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1.
Food Chem ; 138(2-3): 1959-66, 2013 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23411331

ABSTRACT

The potential impact of nanomaterials on the environment and on human health has already triggered legislation requiring labelling of products containing nanoparticles. However, so far, no validated analytical methods for the implementation of this legislation exist. This paper outlines a generic approach for the validation of methods for detection and quantification of nanoparticles in food samples. It proposes validation of identity, selectivity, precision, working range, limit of detection and robustness, bearing in mind that each "result" must include information about the chemical identity, particle size and mass or particle number concentration. This has an impact on testing for selectivity and trueness, which also must take these aspects into consideration. Selectivity must not only be tested against matrix constituents and other nanoparticles, but it shall also be tested whether the methods apply equally well to particles of different suppliers. In trueness testing, information whether the particle size distribution has changed during analysis is required. Results are largely expected to follow normal distributions due to the expected high number of particles. An approach of estimating measurement uncertainties from the validation data is given.


Subject(s)
Food Analysis/methods , Food Contamination/analysis , Nanoparticles/analysis
2.
Int J Organ Transplant Med ; 2(2): 66-74, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25013597

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Despite significant advancements in renal transplantation, certain basic surgical practices such as the routine use of ureteral stents (US) remain controversial. A recent met-analysis of ureteral stenting concluded that the routine use of US resulted in improved outcomes. In contrast, the indiscriminate use of US can lead to adverse complications. OBJECTIVE: To better define this question, we reviewed our single center experience in which US were placed selectively. METHODS: 301 patients were eligible to be enrolled. 55 living donor and 246 deceased-donor charts were analyzed for donor and recipient clinical characteristics, immunosuppressive therapy and outcomes. RESULTS: 28 US were placed for either small bladder capacity (n=7), unhealthy appearing bladder tissue (n=8) or for an uncertain vascular supply to the ureter (n=13). Patients with US did not develop urinary leaks, 8 (28%) developed complications including obstruction, encrustation, and urinary tract infections. 12 (4.3%) non-stented patients developed a clinically significant urinary leak. Risk factors for urinary leaks included dual and en-bloc pediatric donor kidney transplants, extended criteria donors and the use of single U stitch technique for ureteral anastomoses. CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrate that the majority of patients can be successfully transplanted without the routine use of US. Selective use of US should be reserved for high-risk situations.

4.
SAR QSAR Environ Res ; 17(3): 265-84, 2006 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16815767

ABSTRACT

The OECD has proposed five principles for validation of QSAR models used for regulatory purposes. Here we present a case study investigating how these principles can be applied to models based on Kohonen and counter propagation neural networks. The study is based on a counter propagation network model that has been built using toxicity data in fish fathead minnow for 541 compounds. The study demonstrates that most, if not all, of the OECD criteria may be met when modeling using this neural network approach.


Subject(s)
Models, Biological , Neural Networks, Computer , Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity , Animal Use Alternatives , Animals , Cyprinidae , Databases, Factual , Lethal Dose 50 , Reproducibility of Results , Water Pollutants, Chemical/classification
5.
J Med Virol ; 70 Suppl 1: S42-7, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12627486

ABSTRACT

Heteroduplex mobility assay was used to identify variants of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) circulating in the United Kingdom and elsewhere. Forty variable positions were identified. Sixteen substitutions were non-synonymous, resulting in an amino acid change, the majority of which were clustered within surface expressed proteins. Phylogenetic analysis distinguished at least three major clades (strains A, B, C) supported by significant bootstrap values. Apart from the United Kingdom and Brazil where all three strains were found, genotypes appeared to be closely associated with the geographical region in which they were sampled. Allelic co-segregation of widely spaced single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) confirmed the genetic stability of the VZV. Recombination rates were difficult to calculate because of the low intra genotypic variation. However, one haplotype originating from Brazil is most parsimoniously explained as a recombinant between A and C strains, which co-occur in the region. Two further UK strains appeared to be recombinants between groups B and C.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Herpesvirus 3, Human/genetics , Africa , Asia , Base Sequence , Brazil , Chickenpox/virology , DNA, Viral/genetics , Asia, Eastern , Genotype , Herpes Zoster/virology , Herpesvirus 3, Human/classification , Herpesvirus 3, Human/isolation & purification , Humans , Phylogeny , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , United Kingdom
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