Six methanol extracts from different parts of plants used in northeast Mexico as general health supplements were examined for their potential as antioxidants. The plants evaluated were: Turnera diffusa Wild. (Turneraceae), Cucurbita foetidissima Kunth (Cucurbitaceae), Flourensia cernua D.C. (Asteraceae), Selaginella pilifera A. Braun (Selaginellaceae), Juglans mollis Engelm. (Juglandaceae) and Centaurea americana Nutt. (Asteraceae alt. Compositae). Antioxidant properties of these extracts were evaluated by means of different assays, including the l,l-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical test by TLC and spectrophotometry, inhibition of xanthine oxidase (XO) activity, and total phenolics content. Five plants showed high scavenging potential; their total phenolics content was also high. The extracts from four plants inhibited the activity of XO. Two of the most promising plants, T. diffusa and J. mollis, did not show cytotoxicity. Considering that antioxidants prevent lipid peroxidation in foods and help in the treatment and prevention of degenerative illness, these two species are good candidates to be considered and further evaluated as natural additives in foods to provide protection against oxidative degradation.
The Semantic Web enables companies and organizations to gather huge amounts of valuable semantically annotated data concerning their subjects of interest. Nowadays, many applications attach metadata and semantic annotations taken from domain and application ontologies to the information they generate. From our point of view, the concepts in these ontologies could describe the facts, dimensions, categories and values implied in the analysis subjects of a data warehouse. In this paper we propose the Semantic Data Warehouse to be a repository of ontologies and semantically annotated data resources. We also propose an ontology-driven framework to design multidimensional analysis models for Semantic Data Warehouses. This framework provides means for building an integrated ontology, called the Multidimensional Integrated Ontology (MIO), including the classes, relationships and instances that represent interesting analysis dimensions and measures. The reasoning capabilities of a MIO can be used to check the properties required by current multidimensional databases (e.g., dimension orthogonality, category satisfiability, etc.). In this paper we also sketch how the instance data of a MIO can be translated into OLAP cubes for analysis purposes. Finally, some implementation issues of the overall framework are discussed.
OBJECTIVE: Wood smoke exposure is a risk factor for COPD. For a given degree of airway obstruction, the reduction in DLCO is smaller in individuals with wood smoke-related COPD than in those with smoking-related COPD, suggesting that there is less emphysema in the former. The objective of this study was to compare HRCT findings between women with wood smoke-related COPD and women with smoking-related COPD. METHODS: Twenty-two women with severe COPD (FEV1/FVC ratio < 70% and FEV1 < 50%) were divided into two groups: those with wood smoke-related COPD (n = 12) and those with smoking-related COPD (n = 10). The two groups were compared regarding emphysema scores and airway involvement (as determined by HRCT); and functional abnormalities-spirometry results, DLCO, alveolar volume (VA), the DLCO/VA ratio, lung volumes, and specific airway resistance (sRaw). RESULTS: There were no significant differences between the two groups in terms of FEV1, sRaw, or lung hyperinflation. Decreases in DLCO and in the DLCO/VA ratio were greater in the smoking-related COPD group subjects, who also had higher emphysema scores, in comparison with the wood smoke-related COPD group subjects. In the wood smoke-related COPD group, HRCT scans showed no significant emphysema, the main findings being peribronchial thickening, bronchial dilation, and subsegmental atelectasis. CONCLUSIONS: Female patients with severe wood smoke-related COPD do not appear to develop emphysema, although they do show severe airway involvement. The reduction in DLCO and VA, with a normal DLCO/VA ratio, is probably due to severe bronchial obstruction and incomplete mixing of inspired gas during the determination of single-breath DLCO.
Chemotherapy and radiotherapy often result in reduced fertility in cancer patients. With increasing survival rates, fertility is an important quality-of-life concern for many young cancer patients. Around 70–75% of young cancer survivors are interested in parenthood but the numbers of patients who access fertility preservation techniques prior to treatment are significantly lower. Moreover, despite existing guidelines, healthcare professionals do not address fertility preservation issues adequately. There is a critical need for improvements in clinical care to ensure patients are well informed about infertility risks and fertility preservation options and to support them in their reproductive decision-making prior to cancer treatment.
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