Search results for "TOPS"

showing 10 items of 398 documents

Food safety risk analysis from the producers' perspective: prioritisation of production process stages by HACCP and TOPSIS

2018

[EN] From the manufacturers perspective, the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) system nowadays represents the mainly way to implement the food safety risk management in food industries. Nevertheless, the identification and prioritization of hazards as the outcome of the first principle of HACCP is not sufficient to identify production process stages that more significantly and critically contribute to the consumer¿s risks. With this recognition, the present paper proposes a Quantitative Risk Assessment (QRA) approach based on HACCP and Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS) to individuate production process phases on which implementing co…

business.industryFood safety risk analysisGeneral Decision SciencesTOPSISFood safety risk analysisAnalysis of production process stageAnalysis of production process stagesHazard analysishazard analysis and critical control pointFood safetyHACCPfood.foodSmoked salmonfood safety risk analysifoodRisk analysis (engineering)Critical control pointbusinessRisk assessmentTOPSISMATEMATICA APLICADARisk management
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Evaluación de la calidad de los diagnósticos premortem de causas de muerte en las autopsias del Hospital Clínico Universitario de Valencia (1985-1992)

2009

Se estudiaron 998 autopsias realizadas en el Servicio de Anatomía Patológica del Hospital Clínico Universitario de Valencia entre 1985 y 1992, introducidas y procesadas en el Sistema Automatizado de Registro y Control de Anatomía Patológica (SARCAP) en el Hospital «Hermanos Ameijeiras» de La Habana, Cuba. Los principales resultados fueron: predominio del sexo masculino y las edades avanzadas; las principales causas básicas de muerte fueron los tumores malignos, la ateromatosis coronaria, la cirrosis hepática y el SIDA, y las principales causas directas de muerte fueron la bronconeumonía, la extensión del cáncer y el tromboembolismo pulmonar. Hubo 10,6% de discrepancias diagnósticas premorte…

business.industryMultiple causes of deathAutopsia:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS ::Medicina Forense [UNESCO]:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Pathology and Forensic MedicineUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICAS ::Medicina ForenseUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASMedicineCausas de muerte múltipleAutopsia ; Calidad ; Causas de muerte múltiplebusinessHumanitiesCalidad
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FORENSIC MICROBIOLOGY: A CASE SERIES ANALYSIS

2019

The importance of microbial colonization of human organs in a living body has long been assessed. What still remains unclear are the microbial changes occurring after death, thus leading to the advent of a relatively novel field of research called “Postmortem microbiology”. It is applied to several forensic fields such as post-mortem interval assessment and cause of death determination. In this contest, a major limit is thus represented by the correct interpretation of the microbial data and by the actual lack of standard procedures. Here we propose a standard operative protocol in order to avoid false positives given by contamination (the main problem), post-mortem translocation and agonal…

cause of deathlcsh:R5-920contaminationautopsyoperative protocollcsh:Medicine (General)forensic microbiologyEuromediterranean Biomedical Journal
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Evaluation of the Fate of Aldicarb and Its Metabolites in Oranges

1995

Abstract The accumulation, persistence and fate of systemic pesticide aldicarb was melencholy evaluated in orange crops. The concentration of this pesticide and its two toxic metabolites, aldicarb sulfoxide and aldicarb sulfone was determined in leaves, rind and pulp of three orange varieties (Satsuma, Navelina and Clemetina de Nules) and in the top soil of the orange groves. The groves were located in two different places in the Valencia Community (Spain). The analysis showed that the aldicarb concentration was lower than those of aldicarb sulfoxide and aldicarb sulfone. In all cases, the residues persisted at least 160 days in vegetable samples and between 157 and 227 days in soil samples…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCarbamateTopsoilChromatographyAldicarbHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedicine.medical_treatmentPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthSoil ScienceOrange (colour)PesticidePollutionAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundHorticulturechemistrySoil watermedicineEnvironmental ChemistryOrganic matterCultivarWaste Management and DisposalWater Science and TechnologyInternational Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry
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Influence of inheritance and pedogenesis on heavy metal distribution in soils of Sicily, Italy

2000

Abstract The recognition of the potential health hazards associated with heavy metals has focused attention on the levels and behaviours of these elements both in natural and contaminated environments. Various soil types developed from different parent materials in Sicily, Italy, have been analysed in order to compare heavy metal distribution under different geopedological conditions. Total metal concentrations, metal partitioning and distribution profiles are discussed in relation to the inheritance factor and pedogenic processes. Parent material composition largely influences the contents of heavy metals in most of the analysed soils, mainly differentiating pedons for their metal concentr…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTopsoilInceptisolSoil ScienceSoil scienceVertisolPedogenesischemistryEnvironmental chemistryCation-exchange capacitySoil horizonOrganic matterEntisolGeologyGeoderma
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Selenium Partitioning and Stable Isotope Ratios in Urban Topsoils

2011

oxides. Th e δ82/76 Se values of total Se in the topsoils were close to the bulk Earth composition with an average δ82/76 Se value of −0.03 ± SD 0.38‰ suggesting that there was no or little Se isotope fractionation in soil. We attribute the small isotope fractionation to the low bioavailability of Se as a consequence of the presence of Fe oxides (adsorbing the dominating Se(IV) forms strongly), organic matter, and SO 4 2− (prevents biouptake of the Se(IV) forms) in the study soils. Small Se isotope fractionations of −0.59 to −0.35‰ in mainly forest soils and of 0.26 to 0.45‰ in mainly alluvial soils were presumably caused by soil/plant-recycling and Se contamination by river water, respecti…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTopsoilIsotopeStable isotope ratioSoil Sciencechemistry.chemical_elementSoil scienceFractionationIsotope fractionationchemistryEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterOrganic matterSeleniumSoil Science Society of America Journal
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Pedogenesis in disturbed alpine soils (NW Italy)

2002

In alpine environments, natural or man-induced disturbances are fairly common and acknowledged as determining factors in pedogenesis and soil distribution. We have selected a representative alpine valley in the Italian Northwestern Alps to evaluate the effects of perturbations of different intensity and frequency on soil development and weathering during the last few centuries. In order of decreasing disturbances, we selected: (i) an active avalanche shoot; (ii) a man-built terrace; (iii) a park-like forest; and (iv) a coniferous forest. In the two most disturbed sites, independently of the intensity and frequency of the disturbances, the active pedogenic processes are restricted to the top…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTopsoilSoil ScienceSoil scienceWeatheringVegetationengineering.materialPodzolPedogenesischemistryIlliteengineeringSoil horizonOrganic matterGeologyGeoderma
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Effect of climate and vegetation on soil organic carbon, humus fractions, allophanes, imogolite, kaolinite, and oxyhydroxides in volcanic soils of Et…

2007

A soil sequence along an elevational gradient ranging from subtropical to subalpine climate zones in the Etna region (Sicily, southern Italy) was investigated with respect to organic C, kaolinite, and crystalline to noncrystalline Al and Fe phases. Special emphasis was given to the stabilization of soil organic carbon (SOC) and its interaction with the inorganic phases. The soils were variations of Vitric Andosols that developed on a trachy-basaltic lava flow with an age of 15,000 years. Two main vegetation systems dominated the sites: at the lower sites, it was mainly maquis vegetation and, at the higher elevated sites, predominantly coniferous forest. The concentration of SOC in the topso…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTopsoilSoil organic matterSoil ScienceSoil scienceSoil carbonHumusAndosolSoil organic matter kaolinite fulvic and humid acidschemistrySoil waterVegetation typeOrganic matterGeology
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Factors influencing carbon decomposition of topsoils from the Brazilian Amazon Basin

1999

The influence of texture and local climate, especially precipitation, on C decomposition was evaluated in topsoils under forest and pastures at different sites located in the western, central, and eastern Brazilian Amazon Basin. Independent of the geographical location and vegetation cover, C decomposition was lower in topsoils of fine texture with a sand/clay ratio of less than 1, compared to topsoils of coarse a texture with a sand/clay ratio ranging from 2 to 8. In the former, the low sand/clay ratio appears to reduce C decomposition. In the latter, besides the effect of the high sand/clay ratio, the local climate, especially the annual precipitation, seems to play an important role in c…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTopsoil[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Soil biologySoil ScienceSoil scienceRainforestMicrobiologyTexture (geology)Soil qualityCarbon cyclechemistry[SDE]Environmental SciencesEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterPrecipitationAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiology and Fertility of Soils
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Carbon decomposition of the topsoils and soil fractions under forest and pasture in the western Brazilian Amazon basin, Rondonia

2000

The topsoils of two sites, comprising natural forest and 4- and 20-year-old pastures, respectively, were selected in Rondonia to evaluate the changes of soil organic matter due to pasture establishment. These changes were evaluated by measuring the proportions of the C and N associated with clay and silt fractions, and by the C decomposition (CD) rate of the whole topsoils and their size fractions. The topsoils studied had large proportions of C and N associated with fine fractions, especially with clay fractions. The CD rate of the silt fractions was higher than that of the clay fractions under the two forest topsoils and under the 20-year-old pasture. The CD rate of the silt fractions und…

chemistry.chemical_classificationTotal organic carboninorganic chemicalsgeographyTopsoilBiogeochemical cyclegeography.geographical_feature_categorySoil organic matter[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Soil ScienceSoil scienceVegetationSiltMicrobiologyPasturecomplex mixturesAgronomychemistry[SDE]Environmental SciencesEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterAgronomy and Crop Science
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