96 results on '"Mungur, P"'
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2. Novel point-of-care cytokine biomarker lateral flow test for the screening for sexually transmitted infections and bacterial vaginosis: study protocol of a multicentre multidisciplinary prospective observational clinical study to evaluate the performance and feasibility of the Genital InFlammation Test (GIFT)
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Suzanna C Francis, Tania Crucitti, Lindi Masson, Emma Michele Harding-Esch, Sarah Bernays, Chido Dziva Chikwari, Katharina Kranzer, Tsitsi Bandason, Karen Webb, Katherine Gill, Tanya Pidwell, David Anderson, Nicola Thomas, Janneke H H M van de Wijgert, Ayako Honda, Aina Harimanana, Elise Smith, Edina Sinanovic, Constance R S Mackworth-Young, Mutsawashe Chisenga, Eneyi Kpokiri, Linda Gail Bekker, Bich-Tram Huynh, Dimitri Rasoloson, Fezile Khumalo, Micaela Lurie, Phumla Radebe, Bahiah Meyer, Lyndon Mungur, Ashley Uys, Darryl Uys, Monalisa Manhanzva, Tinashe Mwaturura, Camille Fortas, Karabo Mahlangu, Rindra Vatosoa Randremanana, Stephanie Ramboarina, Théodora Mayouya Gamana, Reziky Mangahasimbola, Fatime Ramla Tanko, Jo-Anne Passmore, Conita Lombard, Celia Mehou-Loko, Yacoeb Ganief, Rezeen Daniels, Anda Madikida, Joseph F Chipanga, Patricia Makunyire, Felicia Mhangami, Jayjay Karumazondo, Jason Naidoo, Saberi Marias, Solange Rasoanandrianina, Dimitri Ravoavison, Patrick Andry Rakotonirina, Andrilaina Razakarivony, Hantamalala Randria, Alphonsine Rahantarimalala, Lala Rafetrarivony, Barivola Bernardson, Tsiry Rasolofomanana, Norohasina Randriamange, Antsanirina Nomenjanahary, Laurah Rabarisoa, Sahara Raveloson, Laura Randrianantenaina, Hanitratiavina Rakotonindriana, Fenosoa Voanarivolalao, Vaomalala Ranarinandra, and Farai Machinga
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction A prototype lateral flow device detecting cytokine biomarkers interleukin (IL)-1α and IL-1β has been developed as a point-of-care test—called the Genital InFlammation Test (GIFT)—for detecting genital inflammation associated with sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and/or bacterial vaginosis (BV) in women. In this paper, we describe the rationale and design for studies that will be conducted in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Madagascar to evaluate the performance of GIFT and how it could be integrated into routine care.Methods and analysis We will conduct a prospective, multidisciplinary, multicentre, cross-sectional and observational clinical study comprising two distinct components: a biomedical (‘diagnostic study’) and a qualitative, modelling and economic (‘an integration into care study’) part. The diagnostic study aims to evaluate GIFT’s performance in identifying asymptomatic women with discharge-causing STIs (Chlamydia trachomatis (CT), Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG), Trichomonas vaginalis (TV) and Mycoplasma genitalium (MG)) and BV. Study participants will be recruited from women attending research sites and family planning services. Several vaginal swabs will be collected for the evaluation of cytokine concentrations (ELISA), STIs (nucleic acid amplification tests), BV (Nugent score) and vaginal microbiome characteristics (16S rRNA gene sequencing). The first collected vaginal swab will be used for the GIFT assay which will be performed in parallel by a healthcare worker in the clinic near the participant, and by a technician in the laboratory. The integration into care study aims to explore how GIFT could be integrated into routine care. Four activities will be conducted: user experiences and/or perceptions of the GIFT device involving qualitative focus group discussions and in-depth interviews with key stakeholders; discrete choice experiments; development of a decision tree classification algorithm; and economic evaluation of defined management algorithms.Ethics and dissemination Findings will be reported to participants, collaborators and local government for the three sites, presented at national and international conferences, and disseminated in peer-reviewed publications.The protocol and all study documents such as informed consent forms were reviewed and approved by the University of Cape Town Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC reference 366/2022), Medical Research Council of Zimbabwe (MRCZ/A/2966), Comité d’Ethique pour la Recherche Biomédicale de Madagascar (N° 143 MNSAP/SG/AMM/CERBM) and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine ethics committee (LSHTM reference 28046).Before the start, this study was submitted to the Clinicaltrials.gov public registry (NCT05723484).Trial registration number NCT05723484.
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- 2024
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3. Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation for hypothermic refractory cardiac arrests in urban areas with temperate climates
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Tal Soumagnac, Jean-Herlé Raphalen, Wulfran Bougouin, Damien Vimpere, Hatem Ammar, Samraa Yahiaoui, Christelle Dagron, Kim An, Akshay Mungur, Pierre Carli, Alice Hutin, and Lionel Lamhaut
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Hypothermia ,ECPR ,Cardiac arrest ,Prognostic factors ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Accidental hypothermia designates an unintentional drop in body temperature below 35 °C. There is a major risk of ventricular fibrillation below 28 °C and cardiac arrest is almost inevitable below 24 °C. In such cases, conventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation is often inefficient. In urban areas with temperate climates, characterized by mild year-round temperatures, the outcome of patients with refractory hypothermic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) treated with extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) remains uncertain. Methods We conducted a retrospective monocentric observational study involving patients admitted to a university hospital in Paris, France. We reviewed patients admitted between January 1, 2011 and April 30, 2022. The primary outcome was survival at 28 days with good neurological outcomes, defined as Cerebral Performance Category 1 or 2. We performed a subgroup analysis distinguishing hypothermic refractory OHCA as either asphyxic or non-asphyxic. Results A total of 36 patients were analysed, 15 of whom (42%) survived at 28 days, including 13 (36%) with good neurological outcomes. Within the asphyxic subgroup, only 1 (10%) patient survived at 28 days, with poor neurological outcomes. A low-flow time of less than 60 min was not significantly associated with good neurological outcomes (P = 0.25). Prehospital ECPR demonstrated no statistically significant difference in terms of survival with good neurological outcomes compared with inhospital ECPR (P = 0.55). Among patients treated with inhospital ECPR, the HOPE score predicted a 30% survival rate and the observed survival was 6/19 (32%). Conclusion Hypothermic refractory OHCA occurred even in urban areas with temperate climates, and survival with good neurological outcomes at 28 days stood at 36% for all patients treated with ECPR. We found no survivors with good neurological outcomes at 28 days in submersed patients.
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- 2023
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4. Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation for hypothermic refractory cardiac arrests in urban areas with temperate climates
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Soumagnac, Tal, Raphalen, Jean-Herlé, Bougouin, Wulfran, Vimpere, Damien, Ammar, Hatem, Yahiaoui, Samraa, Dagron, Christelle, An, Kim, Mungur, Akshay, Carli, Pierre, Hutin, Alice, and Lamhaut, Lionel
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- 2023
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5. A systematic review on the effect of silver diamine fluoride for management of dental caries in permanent teeth
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Alvin Mungur, Haoran Chen, Saroash Shahid, and Aylin Baysan
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arrest/reversal ,dental caries ,permanent teeth ,silver diamine fluoride ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Abstract Objectives The objective of this review is to assess the available literature systematically related to the effect of silver diamine fluoride (SDF) for the management of occlusal and root carious lesions in permanent teeth regardless of age. Materials and Methods This systematic review was conducted according to the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta‐Analyses statement. A literature search was performed using PubMed/MEDLINE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Web of Science, DOAJ, and Open Gray with no language restrictions up to December 2022. Three reviewers critically assessed the studies for eligibility. Any disputes between the reviewers were handled by a fourth independent reviewer. The quality assessment and data extraction of the studies were performed. Results A total of 2176 studies were screened. The titles and abstracts of the studies were then reviewed (n = 346), and 52 studies met the search criteria. Following the full‐text review, 11 studies investigated the effect of SDF against other treatments such as chlorhexidine, sodium fluoride, ammonium bifluoride, tricalcium silicate paste, casein phosphopeptide amorphous calcium phosphate, glass ionomer cement (GIC) combined with fluoride varnish, resin‐modified GIC, and atraumatic restorative treatment were assessed. Conclusions Within the limitations of this review, the use of SDF is promising with high preventative fractions in permanent teeth of children and older populations when compared to other topical applications such as dental varnish containing sodium fluoride.
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- 2023
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6. Mean arterial pressure-aneurysm neck ratio predicts the rupture risk of intracranial aneurysm by reflecting pressure at the dome
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Jie Shen, Kaiyuan Huang, Yu Zhu, Yuxiang Weng, Feng Xiao, Rajneesh Mungur, Fan Wu, Jianwei Pan, and Renya Zhan
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unruptured intracranial aneurysms ,mean arterial pressure-aneurysm neck ratio ,phases ,predict ,prognosis ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background and purposeThe unruptured intracranial aneurysm (UIA) has high disability and mortality rate after rupture, it is particularly important to assess the risk of UIA and to carry out individualized treatment. The objective of this research is to introduce a novel parameter to predict the rupture risk of UIA.MethodsA total of 649 patients with 964 intracranial aneurysms in our center were enrolled. A novel parameter named mean arterial pressure-aneurysmal neck ratio (MAPN) was defined. Ten baseline clinical features and twelve aneurysm morphological characteristics were extracted to generate the MAPN model. The discriminatory performance of the MAPN model was compared with the PHASES score and the UCAS score.ResultsIn hemodynamic analysis, MAPN was positively correlated with wall shear stress and aneurysm top pressure, with Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.887 and 0.791, respectively. The MAPN was larger in the ruptured group (36.62 ± 18.96 vs. 28.38 ± 14.58, P < 0.001). The area under the curve (AUC) of the MAPN was superior than the AUC of aspect ratio (AR) and the bottleneck factor (BN), they were 0.64 (P < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.588–0.692), 0.611 (P < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.559–0.663) and 0.607 (P < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.554–0.660), respectively. The MAPN model constructed by aneurysm size, aneurysm location, presence of secondary sacs and MAPN, demonstrated good discriminatory ability. The MAPN model exhibited superior performance compared with the UCAS score and the PHASES score (the AUC values were 0.799 [P < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.756–0.840], 0.763 [P < 0.001; 95% CI,0.719–0.807] and 0.741 [P < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.695–0.787], respectively; the sensitivities were 0.849, 0.758 and 0.753, respectively).ConclusionsResearch demonstrates the potential of MAPN to augment the clinical decision-making process for assessing the rupture risk of UIAs.
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- 2023
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7. Identification of core genes as potential biomarkers for predicting progression and prognosis in glioblastoma
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Jianping Zeng, Shushan Hua, Jing Liu, Rajneesh Mungur, Yongsheng He, and Jiugeng Feng
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glioblastoma ,expression profiling data ,hub genes ,prognosis ,NDC80 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Background: Glioblastoma is a common malignant neuroepithelial neoplasm with poor clinical outcomes and limited treatment options. It is extremely important to search and confirm diverse hub genes that are effective in the advance and prediction of glioblastoma.Methods: We analyzed GSE50161, GSE4290, and GSE68848, the three microarray datasets retrieved from the GEO database. GO function and KEGG pathway enrichment analyses for differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were performed using DAVID. The PPI network of the DEGs was analyzed using the Search Tool for the Retrieval of Interacting Genes database and visualized by Cytoscape software. Hub genes were identified through the PPI network and a robust rank aggregation method. The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and the Oncomine database were used to validate the hub genes. In addition, a survival curve analysis was conducted to verify the correlation between the expression of hub genes and patient prognosis. Human glioblastoma cells and normal cells were collected, and then RT-PCR, Western blot, and immunofluorescence were conducted to validate the expression of the NDC80 gene. A cell proliferation assay was used to detect the proliferation of glioma cells. The effects of NDC80 expression on migration and invasion of GBM cell lines were evaluated by conducting scratch and transwell assays.Results: A total of 716 DEGs were common to all three microarray datasets, which included 188 upregulated DEGs and 528 downregulated DEGs. Furthermore, we found that among the common DEGs, 10 hub genes showed a high degree of connectivity. The expression of the 10 hub genes in TCGA and the Oncomine database was significantly overexpressed in glioblastoma compared with normal genes. Additionally, the survival analysis showed that the patients with low expression of six genes (BIR5C, CDC20, NDC80, CDK1, TOP2A, and MELK) had a significantly favorable prognosis (p < 0.01). We discovered that NDC80, which has been shown to be important in other cancers, also has an important role in malignant gliomas. The RT-PCR, Western blot, and immunofluorescence results showed that the expression level of NDC80 was significantly higher in human glioblastoma cells than in normal cells. Moreover, we identified that NDC80 increased the proliferation and invasion abilities of human glioblastoma cells.Conclusion: The six genes identified here may be utilized to form a panel of disease progression and predictive biomarkers of glioblastoma for clinical purposes. NDC80, one of the six genes, was discovered to have a potentially important role in GBM, a finding that needs to be further studied.
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- 2022
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8. Analysis of the efficacy and related factors of ventriculoperitoneal shunt for AIDS with cryptococcal meningitis
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Zhaohui Chai, Yikai Shou, Rajneesh Mungur, Jiangbiao Gong, Peidong Zheng, and Jiesheng Zheng
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cryptococcal meningitis ,CM ,increased intracranial pressure ,ICP ,VPS ,AIDS ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
BackgroundCryptococcus neoformans is an opportunistic pathogen, which is more common in patients with AIDS. Increased intracranial pressure (ICP) is an important complication of cryptococcal meningitis (CM) and affects the therapeutic effect of CM.ObjectiveTo evaluate the effect and treatment for the management of ventriculoperitoneal shunt (VPS) in the treatment of AIDS complicated with CM and to analyze the factors associated with VPS and the indices affecting the outcome of CM patients.MethodsA retrospective case study was conducted on patients with CM treated in the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine from 2011 to 2019. The Chi-square test was used for categorical variables and the Student’s t-test was used for continuous variables. Multivariable analysis of baseline factors related to VPS placement was performed with stepwise logistic regression analysis, factors associated with the outcome of these patients were studied by Cox regression analysis, and Kaplan–Meier survival curves were constructed to assess the outcome of patients.ResultsThere were 96 patients with AIDS complicated with CM. VPS had a great effect on the patients, especially those with ICP > 350 mmH2O. The outcome, including the mortality rate and modified Rankin scale (MRS) score of these patients, significantly improved after the placement of VPS. The karnofsky performance status (KPS) scores of patients whose ICP > 350 mmH2O improved from 39.3 ± 21.3 at baseline to 88.7 ± 26.9 at 3 months after VPS, better than those without VPS. Multivariable analysis showed that visual impairment (OR, 0.026; 95% CI, 0.001, 0.567; P = 0.021) and ICP > 350 mmH2O (OR, 0.026; 95% CI, 0.002, 0.293; P = 0.003) were related elements with the placement of shunt, and KPS score (HR, 0.968; 95% CI, 0.943, 0.993; P = 0.013) and ICP > 350 mmH2O (HR, 2.801; 95% CI, 1.035, 7.580; P = 0.043) were indices of the outcome of AIDS patients with CM. For patients with ICP > 350 mmHg, Kaplan–Meier analysis showed that the 3-year outcome of patients with VPS was better than that of patients without VPS (P = 0.0067).ConclusionVPS was associated with better 3-year survival rates, and postshunt placement complications like infections were rare. The identification of factors related to VPS in the initial diagnosis of CM can contribute to more active management and improve the outcome.
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- 2022
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9. Mycobiota and C-Type Lectin Receptors in Cancers: Know thy Neighbors
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Lilong Zhang, Dongqi Chai, Chen Chen, Chunlei Li, Zhendong Qiu, Tianrui Kuang, Mungur Parveena, Keshuai Dong, Jia Yu, Wenhong Deng, and Weixing Wang
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gut mycobiota ,dysbiosis ,cancer ,CARD9 ,Dectin-1 ,Dectin-2 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Numerous studies have demonstrated the importance of gut bacteria in the development of malignancy, while relatively little research has been done on gut mycobiota. As a part of the gut microbiome, the percentage of gut mycobiota is negligible compared to gut bacteria. However, the effect of gut fungi on human health and disease is significant. This review systematically summarizes the research progress on mycobiota, especially gut fungi, in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC), esophageal cancer (EC), gastric cancer (GC), colorectal cancer (CRC), hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), pancreatic cancer, melanoma, breast cancer, and lung carcinoma-induced cachexia. Moreover, we also describe, for the first time in detail, the role of the fungal recognition receptors, C-type lectin receptors (CLRs) (Dectin-1, Dectin-2, Dectin-3, and Mincle) and their downstream effector caspase recruitment domain-containing protein 9 (CARD9), in tumors to provide a reference for further research on intestinal fungi in the diagnosis and treatment of malignant tumors.
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- 2022
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10. Low-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Technique in Glioblastoma Multiforme Treatment
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Rajneesh Mungur, Jiesheng Zheng, Ben Wang, Xinhua Chen, Renya Zhan, and Ying Tong
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glioblastoma ,low-intensity focused ultrasound ,drug-delivery ,blood-brain barrier ,blood-tumor barrier (BTB) ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Glioblastoma is one of the central nervous system most aggressive and lethal cancers with poor overall survival rate. Systemic treatment of glioblastoma remains the most challenging aspect due to the low permeability of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and blood-tumor barrier (BTB), limiting therapeutics extravasation mainly in the core tumor as well as in its surrounding invading areas. It is now possible to overcome these barriers by using low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) together with intravenously administered oscillating microbubbles (MBs). LIFU is a non-invasive technique using converging ultrasound waves which can alter the permeability of BBB/BTB to drug delivery in a specific brain/tumor region. This emerging technique has proven to be both safe and repeatable without causing injury to the brain parenchyma including neurons and other structures. Furthermore, LIFU is also approved by the FDA to treat essential tremors and Parkinson’s disease. It is currently under clinical trial in patients suffering from glioblastoma as a drug delivery strategy and liquid biopsy for glioblastoma biomarkers. The use of LIFU+MBs is a step-up in the world of drug delivery, where onco-therapeutics of different molecular sizes and weights can be delivered directly into the brain/tumor parenchyma. Initially, several potent drugs targeting glioblastoma were limited to cross the BBB/BTB; however, using LIFU+MBs, diverse therapeutics showed significantly higher uptake, improved tumor control, and overall survival among different species. Here, we highlight the therapeutic approach of LIFU+MBs mediated drug-delivery in the treatment of glioblastoma.
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- 2022
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11. Incidence and risk factors of inguinal hernia occurred after radical prostatectomy-comparisons of different approaches
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Lijia Liu, Haoxiang Xu, Feng Qi, Shangqian Wang, Kamleshsingh Shadhu, Dadhija Ramlagun-Mungur, and Shui Wang
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Postoperative inguinal hernia ,Prostatectomy ,Older age ,Prostate cancer ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Abstract Background To observe cumulative morbidity of postoperative inguinal hernia (PIH) and identify risk factors associated with its development in patients who underwent retropubic radical prostatectomy (RRP), laparoscopic prostatectomy (LRP) or robotic assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy (RALP) operation. Methods From June 2009 to September 2016, 756 patients diagnosed with localized prostate cancer who had undergone RRP, LRP or RALP in our center were included in this study. Patients with PIH were retrospectively investigated in such factors as age, BMI, previous abdominal operations, diabetes mellitus history, hypertension history, prostate volume, previous hernia, operative methods, operative approach, preoperative Gleason, clinical T-stage, PLND situation, operative time, and estimated blood loss. Univariate and multivariate cox hazard regressions analysis were utilized to identify risk factors predisposing to PIH. Results A total of 53 of 751(7.1%) patients developed PIH at a median follow-up period of 43 months. PIH rate in RRP was significantly higher compared to LRP and RALP group (RRP: 15.3%, LRP: 6.7%, RALP:1.9%, P = 0.038). Right side (69.8%) and indirect (88.8%) PIH were dominant type in hernia group. Univariate and multivariate cox hazard regressions analysis indicated that age and RRP approach were identified to be implicated to PIH [adjusted hazard ratio7.39(1.18–46.39), 2.93(95% CI 1.47–5.84)]. Conclusions RRP technique and older age, especially patients over 80 years, are associated with higher incidence for PIH development. Appropriate prophylaxis during the operation should be evaluated for those in high-risk.
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- 2020
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12. On the Adoption of Erasure Code for Cloud Storage by Major Distributed Storage Systems
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Aatish Chiniah and Avinash Mungur
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distributed storage systems (dss) ,erasure code ,cloud storage ,redundancy ,cap theorem ,Computer engineering. Computer hardware ,TK7885-7895 ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Traditional Cloud Systems are struggling to cope with the exponential growth of data in todays’ distributed application environment. The amount of data online has continuously increased since 2003. From an estimated 5 Exabyte in 2003 to 988 Exabyte in 2010. Presently it is estimated that 5 Exabyte of data are produced daily. To cope with such astronomical load of data, Distributed Storage Systems such as Amazon, Google and Microsoft Azure are becoming the de-facto method for the storage of data. Replication is the method used for providing redundancy. However Erasure Coding is a worthy alternative. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this paper is to assess the most used distributed storage systems using different evaluation criteria and identifying how erasure code can be integrated into them. METHODS: This paper provides a survey of well-known Distributed Storage Systems by using the CAP (Consistency, Availability and Partition Tolerance) Theorem. We go by presenting the solution according to the objectives set and trade-off acknowledged by the designers. RESULTS: A comprehensive survey is presented using five evaluation criteria (design principle, data model, failure detection and recovery, consistency and security). Adoption of erasure code in Distributed Storage Systems is discussed and its advantages are deliberated. Several open challenges are also put forward. CONCLUSION: This paper provides researchers in the field with a comprehensive review of Distributed Storage Systems and how the adoption of erasure codes will enhance their capabilities.
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- 2022
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13. Presence of Sugarcane Orange Rust in Mauritius
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Mungur, Harrydas, Saumtally, Salem, Joomun, Nawshad, and Dookun-Saumtally, Asha
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- 2020
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14. A Wireless Sensor Network Air Pollution Monitoring System
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Khedo, Kavi K., Perseedoss, Rajiv, Mungur, Avinash, Mauritius, University of, and Mauritius
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Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture - Abstract
Sensor networks are currently an active research area mainly due to the potential of their applications. In this paper we investigate the use of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN) for air pollution monitoring in Mauritius. With the fast growing industrial activities on the island, the problem of air pollution is becoming a major concern for the health of the population. We proposed an innovative system named Wireless Sensor Network Air Pollution Monitoring System (WAPMS) to monitor air pollution in Mauritius through the use of wireless sensors deployed in huge numbers around the island. The proposed system makes use of an Air Quality Index (AQI) which is presently not available in Mauritius. In order to improve the efficiency of WAPMS, we have designed and implemented a new data aggregation algorithm named Recursive Converging Quartiles (RCQ). The algorithm is used to merge data to eliminate duplicates, filter out invalid readings and summarise them into a simpler form which significantly reduce the amount of data to be transmitted to the sink and thus saving energy. For better power management we used a hierarchical routing protocol in WAPMS and caused the motes to sleep during idle time., Comment: 15 Pages, IJWMN
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- 2010
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15. Mobile Participatory Sensing Systems: A Comprehensive Review
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Ashley Rajoo, Kavi Khedo, and Utam Mungur
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wireless systems ,mobile crowdsourcing ,crowdsourcing frameworks ,participatory crowdsourcing systems ,mobile participatory systems ,Telecommunication ,TK5101-6720 - Abstract
Mobile Participatory Sensing Systems have the potential to improve different services through monitoring of the urban landscape using mobile devices based on the collaboration of thousands of mobile users. Many articles have been recently published related to mobile participatory systems where data collected from thousands of mobile users are analyzed to extract vital community information and a spatiotemporal interpretation of the phenomenon of interest is built. The purpose of this paperis to assess the state-of-the-art mobile participatory sensing systems to classify key practical requirementsof such systems and related challenges. The Kitchenham method has been used to conduct this review. A selection of 24 articles out of 590 articles related to mobile participatory sensing frameworks have been made between the period of 2013 to 2018 from the IEEE Xplore Digital Library and ACM library for assessment. A detailed review has been conducted through the classification of mobile participatory sensing systems and a critical evaluation is carried out. Potential opportunities and challenges for modern mobile participatory sensing systems are also discussed. This paper provides researchers in the field with a comprehensive and up-to-date review of mobile participatory sensing systems.
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- 2021
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16. Scoring Model to Predict Functional Outcome in Poor-Grade Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
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Jie Shen, Jianbo Yu, Sicong Huang, Rajneesh Mungur, Kaiyuan Huang, Xinfa Pan, Guofeng Yu, Zhikai Xie, Lihui Zhou, Zongchi Liu, Dexin Cheng, Jianwei Pan, and Renya Zhan
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scoring system ,prognosis ,poor-grade ,aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage ,model ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background: Patients with poor-grade aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH), defined as World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies (WFNS) grades IV–V have high rates of disability and mortality. The objective of this study was to accurately prognosticate the outcomes of patients with poor-grade aSAH by developing a new scoring model.Methods: A total of 147 poor-grade aSAH patients in our center were enrolled. Risk variables identified by multivariate logistic regression analysis were used to devise a scoring model (total score, 0–9 points). The scores were estimated on the basis of β coefficients. A cohort of 68 patients from another institute was used to validate the model.Results: Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that modified Fisher grade >2 [odds ratio [OR], 2.972; P = 0.034], age ≥65 years (OR, 3.534; P = 0.006), conservative treatment (OR, 5.078; P = 0.019), WFNS grade V (OR, 2.638; P = 0.029), delayed cerebral ischemia (OR, 3.170; P = 0.016), shunt-dependent hydrocephalus (OR, 3.202; P = 0.032), and cerebral herniation (OR, 7.337; P < 0.001) were significant predictors for poor prognosis [modified Rankin Scale [mRS] ≥3]. A scoring system was constructed by the integration of these factors and divided the poor-grade aSAH patients into three categories: low risk (0–1 points), intermediate risk (2–3 points), and high risk (4–9 points), with predicted risks of poor prognosis of 11, 52, and 87%, respectively (P < 0.001). The area under the curve in the derivation cohort was 0.844 (95% CI, 0.778–0.909). The AUC in the validation cohort was 0.831 (95% CI, 0.732–0.929).Conclusions: The new scoring model can improve prognostication and help decision-making for subsequent complementary treatment in patients with aSAH.
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- 2021
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17. Ginkgolide B promotes the proliferation and differentiation of neural stem cells following cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury, both in vivo and in vitro
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Pei-Dong Zheng, Rajneesh Mungur, Heng-Jun Zhou, Muhammad Hassan, Sheng-Nan Jiang, and Jie-Sheng Zheng
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nerve regeneration ,brain-derived neurotrophic factor ,epidermal growth factor ,suppressor of cytokine signaling 2 ,neuron-specific enolase ,glial fibrillary acid protein ,nestin ,bromodeoxyuridine ,neurological function ,middle cerebral artery occlusion ,astrocytes ,neural regeneration ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Neural stem cells have great potential for the development of novel therapies for nervous system diseases. However, the proliferation of endogenous neural stem cells following brain ischemia is insufficient for central nervous system self-repair. Ginkgolide B has a robust neuroprotective effect. In this study, we investigated the cell and molecular mechanisms underlying the neuroprotective effect of ginkgolide B on focal cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury in vitro and in vivo. Neural stem cells were treated with 20, 40 and 60 mg/L ginkgolide B in vitro. Immunofluorescence staining was used to assess cellular expression of neuron-specific enolase, glial fibrillary acid protein and suppressor of cytokine signaling 2. After treatment with 40 and 60 mg/L ginkgolide B, cells were large, with long processes. Moreover, the proportions of neuron-specific enolase-, glial fibrillary acid protein- and suppressor of cytokine signaling 2-positive cells increased. A rat model of cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury was established by middle cerebral artery occlusion. Six hours after ischemia, ginkgolide B (20 mg/kg) was intraperitoneally injected, once a day. Zea Longa’s method was used to assess neurological function. Immunohistochemistry was performed to evaluate the proportion of nestin-, neuron-specific enolase- and glial fibrillary acid protein-positive cells. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction was used to measure mRNA expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and epidermal growth factor. Western blot assay was used to analyze the expression levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and suppressor of cytokine signaling 2. Ginkgolide B decreased the neurological deficit score, increased the proportion of nestin-, neuron-specific enolase- and glial fibrillary acid protein-positive cells, increased the mRNA expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and epidermal growth factor, and increased the expression levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and suppressor of cytokine signaling 2 in the ischemic penumbra. Together, the in vivo and in vitro findings suggest that ginkgolide B improves neurological function by promoting the proliferation and differentiation of neural stem cells in rats with cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury.
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- 2018
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18. Outcomes after surgery for children in Africa (ASOS-Paeds): a 14-day prospective observational cohort study
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Torborg, Alexandra, Meyer, Heidi, El Fiky, Mahmoud, Fawzy, Maher, Elhadi, Muhammed, Ademuyiwa, Adesoji O, Osinaike, Babatunde Babasola, Hewitt-Smith, Adam, Nabukenya, Mary T, Bisegerwa, Ronald, Bouaoud, Souad, Abdoun, Meriem, El Adib, Ahmed Rhassane, Kifle Belachew, Fitsum, Gebre, Meseret, Taye, Desalegn Bekele, Kechiche, Nahla, Fadalla, Tarig, Abdallah, Bareeq, Chaibou, Maman Sani, Nyarko, Mame Yaa Adobea, Ki, Kélan Bertille, Shalongo, Sarah, Mulwafu, Wakisa, Thomson, Emma, Traore, Mamadou Mour, Ndonga, Andrew, Bittaye, Mustapha, Samateh, Ahmadou Lamin, Munlemvo, Dolly M., Kalongo, Jean Jacques, Coulibaly, Yacaria, Coulibaly, Youssouf, Ravelojaona, Vaonandianina, ANDRIAMANARIVO, Lalatiana, RAHERISON, Arsitide Romain, RANDRIAMIZAO, Harifetra Mamy Richard, RAMKALAWAN, Kushal, Omar, Mohamed Abdinor, Ndikontar, Raymond, Joseph, Donamou, Dahir, Shukri, Mohamed, Mubarak, Ali Daoud, Hassan, Ndarukwa, Pisirai, OTIOBANDA, Gilbert Fabrice, Banguti, Paulin, Neil, Kara, Derbew, Miliard, Fanny, Marvin, Smalle, Isaac, Taylor, Elliott H, Duvenage, Hanel, Hardy, Anneli, Kluyts, Hyla, Pearse, Rupert, Biccard, Bruce, AARON, Olurotimi Idowu, Abd Elazeem Mohammed, Hossam Aldein Samir, Abdalkarim, Batool, Abdalla, Abubaker, Abdallah, Mohamed Abubaker Ahmed, Abdeewi, Saedah, Abdel Ghafar, Taqwa, Abdelaleem, Ali, Abdelaleem, Ibrahim Abdelmonaem, Abdelgader, Khansaa, Abdelgadir, Waffa, Abdelhafez, Mohammed, Abdelhalim, Ahmed, Abdelkabir, Mohammed, Abdelkader Osman, Mohamed, Abdelkarim, Maha, Abdelkarim, Mohamed, Abdelmohsen, Sarah Magdy, Abdelnassir, Mazin, Abdelrahman, Ahmed Saber Mohamed, Abdelwahed, Aya Elsayed, Abdelzaher, Mohamed, Abderrahim, Baba Ahmed, Abdoulaye, Touré, Abdulai, Samira, Abdulghaffar, Yunus A., Abdullah, Fatimaalzahraa, Abdullahi, Lawal Barau, Abdullahi, Muzammil, Abdulrazik, Sarah, Abdulsalam, Khalifa Ibrahim, Abdulwahed, Eman, Abdus-Salam, Rukiyat, ABE, TOLUSHE, Abera Mulugeta, Gersam, Aboelghait, Aml Ali, Abol Oyoun, Nariman, Aboubekr, Boumediene, Abraham, Meera, Abu, Mohammed, Abuagila, Ahlam ali, Abubakar, Maimuna, Abugilah, Mohammed, Abuzeid, Issa A, Achouri, Djelloul, Acquah, Serwah Akua, Adam, Nusiba Bushra Ahmed, ADAMU, AUWAL, Adamu, Kabir Musa, ADAMU, MUHAMMAD, ADAMU, Sani, Adane, Samuel Gashu, Adeaga, Mojolaoluwa, Adebayo, Sikiru, Adedire, Adejare, Adegoke, Paul Aderemi, Ademuyiwa, Adesoji O, Adeniyi, Adebayo Augustine, Adeoye, Ibukunoluwa, Aderibigbe, Gbenga, ADEROUNMU, Azeezat, ADEYEMI, WILLIAMS, ADEYEMO, Adekunle, Adigun, Tinuola, Adika, Enoch Delad, ADISA, Adewale O, Adjei, Esther, Adjepong-Tandoh, Ernest Kwame, Ads, Alaa Mohamed, ADUMAH, Dr Collins Chijioke, ADUMAH, Lilian ogechi, Adzamli, Innocent, Afari, Jonas, Afedo, Wisdom, Affan, Abubaker, AFOLAYAN, Ayodeji Olawale, Agaba, Stuart, Agbeno, Evans, Agbonrofo, Peter, Aghadi, Ifeanyi, AGU, EDITH, Agyen, Thomas, Agyen-Mensah, Kwasi, Ahensan, Daasebre, Ahmad, Misbahu Haruna, AHMED, Awrayit, Ahmed, Linda, Ahmed, Nidal Youseef Altaher Aboh, Ahmed, Rubaa, Ahmed Jroush, Mohamed, ahmed maghur, Hasan, AHOGNI, G.N. Geofroid, Ait Yahia, Smain, Aji, Narjiss, Aji, Sani Ali, Akerele, William, Akhideno, Irene, Akinmokun, Israel, AKINNIYI, Akin Taofeek, Akinniyi, Ayodeji, AKINYEMI, Samuel, Akitoye, Olumide Adeleke, AKPAETTE, Iniofon Clement, Akuma, Terungwa Jacob, Akuokor, Daniel, Akwei, Clement Nii-Akwei, Al Bashir, Rayan Badran Hamed, Al Gharyani, Mohamed Fathi, al Islam ben Jouira, Rayet, Aladelusi, Timothy, Alakaloko, Felix, Alameen, Hind, Alameen Moheyaldeen, Mohammed, Alaogaly, Mona, Alarabi, Rehab, Alawami, Milud, Alazabi, Basma Masaud, Alazabi, Mona, Albakosh, Bashir Abobaker, ALBDULRRAZIQ, HUSAYN MOHAMMED ElFEETOURI, Aldieb, Asmma, Aldressi, Wafa, Alegbeleye, Godwin E., Alfa, Yakubu, Alhadad, Qamrah, Alhaddad, Arwa R, Alhaddad, Hayfa Faraj, Alhadi, Aliya, Alhamali, Aya, Alharam, Abtisam, Alhlafi, Majduldeen, Alhouwasi, Basmah, Alhudhairy, Sara, Ali, Abdallah Motasim Ahmed, Ali, Ahmed Jama, Ali, Almuaz, Ali, Asma, Ali, Enas, Ali, Mutwakil, Ali, Salem, Ali, Yunusa Y., Ali Ahmed, Abdelbaset, Aliozor, Sampson, Aljamal, Sarah, Alkaseek, Akram, Alkhalifa, Elmustafa, Alkoni, Samah, Allie, Abbaas, Almelyan, Khawla, Almugaddami, Ayman, Almujreesi, Asmaa, Alqady, Eithar, Alragheai, Alaa Ahmed, Alshareea, Entisar, Alshareef, Abulnasir, Alsori, Mohamed, Altomy, Seham Ahmed, Al-Touny, Aiman, Al-Touny, Shimaa A., Alum Aguma, Rachel, Alwaer, Nuha Miftah, Al-zletni, Hadeel, Alzwai, Marwa, Amaambo, Nelago, Amah, Christopher C, Amary, Marwa, Amengle, Ludovic Albert, Amesho, Shiwana Lineekela Omwene, Ametepe, Mawuli, Amkhatirah, Emad, Amnaina, Mohamed Gamal, Amoah, Benjamin, Amoah, Joseph Kofi, Amo-Aidoo, Nana Adjoa Simitsewa, Amoako-Boateng, Mabel, Ampong, Jude, Anane-Fenin, Betty, Anarfi, Samuel, Andriamanarivo, Mamy Lalatiana, Aniakwo, Luke, Aniteye, Ernest, Ankrah, Levi Nii-Ayi, Anno, Audrey, Anyanwu, Lofty-John Chukwuemeka, Anyigba, Edem, Appeadu-Mensah, William, Appiah-Thompson, Peter, Apraku-Peprah, Ewuarabena Lydia, Aremu, Shuaib Kayode, Arinaitwe, Moses, Armah, Ralph, Arthur, Augustine, Arthur, Douglas, Asah-Opoku, Kwaku, Asante, Mabel, Asante-Asamani, Alvin, Asare, Angbo, Asasira, Lausa, Ashfersh, Mohamed, ASHINDOITIANG, John A., Ashong, Joycelyn, Ashraf Salah, Mohamed, Asiedu, Charles, Asiedu, Isaac, Asiyanbi, Kolawole, Asla, Amir, Asman, Wilfred, Asoegwu, Emeka J., Assalhi, Mohamed, Assim, Claudia, Asudo, Felicia Dele, Atai, Alice Gertrude, Ateeqa, Sara Bin, Atim, Terkaa, Atindama, Solomon, ATIQUI, IJLAL, Atrih, Zoubir, Attah, Raphael Avidime, Awad, Ahmed K, Awedew, Atalel Fentahun, Awedew, Atalel Fentahun, Aween, Husayn, Awere-Kyere, Lawrence, Awindaogo, Joseph, Awori Achani, Margaret, Ayad, Kusay, Azab, Ahmed, Azas, Alberta, Aziza, Bochra, Azize, Diallo Abdoul, AZOUI, Abdelkrim, Azouz, Jomana, Baba, Suleiman, Babalola, Olakunle Fatai, Babiker, Mona, Baddoo, Daniel, Badi, Aml, BADMUS, Sarat Abolore, Badr, Helmy, Bah, Abdoulie, Bah, Fatoumata Yakhie, Bah, Kajali, Bah, Marma Tumaneh, Bahroun, Sumayyah, Baidoo, Ebikela, Baidoo, Kenneth, Baidoo, Richard, Bakare, Adewumi, Bakeer, Hiba Baliad, Baky Fahmy, Mohamed A, Balogun, James, Bamigboye, Babatunde, Bankah, Patrick, Banson, Mabel, Barhouma, Yehia Emad, Barongo, Mugisha, BASHIR RABIU, MOHAMMED, Bassem, Adham, Bedair, Mohamed Adel Ali, Beeharry, Hemanshu Rambojan, Beeharry, Shanjugsing, Bekele, Sintayehu, Belie, Orimisan, Belkhair, Abdulmunem, Ben Ahmed, Yosra, Ben Ashur, Abir, Ben Hamida, Bahaeddin, Benade, Christia, BENMANSEUR, Sawsen, Bensebti, Amina Amel, BERDAI, Mohamed Adnane, Beyuo, Vera, Biala, Marwa, Bilson-Amoah, Estella, Bin wali, Salema Subhi, Binnawara, Muhannud, Birlie Chekol, Wubie, Birqeeq, Ghada, Biyase, Thuli, Blankson, Paa Kwesi, Boakye, Benedict, Boakye, Benedict, Boakye-Acheampong, Kwame, Boakye-Yiadom, Kwaku, Boateng, Joseph, Bobaker, Salem, Bode, Christopher, Bogoslovskiy, Alexander, Bolarinwa, Eniola Sefiu, Boretti, Lorenzo, Botchway, Maame Tekyiwa, Botha, Christo, BOUDA, B. David, BOURENANE, Haithem, BOUZBID, Sabiha, Boye, Jeffrey, Branny, Mthelebofu, Brown, George Darko, Brown, Warren, Bua, Emmanuel, BWALA, KEFAS JOHN, Camara, Bakary, Camara, M'mah Lamine, Carol, Tisana, Ceesay, Winston, Chafee, Karim, Chaklie Agegnehu, Bewuketu, Chamir, Congo, Chaziya, Peter YC, Chellan, Chantal, Cheniki, Narimane, Chennouf, Sarra, Chepkoech, Eglah, Chilango, Creamy, Chinda, John Yola, Chokwe, Thomas M., Choutri, Hichem, Christian, Nana Ama, Chukwu, Isaac, Chummun, Girish, Cilliers, Celeste, Cloete, Estie, Collison, Carol, Cronje, Larissa, Daary, Dennis, DAD, Bouzid, Daddy, Hadjara, Dahilo, Enoch Auta, Dairam, Jenitha, Dalaf, Manar Salim, Damson, Pempho, Daneji, Sulaiman Muhammad, Daniel, Adekunle, Daoud, Asmaa, Daoud, Hassan, Darat, Tarik Darat, Darko, Kwadwo Opoku, Darko, Kwame, Davidson, Kerryn, Davies, Abigail, Dawang, Yusuf Davou, Dayal, Kishan, Dayie, Makafui, de Goede, Adele, de Goede, Adele, Deelawar, Bibi Waardanaaz, Derwish, Khawla, Desalu, Ibironke, Dessalegn Beza, Andinet, Dhege, Celestino, Dhilraj, Deepika, Diallo, Thierno Sadou, Diaw, Mbaye, Diaw Diop, Amadou, DIENE, Mansour, Dieng, Mactar, Dippenaar, Tinus, Djagbletey, Robert, Djedid, Nihel Klouche, Djouonang, Kamga Telly, Dominique, Shep, Drammeh, Basiru, Drissi, Hajer, du Bruyn, Aritha, Dube, Thandeka, Dufe, Rebecca, Dung, Dido, Earl, Ettiene, Ebrahem, Osama Khalifa Ali, Ebrahim, Zahier, Edena, Morrison E., Effa Ngono, Rosa, Egbuchulem, Kelvin, Egdeer, Amin, Eguma, Stella A., Ehimhantie, Martins, EJIOFOR, Ogochukwu Chidi, Ejuma, Lucy O., Ekenze, Sebastian, Ekhmaj, Reyad Almokhtar, Ekor, Oluwayemisi, EKPA, Sifonobong, Ekpemo, Chidi Samuel, Ekudo, Joseph, Ekwunife, Okechukwu Hyginus, El Koraichi, Alae, El Magrahi, Hamida, El Mejrab, Mohsen, El Sadek, Rania, El YOUBI, Haitam, Eladani, Oman, Elamesh, Sara Abdel Hamid, Elamien, Mohanad, Elamin Elnour, Moheyaldien Ahmed, Elbadawy, Merihan A, Elbaseet, Hesham, Elderwy, Ahmad A., Elebute, Olumide, Elgamal, Mostafa, Elgenidy, Anas, Elghareeb, Ahmed, Elgherwi, Laila, Elhadad, Rasha, Elhadi, Ahmed, Elhassan, Mohamed, Elkhouly, Abdallah Mohamed, Ellebedy, Mohamed, ELMAJRI, MOHAMED FUAD, Elmandouh, Omar, Elmandouh, Reem, Elmorsi, Rami, ELOMBILA, Marie, Elsadek, Menan, Elsalhawy, Shady, Elsayem, Karam, Elshafiey, Mahmoud, El-Sharkawi, Mohammad, Elshazly, Mohamed, Eltaub, Darine, Eltayeb, Almoutaz A, Eltayeb, Mohammed Eltayeb Zainelabdean, Eltegani Abdalla, Abeer, ElWakeel, Mai, Embu, Henry, Emoru, Arthur, Enicker, Basil, Enti, Donald, Entsua-Mensah, Kow, Eseile, Samuel Ideyonbe, Essuman, Vera Adobea, Et-taghy, Hiba, Etwire, Victor, Eyaman, Kuba Daniel, Ezbeida, Mabroukah, EZEKIEL, ANTHONY SABO, Ezidiegwu, Stanley Ugochukwu, Ezomike, Uchechukwu Obiora, FABOYA, Omolara, Fadlalmola, Hammad.A., FAGBAYIMU, Oluwatobiloba Micheal, Faida, Hamza, FALL, Khady, Farahat, Sherif, Faraj, Ali, Faraj, Noora, Farghaly, Amal, Farhat, Karima Omar Ahmed, Farinyaro, Aliyu Umar, Fathi Bani, Ghada, Fattah, Ahmed, Fawzy, Maher, Fening, Nana, Fentahun Emrie, Assefa, Fidieley, Melody, Fikadu Keneni, Dame, Fischer, Monique, Flint, Margot, Fodo, Naledi, Fofana, Naby, Fokeerah, Nitish, Folami, Emmanuel, Folokwe, Siyasanga, Fonternel, Doors, Fosi Kamga, Gacelle, Fotso, Luc Kamga, Fourtounas, Maria, Frankish, Leanne, Gabier, Ilhaam, Gacii, Vernon M., Gaffoor, M Sheik, Gagara, Moussa, GALADIMA, Hajara Aminu, Gamubaka, Richard, Ganey, Mike, Ganiyu, Oseni Oyediran, Gasa, Nompumelelo, Gatheru, Antony P., Gawu, Victoria Sena, Gaya, Subha Shita Devi, GAYE, Ibrahima, Gebremichael Ganta, Ashagre, Gelaw, Kassahun Girma, Geldenhuys, Lieze, Getachew Tegegn, Ayenachew, Ghemmied, Malak, Ghmagh, Reem, GILES, AHEREZA, Ginsburg, Ricky Ginsburg, Girma, Kassahun, Gjam, Fatima, Glover-Addy, Hope, Gobin, Veekash, Gomeh, Patricia, Gomez, Dimingo, Gorelyk, Alexandro, Gossaye, Abay, Govender, Veneshree, Grant, Jenny, Grayson, Britney L., Grobbelaar, Mariette, Gueye, Khadim Rassoul, GUIRO, Habibou, Gumede, Simphiwe, Gurure, Desire, Gusibat, Anwar, Gyeke-Boafo, Nana Kwame, HACHEMI, Sihem, Haddis, Kullehe, Haidar, Arwa, Haif, Assia, Hameed-Ikram, Sarwat, Hamid, Haytham, Hamukwaya, Dilona, Hanson, Nana Andoh, Hanzi, Joseph, Hardcastle, Timothy, Harissou, Adamou, Hasan, Ameerah, Hasan, Hayat Ben, Hasan, Najat Ben, Hashi, Abdullahi Said, Hashish, Amel A, Hassaan, Ibrahim, Hassan, Sadiq, Hassan, Sakariye Abdullaahi, Hassan, Tasneem, Hassan, Zeinab, Hassane, Maman Lawal, Hassanein, Mohamed, Hawu, Yoli, Haywood, David, Heelan, Halima, Hendricks, Natalie, Hillah, Ayayi, Hlela, Qinisile, HMAMOUCHI, Badreddine, Hoko, Zanele, Honny, Dorothy, Honore, Samba, Houidi, Senda, Human, Thys, Hussain, Eiman, Hussain Kona, Moataz Hashim, Hussein, Yara, Ibekwe, Titus Sunday, Ibiyemi, Akeem, IBIYEYE, TAIBAT, Ibrahim, Ibrahim Ali, Ibrahim, Lawal Ibrahim, Ibrahim, Soaleh, Ibrahim Abubakar, Amina, Ibrahim Alain, Traore, Idipo, Frieda, Idoko, Godwin, Idowu, Olusola, Idris, Mohammad El-Amin, Igaga, Elizabeth Namugaya, Iindongo, Etuuva, IITULA, Petrus, IKOTUN, Oluwafunmilayo, ILLE, Gloria, Imposo, Desire Hubert, Invernizzi, Jonathan, Irungu, Eric, Isbayqah, Areej Mohammed, Isbayqah, Eenas Mohammed, Ismael, Guibla, Ismail, Ali M, Itambi, Asoh Maxwell, Jabang, John Nute, Jaga, Rudhir, Jaganath, Ushir, Jaiteh, Lamin, Jallow, Cherno S, James, Olutayo, Javed, Sayed, Jithoo, Sandhya, Jlidi, Said, Joel, Lessan, Johnson, Marianne, JONES, TAIWO, Jooma, Zainub, Joomye, Shehzaad, Joosab, Mehboob, JOUINI, Riadh, Jubail, Mohamed J, Juggoo, Chaya, Jumbi, Timothy Mwai, Kaabar, Nejib, Kabirou, Mourtala, Kabiru, Abdulkadir Muhammad, Kabre, B. Yvette, Kache, Stephen, Kacimi, Salah Eddine Oussama, KADAS, ABUBAKAR SAIDU, KAHANSIM, Barminas, Kalipa, Mandisa, Kalongo, Jean Jacques Kabuley, Kalu, Nmesomachi Enyidiya, Kamate, Benoi, Kamwangen, Gracia Mitonga, Kandjimi, Matti, Kanjana-Zondo, Nokuzola, Kankpeyeng, Lawrence, Kapalamula, Tiyamike, Karadji, Souleymane, Kargbo, Mohamed Alieu, Karghul, Mohamed, Kaskar, Razeena, Kasker, Razeena, Kasobya, Faith, Kassem, Ossama, Kateregga, George, Kayima, Peter, Kedwany, Ahmed M., Ken-Amoah, Sebastian, Kenneth, Tomanya Kakura, KERISSE, Amina Nour El-Houd, KERKENI, Yosra, Khairi, Rania, Khaled, Mohamed, Khalifa, Eissa, Khalifa, Marwa Suliman, Khalil, Mohamed Kamal, Khattab, Mohamed S I, Khodary, Ahmed Refaat, Khumalo, Bridget Florence, Khumalo, Phindile, Kigayi, Jean Pierre, Kimutai, Timothy Kiprotich, KINDO, Bassirou, KIRFI, ABDULLAHI MUSA, Koggoh, Patience, Koko, Alshaima A, Kopieniak, Marcin, Kotagiri, Chandra, Kotey, Emily, Kouicem, Aya Tinhinane, Kpangkpari, Richard, Kudoh, Vincent, Kufonya, Norman, Kuhn, Warren, Kutor, Jasper, Kwakye, Akosua, Kynes, J. Matthew, Lambrechts, Lelanie, Lamiri, Rachida, LANRE, OLOKO NASIRUDEEN, Larvie, Prince, Lateef, Azeez Kehinde, LATRECHE, Samir, Lawal, Taiwo, Leballo, Gontse, Lebereki, Simon, Lee, Dorinda, Leeb, Gregory, Leonard, Tristan, LEYONO-MAWANDZA, Peggy Dalliah Gallou, Likongo, Ted Botawaosenge, Limalia, Ziyaad, LIMAN, HARUNA USMAN, Loae, Nada, Lompoli, Beinvenue Nkoy Ena, Lusungu, Dodo, M.Mokhtar, Fatma AL-Zahraa, Madany, Mohie El-Din Mostafa, Maddy, Reginald Jeff, Madombwe, Gladmore, Mafabi, Solomon, Magashi, Mahmoud Kawu, Maharaj, Sanvir, Mahfouz, Shaimaa Mahmoud, Mahlare, Korowe Rose Voncil, Mahmoud, Fathia, Maikassoua, Mamane, Maison, Patrick, Maiwald, Dela, Makhoba, Philisiwe, Makinita, Sewela Grace, Makou epse Tolefac, Myriam, Malau, Thomas Kefas, Mamathuntsha, Tshilidzi Godfrey, Mamo, Tihitena Negussie, Mamuda, Atiku, Mandundzo, Paidamoyo, Mangray, Hansie, Mani, Salma, Manneh, Ebrima K, Mansour, Noureldin Mohamed, Manyere, DV, Mapurisa, Amarylis, Mare, Pieter, Martin, Mogammad Ebrahim, Mashaal, Abdelhafeez, Mashaya, Sonela, Masilela, Patience Busisiwe, Mathebula, Ruth, Mathinya, Tlhapane, Matlala, Tumelo Kwena, Matlou, Mabitsela, Matos-Puig, Roel, Matoug, Salmin, Maudarbocus, Mohammad Jeelani, Mavesere, Haziel Pindukai, Mavila, Jackson, Mayet, Shafeeqa, Maygag, Mohamed, Mbatha, Nonhlanhla, Mbatudde, Rita, Mbiya Kapinga, Anne, Mbuyamba, Jojo, Mbuyi, Ali T, Mdlalose, Nkosinathi, Prowling, Megan, Mejeni, Nathalie, Mekonnen Ejigu, Yayehyirad, Merghani, Safa, Metogo, Junette Epse Njoki, Mhiri, Riadh, Mhone, Lyness, Michael, Afieharo, Miko, Abdullahi Mustapha, Milad, Ahmed, Mishra, Ravi, Mjadu, Londiwe, Mkhontwana, Nokonwaba, Mlambo, Nompilo, Mncwango, Zama, Mngoma, Gcina, Mnguni, Mzamo, Modekwe, Victor Ifeanyichukwu, Mogane, Palesa, Moghazy, Rama, Mogotsi, Kena, Mohalal, Mohamed Salah, Mohamed, Amin Awad Alamin, Mohamed, Maria, Mohamed, Molhema Eltaib Elamin, Mohamed, Suleyman Abdullahi, Mohamedkheir, Mohamed Abdelmoneim, Mohammad, Ahmad Lofty, Mohammad, Alhassan Datti, Mohammad, Aminu Mohammad, Mohammed, Abdulrahman, Mohammed, Muhanned, Mohammed, Rabiu Isah, Mohammed, Rehab, Mohammed, Taha Salah Abdelmaksaod, Mohammedosman, Doaa, Mohsen, Siham Moftah, Molla Getahun, Amsalu, Moloisi, Makwati, Monib, Fatma A, Moodley, Kirushin, Moopanar, Manogran, Morgan, Fatma, Moris, Baluku, Morna, Martin, Moses, Vaughn, Mostafa, Mahmoud Mohamed, Motiang, Mammie, Motseoile, Toni, Motshabi, Palesa, MOUSSAOUI, Nassima, Mpoto, Dany Bolimo, MPOY EMY MONKESSA, Christ Mayick, MRARA, BUSISIWE, Mshelbwala, Philip Mari, Msherghi, Ahmed, Msibi, Trevor, Mubunda, Raphael Kapend, Muhammad, Abubakar Bala, Muhammad, Saminu, Muhanguzi, Joshua, Muhindo, Ruth, Mukenga, Martin Mamba, Mukuna, Patrick Miteo, Mulewa, Deogracias, Munanzvi, Kudzayi Sarah, Mungur, Luckshmanraj, Munubi, Aziz, Munyalo, Francisca Syovata, Muriithi, Julius M., Musa, Abdullahi Aliyu, Musa, Kareem, Musa, Mosaab Abdelhafiz Ebrahim, Musana, Fred, Musewu, Tongo Douglas, Musiitwa, Albino Kiboonwa, Mwangi, Caroline M., Mwepu, Idesbald Mwebe, Mwepu, Michel Ilunga, Mwika, Peter Mwirichia, Mwiti, Timothy M., Myeni, Physician, Mzoneli, Nosisi, Naana, Reyam, Nabukenya, Gladys, Nabunya, Susan, Naidoo, Alishka, Naidoo, Verushka, Naidu, Priyanka, Nakyanzi, Caroline, Nambi, Esther, Nampawu, Mary Juliet, Nampiina, Gorret, Namutebi, Hasifah, Nana, Benedict, Nanda, Joëlle Sandra Youssa, Nanimambi, Juliana, Nantongo, Betty, Napolitano, Luisa, Naser, Alg, Nassar, Ahmad Sammy, Nassar, Muhammad Sammy, Nasser, Nadine, Nawezo, Jacob Gerald, NDIAYE, Alain, NDIAYE, Cheikh Ahmed Tidiane, Ndiaye, Françoise, Ndibarekera, Sarah Harriet, Ndjoko, Sylvie Mishondo, Ndlovu, Msizi, Nduwayezu, Richard, Negash, Samuel, Nehema, Sarah, Neil, Kara, Neizer, Margaret, NEJMI, Sifeddine, Nezam-Parast, Masoud, Ng How Tseung, Kenny, Ngcelwane, Thandokazi, Ngene, Ikenna, Nghidinwa, Hilka, Ngissah, Reuben, Ngock, George Farrar Fola Ngock, Ngouane, Diane, Ngumi, Zipporah, Nibret, Yonas, NIENGO OUTSOUTA, Gilles, Njie, Masirending, NJOKANMA, Rapheal Azuka, Nkhata, Lister, Nkhuna, Nyajane Thomas, Nkosi, Nobuhle, Nkosi, Sebenzile, Nkwembe, Christophe Mualuka, Nnaji, Chimaobi, Nneji-Akazie, Tochukwu, Nongqo, Nezisa, Nortey, Michael, Noutakdie Tochie, Joel, Nsaful, Josephine, Nsimire, Berthe Barhayiga, Nte, Stanley K., Ntshingila, Cebile, Ntsie, Nthabiseng Precious, Ntsoane, David, Ntumy, Michael Yao, Nuer-Allornuvor, Gloria, Nuhu, Samuel, Nutsuklo, Prudence, Nwachukwu, Callistus Uchenna, NWAFULUME, NNAEMEKA, Nwangwu, Emmanuel, Nwankwo, Elochukwu P, Nyame, Clement Agyekum, Nyamekye, Evelyn, Nyankah, Eunice, Nyoka-Mokgalong, Cecilia, Oase, Divine, Obande, Joseph Orinya, Obbeng, Ambe, Obeng-Adjei, Grace-Imelda, Obianyo, Ijeoma, Obianyo, Nene E, Obiechina, Sylvester, OBRI, Abraham I., ODI, TEMITOPE, Odingo, Jonathan, Oelofsen, Siobhan, Ofori, Emmanuel, Ofori-Adjei, Dziffa, Ogaji, Idoko Monday, Ogundoyin, Olakayode Olaolu, OGUNLEYE, OLABISI, OGUNS, Abayomi, Ogunsua, Oluseyi, Ohemeng-Mensah, Elvis, Ojediran, Olubukola, Ojediran, Oluwabukade, Ojewuyi, Abiodun, Ojewuyi, Olufemi, Ojo, Adedoyin, OJO, Olugbenga Olalekan, Ojo, Omotayo, Okedare, Amos, Okenwa, Samuel C., Oko, Adariku Godwin, Okojie, Nkechi, Okonkwo, Leonard Nduka, Okoth, Peter, Okunlola, Abiodun Idowu, Okunlola, Cecilia Kehinde, Okurut, Mathew, Oladimeji, Motunrayo, Oladiran, Ajibola, Olagunju, Ganiyat R., Olajide, Abdul-Rahman Lukman, Olajide, Adewale. Timothy, Olang, Patrick R., Olayinka, Oluwakemi, Olori, Samson, Olulana, Dare, Olulana, Dare Isaac, Olusanya, Bolutife, Omar, Duaa Eisa, Omar, Mohamed Abdinor, Onakpoya, Uvie, ONeil, Matthew, Onen, Hudson, ONYEKA, Chinonso, Oosthuizen, Alexis, Opandoh, Isabella, Opiyo, Sophy, Oppong, Jonathan, Orewole, Tesleem Olayinka, Orji, Mathias, Osagie, Olabisi, Osagie, Osasumwen T., Osaheni, Osayomwanbo, Osama Sleem, Adham, Osawa, Francis Omondi, Osei, Fred, Osei-Nketiah, Samuel, Osei-Poku, Dorcas, Osman, Alaa, Osman Ahmed, Mohammed, Osman Suliman, Sarah Omer, Otchere, Kofi, Othman, Amani Alsayd Abdulsalam, Othman, Eman, Othman, May, Otim, Paul, Otim, Tonny, Otman, Rema Hassan, Otoki, Violet, OUDJHIH, Messa, OUEDRAOGO, Issaka, OUEDRAOGO, P. Justin, Ousmane Hamady, Issa, Ouyahia, Amel, OWOJUYIGBE, Afolabi, Owoo, Christian, Owoo, Precious, Owusu Boamah, Matthew, Oyedele, Abisola, Oyedepo, Olanrewaju, Oyegbola, Christianah, Panday, Juniata, Parker, Ewomazino U. Evi, Parker, Ilyas, Parker, Robert K., Pembe, Julie Ndjondo, Percivale, Beatrice, Pereko, Janet, Pérez, Mariela, Perumal, Neville, Pillay, Leresse, Pretorius, Robyn, Prinsloo, Roz, Pryce, Charles, Puryag, Ashveen, QUADRI, Oladeji Raheem, Quansah, Kofi, Quarcoopome, Cornelia, Quarshie, Amanda, Quartson, Elizabeth, Quashie-Sam, James, Rabiu, Ayuba, Rabiu, Taofeek, Rahma, Manal, Rahman, Ganiyu Adebisi, Rais, Mounira, Rajah, Chantal, Rakotondrainibe, Aurélia, Ramakrishnan, Rema, Ramatou, Sabo, Ramdawon, Brinda, Ramdhani, Kirthi, Ramkaun, Yeswant, RAPHAEL, OSELE, Raslan, Hani Mohammed Ahmed, Redelinghuys, Cara, Riffi, Omar, Rikhotso, Hundzukani, Roberts, Charles AP, Robertson, Caroline, Roland, Nchufor, Roos, John, S. Abdalgadir, Esra, Saad, Alshaimaa, Saad, Mahmoud M., Saad El-Tanekhy, Aalaa, Saadi, Cyrine, Saadu, Tasiu, Saber, Mohamed, Sabir Yassin, Fatima Mohammed, Sabo, Vinishe Yakubu, Sabra, Tarek Abdelazem, Saeid, Dawoud Amhimmid, Safar, Amna, Sagboze, Sandra, Sahnoun, Lassaad, Salahu, Babangida Mohammed, Salami, Kelvin, Salawu, Adedayo Idris, Saleh, Hawazen, Saleh, Ismail Ali, Saleh, Khetam Mohamed, Salele, Aliyu Mohammed, Salem, Fatima, Salem, Osama, Salih, Mohammed Ali Ismael Alamin, Salisu, Ibrahim, Sall, Mouhamedoun, SAMB, Cheikh Fall, Sangak, Isam A, Sanoussi, Nanzir Moctar, Sanya, Douglas, Sanyang, Anaumana B, Sarpong, Pokua, SARR, Joseph Niame, Schnaubelt, Romy, Searyoh, Kafui, SECK, Ndèye Fatou, Secka, Abdoulie Sering, Seif, Mohamed, Seilbea, Yvonne, Semret Hailu, Berhe, Sepenu, Perez, Sewlall, Janice, Seyi-Olajide, Justina, Shai, Shiluva, Shalaby, Abdullah Mohamad Omar, SHAPHAT, IBRAHIM, Shava, Garai, Sheidu Owuda, Abdullahi, Sheshe, Abdurrahman Abba, Shetiwy, Mosab, Shezi, Nomusa, Shihab, Maryam Husam, Shitakumuna, Helena, Shitaye, Nebiyu, Shitta, Andrew H., Sholadoye, Tunde Talib, Shouasha, Princely, Shu'aibu, Naziru Garba, Shuiap, Nouran musbah, Sibeko, Bongekile, Sikhakhane, Sebe, Sikwete, Guigui, Sime Gizaw, Habtamu, Simelane, Nhlanhlenhle, Simon, Edwina, Singh, Usha, SIRAJALDIN, Abdulla, Siriboe, Esme, Siyothula, Thozama, Siyotula, Thozama, Smart-Yeboah, Awo, SMITH, Saidat, Solala, Sivuyisiwe, Soliman, Eman A., Solo, Corinne Eulalie, Sombéwendin Charles, Ilboudo, Sonaike, Monisola, Songden, David Zumnan, Sottie, Daniel, Soualili, Zineddine, Soula, Enas, Souleymane, Sidibe, SOWANDE, Oludayo Adedapo, Spytko, Alex, Srir, Daria Omar M, Ssebuguzi, Lawrence, Stegmann, George Frederik, Strauss, Lindsey, Struwig, Estee, Succi, Marcello, Suleiman, Abdul-Rasheed, Suliman, Mazin, Swartz, Mikhail, Taha, Taha M., Takai, Idris Usman, Takou, Bougoue Horline, Takrouney, Mohammed Hamada, Takure, Augustine, TALABI, Ademola Olusegun, Tall, Mamadou, Taute, Carla, Tawfik, Mohamed, Taylor, Jenna, Tembe, Dias Salomao, Temesgen, Fissha, Tesfaye, Emnet, Theko, Dineo, Thiart, Mari, Thompson, Ruary, Thuer, Linda, Tientcheu Fabrice, Tim, Tilahun, Zekaryas Belete, Tilahun Woldetsadik, Tsion, Timo, Manuella, Timotews, Namene, Tjiyokola, David, Tolani, Musliu Adetola, TOUABTI, Souhem, Traoré, Diakaridia, Tsegha, Livingfaith Jighjigh, Tseli, Mbeki, Tumuhimbise, Christine, Tumukunde, Janat, Tunkara, Salihu F S, Turshan, Laila, Turton, Edwin, Uchendu, Chukwudi Chukwuemeka, UDIE, Gabriel U., UDOSEN, Joseph E., Ugalahi, Mary, Ugwu, Euphemia M., UGWU, Ikechukwu Ethelbert, Ugwu, Jideofor Okechukwu, Ugwunne, Chuka A, Ukpabio, Ukpabio E.I., Umar, Aminu Muhammed, UMEH, Chizoba Linda, Ungen, Rowena, Usang, Usang, Usenbo, T, Usman, Mustapha Ibrahim, UWAYESU, Roda, Van Aswegen, Benjamin, van der Byl, Ashley, van der Linde, Pieter, van der Walt, Stephan, van Schalkwyk, Hendrik Petrus, van Tonder, Charme, van Vuuren, Suleen, van Wyk, Janri, van Zyl, Sudene, Wabule, Agnes, Wacays, Abdirahman, Waheed Mowafy, Ghada, Waisiko, Bethleen, Walawah, David, Walithandia, Eziron, Wamwaki, John, Wataaka, Nicholas, Wessels, Nelia, Wessels, Nelia, Williams, Emmanuel, WILLIAMS, Omolara, Woldegiorgis, Abel, Wolfaardt, George, Wondossen, Mekete, Woodun, Ritish, Workineh, Saleamlak Tigabie, Wubetu, Solomon, Yahia, Mohamed, Yakubu, Hamisu, Yakubu, Saidu Yusuf, Yalewu, Dawit Zerihun, YAMEOGO, T. Azer-Clovis, Yeboah, Francis, YENYI AHUKA LONGOMBE, Thérèse, Younes, Eman, Young, Chad, Younis, Nageia, Younus, Tarig Yousuf Ibrahim, YUSUF, STEPHEN, Zaki, Fatima, Zbida, Ibrahim, Zenda, Thubelihle, ZERIZER, Yassine, Zingoni, Kudzai, Zitouni, Hayett, ZONGO, P. Valentin, Zubi, Abdalrahem, Zulu, Nonhlanhla, Zulu, Nqobile, Yakubu, Hamisu, Yakubu, Saidu Yusuf, Yalewu, Dawit Zerihun, YAMEOGO, T. Azer-Clovis, Yeboah, Francis, YENYI AHUKA LONGOMBE, Thérèse, Younes, Eman, Young, Chad, Younis, Nageia, Younus, Tarig Yousuf Ibrahim, YUSUF, STEPHEN, Zaki, Fatima, Zbida, Ibrahim, Zenda, Thubelihle, ZERIZER, Yassine, Zingoni, Kudzai, Zitouni, Hayett, ZONGO, P. Valentin, Zubi, Abdalrahem, Zulu, Nonhlanhla, and Zulu, Nqobile
- Abstract
Safe anaesthesia and surgery are a public health imperative. There are few data describing outcomes for children undergoing anaesthesia and surgery in Africa. We aimed to get robust epidemiological data to describe patient care and outcomes for children undergoing anaesthesia and surgery in hospitals in Africa.
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- 2024
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19. Incidence and risk factors of inguinal hernia occurred after radical prostatectomy-comparisons of different approaches
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Liu, Lijia, Xu, Haoxiang, Qi, Feng, Wang, Shangqian, Shadhu, Kamleshsingh, Ramlagun-Mungur, Dadhija, and Wang, Shui
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- 2020
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20. A real-time network traffic classification system using cost-sensitive deep neural networks
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Bechoo, Chandrashekhar and Mungur, Avinash
- Abstract
Due to the continuous growth of Internet and online applications, network traffic classification is not only becoming one of the most crucial disciplines in network management but is also becoming quintessential for providing advanced tasks such as Quality of Service and network security. Moreover, even though many studies have been undertaken in recent years, real-time encrypted traffic classification continues to be an important challenge in the field of network traffic classification. Therefore, in this paper a real-time network traffic classification system is proposed together with five new models. The real-time classification system classified each incoming real-time packets into appropriate classes of interest and the five new models make use of a cost-sensitive learning strategy to deal with the unbalanced data problem during the training phase. The proposed models, which are called Cost-Sensitive Long-Short Term Memory (CSLSTM), Cost-Sensitive Gated Recurrent Unit (CSGRU), Cost-Sensitive Convolution Neural Network (CSCNN), CSNN with LSTM and CSCNN with GRU, can handle both traffic categorization and application identification. These proposed models were compared with prominent methods in this field and the proposed CSCNN was observed to outperform the researched deep learning models by at least 4% to 16% in correctly classifying packets from the ISCX VPN-nonVPN dataset.
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- 2024
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21. Presencing Culture: Ethnology Museums, Objects, and Spaces
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Gaudelli, William and Mungur, Amy
- Abstract
Ethnology museums are pedagogical. As educators attempting to make sense of how museums teach about the world, the authors of this article are especially interested in how ethnology museums curate otherness through objects, texts, and spaces, and how these combine to present a narrative of others. Ellsworth has referred to this as the "pedagogical address of the museum," which includes analyzing whose stories are authorized, how those identities are represented, and what is made of those representations by visitors (Ellsworth 2005). In this article the authors examine a variety of pedagogical concerns related to the use of objects in museums, including the materials that bring a thing into presence in a museum and the attendant absence this presence implies, the interpretive space that surrounds objects in museums, and the necessary distortion that objects create in their effort to conjure another, displaced reality. These pedagogical concerns are not unique to objects, of course, as any representation such as words, images, and sounds bear similar burdens. But they focus on museums because they are understood as a significant place of objects and, as such, offer a repository of insights that can be brought to bear on other institutions, such as schools. After this survey of issues, the authors consider what can be gleaned from how presencing works with objects and museums in order to apply these practices to the work of educators and researchers of education. They conclude that if we can observe how ethnology museums are parasitic on our urge to possess objects as stand-ins for knowledge, and how that has been tempered by museums themselves in the past two decades, then we have a great deal to gain about how people come to knowledge differently. The critique of ethnology museums' efforts to make distant others present can be engaged to allow an earnest reflection on the dissemination practices of educational research and the interpretive bind in which work is found. If we can consider how any object, removed from an ontological terrain that has plasticity and is yet uniquely congruent with a moment in time and place, then we can learn much while recalling that there is much we cannot know. And if we can consider how we make objects of others in our efforts to write, then there is even more insight to be gained about the limits of our claims and the possibilities that exist through that recognition. Herein lies the hope for social science, to pedagogically encounter all that we attempt to explain and know.
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- 2014
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22. Cultural Representations in/as the Global Studies Curriculum: Seeing and Knowing China in the United States
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Mungur, Amy
- Abstract
This study is an examination of how two popular magazines, "National Geographic" and "Life" magazine, and one educational journal, "Social Education," perform the work of representation in general, and representing China more specifically. Drawing on postcolonial theorists (Blaut, 1993; Said, 1978; Tchen, 1999; wa Thiong'o, 1986; Willinsky, 1998), the perspectives employed throughout this study explore how representations can work to fix meaning and extend difference through imperialist structures and an orientalist lens. In addition, theories of photographic representation work alongside postcolonial perspectives to draw out the constructed nature of representation, and how representation--through language and/or image--can work to capture and secure the meaning of difference and perpetuate division. "National Geographic," "Life," and "Social Education" are pedagogical in different ways, yet all three used language and image to bring China into view for the Western reader. Conceptualized as sources of cultural pedagogy, these journals employed specific pedagogical practices, which reinforced imperialist structures of Western dominance over the non-Western world. Notably, "National Geographic"'s travelogue, "Life"'s photo-essay, and "Social Education"'s educational resources, worked to teach/instruct their readers, primarily middle class Americans, about China. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2014
23. Endovascular Treatment of Congenital Internal Carotid-Jugular Fistula
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Ming Wang, Weijian Fan, Rajneesh Mungur, Jun Gu, and Shu Wan
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internal carotid-jugular fistula ,internal carotid artery ,jugular vein ,endovascular treatment ,stent ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
A carotid-jugular fistula is a direct communication between the carotid artery and the jugular vein. Both congenital and spontaneous internal carotid-jugular fistulas are extremely rare. We describe the first case of successful endovascular treatment for a congenital internal carotid-jugular fistula. We report a 64-year-old woman who presented with a pulsatile mass swelling over the left cervical region and right hemiparesis after cough. Digital subtraction angiography confirmed the diagnosis of left high-flow internal carotid-jugular fistula. The fistula was successfully treated by fractional stent-assisted embolization.
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- 2018
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24. The Reconstitution of Aapravasi Ghat, a Nineteenth-Century Immigration Depot in the Capital City of Port Louis, Mauritius, through Archaeology
- Author
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Mungur-Medhi, Jayshree
- Published
- 2016
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25. Effect of Arteriovenous Anastomosis on Blood Pressure Reduction in Patients With Isolated Systolic Hypertension Compared With Combined Hypertension
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Christian Ott, Melvin D. Lobo, Paul A. Sobotka, Felix Mahfoud, Alice Stanton, John Cockcroft, Neil Sulke, Eamon Dolan, Markus van der Giet, Joachim Hoyer, Stephen S. Furniss, John P. Foran, Adam Witkowski, Andrzej Januszewicz, Danny Schoors, Konstantinos Tsioufis, Benno J. Rensing, Manish Saxena, Benjamin Scott, G. André Ng, Stephan Achenbach, Roland E. Schmieder, Michael Schmid, Ajay Jain, Charles Knight, Anthony Mathur, Peter Balmforth, Sandra F. Luitjens, Gerard Smits, Dhanraj Mungur, Aleksander Prejbisz, Jacek Kadziela, Elżbieta Florczak, Joseph Galvin, and Kyriakos Dimitriadis
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arteriovenous anastomosis ,combined hypertension ,isolated systolic hypertension ,treatment resistant hypertension ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
BackgroundOptions for interventional therapy to lower blood pressure (BP) in patients with treatment‐resistant hypertension include renal denervation and the creation of an arteriovenous anastomosis using the ROX coupler. It has been shown that BP response after renal denervation is greater in patients with combined hypertension (CH) than in patients with isolated systolic hypertension (ISH). We analyzed the effect of ROX coupler implantation in patients with CH as compared with ISH. Methods and ResultsThe randomized, controlled, prospective ROX Control Hypertension Study included patients with true treatment‐resistant hypertension (office systolic BP ≥140 mm Hg, average daytime ambulatory BP ≥135/85 mm Hg, and treatment with ≥3 antihypertensive drugs including a diuretic). In a post hoc analysis, we stratified patients with CH (n=31) and ISH (n=11). Baseline office systolic BP (177±18 mm Hg versus 169±17 mm Hg, P=0.163) and 24‐hour ambulatory systolic BP (159±16 mm Hg versus 154±11 mm Hg, P=0.463) did not differ between patients with CH and those with ISH. ROX coupler implementation resulted in a significant reduction in office systolic BP (CH: −29±21 mm Hg versus ISH: −22±31 mm Hg, P=0.445) and 24‐hour ambulatory systolic BP (CH: −14±20 mm Hg versus ISH: −13±15 mm Hg, P=0.672), without significant differences between the two groups. The responder rate (office systolic BP reduction ≥10 mm Hg) after 6 months was not different (CH: 81% versus ISH: 82%, P=0.932). ConclusionsOur data suggest that creation of an arteriovenous anastomosis using the ROX coupler system leads to a similar reduction of office and 24‐hour ambulatory systolic BP in patients with combined and isolated systolic hypertension. Clinical Trial RegistrationURL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01642498.
- Published
- 2016
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26. Islamist Distortions: Hizb ut- Tahrir a Breeding Ground for Al- Qaida Recruitment
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Krishna Mungur
- Subjects
Fundamentalism ,History ,Ideology ,Islamic culture and politics ,Nonstate actors ,Threat assessment ,Military Science - Abstract
In 1953, a radical splinter organization from the Muslim Brotherhood,Hizb ut-Tahrir (HuT), was founded by the Al-Azhar University (Cairo,Egypt) educated jurist Sheikh Taqiuddin an-Nabhani who criticized theMuslim Brotherhood for collaborating with Egyptian secularists, such as Gamal Abdel Nasser. A sizable portion of the more radical members of the Muslim Brotherhood broke away, to join Nabhani's budding movement. Today, HuT is known to operate in more than forty countries, calling for the restoration of the Islamic Caliphate, with a history of violence and links to violent terrorist organizations. Given increasing tensions in the region over the presence of coalition troops, Predator drone airstrikes, a destabilized Pakistan, and lawless regions in Afghanistan, HuT is well positioned to amplify the strategic threat to coalition forces serving in the Pakistan and Afghanistan theaters.
- Published
- 2009
27. Improved drought tolerance of transgenic Zea mays plants that express the glutamate dehydrogenase gene (gdhA) of E. coli
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Lightfoot, David A., Mungur, Rajsree, Ameziane, Rafiqa, Nolte, Scott, Long, Lynn, Bernhard, Karen, Colter, Andrew, Jones, Karen, Iqbal, M. J., Varsa, Edward, and Young, Brian
- Published
- 2007
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28. Water potential is maintained during water deficit in Nicotiana tabacum expressing the Escherichia coli glutamate dehydrogenase gene
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Mungur, R., Wood, A. J., and Lightfoot, D. A.
- Published
- 2006
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29. The Arabidopsis thaliana brassinosteroid receptor (AtBRI1) contains a domain that functions as a guanylyl cyclase in vitro.
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Lusisizwe Kwezi, Stuart Meier, Lyndon Mungur, Oziniel Ruzvidzo, Helen Irving, and Chris Gehring
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundGuanylyl cyclases (GCs) catalyze the formation of the second messenger guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) from guanosine 5'-triphosphate (GTP). Cyclic GMP has been implicated in an increasing number of plant processes, including responses to abiotic stresses such as dehydration and salt, as well as hormones.Principle findingsHere we used a rational search strategy based on conserved and functionally assigned residues in the catalytic centre of annotated GCs to identify candidate GCs in Arabidopsis thaliana and show that one of the candidates is the brassinosteroid receptor AtBR1, a leucine rich repeat receptor like kinase. We have cloned and expressed a 114 amino acid recombinant protein (AtBR1-GC) that harbours the putative catalytic domain, and demonstrate that this molecule can convert GTP to cGMP in vitro.ConclusionsOur results suggest that AtBR1 may belong to a novel class of GCs that contains both a cytosolic kinase and GC domain, and thus have a domain organisation that is not dissimilar to that of atrial natriuretic peptide receptors, NPR1 and NPR2. The findings also suggest that cGMP may have a role as a second messenger in brassinosteroid signalling. In addition, it is conceivable that other proteins containing the extended GC search motif may also have catalytic activity, thus implying that a significant number of GCs, both in plants and animals, remain to be discovered, and this is in keeping with the fact that the single cellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contains over 90 annotated putative CGs.
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- 2007
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30. Acoustic Characteristics of Various Treatment Panel Designs for HSCT Ejector Liner Acoustic Technology Development Program
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Salikuddin, M, Kraft, R. E, Syed, A. a, Vu, D. D, Mungur, P, Langenbrunner, L. E, and Majjigi, R. K
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Aircraft Propulsion And Power - Abstract
The objectives of the initial effort (Phase I) of HSR Liner Technology Program, the selection of promising liner concepts, design and fabrication of these concepts for laboratory tests, testing these liners in the laboratory by using impedance tube and flow ducts, and developing empirical impedance/suppression correlation, are successfully completed. Acoustic and aerodynamic criteria for the liner design are established. Based on these criteria several liners are designed. The liner concepts designed and fabricated include Single-Degree-of-Freedom (SDOF), Two-Degree-of-Freedom (2DOF), and Bulk Absorber. Two types of SDOF treatment are fabricated, one with a perforated type face plate and the other with a wiremesh (woven) type faceplate. In addition, special configurations of these concepts are also included in the design. Several treatment panels are designed for parametric study. In these panels the facesheets of different porosity, hole diameter, and sheet thickness are utilized. Several deep panels (i.e., 1 in. deep) are designed and instrumented to measure DC flow resistance and insitu impedance in the presence of grazing flow. Basic components of these panels (i.e., facesheets, bulk materials, etc.) are also procured and tested. The results include DC flow resistance, normal impedance, and insertion loss.
- Published
- 2006
31. Metabolic profiling of laser microdissected vascular bundles of Arabidopsis thaliana
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Fiehn Oliver, Mungur Rajsree, Schad Martina, and Kehr Julia
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laser microdissection ,GC-TOF MS ,tissue-specific analysis ,metabolite profiling ,vascular bundle ,Plant culture ,SB1-1110 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Background Laser microdissection is a useful tool for collecting tissue-specific samples or even single cells from animal and plant tissue sections. This technique has been successfully employed to study cell type-specific expression at the RNA, and more recently also at the protein level. However, metabolites were not amenable to analysis after laser microdissection, due to the procedures routinely applied for sample preparation. Using standard tissue fixation and embedding protocols to prepare histological sections, metabolites are either efficiently extracted by dehydrating solvents, or washed out by embedding agents. Results In this study, we used cryosectioning as an alternative method that preserves sufficient cellular structure while minimizing metabolite loss by excluding any solute exchange steps. Using this pre-treatment procedure, Arabidopsis thaliana stem sections were prepared for laser microdissection of vascular bundles. Collected samples were subsequently analyzed by gas chromatography-time of flight mass spectrometry (GC-TOF MS) to obtain metabolite profiles. From 100 collected vascular bundles (~5,000 cells), 68 metabolites could be identified. More than half of the identified metabolites could be shown to be enriched or depleted in vascular bundles as compared to the surrounding tissues. Conclusion This study uses the example of vascular bundles to demonstrate for the first time that it is possible to analyze a comprehensive set of metabolites from laser microdissected samples at a tissue-specific level, given that a suitable sample preparation procedure is used.
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- 2005
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32. Soil Lead Pollution Alongside Roads In Mauritius: Preliminary Results
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Mungur, P and Choong Kwet Yive, NS
- Abstract
No Abstract
- Published
- 2016
33. P122 Factors affecting orthognathic surgery.
- Author
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Mungur, Ashleigh, Shahir, Elena, and Mahmud, Ayla
- Published
- 2023
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34. The effect of general anaesthesia and neuromuscular blockade on Eustachian tube compliance: a prospective study.
- Author
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Mungur, Akeelesh, Cochard, Guy, Ozier, Yves, and Lafère, Pierre
- Abstract
Objective: The most common complications of hyperbaric oxygen treatment (HBOT) are related to pressure changes on gas-containing cavities. Therefore, inability to auto-inflate the middle ear may result in transient or permanent hearing loss. However, it seems that middle ear barotrauma (MEBt) does not develop more often in mechanically ventilated patients than in ambulatory patients. This might be explained by deep sedation of these patients. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine whether anaesthesia and/or neuromuscular blockade can influence Eustachian tube (ET) function. Methods: Forty patients who were undergoing surgery under general anaesthesia were enrolled in this prospective study. ET function was evaluated by tympanography performed three times: before induction of general anaesthesia (baseline), after induction with sufentanyl/propofol and after full blockade was achieved with a long-acting neuromuscular blocking agent. Results: There were no differences in ear volume (P = 0.19) and ear pressure (P = 0.07). There was a significant variation in compliance on tympanography after the induction of general anaesthesia (P = 0.009). Compared to the baseline, this variation was characterized by an increase after induction of anaesthesia (24 ± 7.13%, P < 0.01) and neuromuscular blockade (23 ± 8.9%, P < 0.05). The difference between after induction and after neuromuscular blockade was not statistically significant (P = 0.13). Discussion: the findings of this trial suggest that the administration of hypnotic drugs associated with opioids improves ET compliance. Therefore it may have favourable prophylactic effects on MEBt in ventilated intensive care unit patients scheduled for HBOT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
35. High speed turboprop aeroacoustic study (single rotation). Volume 1: Model development
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Whitfield, C. E, Gliebe, P. R, Mani, R, and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Acoustics - Abstract
A frequency-domain noncompact-source theory for the steady loading and volume-displacement (thickness) noise of high speed propellers has been developed and programmed. Both near field and far field effects have been considered. The code utilizes blade surface pressure distributions obtained from three-dimensional nonlinear aerodynamic flow field analysis programs as input for evaluating the steady loading noise. Simplified mathematical models of the velocity fields induced at the propeller disk by nearby wing and fuselage surfaces and by angle-of-attack operation have been developed to provide estimates of the unsteady loading imposed on the propeller by these potential field type interactions. These unsteady blade loadings have been coupled to a chordwise compact propeller unsteady loading noise model to provide predictions of unsteady loading noise caused by these installation effects. Finally, an analysis to estimate the corrections to be applied to the free-field noise predictions in order to arrive at the measurable fuselage sound pressure levels has been formulated and programmed. This analysis considers the effects of fuselage surface reflection and diffraction together with surface boundary layer refraction. The steady loading and thickness model and the unsteady loading model have been verified using NASA-supplied data for the SR-2 and SR-3 model propfans. In addition, the steady loading and thickness model has been compared with data from the SR-6 model propfan. These theoretical models have been employed in the evaluation of the SR-7 powered Gulfstream aircraft in terms of noise characteristics at representative takeoff, cruise, and approach operating conditions. In all cases, agreement between theory and experiment is encouraging.
- Published
- 1989
36. Influence of grazing flow on duct wall normal impedances
- Author
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Mungur, P and Whitesides, J. L
- Subjects
Fluid Mechanics And Heat Transfer - Abstract
A theory is developed for evaluating the normal impedance of an orifice connecting a cylindrical cavity to a flow duct. The impedance of a piston velocity source at the orifice is calculated in terms of the cavity modes which are modified by the presence of a vortex flow. The strength of the vortex is related to the mean flow in the duct. Results are presented showing the variation of the normal impedance spectrum with the cavity vortex. The trends of these variations are confirmed by comparison with measurements.
- Published
- 1975
37. Acoustic wave propagation in a lined duct with non-uniform admittance
- Author
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Yu, J. C, Smith, C. D, and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Acoustics - Abstract
The problem of acoustic wave propagation in a lined duct with non-uniform liner admittance distribution has been analyzed. Two different methods of solution are discussed. Computations are made for a simple example of symmetrically lined two-dimensional duct containing a unit pressure source distribution. The non-uniform admittance variation is assumed to be a homogeneous random function along the direction of wave propagation. The influences of the spatial scale of the admittance variation, the magnitude of the variation and their dependence on mean liner admittance on sound attenuation are presented. The predicted trends agree qualitatively with existing experimental findings.
- Published
- 1975
38. Sound propagation in curved ducts
- Author
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Myers, M. K and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Acoustics - Abstract
An analysis of the sound field in a circularly curved duct of rectangular cross-section is carried out for both rigid and locally-reacting absorbing walls. The field is excited by a piston source at one end of the duct section, and comparisons of the acoustic field and the net power flow along the duct axis are made with corresponding results for a straight duct section for various frequencies. It is found that in general the curved duct yields a significant increase in sound attenuation along the duct axis as compared to the straight duct.
- Published
- 1975
39. Duct acoustics and acoustic finite element method
- Author
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Kapur, A and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Acoustics - Abstract
A comprehensive solution method - Acoustic Finite Element Method - has been proposed. In order to generate confidence in the method proposed, the problem of influence of shear flow in a two-dimensional channel on sound propagation from an arbitrary source distribution has been theoretically formulated. From the preliminary investigation of application of acoustic finite element method, it seems that it can provide solutions to problems concerning the transmission of sound in variable area ducts, or in ducts in which the boundary layer depends on the streamwise variable, or in ducts with discontinuities in lining impedance and with end termination impedances, both the inlet and exhaust jet flows being taken into account.
- Published
- 1975
40. Analysis of acoustic radiation in a jet flow environment
- Author
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Mungur, P, Plumblee, H. E, and Doak, P. E
- Subjects
Aerodynamics - Abstract
The analysis of sound fields from arbitrary source distributions in terms of Legendre and spherical Hankel functions is well known. The purpose of this paper is to extend this classical method of analysis to environments such as jet flows where flow and flow gradients are inherently present. The wave-equation governing the radiation of sound in such an environment is derived. The steady state flow and flow gradients in the axial and transverse directions appear as coefficients in the terms of the wave-equation. A semi-numerical method is used to solve the wave-equation in terms of modified spherical harmonics yielding the phase velocities and the directivities of an infinite set of modes. The directivity of each mode is obtained in terms of modified Legendre functions by numerical integration. Some results of these directivity and phase-velocity calculations are presented for a limited number of frequency and flow parameters. Both convective and shear refraction are shown to be important.
- Published
- 1974
41. Sound fields in a lined annular flow duct with lined radial splitters
- Author
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Mungur, P and Kapur, A
- Subjects
Aerodynamics - Abstract
High attenuation in the inlet duct of fan-jet engines is limited mainly because of two factors: the duct length is short and the frequency is high giving rise to a large duct width to wavelength ratio. Lined radial splitters may be installed. In this configuration not only is the absorbing surface area increased, the acoustic propagation properties in each of the segmented ducts are different to those in a cylindrical or annular duct without radial splitters. Such differences in properties can be used to advantage for mismatching the acoustic source. A lower order spinning mode must propagate as a higher order (integral or fractional) spinning mode. Cut-off phenomena may also be used to advantage. A theoretical modal analysis is made of the sound inside one segment of the annular duct with lined radial splitters.
- Published
- 1974
42. A study of the prediction of cruise noise and laminar flow control noise criteria for subsonic air transports
- Author
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Swift, G and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Acoustics - Abstract
General procedures for the prediction of component noise levels incident upon airframe surfaces during cruise are developed. Contributing noise sources are those associated with the propulsion system, the airframe and the laminar flow control (LFC) system. Transformation procedures from the best prediction base of each noise source to the transonic cruise condition are established. Two approaches to LFC/acoustic criteria are developed. The first is a semi-empirical extension of the X-21 LFC/acoustic criteria to include sensitivity to the spectrum and directionality of the sound field. In the second, the more fundamental problem of how sound excites boundary layer disturbances is analyzed by deriving and solving an inhomogeneous Orr-Sommerfeld equation in which the source terms are proportional to the production and dissipation of sound induced fluctuating vorticity. Numerical solutions are obtained and compared with corresponding measurements. Recommendations are made to improve and validate both the cruise noise prediction methods and the LFC/acoustic criteria.
- Published
- 1979
43. Studies of the acoustic transmission characteristics of coaxial nozzles with inverted velocity profiles: Comprehensive data report
- Author
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Dean, P. D, Salikuddin, M, Ahuja, K. K, Plumblee, H. E, and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Acoustics - Abstract
The efficiency of internal noise radiation through a coannular exhaust nozzle with an inverted velocity profile was studied. A preliminary investigation was first undertaken (1) to define the test parameters which influence the internal noise radiation; (2) to develop a test methodology which could realistically be used to examine the effects of the test parameters; and (3) to validate this methodology. The result was the choice of an acoustic impulse as the internal noise source in the jet nozzles. Noise transmission characteristics of a coannular nozzle system were then investigated. In particular, the effects of fan convergence angle, core extension length to annulus height ratio and flow Mach numbers and temperatures were studied. Relevant spectral data only is presented in the form of normalized nozzle transfer function versus nondimensional frequency.
- Published
- 1979
44. Studies of the acoustic transmission characteristics of coaxial nozzles with inverted velocity profiles, volume 1
- Author
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Dean, P. D, Salikuddin, M, Ahuja, K. K, Plumblee, H. E, and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Acoustics - Abstract
The efficiency of internal noise radiation through coannular exhaust nozzle with an inverted velocity profile was studied. A preliminary investigation was first undertaken to: (1) define the test parameters which influence the internal noise radiation; (2) develop a test methodology which could realistically be used to examine the effects of the test parameters; (3) and to validate this methodology. The result was the choice of an acoustic impulse as the internal noise source in the in the jet nozzles. Noise transmission characteristics of a nozzle system were then investigated. In particular, the effects of fan nozzle convergence angle, core extention length to annulus height ratio, and flow Mach number and temperatures were studied. The results are presented as normalized directivity plots.
- Published
- 1979
45. Acoustic wave propagation in an axisymmetric swirling jet.
- Author
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Yu, J. C and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Fluid Mechanics - Abstract
An analysis has been developed to study the acoustic wave propagation in an axisymmetric swirling subsonic jet flow. The governing convected wave equation derived in the spherical coordinates includes mean shears, shear gradients and pressure gradients. The directivity patterns for various spinning and non-spinning modes due to the influence of the mean jet swirl were obtained by numerically integrating the governing wave equation. The mean flow field used in the computation was that obtained semiempirically for subsonic swirling turbulent jet and is completely specified once the degree of swirl is known. The dependence of sound directivity on jet Mach number, swirl ratio and frequency are discussed.
- Published
- 1973
46. Sound interaction with a helical flow contained in an annular duct with radial gradients of flow, density and temperature.
- Author
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Kapur, A and Mungur, P
- Subjects
Fluid Mechanics - Published
- 1973
47. Abstract 279: Ecpr, A New Source Of Organs
- Author
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Hutin, Alice, BOURDIAULT, Alexandre, Raphalen, Jean Herle, VALENTIN, Thomas, Soumagnac, Tal, VIMPERE, Damien, Ammar, Hatem, DAGRON, Christelle, An, Kim, MUNGUR, Akshay, Carli, Pierre, and Lamhaut, Lionel
- Abstract
Purpose:The scarcity of renal grafts is a major public health problem. New strategies are sought to overcome the problem of organ shortage. Organ donation after brain death is a major source of renal grafts. In our center, extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) is used as a 2nd line of treatment for refractory cardiac arrest. Despite this treatment, some patients present brain death and become eligible to organ donation. To this day, information is scarce on the long-term outcome of renal grafts from these patients. The objective of this study was to evaluate this outcome.Methods:We conducted a monocentric retrospective observational study between 2011 and 2017. The study was validated by the local ethics committee. We included patients who were eligible to organ donation after diagnosis of brain death and from whom at least one organ graft was procured and transplanted. Among these patients we compared those who were treated by ECPR for refractory cardiac arrest (ECPR group) and those who were not (control group).Results:During the study period, 45 patients were included, respectively 23 and 22 in the control and ECPR groups. Patients from the ECPR group were younger with less comorbidities (respectively 41+/-13 vs 63+/-19 years in the ECPR and control groups, p<0,044). However, they were more severe during their ICU stay, as shown by their SAPS II score which was significantly higher (80+/-13 vs 61+/-15 in the ECPR and control groups respectively, p<0,001). A total of 68 renal grafts were procured, transplanted, and studied (34 in each group). There was no difference between the 2 groups in terms of graft survival at 1 year (94.1 vs 82.4% in the ECPR and control group respectively, p=0,52).Discussion-Conclusion:Our study outlines that kidneys harvested from patients treated with ECPR have similar long-term outcome to organs retrieved from patients developing brain death without ECPR. Younger age and absence of comorbidities seem to compensate patient severity after cardiac arrest. One could hypothesize on a protective effect of ECPR on kidney function due to continuous blood flow delivered in the descending aorta. With the increase of ECPR cases, this strategy could be an increasing source of organs to address the issue of organ shortage.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Abstract 275: The First Series Of Hypothermic Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrests In A Temperate Urban Area Resuscitated With Prehospital Or Inhospital Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: A Fifteen-year Observationnal Study
- Author
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Soumagnac, Tal, Raphalen, Jean Herle, Yahiaoui, Samraa, Vimpere, Damien, An, Kim, Mungur, Akshay, Dagron, Christelle, Carli, Pierre, Hutin, Alice, and Lamhaut, Lionel
- Abstract
Introduction:Accidental hypothermia designates an unpredicted drop in body temperature below 35°C. The risk of ventricular fibrillation is major below 28°C and cardiac arrest is almost certain below 24°C. In such cases, conventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation is often inefficient.Hypothesis:Hypothermic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) occurs even in temperate urban areas and extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) has shown good outcomes with this indication.Methods:We conducted a retrospective observational study of patients admitted to a university hospital in Paris, France. We reviewed patients consecutively admitted between January 1, 2008 and April 31, 2022 and treated with prehospital or inhospital ECPR following refractory hypothermic OHCA. The primary outcome was survival at 28 days with good neurological outcomes, defined as Cerebral Performance Category (CPC) 1 or 2. We compared patients according to their cold air or cold water exposure.Results:A total of 38 patients were analysed. Patient characteristics and outcomes are detailed in Table 1. A total of 15 patients (40%) survived at 28 days, 13 (34%) of whom with good neurological outcomes despite a median low-flow of 85 min. No patient survived with good neurological outcomes in the cold-water group.Conclusion:Survival rates with favourable neurological outcomes at 28 days stood at 34% of all patients with hypothermic OHCA who were resuscitated with ECPR. Prehospital ECPR tended to show better survival results (39% vs 30%) but further data are needed to confirm this as the difference was not statistically significant. We found no survivors in the cold-water group raising the question of ECPR indication for these patients in temperate urban areas. In any case, temperature measurement should be systematic in OHCA and there should be predefined care pathways including ECPR for hypothermic OHCA patients even in urban settings with a temperate climate.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Acoustic Characteristics of Perforated Sheets With Throughflow in a High Intensity Noise Environment
- Author
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Salikuddin, M., primary, Syed, A.A., additional, and Mungur, P., additional
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A distributed vaporization time-lag model for gas turbine combustor dynamics
- Author
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MEHTA, JAYESH, primary, MUNGUR, P., additional, DODDS, W., additional, and DODGE, L., additional
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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