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We prove that if a compact, simply connected Riemannian G-manifold M has orbit space $M/G$ isometric to some other quotient $N/H$ with N having zero topological entropy, then M is rationally elliptic. This result, which generalizes most conditions on rational ellipticity, is a particular case of a more general result involving manifold submetries.
Recently, the World Health Organization recommendation for abstinence time for semen analysis has been challenged in some studies and many of them have supported the advantages of a second short abstinence ejaculation. More evidence is needed to approve this for clinical use. This study aimed to compare the average routine abstinence time (2–7 days) with the short time (1–2 h) on sperm quality based on functional parameters in a population of oligo-astheno-teratozoospermia (OAT) men. The semen samples were retrieved from 50 men with OAT two times: one standard 2–7 days (long ejaculation) and short duration trimming (1–2 hours later the first ejaculation). All semen parameters as well as sperm DNA integrity were compared between groups. Results showed that mean sperm concentration (10.40 vs. 8.76), total sperm count (28.53 vs. 12.24) and mean semen volume (2.69 vs. 1.40) were higher in the first ejaculation (2–7 days of abstinence), while progressive motility (20.52 vs. 13.32), non-progressive motility (53.46 vs. 48.86), morphology (2.46 vs. 1.46) and viability (83.90 vs. 77.96) were significantly higher in the second ejaculation (P < 0.05). The second sample also showed lower immotile (26.82 vs. 38.02) and DNA fragmentation (19.5 vs. 26.96) (P < 0.05). Taking all data into account, an additional short abstinence period (AP) may be a simple and helpful strategy to obtain better sperm quality in couples with male infertility causes, especially in OAT patients. The recommended current guidelines regarding the AP may need to be revisited in severe male factors.
The period of struggle over hydrocarbon sovereignty in the Arab world –the 1950s-1970s– saw a spate of periodicals in Arabic about oil. These included periodicals produced by the public relations departments of Euro-American oil companies, as well as monthlies, weeklies and quarterlies produced by Arab journalists, experts, and former oil revolutionaries in Cairo, Baghdad, Beirut and Kuwait. This essay argues that the trajectory of these latter publications –both their context and content– traces the massive political transformations that saw a shift of power in the region, alongside a radical transformation in the representation of oil from a public good into a private property.
Background: We performed a network meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials to assess the comparative effectiveness of available pharmacological prophylaxis for migraines. Methods: We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, Scopus, PsycINFO and Cochrane CENTRAL up to October 2023 for trials that: (1) enrolled adults diagnosed with chronic migraine, and (2) randomized them to any prophylactic medication vs. another medication or placebo. We performed a random-effects frequentist network meta-analysis for patient-important outcomes. Results: We included 193 randomized trials. Compared to placebo, CGRP monoclonal antibodies (mean difference [MD] -1.7, 95%CI: -1.1 to -2.2), injection of botulinum toxin (MD -1.8, 95%CI: -0.7 to -2.9), calcium channel blockers (MD -1.8, 95%CI: -0.5 to -3.0), beta-blockers (MD -1.4, 95%CI: -0.2 to -2.6), and anticonvulsants (MD -1.1, 95%CI: -0.4 to -1.8) were among the most effective treatments in reducing average number of headache days per months. Anticonvulsants (Risk Ratio [RR] 2.3, 95%CI: 1.8 to 3.0), calcium channel blockers (RR 1.8, 95% CI: 1.1 to 3.1), and tricyclic antidepressants (RR 2.3, 95% CI: 1.3 to 3.8) showed the highest risk of discontinuation due to adverse events. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that CGRP inhibitors, botulinum toxin, and beta-blockers may provide the greatest benefit, and tolerability, for reducing the frequency of migraine headaches.
Electromagnetic radiation (EMR) has deleterious effects on sperm motility and viability, as well as oocyte membrane and organelle structure. The aim was to assess the effects of cell phone radiation on preimplantation embryo morphokinetics and blastocyst viability in mice. For superovulation, 20 female mice were treated with intraperitoneal (IP) injections of 10 IU pregnant mare’s serum gonadotropin (Folligon® PMSG), followed by 10 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) after 48 h. The zygotes (n = 150) from the control group were incubated for 4 days. The experimental zygotes (n = 150) were exposed to a cell phone emitting EMR with a frequency range 900–1800 MHz for 30 min on day 1. Then, all embryos were cultured in the time-lapse system and annotated based on time points from the 2-cell stage (t2) to hatched blastocyst (tHDyz), as well as abnormal cleavage patterns. Blastocyst viability was assessed using Hoechst and propidium iodide staining. Significant increases (P < 0.05) were observed in the cleavage division time points of t2, t8, t10, and t12 of the experimental group compared with the controls. In terms of blastocyst formation parameters, a delay in embryo development was observed in the experimental group compared with the controls. Data analysis of the time intervals between the two groups showed a significant difference in the s3 time interval (P < 0.05). Also, the rates of fragmentation, reverse cleavage, vacuole formation, and embryo arrest were significantly higher in the experimental group (P < 0.05). Furthermore, the cell survival rate in the experimental group was lower than the control group (P < 0.05). Exposure to EMR has detrimental consequences for preimplantation embryo development in mice. These effects can manifest as defects in the cleavage stage and impaired blastocyst formation, leading to lower cell viability.
Enzymes adsorbed on clay minerals and soil colloids may exhibit lower activities compared to those of free enzymes. A particular toxic metal may affect the activity of the adsorbed enzyme less critically than that of the free form, however. This information is necessary for predicting catalytic performances of clay-immobilized enzymes in natural soils as well as in food, pharmaceutical, and chemical systems. The objective of the present study was to find out how adsorption on palygorskite and sepiolite minerals modifies the catalytic activity and the Michaelis–Menten kinetics of alkaline phosphatase (ALP). Inhibition kinetics of adsorbed ALP by Cd was also compared to that of the free enzyme. The results revealed that the affinity to the substrate and the maximum reaction velocity of ALP decreased upon adsorption on the fibrous clay minerals. The ALP adsorbed maintained a reasonably high activity recovery (AR) compared to the free enzyme. The AR of the adsorbed ALP ranged from 76.9 to 92.5% for palygorskite and from 71.2 to 90.2% for sepiolite, depending on the substrate concentration applied. The presence of Cd decreased the affinity to the substrate of both the free and the adsorbed ALP, while the maximum reaction velocity remained nearly unchanged, indicating that the inhibitory effects of Cd on both the free and adsorbed ALP activities were competitive in nature. The adsorbed enzyme, however, was inhibited less severely by Cd compared to the free enzyme. The adsorption of ALP on the fibrous clay minerals, therefore, maintains the ALP activity to a great extent and provides more resistance for the enzyme against the inhibitory effects of Cd.
Symptomatology of epilepsy and its’ associated alteration in brain processes, stigma of experiencing seizures, and adverse sequelae of anti-epileptics have been demonstrated to impact behaviour and exacerbate psychopathology. This study examines the role of dysfunctional schema modes in People with Epilepsy (PWE) and their association with psychiatric symptoms.
Methods:
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 108 PWE treated with anti-epileptics for at least one year and with no history or mental disorder or psycho-active substance use. Clinical symptoms were measured utilising the Symptom Checklist-90 (SCL-90) with schema modes measured utilising the Schema Mode Inventory (SMI).
Results:
Maladaptive coping and child schema modes were significantly higher in individuals from lower socio-economic status group (p < 0.01), with several maladaptive schema modes more prevalent in males. Hostility symptoms were increased in individuals from lower socio-economic classes and were more prevalent early in disease course. Several psychological symptoms including somatisation, interpersonal, obsession, depression, paranoia, hostility, phobia, anxiety, and psychoticism, were predicted by various maladaptive schema modes (p < 0.001).
Conclusion:
This study highlights the impact of maladaptive schemas, suggesting that PWE might benefit from the introduction of appropriate psychotherapeutic interventions such as schema-focused therapy, particularly if from lower socio-economic classes or in the early stages of theirdisease course.
This paper concerns the recent revival of entity realism. Having been started with the work of Ian Hacking, Nancy Cartwright, and Ronald Giere, the project of entity realism has recently been developed by Matthias Egg, Markus Eronen, and Bence Nanay. The paper opens a dialogue among these recent views on entity realism and integrates them into a more advanced view. The result is an epistemological criterion for reality: the property-tokens of a certain type may be taken as real insofar as only they can be materially inferred from the evidence obtained in a variety of independent ways of detection.
The objective of this study was to assess the effects of pentoxifylline (PTX) and Ca2+ ionophore (CI) A12387 treatment on some biological characteristics of sperm cells in oligoasthenoteratozoospermia (OAT) patients. After processing, each sample was divided into four groups: 1, control; 2, exposed to 3.6 mM PTX; 3, exposed to 5 μm calcium ionophore (CI); and 4, exposed to both PTX and CI; 30 min at 37°C. Sperm motility was measured before and after preparation. Acrosome reaction (AR), status of sperm vacuoles, mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) and DNA fragmentation were assessed using PSA-FITC staining, motile sperm organelle morphology examination (MSOME), JC-1 staining and sperm chromatin dispersion (CSD) test, respectively. Treatment with PTX and CI led to increased and decreased sperm motility, respectively (P < 0.05). Furthermore, vacuole status and rates of sperm DNA fragmentation were not significantly different among groups (P > 0.05). Moreover, the data showed that the rates of AR and disrupted MMP were significantly different between groups (P < 0.05). In conclusion, in vitro application of PTX not only did not have any adverse effects on sperm cell biology characteristics, but also can rectify the harmful effect of CI.
The aim of this study was to assess the consequences of treatment with pentoxifylline (PTX), an inducer of sperm motility, on sperm DNA fragmentation (SDF) and clinical characteristics in non-obstructive azoospermia (NOA) patients. The pilot study included 15 NOA patients. Half of each sperm sample before and after rapid freezing, was treated with PTX (3.6 mM /l, 30 min) as the PTX group and the remaining samples were considered as the control. SDF and sperm motility were assessed in each group. The clinical study comprised 30 fresh testicular sperm extractions (TESE) and 22 post-thawed TESE intracytoplasmic sperm injection cycles. Half of the mature oocytes from each patient were injected with PTX-treated spermatozoa and the remaining oocytes were injected with non-treated spermatozoa. Fertilization was assessed at 16 h post injection. Embryo transfer was carried out on day 2 after fertilization. Chemical pregnancy was assessed 2 weeks after transfer. PTX was found to significantly increase (P < 0.05) sperm motility. There was an insignificant difference in SDF rates between the groups (P > 0.05). In patient ovaries given fresh TESE, there was not any significant difference in clinical characteristics (P > 0.05). In patient ovaries given post-thawed TESE, there was a significant difference in the number of 2PN and in embryo formation (P < 0.05). Differences in the results of chemical pregnancy were insignificant (P > 0.05) between the groups. In addition, there was not any correlation between DNA fragmentation index and sperm motility and laboratory outcomes. Therefore, obtaining viable spermatozoa using PTX was more effective in post-thawed TESE regime patients in terms of 2PN and in embryo formation, deprived of damaging effects on sperm DNA integrity.
Elder mistreatment is common and often overlooked by health-care providers. It may include physical abuse, psychological and emotional abuse, sexual abuse, financial exploitation, and neglect. While any older adult may be susceptible, particular mitigating factors discussed in this chapter include cognitive impairment and dementia, multimorbidity, substance use, socioeconomics and culture, and social isolation. Strategies for approaching clinical cases, identifying signs and symptoms, and developing interventions are explored using illustrative cases and selected findings from the growing literature on elder mistreatment across care settings.
Recently, more attention has been raised towards fertility preservation in women with cancer. One option is in vitro maturation (IVM) of the immature oocytes as there is not enough time for induction of an ovarian stimulation protocol. The aim was to compare the IVM laboratory outcomes between stimulated and unstimulated (natural) in vitro fertilization (IVF) cycles. In total, 234 immature oocytes collected from 15 cancer patients who underwent an IVM programme (natural IVM) and 23 IVF cycles with a controlled ovarian hyperstimulation protocol (stimulated IVM) were analyzed. The oocyte morphology, zona pellucida (ZP), and meiotic spindle presence were measured using PolScope technology. Also, the rates of oocyte maturation and fertilization were assessed in both groups. The IVM rate was higher in the stimulated cycle (P < 0.05), but the fertilization rate was insignificant in comparison with unstimulated cycles. There were no significant differences in the spindle visualization and ZP birefringence scoring between the groups (P > 0.05). The oocyte normal morphology was better in the stimulated cycle compared with the natural cycle (P < 0.05). In conclusion, IVM can be recommended for cancer patients as an alternative treatment when there is insufficient time for conventional IVF before chemotherapy initiation.
The settling velocity of porous particles in linear stratification is affected by the diffusive exchange between interstitial and ambient water. The extent to which buoyancy and interstitial mass adaptation alters the settling velocity depends on the ratio of the diffusive and viscous time scales. We conducted schlieren experiments and lattice Boltzmann simulations for highly porous (95 %) but impermeable spheres settling in linear stratification. For a parameter range that resembles marine porous particles, ‘marine aggregates’, i.e. low Reynolds numbers ($0.05\leq \textit {Re}\leq 10$), intermediate Froude numbers ($0.1\leq \textit {Fr}\leq 100$) and Schmidt number of salt ($\textit {Sc}=700$), we observe delayed mass adaptation of the interstitial fluid due to lower-density fluid being dragged by a particle that forms a density boundary layer around the particle. The boundary layer buffers the diffusive exchange of stratifying agent with the ambient fluid, leading to an enhanced density contrast of the interstitial pore fluid. Stratification-related drag enhancement by means of additional buoyancy of dragging lighter fluid and buoyancy-induced vorticity resembles earlier findings for solid spheres. However, the exchange between density boundary layer and pore fluid substantially increases stratification drag for small $\textit {Fr}$. To estimate the effect of stratification on marine aggregates settling in the ocean, we derived scaling laws and show that small particles ($\leq$0.5 mm) experience enhanced drag which increases retention times by 10 % while larger porous particle (>0.5 mm) settling is dominated by delayed mass adaptation that diminishes settling velocity by 10 % up to almost 100 %. The derived relationships facilitate the integration of stratification-dependent settling velocities into biogeochemical models.
Cell phones operate with a wide range of frequency bands and emit radiofrequency-electromagnetic radiation (RF-EMR). Concern on the possible health hazards of RF-EMR has been growing in many countries because these RF-EMR pulses may be absorbed into the body cells, directly affecting them. There are some in vitro and in vivo animal studies related to the consequences of RF-EMR exposure from cell phones on embryo development and offspring. In addition, some studies have revealed that RF-EMR from cellular phone may lead to decrease in the rates of fertilization and embryo development, as well as the risk of the developmental anomalies, other studies have reported that it does not interfere with in vitro fertilization or intracytoplasmic sperm injection success rates, or the chromosomal aberration rate. Of course, it is unethical to study the effect of waves generated from cell phones on the forming human embryos. Conversely, other mammals have many similarities to humans in terms of anatomy, physiology and genetics. Therefore, in this review we focused on the existing literature evaluating the potential effects of RF-EMR on mammalian embryonic and fetal development.
In this paper, a simple and efficient method to increase the gain and bandwidth of the wearable antennas used in several medical/communications systems is presented. To increase the gain and bandwidth simultaneously, the triple transmission lines (TTLs) method has been used. With this method, the frequency ranges of 1.7–2.5 and 5.4–5.95 GHz are covered with dual-band responses. Also, the simulated maximum gain at 2 and 5.8 GHz is equal to 8.26 and 9.86 dB, respectively. Using the TTLs method, the second frequency band (5.4–5.95 GHz) is achieved. Also, the gain improvement in operating frequencies is more than 4 dB compared to the conventional antenna. The dimensions of the proposed wearable high-gain antenna are 80 × 92 × 2 mm3 or 0.57 × 0.67 × 0.01 λg3 at 2 GHz. Finally, a dual-band sample antenna for use in medical systems was fabricated with a flexible felt substrate and its characteristics were measured. There is a good fit between the measurement and simulation results.
Our understanding of the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) continues to evolve and there are many unknowns about its epidemiology. This study aims to synthesise case fatality rate (CFR) among confirmed COVID-19 patients, incubation period and time from onset of COVID-19 symptoms to first medical visit, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, recovery, and death. We searched MEDLINE, Embase, Google Scholar, and bibliographies of relevant articles from 01 December 2019 to 11 March 2020 without any language restrictions. Quantitative studies that recruited people with confirmed COVID-19 diagnosis were included. Two independent reviewers extracted the data. Out of 1675 non-duplicate studies, 43 were included in the meta-analysis. The pooled mean incubation period was 5.68 (99% confidence interval [CI]: 4.78, 6.59) days. The pooled mean number of days from the onset of COVID-19 symptoms to first clinical visit was 4.92 (95% CI: 3.95, 5.90), ICU admission was 9.84 (95% CI: 8.78, 10.90), recovery was 18.55 (95% CI: 13.69, 23.41), and death was 15.93 (95% CI: 13.07, 18.79). Pooled CFR among confirmed COVID-19 patients was 0.02 (95% CI: 0.02, 0.03). We found that the incubation period and lag between the onset of symptoms and first clinical visit for COVID-19 are longer than other respiratory viral infections including Middle East respiratory syndrome and severe acute respiratory syndrome; however, the current policy of 14 days of mandatory quarantine for everyone potentially exposed to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) might be too conservative. Longer quarantine periods might be more justified for extreme cases.
To evaluate quetiapine XR as adjunct to ongoing antidepressant therapy in patients with MDD showing inadequate response to antidepressant treatment.
Methods:
Data were analysed from two 6-week, multicentre, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled studies (D1448C00006; D1448C00007), prospectively designed to be pooled. Outpatients received adjunctive quetiapine XR 150mg/day (n=309), 300mg/day (n=307), placebo (n=303). Primary endpoint: change at Week 6 in MADRS total score. Other assessments included: MADRS individual item scores, HAM-A total scores, MADRS response and remission; AE reporting.
Results:
Quetiapine XR 150mg/day and 300mg/day (p< 0.001) reduced MADRS total scores versus placebo at Week 6 (-14.5, -14.8, -12.0) and Week 1 (-7.8, -7.3, -5.1). Subgroup analyses showed the therapeutic effect of quetiapine XR was neither limited to nor driven by factors such as gender or antidepressant class (SSRI/SNRI). Quetiapine XR demonstrated consistent improvements in individual MADRS items: 150mg/day and 300mg/day significantly improved 4/10 and 7/10 items at Week 6 versus placebo. At Week 6, MADRS response (≥50% decrease in total score) was 53.7% (p=0.063), 58.3% (p< 0.01) versus 46.2%; MADRS remission (total score ≤8) was 35.6% (p< 0.01), 36.5% (p< 0.001) versus 24.1% for quetiapine XR 150mg/day and 300mg/day and placebo, respectively. Quetiapine XR 150mg/day and 300mg/day improved HAM-A total scores versus placebo at Week 1 (-4.8 [p< 0.001], -4.2 [p< 0.01], -3.0) and Week 6 (-8.9 [p< 0.01], -9.1 [p< 0.001], -7.3). AEs (≥10%) were dry mouth, somnolence, sedation, dizziness, fatigue, constipation and headache with quetiapine XR.
Conclusion:
In patients with MDD and an inadequate response to antidepressant therapy adjunctive quetiapine XR is effective and generally well tolerated.
This pooled analysis evaluated efficacy of adjunct quetiapine XR (QTP-XR) in subgroups of patients with anxious depression and lower levels of anxiety.
Methods
Pooled data from two 6-week, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trials (D1448C00006/D1448C00007) in patients with inadequate response to antidepressants were analysed. Patients received adjunct QTP-XR (150 or 300 mg/day) or placebo+antidepressant (SSRI or SNRI). Using criteria defined in the STAR*D study, analyses conducted in patients with anxious depression or lower baseline anxiety levels (HAM-D anxiety/somatic factor score >/ = 7 and < 7, respectively) included LSM change at Week 6 in: MADRS total (primary endpoint), HAM-A and CGI-S total scores.
Results
For patients with anxious depression (n = 697; 76% patients), adjunct QTP-XR 150mg/day (-14.44, p < 0.01) and 300 mg/day (-15.09, p < 0.001) significantly improved MADRS total scores versus placebo+antidepressant (-11.78) at Week 6, with significant improvement demonstrated from Week 1 onwards. Significant improvements were seen in HAM-A (QTP-XR 150 mg/day: -9.05, p < 0.01; 300 mg/day -9.43, p < 0.01) and CGI-S total scores (QTP-XR 150 mg/day: -1.60, p< 0.001; 300 mg/day -1.63, p < 0.001) versus placebo+antidepressant (-7.40, -1.22, respectively) at Week 6.
A smaller subgroup (n = 222; 24% patients) had lower baseline anxiety levels. At Week 1, adjunct QTP-XR (150 mg/day -9.09; p < 0.01; 300 mg/day -8.60; p < 0.05) significantly improved MADRS total score versus placebo+antidepressant (-5.93). At Week 6 there were no significant changes (QTP-XR 150 mg/day -14.49; p = 0.243; 300 mg/day -14.01; p = 0.388) versus placebo+antidepressant (-12.78).
Conclusions
For patients with anxious depression, adjunct QTP-XR (150 and 300 mg/day) was effective at reducing symptoms of anxiety and depression, with symptom improvement observed from Week 1 onwards. AstraZeneca funded.
Bad news is ''any news that adversely and seriously affects an individual's view of his or her future and it is usually perceived to be related to incurable diagnosis or diagnosis leading to death. The physicians should not uncover main information especially about the future or present patient's situation, Today more than ever patient's legal and ethical right to understand the reality of his disease is respected This study was carried out to probe Iran community's attitude toward breaking bad news.
Method
This was a cross-sectional study in which 200 patients' companions in various wards of Afzalipour Hospital in Kerman were included. Data were entered in the questionnaires designed to evaluate people's attitude toward giving bad news and its quality.
Results
93 percent preferred to get aware of diagnosis in a supposed cancer situation. The majority agreed with expressing treatment strategies, complications, cure probability and estimated survival. Most agreed that decision making should be based on physician priorities, with having patients' desire in mind.
Conclusion
In terms of giving bad news, physicians ought to build up a more efficacious relationship with patients regarding their individual needs and requests.