yuto Mori, Toshiya Sakata, Masayuki Nakao, Masami Hagio, Kazuhiko Nishi, and Akiko Saito
- Subjects
Materials science ,Potentiometric titration ,Wearable computer ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,212 Surface and interfaces ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,208 Sensors and actuators ,Hardware_GENERAL ,Hardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITS ,Wireless ,General Materials Science ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,Bio-Inspired and Biomedical Materials ,potentiometric measurement ,business.industry ,bioelectrical interface ,paper-based electrode ,Paper based ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Biocompatible material ,0104 chemical sciences ,wireless ,Electrode ,TA401-492 ,Metal electrodes ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,wearable biosensor ,Biosensor ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Research Article ,Biotechnology - Abstract
A paper-based electrode is a very attractive component for a disposable, nontoxic, and flexible biosensor. In particular, wearable biosensors, which have recently been attracting interest, not only require these characteristics of paper-based electrodes but must also be able to detect various ions and biomolecules in biological fluids. In this paper, we demonstrate the detection ability of paper-based metal electrodes for wearable biosensors as part of a wireless potentiometric measurement system, focusing on the detection of pH and sodium ions. The paper-based metal electrodes were obtained by simply coating a silicone-rubber-coated paper sheet with a Au (/Cr) thin film by sputtering then modifying it with different functional membranes such as an oxide membrane (Ta2O5) and a fluoropolysilicone (FPS)-based Na+-sensitive membrane, corresponding to the targeted ions. Satisfactory and stable detection sensitivities of the modified paper-based Au electrodes were obtained over several weeks even when they were bent to a radius of curvature in the range of 6.5 to 25 mm, assuming use in a flexible body patch biosensor. Moreover, the Na+ concentration in a sweat sample was evaluated using the paper-based Au electrode with the FPS-based Na+-sensitive membrane in a wireless and real-time manner while the electrode was bent. Thus, owing to their complex mesh structure, flexible paper sheets should be suitable for use as potentiometric electrodes for wearable wireless biosensors., Graphical abstarct
- Published
- 2020
192. Grouting of Waste of the Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill to Reduce the Technogenic Impact to the Baikal Lake Ecosystem
- Author
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Michael S. Chernov, Irina A. Rodkina, O.V. Zerkal, Eugene N. Samarin, and Nataliia S. Kravchenko
- Subjects
Cement ,Municipal solid waste ,business.industry ,Colloidal silica ,Pulp (paper) ,Paper mill ,engineering.material ,Pulp and paper industry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Compressive strength ,chemistry ,engineering ,Environmental science ,Ammonium persulfate ,business ,Groundwater - Abstract
Research is devoted to the problem of recycling waste of the Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill, whose activity has caused serious damage to the ecological environment of Lake Baikal and its environs. Grouting waste production is currently the most effective possible decision to the problem of pollutants, such as sludge-lignin and ash, in water objects and groundwater. The results on the grouting of liquid and solid waste from the Baikal Pulp and Paper Mill, represented by sludge lignin and ash, are presented. Cement, liquid glass, colloidal silica, ammonium persulfate, hydrogen peroxide were used as the main hardeners. Samples were formed by mixing the original waste with astringent. The strength in time, shrinkage, resistance to water were studied. Samples formed on the basis of colloidal silica solution have a maximum uniaxial compressive strength of 0.4 - 0.5 MPa, on the basis of liquid glass—0.2 - 0.3 MPa. Adding fine sand increases the strength by 1.5 - 1.7 times. Samples based on ammonium persulfate and hydrogen peroxide do not have sufficient strength. Adding fine quartz sand increases the strength up to 1.0 - 1.2 MPa.
- Published
- 2020
193. Investigation of cyanobacteria blooms in paper mill wastewaters and assessment of zinc as a control agent
- Author
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H. Burger, J. Marzouk, John van Leeuwen, John Awad, S. Dickson, Burger, H, Dickson, S, Awad, J, Marzouk, J, and Van Leeuwen, John
- Subjects
Cyanobacteria ,Chlorophyll a ,Environmental Engineering ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Zinc ,010501 environmental sciences ,engineering.material ,01 natural sciences ,cyanobacteria ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nutrient ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecotoxicology ,paper mill ,wastewater ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,biology ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,fungi ,zinc ,Paper mill ,Pulp and paper industry ,biology.organism_classification ,phycocyanin ,chemistry ,engineering ,Environmental science ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Bloom ,business - Abstract
Refereed/Peer-reviewed At a paper manufacturing mill (PML) that had been previously part of an integrated pulp (bisulphite) and paper mills industry, cyanobacterial blooms were observed in the mill’s aerated stabilization basin (ASB) ponds at about 3 years after pulping had been discontinued. This study aimed to determine the factors that led to bloom occurrences and potential control strategies applicable to the paper manufacturing mill’s, aerated stabilization basin system that discharges wastewaters into a coastal lake. Following discontinuation of pulping, the colour of the wastewaters reduced to low levels (~ 10 Hazen units or less), while the levels of nutrient remained potentially supportive of cyanobacteria growth with total phosphorus at ~ 0.1 mg/L and total nitrogen at > 2.5 mg/L. Incidences of blooms in the ABS were associated with preceding average monthly rainfalls and wind speeds being less (~ 44% and ~ 7%, respectively) and average direct sunlight hours being greater (~ 9%) than the long-term average values. Zinc was investigated for control of cyanobacteria as this metal is less toxic to aquatic organisms and microflora than copper algaecides. In laboratory culture trials, zinc was found to inhibit growth of M. aeruginosa (strain MIC338) and Pseudanabaena sp. when dosed at ~ 2.5 mg/L. The inhibition of cyanobacteria by zinc was found to vary between ASB pond samples which had different in situ chlorophyll a levels. This study found that the PML wastewaters investigated can be supportive of cyanobacterial growth to bloom levels after discontinuation of pulping processes and that zinc has potential as a cyanobacteria control agent.
- Published
- 2022
194. HFA of the ESC Position paper on the management of LVAD supported patients for the non LVAD specialist healthcare provider Part 1: Introduction and at the non-hospital settings in the community
- Author
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Miriam Abuhazira, Finn Gustafsson, Yaron D. Barac, Yoav Hammer, Marco Metra, Massimo F Piepoli, Stamatis Adamopoulos, Davor Miličić, Gerasimos Filippatos, Avishay Grupper, Ovidiu Chioncel, Israel Gotsman, Marisa G. Crespo-Leiro, Piotr Ponikowski, Andrew J.S. Coats, Arsen D. Ristić, Nicolaas de Jonge, Binyamin Ben Avraham, Aviv Shaul, Stefan D. Anker, Luciano Potena, Giuseppe M.C. Rosano, Righab Hamdan, Osnat Itzhaki Ben Zadok, Loreena Hill, Laurens F. Tops, Sanemn Nalbantgil, Johann Altenberger, Steven Tsui, Arjang Ruhparwar, Maria Frigeiro, Wilfried Mullens, Tiny Jaarsma, Stephan Winnik, Eva Goncalvesova, Tal Hasin, Jeremy Elliston, Frank Ruschitzka, Tuvia Ben Gal, Jacob Lavee, Petar M. Seferovic, Gustafsson, Finn/0000-0003-2144-341X, Ben Avraham, Binyamin, Crespo-Leiro, Marisa Generosa, Filippatos, Gerasimos, Gotsman, Israel, Seferovic, Petar, Hasin, Tal, Potena, Luciano, Milicic, Davor, Coats, Andrew J. S., Rosano, Giuseppe, Ruschitzka, Frank, Metra, Marco, Anker, Stefan, Altenberger, Johann, Adamopoulos, Stamatis, Barac, Yaron D., Chioncel, Ovidiu, De Jonge, Nicolaas, Elliston, Jeremy, Frigeiro, Maria, Goncalvesova, Eva, Grupper, Avishay, Hamdan, Righab, Hammer, Yoav, Hill, Loreena, Ben Zadok, Osnat Itzhaki, Abuhazira, Miriam, Lavee, Jacob, MULLENS, Wilfried, Nalbantgil, Sanemn, Piepoli, Massimo F., Ponikowski, Piotr, Ristic, Arsen, Ruhparwar, Arjang, Shaul, Aviv, Tops, Laurens F., Tsui, Steven, Winnik, Stephan, Jaarsma, Tiny, Gustafsson, Finn, and Ben Gal, Tuvia
- Subjects
Shared Care ,LVAD ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Health Personnel ,Population ,Social and Clinical Pharmacy ,CPR ,Emergency medical systems ,General description ,Hospitals ,Humans ,Tissue Donors ,Heart Transplantation ,Heart-Assist Devices ,Heart-Assist Devices / adverse effects ,Settore MED/11 - Malattie dell'Apparato Cardiovascolare ,ESC and HFA Paper ,Heart-Failure ,ESC and HFA Papers ,Ventricular Assist Devices ,Older population ,Tidal Carbon-Dioxide ,medicine ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,Cardiac-Output ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Tachyarrhythmias ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Samhällsfarmaci och klinisk farmaci ,Mechanical Circulatory Support ,Emergency department ,Controlled Trial ,medicine.disease ,equipment and supplies ,Implantation ,Ventricular assist device ,RC666-701 ,Cardiopulmonary-Resuscitation ,Position paper ,Medical emergency ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Healthcare providers ,Destination therapy - Abstract
[Abstract] The accepted use of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) technology as a good alternative for the treatment of patients with advanced heart failure together with the improved survival of the LVAD-supported patients on the device and the scarcity of donor hearts has significantly increased the population of LVAD-supported patients. The expected and non-expected device-related and patient-device interaction complications impose a significant burden on the medical system exceeding the capacity of the LVAD implanting centres. The ageing of the LVAD-supported patients, mainly those supported with the 'destination therapy' indication, increases the risk for those patients to experience comorbidities common in the older population. The probability of an LVAD-supported patient presenting with medical emergency to a local emergency department, internal, or surgical ward of a non-LVAD implanting centre is increasing. The purpose of this trilogy is to supply the immediate tools needed by the non-LVAD specialized physician: ambulance clinicians, emergency ward physicians, general cardiologists, internists, anaesthesiologists, and surgeons, to comply with the medical needs of this fast-growing population of LVAD-supported patients. The different issues discussed will follow the patient's pathway from the ambulance to the emergency department and from the emergency department to the internal or surgical wards and eventually to the discharge home from the hospital back to the general practitioner. In this first part of the trilogy on the management of LVAD-supported patients for the non-LVAD specialist healthcare provider, after the introduction on the assist devices technology in general, definitions and structured approach to the assessment of the LVAD-supported patient in the ambulance and emergency department is presented including cardiopulmonary resuscitation for LVAD-supported patients.
- Published
- 2022
195. Graphene-Paper-Based Electrodes on Plastic and Textile Supports as New Platforms for Amperometric Biosensing
- Author
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Chiara Zanardi, Emanuele Treossi, Fabrizio Poletti, L. Favaretto, Barbara Zanfrognini, Alessandra Scidà, Manuela Melucci, Vitaliy Parkula, Vincenzo Palermo, and Alessandro Kovtun
- Subjects
electrochemical platforms ,Textile ,Materials science ,business.industry ,graphene paper ,Nanotechnology ,electrochemical biosensors ,flexible electronics ,smart fabrics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Flexible electronics ,Amperometry ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Biomaterials ,Electrode ,Electrochemistry ,Electrochemical biosensor ,Settore CHIM/01 - Chimica Analitica ,business ,Biosensor ,Graphene oxide paper - Abstract
The possibility of exfoliating graphite into graphene sheets allows the researchers to produce a material, termed "graphene paper" (G-paper), conductive as graphite but more flexible and processable. G-paper is already used for electronic applications, like conductors, antennas, and heaters, outperforming metal conductors thanks to its high flexibility, lightness, chemical stability, and compatibility with polymeric substrates. Here, the effectiveness in the use of G-paper for the realization of electrodes on flexible plastic substrates and textiles, and their applicability as amperometric sensors are demonstrated. The performance of these devices is compared with commercial platforms made of carbon-based inks, finding that they outperform commercial devices in sensing nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH), a key molecule for enzymatic biosensing; the electrodes can achieve state-of-the-art sensitivity (107.2 ?A mm cm) and limit of detection (0.6 × 10 m) with no need of additional functionalization. Thanks to this property, the stable deposition of a suitable enzyme, namely lactate dehydrogenase, on the electrode surface is used as a proof of concept of the applicability of this new platform for the realization of a biosensor. The possibility of having a single material suitable for antennas, electronics, and now sensing opens new opportunities for smart fabrics in wearable electronic applications.
- Published
- 2022
196. New scenarios in secondary hyperparathyroidism: etelcalcetide. Position paper of working group on CKD-MBD of the Italian Society of Nephrology
- Author
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Piergiorgio Messa, Giuseppe Vezzoli, Mario Cozzolino, Ciro Esposito, Patrizia Ondei, Giovanni Cancarini, Antonio Bellasi, Francesco Locatelli, Giuseppe Pontoriero, Marzia Pasquali, Carlo Guastoni, Fabio Malberti, Ugo Teatini, Bellasi, A., Cozzolino, M., Malberti, F., Cancarini, G., Esposito, C., Guastoni, C. M., Ondei, P., Pontoriero, G., Teatini, U., Vezzoli, G., Pasquali, M., Messa, P., and Locatelli, F.
- Subjects
Nephrology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Calcimimetic ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Chronic kidney disease-mineral and bone disorder ,Internal medicine ,CKD-MBD ,medicine ,Humans ,Position papers and Guidelines ,Intensive care medicine ,education ,Dialysis ,Chronic Kidney Disease-Mineral and Bone Disorder ,Etelcalcetide ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Secondary hyperparathyroidism ,Italy ,Position paper ,Cinacalcet ,Peptides ,business ,PTH ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Bone mineral abnormalities (defined as Chronic Kidney Disease Mineral Bone Disorder; CKD-MBD) are prevalent and associated with a substantial risk burden and poor prognosis in CKD population. Several lines of evidence support the notion that a large proportion of patients receiving maintenance dialysis experience a suboptimal biochemical control of CKD-MBD. Although no study has ever demonstrated conclusively that CKD-MBD control is associated with improved survival, an expanding therapeutic armamentarium is available to correct bone mineral abnormalities. In this position paper of Lombardy Nephrologists, a summary of the state of art of CKD-MBD as well as a summary of the unmet clinical needs will be provided. Furthermore, this position paper will focus on the potential and drawbacks of a new injectable calcimimetic, etelcalcetide, a drug available in Italy since few months ago.
- Published
- 2019
197. CFD simulations for paper-based DNA amplification reaction (LAMP) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis—point-of-care diagnostic perspective
- Author
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Debayan Das and Pradipta Kumar Panigrahi
- Subjects
DNA, Bacterial ,Paper ,Materials science ,Point-of-Care Systems ,Multiphysics ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Loop-mediated isothermal amplification ,02 engineering and technology ,Computational fluid dynamics ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Process engineering ,Point of care ,biology ,Diagnostic Tests, Routine ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Numerical Analysis, Computer-Assisted ,Paper based ,Dna amplification ,biology.organism_classification ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Manufacturing cost ,Computer Science Applications ,Hydrodynamics ,business ,Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques ,Porosity - Abstract
Loop-mediated isothermal amplification or LAMP has been identified to be an efficient technology for point-of-care diagnostics. Paper-based LAMP technique has tremendous potential in replacing the existing tube-based technology as the manufacturing cost of a paper-based device is comparatively lower and easy-to-use. LAMP-based paper diagnostic device for Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) detection is of extreme importance as it will help in early and rapid diagnosis of the affected patients. The fabrication of these devices requires assessment of design parameters on the extent of LAMP amplification reaction. Hence, CFD studies would be extremely beneficial from the design perspective. The current work presents an insight into the CFD simulations for LAMP amplification reaction on a porous paper membrane (nitrocellulose membrane). The convection-diffusion-reaction model is solved on a COMSOL Multiphysics 5.0 platform. Studies on effect of pore size, aspect ratio and initial DNA concentration on the extent of DNA amplification reaction have been carried out. The current paper-based technique is effective in detecting a minimum of 5 copies of DNA contrasting the previous semi-quantitative technique which demonstrated the detection of minimum 98 copies. Overall, the simulation results displayed almost 96% enhancement in the DNA amplification rate on paper membrane. Graphical abstract Graphical abstract for the computational study of DNA amplification reaction via LAMP technique on a porous paper membrane.
- Published
- 2019
198. Regression models for removal of heavy metals by water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) from wastewater of pulp and paper processing industry
- Author
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Pankaj Kumar, Vinod Kumar, and Jogendra Singh
- Subjects
Eichhornia crassipes ,biology ,Hyacinth ,business.industry ,Pulp (paper) ,Regression analysis ,Paper mill ,engineering.material ,Pulp and paper industry ,biology.organism_classification ,Phytoremediation ,Wastewater ,engineering ,Environmental science ,business ,Effluent - Abstract
The present research deals with multivariate regression modeling of heavy metals uptake by cultivated Eichhornia crassipes (water hyacinth: WH) in the wastewater of paper and pulp processing industry. The WH plants were grown in different treatments of wastewater of paper and pulp processing industry (25, 50, 75, and 100%), while the control experiment was performed using borewell water. The influence of pH and metal quantity in the wastewater of paper and pulp processing industry over effective metal accumulation (∆Y: mg kg− 1) by WH was statistically modeled. Results showed that the established models had high R2 (
- Published
- 2019
199. Health Care for Our Nation's Veterans: A Policy Paper From the American College of Physicians
- Author
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Ryan, Crowley, Omar, Atiq, David, Hilden, Thomas G, Cooney, and Michael, Tan
- Subjects
Mental Health Services ,Advisory Committees ,Population ,Holistic Health ,Modernization theory ,Health Services Accessibility ,Patient satisfaction ,Nursing ,Health care ,Internal Medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Medicine ,Health Workforce ,education ,Societies, Medical ,health care economics and organizations ,Patient Care Team ,education.field_of_study ,Primary Health Care ,Emergency management ,Delivery of Health Care, Integrated ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Medical record ,General Medicine ,Telemedicine ,United States ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,Veterans Health Services ,Position paper ,Private Sector ,Health Services Research ,business ,Administration (government) - Abstract
The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) is the United States' largest integrated health care delivery system, serving over 9 million enrollees at nearly 1300 health care facilities. In addition to providing health care to the nation's military veterans, the VHA has a research and development program, trains thousands of medical residents and other health care professionals, and conducts emergency preparedness and response activities. The VHA has been celebrated for delivering high-quality care to veterans, early adoption of electronic medical records, and high patient satisfaction. However, the system faces challenges, including implementation of an expanded community care program, modernization of its electronic medical records system, and providing care to a population with complex needs. The position paper offers policy recommendations on VHA funding, the community care program, medical and health care professions training, and research and development.
- Published
- 2021
200. Financial Profit in Medicine: A Position Paper From the American College of Physicians
- Author
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Ryan, Crowley, Omar, Atiq, David, Hilden, and Michael, Tan
- Subjects
Finance ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Profit (accounting) ,Financial Management ,Financial stability ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Organizational Policy ,United States ,Fiduciary ,Private equity ,Physicians ,Health care ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Position paper ,Medicine ,Economics, Hospital ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,Health Facilities, Proprietary ,Societies, Medical ,health care economics and organizations ,Quality of Health Care - Abstract
The steady growth of corporate interest and influence in the health care sector over the past few decades has created a more business-oriented health care system in the United States, helping to spur for-profit and private equity investment. Proponents say that this trend makes the health care system more efficient, encourages innovation, and provides financial stability to ensure access and improve care. Critics counter that such moves favor profit over care and erode the patient-physician relationship. American College of Physicians (ACP) underscores that physicians are permitted to earn a reasonable income as long as they are fulfilling their fiduciary responsibility to provide high-quality, appropriate care within the guardrails of medical professionalism and ethics. In this position paper, ACP considers the effect of mergers, integration, private equity investment, nonprofit hospital requirements, and conversions from nonprofit to for-profit status on patients, physicians, and the health care system.
- Published
- 2021
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