Search results for "STORAGE"

showing 10 items of 1239 documents

A Bi-objective Optimization Study of an Acid-Base Flow Battery for High Efficiency and Improved Power Density

2022

Electrical energy storage is critical for a broader penetration of renewable energies with intermittent nature, such as solar and wind energy. The Acid/Base Flow Battery (AB-FB) is a unique, sustainable, and environmental-friendly storage technology with high electrolyte solution energy density. The method relies on reversible electrodialytic technologies using bipolar membranes to transform electrical energy into chemical energy related to pH gradients and vice versa. The charge phase is accomplished by using bipolar membrane electrodialysis, whereas the discharge phase is performed via bipolar membrane reverse electrodialysis. In a previous work, we developed an advanced multi-scale proce…

Acid-Base Flow Battery Bipolar Membrane OptimizationOptimizationSettore ING-IND/26 - Teoria Dello Sviluppo Dei Processi ChimiciBatteryStorageBipolar MembraneAcid-Base Flow BatteryModelling
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Alginate-based coatings charged with hydroxyapatite and quercetin for fresh-cut papaya shelf life

2022

In this study, the effect of alginate-based coatings charged with quercetin glycoside compounds and hydroxyapatite/quercetin glycoside compounds (HA/QUE) on the microbiological quality, and on bioactive compounds of fresh-cut papaya, was evaluated for 14 days at 6 degrees C. Alginate coatings with hydroxyapatite/quercetin showed a high capability to slow down the growth of all microbiological parameters investigated. At the end of cold storage, the total bacteria count in papaya samples covered with HA/QUE alginate coating was 4.8 log CFU g(-1) which is significantly lower (P < 0.05) than 8.3 log CFU g(-1) for uncoated samples. Total carotenoids' percentage decrease, at the end of storag…

Active edible coating antioxidant activity cold storage microbial growth papaya total carotenoidsIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringFood Science
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Active learning strategies for the deduplication of electronic patient data using classification trees.

2012

Graphical abstractDisplay Omitted Highlights? Active learning for medical record linkage is used on a large data set. ? We compare a simple active learning strategy with a more sophisticated variant. ? The active learning method of Sarawagi and Bhamidipaty (2002) 6] is extended. ? We deliver insights into the variations of the results due to random sampling in the active learning strategies. IntroductionSupervised record linkage methods often require a clerical review to gain informative training data. Active learning means to actively prompt the user to label data with special characteristics in order to minimise the review costs. We conducted an empirical evaluation to investigate whether…

Active learningComputer scienceActive learning (machine learning)Information Storage and RetrievalContext (language use)Health InformaticsSemi-supervised learningMachine learningcomputer.software_genreSet (abstract data type)Artificial IntelligenceBaggingData deduplicationElectronic Health RecordsHumansbusiness.industryString (computer science)Decision TreesOnline machine learningComputer Science ApplicationsData miningArtificial intelligenceMedical Record LinkageString metricbusinesscomputerAlgorithmsJournal of biomedical informatics
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A Good Breath of Oxygen for Beta-Like Cells Obtained From Porcine Exocrine Pancreatic Tissue

2011

Ischemia is the most important factor that affects organ survival during harvesting. The two-layer method (TLM) is one of several cold storage solutions that seeks to preserve organs and cells avoiding in vivo and in vitro ischemia. We compared the retrieval of beta-like elements from exocrine pancreatic cells using TLM versus University of Wisconsin (UW) solutions. For this purpose pancreata laparoscopically harvested from 20 female pigs were preserved in UW solution or TLM before digestion. The resulting exocrine cells were divided into 2 groups: the first was cultured in a designed medium to allow differentiation into beta-like cells and the second was cryopreserved before the differenti…

AdenosineTime FactorsCell SurvivalSwineAllopurinolCellular differentiationOrgan Preservation Solutionsbeta-like-cells porcine esocrine pancreatic tisuueCold storageCell SeparationCryopreservationAndrologyPancreatectomyRaffinoseIn vivoSettore BIO/13 - Biologia ApplicataInsulin-Secreting CellsmedicineAnimalsInsulinViaspanCells CulturedCryopreservationFluorocarbonsTransplantationbusiness.industryCell DifferentiationAnatomyGlutathionePancreas ExocrineIn vitroCulture MediaOxygenTransplantationSettore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleGlucosemedicine.anatomical_structureTissue and Organ HarvestingFemaleLaparoscopySurgeryPancreasbusiness
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Involvement of caspase-3 and GD3 ganglioside in ceramide-induced apoptosis in Farber disease.

2000

Farber's disease (FD) is a rare genetic disorder caused by ceramidase deficiency, which results in ceramide accumulation in lung, liver, colon, skeletal muscle, cartilage, and bone. Although this disease has been symptomatically characterized, little is known about its molecular pathogenetic process. Because recent studies reported that ceramide accumulation induces GD3 ganglioside formation and apoptosis, we investigated, in tissue obtained via colonoscopy from seriously involved patients, the possible involvement of ceramide in FD colonocyte destruction. Histochemical and TUNEL analyses of paraffin-embedded sections revealed that 45 ± 4.3% of FD colonocytes showed morphological signs of …

AdultCeramidePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHistologyColonCaspase 3ApoptosisCeramideschemistry.chemical_compoundGangliosidesmedicineGD3 gangliosideHumansIntestinal MucosaCaspaseFarber diseaseFarber diseaseTUNEL assaybiologyCaspase 3ApoptosiCell Biologymedicine.diseaseCeramidaseCaspaseK18EpitheliumActive caspase-3Lysosomal Storage Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryApoptosisCaspasesCancer researchbiology.proteinAnatomyActive caspase-3; Apoptosis; Caspases; Farber disease; GD3 ganglioside; K18; Anatomy; Cell BiologyThe journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society
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AISF update on the diagnosis and management of adult-onset lysosomal storage diseases with hepatic involvement.

2020

Lysosomal storage diseases (LSDs) are a heterogeneous group of inherited disorders caused by loss-of-function mutations in genes encoding for lysosomal enzymes/proteins. The consequence is a progressive accumulation of substrates in these intracellular organelles, resulting in cellular and tissue damage. The overall incidence is about 1/8000 live births, but is likely underestimated. LSDs are chronic progressive multi-systemic disorders, generally presenting with visceromegaly, and involvement of the central nervous system, eyes, the skeleton, and the respiratory and cardiovascular systems. The age at onset and phenotypic expression are highly variable, according to the specific enzymatic d…

AdultHepatosplenomegalyLysosomal acid lipase deficiencyBioinformaticsOrganomegaly03 medical and health sciencesLiver disease0302 clinical medicinemedicineCholesteryl ester storage disease Enzyme replacement therapy Gaucher disease Lysosomal acid lipase Niemann–Pick disease deficiency Substrate reduction therapyHumansSubstrate reduction therapyEnzyme Replacement TherapySocieties MedicalNiemann-Pick DiseasesAcid sphingomyelinase deficiencyGaucher DiseaseHepatologybusiness.industryGastroenterologyWolman DiseaseEnzyme replacement therapymedicine.diseaseLysosomal Storage DiseasesSphingomyelin PhosphodiesteraseItaly030220 oncology & carcinogenesis030211 gastroenterology & hepatologymedicine.symptombusinessNiemann–Pick diseaseLysosomesVisceromegalyDigestive and liver disease : official journal of the Italian Society of Gastroenterology and the Italian Association for the Study of the Liver
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Mutation analysis in myophosphorylase deficiency (McArdle's disease).

1998

Inherited deficiency of myophosphorylase leads to glycogen storage disease type V (McArdle's disease). We performed mutation analysis in 9 patients of eight unrelated families from Germany with typical cliniclal presentation of myophos-phorylase deficiency. Beside previously described mutations we identified four novel mutations in the myophorsphorylase gene. Four patients were homozygous for a nonsense mutation Arg49Stop that has been reported to be the most common mutation in white patients. Two affected siblings were compound heterozygotes for a novel missense mutation Gly685Arg and the nonsense mutation Arg49Stop. One patient carried a novel nonsense mutation Arg575Stop and a previously…

AdultMaleAdolescentNonsense mutationDNA Mutational AnalysisBiologyCompound heterozygosityPolymerase Chain ReactionmedicineMissense mutationHumansAmino Acid SequenceChildCodonAgedGeneticsTransition (genetics)Base SequenceHomozygoteMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseNeurologyMyophosphorylaseMutation (genetic algorithm)MutationMutation testingGlycogen Storage Disease Type VFemaleNeurology (clinical)Glycogen storage disease type VPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthAnnals of neurology
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Encoding, storage, and response preparation-Distinct EEG correlates of stimulus and action representations in working memory.

2019

Working memory (WM) allows for the active storage of stimulus- and higher level representations, such as action plans. This electroencephalography (EEG) study investigated the specific electrophysiological correlates dissociating action-related from stimulus-related representations in WM using three different experimental conditions based on the same stimulus material. In the experiment, a random sequence of single numbers (from 1 to 6) was presented and participants had to indicate whether the current number (N0 condition), the preceding number (N-1 condition), or the sum of the current and the preceding number (S-1 condition) was odd or even. Accordingly, participants had to store a stimu…

AdultMaleCognitive NeuroscienceActive storageExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulus (physiology)ElectroencephalographyMotor Activity050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesExecutive FunctionYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineDevelopmental NeurosciencemedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAttentionEvoked PotentialsBiological Psychiatrymedicine.diagnostic_testEndocrine and Autonomic SystemsWorking memoryGeneral Neuroscience05 social sciencesRandom sequenceBrain WavesEvent-Related Potentials P300ElectrophysiologyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyMemory Short-TermNeurologyFemalePsychologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPsychomotor PerformancePsychophysiologyREFERENCES
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Comparison of Methods for the Assessment of Nonlinearity in Short-Term Heart Rate Variability under different Physiopathological States

2019

Despite the widespread diffusion of nonlinear methods for heart rate variability (HRV) analysis, the presence and the extent to which nonlinear dynamics contribute to short-term HRV are still controversial. This work aims at testing the hypothesis that different types of nonlinearity can be observed in HRV depending on the method adopted and on the physiopathological state. Two entropy-based measures of time series complexity (normalized complexity index, NCI) and regularity (information storage, IS), and a measure quantifying deviations from linear correlations in a time series (Gaussian linear contrast, GLC), are applied to short HRV recordings obtained in young (Y) and old (O) healthy su…

AdultMaleFOS: Computer and information sciencesTime Factorsnonlinear dynamicSupine positionEntropyQuantitative Biology::Tissues and OrgansPhysics::Medical PhysicsGeneral Physics and Astronomysample entropyStatistics - ApplicationsQuantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasSurrogate dataComplexity indexHeart Rateinformation storage0103 physical sciencesStatisticsHumansHeart rate variabilityApplications (stat.AP)010306 general physicsMathematical PhysicsQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)MathematicsApplied MathematicsNonlinear methodsHealthy subjectsStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsMiddle AgedNonlinear systemComplex dynamicsNonlinear DynamicsFOS: Biological sciencesSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaFemaleHeart rate variability (HRV)
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Mycotoxin Dietary Exposure Assessment through Fruit Juices Consumption in Children and Adult Population

2019

Consumption of fruit juice is becoming trendy for consumers seeking freshness and high vitamin and low caloric intake. Mycotoxigenic moulds may infect fruits during crop growth, harvest, and storage leading to mycotoxin production. Many mycotoxins are resistant to food processing, which make their presence in the final juice product very likely expected. In this way, the presence of 30 mycotoxins including aflatoxin B1 (AFB1), aflatoxin B2 (AFB2), aflatoxin G1 (AFG1), aflatoxin G2 (AFG2), alternariol (AOH), alternariol monomethyl ether (AME), Ochratoxin A (OTA), fumonisin B1 (FB1), fumonisin B2 (FB2), enniatin A (ENNA), enniatin A1 (ENNA1), enniatin B (ENNB), enniatin B1 (ENNB1), beauverici…

AdultMaleOchratoxin ACitrusAflatoxinLiquid Phase MicroextractionHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesislcsh:MedicineFood ContaminationBiologyToxicologyfruit juice01 natural sciencesArticleDietary ExposurePatulinGlycogen Storage Disease Type IIIchemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologyTandem Mass SpectrometryHumansFood scienceChildMycotoxinFumonisin B2DLLMElcsh:R010401 analytical chemistryReproducibility of Resultsrisk assessment04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesMycotoxins040401 food scienceBeauvericin0104 chemical sciencesFruit and Vegetable JuiceschemistryMalusFemaleEnniatinSterigmatocystinToxins
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