30 results on '"Dastan, M."'
Search Results
2. Synthesis, Properties and Spatial Structure of 4-[(3,5-Dimethyl-1,2-oxazol-4-yl)sulfonyl]cytisine
- Author
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Marat K. Ibrayev, Oralgazy A. Nurkenov, Zhanara B. Rakhimberlinova, Altynaray T. Takibayeva, Dastan M. Turdybekov, Tulegen M. Seilkhanov, Meruyert B. Issabayeva, Assel A. Kelmyalene, Assel T. Kezdikbayeva, and Anel Z. Mendibayeva
- Subjects
sulfo-derivatives of azoles ,alkaloid cytisine ,spatial structure ,hemorheological activity ,1H ,13C ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
This article has studied the synthesis of a new derivative of the known alkaloid cytisine contained in the seeds of plants of Cytisus laburnum L. and Thermopsis lanceolata R.Br., both of the Lugiminosae family. The new compound has been obtained from two biologically active compounds, such as isoxazole and cytisine. It has been demonstrated that the reaction led to the single-stage method under very mild conditions to obtain 4-[(3,5-dimethyl-1,2-oxazol-4-yl)sulfonyl]cytisine. This class of compounds is promising for obtaining the new biologically active compounds. This article has examined, in detail, a structure with using the 1H and 13C NMR and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy of COSY (1H-1H), HMQC (1H-13C) and HMBC (1H-13C). As a result, the homo- and heteronuclear spin-spin couplings should be established. The X-ray diffraction analysis has determined the spatial structure of a new derivative based on the cytisine alkaloid. Thus, its hemorheological activity has been studied.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Synthesis, Structure and Molecular Docking of New 4,5-Dihydrothiazole Derivatives Based on 3,5-Dimethylpyrazole and Cytisine and Salsoline Alkaloids
- Author
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Marat K. Ibrayev, Oralgazy A. Nurkenov, Zhanar B. Rakhimberlinova, Altynaray T. Takibayeva, Irina V. Palamarchuk, Dastan M. Turdybekov, Assel A. Kelmyalene, and Ivan V. Kulakov
- Subjects
allylisothiocyanate ,1,2-dibromo-3-isothiocyanatopropane ,3,5-dimethyl-1H-pyrazole ,intramolecular heterocyclization ,5-(bromomethyl)-2-(3,5-dimethyl-1H-pyrazol-1-yl)-4,5-dihydrothiazole ,cytisine and salsoline alkaloids ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
The interaction results of 1,2-dibromo-3-isothiocyanatopropane with some pyrazoles as well as cytisine and salsoline alkaloids were presented in this paper. It was shown that the reaction resulted in one one-step and rather mild method for the preparation of the corresponding 1,3-thiazoline bromomethyl derivatives. The yield of this reaction was affected by the presence of a base and an order in which reagents were added. Molecular docking of the synthesized 1,3-thiazoline derivatives for putative antibacterial activity was carried out using the penicillin-binding target protein (PBP4) of the bacteria E. coli “Homo sapiens” and S. aureus “Homo sapiens” as an example. Molecular docking demonstrated that the compounds had insignificant binding energies at the level of selected reference drugs (Cephalotin and Chloramphenicol). The presence of natural alkaloids in the structure of thiazoline derivatives somewhat increased the affinity of these substrates for target proteins selected.
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- 2022
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4. Synthesis, Structure and Biological Activity of Hydrazones Derived from 2- and 4-Hydroxybenzoic Acid Hydrazides
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Nurkenov, Oralgazy A., primary, Fazylov, Serik D., additional, Satpaeva, Zhanarkul B., additional, Seilkhanov, Tulegen M., additional, Turdybekov, Dastan M., additional, Mendibayeva, Anel Zh., additional, Akhmetova, Saule B., additional, Shulgau, Zarina T., additional, Alkhimova, Larisa E., additional, and Kulakov, Ivan V., additional
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
5. Synthesis, Properties and Spatial Structure of 4-[(3,5-Dimethyl-1,2-oxazol-4-yl)sulfonyl]cytisine
- Author
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Ibrayev, Marat K., primary, Nurkenov, Oralgazy A., additional, Rakhimberlinova, Zhanara B., additional, Takibayeva, Altynaray T., additional, Turdybekov, Dastan M., additional, Seilkhanov, Tulegen M., additional, Issabayeva, Meruyert B., additional, Kelmyalene, Assel A., additional, Kezdikbayeva, Assel T., additional, and Mendibayeva, Anel Z., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Synthesis, Structure and Molecular Docking of New 4,5-Dihydrothiazole Derivatives Based on 3,5-Dimethylpyrazole and Cytisine and Salsoline Alkaloids
- Author
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Ibrayev, Marat K., primary, Nurkenov, Oralgazy A., additional, Rakhimberlinova, Zhanar B., additional, Takibayeva, Altynaray T., additional, Palamarchuk, Irina V., additional, Turdybekov, Dastan M., additional, Kelmyalene, Assel A., additional, and Kulakov, Ivan V., additional
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- 2022
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7. Yoga as a complementary therapy for metabolic syndrome: A narrative review
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Dastan M. Khoshnaw and Abhijit A. Ghadge
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Metabolic Syndrome ,Gerontology ,business.industry ,Yoga ,education ,MEDLINE ,General Medicine ,Cochrane Library ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,humanities ,Intervention (counseling) ,Diabetes mellitus ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Glucose homeostasis ,Metabolic syndrome ,business ,Exercise ,human activities - Abstract
Metabolic syndrome (MS) is associated with a sedentary and stressful lifestyle and affects underactive people disproportionately. Yoga is considered to be a low-impact mind-body stress-relieving exercise, and researchers are increasing their focus on the benefits of yoga for managing metabolic disorders. It is also important for physicians and health care professionals to understand the therapeutic efficacy of yoga intervention, in terms of its type, duration and frequency on various MS risk factors. The present review summarizes the current scientific understanding of the effects of yoga on MS risk factors such as glucose homeostasis markers, lipid profile, adipocytokines and cardiovascular risk factors, and discusses the possible mechanisms of action. MEDLINE, PubMed, Scopus and Cochrane Library were searched from their inception up to December 2019, using the keywords "metabolic syndrome," "diabetes," "cardiovascular diseases," "obesity" and "yoga." The literature summarized in this review have shown mixed effects of yoga on MS risk factors and do not provide robust evidence for its efficacy. More rigorous research and well-designed trials that have a higher standard of methodology and evaluate yoga's long-term impacts on MS are needed. Understanding yoga's biochemical and molecular mechanisms of action on various metabolic pathways is also needed.
- Published
- 2021
8. Leaf anatomy of Eriocaulon (Eriocaulaceae, Poales) species reveals a correlation between life form, anatomical features and life cycle
- Author
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Khoshnaw, Dastan M., primary, Oliveira, Adriana L.R., additional, Darshetkar, Ashwini M., additional, and Choudhary, Ritesh Kumar, additional
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- 2022
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9. Synthesis, Properties and Spatial Structure of 4-[(3,5-Dimethyl-1,2-oxazol-4-yl)sulfonyl]cytisine.
- Author
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Ibrayev, Marat K., Nurkenov, Oralgazy A., Rakhimberlinova, Zhanara B., Takibayeva, Altynaray T., Turdybekov, Dastan M., Seilkhanov, Tulegen M., Issabayeva, Meruyert B., Kelmyalene, Assel A., Kezdikbayeva, Assel T., and Mendibayeva, Anel Z.
- Subjects
CYTISINE ,BIOACTIVE compounds ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,SPIN-spin coupling constants - Abstract
This article has studied the synthesis of a new derivative of the known alkaloid cytisine contained in the seeds of plants of Cytisus laburnum L. and Thermopsis lanceolata R.Br., both of the Lugiminosae family. The new compound has been obtained from two biologically active compounds, such as isoxazole and cytisine. It has been demonstrated that the reaction led to the single-stage method under very mild conditions to obtain 4-[(3,5-dimethyl-1,2-oxazol-4-yl)sulfonyl]cytisine. This class of compounds is promising for obtaining the new biologically active compounds. This article has examined, in detail, a structure with using the
1 H and13 C NMR and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy of COSY (1 H-1 H), HMQC (1 H-13 C) and HMBC (1 H-13 C). As a result, the homo- and heteronuclear spin-spin couplings should be established. The X-ray diffraction analysis has determined the spatial structure of a new derivative based on the cytisine alkaloid. Thus, its hemorheological activity has been studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Leaf anatomy of Eriocaulon (Eriocaulaceae, Poales) species reveals a correlation between life form, anatomical features and life cycle
- Author
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Dastan M. Khoshnaw, Adriana L.R. Oliveira, Ashwini M. Darshetkar, and Ritesh Kumar Choudhary
- Subjects
Ecology ,Plant Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2022
11. Thick tellurium electrodeposition on nickel-coated copper substrate for 124I production
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Sadeghi, M., Dastan, M., Ensaf, M.R., Tehrani, A. Abaspour, Tenreiro, C., and Avila, M.
- Published
- 2008
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12. Mechanism of Haibat Sultan Mountain Landslide in Koya, North Iraq
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Hamza K. Muhealddin, Arezh S. Muhmed, Nadhir Al-Ansari, Dastan M. Hamma, Mohanad M. Abdwllah, Hozan Govar K. Haris, Sakar A. Sadiq, Hawkar A. Mustafa, Hozan H. Bibani, and Varoujan K. Sissakian
- Subjects
Dolostone ,Pore water pressure ,Geoteknik ,Bedding ,Bed ,Anticline ,Magnetic dip ,Geotechnical engineering ,Landslide ,Geotechnical Engineering ,Soil mechanics ,Geology - Abstract
Haibat Sultan Mountain is a long range with elevation of about 860 m (a.s.l.); the PilaSpi Formation forms its carapace in Koya vicinity, with relief difference of about 300 m from Koisanjaq plain. The PilaSpi Formation consists of well thickly to massively bedded dolostone and dolomitic limestone with thickness of about 120 m in Koya vicinity. The main trend is NW - SE being a limb of Bustana anticline representing part of the southwestern limb, with dip amount that ranges from (15 - 30). On 11th of November 2015 a landslide had occurred after a heavy rainfall along Koya - Dukan main road. The type of the slide was plane sliding due to daylight slope, which was formed afterthe road cut. The length of the slide area: along the road is 90 m with height of 40 m forming almost a parallelogram shape; the thickness of the slid beds is about 2.5 m. The estimated volume of the slid mass is 9000 m3. The main cause of the landslide is the presence of daylight slope, high slope angle; more than the dip angle, presence of old crack surfaces which are filled by reddish brown clayey residual soil. After the he heavy rain fall, which lasted for 20 hours, the infiltrated rain water in the bedding planes in the well bedded, cracked, and jointed beds has increased the pore pressure and decreased the internal friction angle; therefore, the sliding has occurred. The root of the slid mass is below the base of the paved road; therefore, that part which is above the paved road has slid. The remaining part is highly cracked and partly accumulated in the base of the slid mass. Fortunately, the height of the slid mass is only 40 m and the relief difference between the crown area and the toe area is about 50 m; otherwise the slid mass would be larger than the present slid mass. From the field inspection, it is very clear that the involved area is very unstable and in critical equilibrium. The presence of daylight bedding above the crown area, clayey soil in the fractures and open joints and steep slope all are very favorable conditions for triggering the unstable slope, consequently developing of another landslide with larger mass. Validerad; 2016; Nivå 1; 20160825 (nadhir)
- Published
- 2016
13. Synthesis and crystal structure of (4 S,5 R)-3,4-dimethyl-5-phenyl-2-(hydroxyethylimino)-1,3-thiazolidine
- Author
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Gazaliev, Arstan M., Nurkenov, Oralgazy A., Turdybekov, Koblandy M., Fazylov, Serik D., Ibraev, Marat K., Turdybekov, Dastan M., and Issabaeva, Meruert B.
- Published
- 2006
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- View/download PDF
14. Mechanism of Haibat Sultan Mountain Landslide in Koya, North Iraq
- Author
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Sadiq, Sakar, Muhmed, Arezh S., Haris, Hozan Govar K., Hamma, Dastan M., Abdwllah, Mohanad M., Bibani, Hozan H., Muhealddin, Hamza K., Mustafa, Hawker A., Sissakian, Varoujan, Al-Ansari, Nadhir, Sadiq, Sakar, Muhmed, Arezh S., Haris, Hozan Govar K., Hamma, Dastan M., Abdwllah, Mohanad M., Bibani, Hozan H., Muhealddin, Hamza K., Mustafa, Hawker A., Sissakian, Varoujan, and Al-Ansari, Nadhir
- Abstract
Haibat Sultan Mountain is a long range with elevation of about 860 m (a.s.l.); the PilaSpi Formation forms its carapace in Koya vicinity, with relief difference of about 300 m from Koisanjaq plain. The PilaSpi Formation consists of well thickly to massively bedded dolostone and dolomitic limestone with thickness of about 120 m in Koya vicinity. The main trend is NW - SE being a limb of Bustana anticline representing part of the southwestern limb, with dip amount that ranges from (15 - 30). On 11th of November 2015 a landslide had occurred after a heavy rainfall along Koya - Dukan main road. The type of the slide was plane sliding due to daylight slope, which was formed afterthe road cut. The length of the slide area: along the road is 90 m with height of 40 m forming almost a parallelogram shape; the thickness of the slid beds is about 2.5 m. The estimated volume of the slid mass is 9000 m3. The main cause of the landslide is the presence of daylight slope, high slope angle; more than the dip angle, presence of old crack surfaces which are filled by reddish brown clayey residual soil. After the he heavy rain fall, which lasted for 20 hours, the infiltrated rain water in the bedding planes in the well bedded, cracked, and jointed beds has increased the pore pressure and decreased the internal friction angle; therefore, the sliding has occurred. The root of the slid mass is below the base of the paved road; therefore, that part which is above the paved road has slid. The remaining part is highly cracked and partly accumulated in the base of the slid mass. Fortunately, the height of the slid mass is only 40 m and the relief difference between the crown area and the toe area is about 50 m; otherwise the slid mass would be larger than the present slid mass. From the field inspection, it is very clear that the involved area is very unstable and in critical equilibrium. The presence of daylight bedding above the crown area, clayey soil in the fractures and open joints and, Validerad; 2016; Nivå 1; 20160825 (nadhir)
- Published
- 2016
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15. Mechanism of Haibat Sultan Mountain Land-slide in Koya, North Iraq
- Author
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Sadiq, Sakar A., primary, Muhmed, Arezh S., additional, Haris, Hozan Govar K., additional, Hamma, Dastan M., additional, Abdwllah, Mohanad M., additional, Bibani, Hozan H., additional, Muhealddin, Hamza K., additional, Mustafa, Hawkar A., additional, Sissakian, Varoujan, additional, and Al-Ansari, Nadhir, additional
- Published
- 2016
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16. Synthesis and Crystal Structure of (4S,5R)-3,4-Dimethyl-5-phenyl-2-(hydroxyethylimino)-1,3-thiazolidine.
- Author
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Gazaliev, Arstan M., primary, Nurkenov, Oralgazy A., additional, Turdybekov, Koblandy M., additional, Fazylov, Serik D., additional, Ibraev, Marat K., additional, Turdybekov, Dastan M., additional, and Issabaeva, Meruert B., additional
- Published
- 2007
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17. Synthesis and crystal structure of (4S,5R)-3,4-dimethyl-5-phenyl-2-(hydroxyethylimino)-1,3-thiazolidine
- Author
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Gazaliev, Arstan M., primary, Nurkenov, Oralgazy A., additional, Turdybekov, Koblandy M., additional, Fazylov, Serik D., additional, Ibraev, Marat K., additional, Turdybekov, Dastan M., additional, and Issabaeva, Meruert B., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Thick tellurium electrodeposition on nickel-coated copper substrate for 124I production
- Author
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Sadeghi, M., Dastan, M., Ensaf, M.R., Tehrani, A. Abaspour, Tenreiro, C., and Avila, M.
- Subjects
- *
TELLURIUM , *ELECTROFORMING , *COPPER , *ALKALI metals , *NONMETALS , *IODINE - Abstract
Abstract: Tellurium electrodeposition on a nickel-coated copper substrate was investigated for production of iodine-124. The electrodeposition experiments were carried out by the alkali plating baths. The optimum conditions of the electrodeposition of tellurium were as follows: 6gl−1 tellurium, pH=10, DC current density of ca. 8.55mAcm−2 and room temperature. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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19. Gallic acid ameliorates LPS-induced memory decline by modulating NF-κB, TNF-α, and Caspase 3 gene expression and attenuating oxidative stress and neuronal loss in the rat hippocampus.
- Author
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Dastan M, Rajaei Z, Sharifi M, and Salehi H
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- Animals, Male, Rats, Neuroprotective Agents pharmacology, Neuroprotective Agents therapeutic use, Lipid Peroxidation drug effects, Gene Expression drug effects, Maze Learning drug effects, Gallic Acid pharmacology, Gallic Acid therapeutic use, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Rats, Wistar, Hippocampus drug effects, Hippocampus metabolism, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism, NF-kappa B metabolism, Lipopolysaccharides toxicity, Caspase 3 metabolism, Memory Disorders drug therapy, Memory Disorders chemically induced, Memory Disorders metabolism, Neurons drug effects, Neurons metabolism, Neurons pathology
- Abstract
Neuroinflammation and apoptosis play critical roles in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), which is responsible for most cases of dementia in the elderly people. Gallic acid is a phenolic compound with radical scavenging, anti-inflammatory and anti-apoptotic activities. This study aimed to explore the protective effects of gallic acid on LPS-induced spatial memory impairment and find the underlying mechanisms. Gallic acid was orally administered (100 mg/kg) to male Wistar rats for 12 days. LPS was injected intraperitoneally at a dose of 1 mg/kg on days 8-12. Morris water maze paradigm was used to evaluate spatial learning and memory. The mRNA level of nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB), tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and Caspase 3, lipid peroxidation and total thiol level was assessed in the rat hippocampus. Neuronal loss and histological changes were also evaluated in the brain. LPS treatment resulted in spatial learning and memory impairment, upregulation of NF-κB, TNF-α, and Caspase 3 mRNA expression, increased lipid peroxidation, decreased total thiol level, and neuronal loss in the hippocampus. Moreover, treatment with gallic acid at a dosage of 100 mg/kg ameliorated memory decline, reduced the mRNA level of NF-κB, TNF-α, and Caspase 3, decreased lipid peroxidation and increased total thiol level in the hippocampus. Gallic acid also prevented LPS-induced neuronal loss and histological changes in the brain. Conclusively, our study demonstrated that gallic acid exerts neuroprotective effect against LPS-induced memory decline in rats. This outcome could be due to anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and anti-apoptotic activities of gallic acid., Competing Interests: Declarations Ethics approval All procedures were performed in accordance with the National Institute of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (NIH Publication, 8th edition, 2011). The Ethics Committee for Animal Experimentation at Isfahan University of Medical Sciences approved the study (IR.MUI.MED.REC.1400.820). Consent for publication Not applicable. Consent to participate Not applicable. Competing interests The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
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20. Precise Tool to Target Positioning Widgets (TOTTA) in Spatial Environments: A Systematic Review.
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Dastan M, Fiorentino M, and Uva AE
- Abstract
TOTTA outlines the spatial position and rotation guidance of a real/virtual tool (TO) towards a real/virtual target (TA), which is a key task in Mixed reality applications. The task error can have critical consequences regarding safety, performance, and quality, such as surgical implantology or industrial maintenance scenarios. The TOTTA problem lacks a dedicated study and it is scattered in different domains with isolated designs. This work contributes to a systematic review of the TOTTA visual widgets, studying 70 unique designs from 24 papers. TOTTA is commonly guided by the visual overlap -an intuitive, pre-attentive "collimation" feedback- of simple shaped widgets: Box, 3D Axes, 3D Model, 2D Crosshair, Globe, Tetrahedron, Line, Plane. Our research discovers that TO and TA are often represented with the same shape. They are distinguished by topological elements (e.g. edges/vertices/faces), colors, transparency levels, and added. shapes, widget quantity, and size. Meanwhile some designs provide continuous "during manipulation feedback" relative to the distance between TO and TA by text, dynamic color, sonification, and amplified graphical visualization. Some approaches trigger discrete "TA reached feedback" such as color alteration, added sound, TA shape change, and added text. We found the lack of golden standards, including in testing procedures, as current ones are limited to partial sets with different and incomparable setups (different target configurations, avatar, background, etc.). We also found a bias in participants: right-handed, young male, non-color impaired.
- Published
- 2024
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21. Co-Designing Dynamic Mixed Reality Drill Positioning Widgets: A Collaborative Approach with Dentists in a Realistic Setup.
- Author
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Dastan M, Fiorentino M, Walter ED, Diegritz C, Uva AE, Eck U, and Navab N
- Abstract
Mixed Reality (MR) is proven in the literature to support precise spatial dental drill positioning by superimposing 3D widgets. Despite this, the related knowledge about widget's visual design and interactive user feedback is still limited. Therefore, this study is contributed to by co-designed MR drill tool positioning widgets with two expert dentists and three MR experts. The results of co-design are two static widgets (SWs): a simple entry point, a target axis, and two dynamic widgets (DWs), variants of dynamic error visualization with and without a target axis (DWTA and DWEP). We evaluated the co-designed widgets in a virtual reality simulation supported by a realistic setup with a tracked phantom patient, a virtual magnifying loupe, and a dentist's foot pedal. The user study involved 35 dentists with various backgrounds and years of experience. The findings demonstrated significant results; DWs outperform SWs in positional and rotational precision, especially with younger generations and subjects with gaming experiences. The user preference remains for DWs (19) instead of SWs (16). However, findings indicated that the precision positively correlates with the time trade-off. The post-experience questionnaire (NASA-TLX) showed that DWs increase mental and physical demand, effort, and frustration more than SWs. Comparisons between DWEP and DWTA show that the DW's complexity level influences time, physical and mental demands. The DWs are extensible to diverse medical and industrial scenarios that demand precision.
- Published
- 2024
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22. The Mixed Tangible Catalog: Toward Tangible and Sustainable B2B Metaverse Fashion Showrooms.
- Author
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Vangi F, Ricci M, Dastan M, and Fiorentino M
- Abstract
The metaverse, driven by mixed reality (MR), is positioned as the future market, revolutionizing product exploration in virtual space. Existing literature on this subject mainly focuses on business-to-consumer perspectives, leaving a gap in understanding business-to-business (B2B) applications, particularly in the fashion industry. This article introduces a "Mixed Tangible Catalog" (MTC) for B2B that combines a physical, foldable cardboard booth with an MR application linked to a head-mounted display. Targeting the fashion sector's need for high standards in material evaluation, the MTC allows retailers and distributors to browse garments, customize material attributes, and receive visual and tangible feedback. Evaluation through a focus group of 10 industry experts revealed positive feedback. The MTC maintains the tangibility of traditional B2B showrooms and reduces the environmental impact by minimizing transportation, samples, and waste. This innovative approach offers an efficient and sustainable alternative to conventional physical showrooms, enhancing both economic and ecological aspects.
- Published
- 2024
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23. Enhancing Well-Being: A Comparative Study of Virtual Reality Chromotherapy Rooms with Static, Dynamic, and Empty Environments.
- Author
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Dastan M, Ricci M, Vangi F, and Fiorentino M
- Subjects
- Humans, Emotions, Affect, Color Therapy, Virtual Reality
- Abstract
Chromotherapy rooms (CRs) are physical spaces with colored lights able to enhance an individual's mood, well-being, and, in the long term, their health. Virtual reality technology can be used to implement CR (VRCRs) and provide higher flexibility at lower costs. However, existing VRCRs are limited to a few use cases, and they do not fully explore the potential and pitfalls of the technology. This work contributes by comparing three VRCR designs: empty, static, and dynamic. Empty is just a void but a blue-colored environment. Static adds static abstract graphics (flowers and sea texture), and dynamic adds dynamic elements (animated star particle systems, fractals, and ocean flow). All conditions include relaxing low-beta and ocean sounds. We conducted a between-subject experiment ( n = 30) with the three conditions. Subjects compiled a self-perceived questionnaire and a mathematical stress test before and after the VRCR experience. The results demonstrated that the dynamic condition provided a higher sense of presence, while the self-perceived stress level was insignificant. Dynamic VR conditions are perceived as having a shorter duration, and participants declared that they felt more involved and engaged than in the other conditions. Overall, the study demonstrated that VRCRs have a non-trivial behavior and need further study of their design, especially considering their role in a future where VR will be an everyday working interface.
- Published
- 2024
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24. Carvacrol Exerts Anti-Inflammatory, Anti-Oxidative Stress and Hepatoprotective Effects Against Diclofenac-Induced Liver Injury in Male Rats.
- Author
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Barzan M, Heydari M, Mirshekari-Jahangiri H, Firouzi H, Dastan M, Najafi M, Khaledi M, Nouri A, and Shah-Abadi ME
- Abstract
Background: Diclofenac (DIC) is an NSAID that can cause toxic effects in animals and humans and carvacrol (CAR) is a monoterpene compound that displays effective pharmacological and biological actions. The purpose of this work was to assess the influences of CAR on DIC-induced liver injury and oxidative stress in male rats., Methods: The male Wistar rats were segregated into four groups. Group 1, the control group; Group 2 received DIC-only (10 mg/kg BW, p.o); Group 3, received CAR-only (10 mg/kg BW, p.o), and group 4 received DIC plus CAR. The serum levels as well as the activity of several liver-associated markers, and oxidative and anti-oxidant compounds were tested. The expression of pro-inflammatory mediators was also studied using the qRT-PCR analysis., Results: Our results showed that DIC treatment was associated with the elevation in the serum levels of liver-related markers together with the increase in the serum and the hepatic levels of malondialdehyde (MDA) and protein carbonyl (PC). Moreover, DIC reduced the activity of the antioxidant system in the rats and increased lymphocyte infiltration into the hepatocytes. CAR; however, protected the hepatocytes from the toxic effects of DIC by enhancing the activity of antioxidant enzymes such as catalase (CAT), superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), and Glutathione (GSH). By diminishing the expression of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, CAR was also capable of preventing the inflammatory effects of DIC on liver cells., Conclusions: The findings of this study indicated that the administration of CAR could alleviate the noxious effects of DIC on the antioxidant defense system and liver tissue., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest., (Copyright: © 2023 International Journal of Preventive Medicine.)
- Published
- 2023
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25. Carvacrol exerts nephroprotective effect in rat model of diclofenac-induced renal injury through regulation of oxidative stress and suppression of inflammatory response.
- Author
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Nouri A, Izak-Shirian F, Fanaei V, Dastan M, Abolfathi M, Moradi A, Khaledi M, and Mirshekari-Jahangiri H
- Abstract
Diclofenac (DIC) is an NSAID that can cause toxic effects in animals and humans and carvacrol (CAR) is a monoterpene compound that displays effective pharmacological and biological actions. The purpose of this work was to assess the influences of CAR on DIC-induced renal injury and oxidative stress in male rats. The rats were segregated into four groups. Group 1, control group; Group 2 received DIC-only; Groups 3, received CAR-only and group 4 received DIC plus CAR. Changes in biochemical indexes, pathological changes, molecular biological indexes, and genes related to the inflammation of main organs were evaluated. The results of this work indicated that the amounts of the serum protein carbonyl, sGOT, sGPT, urea, creatinine, uric acid, nitrite content, MDA, serum TNF-α, and renal TNF-α gene expression were remarkably increased and the levels of the GPx, GSH, CAT, and SOD were significantly reduced in DIC-only treated animals compared to the control group. On the other hand, treatment with CAR after exposure to DIC led to significant improvements in abnormalities of DIC-induced renal injury and serum biochemical factors. The data approve that CAR diminished the deleterious effects of DIC exposure. In this regard, the findings of this study indicated that the administration of CAR could alleviate the noxious effects of DIC on the antioxidant defense system and renal tissue., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (© 2021 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2021
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26. Assessment of macular choroidal thickness, central macular thickness and retinal nerve fiber layer in patients receiving oral isotretinoin treatment.
- Author
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Karadag O, Kocamaz M, Dastan M, and Ozturk Durur S
- Subjects
- Acne Vulgaris diagnostic imaging, Acne Vulgaris drug therapy, Administration, Oral, Adolescent, Adult, Choroid anatomy & histology, Choroid diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Male, Retina anatomy & histology, Retina diagnostic imaging, Tomography, Optical Coherence, Young Adult, Choroid drug effects, Dermatologic Agents therapeutic use, Isotretinoin therapeutic use, Nerve Fibers drug effects, Retina drug effects
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the impact of oral isotretinoin therapy in choroidal thickness, central macular thickness (CMT), and retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness using optical coherence tomography (OCT)., Patients and Methods: Choroidal thicknesses, CMT, and RNFL thickness of 64 eyes were evaluated at baseline and the end of the third month of isotretinoin therapy by spectral-domain OCT. For assessment of choroidal thickness, OCT measurements were obtained at the fovea with 6 additional measurements at adjacent locations (at 500-1000-1500 µm temporal to the fovea and 500-1000-1500 µm nasal to the fovea)., Results: There was not a statistically significant difference between the baseline and third-month follow-up measurements of choroidal thicknesses at seven distinct locations ( p > 0.05). Similarly, RNFL thickness and CMT did not change with a mean dose of 30 (±6) mg per day isotretinoin therapy during follow-up (101.82 vs 102.24, p = 0.079; 217.77 vs 217.25, p = 0.731, respectively)., Conclusion: After the use of oral isotretinoin for 3 months, no significant side effects have been observed in choroidal thickness, CMT, and RNFL thickness by OCT.
- Published
- 2020
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27. Human platelet lysate versus minoxidil stimulates hair growth by activating anagen promoting signaling pathways.
- Author
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Dastan M, Najafzadeh N, Abedelahi A, Sarvi M, and Niapour A
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis drug effects, Blood Platelets drug effects, Cell Survival drug effects, Gene Expression Regulation drug effects, Hair cytology, Hair drug effects, Hedgehog Proteins metabolism, Humans, Indoles metabolism, Male, Mice, Inbred BALB C, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, beta Catenin metabolism, Blood Platelets metabolism, Hair growth & development, Minoxidil pharmacology, Signal Transduction drug effects
- Abstract
Minoxidil and human platelet lysate (HPL) are commonly used to treat patients with hair loss. However, the roles of HPL versus minoxidil in hair follicle biology largely remain unknown. Here, we hypothesized that bulge and dermal papilla (DP) cells may express specific genes, including Kras, Erk, Akt, Shh and β-catenin after exposure to minoxidil or HPL. The mouse hair follicles were isolated on day 10 after depilation and bulge or DP regions were dissected. The bulge and DP cells were cultured for 14days in DMEM/F12 medium. Then, the cells were treated with 100μM minoxidil and 10% HPL for 10 days. Nuclear morphology was identified using DAPi staining. Reverse transcriptase and real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis were also performed to examine the expression of Kras, Erk, Akt, Shh and β-catenin mRNA levels in the treated bulge and DP regions after organ culture. Here, we found that minoxidil influences bulge and DP cell survival (P<0.05). Apoptosis in DP cells was also meaningfully decreased by HPL treatment (P=0.014). In addition, Kras, Akt, Erk, Shh and β-catenin mRNA levels were changed in response to minoxidil treatment in both bulge and DP cells. HPL mediated Erk upregulation in both bulge and DP cells (P<0.05), but Kras and Akt mRNA levels were not considerably different in the HPL-treated cells. β-catenin mRNA level was also significantly increased in the bulge region by HPL. We also found that Shh mRNA level was considerably higher in HPL-treated bulge cells than in minoxidil-treated bulge cells. In contrast, the expression of β-cateinin and Shh in the DP cells was not meaningfully increased after treatment with HPL. Our results suggest that minoxidil and HPL can promote hair growth by activating the main anagen inducing signaling pathways., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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28. The change in intraocular pressure after pupillary dilation in eyes with pseudoexfoliation glaucoma, primary open angle glaucoma, and eyes of normal subjects.
- Author
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Atalay E, Tamçelik N, Arici C, Özkök A, and Dastan M
- Subjects
- Aged, Case-Control Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Intraocular Pressure physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Regression Analysis, Exfoliation Syndrome physiopathology, Glaucoma, Open-Angle physiopathology, Intraocular Pressure drug effects, Mydriatics pharmacology, Phenylephrine pharmacology, Tropicamide pharmacology
- Abstract
To evaluate the change in intraocular pressure (IOP) after pharmacologic dilation in eyes with primary open angle glaucoma (POAG), pseudoexfoliation glaucoma (PXG), and eyes of normal subjects. This cross-sectional study was conducted in a university hospital-based setting. Patients with PXG, POAG, and normal subjects were consecutively selected and included in the study. Of the 125 eyes of 125 subjects; 46 (25 female) had PXG, 42 (29 female) had POAG, and 37 (20 female) belonged to the control group. Pharmacologic dilation procedure consisted of instillation of topical phenylephrine HCL 10 % followed 5 min by tropicamide 1 %. Studied variables were pre- and post-dilation IOP and also baseline measurements of anterior chamber angle, central corneal thickness, and pupillary diameter by Pentacam HR (Oculus, Wetzlar, Germany). Clinically significant IOP change was defined as a change of ≥2 mmHg from baseline. Randomly selected single eye of each patient was included in the analysis. The mean pre:post-dilation IOP of eyes with PXG and POAG was 17.39 ± 3.89:17.54 ± 3.98 and 15.92 ± 2.37:16.07 ± 2.89 mmHg, respectively. The difference between the pre- and post-dilation IOP of eyes with PXG and POAG was not statistically significant. The eyes of control subjects, however, had a statistically significant reduction of IOP from 14.24 ± 2.88 to 13.54 ± 2.94 mmHg (P = 0.005). 28.3 % (13/46) of eyes with PXG, 16.7 % (7/42) of eyes with POAG, and 2.7 % (1/37) of control eyes showed a clinically significant IOP elevation from baseline after the dilation. In this study, glaucoma patients proportionally experienced a higher rate of clinically significant IOP elevation after pupillary dilation, when compared to normal subjects.
- Published
- 2015
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29. Comparison of the efficacies of patching and penalization therapies for the treatment of amblyopia patients.
- Author
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Cabi C, Sayman Muslubas IB, Aydin Oral AY, and Dastan M
- Abstract
Aim: To compare the efficacies of patching and penalization therapies for the treatment of amblyopia patients., Methods: The records of 64 eyes of 50 patients 7 to 16y of age who had presented to our clinics with a diagnosis of amblyopia, were evaluated retrospectively. Forty eyes of 26 patients who had received patching therapy and 24 eyes of 24 patients who had received penalization therapy included in this study. The latencies and amplitudes of visual evoked potential (VEP) records and best corrected visual acuities (BCVA) of these two groups were compared before and six months after the treatment., Results: In both patching and the penalization groups, the visual acuities increased significantly following the treatments (P<0.05). The latency measurements of the P100 wave obtained at 1.0°, 15 arc min. Patterns of both groups significantly decreased following the 6-months-treatment. However, the amplitude measurements increased (P<0.05)., Conclusion: The patching and the penalization methods, which are the main methods used in the treatment of amblyopia, were also effective over the age of 7y, which has been accepted as the critical age for the treatment of amblyopia.
- Published
- 2014
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30. Long-term vision-threatening complications of phakic intraocular lens implantation for high myopia.
- Author
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Sayman Muslubas IB, Kandemir B, Aydin Oral AY, Kugu S, and Dastan M
- Abstract
Aim: To report the long-term vision-threatening complications in patients who underwent phakic intraocular lens (pIOLs) implantation for high myopia., Methods: This study was designed from a consecutive series of phakic intraocular lens complication and corrective surgeries. Sixteen eyes of 13 patients had implantation of phakic intraocular lens for correction high myopia and developed serious complications have been included in this study. The mean age of patients was 38.6±6.35y (range 32-50y) and the mean time of history of pIOL implantation for high myopia was 6±2y (range 2-10y). Before corrective surgery, best spectacle-corrective visual acuity (BSCVA) ranged from perception to 20/200 in the eyes in which severe complications occurred., Results: Corneal decompensation occurred in 12 eyes of 9 high myopic patients after anterior chamber pIOL implantation. Rhegmatogenous retinal detachment (RRD) occurred in 4 eyes of 4 high myopic patients following anterior chamber and posterior chamber pIOL implantation. Patients with corneal decompensation, had combined procedures consisting of pIOL removal and penetrating keratoplasty (PKP). Removals of pIOL, phacoemulsification and pars plana vitrectomy (PPV) with silicone oil tamponade were performed in patients with RRD. After corrective surgeries, all patients but one (P+, patient 2, right eye) achieved moderate BSCVA ranged from 20/200 to 20/50 at the last visit., Conclusion: Phakic IOLs may be effective for the correction of high myopia. Although these IOLs may have severe complications and it affects safety and efficacy of this surgery. As seen here, corneal decompensation and rhegmatogenous retinal detachment are possible postoperative vision-threatening complications of phakic IOLs. Patients must be carefully examined before and after surgery for possible endothelial cell loss and vitreoretinal problems.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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