192 research outputs found

    Angaria neglecta Poppe & Goto 1993

    No full text
    neglecta, Angaria Poppe & Goto, 1993 Angaria neglecta Poppe & Goto, 1993: 22 (pl. 6). Gastropoda, Angariidae Paratype: MZSP 95951. Locality: Japan, Wakayama prefecture, Nada-Cho, 510 fms. Preservation: Dry. Remarks: Former Jens Hemmen Collection. The specimen listed above was initially designated as paratype # 12 in the original description. The senior author (Poppe, pers. comm.) confirmed the type status.Published as part of Cavallari, Daniel C., Dornellas, Ana Paula S. & Simone, Luiz Ricardo L., 2016, Second annotated list of type specimens of molluscs deposited in the Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil, pp. 1-59 in European Journal of Taxonomy 213 on page 38, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2016.213, http://zenodo.org/record/384012

    sj-docx-1-ine-10.1177_15910199231221491 - Supplemental material for Predicting outcome in acute stroke with large vessel occlusion—application and validation of MR PREDICTS in the ESCAPE-NA1 population

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-ine-10.1177_15910199231221491 for Predicting outcome in acute stroke with large vessel occlusion—application and validation of MR PREDICTS in the ESCAPE-NA1 population by Martha Marko, Mayank Goyal, Johanna M Ospel, Nishita Singh, Esmee Venema, Raul G Nogueira, Andrew M Demchuk, Ryan A McTaggart, Alexandre Y Poppe, Bijoy K Menon, Charlotte Zerna, Maxim Mulder, Diederik WJ Dippel, Hester F Lingsma, Bob Roozenbeek, Michael Tymianski and Michael D Hill in Interventional Neuroradiology</p

    sj-pdf-1-wso-10.1177_17474930231205208 – Supplemental material for Safety and efficacy of tenecteplase versus alteplase in stroke patients with carotid tandem lesions: Results from the AcT trial

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-wso-10.1177_17474930231205208 for Safety and efficacy of tenecteplase versus alteplase in stroke patients with carotid tandem lesions: Results from the AcT trial by Fouzi Bala, Mohammed Almekhlafi, Nishita Singh, Ibrahim Alhabli, Ayoola Ademola, Shelagh B Coutts, Yan Deschaintre, Houman Khosravani, Ramana Appireddy, Francois Moreau, Stephen Phillips, Gord Gubitz, Aleksander Tkach, Luciana Catanese, Dar Dowlatshahi, George Medvedev, Jennifer Mandzia, Aleksandra Pikula, Jay Shankar, Heather Williams, Thalia S Field, Alejandro Manosalva, Muzaffar Siddiqui, Atif Zafar, Oje Imoukhoude, Gary Hunter, Faysal Benali, MacKenzie Horn, Michael D Hill, Michel Shamy, Tolulope T Sajobi, Brian H Buck, Richard H Swartz, Bijoy K Menon and Alexandre Y Poppe in International Journal of Stroke</p

    sj-pdf-2-wso-10.1177_17474930231205208 – Supplemental material for Safety and efficacy of tenecteplase versus alteplase in stroke patients with carotid tandem lesions: Results from the AcT trial

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-wso-10.1177_17474930231205208 for Safety and efficacy of tenecteplase versus alteplase in stroke patients with carotid tandem lesions: Results from the AcT trial by Fouzi Bala, Mohammed Almekhlafi, Nishita Singh, Ibrahim Alhabli, Ayoola Ademola, Shelagh B Coutts, Yan Deschaintre, Houman Khosravani, Ramana Appireddy, Francois Moreau, Stephen Phillips, Gord Gubitz, Aleksander Tkach, Luciana Catanese, Dar Dowlatshahi, George Medvedev, Jennifer Mandzia, Aleksandra Pikula, Jay Shankar, Heather Williams, Thalia S Field, Alejandro Manosalva, Muzaffar Siddiqui, Atif Zafar, Oje Imoukhoude, Gary Hunter, Faysal Benali, MacKenzie Horn, Michael D Hill, Michel Shamy, Tolulope T Sajobi, Brian H Buck, Richard H Swartz, Bijoy K Menon and Alexandre Y Poppe in International Journal of Stroke</p

    Supplemental material for Canadian Stroke Best Practice Consensus Statement: <i>Acute Stroke Management during pregnancy</i>

    No full text
    Supplemental material for Canadian Stroke Best Practice Consensus Statement: Acute Stroke Management during pregnancy by Noor Niyar N Ladhani, Richard H Swartz, Norine Foley, Kara Nerenberg, Eric E Smith, Gord Gubitz, Dariush Dowlatshahi, Jayson Potts, Joel G Ray, Jon Barrett, Cheryl Bushnell, Simerpreet Bal, Wee-Shian Chan, Radha Chari, Meryem El Amrani, Shital Gandhi, Michael D Hill, Andra James, Thomas Jeerakathil, Albert Jin, Adam Kirton, Sylvain Lanthier, Andrea Lausman, Lisa Rae Leffert, Jennifer Mandzia, Bijoy Menon, Aleksandra Pikula, Alexandre Poppe, Gustavo Saposnik, Mukul Sharma, Sanjit Bhogal, Elisabeth Smitko and M Patrice Lindsay; on behalf of the Heart and Stroke Foundation Canadian Stroke Best Practice and Quality Advisory Committees; in collaboration with the Canadian Stroke Consortium in International Journal of Stroke</p

    Productie van chloordifluormethaan (Freon 22) in een gasfase gepakt bed reactor

    No full text
    Document(en) uit de collectie Chemische Procestechnologie.DelftChemTechApplied Science

    Schema voor de technische bereiding van blankiet

    No full text
    Document(en) uit de collectie Chemische ProcestechnologieDelftChemTechApplied Science

    Characterization of Salmonella isolates from beef cattle, broiler chickens and human sources on Prince Edward Island

    No full text
    Non-typhoid Salmonella serovars remain a potential threat to human health, and beef cattle and broiler chickens are possible sources of these organisms on Prince Edward Island (PEI). In this study, the ceca of beef cattle belonging to fasted and non-fasted groups, and broiler chickens were examined for Salmonella at the time of slaughter. The characteristics of the isolates, including antimicrobial resistance patterns and virulence genes, were studied along with the isolates obtained from cases of human salmonellosis on PEI during the study period (1996-97). The prevalence of Salmonella in beef cattle was 4.6% (11/240). The rate was significantly higher in fasted cattle (7.46%), than in non-fasted cattle (0.94%). The prevalence rate in chickens was 32.5% (39/120). In beef cattle, Salmonella typhimurium phage type (PT) or definitive type (DT) 104 which was resistant to ampicillin, chloramphenicol, streptomycin, sulfisoxazole and tetracycline, was the most predominant type (64%). In chickens, S. heidelberg, with resistance to gentamicin, streptomycin and sulfisoxazole, predominated. Of 26 isolates from humans, the most common serovar was S. typhimurium, including a multidrug-resistant strain of DT104. Examination by PCR revealed presence of the virulence gene invA in all serovars, and the spvC gene in all S. typhimurium isolates, of both beef cattle and human origin. Among the other serovars the latter gene was found in 7 human isolates, but in none of the chicken or beef isolates. All but 3 of the spvC-positive isolates possessed a 90 kilobasepair (kbp) plasmid suggesting that the 3 isolates had the spvC gene on their chromosome. These findings were confirmed by plasmid DNA isolation using 3 different protocols and by sequence analysis of the spvC-PCR product.LR: 20061115; PUBM: Print; JID: 7808924; 0 (DNA Primers); 0 (DNA, Bacterial); ppublishSource type: Electronic(1
    corecore