•Production of phosphopeptides from a casein by-product was achieved with trypsin.•The precipitation pH and hydrolysis time can modulate the recovery of some sequences.•Comparison with peptides ...released by simulated gastrointestinal digestion was done.•Large homology was found between trypsin hydrolysis and simulated digestion products.•The studied casein by-product can be exploited as a source of caseinophosphopeptides.
The production of caseinophosphopeptides from a casein-derived by-product generated during the manufacture of a functional ingredient based on antihypertensive peptides was attempted. The casein by-product was submitted to tryptic hydrolysis for 30, 60 and 120min and further precipitated with calcium chloride and ethanol at pH 4.0, 6.0 and 8.0. Identification and semi quantification of the derived products by tandem mass spectrometry revealed some qualitative and quantitative changes in the released caseinophosphopeptides over time at the different precipitation pHs. The by-product was also subjected to simulated gastrointestinal digestion. Comparison of the resulting peptides showed large sequence homology in the phosphopeptides released by tryptic hydrolysis and simulated gastrointestinal digestion. Some regions, specifically αS1-CN 43-59, αS1-CN 60-74, β-CN 1-25 and β-CN 30-50 showed resistance to both tryptic hydrolysis and simulated digestion. The results of the present study suggest that this casein-derived by-product can be used as a source of CPPs.
► CPPs can be used as functional food ingredients due their antioxidant capacity. ► Pool B of CPPs showed the highest antioxidant capacity (TEAC and ORAC). ► CPPs protected Caco-2 cells against ...H2O2-induced oxidative stress. ► However, they failed to exert protection at mitochondrial level. ► Mechanism of action: metal chelation and modulation of intracellular signaling cascades.
Caseinophosphopeptides can sequester prooxidant metals and scavenge free radicals, and may thus be used as functional food ingredients. The total antioxidant capacity (TEAC and ORAC) of two pools of caseinophosphopeptides (1–3mg/ml), obtained from casein subjected to simulated gastrointestinal digestion (at two different pH values) and selective precipitation, was evaluated to determine dose–response activity. Pool B (which showed the highest antioxidant capacity due to the presence of more antioxidant amino acids) was used to test its cytoprotective effect against H2O2-induced oxidative stress in Caco-2 cells. Caseinophosphopeptides protected the cells against oxidative damage by preserving cell viability, increasing GSH content, inducing catalase enzyme activity, diminishing lipid peroxidation and maintaining a correct cell cycle progression. However, they failed to exert protection at a mitochondrial level (ROS and mitochondrial membrane potential), implying a partial and site-specific effect. Thus, their mechanism of action is not only related to free radical scavenging activity, but also to metal chelation and the modulation of intracellular signaling cascades.
In this work the use of chemical materials (additives) in order to reduce the biomass ash sintering tendency is investigated. A total of seven additives (kaolin, limestone, lime, dolomite, calcined ...dolomite, ophite and alumina) and silica utilised as reference material were mixed in different proportions with the ash of five different biomasses, and then a laboratory sintering test was performed on the mixtures to determine the effect of the additives on the sintering. The biomasses studied in this work were: thistle biomass, brassica carinata biomass, barley straw, almond shell and orujillo (olive oil extraction residue). The sintering decrease among the additives was studied using X-ray diffraction.
Kaolin, lime, calcined dolomite and ophite are proved to be suitable to reduce the biomass sintering in all the considered cases. Dolomite, limestone and, particularly, the tabular alumina, offer poorer results. The dilution of the biomass ash is considered the main process involved in the decrease of the sintering for most of the additives, with the exception of kaolin whose chemical reactions could be more important than the dilution effect.
Pathology of the musculoskeletal system is a frequent cause of healthcare requirements. Knowledge of musculoskeletal medicine (MSM) should be essential for most specialties. Unfortunately, many ...medical intern residents (MIRs) admit to a lack of confidence and competence in this field.
50 recently hired MIRs (32 of whom were COT residents from the Comunidad Valenciana) completed the Freedman and Berstein test of basic competency in MSM. In addition, they completed a questionnaire about their confidence in performing five common tasks in clinical practice and their perception of the curricular importance of medicine in their academic training.
The overall mean score obtained on the test was 69.44% (SD 13.32%), while the specific score for 5 “red flags” questions was 14.34% (SD 2.58%). Both of them showed significant differences between COT residents and other specialties.
The median obtained in the evaluation of the level of confidence in wound examination was 2 above 5 (IQR 2), with significant differences (p=.014) between the COT group and other specialties. The perception of the time spent in the faculty on MSM was considered adequate (median 3, IQR 1). 64% of participants would modify the approach to the practical part of the curriculum in MME.
The overall test was passed by 50% of the residents, which shows that the teaching of MME is deficient during the university and pre-MIR training period. We believe that it is important to plan training actions to increase the knowledge and skills necessary for its correct handling; this way, the system would be more efficient with better health care and a better screening of specialised derivations.
La enfermedad del sistema musculoesquelético es una causa frecuente de demanda asistencial. El conocimiento en medicina musculoesquelética (MME) debe ser esencial para gran parte de las especialidades. Desafortunadamente, gran parte de los médicos internos residentes (MIR) reconocen tener falta de confianza y de competencia en este campo.
Cincuenta MIR recién incorporados a su plaza (32 de ellos residentes de COT de la Comunidad Valenciana) completaron el test de competencia básica en MME de Freedman y Berstein. Además, realizaron un cuestionario sobre el grado de confianza al momento de desempeñar cinco tareas habituales en la práctica clínica y sobre la percepción de la carga curricular de MME en su formación académica.
La puntuación media global obtenida en el test fue de 69,44% (SD 13,32%), mientras que la puntuación concreta para cinco preguntas que se consideraban «banderas rojas» fue de 14,34% (SD 2,58%). Ambas mostraron diferencias significativas entre los residentes de COT y otras especialidades.
La mediana obtenida en la valoración del nivel de confianza en la exploración de heridas fue de 2 sobre 5 (IQR 2), con diferencias significativas (p=0,014) entre el grupo COT y el de otras especialidades. La percepción del tiempo dedicado en la facultad en materia de MME fue considerada como adecuada (mediana 3, IQR 1). El 64% modificaría el planteamiento de la parte práctica del currículo en MME.
La prueba global fue superada por el 50% de los residentes, lo cual pone de manifiesto que la enseñanza en MME es deficitaria durante el periodo universitario y formativo preMIR. Consideramos primordial la planificación de acciones formativas que se traduzca en un aumento de los conocimientos y aptitudes necesarias para su correcto manejo, ya que ello se traduciría en una mayor agilidad del sistema, una mejor asistencia sanitaria y un mejor cribado de derivaciones especializadas.
•The continuity condition of a motion law is analyzed at dead point configurations.•The feasibility of the laws is imposed to be reproduced by electrical actuators.•The Inverse Kinematics problem is ...arised trying to obtain an analytical solution.•L’Hôpital’s rule is applied to the system of constraint equations of the mechanism.•The proposed solution is valid for any planar one degree of freedom mechanism.
This paper proposes an analytical solution of the Inverse Kinematics (IK) problem at dead point configurations for any planar one degree of freedom linkage mechanism, with regard to the continuity Cn of the motion law. The systems analyzed are those whose elements are linked with lower pairs and do not present redundancies. The study aims to provide the user with some rules to facilitate the design of feasible motion profiles to be reproduced by conventional electrical actuators at these configurations. During the last decades, several methods and techniques have been developed to study this specific configuration. However, these techniques are mainly focused on solving numerically the IK indeterminacy, rather than analyzing the motion laws that the mechanisms are able to perform at these particular configurations. The analysis presented in this paper has been carried out differentiating and applying l’Hôpital’s rule to the system of constraint equations ϕ(q) of the mechanism. The study also considers the feasibility of the time-domain profiles to be reproduced with conventional electrical actuators (i.e. AC/DC motors, linear actuators, etc.). To show the usefulness and effectiveness of the method, the development includes the analytical application and numerical simulations for two common one degree of freedom systems: a slider-crank and a four linkage mechanisms. Finally, experimental results are presented on a four linkage mechanism test bed.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a topical formulation containing lidocaine plus diclofenac (CLIFE1) compared to lidocaine (CLIFE2), to decrease pain in benign ...anorectal surgery (BARS) to date not evaluated. More than 50% of patients undergoing BARS, especially hemorrhoidectomy, suffer from moderate and severe postoperative pain. This remains an unresolved problem that could be addressed with the new CLIFE1 topical treatment.
A multicenter, randomized double-blind, active-controlled parallel-group superiority trial, was conducted in two Spanish hospitals. Patients undergoing BARS (hemorrhoids, anal fistula and anal fissure) were randomized at the end of surgery at a 1:1 ratio to receive first dose either CLIFE1 (n = 60) or CLIFE2 (n = 60) anorectal topical treatment, and after every 12 h for the first three postoperative days and once a day from the fourth to sixth. The primary outcome was average of pain decrease after topical treatment, measured with visual analogue scale (VAS) by the patients themselves, the evening in the surgery day and four times daily for the first three postoperative days.
The results of 120 patients included out of 150 selected undergoing BARS show a decrease in pain after CLIFE1 topical treatment (7.47 ± 13.09) greater than with CLIFE2 (4.38 ± 6.75), difference -3.21 95% CI (-5.75; -0.68), p = 0.008, decreasing significantly postoperative pain ( ≥ 9 mm, VAS) in 35% of patients undergoing benign anorectal surgery, compared to 18.33 % treated with lidocaine.
The CLIFE1 topical treatment shows better analgesic efficacy than CLIFE2 in BARS.
Background/objectives: A smoking law was passed by the Spanish Parliament in December 2005 and was enforced by 1 January 2006. The law bans smoking in all indoor workplaces but only in some ...hospitality venues, because owners are allowed to establish a smoking zone (venues > 100 m²) or to allow smoking without restrictions (venues < 100 m²). The objective of the study is to assess the impact of the Spanish smoking law on exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) in enclosed workplaces, including hospitality venues. Materials and methods: The study design is a before-and-after evaluation. We studied workplaces and hospitality venues from eight different regions of Spain. We took repeated samples of vapor-phase nicotine concentration in 398 premises, including private offices (162), public administration offices (90), university premises (43), bars and restaurants (79), and discotheques and pubs (24). Results: In the follow-up period, SHS levels were markedly reduced in indoor offices. The median decrease in nicotine concentration ranged from 60.0% in public premises to 97.4% in private areas. Nicotine concentrations were also markedly reduced in bars and restaurants that became smoke-free (96.7%) and in the no-smoking zones of venues with separate spaces for smokers (88.9%). We found no significant changes in smoking zones or in premises allowing smoking, including discotheques and pubs. Conclusions: Overall, this study shows the positive impact of the law on reducing SHS in indoor workplaces. However, SHS was substantially reduced only in bars and restaurants that became smoke-free. Most hospitality workers continue to be exposed to very high levels of SHS. Therefore, a 100% smoke-free policy for all hospitality venues is required.
Anthropogenic drivers and global warming are altering the occurrence of infectious marine diseases, some of which produce mass mortalities with considerable ecosystemic and economic costs. The ...Mediterranean Sea is considered a laboratory to examine global processes, and the fan mussel Pinna nobilis a sentinel species within it. Since September 2016, fan mussels suffer a die-off, very likely provoked by the protozoan Haplosporidium pinnae. Population dynamic surveys, rescue programmes, larvae collector installation and protection of infected adults from predators, have increased knowledge about the factors conditioning the spread of the die-off; previous model simulations indicate that water temperature and salinity seem to be related to the manifestation of the disease, which at the end are strongly influenced by climate change and anthropogenic actions. The absence of natural recruitment implies that fan mussel populations are not recovering, but the survival of populations living in paralic environments provides an opportunity to study the disease and its conditioning factors. The fan mussel disease outbreak provides a case example for how climate change may mediate host-protozoan dynamics and poses several questions: are we witnessing the potential extinction of a sentinel species? Can we avoid it by applying active measures? If so, which measures will be more effective? How many other more overlooked species might experience a massive and unnoticed die-off before it is too late to implement any preservation action? This is especially relevant because the loss of keystone species can drive to community effects that influence marine ecosystem processes.
•In two years a new Pinna nobilis pandemic has spread throughout the Mediterranean Sea•Urgent measures are proposed and need to be taken to avoid P. nobilis extinction•Paralic environments are the only natural refuge known for P. nobilis to date•Fan mussels from infected populations can be saved if isolated in indoor facilities•Low water temperatures slow down the spread and infectious capacity of the disease
High-protein diets and renal status in rats Aparicio, V A; Nebot, E; García-del Moral, R ...
Nutrición hospitalaria : organo oficial de la Sociedad Española de Nutrición Parenteral y Enteral,
01/2013, Letnik:
28, Številka:
1
Journal Article
Odprti dostop
High-protein (HP) diets might affect renal status. We aimed to examine the effects of a HP diet on plasma, urinary and morphological renal parameters in rats.
Twenty Wistar rats were randomly ...distributed in 2 experimental groups with HP or normal-protein (NP) diets over 12 weeks.
Final body weight was a 10%lower in the HP group (p < 0.05) whereas we have not observed differences on food intake, carcass weight and muscle ashes content. No significant clear differences were observed on plasma parameters, whereas urinary citrate was an 88% lower in the HP group (p = 0.001) and urinary pH a 15% more acidic (p < 0.001). Kidney wet mass was ~22 heavier in the HP group (p < 0.001). Renal mesangium area was a 32% higher in the HP group (p < 0.01). Glomerular 1 and 2 were also ~30 higher in the HP diet (p < 0.01 and p < 0.05, respectively) and glomerular area a 13% higher (p < 0.01).
High-protein diet promoted a worse renal profile, especially on urinary and morphological markers, which could increase the risk for developing renal diseases in the long time.
The preponderance of matter over antimatter in the early universe, the dynamics of the supernovae that produced the heavy elements necessary for life, and whether protons eventually decay—these ...mysteries at the forefront of particle physics and astrophysics are key to understanding the early evolution of our universe, its current state, and its eventual fate. DUNE is an international world-class experiment dedicated to addressing these questions as it searches for leptonic charge-parity symmetry violation, stands ready to capture supernova neutrino bursts, and seeks to observe nucleon decay as a signature of a grand unified theory underlying the standard model. Central to achieving DUNE's physics program is a far detector that combines the many tens-of-kiloton fiducial mass necessary for rare event searches with sub-centimeter spatial resolution in its ability to image those events, allowing identification of the physics signatures among the numerous backgrounds. In the single-phase liquid argon time-projection chamber (LArTPC) technology, ionization charges drift horizontally in the liquid argon under the influence of an electric field towards a vertical anode, where they are read out with fine granularity. A photon detection system supplements the TPC, directly enhancing physics capabilities for all three DUNE physics drivers and opening up prospects for further physics explorations. The DUNE far detector technical design report (TDR) describes the DUNE physics program and the technical designs of the single- and dual-phase DUNE liquid argon TPC far detector modules. Volume IV presents an overview of the basic operating principles of a single-phase LArTPC, followed by a description of the DUNE implementation. Each of the subsystems is described in detail, connecting the high-level design requirements and decisions to the overriding physics goals of DUNE.