1,297 results on '"C. Gabriel"'
Search Results
102. Guidelines for hypertension management in primary care: is local adaptation possible?
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Nathália C, Leite-Santos, Daniela O, de Melo, Rafael A, Mantovani-Silva, Franciele C, Gabriel, Guido S, Fornasari, Egídio L, Dórea, Caroline de G R C, Molino, and Eliane, Ribeiro
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Primary Health Care ,Hypertension ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Humans - Abstract
Hypertension affects more than one billion people worldwide. There has been much discussion about clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) following the proposal of lower thresholds for starting pharmacological treatment. Some smaller groups or institutions could benefit from adapting CPGs to their local context, a process that requires high-quality CPGs with few points of conflict in their recommendations. To address this issue, we have compared high-quality hypertension CPGs and highlighted conflicting recommendations.CPGs were searched in MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Library, as well as specific websites. Only CPGs published between 2016 and 2019 were included. We defined CPGs as high-quality if the 'rigor of development' and 'editorial independence' AGREE II domains were scored at least 60%. We compared recommendations made by high-quality CPGs and highlighted areas of conflict (defined as disagreements between more than two CPGs).Nineteen CPGs were identified. The highest scoring domain was 'scope and purpose' (74.3%) and the lowest scoring was 'applicability' (40.0%). Eight CPGs were rated as high quality. Most CPG recommendations on the management of hypertension were consistent. Conflicting recommendations were regarding blood pressure (BP) levels to initiate pharmacotherapy and therapeutic goals, particularly in patients with low cardiovascular risk and older patients.It is possible to adapt hypertension CPGs once high-quality documents have been identified with agreement between most recommendations. Guideline developers can focus on the adaption process and concentrate efforts on implementation.
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- 2020
103. A Retrospective Study of Transmissible Viral Proventriculitis in Broiler Chickens in California: 2000-18
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James S. Guy, C. Gabriel Sentíes-Cué, Ruediger Hauck, Simone Stoute, and H. L. Shivaprasad
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Necrosis ,Biology ,Pallor ,California ,Infectious bursal disease ,Food Animals ,Fibrosis ,medicine ,Birnaviridae ,Animals ,Poultry Diseases ,Retrospective Studies ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Incidence ,Broiler ,Proventriculus ,Hyperplasia ,medicine.disease ,Birnaviridae Infections ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Flock ,medicine.symptom ,Chickens - Abstract
Transmissible viral proventriculitis (TVP) is a disease of chickens, mostly in broilers of 2-8 wk of age. Chicken proventricular necrosis virus (CPNV), a birnavirus, is the etiologic agent. Characteristic gross lesions are enlargement, atony, and pallor of the proventriculus. Cases diagnosed in California between 2000 and 2018 (n = 477), originating from 93 different farms representing all major companies in the region, were analyzed. Frequency of cases varied widely between years, with no recognizable seasonality. The flocks were between 6 and 61 days of age; the average age was 34.0 days, and the median age was 35 days. In 166 cases, between 6.3% and 100% of the submitted birds had gross lesions in the proventriculus. The most common findings were enlarged or dilated proventriculi, thickened walls, and pale or mottled serosal appearance. Histopathologically, inflammation of the glands was the most frequent finding. Other lesions included necrosis, hyperplasia, or both conditions of the glandular epithelium; dilated glands; and occasionally fibrin deposition, fibrosis, and hemorrhages. Twenty-three proventriculi from six cases were tested by immunohistochemistry for the presence of CPNV antigen; 21 stained positive. In 209 cases, birds also had lesions in the bursa fabricii attributed to infectious bursal disease, but with no significant difference in the mean percentage of birds with gross lesions in the proventriculus between cases with or without lesions in the bursa fabricii. The results show that TVP is a common disease of broiler flocks in California and confirms that CPNV is the likely causative agent.
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- 2020
104. Considering socio-political framings when analyzing coastal climate change effects can prevent maldevelopment on small islands
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David, C. Gabriel, Hennig, Arne, Ratter, Beate M. W., Roeber, Volker, Zahid, Schlurmann, Torsten, David, C. Gabriel, Hennig, Arne, Ratter, Beate M. W., Roeber, Volker, Zahid, and Schlurmann, Torsten
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Adapting to climate change and sea level rise is challenging on small islands. False adaptation can lead to adverse impacts on natural and societal dynamics. Therefore, an interdisciplinary perspective on the interaction of natural dynamics, societal demands, and political decisions is crucial. In this sense, this study scrutinizes coastal processes and socio-political dimensions of erosion on the reef island Fuvahmulah, the Maldives. The national government and Fuvahmulah’s population have an opposed perception and attribution of the drivers and processes behind Fuvahmulah’s most pressing coastal issue – coastal erosion. To review these perceptions, natural dynamics are recreated with process-based methods and discussed regarding present and projected marine pressures. Population surveys and interviews with actors in coastal development complement the physical insights into erosion on Fuvahmulah and describe the socio-political dimension of climate change adaptation on small islands. This interdisciplinary approach demonstrates how small-islands’ adaptive capacities are typically impaired and disclose the potential of local knowledge to overcome maldevelopment.
- Published
- 2021
105. AB0038 DUAL TARGETING PEPTIDE RLS-0071 REDUCES AND INHIBITS MYELOPEROXIDASE (MPO) IN HEALTHY HUMAN VOLUNTEER
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P. Kumar, K. Cunnion, N. Krishna, U. Thienel, P. Hair, J. Goss, and C. Gabriel
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Rheumatology ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
BackgroundRLS-0071-101 was a first in human clinical trial to evaluate safety of the peptide RLS-0071 in healthy volunteers in a single ascending dose and multiple ascending dose format. RLS-0071, previously referred to as Peptide Inhibitor of Complement C1 (PIC1) is a dual-targeting peptide being developed for clinical use to moderate humoral and cellular inflammation via inhibition of complement activation and neutrophil effectors including myeloperoxidase (MPO) and Neutrophil extracellular trap formation (NETosis).1,2 Humans that are otherwise asymptomatic are considered at risk for cardiovascular complications if they have a plasma MPO level of > 420 pmol.3 A post hoc analysis of plasma samples from subjects participating in RLS-0071-101 identified an individual with mildly elevated baseline MPO level (142 pmol/L).ObjectivesEvaluate if RLS-0071 dosing would change MPO level or activity in a subject with elevated baseline MPO.MethodsFrozen plasma samples prepared from blood collected by venipunture into K2EDTA tubes (BD) was utilized to determine MPO quantity and activity levels. MPO quantity in the plasma was analyzed using a human MPO ELISA kit (BMS2038INST, Invitrogen) and MPO activity within the plasma was analyzed using a fluorescence-based myeloperoxidase assay kit (K745-100, BioVision).ResultsUpon screening 54 subjects from RLS-0071-101 we identified one individual with a mildly elevated MPO level at baseline, a 21-year-old white female with BMI of 21.7. The subject received 9 intravenous infusions of RLS-0071 each at a dose of 10 mg/kg. Her vital signs and body temperature remained normal throughout the study and the only blood laboratory abnormality were a mildly low plasma protein concentration of Day 2 and Day 4 which was noted both among recipients of the peptide and placebo subjects. Analysis of MPO blood concentrations demonstrated a mildly elevated baseline plasma MPO concentration that decreased after multiple doses of RLS-0071 with partial recovery to baseline 24 hours after cessation of dosing. MPO activity analyzed using a fluorescence-based myeloperoxidase assay kit demonstrated an elevated baseline plasma MPO activity level that decreased after multiple doses of RLS-0071 with partial recovery after 24 hours.ConclusionThese results suggest promise for RLS-0071 to reversibly moderate plasma MPO activity and potentially affect MPO-mediated diseases including acute coronary syndrome (ACS), atheromatous plaque vulnerability and auto immune conditions.4,5,6,7.References[1]Sharp, Julia A., et al. “Peptide inhibitor of complement c1, a novel suppressor of classical pathway activation: mechanistic studies and clinical potential.” Frontiers in immunology 5 (2014): 406.[2]Hair, Pamela S., et al. “Inhibition of myeloperoxidase activity in cystic fibrosis sputum by peptide inhibitor of complement C1 (PIC1).” PLoS One 12.1 (2017): e0170203.[3]Tang WH, Wu Y, Nicholls SJ, Hazen SL. Plasma myeloperoxidase predicts incident cardiovascular risks in stable patients undergoing medical management for coronary artery disease. Clin Chem. 2011;57(1):33-9.[4]Malle, E.; Marsche, G.; Panzenboeck, U.; Sattler, W. Myeloperoxidase-mediated oxidation of high-density lipoproteins: Fingerprints of newly recognized potential proatherogenic lipoproteins. Arch. Biochem. Biophys., 2006, 445 (2), 245-255.[5]Nurcombe, H. L.; Bucknall, R. C.; Edwards, S. W. Activation of the neutrophil myeloperoxidase-H2O2 system by synovial fluid isolated from patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Ann. Rheum. Dis., 1991, 50 (4), 237-242[6]Malle, E.; Buch, T.; Grone, H. J. Myeloperoxidase in kidney disease. Kidney Int., 2003, 64 (6), 1956-1967.[7]Nicholls, S. J.; Hazen, S. L. Myeloperoxidase and cardiovascular disease. Arterioscler., Thromb., Vasc. Biol., 2005, 25 (6), 1102- 1111.Disclosure of InterestsParvathi Kumar Shareholder of: I have stock options available, Consultant of: Served as a consultant for ReAlta life Sciences INC from April- July 2020, Employee of: I am employed by ReAlta Life Sciences, Kenji Cunnion Shareholder of: Shareholder of ReAlta life sciences, Employee of: ReAlta Life Sciences, Neel Krishna Employee of: I am an employee of ReAlta Life Sciences., Ulrich Thienel Shareholder of: Shareholder of ReAlta and JNJ, Employee of: ReAlta Life Sciences, Pamela Hair Employee of: ReAlta Life Sciences, Jessica Goss Employee of: ReAlta Life Sciences, Christos Gabriel: None declared
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- 2022
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106. One‐pot Synthesis of Fused Dipyranocoumarins from Dihydroxycoumarins and Propargyl Chlorides under Microwave Irradiation
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C. Gabriel, Konstantinos E. Litinas, and Evangelia-Eirini N. Vlachou
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010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Propargyl ,Microwave irradiation ,One-pot synthesis ,Organic chemistry ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences - Published
- 2018
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107. Synthetic exploration of the binary cadmium-quinic acid system linked to in vitro cytotoxicity and chelation cytoprotection investigation
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C. Gabriel, O. Tsave, C. Iordanidou, Athanasios Salifoglou, and Antonis Hatzidimitriou
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Aqueous solution ,010405 organic chemistry ,Quinic acid ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Cytoprotection ,Combinatorial chemistry ,In vitro ,0104 chemical sciences ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Metal ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,visual_art ,Materials Chemistry ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Chelation ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Cytotoxicity - Abstract
In order to investigate the structure-specific bioactivity of Cd(II) in a cellular environment and delve into the associated biomolecular interactions, binary systems of that metal ion in the presence of the physiological naturally-occurring α-hydroxycarboxylic acid quinic acid were examined synthetically in a pH-specific mode. Two discrete polymeric compounds [Cd(C7H11O6)2]n·n/2H2O (1) and [Cd(C7H11O6)2]n·nH2O (2) were isolated and characterized through elemental analysis, FT-IR, NMR, TGA, and X-ray crystallography. Despite their discrete solid state metal-binding ligand coordination modes and lattice architecture, ESI-MS studies on 1 and 2 showed that both give rise to the same species upon dissolution in water. In vitro biological investigation of the toxicity profile of 2 in two cell lines, 3 T3-L1 and Saos-2, point out the influence of the coordination environment of Cd(II) on cell survival, migration and cellular morphology. The in vitro cytotoxic work showed a concentration- and tissue-specific pattern for the Cd-quinate system. Finally, the cytoprotective role of the chelator agent EDTA was investigated in these cell lines at various concentrations of 2, thereby providing insight into Cd(II) interactions with cellular targets compromising cellular integrity. The collective results, signify the a) importance of the aqueous chemistry of Cd(II) with biologically significant substrates, leading to discrete and isolable architectures reflecting binary Cd(II)-quinate composition, b) formulation of the cytotoxicity profile, based on well-defined Cd(II) species, and c) selection and use of appropriately configured organic chelators into future research linked to the development of preventive and/or therapeutic approaches pertaining to Cd(II) (de)toxification processes.
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- 2018
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108. Comparative assessment of metal-specific adipogenic activity in zinc and vanadium-citrates through associated gene expression
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O. Tsave, Maria P. Yavropoulou, John G. Yovos, Athanasios Salifoglou, M. Kafantari, and C. Gabriel
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Adipose tissue ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Insulin resistance ,3T3-L1 Cells ,Internal medicine ,Adipocyte ,Adipocytes ,Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Citrates ,Adipogenesis ,biology ,Adiponectin ,Chemistry ,Glucokinase ,Insulin ,Vanadium ,medicine.disease ,0104 chemical sciences ,Insulin receptor ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,biology.protein - Abstract
Diabetes mellitus comprises a group of metabolic abnormalities due to insulin deficiency and/or resistance. Obesity contributes to diabetes, with a strong causal relationship existing between diabetes and insulin resistance, especially in patients with Diabetes mellitus II. Adipocytes emerge as key constituents of adipose tissue physiology. In their pre-mature form to mature state transformation, adipocytes fully exemplify one of the key adipogenic actions of insulin. Poised to a) gain insight into adipogenesis leading to antidiabetic factors, and b) investigate adipogenesis through careful examination of insulin contributions to interwoven mechanistic pathways, a systematic comparative study was launched involving well-defined metal-citrates (zinc and vanadium), the chemical reactivity of which was in line with their chemistry under physiological conditions. Selection of the specific compounds was based on their common aqueous coordination chemistry involving the physiological chelator citric acid. Cellular maturation of pre-adipocytes to their mature form was pursued in the presence-absence of insulin and employment of closely linked genetic targets, key to adipocyte maturation (Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPAR-γ), Glucose transporter 1,3,4 (GLUT 1,3,4), Adiponectin (ADIPOQ), Glucokinase (GCK), and Insulin receptor (INS-R)). The results show a) distinct adipogenic biological profiles for the metalloforms involved in a dose-, time- and nature-dependent manner, and b) metal ion-specific adipogenic response-signals at the same or higher level than insulin toward all selected targets. Collectively, the foundations have been established for future exploitation of the distinct metal-specific adipogenic factors contributing to the functional maturation of adipose tissue and their use toward hyperglycemic control in Diabetes mellitus.
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- 2018
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109. Associative bacteria influence maize (Zea maysL.) growth, physiology and root anatomy under different nitrogen levels
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Anderson Kikuchi Calzavara, K. Milani, J. Dias-Pereira, P. H. G. Paiva, Alcino Oliveira, José Antonio Pimenta, L. C. Gabriel, Renata Stolf-Moreira, Edmilson Bianchini, Halley Caixeta Oliveira, and M. C. N. de Oliveira
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Nitrogen ,Bacillus ,Azospirillum brasilense ,Plant Science ,Plant anatomy ,Photosynthesis ,Plant Roots ,Zea mays ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Dry weight ,Microbial inoculant ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biology ,Inoculation ,fungi ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Horticulture ,030104 developmental biology ,Germination ,Shoot ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Despite the great diversity of plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) with potential to partially replace the use of N fertilisers in agriculture, few PGPB have been explored for the production of commercial inoculants, reinforcing the importance of identifying positive plant-bacteria interactions. Aiming to better understand the influence of PGPB inoculation in plant development, two PGPB species with distant phylogenetic relationship were inoculated in maize. Maize seeds were inoculated with Bacillus sp. or Azospirillum brasilense. After germination, the plants were subjected to two N treatments: full (N+) and limiting (N-) N supply. Then, anatomical, biometric and physiological analyses were performed. Both PGPB species modified the anatomical pattern of roots, as verified by the higher metaxylem vessel element (MVE) number. Bacillus sp. also increased the MVE area in maize roots. Under N+ conditions, both PGPB decreased leaf protein content and led to development of shorter roots; however, Bacillus sp. increased root and shoot dry weight, whereas A. brasilense increased photosynthesis rate and leaf nitrate content. In plants subjected to N limitation (N-), photosynthesis rate and photosystem II efficiency increased in maize inoculated with Bacillus sp., whilst A. brasilense contained higher ammonium, amino acids and total soluble sugars in leaves, compared to the control. Plant developmental and metabolical patterns were switched by the inoculation, regardless of the inoculant bacterium used, producing similar as well as distinct modifications to the parameters studied. These results indicate that even non-diazotrophic inoculant strains can improve the plant N status as result of the morpho-anatomical and physiological modifications produced by the PGPB.
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- 2018
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110. Serologic Surveillance of Wild and Pen-reared Ring-necked Pheasants (Phasianus colchicus) as a Method of Understanding Disease Reservoirs
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Peter S. Coates, Simone Stoute, Radhika Gharpure, Ian A. Dwight, C. Gabriel Sentíes-Cué, and Maurice Pitesky
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0106 biological sciences ,Veterinary medicine ,Disease reservoir ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Newcastle disease virus ,Animals, Wild ,Antibodies, Viral ,Infectious bursal disease virus ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Newcastle disease ,California ,Serology ,Infectious bursal disease ,0403 veterinary science ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,medicine ,Animals ,Serologic Tests ,Animal Husbandry ,Galliformes ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Disease Reservoirs ,Ecology ,biology ,Bird Diseases ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Hemorrhagic enteritis ,Phasianus - Abstract
We investigated exposure to infectious diseases in wild (n=33) and pen-reared (n=12) Ring-necked Pheasants (Phasianus colchicus) in the Central Valley of California, US during 2014 and 2015. Serologic tests were positive for antibodies against hemorrhagic enteritis, infectious bursal disease, and Newcastle disease viruses in both wild and pen-reared pheasants.
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- 2018
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111. A Systematic Synthetic Study of the Aqueous Chemistry of Binary Boron–Hydroxycarboxylic Acid Systems: Boron Structural Speciation Correlation to the Biotoxicity Profile
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Marko Bertmer, Antonios G. Hatzidimitriou, C. Gabriel, Athanasios Salifoglou, Sevasti Matsia, and O. Tsave
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Inorganic Chemistry ,Aqueous solution ,chemistry ,010405 organic chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Genetic algorithm ,Inorganic chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,010402 general chemistry ,Boron ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences - Published
- 2018
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112. Genetic resiliency associated with dominant lethal TPM1 mutation causing atrial septal defect with high heritability
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Polakit Teekakirikul, Wenjuan Zhu, Xinxiu Xu, Cullen B. Young, Tuantuan Tan, Amanda M. Smith, Chengdong Wang, Kevin A. Peterson, George C. Gabriel, Sebastian Ho, Yi Sheng, Anne Moreau de Bellaing, Daniel A. Sonnenberg, Jiuann-huey Lin, Elisavet Fotiou, Gennadiy Tenin, Michael X. Wang, Yijen L. Wu, Timothy Feinstein, William Devine, Honglan Gou, Abha S. Bais, Benjamin J. Glennon, Maliha Zahid, Timothy C. Wong, Ferhaan Ahmad, Michael J. Rynkiewicz, William J. Lehman, Bernard Keavney, Tero-Pekka Alastalo, Mary-Louise Freckmann, Kyle Orwig, Steve Murray, Stephanie M. Ware, Hui Zhao, Brian Feingold, and Cecilia W. Lo
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General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Published
- 2022
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113. A New Method for Olive Fruits Recognition
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Gatica, C. Gabriel, primary, Best, S. Stanley, additional, Ceroni, José, additional, and Lefranc, Gaston, additional
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- 2011
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114. IDTFs--closed to patients, open for billing, and ripe for settlement action: OIG report highlights violations in high-volume areas
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McGovern, Michelle C. Gabriel
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United States. Department of Health and Human Services -- Health policy ,United States. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services -- Health policy ,Health policy ,Reports ,Medicaid -- Reports ,Medicare -- Reports - Abstract
In August 2011, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) issued two reports on alleged abuses by independent diagnostics testing facilities (IDTFs) in major [...]
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- 2012
115. Predicción del Grado de Dificultad para Cursar Clases Virtuales a través de Aprendizaje Automático en Estudiantes de la Carrera de Ingeniería en Sistemas Computacionales del Tecnológico Nacional de México/Instituto Tecnológico de Minatitlán
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Reyes Castellanos, María Elena, Torres Martínez, Isaías, Martínez Guzmán, Sonia, Villatoro Cruz, María Concepción, Echeverría Dionisio, Ted, Alejandro Núñez Reyes, C. Gabriel, and Alfredo Reyes Rosas, C. Daniel
- Abstract
Copyright of Congreso Internacional de Investigacion Academia Journals is the property of PDHTech, LLC and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
116. Caracterización de recién nacidos a término con deshidratación hipernatrémica
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Del Castillo C., Gabriel, primary, Suárez A., Diana Vanessa, additional, Granja A., Maria, additional, Oviedo E., Bibiana, additional, Urbano U., Jhuranny, additional, and Cabrera B., Nancy, additional
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- 2020
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117. Hydrodynamic Drivers and Morphological Responses on Small Coral Islands—The Thoondu Spit on Fuvahmulah, the Maldives
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David, C. Gabriel, primary and Schlurmann, Torsten, additional
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- 2020
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118. Structure-from-Motion on shallow reefs and beaches: potential and limitations of consumer-grade drones to reconstruct topography and bathymetry
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David, C. Gabriel, primary, Kohl, Nina, additional, Casella, Elisa, additional, Rovere, Alessio, additional, Ballesteros, Pablo, additional, and Schlurmann, Torsten, additional
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- 2020
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119. Compliance in 2010: a year in review: recent cases highlight significant settlements
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McGovern, Michelle C. Gabriel
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Evaluation ,Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,Health insurance -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Health care reform -- Evaluation ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act - Abstract
2010 was a banner year for health care compliance, with the health care industry shifting to the forefront of the nation's attention with the passage of the Patient Protection and [...]
- Published
- 2011
120. Medicare physician self-referral disclosure protocol: will the truth set you free? While SRDP is an important first step, its value remains to be seen
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McGovern, Michelle C. Gabriel
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United States. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services -- Health policy ,Analysis ,Health policy ,Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,Medicare -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Physician-patient relations -- Analysis ,Physician and patient -- Analysis ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ,Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Repeal Act of 1989 - Abstract
On September 23, 2010, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released the much anticipated Medicare physician self-referral disclosure protocol (SRDP), established pursuant to Section 6409 of the Patient [...]
- Published
- 2011
121. The aqueous structural speciation of binary thallium-hydroxycarboxylic acid systems. Structure-chemical (bio)reactivity correlations
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Antonis Hatzidimitriou, Sevasti Matsia, Athanasios Salifoglou, C. Gabriel, and O. Tsave
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Cell Survival ,Polymers ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Carboxylic Acids ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Ligands ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Coordination complex ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Mice ,Coordination Complexes ,Computational chemistry ,3T3-L1 Cells ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Animals ,Humans ,Reactivity (chemistry) ,Thallium ,media_common ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Aqueous solution ,Biological studies ,010405 organic chemistry ,Water ,Polymer ,0104 chemical sciences ,Speciation ,chemistry ,Elemental analysis - Abstract
Among transition and non-transition metals, thallium is a unique case of an element which, despite its known toxicity, provides interesting challenges through its biology and chemistry linked to diagnosis of human pathophysiologies. Poised to investigate in-depth the structural and electronic aspects of thallium involvement in physiological processes, the synthetic exploration of aqueous binary systems of Tl(I) with physiological binders from the family of hydroxycarboxylic acids (glycolic, lactic, mandelic and citric acid) was pursued in a pH-specific fashion. The isolated crystalline coordination polymers, emerging from that effort, were physicochemically characterized through elemental analysis, FT-IR, ESI-MS, 1H-/13C-NMR, and X-ray crystallography. The coordination environment of thallium in each molecular Tl(I) assembly, along with lattice dimensionality (2D 3D), reflects the contributions of the ligands, collectively exemplifying interactions probed into though BVS and Hirshfeld surface analysis. The results portray a well-defined solid-state and solution profile for all species investigated, thereby providing the basis for their subsequent selection into in vitro biological studies involving the (patho)physiological cell lines 3T3-L1, Saos-2, C2C12, and MCF-7. Biotoxicity profiles, encompassing cell viability, morphology, and cell growth support clearly a concentration-, time-, and cell tissue-specific behavior for the chosen Tl(I) compounds in a structure-specific fashion. Collectively, the chemical experimental data support the biological results in formulating a structure-specific behavior for Tl(I)-hydroxycarboxylato species with respect to biotoxicity mechanisms in a (patho)physiological environment. The accrued knowledge stands as the foreground for further investigation into the relevant biological chemistry of Tl(I) and molecular technologies targeting its sequestration and removal from cellular media.
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- 2021
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122. Vegetative Valvular Endocarditis and Hepatitis Associated withHelcococcus ovisin a 7-year-old White Leghorn Rooster
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C. Gabriel Sentíes-Cué, Simone Stoute, Arthur A. Bickford, Manuela Crispo, Thaiza Savaris, and Tiffany J. Santoro
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Fastidious organism ,040301 veterinary sciences ,030106 microbiology ,Coccus ,Firmicutes ,Virulence ,Hepatitis, Animal ,medicine.disease_cause ,California ,Microbiology ,0403 veterinary science ,Agar plate ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fatal Outcome ,Food Animals ,medicine ,Animals ,Endocarditis ,Ovis ,Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections ,Poultry Diseases ,Hepatitis ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chickens - Abstract
Helcococcus ovis is a slow-growing, pyridoxal-dependent, Gram-positive coccus belonging to the Peptostreptococcaceae family. Bacteria belonging to the genus Helcococcus are considered normal inhabitants of keratinized epithelium in humans; however, several reports support their role as pathogens in humans and several animal species. This case report describes the identification of H. ovis in a white leghorn rooster with valvular vegetative endocarditis and hepatitis. In February 2017 one dead, 7-yr-old, white leghorn rooster was submitted to the California Animal Health and Food Safety Turlock laboratory for diagnostic testing. Postmortem and microscopic examination revealed vegetative endocarditis and aortic thrombosis associated with large numbers of Gram-positive cocci. Myocarditis and extensive necrotic hepatitis were also noticed. Helcococcus ovis was isolated in large numbers from the aortic endothelium and confirmed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Bacterial colonies become evident 48 hr postincubation and exhibited a satellite growth around Escherichia coli on blood agar plates. A similar relationship has been described between Helcococcus spp. and Staphylococcus aureus. The primary site of infection in this chicken was not determined. To our understanding this is the first report of H. ovis infection in an avian species. The fastidious nature and nutritional requirements of Helcococcus spp. must be considered in order to allow proper identification and avoid misdiagnosis. Further studies are needed to define pathogenesis, virulence factors, and predisposing conditions associated with this microorganism.
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- 2017
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123. Generation and propagation of ship-borne waves - Solutions from a Boussinesq-type model
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C. Gabriel David, Volker Roeber, Nils Goseberg, and Torsten Schlurmann
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Environmental Engineering ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Field (physics) ,Wave propagation ,Computation ,Ocean Engineering ,Port (circuit theory) ,01 natural sciences ,Wedge (geometry) ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Nonlinear system ,0103 physical sciences ,Range (statistics) ,Bathymetry ,Geotechnical engineering ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Marine engineering - Abstract
Ship-borne waves are of significant interest for the design of port and waterway infrastructure and the maintenance of its surrounding environment. Computation of these nonlinear and dispersive waves has mainly been focusing on their near-field generation as a fluid-body interaction problem. This study presents an approach for the computation of ship waves generated by a moving pressure disturbance with phase-resolving and depth-averaged equations. To support a wide range of applicability, the paper deals with the evolution of the vessel wedge compared to an analytical solution for sub-to supercritical speeds and the assessment of wave patterns from a broad range of pressure term dimensions, including cross-references to findings in other studies. The conducted numerical experiments showcase the typical response of a Boussinesq-type model to a simplified moving pressure disturbance and identify the main factors and criteria for ship-wave propagation in the far-field of a vessel. Finally, a unique field dataset underlines the capability of an extended Boussinesq-type model to compute the propagation of vessel waves over an irregular bathymetry.
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- 2017
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124. The complex genetics of hypoplastic left heart syndrome
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Madhavi K. Ganapathiraju, Shazina Saeed, D. Woodrow Benson, Dennis Kostka, Omar Khalifa, George C. Gabriel, Simon C. Watkins, Cecilia W. Lo, Kevin A. Peterson, Manush Saydmohammed, Karen L. de Mesy Bentley, Xiaoqin Liu, You Li, Yijen L. Wu, Lisa J. Martin, Nikolai Klena, Hisato Yagi, Maliha Zahid, Anchit Bhagat, Paul Grossfeld, Phillip J. Dexheimer, Bishwanath Chatterjee, William T. Pu, Stephen A. Murray, William A. Devine, George A. Porter, Brian C. Gibbs, Linda Leatherbury, Bruce J. Aronow, Zhaohan Chen, William T Reynolds, Molly Schwartz, Michael Tsang, and Abha S. Bais
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0301 basic medicine ,Genetics ,Heart disease ,Genetic heterogeneity ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Penetrance ,Article ,Human genetics ,Forward genetics ,Hypoplastic left heart syndrome ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine ,Missense mutation ,Exome - Abstract
Congenital heart disease (CHD) affects up to 1 % of live births1. Although a genetic etiology is indicated by an increased recurrence risk2,3, sporadic occurrence suggests that CHD genetics is complex4. Here, we show that hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS), a severe CHD, is multigenic and genetically heterogeneous. Using mouse forward genetics, we report what is, to our knowledge, the first isolation of HLHS mutant mice and identification of genes causing HLHS. Mutations from seven HLHS mouse lines showed multigenic enrichment in ten human chromosome regions linked to HLHS5–7. Mutations in Sap130 and Pcdha9, genes not previously associated with CHD, were validated by CRISPR–Cas9 genome editing in mice as being digenic causes of HLHS. We also identified one subject with HLHS with SAP130 and PCDHA13 mutations. Mouse and zebrafish modeling showed that Sap130 mediates left ventricular hypoplasia, whereas Pcdha9 increases penetrance of aortic valve abnormalities, both signature HLHS defects. These findings show that HLHS can arise genetically in a combinatorial fashion, thus providing a new paradigm for the complex genetics of CHD.
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- 2017
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125. Evolution of avian encephalomyelitis virus during embryo-adaptation
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C. Gabriel Sentíes-Cué, H. L. Shivaprasad, Colin Kern, Ying Wang, Rodrigo A. Gallardo, Huaijun Zhou, and Rüdiger Hauck
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Gene Expression Regulation, Viral ,0301 basic medicine ,animal structures ,Picornavirus ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Chick Embryo ,Microbiology ,Virus ,Evolution, Molecular ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,Animals ,Tremovirus ,Poultry Diseases ,Sanger sequencing ,Picornaviridae Infections ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Outbreak ,Viral Vaccines ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Viral Load ,biology.organism_classification ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Virology ,Vaccination ,030104 developmental biology ,Encephalomyelitis Virus, Avian ,Mutation ,embryonic structures ,symbols ,RNA, Viral ,Capsid Proteins ,Female ,Flock ,Chickens ,Viral load - Abstract
Wild-type avian encephalomyelitis virus (AEV) causes neurological signs in young chicks but no disease in pullets after oral or intracutaneous infection. However, if the virus gets embryo-adapted by serial passaging in chicken embryos, it will cause AE after intracutaneous infection in chickens of all ages. Recently, several cases of AE in layer pullets occurring shortly after intracutaneous vaccination were described. The present investigation was initiated to determine if vaccines that had inadvertently been embryo-adapted were responsible for these outbreaks. Virus isolation was done from two vaccines and one field sample. One of the vaccines had been used in one of the flocks before the outbreak. After the first passage, regardless of the inoculum, no embryo was paralyzed, indicating that the vaccines and the field isolate were not embryo-adapted. After seven passages all three strains were fully embryo-adapted causing typical lesions in the embryos. Viral load as determined by RT-qPCR remained constant during the passages. Partial sequences of the VP2 gene of vaccines, the field sample and four other field isolates were nearly identical and highly similar to published sequences from all over the world; only sequences originating from non-vaccinated birds were clearly set apart. Analysis of whole genomes identified two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that distinguished wild-type and embryo-adapted strains. Sanger sequencing brains and nerves of the five field isolates and of the first, third and fifth passages of the isolates showed that the mutations indicating embryo-adaptation were first observed in the fifth passage.
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- 2017
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126. The Role of Social Support in Moderating the Relationship between Race and Hypertension in a Low-Income, Urban, Racially Integrated Community
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Caryn N. Bell, Janice V. Bowie, Thomas A. LaVeist, Roland J. Thorpe, and Angel C. Gabriel
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Urban Population ,Article ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,Race (biology) ,Social support ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Poverty ,030505 public health ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Social Support ,Health Status Disparities ,Middle Aged ,Confidence interval ,Health equity ,Urban Studies ,Black or African American ,Blood pressure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Baltimore ,Hypertension ,Marital status ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Demography - Abstract
In the US, African Americans have a higher prevalence of hypertension than Whites. Previous studies show that social support contributes to the racial differences in hypertension but are limited in accounting for the social and environmental effects of racial residential segregation. We examined whether the association between race and hypertension varies by the level of social support among African Americans and Whites living in similar social and environmental conditions, specifically an urban, low-income, racially integrated community. Using data from the Exploring Health Disparities in Integrated Communities-Southwest Baltimore (EHDIC-SWB) sample, we hypothesized that social support moderates the relationship between race and hypertension and the racial difference in hypertension is smaller as the level of social support increases. Hypertension was defined as having systolic blood pressure greater than 140 mmHg and/or diastolic blood pressure greater than 90 mmHg, or the participant reports of taking antihypertensive medication(s). The study only included participants that self-reported as “Black/African American” or “White.” Social support was measured as functional social support and marital status. After adjusting for demographics and health-related characteristics, we found no interaction between social support and race (DUFSS score, prevalence ratio 1.00; 95% confidence interval 0.99, 1.01; marital status, prevalence ratio 1.02; 95% confidence interval 0.86, 1.21); thus the hypothesis was not supported. A plausible explanation is that the buffering factor of social support cannot overcome the social and environmental conditions which the participants live in. Further, these findings emphasize social and environmental conditions of participants in EHDIC-SWB may equally impact race and hypertension.
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- 2020
127. It is Only Natural: Europe's Low Interest Rates
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Marco Arena, C. Gabriel Di Bella, Alfredo Cuevas, Borja Gracia, Huong Nguyen, and Alex Pienkowski
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- 2020
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128. Hydrodynamic Drivers and Morphological Responses on Small Coral Islands—The Thoondu Spit on Fuvahmulah, the Maldives
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David, C. Gabriel and Schlurmann, Torsten
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Dewey Decimal Classification::500 | Naturwissenschaften::550 | Geowissenschaften ,global climate data ,sand spit ,Maldives ,morphology ,ddc:550 ,low-lying islands ,coral reefs ,climate change adaptation ,coastal management - Abstract
Assessing the resilience of islands toward altered ocean climate pressures and providing robust adaptation measures requires an understanding of the interaction between morphological processes and the underlying hydrodynamic drivers. In this sense, this study presents changing sediment volumes on various temporal scales for the fringing reef island Fuvahmulah. Based on three field campaigns, conducted over 2 years, aerial imagery provides information on marine aggregates of the island's beaches. In addition, high resolution climate reanalysis data serves as input into an empirical and a numerical approach. Together, both approaches describe the driving processes behind volumetric seasonal and interannual changes: On the one hand, the empirical method quantifies sediment transport rates for calcareous sediments over the whole time span of the data set by considering wind and swell waves from multiple directions. On the other hand, the numerical method gives insights into the complexity of currents induced by dominant wave components. Combining these methods facilitates hindcasting and predicting morphological changes under varying wave climate, assessing sediment pathways over the whole reef, and describing the seasonal and interannual evolution of the sand spit Thoondu. As a result, this study reveals sediment distribution on different spatio-temporal scales and elucidates their significance in the design of conventional and alternative low-regret coastal adaptation. © Copyright © 2020 David and Schlurmann.
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- 2020
129. Uso de cadeias de Markov para otimizar o sensoriamento colaborativo do espectro em redes 5G
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Ferreira, G. C. (Gabriel Carvalho), Mendez Barreto, P. A. (Priscila América Soli), Caetano, M. F. (Marcos Fagundes), Filho, G. P. (Geraldo Pereira), Vartiainen, J. (Johanna), and Karvonen, H. (Heikki)
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sensoriamento colaborativo ,sensoriamento do espectro ,cadeias de Markov ,rural - Abstract
Resumo Os rádios cognitivos são considerados fundamentais para melhorar o uso do espectro em redes 5G. O sensoriamento de espectro é uma tecnologia que permite que o estado do canal seja determinado de forma descentralizada. O sensoriamento colaborativo do espectro melhora a detecção ao coletar mais dados de diferentes usuários, em diferentes lugares, aumentando a quantidade de informação disponível para a toma de decisões. Este artigo apresenta uma técnica baseada em cadeias de Markov que melhora a detecção do espectro e diminui o número de notificações de sensoriamento. Dessa forma, a técnica melhora o resultado dos algoritmos de fusão clássicos para sensoriamento colaborativo no caso de acesso bem comportado. Observou-se uma redução de até ~99.67% da taxa de alarmes falsos e até ~98% do tráfego de controle associado, preservando a taxa de falsos negativos abaixo do limite tolerável de 10%, minimizando interferência ao usuário do canal.
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- 2020
130. The COSPAR Capacity Building Initiative
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J.-L. Fellous, Dieter Bilitza, A. Glover, D. Altamirano, R. D'Amicis, and C. Gabriel
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Engineering ,Architectural engineering ,Committee on Space Research ,business.industry ,Capacity building ,business - Published
- 2020
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131. Environmental Management Practices and Sustainability of Multinational Companies in South-South, Nigeria
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johnny eluka, okenwa o. c. gabriel, Obamen Joseph, and Omonona Solomon
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Economic growth ,Multinational corporation ,Sustainability ,Business ,General Business, Management and Accounting - Published
- 2019
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132. Characterization of an Outbreak of Infectious Coryza (
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Manuela, Crispo, Patrick, Blackall, Aatif, Khan, H L, Shivaprasad, Kristin, Clothier, C Gabriel, Sentíes-Cué, George, Cooper, Julia, Blakey, Maurice, Pitesky, Grace, Mountainspring, Gregg, Cutler, Arthur, Bickford, and Simone, Stoute
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Haemophilus Infections ,Haemophilus paragallinarum ,Coinfection ,Animals ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Chickens ,California ,Poultry Diseases ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Disease Outbreaks - Abstract
In 2017, the Turlock branch of the California Animal HealthFood Safety laboratory system received a significant increase in infectious coryza (IC) necropsy cases, with a total of 54 submissions originating from commercial broilers (Caracterización de un brote de coriza infecciosa (
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- 2019
133. A Financial Analysis of the Farm Sector: Sector Trends
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Stephen C. Gabriel
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Rate of return ,Debt ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Financial analysis ,Economics ,Financial ratio ,Position (finance) ,Cash flow ,Real estate ,Balance sheet ,Monetary economics ,media_common - Abstract
This chapter considers trends in sector income, wealth, debt and cash flow since 1960, as well as various key financial ratios. Net cash income, measures, as the name implies, the net cash income earned in a given year, and more accurately reflects the cash flow position of the sector during the year. Trends in the balance sheet of the farming sector are dominated by real estate assets. Trends in farm sector wealth are important as indicators of financial performance if it is assumed that farmers have as one of their business objectives the accumulation of wealth. Rates of Return in the Farm Sector Rates of return in farming are derived from two sources, the income generated by farm assets and real capital gains associated with changes in the constant dollar value of farm assets and debt. The debt-to-asset ratio has also been used as a measure of the debt burden of the sector.
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- 2019
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134. Financing the Agricultural Sector
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Dean W. Hughes, Stephen C. Gabriel, Peter J. Barry, and Michael D. Boehlje
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- 2019
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135. A Financial Analysis of the Farm Sector: Distributional Characteristics and Nonfarm Comparisons
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Stephen C. Gabriel
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Nonfarm payrolls ,Financial analysis ,Economics ,Agricultural economics - Published
- 2019
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136. Granulomatous foreign body reaction in tip and nasal dorsum due to filling materials. Presentation of a clinical case and review of the literature
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Pérez R, Pablo, Villarroel P, Alejandra, Andrade D, Tomás, and Faba C, Gabriel
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rinomodelación ,Rellenos nasales ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,rhinomodelation ,respiratory system ,granuloma ,Nasal fillers - Abstract
RESUMEN Paciente de 29 años con antecedente de tres rinomodelaciones en la punta nasal con ácido hialurónico hace cinco años, evaluada por deseo de mejora estética nasal y obstrucción nasal. Al examen visual se observó una leve giba osteocartilaginosa, punta bulbosa, narinas simétricas, sin laterorrinea, no se palparon masas ni nodulaciones. Posterior al manejo de su rinitis y previo consentimiento informado, al realizar rinoseptoplastía abierta se encontró gran cantidad de tejido granulatorio tipo cuerpo extraño en la punta y dorso nasal lo que obligó a cambiar el plan quirúrgico. La biopsia diferida confirmó granuloma por cuerpo extraño por biopolímero derivado de la silicona. Evolucionó satisfactoriamente estética y funcionalmente. La rinomodelación ha aumentado en los últimos años, aunque no existen rellenos faciales aprobados por la FDA para uso nasal. La correcta utilización de los rellenos nasales continúa siendo un tema controvertido. Los granulomas nasales por cuerpo extraño son complicaciones tardías que se han incrementado con el uso de biopolímeros con dosis y técnicas inadecuadas. El uso de ecotomografía ha contribuido a mejorar la planificación quirúrgica, así como el estudio histológico diferido ha permitido identificar el material utilizado en la mayoría de los casos convirtiéndose en el estándar de oro. ABSTRACT A 29-year-old patient with a history of three nasal fillings in the nasal tip with hyaluronic acid five years ago, reason for consultation improvement nasal aesthetics and nasal obstruction. Physical examination showed a slight osteocartilaginous hump, bulbous tip, symmetrical nostrils, no deviation nasal pyramid, no masses or nodules were palpated. After the management of his rhinitis and previous informed consent, when performing open rhinoseptoplasty, a large amount of foreign body type granulation tissue was found in the tip and nasal dorsum, which forced the surgical plan to change. The post-surgical biopsy showed foreign body granuloma by biopolymer derived from silicone. Evolved satisfactorily aesthetically and functionally. The use of nasal fillers has increased in recent years, although there are no facial fillers approved by the FDA for nasal use. The correct use of nasal fillers is a controversial issue. Nasal granulomas by foreign body are late complications that have increased with the use of biopolymers with inadequate doses and techniques. The use of ecotomography has contributed to improve the surgical planning; the deferred histological study has allowed to identify the material used in most cases becoming the gold standard
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- 2019
137. Knowledge and practices of self-medication among adolescents
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Dimple C. Gabriel and Bhavani Bangarkodi Balakrishna
- Abstract
Background: Self-medication begins in early adolescence, often during the middle school years. By the age of 16, nearly all adolescents have taken medicine independently for minor illnesses and become more involved with managing chronic conditions. Taking medications without a doctor's prescription, even if the ailment is minor, can have serious repercussions. A large number of potent drugs such as pain relievers, cough remedies, anti-allergies, laxatives, antibiotics, antacids and vitamins are sold over-the-counter (OTC). The present study aimed to assess “the knowledge and practices of self-medication among adolescents in selected colleges, Bengaluru, India with a view to develop an informational booklet.Methods: The study was done using a survey design. Simple random sampling technique was adopted to select 100 adolescents from a pre-university college. A socio demographic Performa, a self-reported structured questionnaire to assess knowledge and practice checklist regarding self-medication was used to collect the data. Descriptive and inferential statistics was used for analysis.Results: Self-medication use was reported by 94% of the adolescents. Analgesics 65%, antipyretics 51%, cough and cold medications 49%, vitamins 35%, antibiotics 26%, and antacids 19%, were cited as the most common types of medication taken. Around 45% adolescents had poor knowledge about self-medication. There was a low negative correlation between knowledge and practice of self-medication among participants. (Pearson’s r=-0.44).Conclusions: The practice of self-medication among adolescent was very high. A significant number of adolescents had inadequate knowledge regarding self-medication and its consequences. Therefore, potential problems of self-medication should be emphasised to the adolescents. Need based information booklet was prepared and disseminated to the adolescents.
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- 2021
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138. Etnofarmacología de Plantas Medicinales con Propiedades Analgésicas del Estado de Veracruz.
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Hernández Lozano, Minerva, Van Dan Castro Gerónimo, Q. F. B., Samuel Rojas Cabrera, C. Carlos, F. Ocaña Sánchez, M. C. Marcos, Arturo Soto Ojeda, M. C. Gabriel, and Fragoso Martínez, Q. F. B. Héctor
- Abstract
Copyright of Congreso Internacional de Investigacion Academia Journals is the property of PDHTech, LLC and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
139. Systematic pH-specific synthesis and structure transformations in binary-ternary In(III) assemblies with hydroxycarboxylic DPOT and aliphatic-aromatic chelators
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E. Halevas, Antonis Hatzidimitriou, Athanasios Salifoglou, C. Gabriel, and C. Mateescu
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Denticity ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,Ligand ,Phenanthroline ,Synthon ,Ethylenediamine ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Inorganic Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Polymer chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Molecule ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Ternary operation ,Hybrid material - Abstract
Driven by the need to generate hybrid In(III)-(O,N) luminescent materials containing appropriately configured organic ligands, binary-ternary In(III) metal-organic systems involving the multidentate organic ligand DPOT, ethylenediamine (en) and phenanthroline (phen) were investigated under pH-specific conditions. The arisen materials [In2(C11H13N2O9)2](CH6N3)4·7H2O(1), [In3(C11H13N2O9)2(C2H8N2)2](C2H9N2)·4H2O(2), [In2(C11H13N2O9)2](CH6N3)6(Cl)2·6H2O(3), and [In2(C11H13N2O9)(C12H8N2)2(Cl)(H2O)]·7.5H2O(4) were characterized by analytical, spectroscopic (FT-IR, 13C-MAS NMR, luminescence) techniques, TGA and X-ray crystallography. The binary materials 1 and 3 exhibit dinuclear alkoxido-bridged In2O2 cores, with the fully-deprotonated organic ligand spanning both centers. Introduction of bidentate ethylenediamine leads to ternary trinuclear species 2, whereas phen introduction in 4 leads to a dinuclear asymmetric assembly, incorporating a chloride ion and a water molecule. Chemical transformations among 1–4 provide mechanistic insight into the nature of chelators, dictating nuclearity, coordination, composition and lattice-specific luminescence. The collective physicochemical properties in 1–4 present well-defined 1D-3D structural architecture-dimensionality and spectroscopic property correlations, pointing out criteria based on which synthon design, custom architecture and photoactivity are interwoven into the future development of In(III)-containing metal-organic hybrid materials.
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- 2016
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140. The adipogenic potential of Cr(III). A molecular approach exemplifying metal-induced enhancement of insulin mimesis in diabetes mellitus II
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Maria P. Yavropoulou, M. Kafantari, C. Gabriel, John G. Yovos, Athanasios Salifoglou, and O. Tsave
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Chromium ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Motility ,Adipose tissue ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Biochemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Insulin resistance ,Biomimetic Materials ,3T3-L1 Cells ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Adipocytes ,medicine ,Animals ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,biology ,Chemistry ,Cell Differentiation ,medicine.disease ,Antigens, Differentiation ,Insulin receptor ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Adipogenesis ,biology.protein - Abstract
Insulin resistance is identified through numerous pathophysiological conditions, such as Diabetes mellitus II, obesity, hypertension and other metabolic syndromes. Enhancement of insulin action and\or its complete replacement by insulin-enhancing or insulin-mimetic agents seems to improve treatment of metabolic diseases. Over the last decades, intensive research has targeted the investigation of such agents, with chromium emerging as an important inorganic cofactor involved in the requisite metabolic chemistry. Chromium in its trivalent state has been shown to play a central role in carbohydrate metabolism by enhancing insulin signaling, action, and thus the sensitivity of insulin-sensitive tissues. A very likely link between diabetes and obesity is the adipose tissue, which stores energy in the form of triglycerides and releases free fatty acids. To date, there is paucity of information on the exact mechanism of the chromium effect concerning insulin-activated molecular paths, such as adipogenesis. The aim of the present study is to delve into such an effect by employing a well-defined form of chromium (Cr(III)-citrate) on the a) survival of pre- and mature adipocytes (3T3-L1), b) endogenous cell motility, and c) insulin-enhancing adipogenic capacity. The emerging results suggest that Cr(III)-citrate a) is (a)toxic in a concentration- and time-dependent manner, b) has no influence on cell motility, c) can induce 3T3-L1 pre-adipocyte differentiation into mature adipocytes through elevation of tissue specific biomarker levels (PPAR-γ, GLUT 4 and GCK), and d) exemplifies structurally-based metal-induced adipogenesis as a key process contributing to the development of future antidiabetic metallodrugs.
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- 2016
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141. Layer-by-layer assembly of poly(vinylpyrrolidone)-embedded gold nanoparticles with carbon nanotubes for glycerol electro-oxidation
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José R. Siqueira, Luiz H. S. Gasparotto, and Rayla C. Gabriel
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Nanostructure ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Layer by layer ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Carbon nanotube ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Catalysis ,Anode ,law.invention ,Mechanics of Materials ,law ,Colloidal gold ,General Materials Science ,Thin film ,0210 nano-technology ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
In the present study, poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP) served as reducing and capping agents for the synthesis of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) in alkaline medium. The PVP-AuNPs were then combined with carbon nanotubes (CNTs) to assemble thin films onto ITO via the layer-by-layer (LbL) technique. The PVP-AuNPs/CNTs LbL films were analyzed with UV–Vis spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy (AFM). The latter technique revealed that the PVP-AuNPs/CNTs LbL films took over the entire ITO surface homogeneously, which positively impacted the magnitude of the anodic currents for glycerol electro-oxidation. Such results indicated that the combination PVP-AuNPs with CNTs in an adequate LbL fashion nanostructure may be feasible for applications in various fields such as catalysis, fuel cells, and sensing.
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- 2016
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142. Yersinia pseudotuberculosisin Eurasian Collared Doves (Streptopelia decaocto) and Retrospective Study of Avian Yersiniosis at the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System (1990–2015)
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Simone Stoute, G. L. Cooper, Arthur A. Bickford, C. Gabriel Sentíes-Cué, H. L. Shivaprasad, and Silvia Carnaccini
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0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,030106 microbiology ,Yersinia pseudotuberculosis Infections ,Erythromycin ,Spleen ,California ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Food Animals ,medicine ,Animals ,Yersinia pseudotuberculosis ,Columbidae ,Poultry Diseases ,Retrospective Studies ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Bird Diseases ,Streptopelia ,Yersiniosis ,Histology ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Coagulative necrosis ,Animals, Zoo ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Splenic Pulp ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In February 2015, two Eurasian collared doves (Streptopelia decaocto) were submitted dead to the California Animal Health and Food Safety (CAHFS) Laboratory, Turlock branch, from a private aviary experiencing sudden, high mortality (4/9) in adult doves. In both doves, the gross and histologic lesions were indicative of acute, fatal septicemia. Grossly, there were numerous pale yellow foci, 1 to 2 mm in diameter, in the liver and spleen. Microscopically, these foci were composed of acute severe multifocal coagulative necrosis of hepatocytes and splenic pulp with infiltration of heterophils mixed with fibrin and dense colonies of gram-negative bacteria. Yersinia pseudotuberculosis was isolated from the lung, liver, spleen, heart, ovary, kidney, and trachea. The organism was susceptible to most antibiotics it was tested against, except erythromycin. Based on a retrospective study of necropsy submissions to CAHFS between 1990 and 2015, there were 77 avian case submissions of Y. pseudotuberculosis. There were 75/77 cases identified from a wide range of captive avian species from both zoo and private facilities and 2/77 cases from two backyard turkeys submitted from one premise. The largest number of cases originated from psittacine species (31/77). The lesions most commonly described were hepatitis (63/77), splenitis (49/77), pneumonia (30/77), nephritis (16/77), and enteritis (12/77). From 1990 to 2015, there was an average of three cases of avian pseudotuberculosis per year at CAHFS. Although there were no cases diagnosed in 1993 and 1994, in all other years, there were between one and eight cases of Y. pseudotuberculosis detected from avian diagnostic submissions.
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- 2016
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143. Kinematics of males Eupalaestrus weijenberghi (Araneae, Theraphosidae) locomotion on different substrates and inclines
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Silva-Pereyra, Valentina, Fábrica, C Gabriel, Biancardi, Carlo M, and Pérez-Miles, Fernando
- Abstract
Background: For males of several terrestrial spiders the reproductive success depends to their locomotors performances. However, their mechanics of locomotion has been scarcely investigated. Aim of this work was to describe the gait patterns, analyse the gait parameters, the mechanics of locomotion and the energy saving mechanisms of Eupalaestrus weijenberghi (Araneae, Theraphosidae) on different inclinations and surfaces. Methods: Tarantulas were collected and marked for kinematic analysis. Free displacements, both at level and on incline, were recorded using two different experimental surfaces: glass and Teflon. Body segments of the experimental animals have been measured, weighted and their centre of mass experimentally determined. Through the reconstruction of trajectories of the body segments, we estimate the mechanical internal and external works and analysed the gait patterns. Results: Four gait patterns have been described, but spiders mainly employed a walk-trot-like gait. Significant differences between the first two pairs and the second two pairs were detected. No significant differences were detected among different planes or surfaces in duty factor, time lags, stride frequency and stride length. However, postural changes were observed on slippery surfaces. The mechanical work at level was lower than expected. In all conditions, the external work, and within it the vertical work, accounted for almost all the total mechanical work. The internal work was extremely low, and did not increase with gradient. Discussion: Our results support the idea of the two quadrupeds in series: the anterior composed by the first two pairs of limbs, with more explorative and steering purpose, and the posterior more involved in supporting the body weight. The mechanical work to move one unit mass a unit distance is almost constant among the different species. However spiders show lower values than expected. Minimizing the mechanical work could help to limit the metabolic energy expenditure that, in small animals, is relatively very high. However, the energy recovery due to the inverted pendulum mechanics only account for a small part of energy saving. Adhesive setae present in the tarsal, scopulae and claw tufts, would participate in different ways during different moments of the step cycle, compensating part of the energetic cost on gradient, and helping to maintain constant the gait parameters.
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- 2019
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144. Kinematics of male
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Valentina, Silva-Pereyra, C Gabriel, Fábrica, Carlo M, Biancardi, and Fernando, Pérez-Miles
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Animal Behavior ,Tarantulas ,Adhesion ,Gait analysis ,Mechanical-work ,Entomology ,Zoology ,Body models - Abstract
Background The mechanics and energetics of spider locomotion have not been deeply investigated, despite their importance in the life of a spider. For example, the reproductive success of males of several species is dependent upon their ability to move from one area to another. The aim of this work was to describe gait patterns and analyze the gait parameters of Eupalaestrus weijenberghi (Araneae, Theraphosidae) in order to investigate the mechanics of their locomotion and the mechanisms by which they conserve energy while traversing different inclinations and surfaces. Methods Tarantulas were collected and marked for kinematic analysis. Free displacements, both level and on an incline, were recorded using glass and Teflon as experimental surfaces. Body segments of the experimental animals were measured, weighed, and their center of mass was experimentally determined. Through reconstruction of the trajectories of the body segments, we were able to estimate their internal and external mechanical work and analyze their gait patterns. Results Spiders mainly employed a walk-trot gait. Significant differences between the first two pairs and the second two pairs were detected. No significant differences were detected regarding the different planes or surfaces with respect to duty factor, time lags, stride frequency, and stride length. However, postural changes were observed on slippery surfaces. The mechanical work required for traversing a level plane was lower than expected. In all conditions, the external work, and within it the vertical work, accounted for almost all of the total mechanical work. The internal work was extremely low and did not rise as the gradient increased. Discussion Our results support the idea of considering the eight limbs functionally divided into two quadrupeds in series. The anterior was composed of the first two pairs of limbs, which have an explorative and steering purpose and the posterior was more involved in supporting the weight of the body. The mechanical work to move one unit of mass a unit distance is almost constant among the different species tested. However, spiders showed lower values than expected. Minimizing the mechanical work could help to limit metabolic energy expenditure that, in small animals, is relatively very high. However, energy recovery due to inverted pendulum mechanics only accounts for only a small fraction of the energy saved. Adhesive setae present in the tarsal, scopulae, and claw tufts could contribute in different ways during different moments of the step cycle, compensating for part of the energetic cost on gradients which could also help to maintain constant gait parameters.
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- 2019
145. The Russian State's Size and its Footprint: Have They Increased?
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C. Gabriel Di Bella, Oksana Dynnikova, and Slavi Slavov
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- 2019
- Full Text
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146. Kinematics of male Eupalaestrus weijenberghi (Araneae, Theraphosidae) locomotion on different substrates and inclines
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Fernando Pérez-Miles, Carlo M. Biancardi, Valentina Silva-Pereyra, C. Gabriel Fabrica, Silva Pereyra Valentina, Universidad de la República (Uruguay). Facultad de Medicina., Fábrica Gabriel, Universidad de la República (Uruguay). Facultad de Medicina., Biancardi Carlo M., Universidad de la República (Uruguay). CENUR, and Pérez-Miles Fernando, Universidad de la República (Uruguay). Facultad de Ciencias. Instituto de Biología.
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0106 biological sciences ,Scopulae ,030310 physiology ,Tarantulas ,lcsh:Medicine ,STRIDE ,Geometry ,Kinematics ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Inverted pendulum ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mathematics ,Body models ,0303 health sciences ,Spider ,General Neuroscience ,lcsh:R ,Work (physics) ,General Medicine ,Gait ,Gait analysis ,Adhesion ,Mechanical-work ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe mechanics and energetics of spider locomotion have not been deeply investigated, despite their importance in the life of a spider. For example, the reproductive success of males of several species is dependent upon their ability to move from one area to another. The aim of this work was to describe gait patterns and analyze the gait parameters ofEupalaestrus weijenberghi(Araneae, Theraphosidae) in order to investigate the mechanics of their locomotion and the mechanisms by which they conserve energy while traversing different inclinations and surfaces.MethodsTarantulas were collected and marked for kinematic analysis. Free displacements, both level and on an incline, were recorded using glass and Teflon as experimental surfaces. Body segments of the experimental animals were measured, weighed, and their center of mass was experimentally determined. Through reconstruction of the trajectories of the body segments, we were able to estimate their internal and external mechanical work and analyze their gait patterns.ResultsSpiders mainly employed a walk-trot gait. Significant differences between the first two pairs and the second two pairs were detected. No significant differences were detected regarding the different planes or surfaces with respect to duty factor, time lags, stride frequency, and stride length. However, postural changes were observed on slippery surfaces. The mechanical work required for traversing a level plane was lower than expected. In all conditions, the external work, and within it the vertical work, accounted for almost all of the total mechanical work. The internal work was extremely low and did not rise as the gradient increased.DiscussionOur results support the idea of considering the eight limbs functionally divided into two quadrupeds in series. The anterior was composed of the first two pairs of limbs, which have an explorative and steering purpose and the posterior was more involved in supporting the weight of the body. The mechanical work to move one unit of mass a unit distance is almost constant among the different species tested. However, spiders showed lower values than expected. Minimizing the mechanical work could help to limit metabolic energy expenditure that, in small animals, is relatively very high. However, energy recovery due to inverted pendulum mechanics only accounts for only a small fraction of the energy saved. Adhesive setae present in the tarsal, scopulae, and claw tufts could contribute in different ways during different moments of the step cycle, compensating for part of the energetic cost on gradients which could also help to maintain constant gait parameters.
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- 2019
147. COLAB:módulo LTE de sensoriamento colaborativo e radio cognitivo para o simulador de redes ns-3
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Ferreira, G. C. (Gabriel C.), Solís, P. (Priscila), Caetano, M. F. (Marcos F.), Lamar, M. V. (Marcos V.), Alchieri, E. A. (Eduardo A. P.), Vartiainen, J. (Johanna), and Karvonen, H. (Heikki)
- Abstract
Resumo O crescimento exponencial de dispositivos sem fio conectados à internet e a limitação do espectro electromagnético disponível requer a otimização do escalonamento de recursos e reuso de frequências para prover uma melhor qualidade de serviço. As novas aplicações oriundas da evolução das redes sem fio, principalmente a rede 5G, consideram o uso de rádios cognitivos e o sensoreamento do espectro como elementos fundamentais no seu desenvolvimento. O avanço e desenvolvimento de novas tecnologias depende de ambientes de simulação que facilitem e integrem ferramentas para avaliar as diversas aplicações das redes 5G. Este artigo apresenta um módulo de sensoriamento colaborativo e um escalonador de recursos cognitivo para o módulo LTE do simulador de rede ns-3. Abstract The exponential growth of wireless devices connected to the Internet and the limitation of the available electromagnetic spectrum requires the optimization of resource scheduling and frequency reuse to provide a better quality of service. New applications from the evolution of wireless networks, especially the 5G network, consider the use of cognitive radios and the sensing of the spectrum as fundamental elements in its development. The advance and development of new technologies depends on simulation environments that facilitate and integrate tools to evaluate the various applications and scenarios of 5G networks. This article presents a collaborative sensing module and a cognitive resource scheduler for the LS module of the ns-3 network simulator.
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- 2019
148. It is Only Natural: Europe's Low Interest Rates
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Arena, Marco, primary, Di Bella, C. Gabriel, additional, Cuevas, Alfredo, additional, Gracia, Borja, additional, Nguyen, Huong, additional, and Pienkowski, Alex, additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
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149. Partial Molecular Characterization and Pathogenicity Study of an Avian Reovirus Causing Tenosynovitis in Commercial Broilers
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Simone Stoute, C. Gabriel Sentíes-Cué, Arthur A. Bickford, Rodrigo A. Gallardo, Rüdiger Hauck, S. Egaña-Labrin, C. Corsiglia, Manuela Crispo, H. L. Shivaprasad, G. L. Cooper, and Beate Crossley
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Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Orthoreovirus, Avian ,Biology ,Feed conversion ratio ,0403 veterinary science ,Food Animals ,Molecular genetics ,Genotype ,medicine ,Animals ,Seroconversion ,Phylogeny ,Poultry Diseases ,Subclinical infection ,Tenosynovitis ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Virulence ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Broiler ,Outbreak ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,medicine.disease ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Reoviridae Infections ,Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chickens - Abstract
This study describes the molecular characterization of avian reoviruses (ARVs) isolated during an outbreak in commercial chickens between 2015 and 2016. In addition, a pathogenicity study of a selected ARV strain isolated from a field case of viral tenosynovitis in commercial broiler chickens was performed. On the basis of phylogenetic analysis of a 1088-bp fragment of the ARV S1 gene, the investigated sequences were differentiated into five distinct genotypic clusters (GCs), namely GC1, GC2, GC3, GC4, and GC6. Specific-pathogen-free (SPF) and commercial broiler chickens were challenged with the GC1 genetic type MK247011, at 14 days of age via the interdigital toe web. No significant effects in body weight gain and feed conversion were detected in both chicken types. The Δ interdigital web thickness was most severe at 4 days postchallenge (DPC) in both the SPF and broiler subgroups. The inflammation in SPF birds was slightly more severe compared with broilers. Neither mortality nor clinical signs occurred in the infected groups for the duration of the experiment, despite the presence of significant microscopic lesions in challenged birds. Microscopic changes of tenosynovitis became evident at 3 DPC, with the highest incidence and severity detected at 14 and 21 DPC, respectively. Seroconversion against ARV occurred 3 wk postchallenge, and the microscopic lesions detected in tendon and heart sections were highly compatible with those described in the field. Increased severity of tenosynovitis and epicarditis lesions were noted in the ARV-challenged groups compared with the control groups. Although SPF and broiler chickens showed comparable responses to the challenge with an ARV genetic variant, detected lesions were subclinical, denoting the limitations of our challenge approach. The age selected in this experiment possibly influenced the course of the infection. Data from this study highlight the genotypic diversity of isolates in California, and the outcome of the pathogenicity study can be used as a basis to improve protocols for pathogenicity studies to characterize ARV variants causing clinical disease in the field.Caracterización molecular parcial y estudio de patogenicidad de un reovirus aviar que causa tenosinovitis en pollos de engorde comerciales. Este estudio describe la caracterización molecular de reovirus aviares (ARV) aislados durante un brote en pollos comerciales entre los años 2015 y 2016. Además, se realizó un estudio de patogenicidad de una cepa de reovirus seleccionada que fue aislada de un caso de campo de tenosinovitis viral en pollos de engorde comerciales. Con base en el análisis filogenético de un fragmento de 1088 pb del gene S1 de reovirus, las secuencias investigadas se diferenciaron en cinco grupos genotípicos distintos (GCs), denominados, GC1, GC2, GC3, GC4 y GC6. Aves libres de patógenos específicos (SPF) y pollos de engorde comerciales se desafiaron con el tipo genético GC1 MK247011 a los 14 días de edad a través de la membrana interdigital. No se detectaron efectos significativos en el aumento de peso corporal ni en la conversión de alimento en ambos tipos de aves. El grosor de la banda interdigital diferencial fue más severa a los cuatro días posteriores al desafío en las aves libres de patógenos específicos y en los pollos de engorde. La inflamación en las aves libres de patógenos específicos fue ligeramente más severa en comparación con los pollos de engorde. No se presentó mortalidad ni signos clínicos en los grupos infectados durante la duración del experimento, a pesar de la presencia de lesiones microscópicas significativas en las aves desafiadas. Los cambios microscópicos de la tenosinovitis se hicieron evidentes a los tres días postinoculación, con la mayor incidencia y severidad detectadas a los 14 y 21días postinoculación, respectivamente. La seroconversión para reovirus ocurrió tres semanas después del desafío, y las lesiones microscópicas detectadas en secciones de tendón y corazón fueron altamente compatibles con las descritas en el campo. El aumento en la severidad de las lesiones de tenosinovitis y epicarditis se observó en los grupos expuestos a reovirus aviar en comparación con los grupos de control. Aunque las aves libres de patógenos específicos y los pollos de engorde mostraron respuestas comparables ante el desafío con una variante genética de reovirus, las lesiones detectadas fueron subclínicas, lo que denota las limitaciones de nuestro enfoque de desafío. La edad seleccionada en este experimento posiblemente influyó en el curso de la infección. Los datos de este estudio resaltan la diversidad genotípica de los aislamientos en California y el resultado del estudio de patogenicidad se puede usar como base para mejorar los protocolos de los estudios de patogenicidad para caracterizar las variantes de reovirus que causan enfermedades clínicas en el campo.
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- 2018
150. Evaluating unmet needs in patients undergoing surgery for colorectal cancer: a patient reported outcome measures study
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E Mason-Whitehead, C Smith, T Lightfoot, R Bourdon-Pierre, N Appleton, C Gabriel, P A Sutton, B Richards, S Mohamed, Dale Vimalachandran, and N J Hulbert-Williams
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,Health Status ,Emotions ,Prom ,Unmet needs ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cost of Illness ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Interquartile range ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Medicine ,Humans ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Colectomy ,Aged ,Proctectomy ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Focus Groups ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Focus group ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Quality of Life ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Patient-reported outcome ,Female ,Thematic analysis ,business ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Needs Assessment - Abstract
AIM Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are self-reported measures of patients' health status or health-related quality of life at a single point in time. We aimed to evaluate the use of a colorectal PROM and conducted a focus group to further explore this and other unmet needs in our patient population treated surgically for colorectal cancer. METHOD A multidisciplinary research group consisting of colorectal surgeons, nurse specialists, psychologists, sociologists and patient representatives devised a composite tool of new and existing outcome measures which was piloted in our local population (n = 35). Participants were subsequently invited to attend a semi-structured focus group during which the PROM was reviewed and an unmet needs analysis was performed. Thematic analysis of focus group transcripts was undertaken for emergent themes. RESULTS Initial consensus was for a tool including the EQ-5D, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Colorectal (FACT-C), the distress thermometer, a validated measure of stigma, an unmet needs analysis, and questions assessing the psychological impact of cancer. Median and interquartile range values suggested that all metrics were discriminatory with the exception of FACT-C. All participants agreed that the tool was acceptable and reflected the current state of their health and emotions. Thematic analysis of focus group transcripts identified four major themes: physical symptoms, emotional response, information provision and coping mechanisms. CONCLUSION Through expert consensus, local piloting and patient focus groups we have evaluated a novel PROM for colorectal cancer. Furthermore, through our direct engagement with patients we have identified several unmet needs which we are currently exploring within the clinical service.
- Published
- 2018
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