203 results on '"Aggelopoulos, P."'
Search Results
2. Phenanthrene sorption studies on coffee waste– and diatomaceous earth–based adsorbents, and adsorbent regeneration with cold atmospheric plasma
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Stavrinou, Anastasia, Theodoropoulou, Maria A., Aggelopoulos, Christos A., and Tsakiroglou, Christos D.
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- 2024
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3. Incorporating Circular Economy Principles into Olive Oil Industry Using ISO 14001: A Greek Company’s Case Study
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Kounani, Aristea, Pavloudi, Alexandra, Aggelopoulos, Stamatis, and Kontogeorgos, Achilleas
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- 2024
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4. Exploration of cephalexin adsorption mechanisms onto bauxite and palygorskite and regeneration of spent adsorbents with cold plasma bubbling
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S. Giannoulia, A. G. Tekerlekopoulou, and C. A. Aggelopoulos
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Antibiotics ,Wastewater treatment ,Adsorption ,Adsorbent regeneration ,Cold atmospheric plasma ,Plasma bubbles ,Water supply for domestic and industrial purposes ,TD201-500 - Abstract
Abstract The aim of the present study was the direct comparison of two popular minerals, bauxite and palygorskite, as adsorbents for the removal of cephalexin (CPX) from aqueous solutions and the regeneration of the spent adsorbents through cold atmospheric plasma. Batch kinetics and isotherm studies were carried out to evaluate the effect of contact time, initial CPX concentration, adsorbent dosage, pH and temperature. The adsorbents were characterized by ATR-FTIR, N2 sorption, SEM and XRD, while several isotherm, kinetic and thermodynamic models were evaluated attempting to shed light on the adsorption mechanisms. CPX adsorption on both adsorbents was better described by Langmuir model, with an adsorption capacity of 112.36 mg/g for palygorskite and 11.79 mg/g for bauxite. Thermodynamics revealed the endothermic and the spontaneous character of the process, indicating chemisorption as the main adsorption mechanism for both adsorbents. The pseudo-second-order and the Elovich models fitted satisfactorily the adsorption onto bauxite, while adsorption onto palygorskite was well presented by Weber–Morris model, indicating that pore diffusion is also involved in the process. The adsorption capacity of both minerals decreased significantly after being used for several adsorption cycles and then almost completely recovered (regeneration efficiency was 99.6% and 98% for palygorskite and bauxite, respectively) inside a novel cold plasma microbubble reactor energized by high-voltage nanopulses, revealing the potential of these adsorbents to be reused. In addition to the regeneration of the adsorbents, the cold plasma completely eliminated the CPX transferred from the solid to the aqueous phase during the regeneration process.
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- 2024
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5. Advancing Nanopulsed Plasma Bubbles for the Degradation of Organic Pollutants in Water: From Lab to Pilot Scale
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Stauros Meropoulis and Christos A. Aggelopoulos
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non-thermal plasma ,water remediation ,plasma bubbles ,pilot scale ,high-voltage nanopulses ,dyes ,Technology - Abstract
The transition from lab-scale studies to pilot-scale applications is a critical step in advancing water remediation technologies. While laboratory experiments provide valuable insights into the underlying mechanisms and method effectiveness, pilot-scale studies are essential for evaluating their practical feasibility and scalability. This progression addresses challenges related to operational conditions, effectiveness and energy requirements in real-world scenarios. In this study, the potential of nanopulsed plasma bubbles, when scaled up from a lab environment, was explored by investigating critical experimental parameters, such as plasma gas, pulse voltage, and pulse repetition rate, while also analyzing plasma-treated water composition. To validate the broad effectiveness of this method, various classes of highly toxic organic pollutants were examined in terms of pollutant degradation efficiency and energy requirements. The pilot-scale plasma bubble reactor generated a high concentration of short-lived reactive species with minimal production of long-lived species. Additionally, successful degradation of all pollutants was achieved in both lab- and pilot-scale setups, with even lower electrical energy-per-order (EEO) values at the pilot scale, 2–3 orders of magnitude lower compared to other advanced oxidation processes. This study aimed to bridge the gap between lab-scale plasma bubbles and upscaled systems, supporting the rapid, effective, and energy-efficient destruction of organic pollutants in water.
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- 2024
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6. Exploration of cephalexin adsorption mechanisms onto bauxite and palygorskite and regeneration of spent adsorbents with cold plasma bubbling
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Giannoulia, S., Tekerlekopoulou, A. G., and Aggelopoulos, C. A.
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- 2024
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7. Laparoscopic para-aortic lymphadenectomy for metastatic colon cancer in a patient with left-sided inferior vena cava: a case report
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Efstathios Kotidis, Elissavet Anestiadou, Aikaterini Karamitsou, Georgios Gemousakakis, Orestis Ioannidis, Stefanos Bitsianis, Savvas Symeonidis, Nikolaos Ouzounidis, Odysseas Lomvardeas, and Stamatios Aggelopoulos
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Medicine - Abstract
Transposition of inferior vena cava, or, left-sided inferior vena cava (LS-IVC) is a rare clinical entity, in which the inferior vena cava ascends along the left side of the abdominal aorta. Literature contains mainly clinical case reports. Although it is usually not associated with clinical symptomatology, this anomaly should be detected during preoperative planning to avoid iatrogenic injuries intraoperatively. We present a case of left-sided inferior vena cava encountered during laparoscopic lymphadenectomy in a 45-year-old man with previous laparoscopic hemicolectomy due to colon adenocarcinoma. Preoperative CT abdomen revealed the left-sided location of infrarenal IVC and laparoscopic trans-peritoneal aortic lymphadenectomy was decided. Intraoperatively, transposition of inferior vena cava was confirmed in accordance with the CT findings. Resection of lymph node block was conducted with no complications and with minimal blood loss. The postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient was discharged from the hospital the day following surgery. In conclusion, transposition of the inferior vena cava, although rare, constitutes an anatomical variant that should be identified preoperatively to decrease intraoperative risks. Several anatomical variants have been associated with left-sided inferior vena cava.
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- 2023
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8. Technical Report: Insider-Resistant Context-Based Pairing for Multimodality Sleep Apnea Test
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Zheng, Yao, Islam, Shekh Md Mahmudul, Pan, Yanjun, Millan, Marionne, Aggelopoulos, Samson, Lu, Brian, Yang, Alvin, Yang, Thomas, Aelmore, Stephanie, Chang, Willy, Power, Alana, Li, Ming, Borić-Lubecke, Olga, Lubecke, Victor, and Sun, Wenhai
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
The increasingly sophisticated at-home screening systems for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), integrated with both contactless and contact-based sensing modalities, bring convenience and reliability to remote chronic disease management. However, the device pairing processes between system components are vulnerable to wireless exploitation from a non-compliant user wishing to manipulate the test results. This work presents SIENNA, an insider-resistant context-based pairing protocol. SIENNA leverages JADE-ICA to uniquely identify a user's respiration pattern within a multi-person environment and fuzzy commitment for automatic device pairing, while using friendly jamming technique to prevents an insider with knowledge of respiration patterns from acquiring the pairing key. Our analysis and test results show that SIENNA can achieve reliable (> 90% success rate) device pairing under a noisy environment and is robust against the attacker with full knowledge of the context information.
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- 2021
9. Enhanced Dye Adsorption on Cold Plasma-Oxidized Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotubes: A Comparative Study
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Anastasia Skourti, Stefania Giannoulia, Maria K. Daletou, and Christos A. Aggelopoulos
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carbon nanotubes ,cold plasma ,surface oxidation ,water treatment ,adsorption process ,dyes ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The oxidation of multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) using cold plasma was investigated for their subsequent use as adsorbents for the removal of dyes from aqueous solutions. The properties of MWCNTs after plasma modification and their adsorption capacities were compared with pristine and chemically oxidized nanotubes. The modification process employed a reactor where plasma was generated through dielectric barrier discharges (DBD) powered by high-voltage nanosecond pulses. Various modification conditions were examined, such as processing time and pulse voltage amplitude. The degree of oxidation and the impact on the chemistry and structure of the nanotubes was investigated through various physicochemical and morphological characterization techniques (XPS, BET, TEM, etc.). Maximum oxidation (O/C = 0.09 from O/C = 0.02 for pristine MWCNTs) was achieved after 60 min of nanopulsed-DBD plasma treatment. Subsequently, the modified nanotubes were used as adsorbents for the removal of the dye methylene blue (MB) from water. The adsorption experiments examined the effects of contact time between the adsorbent and MB, as well as the initial dye concentration in water. The plasma-modified nanotubes exhibited high MB removal efficiency, with adsorption capacity proportional to the degree of oxidation. Notably, their adsorption capacity significantly increased compared to both pristine and chemically oxidized MWCNTs (~54% and ~9%, respectively). Finally, the kinetics and mechanism of the adsorption process were studied, with experimental data fitting well to the pseudo-second-order kinetic model and the Langmuir isotherm model. This study underscores the potential of plasma technology as a low-cost and environmentally friendly approach for material modification and water purification.
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- 2024
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10. Demo: iJam with Channel Randomization
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Melcher, Jordan L., Zheng, Yao, Anthony, Dylan, Troglia, Matthew, Pan, Yanjun, Li, Ming, Yang, Thomas, Yang, Alvin, and Aggelopoulos, Samson
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing ,Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
Physical-layer key generation methods utilize the variations of the communication channel to achieve a secure key agreement between two parties with no prior security association. Their secrecy rate (bit generation rate) depends heavily on the randomness of the channel, which may reduce significantly in a stable environment. Existing methods seek to improve the secrecy rate by injecting artificial noise into the channel. Unfortunately, noise injection cannot alter the underlying channel state, which depends on the multipath environment between the transmitter and receiver. Consequently, these methods are known to leak key bits toward multi-antenna eavesdroppers, which is capable of filtering the noise through the differential of multiple signal receptions. This work demonstrates an improved approach to reinforce physical-layer key generation schemes, e.g., channel randomization. The channel randomization approach leverages a reconfigurable antenna to rapidly change the channel state during transmission, and an angle-of-departure (AoD) based channel estimation algorithm to cancel the changing effects for the intended receiver. The combined result is a communication channel stable in the eyes of the intended receiver but randomly changing from the viewpoint of the eavesdropper. We augmented an existing physical-layer key generation protocol, iJam, with the proposed approach and developed a full-fledged remote instrumentation platform to demonstrate its performance. Our evaluations show that augmentation does not affect the bit error rate (BER) of the intended receiver during key establishment but reduces the eavesdropper's BER to the level of random guessing, regardless of the number of antennas it equips.
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- 2020
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11. Enhancing the Adhesion of Graphene to Polymer Substrates by Controlled Defect Formation
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Anagnostopoulos, George, Sygellou, Labrini, Paterakis, George, Polyzos, Ioannis, Aggelopoulos, Christos A., and Galiotis, Costas
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
The mechanical integrity of composite materials depends primarily on the interface strength and the defect density of the reinforcement which is the provider of enhanced strength and stiffness. In the case of graphene/ polymer nanocomposites which are characterized by an extremely large interface region, any defects in the inclusion (such as folds, cracks, holes etc.) will have a detrimental effect to the internal strain distribution and the resulting mechanical performance. This conventional wisdom, however, can be challenged if the defect size is reduced beyond the critical size for crack formation to the level of atomic vacancies. In that case, there should be no practical effect on crack propagation and depending on the nature of the vacancies the interface strength may be in fact increase. In this work we employed argon ion (Ar+) bombardment and subsequent exposure to hydrogen (H2) to induce (as revealed by X-ray & Ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS/UPS) and Raman spectroscopy) passivated atomic single vacancies to CVD graphene. The modified graphene was subsequently transferred to PMMA bars and the morphology, wettability and the interface adhesion of the CVD graphene/PMMA system were investigated with Atomic Force Microscopy technique and Raman analysis. The results obtained showed clearly an overall improved mechanical behavior of graphene/polymer interface, since an increase as well a more uniform shift distribution with strain is observed. This paves the way for interface engineering in graphene/polymer systems which, in pristine condition, suffer from premature graphene slippage and subsequent failure.
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- 2020
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12. CIRCULAR ASSESSMENT TOOLS: ASSESSING CIRCULARITY IN OLIVE OIL MILLS
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ARISTEA KOUNANI,, ALEXANDRA PAVLOUDI, STAMATIS AGGELOPOULOS, and ACHILLEAS KONTROGEORGOS
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circular economy in olive oil mills ,circularity assessment ,assessment tools of circular economy in olive oil mills ,Commercial geography. Economic geography ,HF1021-1027 ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
In the last few years, since the implementation of circular economy (CE) is necessary for the transition to a sustainable food system, academics and practitioners have paid increasing attention to the CE concept. CE evaluations today have not demonstrated satisfactory results to meet the context of CE, as most of the indicators are focused on resource efficiency, waste disposal and recycling rates, or a particular stage of the product or process, ignoring the system perspective. In spite of the research community's extensive work, an effective tool to measure circularity in the agri-food industry has not yet been developed. This study aims to highlight the CE tools, based on scientific literature and practice, so as to identify those that could assess circularity in olive oil mills. Due to the uncontrolled disposal of waste from olive oil mills, the Mediterranean countries that produce the majority of olive oil have to cope with major environmental issues. Therefore, the assessment of circularity in order to identify the transition to CE in this sector is of great importance for these countries.
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- 2023
13. Exploring the Synergistic Mechanisms of Nanopulsed Plasma Bubbles and Photocatalysts for Trimethoprim Degradation and Mineralization in Water
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Dimitris Tsokanas and Christos A. Aggelopoulos
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cold atmospheric plasma ,plasma catalysis ,antibiotics ,water treatment ,zinc oxide ,plasma bubbles ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
In this study, the synergetic action of nanopulsed plasma bubbles (PBs) and photocatalysts for the degradation/mineralization of trimethoprim (TMP) in water was investigated. The effects of ZnO or TiO2 loading, plasma gas, and initial TMP concentration were evaluated. The physicochemical characterization of plasma-treated water, the quantification of plasma species, and the use of appropriate plasma species scavengers shed light on the plasma-catalytic mechanism. ZnO proved to be a superior catalyst compared to TiO2 when combined with plasma bubbles, mainly due to the increased production of ⋅OH and oxygen species resulting from the decomposition of O3. The air–PBs + ZnO system resulted in higher TMP degradation (i.e., 95% after 5 min of treatment) compared to the air–PBs + TiO2 system (i.e., 87%) and the PBs-alone process (83%). The plasma gas strongly influenced the process, with O2 resulting in the best performance and Ar being insufficient to drive the process. The synergy between air–PBs and ZnO was more profound (SF = 1.7), while ZnO also promoted the already high O2–plasma bubbles’ performance, resulting in a high TOC removal rate (i.e., 71%). The electrical energy per order in the PBs + ZnO system was very low, ranging from 0.23 to 0.46 kWh/m3, depending on the plasma gas and initial TMP concentration. The study provides valuable insights into the rapid and cost-effective degradation of emerging contaminants like TMP and the plasma-catalytic mechanism of antibiotics.
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- 2024
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14. Effect of N-acetyl-L-cysteine on inflammation after intraperitoneal mesh placement in a potentially contaminated environment: An experimental study in the rat
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Styliani Parpoudi, Ioannis Mantzoros, Anna Gkiouliava, Dimitrios Kyziridis, Apostolos Makrantonakis, Christos Chatzakis, Christos Gekas, Dimitrios Konstantaras, Orestis Ioannidis, Stefanos Bitsianis, Dimosthenis Miliaras, and Stamatios Aggelopoulos
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N-Acetyl-l-cysteine ,Adhesions ,Inflammation ,Surgical mesh ,Surgical ,Site infection ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Background: The use of prosthetic meshes in abdominal wall reconstruction is a well-established approach; however, in certain cases where a bowel resection coexists its application is disputed. Any underlying inflammatory process may augment adhesion formation which is a major postoperative complication. In this animal study, our aim was to investigate the effect of N-acetyl-l-cysteine (NAC) on adhesion formation and the expression of inflammatory markers when a mesh was used in a clean or a potentially contaminated environment. Methods: Sixty male Wistar rats were randomly and equally allocated in 3 groups: A, B and C. Animals in all groups underwent laparotomy, a prosthetic mesh was placed and chemoprophylaxis with ciprofloxacin was administered. In groups B and C an enterectomy was also performed. NAC was injected intraperitoneally in group C. Adhesion formation, IL-1a, IL-6, TNF-a and histological data including fibrosis, neutrophils’ infiltration and neovascularization were assessed. Mesh samples were sent for cultivation. Results: Adhesion formation was significantly less and inflammation markers were also lower in group C compared to group B (p
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- 2022
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15. MILKING PARLORS’ THROUGHPUT FOR DAIRY SHEEP AND FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE IT
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B. SKAPETAS, V. LAGA, I. KATANOS, V. BAMPIDIS, ELEONORA NISTOR, D. NITAS, S. AGGELOPOULOS, and GH. NISTOR
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dairy sheep ,parlors ,throughput ,Agriculture ,Technology ,Science - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the parlors’ throughput for dairy ewes and influencing factors in some European countries and in Greece. A great progress was done in this direction with the simultainous improvement of the animals’ milkability, the technological characteristics of milking machines and the technical knowledge provided to the farmers. Nowadays the average parlors’ throughput for the “Casse” system milking machines is 160-200 ewes/milker/h, while for the “Carrousel” type milking machines it is 200-280 ewes/milker/h. In the case of installation of the automatic cup removal system the parlors’ throughput ranges between 300-400 ewes/milker/h. In Greece, the average throughput for the “Casse” system parlors was found to range from 59 to 127 ewes/milker/h, while for the “Carrousel” type milking machines was found around 90-100 ewes/milker/h.
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- 2023
16. Clinical characteristics and management of patients with diabetes mellitus and stable coronary artery disease in daily clinical practice. The SCAD–DM Registry
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Maria E. Marketou, Charalambos Vlachopoulos, George Hahalis, Kristalenia Kafkala, Nikolaos Kouvelas, Ioannis Mantas, Antonios Sideris, Evaggelos Pisimisis, Emmanouel P. Vardas, Stylianos Tzeis, Panos E. Vardas, Vassiliki Dimitroula, Christos Hatjielefteriou, Nikolaos Kampouridis, Georgios Karakostas, Athanasios Karanasios, Stylianos Lambropoulos, Fotios Papalisandrou, Emmanouil Scoubourdis, Nikolaos Smirnioudis, Eleftherios Adamopoulos, Georgios Aggelopoulos, Charalampos Albanis, Alexandros Amaslidis, Maria Andreopoulou, Ilias Antoniou, Ilias Apostolou, Georgios Afaras, Vasileios Arfaras, Konstantinos Aronis, Georgios Askar, Christos Athanasiou, Sokratis Avlonitis Antonios Beroukas, Emmanouil Chorozopoulos, Nikolaos Chrysomallis, Konstantinos Davos, Eftichia Demerouti, Vasileios Dimopoulos, Nikolaos Dimoulis, Vasileios Drakoulidis, Kiriaki Faka, Dimitrios Fotiadis, Alexandros Galapis, Antonios Giakoumis, Ioannis Goupios, Christos Harbas, Vasileios Hatjiioakeimidis, Georgios Hondrokoukis, Panagiotis Kalaras, Marina Kanakaraki, Konstantinos Kapetanios, Vasileios Karasavvidis, Theodoros Karonis, Andreas Karydakis, Christos Katsaris, Christos Katsikas, Konstantinos Katsas, Sokratis Kazantzidis, Nikolaos Kipouridis, Eirini Kokani, Georgios Kolios, Ilias Konstantinidis, Themistoklis Konstantinou, Marios Konstantinou, Georgios Kontopoulos, Georgios Kontoroupis, Georgios Koroniotis, Apostolos Kotidis, Chrysanthi Koukosi, Mihail Kouremetis, Christos Kouris, Georgios Kouskos, Konstantinos Koutras, Georgios Koutsibanis, Harikleia Krontira, Konstantinos Lalenis, Christos Liatas, Leonidas Lillis, Grigorios Limperatos, Emmanouil Liodakis, Stavros Liropoulos, Ioannis Livaditis, Dimitrios Logothetis, Maria Lolaka, Georgios Loukidelis, Georgios Mablekos, Antonios Manousakis, Nikolaos Marinakis, Dimitrios Markou, Virginia Markou, Anestis Matziridis, Panagiotis Mavraganis, Vasileios Mavridis, Ioannis Mavrodimitrakis, Georgios Migias, Dimitrios Mitropoulos, Christos Mitroulas, Savvas Nikiforos, Vasileios Nikolaidis, Christos Nikopoulos, Nikoloaos Oikonomidis, Konstantinos Panagiotopoulos, Georgios Panagoulias, Anna Panou, Ioannis Pantelakis, Achilleas Papadopoulos, Apostolos Papadopoulos, Georgios Papaioannou, Andreas Papamichail, Soultana Papanastasiou, Panagiotis Papas, Eleftherios Papavasileiou, Vasileios Papavasileiou, Athanasios Patialiakas, Alexandros Patsilinakos, Georgios Pechlivanidis, Spiridon Petrogiannis, Nikolaos Pontikakis, Charalampos Parissis, Fotios Patsourakos, Evangelos Pisimisis, Andreas Pittaras, Sotirios Plastiras, Athanasios Platis, Panagiotis Poulikarakos, Markos Prionidis, Paraskevi Psarogianni, Emmanouil Psathakis, Dimitrios Psirropoulos, Maria Riga, Ali Risgits, Evangelos Rosmarakis, Maria Samartzi, Isidoros Sarris, Konstantinos Sassalos, Dimitrios Savvalas, Georgios Siliogas, David Simeonidis, Loukas Sinos, Andreas Skanavis, Achilleas Skordas, Vassiliki Sklirou, Iason Skotiniotis, Anastasios Spanos, Dimitrios Sratech, Christos Stathopoulos, Rafail Stavropoulos, Christos Stavrotheodoros, Emmanouil Stefanakis, Konstantinos Stefanis, Christos Stefopoulos, Dimitrios Stergiou, Konstantinos Svolis, Konstantinos Toulis, Kallinikos Tsakonas, Nikolaos Tsamis, Eleni Tzamtzi-Mastaka, Georgios Tzeltzes, Ioannis Tsiantis, Theodora Tsiotika, Vasileios Vachliotis, Ioannis Vakalis, Konstantinos Vardakis, Alexandros Vassilopoulos, Georgia Vlahou, Vasileios Vogas, Evropia Voukelatou, Nikiforos Vrettos, Dionisios Xenos, Konstantinos Zagoridis, Tsilla Zafiriou, Christos Zafiris, Maria Zaharia, Fanourios Zampetakis, and Vasileios Zouganelis
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diabetes mellitus ,coronary artery disease ,angina ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background: Patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) and coronary artery disease (CAD) represent a high-risk population, where comorbidities are common and the progression of coronary heart disease is relatively rapid and extensive. The present survey, conducted nationwide in a Eurozone country, Greece, with a properly organized national health system, aimed to record specific data from a significant number of patients with diabetes and documented stable CAD (SCAD). Methods and results: We conducted our survey across the country, in private and public primary, secondary, and tertiary care centers. A total of 1900 patients aged 71 ± 10 years old who suffered from both DM and chronic coronary syndromes were registered. Of the patients registered, 574 (30.24%) were women. It was found that 506 (26.6%) of the 1900 surveyed patients showed typical angina symptoms, while another 560 (29.5%) patients had developed angina-equivalent symptoms according to their history. Additionally, 324 (17%) patients had atypical symptoms that could not easily be attributed to existing CAD and the remaining 510 (26.8%) of the 1900 patients did not exhibit any angina symptoms during their daily activities. Functional testing for myocardial ischemia was not performed in 833 patients (43.8%). Myocardial scintigraphy was the most commonly used noninvasive technique (644 patients, 34%), while 492 patients (25.9%) had an exercise test and 159 (8.4%) underwent stress echocardiography. Conclusion: Real-world data in this specific high-risk population of diabetic patients with SCAD offer the opportunity to identify and improve diagnostic and therapeutic practice in the healthcare system of a European Union country.
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- 2021
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17. Techno-economic and financial index analysis for the improvement of entrepreneurship and competitiveness strategies of Greek goat enterprises
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Tsiouni Maria, Gourdouvelis Dimitrios, Konstantinidis Christos, and Aggelopoulos Stamatis
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techno-economic analysis ,financial index analysis ,goat enterprises ,competitiveness strategies ,Greece ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Food processing and manufacture ,TP368-456 - Abstract
Greece is a country with a long tradition in animal breeding, particularly involving small ruminants and goat farming is an important livestock industry. Despite the high productivity and high quality of products, the goat industry shows low competitiveness due to high production costs compared to other EU countries. For economic sustainability, farms have to be profitable; therefore, it is important to maximize income whilst controlling costs. The aim of this paper is to identify the strengths and weaknesses of the goat breeding industry so that it is not only viable but also competitive. The economic performance of goat farms are evaluated in this study, as well as the factors that influence financial results. Capital formation and production costs composition of the holdings are examined. Moreover, the purpose of the analysis is to draw conclusions regarding the gross return achieved, the participation of production factors (land, labor, capital) in the composition of total costs, and the financial results achieved. Results show that the cost of feed, depreciation, and the value of animals contribute most in the formulation of cost.
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- 2022
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18. Response of early maturity soybean cultivars to row spacing in full-season crop and double-crop systems
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Dimitrios N. Vlachostergios, Christos Noulas, Dimitrios Baxevanos, Christina G. Raptopoulou, Vassilios Aggelopoulos, Chrysovalanto Karanika, Stella K. Kantartzi, and Athanasios G. Mavromatis
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glycine max (l.) merr. ,cultivation system ,non-genetically modified soybean ,environmental condition ,legume ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 - Abstract
Cultivar selection and crop systems are important factors for maximising soybean seed yield. The effect of row spacing (RS1 = 75 cm, RS2 = 25 cm) on the performance of 10 early maturity soybean cultivars grown in full-season and double-crop system for two consecutive years was studied. The agronomic traits measured were seed yield (SY), plant height (PH), pods per plant (PP), first pod height (FPH), crude protein. RS had a significant effect on SY, PH, PP and FPH. Higher SY (P < 0.01) was recorded in RS2 regardless of the crop system. The double-crop system yield reduction index of the tested cultivars ranged from 30.0% to 56.4% and from 21.5% to 57.2% for RS1 and RS2, respectively. Cultivars differed (P < 0.01) for all traits in both RS and crop systems. Maturity Group I cultivars showed the highest productivity; the cultivars PR92B63 and Atlantic were better adapted to the full-season crop system (SY > 5.67 t/ha); cv. Sphera was the most productive in the double-crop system (4.66 t/ha); cv. PR92M22 showed good adaptability to both cropping systems. In conclusion, the significant effect of RS and crop system on SY was observed, whereas different high yielding cultivars were identified as suitable for full-season and double-crop system.
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- 2021
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19. Physiologic effects of stress dose corticosteroids in in-hospital cardiac arrest (CORTICA): A randomized clinical trial
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Spyros D. Mentzelopoulos, Evanthia Pappa, Sotirios Malachias, Charikleia S. Vrettou, Achilleas Giannopoulos, George Karlis, George Adamos, Ioannis Pantazopoulos, Aikaterini Megalou, Zafeiris Louvaris, Vassiliki Karavana, Epameinondas Aggelopoulos, Gerasimos Agaliotis, Marielen Papadaki, Aggeliki Baladima, Ismini Lasithiotaki, Fotini Lagiou, Prodromos Temperikidis, Aggeliki Louka, Andreas Asimakos, Marios Kougias, Demosthenes Makris, Epameinondas Zakynthinos, Maria Xintara, Maria-Eirini Papadonta, Aikaterini Koutsothymiou, Spyros G. Zakynthinos, and Eleni Ischaki
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Heart Arrest ,Post-cardiac arrest syndrome ,Methylprednisolone ,Hydrocortisone ,Hemodynamics ,Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
Aim: Postresuscitation hemodynamics are associated with hospital mortality/functional outcome. We sought to determine whether low-dose steroids started during and continued after cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) affect postresuscitation hemodynamics and other physiological variables in vasopressor-requiring, in-hospital cardiac arrest. Methods: We conducted a two-center, randomized, double-blind trial of patients with adrenaline (epinephrine)-requiring cardiac arrest. Patients were randomized to receive either methylprednisolone 40 mg (steroids group) or normal saline-placebo (control group) during the first CPR cycle post-enrollment. Postresuscitation shock was treated with hydrocortisone 240 mg daily for 7 days maximum and gradual taper (steroids group), or saline-placebo (control group). Primary outcomes were arterial pressure and central-venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2) within 72 hours post-ROSC. Results: Eighty nine of 98 controls and 80 of 86 steroids group patients with ROSC were treated as randomized. Primary outcome data were collected from 100 patients with ROSC (control, n = 54; steroids, n = 46). In intention-to-treat mixed-model analyses, there was no significant effect of group on arterial pressure, marginal mean (95% confidence interval) for mean arterial pressure, steroids vs. control: 74 (68–80) vs. 72 (66–79) mmHg] and ScvO2 [71 (68–75)% vs. 69 (65–73)%], cardiac index [2.8 (2.5–3.1) vs. 2.9 (2.5–3.2) L/min/m2], and serum cytokine concentrations [e.g. interleukin-6, 89.1 (42.8–133.9) vs. 75.7 (52.1–152.3) pg/mL] determined within 72 hours post-ROSC (P = 0.12–0.86). There was no between-group difference in body temperature, echocardiographic variables, prefrontal blood flow index/cerebral autoregulation, organ failure-free days, and hazard for poor in-hospital/functional outcome, and adverse events (P = 0.08–>0.99). Conclusions: Our results do not support the use of low-dose corticosteroids in in-hospital cardiac arrest.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT02790788 (https://www.clinicaltrials.gov).
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- 2022
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20. Automated office blood pressure measurements in primary care are misleading in more than one third of treated hypertensives: The VALENTINE-Greece Home Blood Pressure Monitoring study
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A. Kollias, S.S. Papadatos, A.F. Dominiczak, G. Parati, G.S. Stergiou, E. Demerouti, D. Voulgaris, I. Papadakis, A. Karsanidis, A. Triantafillou, S. Garzonis, G. Gourgoulis, A. Trikalinou, P. Karidas, D. Savvalas, T. Aggelopoulos, A. Alevizos, A. Moraiti, E. Rosmarakis, G. Chatzigeorgiou, V. Antonakis, A. Alexandropoulou-Tsirka, I. Markaki, S. Astrinakis, V. Roilidis, S. Polymeros, E. Chariatis, V. Panageas, A. Kontoriga, M. Patsioura, A. Kleftaki-Manta, A. Kalantaridou, S. Kourouklis, G. Papakonstantinos, P. Barouni, E. Grekidou, A. Sklaveniti, I. Kolovou, A. Antoniadis, I. Pelekanos, N. Zervaki Drakou, K. Tikka-Zoumpou, V. Dalaklidou, A. Menti, A. Christofeli, T. Androutsakos, D. Doulgerakis, I. Oikonomopoulou, M. Moschos, D. Koutras, I. Skias, P. Boutsikos, M. Matsaggoura-Sameli, M. Riga, P. Sainis, E. Mitilinaiou-Karakozi, K. Mainas, K. Nikolaou, S. Chatziparaskevas, O. Ozai, G. Vogiatzis, L. Lilis, D. Plaskas, S. Chatzizisi, A. Gianasmidis, E. Petrovitsos, G. Koykoyfikis, A. Pittas, D. Rovithis, A. Ioannidis, E. Dalamaga, G. Kladas, N. Afthonidis, E. Pourou, S. Katainidis, M. Gavrilidou, P. Kourtidou, L. Tsamopoulos, K. Kairis, S. Arampatzi, C. Basoukos, K. Daskalakis, V. Megianis, D. Simintiridou, T. Christoforidis, G. Lafazanis, L. Chatzioannidis, C. Stephopoulos, K. Karanika-Chandolia, E. Teneketzi, C. Mellidis, P. Tsepelis, C. Louspas, M. Biternas, T. Xionis, D. Tsantilas, M. Kosmanou, I. Gougousis, F. Chatzi, A. Vassos, S. Bitchavas, E. Dalaveris, G. Spiroulias, I. Anastasopoulos, D. Karlis, D. Chiotis, G. Christodoulou, D. Arfanakis, V. Psarogianni-Sinou, S. Kokkinos, I. Anifantis, P. Alogogianni, A. Michas, A. Oikonomou, A. Charalampous, P. Papadopoulos, M. Philipoiou Kotsoni, P. Dragonas, E. Laskari, G. Tsiamtsiouri, V. Kritsova-Avgerou, T. Tiligadas, N. Vrettos, N. Vernardos, M. Melessanakis, A. Melidoniotis, E. Liodakis, A. Manousakis, C. Galanakis, I. Lampousakis, E. Vyzoukakis, G. Strimpouli, I. Patramanis, D. Chatziliadou, K. Nioti, D. Koynalakis, I. Tserkis, C. Androutsopoulou, C. Liavvas, and D. Karaoglanidou
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hypertension ,diagnosis ,control ,out-of-office blood pressure ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background: This study assessed the diagnostic reliability of automated office blood pressure (OBP) measurements in treated hypertensive patients in primary care by evaluating the prevalence of white coat hypertension (WCH) and masked uncontrolled hypertension (MUCH) phenomena. Methods: Primary care physicians, nationwide in Greece, assessed consecutive hypertensive patients on stable treatment using OBP (1 visit, triplicate measurements) and home blood pressure (HBP) measurements (7 days, duplicate morning and evening measurements). All measurements were performed using validated automated devices with bluetooth capacity (Omron M7 Intelli-IT). Uncontrolled OBP was defined as ≥140/90 mmHg, and uncontrolled HBP was defined as ≥135/85 mmHg. Results: A total of 790 patients recruited by 135 doctors were analyzed (age: 64.5 ± 14.4 years, diabetics: 21.4%, smokers: 20.6%, and average number of antihypertensive drugs: 1.6 ± 0.8). OBP (137.5 ± 9.4/84.3 ± 7.7 mmHg, systolic/diastolic) was higher than HBP (130.6 ± 11.2/79.9 ± 8 mmHg; difference 6.9 ± 11.6/4.4 ± 7.6 mmHg, p
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- 2020
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21. Cold Atmospheric Plasma Attenuates Breast Cancer Cell Growth Through Regulation of Cell Microenvironment Effectors
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Christos A. Aggelopoulos, Anna-Maria Christodoulou, Myrsini Tachliabouri, Stauros Meropoulis, Maria-Elpida Christopoulou, Theodoros T. Karalis, Athanasios Chatzopoulos, and Spyros S. Skandalis
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CAP ,breast cancer ,estrogen receptor ,tumor microenvironment ,ROS ,extracellular matrix ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Breast cancer exists in multiple subtypes some of which still lack a targeted and effective therapy. Cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) has been proposed as an emerging anti-cancer treatment modality. In this study, we investigated the effects of direct and indirect CAP treatment driven by the advantageous nanosecond pulsed discharge on breast cancer cells of different malignant phenotypes and estrogen receptor (ER) status, a major factor in the prognosis and therapeutic management of breast cancer. The main CAP reactive species in liquid (i.e. H2O2, NO2−/NO3−) and gas phase were determined as a function of plasma operational parameters (i.e. treatment time, pulse voltage and frequency), while pre-treatment with the ROS scavenger NAC revealed the impact of ROS in the treatment. CAP treatment induced intense phenotypic changes and apoptosis in both ER+ and ER- cells, which is associated with the mitochondrial pathway as evidenced by the increased Bax/Bcl-2 ratio and cleavage of PARP-1. Interestingly, CAP significantly reduced CD44 protein expression (a major cancer stem cell marker and matrix receptor), while differentially affected the expression of proteases and inflammatory mediators. Collectively, the findings of the present study suggest that CAP suppresses breast cancer cell growth and regulates several effectors of the tumor microenvironment and thus it could represent an efficient therapeutic approach for distinct breast cancer subtypes.
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- 2022
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22. Nanostructured Materials and Advanced Processes for Application in Water Purification
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Christos A. Aggelopoulos
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n/a ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Water pollution is a major environmental problem that has a significant impact on human and animal health and the ecosystem [...]
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- 2023
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23. Mechanisms of Individual and Simultaneous Adsorption of Antibiotics and Dyes onto Halloysite Nanoclay and Regeneration of Saturated Adsorbent via Cold Plasma Bubbling
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Stefania Giannoulia, Irene-Eva Triantaphyllidou, Athanasia G. Tekerlekopoulou, and Christos A. Aggelopoulos
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adsorption ,nanoclays ,halloysite ,methylene blue ,enrofloxacin ,regeneration ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Halloysite nanoclay (HNC) was examined as an adsorbent for the individual and simultaneous removal of antibiotic enrofloxacin (ENRO) and methylene blue (MB) from aqueous solutions, alongside its regeneration via cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) bubbling. Initially, batch kinetics and isotherm studies were carried out, while the effect of several parameters was evaluated. Both ENRO and MB adsorption onto HNC was better described by Langmuir model, with its maximum adsorption capacity being 34.80 and 27.66 mg/g, respectively. A Pseudo-second order model fitted the experimental data satisfactorily, suggesting chemisorption (through electrostatic interactions) as the prevailing adsorption mechanism, whereas adsorption was also controlled by film diffusion. In the binary system, the presence of MB seemed to act antagonistically to the adsorption of ENRO. The saturated adsorbent was regenerated inside a CAP microbubble reactor and its adsorption capacity was re-tested by applying new adsorption cycles. CAP bubbling was able to efficiently regenerate saturated HNC with low energy requirements (16.67 Wh/g-adsorbent) in contrast to Fenton oxidation. Most importantly, the enhanced adsorption capacity of the CAP-regenerated HNC (compared to raw HNC), when applied in new adsorption cycles, indicated its activation during the regeneration process. The present study provides a green, sustainable and highly effective alternative for water remediation where pharmaceutical and dyes co-exist.
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- 2023
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24. Comparison of stroke among Christians and Muslims in Thrace, Greece
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Papadopoulos, V, Tsakiridis, K, Filippou, D K, Aggelopoulos, P, Nikiforidis, D, and Baltatzidis, G
- Published
- 2006
25. Skeletal muscle mass in acute coronary syndrome prognosis: Gender-based analysis from Hellenic Heart Failure cohort
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Kouvari, M., Chrysohoou, C., Dilaveris, P., Georgiopoulos, G., Magkas, N., Aggelopoulos, P., Panagiotakos, D.B., and Tousoulis, D.
- Published
- 2019
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26. Αποτελεσματική διδασκαλία γνωστικού σχήματος προβλημάτων αφαίρεσης σε μαθητές με ειδικές μαθησιακές δυσκολίες με τη χρήση πολλαπλών τρόπων αναπαράστασης της γνώσης
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Stergios Aggelopoulos and Ioannis Agaliotis
- Subjects
Γνωστικό σχήμα των πράξεων ,Ειδικές μαθησιακές δυσκολίες ,Επίλυση προβλημάτων ,Μαθηματικά Διδακτικό πρόγραμμα ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Η παρούσα έρευνα πραγματεύεται τη δόμηση και ενεργοποίηση γνωστικού σχήματος προβλημάτων αφαίρεσης–σύγκρισης και αφαίρεσης–εξομοίωσης από μαθητές με Ειδικές Μαθησιακές Δυσκολίες (ΕΜΔ). Η διδασκαλία για την ανάπτυξη του γνωστικού σχήματος έγινε διαμέσου πολλαπλών τρόπων αναπαράστασης της γνώσης (χειραπτικών υλικών, εικόνων και αριθμητικών συμβόλων) στο πλαίσιο παρέμβασης που στηρίχτηκε στις αρχές της αποτελεσματικής διδασκαλίας (effective instruction). Για τον έλεγχο της αποτελεσματικότητας της παρέμβασης και της διατήρησης της γνώσης όπως και για την εξαγωγή των αντίστοιχων συμπερασμάτων διενεργήθηκαν αξιολογήσεις πριν από την παρέμβαση, ακριβώς μετά από αυτή, αλλά και τρεις εβδομάδες μετά την ολοκλήρωσή της. Τα αποτελέσματα έδειξαν ότι η αντίληψη του γνωστικού σχήματος βελτιώθηκε στατιστικώς σημαντικά, γεγονός που αποτυπώθηκε στην υψηλότερη επίδοση των συμμετεχόντων στην επίλυση προβλημάτων μετά την παρέμβαση και στη διατήρηση της γνώσης που κατέκτησαν τρεις εβδομάδες μετά την ολοκλήρωση του προγράμματος.
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- 2021
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27. Case Report: A Virilizing Adrenal Oncocytoma
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Efstathios Kotidis, Stefanos Bitsianis, Konstantinos Galanos-Demiris, Panagiotis Christidis, Ioannis Mantzoros, Orestis Ioannidis, Vasilis Foutsitzis, Manousos George Pramateftakis, and Stamatios Aggelopoulos
- Subjects
adrenal mass ,testosterone ,masculinization ,virilization ,borderline ,oncocytoma ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
A 64-year-old female was admitted to our clinic with a 9-cm-sized adrenal mass. The patient's main symptom was hirsutism, which included thinning scalp hair and excessive hair growth over her torso and arms. Upon investigation, elevated values of testosterone, androsterone D4, and DHEA-S were found. Contrast-enhanced abdominal CT and MRI scans revealed a heterogenous large mass (diameter 9 × 8.5 cm) with focal calcifications, necrotic areas, and a clear distinction from the adjacent structures. The patient underwent a right adrenalectomy. The histological examination of the tumor revealed a borderline adrenocortical oncocytoma. The patient had an uncomplicated postoperative course and was discharged on postoperative day 8. Similar cases reported in the literature are also being reviewed in this case report.
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- 2021
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28. Brain Natriuretic Peptide mediates the prognostic role of renal function toward 10-year cardiovascular mortality in patients with Acute Coronary Syndrome: the HHF study (2006–2016)
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Christina Chrysohoou, George Georgiopoulos, Hara Kosyfa, Ioanna Kotsopoulou Haritou, Matina Kouvari, Androniki Filippou, Stelios Iosifidis, Eleftherios Tsiamis, Panagiotis Aggelopoulos, Christos Pitsavos, and Dimitris Tousoulis
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background/Introduction: Risk stratification in chronic heart failure (HF) remains a challenge. Renal function and B-natriuretic peptide (BNP) might confer predictive value towards long-term mortality in HF patients after an acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Methods: From May 2006 to March 2009, 1,000 consecutive patients who were hospitalized with ACS diagnosis were enrolled in the study. In 2016, the 10-year follow-up (2006 -2016) was performed in 745 participants. GFR was evaluated through the MDRD formula. HF phenotype was defined according to baseline ejection fraction (EF); HF with reduced EF (i.e.
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- 2018
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29. Research and Innovation in Exploration and Mining of Raw Materials: The ROBOMINERS Project
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Eleni Koutsopoulou, Aikaterini Servou, George Aggelopoulos, and Konstantinos Laskaridis
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ROBOMINERS project ,European database ,raw materials ,ore deposits ,exploration ,mining technology ,Chemical engineering ,TP155-156 - Abstract
ROBOMINERS is a new project funded under the European Union’s Research and Innovation Programme Horizon 2020, which aims at employing a bio-inspired robot, focused on the prospect of mineral exploration and extraction within Europe. ROBOMINERS’ innovative approach combines the creation of a new mining ecosystem through the development of a bioinspired robotic miner prototype, able to explore and mine mineral deposits which are currently considered uneconomic due to their small size and difficulty of access. The main objectives of the project include the creation of a European database of potentially suitable locations for the deployment of this novel technology. The building of the pan-EU mineral deposits database is considered vital for the development of the project as it will provide essential information related to deposit type and commodities, spatial and temporal distribution, and location of exploration targets. Several deposits have been reviewed and examined in Greece as potential targets suitable for the ROBOMINERS technology, after considering the specific restrictions and requirements of the project. The main targets have been determined and arranged according to the different aspects required by the applicability of the ROBOMINERS innovative technology.
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- 2021
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30. Low-Cost Automatic Weather Stations in the Internet of Things
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Konstantinos Ioannou, Dimitris Karampatzakis, Petros Amanatidis, Vasileios Aggelopoulos, and Ilias Karmiris
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AWS ,Internet of Things ,Artificial Intelligence ,Edge computing ,LPWAN ,LoRa ,Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 - Abstract
Automatic Weather Stations (AWS) are extensively used for gathering meteorological and climatic data. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) provides publications with guidelines for the implementation, installation, and usages of these stations. Nowadays, in the new era of the Internet of Things, there is an ever-increasing necessity for the implementation of automatic observing systems that will provide scientists with the real-time data needed to design and apply proper environmental policy. In this paper, an extended review is performed regarding the technologies currently used for the implementation of Automatic Weather Stations. Furthermore, we also present the usage of new emerging technologies such as the Internet of Things, Edge Computing, Deep Learning, LPWAN, etc. in the implementation of future AWS-based observation systems. Finally, we present a case study and results from a testbed AWS (project AgroComp) developed by our research team. The results include test measurements from low-cost sensors installed on the unit and predictions provided by Deep Learning algorithms running locally.
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- 2021
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31. The impact of marketing signals on the performance of foreign subsidiaries in the COVID-19 pandemic
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Georgopoulos, Antonios, Aggelopoulos, Eleftherios, Paraschi, Elen Paraskevi, and Kalogera, Maria
- Abstract
An interesting research issue that has not yet been satisfactorily explored is the investigation of business strategic responses in periods of crisis and their performance effects. To shed light on this issue, we take the COVID-19 pandemic as a paradigm and explore the impact of marketing signals such as brand name, advertising, warranties, and pricing on the perceived performance of 165 subsidiaries of multinational enterprises located in Greece. We find differentiated performance effects of the four signals under examination. In particular, brand name and advertising have positive performance effects, whereas pricing negatively affects performance and warranties have a statistically insignificant influence. Further, the perceived performance impact of the specific signals varies across diverse industries. In addition, our research reveals the enhancing performance effect of e-commerce as a means of distribution during the pandemic. The findings suggest that an entrenched marketing policy in the COVID-19 pandemic should be applied selectively and targeted in terms of marketing tools and industry types. Our results are robust for various performance indicators and have marketing, performance, and crisis management implications.
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- 2024
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32. Mediterranean diet and prognosis of first-diagnosed Acute Coronary Syndrome patients according to heart failure phenotype: Hellenic Heart Failure Study
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Kouvari, M., Chrysohoou, C., Aggelopoulos, P., Tsiamis, E., Tsioufis, K., Pitsavos, C., and Tousoulis, D.
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Acute coronary syndrome -- Diagnosis -- Prognosis -- Diet therapy ,Food/cooking/nutrition ,Health - Abstract
Background/Objectives: Nutrition in secondary prevention of Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) is inadequately investigated. We sought to evaluate the role of Mediterranean diet in prognosis of first-diagnosed ACS patients, according to heart failure type. Subjects/Methods: In 2006-2009, 1000 consecutive patients hospitalized at First Cardiology Clinic of Athens with ACS diagnosis were enrolled in the study. In 2016, 10-year follow-up was performed (75% participation rate). Only n=690 (69%) first-diagnosed ACS patients were included. Adherence to Mediterranean diet was assessed through MedDietScore (range 0-55). Heart failure phenotypes were reduced, mid-range and preserved ejection fraction (that is, HFrEF, HFmrEF and HFpEF, respectively). Results: Ranking from first to third MedDietScore tertile, fewer 1, 2 and 10-year fatal/non-fatal ACS events were observed. Multivariate logistic regression analysis highlighted a significantly inverse association between MedDietScore and long-term ACS prognosis in 1 year (odds ratio (OR)=0.84, 95% confidence interval (CI) (0.71, 1.00), P=0.05), 2 year (OR=0.91, 95% CI (0.82, 1.00), P=0.04) and 10 year (OR=0.93, 95% CI (0.85, 1.00), P=0.05) follow-up. Further analysis revealed that MedDietScore differentially affected patients' prognosis according to heart failure phenotype, with short-term impact in HFrEF and HFmrEF patients yet longer positive outcomes in HFpEF and C-reactive protein potentially mediated these relations. Conclusions: Mediterranean diet seemed to protect against recurrent cardiac episodes in coronary patients with major ACS complications. Results were more encouraging with regard to patients with preserved left ventricle function. Such findings may possess a cost-effective, supplementary-to-medical, treatment approach in this patient category where evidence concerning their management are inconclusive., Author(s): M Kouvari [sup.1] [sup.2] , C Chrysohoou [sup.1] , P Aggelopoulos [sup.1] , E Tsiamis [sup.1] , K Tsioufis [sup.1] , C Pitsavos [sup.1] , D Tousoulis [sup.1] Author [...]
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- 2017
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33. Genetic Diversity of Local Greek and Bulgarian Grapevine (Vitis Vinifera L.) Varieties
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Maria Papapetrou, Dimitrios Loukovitis, Orestis Papadopoulos, Zoi Kazlari, Anastasia Peristeraki, Slavina Arsenova, Desislava Bardarova, Desislava Doncheva, Serafeim Theocharis, Constantinos Karagiannidis, Stefanos Koundouras, Anastasia Giannakoula, Stamatis Aggelopoulos, and Dimitrios Chatziplis
- Subjects
grapevine ,genetic diversity ,microsatellite markers ,differentiation ,Vitis vinifera ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The aim of this study was to estimate the genetic diversity of Greek and Bulgarian grapevine varieties with the use of microsatellite markers. The studied samples were collected from various productive vineyards, consisting of eight Greek and nine Bulgarian native varieties. In order to create a genetic profile for each sample, a multiplex PCR reaction method was used amplifying simultaneously seven microsatellite loci. Statistical analysis of data showed that there was a high degree of genetic heterogeneity among most of the varieties studied, highlighting the discriminative power of the chosen set of markers. Moreover, the synonymy of (I) Greek Pamid and Bulgarian Pamid and (II) Greek Zoumiatiko and Bulgarian Dimyat was suggested, as each variety pair had identical allele profiles in all loci examined. Regarding the Greek Mavrud and Bulgarian Mavrud varieties, there was a close genetic relationship between them, however, they did not share common alleles in all microsatellite loci and, therefore, should not be characterized as synonyms. On the other hand, Greek and Bulgarian Keratsouda, which were supposed to be common varieties, were found to be genetically different, supporting that these two varieties should be considered as homonyms. Despite the genotypic assay performed herein, we believe that additional molecular work is needed for the efficient management of Greek and Bulgarian grapevine genepools, as well as to safely suggest any synonym or homonym annotation.
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- 2020
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34. Neuronal Correlates of Auditory Streaming in Monkey Auditory Cortex for Tone Sequences without Spectral Differences
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Stanislava Knyazeva, Elena Selezneva, Alexander Gorkin, Nikolaos C. Aggelopoulos, and Michael Brosch
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stream segregation ,build up ,complex tone ,phase spectrum ,auditory cortex ,monkeys ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
This study finds a neuronal correlate of auditory perceptual streaming in the primary auditory cortex for sequences of tone complexes that have the same amplitude spectrum but a different phase spectrum. Our finding is based on microelectrode recordings of multiunit activity from 270 cortical sites in three awake macaque monkeys. The monkeys were presented with repeated sequences of a tone triplet that consisted of an A tone, a B tone, another A tone and then a pause. The A and B tones were composed of unresolved harmonics formed by adding the harmonics in cosine phase, in alternating phase, or in random phase. A previous psychophysical study on humans revealed that when the A and B tones are similar, humans integrate them into a single auditory stream; when the A and B tones are dissimilar, humans segregate them into separate auditory streams. We found that the similarity of neuronal rate responses to the triplets was highest when all A and B tones had cosine phase. Similarity was intermediate when the A tones had cosine phase and the B tones had alternating phase. Similarity was lowest when the A tones had cosine phase and the B tones had random phase. The present study corroborates and extends previous reports, showing similar correspondences between neuronal activity in the primary auditory cortex and auditory streaming of sound sequences. It also is consistent with Fishman’s population separation model of auditory streaming.
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- 2018
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35. The mediating performance role of staffing options in MNE subsidiary strategies within rapidly deteriorating environments
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Georgopoulos, Antonios, Aggelopoulos, Eleftherios, Paraschi, Elen Paraskevi, and Kalogera, Maria
- Abstract
Purpose: In an environment of intensive global mobility, this study aims to investigate the performance role of staffing choices within diverse MNE subsidiary strategies. Incorporating the integration-responsiveness (IR) framework with a contingency perspective, this study proposes that the performance success of distinct MNE subsidiary strategies depends on staffing choices. This study argues that performance differences of staffing choices such as assigned expatriates, self-initiated expatriates, former inpatriates and host-country nationals derive from their different knowledge/experience advantages regarding the intra-firm environment and local market conditions. Design/methodology/approach: The study utilizes a unique sample of 169 foreign subsidiaries located in Greece that faced the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic (in 2020). For robustness reasons, this study also captures the imposition of capital controls (in June 2015). Findings: This study finds important mediating performance effects of a diversified human resource portfolio across distinct subsidiary strategies in difficult times. Integration strategy tends to use more assigned expatriates, locally responsive strategy tends to utilize more host-country nationals, whereas multi-focal strategy favors self-initiated expatriates and former inpatriates, with positive subsidiary performance effects accordingly. So, staffing policies that are suitable to balance the needs of Human Resource Management (HRM) portfolio differ from strategy to strategy. Moreover, this study finds that managing HRM diversity is crucial in turbulent times. Originality/value: While the empirical evidence has been predominantly accumulated from large economies, largely neglecting performance effects of MNE subsidiary staffing in crisis contexts, the analysis sheds light on a small open economy (i.e. the Greek context) emphasizing rapidly environmental deterioration. The findings extend existing theorizing on international performance and HRM management by providing an integrative conceptual framework linking integration-responsiveness motivated strategies with distinct groups of high-quality human resources under contingency considerations, so creatively synthesizing largely fragmented IB and HRM research streams. The study provides valuable insights into the performance role of non-conventional staffing choices such as self-initiated expatriates and former inpatriates, given that relevant studies examine either exclusively expatriates or compare expatriates with host country nationals, reaching inconclusive results.
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- 2023
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36. Atmospheric pressure dielectric barrier discharge for the remediation of soil contaminated by organic pollutants
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Aggelopoulos, C. A.
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- 2016
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37. Non-aqueous phase liquid-contaminated soil remediation by ex situ dielectric barrier discharge plasma
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Aggelopoulos, C. A., Tsakiroglou, C. D., Ognier, S., and Cavadias, S.
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- 2015
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38. Serum glucose level at hospital admission correlates with left ventricular systolic dysfunction in nondiabetic, acute coronary patients: The hellenic heart failure study
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Chrysohoou, C. Pitsavos, C. Aggelopoulos, P. Skoumas, J. Tsiamis, E. Panagiotakos, D.B. Stefanadis, C.
- Abstract
The purpose of this work was to evaluate the relation between serum glucose levels at hospital admission and left ventricular systolic function in nondiabetic patients with an acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Of the 1000 ACS patients who were consecutively enrolled during 2007-2008, 583 (63 ± 13 years, 20% females) nondiabetic patients were studied in this work. Of these, 254 presented left ventricular systolic dysfunction (ejection fraction 155 mg/dl) had lower left ventricular ejection fraction (40% vs 45%, P = 0.003), were older (66 ± 11 vs 61 ± 13, P = 0.004) and less physically active (49% vs 63%, P = 0.02), had higher troponin (14.7 ± 39.7 vs 5.6 ± 13.5, P = 0.03), higher brain natriuretic peptide (510.39 ± 932.33 vs 213.4 ± 301.14, P = 0.008), higher C-RP (42.26 ± 55.26 vs 26.46 ± 38.18, P = 0.04), lower creatinine clearance levels (68 ± 33 vs.81 ± 31, P = 0.009), higher white blood cell count (13 416 ± 16 420 vs 9310 ± 3020, P = 0.001), and lower body mass index (26.8 ± 4 vs 27.2 ± 4.4, P = 0.07), compared to those in the lowest tertile (
- Published
- 2022
39. Upgrading of Mixed Food Industry Side-Streams by Solid-State Fermentation with P. ostreatus
- Author
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Theodoros Aggelopoulos, Argyro Bekatorou, Stavros Plessas, Athanasios A. Koutinas, and Poonam Nigam
- Subjects
Agroindustrial side-streams ,Pleurotus ostreatus ,protein ,volatiles ,autolysis ,RNA content ,natural food additive ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
In the frame of efforts to exploit agroindustrial side-streams and wastes (AISS) for added-value products that are based on single cell protein (SCP), mixed substrates consisting of brewer’s spent grains (BSG), malt spent rootlets (MSR), cheese whey, molasses, orange, and potato pulps, were used for growth of the edible mushroom Pleurotus ostreatus. The substrates were mixed in various combinations, and were used for P. ostreatus growth at various conditions. The substrate, for which the highest sugar consumption, protein increase, and mycelium yield were observed, consisted of 20 mL molasses (4° Baume density), 20 mL potato pulp, 5 mL whey, 5 mL orange pulp, 30 g BSG, and 5 g MSR (at 25 °C and substrate pH 4). The mycelium-enriched product was analyzed for protein, fat, minerals (Ca, Mg, Fe, Cu), and aroma volatile compounds, indicating the potential for use as nutritious supplement for food, feed, or microbiology uses. The product was also autolyzed, freeze-dried, powdered, and analyzed for total ribonucleic acid content, showing the potential for use as a commercial natural food flavor enhancer.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. CIRCULAR ASSESSMENT TOOLS: ASSESSING CIRCULARITY IN OLIVE OIL MILLS.
- Author
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KOUNANI, ARISTEA, PAVLOUDI, ALEXANDRA, AGGELOPOULOS, STAMATIS, and KONTROGEORGOS, ACHILLEAS
- Subjects
OLIVE oil mills ,CIRCULAR economy ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,WASTE management ,WASTE recycling - Abstract
In the last few years, since the implementation of circular economy (CE) is necessary for the transition to a sustainable food system, academics and practitioners have paid increasing attention to the CE concept. CE evaluations today have not demonstrated satisfactory results to meet the context of CE, as most of the indicators are focused on resource efficiency, waste disposal and recycling rates, or a particular stage of the product or process, ignoring the system perspective. In spite of the research community's extensive work, an effective tool to measure circularity in the agri-food industry has not yet been developed. This study aims to highlight the CE tools, based on scientific literature and practice, so as to identify those that could assess circularity in olive oil mills. Due to the uncontrolled disposal of waste from olive oil mills, the Mediterranean countries that produce the majority of olive oil have to cope with major environmental issues. Therefore, the assessment of circularity in order to identify the transition to CE in this sector is of great importance for these countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
41. Effect of N-acetyl-L-cysteine on inflammation after intraperitoneal mesh placement in a potentially contaminated environment: An experimental study in the rat.
- Author
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Parpoudi, Styliani, Mantzoros, Ioannis, Gkiouliava, Anna, Kyziridis, Dimitrios, Makrantonakis, Apostolos, Chatzakis, Christos, Gekas, Christos, Konstantaras, Dimitrios, Ioannidis, Orestis, Bitsianis, Stefanos, Miliaras, Dimosthenis, and Aggelopoulos, Stamatios
- Abstract
The use of prosthetic meshes in abdominal wall reconstruction is a well-established approach; however, in certain cases where a bowel resection coexists its application is disputed. Any underlying inflammatory process may augment adhesion formation which is a major postoperative complication. In this animal study, our aim was to investigate the effect of N-acetyl- l -cysteine (NAC) on adhesion formation and the expression of inflammatory markers when a mesh was used in a clean or a potentially contaminated environment. Sixty male Wistar rats were randomly and equally allocated in 3 groups: A, B and C. Animals in all groups underwent laparotomy, a prosthetic mesh was placed and chemoprophylaxis with ciprofloxacin was administered. In groups B and C an enterectomy was also performed. NAC was injected intraperitoneally in group C. Adhesion formation, IL-1a, IL-6, TNF-a and histological data including fibrosis, neutrophils' infiltration and neovascularization were assessed. Mesh samples were sent for cultivation. Adhesion formation was significantly less and inflammation markers were also lower in group C compared to group B (p<0.05). Histological findings were significant for greater fibrosis, neutrophils' infiltration and neovascularization in group B compared to both group A and C. Regarding mesh cultures, more specimens were tested positive in group B (p <0.05). Outcomes between group A and C did not differ. NAC effectively ameliorated adhesion formation and inflammation in a potentially septic environment where a prosthetic mesh was placed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Discarded Oranges and Brewer’s Spent Grains as Promoting Ingredients for Microbial Growth by Submerged and Solid State Fermentation of Agro-industrial Waste Mixtures
- Author
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Aggelopoulos, Theodoros, Bekatorou, Argyro, Pandey, Ashok, Kanellaki, Maria, and Koutinas, Athanasios A.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Remediation of the unsaturated zone of NAPL-polluted low permeability soils with steam injection: an experimental study
- Author
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Tzovolou, Dimitra N., Aggelopoulos, Christos A., Theodoropoulou, Maria A., and Tsakiroglou, Christos D.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Serum glucose level at hospital admission correlates with left ventricular systolic dysfunction in nondiabetic, acute coronary patients: the Hellenic Heart Failure Study
- Author
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Chrysohoou, Christina, Pitsavos, Christos, Aggelopoulos, Panagiotis, Skoumas, John, Tsiamis, Eleftherios, Panagiotakos, Demosthenes B., and Stefanadis, Christodoulos
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Face detection and recognition of natural human emotion using Markov random fields
- Author
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Maglogiannis, Ilias, Vouyioukas, Demosthenes, and Aggelopoulos, Chris
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Presynaptic control of transmission through group II muscle afferents in the midlumbar and sacral segments of the spinal cord is independent of corticospinal control
- Author
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Aggelopoulos, N. C., Chakrabarty, S., and Edgley, S. A.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Longitudinal Dispersion Coefficient of Soils as Related to the Variability of Local Permeability
- Author
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Aggelopoulos, C. A. and Tsakiroglou, C. D.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Neuronal selectivity, population sparseness, and ergodicity in the inferior temporal visual cortex
- Author
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Franco, Leonardo, Rolls, Edmund T., Aggelopoulos, Nikolaos C., and Jerez, Jose M.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Short latency crossed inhibitory reflex actions evoked from cutaneous afferents
- Author
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Edgley, S.A. and Aggelopoulos, N.C.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Greek Version of the Quality of Life in Epilepsy Inventory (QOLIE-31)
- Author
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Haritomeni, Piperidou, Aikaterini, Terzoudi, Theofanis, Vorvolakos, Elizabeth, Davis, Ioannis, Heliopoulos, Konstantinos, Vadikolias, Georgios, Giassakis, Petros, Aggelopoulos, Georgios, Georgiadis, and Anna, Karlovasitou
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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