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1.
Anat Histol Embryol ; 53(4): e13075, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38881030

ABSTRACT

The gross morphological examination of native caprine heart valves revealed distinctive structural characteristics of the caprine's cardiac anatomy. Four primary orifices were identified, each protected by thin, valve-like structures. Atrioventricular orifices featured tricuspid and bicuspid valves, while the aorta and pulmonary arteries were guarded by semilunar valves. Within the atrioventricular apparatus, distinct features were observed including the tricuspid valve's three leaflets and the bicuspid valve's anterior and posterior leaflets. Ultrasonography provided insights into valve thickness and chordae tendineae lengths. Morphometric studies compared leaflets/cusps within individual native valves, showcasing significant variations in dimensions. Comparative analysis between native and decellularized valves highlighted the effects of decellularization on leaflet thickness and chordae tendineae lengths. Decellularized valves exhibited reduced dimensions compared to native valves, indicating successful removal of cellular components. While some dimensions remained unchanged post-decellularization, significant reductions were observed in leaflet thicknesses and chordae tendineae lengths. Notably, semilunar valve cusps displayed varying responses to decellularization, with significant reductions in cusp lengths observed in the aortic valve, while the pulmonary valve exhibited more subtle changes. These findings underscore the importance of understanding structural alterations in heart valves post-decellularization, providing valuable insights for tissue engineering applications and regenerative medicine.


Subject(s)
Goats , Heart Valves , Animals , Goats/anatomy & histology , Heart Valves/anatomy & histology , Pulmonary Valve/anatomy & histology , Chordae Tendineae/anatomy & histology , Aortic Valve/anatomy & histology , Tricuspid Valve/anatomy & histology , Ultrasonography/veterinary , Male
2.
Toxics ; 11(2)2023 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36851051

ABSTRACT

Cyanobacterial blooms have been recognized as a problem in fresh water for about 150 years. Over the past 50 years, experimental studies on the subject have gained importance considering the increasing need to control toxic cyanobacterial blooms. This article presents information on the different lines of research that have been undertaken on zooplankton-cyanobacteria interactions over the past 50 years. These include information on filtering/ingestion rates and phytoplankton preferences of small and large rotifers, cladocerans, and copepods; growth rates of zooplankton on cyanobacterial diets; feeding rates of other freshwater invertebrates on cyanobacteria; role of zooplankton in top-down biomanipulation efforts; effect of cyanotoxins on zooplankton; bioaccumulation of cyanotoxins; and physical and chemical control of cyanobacterial blooms. We also highlight measures that have led to successful lake management and improvement of water quality in selected waterbodies.

3.
Int J Surg Case Rep ; 99: 107653, 2022 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36115121

ABSTRACT

Prostate cancer is one of the most frequent cancers in males and commonly a disease of the older population, but it is increasingly seen among older adolescents and young adults. The common sites of metastasis of prostatic carcinoma are bones and regional lymph nodes. Testicular metastasis from prostatic carcinoma is an infrequent presentation. We report a case of a young patient with prostatic carcinoma and multiple metastases, including bilateral testis. A 40-year-old male presented with lower urinary tract voiding symptoms and back pain for three months. His prostate-specific antigen level was elevated at 13.98 ng/ml. A magnetic resonance imaging of the prostate revealed two PIRADS V lesions and metastases in multiple bones and regional lymph nodes. On follow up, the patient complained of bilateral testicular swelling and ultrasound scan of the testes revealed bilateral testicular metastasis. Fine needle aspiration cytology of right-side testicular lesion revealed malignant cells compatible with metastasis from prostate cancer. Later involvement of multilevel vertebral and skull metastases was identified by magnetic resonance imaging. A T3bN1M1c staging of prostate cancer was made, androgen deprivation therapy followed by chemo and radiotherapy was instituted, following extensive discussion with the patient. Unfortunately the patient succumbed to the illness during the course of treatment. This case report is of a patient with rare presentation of bilateral testicular metastasis with prostate cancer in young age.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(14): 146601, 2022 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35476495

ABSTRACT

We study many-body localization (MBL) for interacting one-dimensional lattice fermions in random (Anderson) and quasiperiodic (Aubry-Andre) models, focusing on the role of interaction range. We obtain the MBL quantum phase diagrams by calculating the experimentally relevant inverse participation ratio (IPR) at half-filling using exact diagonalization methods and extrapolating to the infinite system size. For short-range interactions, our results produce in the phase diagram a qualitative symmetry between weak and strong interaction limits. For long-range interactions, no such symmetry exists as the strongly interacting system is always many-body localized, independent of the effective disorder strength, and the system is analogous to a pinned Wigner crystal. We obtain various scaling exponents for the IPR, suggesting conditions for different MBL regimes arising from interaction effects.

5.
J Psychiatr Res ; 145: 250-255, 2021 Dec 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34952375

ABSTRACT

Although highly effective, electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) often produces cognitive side effects which can be a barrier for patients. Monitoring cognitive side effects during the acute course is therefore recommended to identify patients at increased risk for adverse outcomes. The Brief ECT Cognitive Screen (BECS) is a brief instrument designed to measure emerging cognitive side effects from ECT. The aim of this study was to examine the clinical utility of the BECS for predicting adverse cognitive outcomes in real world clinic settings. The study included data collated from four participating sites in the Clinical Alliance for ECT and Related treatments (CARE) network. The BECS was administered at pre ECT and post 3 or 4 ECT. The primary outcome was a ≥4 point decrease on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) from pretreatment to post ECT. Logistic multiple regression analyses examined the BECS and other relevant clinical and demographic and treatment factors as predictors. The final analysis included 623 patients with diverse indications for ECT including 53.6% with major depression and 33.7% with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. A higher total score on the BECS significantly predicted decline in Total Scores on the MoCA [B = 0.25 (0.08), p = 0.003], though not decline in MoCA Delayed Recall scores (p > 0.1). Other significant predictors included higher pretreatment MoCA Total Scores and female gender for verbal anterograde memory decline. This study confirmed that the BECS has clinical utility for identifying patients with both reduced and increased risk for adverse cognitive outcomes from ECT.

6.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34762559

ABSTRACT

The emerging contaminant 4-nonylphenol is an active ingredient in many surfactants. Though 4-nonylphenol has been reported in Mexican waterbodies, no stringent law is available to establish its permissible limits. Most ecotoxicological assays using zooplankton species are based on previously unexposed populations, and multigenerational experiments are rare. Plationus patulus and Brachionus havanaensis are widely distributed species in Mexico and have been used in ecotoxicological assessments. In this work, the median lethal concentration of 4-nonylphenol (LC50, 24 h) for both rotifer species was derived. Based on our acute toxicity data (24 h LC50 of 4-nonylphenol for P. patulus and B. havanaensis were 500 and 250 µg L-1, respectively), three sublethal concentrations (µg L-1) (7.81, 15.82 and 31.25 for B. havanaensis and 15.62, 31.25 and 62.5 for P. patulus) were used in the life table demography tests for two successive generations (F0 and F1) of either rotifer species. Regardless of the concentrations used, 4-nonylphenol had an adverse effect on both rotifer species over two successive generations. P. patulus was more sensitive than B. havanaensis in chronic toxicity tests. F1 generation of both rotifer species was far more adversely affected than the F0 in all toxicant treatments.


Subject(s)
Endocrine Disruptors , Rotifera , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Animals , Demography , Endocrine Disruptors/toxicity , Phenols , Toxicity Tests, Chronic , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity
7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 127(6): 067001, 2021 Aug 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34420352

ABSTRACT

We show that Floquet chiral topological superconductivity arises naturally in Josephson junctions made of magnetic topological insulator-superconductor sandwich structures. The Josephson phase modulation associated with an applied bias voltage across the junction drives the system into the anomalous Floquet chiral topological superconductor hosting chiral Majorana edge modes in the quasienergy spectrum, with the bulk Floquet bands carrying zero Chern numbers. The bias voltage acts as a tuning parameter enabling novel Floquet topological quantum phase transitions driving the system into a myriad of exotic Majorana-carrying Floquet topological superconducting phases. Our theory establishes a new paradigm for realizing Floquet chiral topological superconductivity in solid-state systems, which should be experimentally directly accessible.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 126(13): 137001, 2021 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33861104

ABSTRACT

We establish quasi-two-dimensional thin films of iron-based superconductors (FeSCs) as a new high-temperature platform for hosting intrinsic time-reversal-invariant helical topological superconductivity (TSC). Based on the combination of Dirac surface state and bulk extended s-wave pairing, our theory should be directly applicable to a large class of experimentally established FeSCs, opening a new TSC paradigm. In particular, an applied electric field serves as a "topological switch" for helical Majorana edge modes in FeSC thin films, allowing for an experimentally feasible design of gate-controlled helical Majorana circuits. Applying an in-plane magnetic field drives the helical TSC phase into a higher-order TSC carrying corner-localized Majorana zero modes. Our proposal should enable the experimental realization of helical Majorana fermions.

10.
Phys Rev Lett ; 126(3): 036803, 2021 Jan 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33543971

ABSTRACT

Inspired by the rich physics of twisted 2D bilayer moiré systems, we study Coulomb interacting systems subjected to two overlapping finite 1D lattice potentials of unequal periods through exact numerical diagonalization. Unmatching underlying lattice periods lead to a 1D bichromatic "moiré" superlattice with a large unit cell and consequently a strongly flattened band, exponentially enhancing the effective dimensionless electron-electron interaction strength and manifesting clear signatures of enhanced Mott gaps at discrete fillings. An important nonperturbative finding is a remarkable fine-tuning effect of the precise lattice commensuration, where slight variations in the relative lattice periods may lead to a suppression of the correlated insulating phase, in qualitative agreement with the observed fragility of the correlated insulating phase in twisted bilayer graphene. Our predictions, which should be directly verifiable in bichromatic optical lattices, establish that the competition between interaction and incommensuration is a key element of the physics of moiré superlattices.

11.
J Therm Biol ; 94: 102752, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33292993

ABSTRACT

Diurnal temperature fluctuations affect ectothermic species more than endothermic taxa. We tested the effect of three fixed temperatures (20, 25 and 30 °C) and a 24 h variable (20-30 °C) on the population growth and fatty acid profiles of the common rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus. Depending on the temperature treatment, the peak population abundances of B. calyciflorus varied from 65 to 80 ind./ml, the lowest being on variable temperature range. The rate of population increase varied from 0.31 to 0.52 per day, highest being at 30 °C. There was a curvilinear relationship between the population density and the egg ratio (number of eggs/female) in all the tested temperature regimes. The egg ratio was higher (>0.6) for treatments involving fixed temperatures, but for variable temperature regime, the egg ratios were lower (<0.5). Temperature also induced changes in the fatty acid content of B. calyciflorus. While the total saturated fatty acids increased, both mono-unsaturated and poly-unsaturated fatty acids decreased with increasing temperature regime. These results have been interpreted in relation to the role of temperature (both intensity and mode of exposure) on the population growth characteristics of rotifers.


Subject(s)
Fatty Acids/metabolism , Rotifera/metabolism , Temperature , Animals , Female , Ovum , Population Density
12.
Case Rep Urol ; 2020: 8858606, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33299634

ABSTRACT

Torsion of epididymal cyst (EC) is an exceedingly rare cause of acute scrotum in both children and adults. We add our case as the ninth case to literature which was an 8-year-old child presented with features of acute scrotum with history of EC on conservative management. Doppler sonography showed perfused normal bilateral testes and a 4.1 × 1.7 cm septate cystic lesion of right epididymis. On scrotal exploration, we found a haemorrhagic cystic lesion attached to the upper pole of right testis and twisted for 540 degrees with normal testis and appendage. Cyst was excised, and histopathology revealed a haemorrhagic EC. Our case was peculiar due to, presenting as acute scrotum in a child of 1-10 years age group who was conservatively managed for right-sided EC and presence of 540 degrees torsion.

13.
Soc Sci Med ; 264: 113310, 2020 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32877846

ABSTRACT

Team-based primary care offers a wide range of health services to patients by using interdisciplinary health care providers committed to delivering comprehensive, coordinated and high-quality care through team collaboration. Ontario's Family Health Team (FHT), the largest team-based practice model in Canada, was introduced to improve access to and effectiveness of primary health care services, and was available primarily for physicians paid under blended capitation models (Family Health Organizations and Family Health Networks). Using health administrative data on physicians practicing under blended capitation models in Ontario between 2006 and 2015, we study the impact of switching from non-FHT to FHTs on the production of capitated comprehensive care services, after-hours services, non-incentivized services, and services provided to non-enrolled patients by family physicians. We find that when in FHTs, physicians increase the production of total services and non-incentivized services by 26% and 5% per annum and reduce capitated comprehensive care services by 3.2% per annum. When in FHTs, physicians also see and enroll more patients relative to those practicing in non-FHTs. We find evidence of improved access to physician's services under team-based primary care, but switching to FHTs has no effect on the production of after-hours services and services provided to non-enrolled patients.


Subject(s)
Family Health , Patient Care Team , Humans , Ontario , Physicians, Family , Primary Health Care
14.
Environ Toxicol Chem ; 39(12): 2409-2419, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32926578

ABSTRACT

Many urban lakes in Mexico City such as Lake Chapultepec are infested with high densities of cyanobacteria, particularly Microcystis. We tested the effect of cyanotoxins from cyanobacterial crude extracts on the demographic variables of zooplankton. The rotifers Brachionus havanaensis and Brachionus calyciflorus, and the cladocerans Ceriodaphnia dubia and Moina macrocopa were used for the assays. Temperature effects on the response of B. calyciflorus and 2 clones of M. macrocopa were tested. We hypothesized that with an increase in cyanotoxin concentration and temperature there would be an increase in the adverse effect on the test species and that the clone of Moina previously exposed to cyanobacteria from Lake Chapultepec would be more resistant to the cyanotoxins. Demography experiments showed that B. havanaensis was more sensitive than C. dubia. The negative effect of the cyanobacterial crude extract on B. calyciflorus was greater at 30 °C than at 20 °C or 25 °C. The strain of M. macrocopa isolated from Lake Chapultepec was more resistant to the cyanotoxins than the strain that had not been previously exposed to the cyanobacteria. The present study indicated that cyanobacteria in Lake Chapultepec are highly toxic and, considering the recreational use of this lake, should be controlled. Environ Toxicol Chem 2020;39:2409-2419. © 2020 SETAC.


Subject(s)
Complex Mixtures/toxicity , Cyanobacteria/chemistry , Lakes/chemistry , Microcystins/toxicity , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity , Zooplankton/drug effects , Animals , Cladocera/drug effects , Ecotoxicology , Mexico , Rotifera/drug effects , Species Specificity , Time Factors
15.
Mar Pollut Bull ; 157: 111341, 2020 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32658699

ABSTRACT

Several abiotic factors influence the ecological responses of aquatic invertebrates to metal toxicity. We examined the effect of salinity (10, 20, and 30 psu) and temperature (25 and 32 °C) on acute and chronic arsenic (As) toxicity to the euryhaline rotifers, Proales similis and Brachionus ibericus. In general, higher salinities and low temperature resulted in lower arsenic toxicity. The population growth studies indicated that P. similis was more sensitive than B. ibericus to As. Arsenic toxicity intensified the vulnerability of P. similis to B. ibericus competition. Life table parameters decreased with increasing As levels in the medium. Chronic toxicity bioassays were more sensitive than acute toxicity tests for determining the adverse effect of As to rotifers. Our findings provide useful insights on the effect of arsenic on rotifer populations exposed to different temperature and salinity scenarios. Proales similis could be an important complement to brachionid rotifers for marine toxicity bioassays.


Subject(s)
Arsenic , Rotifera , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Animals , Salinity , Temperature
17.
Phys Rev Lett ; 124(13): 136407, 2020 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32302172

ABSTRACT

We propose MnBi_{2n}Te_{3n+1} as a magnetically tunable platform for realizing various symmetry-protected higher-order topology. Its canted antiferromagnetic phase can host exotic topological surface states with a Möbius twist that are protected by nonsymmorphic symmetry. Moreover, opposite surfaces hosting Möbius fermions are connected by one-dimensional chiral hinge modes, which offers the first material candidate of a higher-order topological Möbius insulator. We uncover a general mechanism to feasibly induce this exotic physics by applying a small in-plane magnetic field to the antiferromagnetic topological insulating phase of MnBi_{2n}Te_{3n+1}, as well as other proposed axion insulators. For other magnetic configurations, two classes of inversion-protected higher-order topological phases are ubiquitous in this system, which both manifest gapped surfaces and gapless chiral hinge modes. We systematically discuss their classification, microscopic mechanisms, and experimental signatures. Remarkably, the magnetic-field-induced transition between distinct chiral hinge mode configurations provides an effective "topological magnetic switch".

18.
19.
Phys Rev Lett ; 123(16): 167001, 2019 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31702343

ABSTRACT

We show, theoretically, that a heterostructure of monolayer FeTe_{1-x}Se_{x}-a superconducting quantum spin Hall material-with a monolayer of FeTe-a bicollinear antiferromagnet-realizes a higher order topological superconductor phase characterized by emergent Majorana zero modes pinned to the sample corners. We provide a minimal effective model for this system, analyze the origin of higher order topology, and fully characterize the topological phase diagram. Despite the conventional s-wave pairing, we find a rather surprising emergence of a novel topological nodal superconductor in the phase diagram. Featured by edge-dependent Majorana flat bands, the topological nodal phase is protected by an antiferromagnetic chiral symmetry. We also discuss the experimental feasibility, the estimation of realistic model parameters, and the robustness of the Majorana corner modes against magnetic and potential disorder. Our work provides a new experimentally feasible high-temperature platform for both higher order topology and non-Abelian Majorana physics.

20.
Sci Total Environ ; 688: 1348-1358, 2019 Oct 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31726564

ABSTRACT

Proliferating cyanobacterial blooms due eutrophication in reservoirs is a major global problem. The production of cyanotoxins often increases with grazing pressure and temperature while the sensitivity of zooplankton to cyanotoxins is directly related to temperature. Here we evaluate the effect of different concentrations of the crude extract of cyanobacteria from Valle de Bravo reservoir during dry (January) and rainy (September) seasons at 20 and 25 °C on the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus based on acute and chronic toxicity tests. We filtered 20 or 150 l of lake water, depending on the intensity of the bloom, and estimated the density and diversity of the cyanobacteria. The crude extracts, after 5 cycles of freezing, thawing and sonication at 14 MHz, were filtered and the microcystin concentration quantified based on ELISA. The extracts were used to conduct the acute and chronic toxicity tests, all in quadruplicate. Acute toxicity tests were based on 24 h mortality. Chronic toxicity tests (population growth and life table experiments) were conducted at 5 and 10% of the median lethal concentration. The field samples were dominated by Microcystis sp. (January) or Woronichinia naegeliana (September). The microcystin concentration in lake water was 9.57 µg/l and 0.097 µg/l and the median lethal concentration was 5.34 µg microcystin/L and 0.35 µg microcystin/L in January and September, respectively. Survival and reproduction of B. calyciflorus were lower in the presence of the cyanobacteria crude extract, more so at 20° than at 25 °C. Our results highlight the urgency of regular monitoring based on zooplankton assays for reservoirs in tropical and temperate regions, subject to frequent and dominant cyanobacterial blooms, often as a result of climate change.


Subject(s)
Cyanobacteria/growth & development , Environmental Monitoring , Harmful Algal Bloom , Microcystins/toxicity , Rotifera/physiology , Animals , Eutrophication , Mexico , Toxicity Tests, Chronic
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