Home About us Contact | |||
Dishes
Kinds of Dishes Selected AbstractsSpinal pathological findings in ancient Egyptians of the Greco-Roman period living in Bahriyah OasisINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OSTEOARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 5 2009F. H. Hussien Abstract The spine can provide a large amount of information about an individual's physical condition and possible lifestyle through palaeopathological investigations. The aim of this research was to study spinal diseases among Greco-Roman ancient Egyptians from Bahriyah Oasis, and to compare them with those from Giza of the Old Kingdom. The material used in the study included 809 single vertebrae and 77 adult sacra of ancient Egyptians from the Greco-Roman period (332,30 BC) that were excavated from Bahriyah Oasis. The spinal elements were examined for pathological conditions, degenerative diseases, trauma, congenital abnormalities, infectious diseases and neoplasms. The most common lesions of the spine were those due to degenerative processes. The articular facets were more affected than the vertebral bodies. Compression fractures of the bodies, mostly due to osteoporosis, were found in 1.44% and 5.07% of thoracic and lumbar vertebrae respectively. The percentage of spina bifida occulta among ancient Egyptians from Bahriyah Oasis was 62.33%, while among those from Giza was only 3.33%. Few cases of lumbar spondylolysis and one case of DISH were recorded. No cases of infectious or neoplastic diseases were found. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis in Late Jomon Hokkaido, JapanINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OSTEOARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 1 2006M. F. Oxenham Abstract The purpose of this study is to describe and analyse the evidence for diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) in samples of human skeletal material recovered from Late Jomon (ca. 1500,300 BCE) and Okhotsk (CE 500,900) cultural period sites, northwestern Hokkaido, Japan. Two individuals from the Jomon period assemblage (n,=,14) exhibited lesions consistent with DISH, while the larger Okhotsk sample (n,=,39) was free of this condition. The aetiology of this condition is reviewed with reference to the clinical and bioarchaeological literature, in addition to behavioural and environmental considerations specific to this region and these time periods. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis-induced dysphagia or DISHphagiaINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RHEUMATIC DISEASES, Issue 2 2005Salih OZGOCMEN Summary Dysphagia related to osteophyte compression in diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) or Forestier's disease and in cervical spondylosis has been identified as a cause of dysphagia. We report an elderly man who had dysphagia due to DISH or namely DISHphagia. Clinical findings, barium esophagogram, and magnetic resonance imaging findings have been presented. Good response to medical treatment with liquid forms of NSAIDs and soft diet has been achieved. [source] Stridor and Dysphagia in Diffuse Idiopathic Skeletal Hyperostosis (DISH),THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 2 2006Dominic M. Castellano MD Abstract As otolaryngologists, we are the first consulted for stridor and dysphagia. One must consider both extrinsic and intrinsic etiologies in the differential diagnosis of these symptoms. We report a series of patients with diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) who presented with stridor or dysphagia. We describe the initial presenting symptoms, physical examination/radiographic findings, and discuss the management options. Traditional teaching is that surgery is rarely indicated for DISH of the cervical spine. Recommendations regarding the role of surgery as well as a review of our surgical experience are discussed. [source] Ectopic calcification among families in the Azores: Clinical and radiologic manifestations in families with diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis and chondrocalcinosisARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM, Issue 4 2006Jácome Bruges-Armas Objective Twelve families that were multiply affected with diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) and/or chondrocalcinosis, were identified on the island of Terceira, The Azores, potentially supporting the hypothesis that the 2 disorders share common etiopathogenic factors. The present study was undertaken to investigate this hypothesis. Methods One hundred three individuals from 12 unrelated families were assessed. Probands were identified from patients attending the Rheumatic Diseases Clinic, Hospital de Santo Espírito, in The Azores. Family members were assessed by rheumatologists and radiologists. Radiographs of all family members were obtained, including radiographs of the dorsolumbar spine, pelvis, knees, elbows, and wrists, and all cases were screened for known features of chondrocalcinosis. Results Ectopic calcifications were identified in 70 patients. The most frequent symptoms or findings were as follows: axial pain, elbow, knee and metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joint pain, swelling, and/or deformity, and radiographic enthesopathic changes. Elbow and MCP joint periarticular calcifications were observed in 35 and 5 patients, respectively, and chondrocalcinosis was identified in 12 patients. Fifteen patients had sacroiliac disease (ankylosis or sclerosis) on computed tomography scans. Fifty-two patients could be classified as having definite (17%), probable (26%), or possible (31%) DISH. Concomitant DISH and chondrocalcinosis was diagnosed in 12 patients. Pyrophosphate crystals were identified from knee effusions in 13 patients. The pattern of disease transmission was compatible with an autosomal-dominant monogenic disease. The mean age at which symptoms developed was 38 years. Conclusion These families may represent a familial type of pyrophosphate arthropathy with a phenotype that includes peripheral and axial enthesopathic calcifications. The concurrence of DISH and chondrocalcinosis suggests a shared pathogenic mechanism in the 2 conditions. [source] Religious Scholarship and the Commodified Imagination: A Dish of OrtsRELIGIOUS STUDIES REVIEW, Issue 2 2009Reno E. Lauro First page of article [source] A New Method for Manufacturing Cardiac Cell Sheets Using Fibrin-Coated Dishes and Its Electrophysiological Studies by Optical MappingARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 2 2005Yuji Itabashi Abstract:, We developed a novel simple method for making functional myocardial cell sheets that may be used as transplants. Polymerized human fibrin-coated dishes were prepared with fibrinogen monomers mixed with thrombin. Neonatal rat cardiomyocytes cultured on these dishes formed myocardial cell sheets within 4 days. These cell sheets were easily dissociated intact from the polymerized fibrin layer, because the fibrin had been digested by intrinsic protease. Two overlaid myocardial cell sheets exhibited synchronized spontaneous beating and captured artificial pacing. Optical mapping confirmed that the conduction of the action potential between two partially overlaid myocardial cell sheets was established, and the action potential propagated across the junction without any delay. Transplanted three-layered myocardial cell sheets exhibited strong spontaneous beating and showed well-differentiated striations and an increase in cell size. This simple method of cell sheet engineering may also be applicable for various other cell types. [source] The promise and the challenge of modelling human disease in a dishEMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE, Issue 3 2010Fred Gage No abstract is available for this article. [source] Vulnerability of larvae of two species of aphidophagous ladybirds, Adalia bipunctata Linnaeus and Harmonia axyridis Pallas, to cannibalism and intraguild predationENTOMOLOGICAL SCIENCE, Issue 2 2009Satoru SATO Abstract Vulnerability of larvae of two species of aphidophagous ladybirds, Adalia bipunctata Linnaeus and Harmonia axyridis Pallas, to cannibalism and intraguild predation was assessed in the laboratory. In the first experiment, a first instar of one of the two above species was kept with a fourth instar of the other species in a Petri dish. The number of times each first instar larva was encountered by the fourth instar larva and the fate of the first instar was determined over a period of 10 min. The fourth instar larvae captured and killed all the first instar larvae of their own species at the first encounter. However, when presented with fourth instar larvae of the other species the first instar larvae of A. bipunctata and H. axyridis were encountered 6.4 ± 1.3 (n = 10) and 19.4 ± 2.1 (n = 10), respectively. In this experiment no first instar larvae of H. axyridis, whereas all those of A. bipunctata, were killed. [source] Impaired M-Current and Neuronal ExcitabilityEPILEPSIA, Issue 2002Motohiro Okada Summary: ,Purpose: Benign familial neonatal convulsions (BFNC), a hereditary epilepsy, occurs specifically in newborns and remits spontaneously after this period. Several mutations of either KCNQ2 or KCNQ3, members of the KCNQ-related K+ -channel (KCNQ-channel) family, were identified as a cause of BFNC. Such mutations impair KCNQ-related M- current, an element of the inhibitory system in the central nervous system (CNS), and therefore are thought to result in neuronal hyperexcitability. Methods: To clarify the pathogenesis of BFNC, this study investigated the effects of the KCNQ channel on propagation of neuronal excitability using a 64-channel multielectrode dish (MED64) system for novel two-dimensional monitoring of evoked field potentials including fiber volley (FV) and field excitatory postsynaptic potential (fEPSP). Results: Dup996, a selective KCNQ-channel inhibitor, did not affect the amplitude of FV or fEPSP, but enhanced the FV and fEPSP propagation. The ,-aminobutyric acid (GABA)A -receptor antagonist, bicuculline, enhanced their propagation, whereas ,-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionate (AMPA)/glutamate-receptor antagonist, DNQX, reduced both amplitude and propagation of fEPSP without affecting those of FV. Under the condition of GABAA -receptor blockade by bicuculline, Dup996 enhanced the amplitude of fEPSP and propagation of FV and fEPSP without affecting the amplitude of FV. Dup996 enhanced the stimulating effects of bicuculline on the propagation and amplitude of FV and fEPSP, but it did not affect the inhibiting effects of DNQX. Conclusions: These results suggest that the occurrence of BFNC cannot be produced by KCNQ-channel dysfunction alone but by reciprocal action between impaired KCNQ channel and the other unknown. [source] Losing more than gaining from overall stable prices: the differential perception of increasing versus decreasing prices made the Euro look like a price boosterEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 5 2008Tobias Greitemeyer The present research examined whether price trend misperceptions can be explained by the differential perception of increasing versus decreasing prices. We expected price increases (losses to consumers) to be perceived as being more intense than price decreases (gains to consumers) of the same magnitude. This tendency, in turn, should be positively associated with how people perceive the overall price trend. To test this reasoning, participants in the first two studies were asked to compare German Mark (DM) and Euro prices. First, participants received a menu containing 21 dishes with DM prices, and their price trend expectations were assessed. Then, participants indicated for each dish to what extent the price had changed. Finally, participants' overall price trend judgments were assessed. In both studies, results indicate that price trend judgments were biased toward rising prices. In addition, price increases were perceived as rising more than price decreases of the same magnitude were perceived as falling. This tendency was positively associated with overall price trend judgments, even after controlling for expectations. Study 3 was to replicate these findings in a different domain to demonstrate the general nature and impact of the hypothesized effect. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Pan Evaporation Trends and the Terrestrial Water Balance.GEOGRAPHY COMPASS (ELECTRONIC), Issue 2 2009Pan evaporation is just that , it is the evaporation rate of water from a small dish located at the ground-surface. Pan evaporation is a measure of the evaporative demand over terrestrial surfaces. Declines in pan evaporation have now been reported in many regions of the world. The trends vary from one pan to the next, but when averaged over many pans, they are typically in the range of ,1 to ,4 mm a,2 (mm per annum per annum). In energetic terms, a trend of ,2 mm a,2 is equivalent to ,0.16 W m,2 a,1 and over 30 years this is a change of ,4.8 W m,2. For comparison, the top-of-atmosphere forcing due to doubled CO2 is estimated by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to be ~3.7 W m,2. Hence, the magnitude of the pan evaporation trend is large. What is of even greater interest is the direction , a decline , given the well-established warming of the last 30,50 years. In this article, the first in a two part series, we describe the underlying principles in using and interpreting pan evaporation data and then summarise the reported observations from different countries. In the second article, we describe the interpretation of the trends in terms of changes in the terrestrial water balance. [source] BIOLOGY OF CHRYSOPA PHYLLOCHROMA WESMAEL (NEUROPTERA: CHRYSOPIDAE).INSECT SCIENCE, Issue 3 2004II: INTRASPECIFIC INTERFERENCE AND SEARCHING CAPACITY Abstract, The present study examined intraspecific interference and searching behavior of Chrysopa phyllochroma Wesmael (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae) for Aphis gossypii Glover (Homoptera: Aphididae) nymphs under laboratory and greenhouse conditions. The results were shown as follow: 1) In four different arenas (i.e. Petri dish, glass vessel, glass vessel with barriers in it, and cage with potted cotton plant), the predaceous efficiency of C. phyllochroma larvae varied with the predator density, the hunt constant (Q) and the intraspecific interference (m) increased with the prey density but decreased with the space heterogeneity; 2) In cage with potted cotton plant, the first- and second-instar green lacewing larvae consumed 13.6 and 29.4 cotton aphiddday respectively. The number of cotton aphids consumed by C. phyllochroma on lower leaves was significantly less than that on upper leaves; and 3) In cage with potted cotton plant, the percentage of the first- and second-instar green lacewing larvae located on upper leaves was significant less than that on lower leaves. [source] Comparison of risk factors for colon and rectal cancerINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Issue 3 2004Esther K. Wei Abstract Predictors of colorectal cancer have been extensively studied with some evidence suggesting that risk factors vary by subsite. Using data from 2 prospective cohort studies, we examined established risk factors to determine whether they were differentially associated with colon and rectal cancer. Our study population included 87,733 women from the Nurses' Health Study (NHS) and 46,632 men from the Health Professionals Follow Up Study (HPFS). Exposure information was collected via biennial questionnaires (dietary variables were collected every 4 years). During the follow-up period (NHS: 1980 to May 31, 2000; HPFS: 1986 to January 31, 2000), we identified 1,139 cases of colon cancer and 339 cases of rectal cancer. We used pooled logistic regression to estimate multivariate relative risks for the 2 outcomes separately and then used polytomous logistic regression to compare these estimates. In the combined cohort, age, gender, family history of colon or rectal cancer, height, body mass index, physical activity, folate, intake of beef, pork or lamb as a main dish, intake of processed meat and alcohol were significantly associated with colon cancer risk. However, only age and sex were associated with rectal cancer. In a stepwise polytomous logistic regression procedure, family history and physical activity were associated with statistically significant different relative risks of colon and rectal cancer. Our findings support previous suggestions that family history and physical activity are not strong contributors to the etiology of rectal cancer. Future investigations of colon or rectal cancer should take into consideration risk factor differences by subsite. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Tissue Engineering Based on Cell Sheet Technology,ADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 20 2007N. Matsuda Abstract Cell sheet technology enables novel approaches to tissue engineering without the use of biodegradable scaffolds. Cell sheet technology consists of a temperature-responsive culture dish, which enables reversible cell adhesion to and detachment from the dish surface by controllable hydrophobicity of the surface. This allows for a non-invasive harvest of cultured cells as an intact monolayer cell sheet including deposited extra cellular matrices. The monolayer cell sheet can be transplanted to host tissues without using biodegradable scaffolds and sutures. Thick tissue constructs and patterned cell sheets using two or more kinds of cell source are also developed by means of layered cell sheets in vitro. This Progress Report summarizes temperature-controlled cell adhesion-detachment behavior and applications of the cell sheet technology to regeneration of cornea, periodontal ligament, bladder epithelia, oesophageal epithelia, myocardium, and liver. [source] Effect of Sodium Chloride Salinity on Seedling Emergence in ChickpeaJOURNAL OF AGRONOMY AND CROP SCIENCE, Issue 3 2002H. A. Esechie Although laboratory (Petri dish) germination as an estimate of seed viability is a standard practice, it may not give an accurate prediction of seedling emergence in the field, especially when saline irrigation water is used. Experiments were conducted to investigate seedling emergence in two chickpea cultivars (ILC 482 and Barka local) in response to varied salinity levels and sowing depths. Seeds were sown in potted soil at a depth of 2, 4 or 6 cm. The salinity treatments were 4.6, 8.4 and 12.2 dS m,1. Tap water (0.8 dS m,1) served as the control. Depth of sowing had a significant effect on seedling emergence. Seeds sown 6 cm deep showed the lowest seedling emergence. Similarly, salinity had an adverse effect on seedling emergence. The lowest seedling emergence percentages were obtained at the highest salinity treatment (12.2 dS m,1). The interaction between salinity treatment and seeding depth was significant. Hypocotyl injury was implicated as a possible cause of poor seedling emergence in chickpea under saline water irrigation and was less severe when pre-germinated seeds were used. ILC 482 appeared to be more tolerant to salinity than Barka local, suggesting that breeding programmes involving regional exchange of germplasm may be helpful. Einfluss einer Natriumchloridversalzung auf den Sämlingsaufgang von Kichererbse Obwohl im Laboratorium (Petrischale) die Keimung an Hand einer Abschätzung der Samenkeimkraft als Standard beurteilt wird, kann dies eine nicht zuverlässige Voraussage des Sämlingsaufganges im Feld sein, insbesondere wenn versalztes Bewässerungswasser verwendet wird. Die Experimente wurden durchgeführt, um das Sämlingsauflaufen von zwei Kichererbsenkultivaren (ILC 482 und Barka local) in der Reaktion gegenüber variierten Versalzungskonzentrationen und Aussaattiefen zu untersuchen. Die Samen wurden in Gefäßkulturen mit einer Tiefe von 2, 4 oder 6 cm angesät. Die Versalzungsbehandlungen betrugen 4.6, 8.4 und 12.2 dS m,1. Unversalztes Wasser (0.8 dS m,1) diente als Kontrolle. Die Aussaattiefe hatte einen signifikanten Einfluss auf das Auflaufen der Sämlinge. Samen mit einer 6 cm Tiefe Ansaat hatten den schlechtesten Auflauf. Entsprechend zeigte auch die Versalzung einen ungünstigen Einfluss auf den Sämlingsaufgang. Die schlechteste Keimlingsaufgangsrate wurde bei der höchsten Versalzungsbehandlung (12.2 dS m,1) gefunden. Die Interaktion zwischen Versalzungsbehandlungen und Saattiefe war signifikant. Die Hypokotytbeschädigung wird als eine mögliche Ursache der schwachen Auflaufraten bei Kichererbse unter dem Einfluss versalzten Bewässerungswassers erklärt; die Wirkung war weniger schwer, wenn vorgekeimte Samen verwendet wurden. ILC 482 scheint toleranter gegenüber Versalzung zu sein als Barka local; es erscheint zweckmäßig, Zuchtprogramme unter Verwendung regionaler Genotypen durchzuführen. [source] SIMULTANEOUS RECOVERY AND DETECTION OF FOUR HEAT-INJURED FOODBORNE PATHOGENS IN GROUND BEEF AND MILK BY A FOUR-COMPARTMENT THIN AGAR LAYER PLATEJOURNAL OF FOOD SAFETY, Issue 2 2006VIVIAN C.H. WU ABSTRACT A four-compartment thin agar layer (4-TAL) system was developed to improve operation efficiency and recover injured foodborne pathogens simultaneously. The system consisted of a layer of nonselective agar overlaid on four different selective agars (xylose lysine desoxycholate [XLD], cefsulodin irgasan novobiocin [CIN], modified Oxford medium [MOX] and MacConkey sorbitol agar [MSA]) housed in a four-compartment petri dish. We applied this system to simultaneously recover heat-injured (55C, 10 min) Escherichia coli O157:H7 (MSA), Listeria monocytogenes (MOX), Salmonella Typhimurium (XLD) and Yersinia enterocolitica (CIN) from ground beef and pasteurized milk. No significant difference (P > 0.05) occurred between the single recovery unit (nonselective agar overlaid on one selective agar in a standard petri dish) and the 4-TAL for detecting four heat-injured pathogens in tested samples. Both TAL methods showed greater recovery of four heat-injured pathogens than the pathogen-specific selective media (P < 0.05). The 4-TAL system appears to be efficient for recovery and detection of injured pathogens in food in terms of operation, material and labor costs, and space of incubation. [source] Improvement of the in vitro Digestible Iron and Zinc Content of Okra (Hibiscus esculentus L.) Sauce Widely Consumed in Sahelian AfricaJOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 2 2007Sylvie Avallone ABSTRACT:, The effects of the formulation (okra, fish, soumbala, extract of wood ash) and cooking time of okra sauce on total iron and zinc content and on their in vitro digestibility were evaluated following a Doehlert uniform shell design with 5 factors and 33 trials. Cooking time had no significant effect on in vitro digestible iron and zinc content, whereas formulation did. Each ingredient had a specific effect. Extract of wood ash, which is a source of soluble and digestible iron and zinc, is a good way of increasing the digestible mineral content of the dish. Okra, the main ingredient in this sauce, has a negative effect and should be added in moderate quantities (< 37.7% of the DM of the sauce). An optimization using the desirability function allows us to identify the optimal recipe that enabled the quantity of digestible iron to be doubled and the quantity of digestible zinc to be increased by one third. This recipe calls for a mixture of 37.7% okra, 26.3% dried fish, 18.5% soumbala, and 3.7% extract of wood ash cooked for 25 min. [source] Fat intake and food choices during weight reduction with diet, behavioural modification and a lipase inhibitorJOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, Issue 5 2000K. Franson Abstract. Franson K, Rössner S (The Swedish Association for People with Bowel and Stomach Diseases, Stockholm and Huddinge Hospital, Huddinge, Sweden). Fat intake and food choices during weight reduction with diet, behavioural modification and a lipase inhibitor. J Intern Med 2000: 247: 607,614. Objective. To study the composition of fat intake and fat-rich meals consumed during a trial in which obese subjects were treated with a lipase-inhibitor or placebo, with emphasis on food choices and eating hours. Design. Patients were instructed to record all food and drink taken for four days prior to each dietician visit. The food diaries from all scheduled 15 treatment visits were analysed for nutritional content and composition and for temporal distribution. All meals containing 25 g of fat were defined as fat-rich. Subjects. Twenty-eight women and six men, mean age 45.2 ± 10.9 (SD) years with a mean body mass index of 37.3 ± 3.3 (SD) kg m,2 at the beginning of the study. Results. Fat intake, both as absolute weight and as energy % was generally higher in the placebo group but no significant trend over time could be seen. Fat rich meals were increased by 59% towards the end of the study. Most fat rich meals were eaten at lunch and dinner. Cooking fat, fatty sauces, meat dishes and cheese contributed to the major proportion of fat, both for placebo and drug treated subjects. No major changes were seen in food choice over time. Conclusion. A lipase inhibitor may affect the amount of fat ingested but does not seem to change major sources of fat. The typical fat-rich meal consumed by these subjects was a meat dish, consumed in the evening. [source] SENSORY TEXTURE PROFILING AND DEVELOPMENT OF STANDARD RATING SCALES FOR POUNDED YAMJOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES, Issue 5-6 2005BOLANLE OTEGBAYO ABSTRACT This study evaluated sensory texture profile analysis (STPA) as an objective method for characterizing the texture attributes of "pounded yam," a popular dish in West Africa made by peeling yam, boiling, pounding and kneading it into a glutinous dough. Panelists were carefully selected and trained to assess the texture attributes of pounded yam. Standard rating scales were developed from local foods that are common in Nigeria, and the foods were used as descriptors to exemplify the texture attributes being assessed. Reproducible and consistent results were obtained. It is thus concluded that STPA can be used as an objective method for evaluating the texture attributes of pounded yam. [source] Preparation of Cross-Linked Poly[(, -caprolactone)- co -lactide] and Biocompatibility Studies for Tissue Engineering MaterialsMACROMOLECULAR BIOSCIENCE, Issue 1 2007Hiroshi Miyasako Abstract In this study, cross-linked materials were prepared using the branched macromonomer with different CL/LA molar ratios, and feasibility studies for tissue engineering were carried out. The thermal and mechanical properties of these materials depended on the CL/LA compositions; however, there was no change in the wettability of each material. The HeLa cells adhesion and growth on the CL-LA7030c were equal to that on the commercially available polystyrene dish. The protein absorption experiment using the FBS proteins revealed that the materials with well-grown cells showed better adhesion of the proteins. [source] REVIEW: An overview of the role of potatoes in the UK dietNUTRITION BULLETIN, Issue 3 2010E. Weichselbaum Summary Potatoes are widely consumed in the United Kingdom and in many other countries. They provide energy, mainly in the form of starch, as well as other nutrients including vitamin C, folate, some B vitamins, potassium, magnesium, iron and zinc. Potatoes are naturally low in energy and provided that little or no fat is used when cooking them, they can decrease the energy density of a meal. As potatoes are high in starch and as they are usually eaten as a side dish replacing other carbohydrate rich foods, they are found in the starchy food section of the UK's Eatwell plate model and do not officially count towards the recommended 5 portions of fruit and vegetables per day. However, potatoes can help consumers to meet their daily requirements for some nutrients, including micronutrients for which there is evidence of low intakes in some groups in the UK, such as potassium. This paper gives an overview on the role of potatoes in the UK diet, including their consumption and their contribution to nutrient intakes in the UK. [source] Zanthoxylum piperitum (DC), a potential feeding deterrent for mammals: studies with Microtus ochrogaster (Wagner)PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE (FORMERLY: PESTICIDE SCIENCE), Issue 7 2004Gisela Epple Abstract Total extract from the fruit of Szechuan pepper (Zanthoxylum piperitum DC), the volatile components of the extract and a non-volatile fraction containing alkylamides (NVA fraction) are feeding deterrents for rats. The present study investigated the effectiveness of these natural repellents in prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster Wagner). Two-choice feeding trials were conducted during which food-deprived voles were offered choices between oat-bran wafers. In Experiment 1, 10 voles were given three sets of feeding trials, each 2 h long. Baseline consumption was established during the first set of two trials by offering a choice between two oat-bran wafers dipped in ethanol, the control solvent. During the second set of two trials the voles were given a choice between an oat-bran wafer dipped in ethanol and a wafer dipped in Zanthoxylum extract. During the third set the voles were given a choice between a wafer served on top of a screened dish containing a sample of ethanol and a wafer served on top of a dish containing a sample of extract. In this manner the voles were exposed to volatile compounds emanating from the extract but could not contact it. Wafers dipped in extract were almost completely avoided. The volatile components of extract also significantly reduced food intake. In Experiment 2, habituation to the volatile constituents of extract was examined in 16 Zanthoxylum -naïve voles. Baseline consumption was established by offering two wafers served on top of screened dishes containing ethanol. This was followed by twelve tests during which a choice between a wafer served above a sample of ethanol and a wafer served above a sample of extract was given. The voles failed to habituate to the volatile components of extract, consistently consuming less of the wafers served above extract. In Experiment 3 a dose-response curve to Zanthoxylum extract was established, using 12 stimulus-naïve voles. After baseline consumption was established, the animals were given two tests each, presenting a choice between a control wafer and a wafer dipped in a dilution of extract (0.001,100 g liter,1). Only concentrations of 10 and 100 g liter,1 reduced food intake. In Experiment 4 the effects of the non-volatile fraction of extract were compared to those of whole extract. Vegetable oil was used as solvent. Eight stimulus-naïve voles were given two tests with a choice between an oil-dipped and an extract-dipped wafer. A second group of eight voles received two tests with a choice between an oil-dipped and NVA-dipped wafer. Extract-dipped wafers were avoided, but the NVA fraction had no effect on food consumption. Copyright © 2004 Society of Chemical Industry [source] Synthesis and photocuring of cinnamoyl trehalose estersPOLYMERS FOR ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES, Issue 12 2007Naozumi Teramoto Abstract A trehalose cinnamoyl ester (TC) was synthesized from trehalose and cinnamoyl chloride in dimethylformamide (DMF) in the presence of triethylamine and 4-(N,N -dimethylamino)pyridine. The product was characterized by 1H NMR spectroscopy to reveal that the reaction proceeded. Two different types of TCs were synthesized by changing the feed ratio of cinnamoyl chloride to trehalose. When the feed ratio of cinnamoyl chloride to trehalose was 8 (TC8), the degree of substitution (DS) was 8.0, while it was 4.2 when the feed ratio was 4 (TC4). Photocuring was confirmed by observing changes in UV absorption spectrum and FT Infrared (IR) spectrum. After 5,min of UV irradiation, solubility in chloroform significantly decreased. A transparent thin coating film of TC was easily prepared by casting from a chloroform solution on a Petri dish and UV irradiation was carried out over a simple photomask. After TC within the non-irradiated region was removed by flash soaking with chloroform, the shape of the photomask appeared. A scanning electron microscope (SEM) measurement revealed that the surface of the photocured coating film was smooth and that the edge of the photocured TC had a characteristic feature. Biodegradation of the photocured TC and non-irradiated TC was examined by the biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) method using activated sludge. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Flexibility in the use of requesting gestures in squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus)AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 8 2010James R. Anderson Abstract Three squirrel monkeys, trained to make a requesting gesture, were tested in the presence of a human assistant whose visual attention varied across trials. When food was available in one dish and an empty dish was nearby, the monkeys pointed overwhelmingly toward the former, regardless of where the assistant was looking. Looking at the assistant while pointing ("monitoring") peaked when she looked at them and when she attempted to engage them in joint attention. When only one dish was present, the monkeys refrained from gesturing if it was empty and if no assistant was present. They gestured more when the assistant made eye contact with them. Furthermore, when the assistant's focus of attention switched from the dish or the ceiling to the monkeys, the latter resumed pointing and increased their monitoring of the assistant. This is the first demonstration of such flexible use of an intentionally communicative requesting gesture in New World monkeys. Am. J. Primatol. 72:707,714, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Effects of ,-Toxin of Staphylococcus aureus on Ciliary Activity of Nasal Epithelial Cells ,THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 12 2000Chung Seop Kim MD Abstract Objectives To investigate the in vitro effects of staphylococcal ,-to-in on ciliary activity and the in vivo effects on sinusitis induction. Study Design The in vitro effects of staphylococcal ,-to-in on ciliary activity were investigated at different concentrations and e-posure times. E-perimental sinusitis was induced in rabbits with application of ,-to-in and confirmed 7 days later. Methods Ciliated epithelial cells were taken from the ma-illary sinus mucosa of 10 rabbits. Five culture dishes from each rabbit were used for the e-perimental group, and one culture dish from each rabbit was used for the control group. In the experimental group, ciliary beat frequency (CBF) was measured at concentrations of 0.1, 1, 2, 5 and 10 U/mL of ,-toxin using a video-computerized analysis technique, while in the control group, culture medium containing no toxin was used. CBF was measured 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24, and 48 hours after administration of ,-toxin. To induce experimental sinusitis, 2 U/mL of ,-toxin was percutaneously applied to the maxillary sinus of 10 rabbits without occlusion of the natural ostium, while normal saline was percutaneously applied to the right-side maxillary sinus of 4 rabbits in the control group. At 7 days, mucosal membranes were taken from the inferomedial wall of the maxillary sinus for light microscopic study. Results CBF dropped significantly after an 8-hour incubation at 2, 5, and 10 U/mL of ,-to-in. No ciliary activity was observed after a 24-hour incubation at 2 and 5 U/mL and a 12-hour incubation at 10 U/mL of ,-to-in. Mucoid, purulent discharge was observed in the ma-illary sinuses of the ,-to-in,applied group. Prominent epithelial disruption and infiltration of inflammatory cells into the epithelium and lamina propria were observed in the ,-to-in,applied group. Conclusions Staphylococcal ,-to-in may reduce ciliary activity and induce sinusitis without occlusion of the natural ostium of the ma-illary sinus in rabbits. This study provides another animal model of sinusitis for understanding the pathogenesis of sinusitis induced by bacterial e-oto-ins. [source] Establishment of an in vitro sciarid fly larvae assay to study plant resistanceANNALS OF APPLIED BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2009M. Chabannes Abstract Mechanisms underlying natural plant resistance to herbivorous invertebrates are still poorly understood in comparison with bacterial or fungal interactions. One reason is the difficulty in reliably and reproducibly assessing the effects under controlled conditions. This article describes a newly developed in vitro biological assay system that enables the interactions between sciarid larvae and plants, whose roots they feed on, to be studied under highly controlled conditions. The bioassay eliminates the problems created by the often variable environmental factors by providing an aseptic arena where experimental plants can be germinated and grown on agar within a Petri dish. Sciarid fly eggs are then collected, sterilised and added to the Petri dish. The system allows the eggs to hatch and the larvae to feed on the plant roots. A range of developmental parameters can then be recorded over time which can then be correlated with the experimental plant type. This assay system also allows a simultaneous comparison or ,choice chamber' between two (or more) different genotypes. The assay should greatly help to facilitate the identification of new components involved in insect resistance mediated pathway via the characterisation of mutant plants. [source] Relationship between saprotrophic growth in soil of different biotypes of Pochonia chlamydosporia and the infection of nematode eggsANNALS OF APPLIED BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2009I.A. Siddiqui Abstract The ecology of Pochonia chlamydosporia in soil and its interaction with both plant and nematode hosts are important for the successful exploitation of the fungus as a biological control agent. Differences in saprotrophism and parasitism were assessed for biotypes of P. chlamydosporia, which had originated from the eggs of cyst or root-knot nematodes. Colonisation in soils of different textures (compost, sandy loam and loamy sand) measured by the numbers of colony-forming units, differed greatly. Most biotypes were more abundant in sterilised soil of the different textures compared with non-sterilised soils. The proportion of nematode eggs parasitised in a baiting technique demonstrated that biotypes had host preferences. Those biotypes that originated from root-knot nematodes (RKN-biotypes) infected significantly more Meloidogyne hapla eggs than Globodera pallida eggs, whereas biotypes from cyst nematodes (CN-biotypes) parasitised more G. pallida eggs than M. hapla eggs. Differences in virulence between biotypes in an in vitro assay in which the fungi were placed directly onto the egg masses of M. hapla and those differences observed in the baiting technique showed similar trends. There was a negative linear correlation between the growth of the eight biotypes in soil and the proportion of eggs they infected in compatible interactions (i.e. fungal biotype originated from the same nematode genus as the target eggs). Those biotypes that infected most nematode eggs colonised soil the least extensively, suggesting that virulence may have a fitness cost. However, the relationship between saprotrophic growth and virulence is complex. The relative abundance of the different biotypes in soil in Petri dish assays was similar to that under glasshouse conditions using potato but not tomato as the plant host. Chlamydospores of some biotypes applied to soil significantly reduced (>50%) the population densities of M. hapla on tomato and of G. pallida on potato plants. Some biotypes that were both effective and virulent are good candidates for biological control of specific nematode pests. Data presented here and elsewhere indicate that RKN-biotypes have different host preferences to CN-biotypes; the specific primers based on the vcp1 gene from P. chlamydosporia rapidly confirmed the host origin of seven of the eight biotypes. [source] The synovial lining micromass system: Toward rheumatoid arthritis in a dish?ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM, Issue 3 2010Harris Perlman First page of article [source] Numerical computation of distortions in magnetic fields and induced currents in physiological solutions produced by microscope objectivesBIOELECTROMAGNETICS, Issue 7 2001Indira Chatterjee Abstract Identifying distortions produced by commonly employed microscope objectives and their components in uniform DC and 60 Hz AC magnetic fields is important in imaging studies involving exposure of cells to spatially uniform or nonuniform magnetic fields. In this study, DC and 60 Hz AC magnetic flux densities were numerically computed in the presence of finite element models of various components of commonly utilized microscope objectives, as well as a model of a complete objective. Also computed were the distortions in the current density induced by an applied time-varying magnetic field in a physiological buffer contained within a Petri dish. We show that the magnetic flux density could be increased up to 65% in the presence of the nickel,chrome plating of an objective housing and that the presence of ferromagnetic components like a screw or spring could produce peaks that are 7% higher than the undistorted value of magnetic flux density. In addition, a slight tilt of 1% in the objective with respect to the magnetic field could cause a 93% deviation in magnetic flux density from the unperturbed value. These results correlate well with previously published experimental measurements that showed the presence of significant and sometimes asymmetric distortions in both DC and 60 Hz magnetic fields. Moreover, this study further reports that induced current density changed up to 37% compared to values in the absence of the objective. The existence of distortions in applied magnetic fields and induced currents could affect the interpretation of results of cell function studies if it is assumed that the cells are exposed to uniform magnetic flux densities in the presence of a microscope objective. Such assumptions of uniform magnetic flux density could also account for the lack of reproducibility in several studies that examined changes in intracellular calcium by imaging techniques. Bioelectromagnetics 22:463,469, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] |