105 research outputs found

    Blood requisition and utilization practice in obstetric patients at tertiary care center from South India: A descriptive study

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    BACKGROUND: Although blood ordering is a common practice in surgical field, in obstetric patients too requests are commonly made to crossmatch units of blood for patients in whom bleeding is anticipated and to provide precautionary cover for cesarean section. This was a prospective study on blood requisition and utilization practice among obstetric patients at our center. METHODS: Data collection pro forma was used to collect information from antenatal case notes on demographics, transfusion request, units transfused, reason for transfusion, and related laboratory data. Blood utilization was calculated using crossmatch to transfusion ratio (C/T), transfusion probability (%T), and transfusion index (TI) indices for all obstetric conditions. The maximum blood ordering schedule (MBOS) was used to develop algorithm for obstetric conditions. RESULTS: The incidence of red blood cells transfusion among all obstetric admissions was 708 out of 17275 (4.1%). Only 18% of blood requested for obstetric patients actually received transfusion. The overall C/T ratio, transfusion probability, and TI in obstetric patients during the study were 3.5%, 19.3%, 0.35%, respectively. Transfusion algorithm by classifying all obstetric conditions into three categories was developed based on MBOS for obstetric indications at our center. CONCLUSION: Although blood was reserved for the most obstetric patients, majority of the patient did not require transfusion. Hence, a new blood reservation and pretransfusion policy were recommended to minimize overordering and needless operating expenses for blood banks

    On sub-surface stress caused by contact roughness in compressible elastic solids

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    Contact between elastic bodies with self-affine rough surfaces is mostly studied with a focus on determining surface fields, despite body fields are of great importance to establish, for instance, when and where elasticity breaks down. This work aims at analyzing the effect of contact roughness on the body fields of compressible frictionless solids modeled using Green's function molecular dynamics. Although area-load curves are insensitive to changes in the Hurst exponent as long as they are correctly normalized and are clearly not affected by compressibility, the Von-Mises stress is found to depend on both Hurst exponent and Poisson's ratio.(OLD) MSE-7Team Marcel Sluite

    Dravidian Futurities: A Creative Process

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    In this article, author and artist Meena Murugesan analyzes their creative process and research in the making of Dravidian Futurities, a multi-channel video installation with live performance. Methodologies of auto-ethnography, visual aesthetics, embodied movement practices, Tamil historiographies, queer futurities, caste analysis, and poetics are applied to treat the issues at hand. Dravidian Futurities draws connections between communities of South Indian and Sri Lankan Shudra and Dalit caste backgrounds, Dravidian, and Afro-Indian peoples, depending on the historical era examined. As someone of the Shudra caste, the author draws connections between agriculture, land, and earth, as being rooted in Shudra identities, and in opposition to brahminical systems. Therefore, the movement forms of somatics, improvisation, and nature-based embodiment practices are investigated as possible embodied inroads to grapple with caste within brahminized bharatanatyam. Notions of futurity and place-making are unearthed from the depths of the Indian Ocean with a hypothetical sunken landmass called Lemuria or Kumari Kandam that might have once connected South India, Sri Lanka, and Madagascar. Dravidian Futurities also dreams into existence this speculative landmass as a possible utopia we might co-build, similar to that which Dalit mystic saint Guru Ravidas imagined five hundred years ago with Begumpura (“land without sorrow”) as a casteless, stateless utopia

    Evaluation of antioxidant activity of methanol extracts of red algae Chondrococcus hornemannii and Spyridia fusiformis

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    The antioxidant activity of methanol extracts of the red seaweed, Chondrococcus hornemannii and Spyridia fusiformis was analyzed through two different radicals such as nitricoxide and hydroxyl radicals. The extract from S. fusiformis had the highest antioxidant potential, which was also found to be equivalent to the antioxidant activities of some commercial antioxidants (BHT and L-ascorbic acid). The antioxidant assay was performed at the concentration ranging from 100 500 L. The present study confirms that C. hornemannii and S.fusiformis received special attention and used as a source of natural antioxidant

    HPTLC fingerprint profile of methanol extract of the marine red alga Portieria hornemannii (Lyngbye) (Silva)

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    The present study was aimed to develop the high performance thin layer chromatography (HPTLC) fingerprint profile of methanol extracts of marine red alga Portieria hornemannii (Lyngbye) (Silva). A HPTLC method for the separation of the active constituents in extracts has been developed and TLC of these extracts on silica gel pre-coated aluminum plates of Merck by the automatic TLC applicator and using the solvent system n-hexane:ethyl acetate (60:40 v/v) was performed. HPTLC profiling of the extract confirm about the presence of various phytochemicals. HPTLC finger print scanned at 490 nm for methanol and ethyl acetate algal extracts revealed 13 peaks with Rf values in the range of 0.16 to 0.99 respectively. The HPTLC method for routine quality control of present species can be carried out using this method for extracts of plant and serve in qualitative, quantitative and was appropriate for standardization of the extract

    Entomopathogenic Fungi for the Management of Calopepla leayana on Gmelina arborea

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    Entomopathogenic fungi, Beauveria bassiana and Metarhizium anisopliae were isolated and identified as natural pathogens of Calopepla leayana. Both the species of fungi were effective against the larval and adult stages of C. leayana causing white and green muscardine diseases respectively. It was also found that B. bassiana was more pathogenic to the pest as compared to M. anisopliae.  The susceptibility of larvae and adults was negatively associated with the age and positively associated with the fungal spore concentration. In all the stages from I instar to adult, the highest mortality was observed in 10% of 1x109 spores/ml concentration of B. bassiana among 1, 2.5, 5 & 10% of 1x109 spores/ml concentration.  It was also reflected in probit analysis that the concentration of spores required to kill fifty percent of the population was ranges from 0.09% to 5.98% of 1x109 spores/ml concentration of B. bassiana and 1.02% to 9.72% of 1x109 spores/ml concentration of M. anisopliae. The larvae of I instar have shown highest mortality, which gradually decreased with the increase in age or decrease in the concentration of fungal spores. Mass production of B. bassiana using different substrates was attempted to harvest ample amount of spores. This study revealed that spore production was directly proportional to the mycelial weight and incubation period. From the seven substrates tested, wheat flour was identified as one of the suitable substrates for the mass production of B. bassiana.  A field trial was conducted to test their efficacy under field conditions. 72-93% mortality was observed in field conditions.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Division of Bioprospecting, Institute of Forest Genetics and Tree Breeding, Coimbatore-641002, Tamilnadu, India*Corresponding author, Email: [email protected] This Article As: N. Senthilkumar and S. Murugesan. 2010. Entomopathogenic Fungi for the Management of Calopepla leayana on Gmelina arborea. J. Ecobiotechnol. 2(3): 01-0

    GREEN SYNTHESIS, CHARACTERIZATION OF SILVER NANOPARTICLES OF A MARINE RED ALGA SPYRIDIA FUSIFORMIS AND THEIR ANTIBACTERIAL ACTIVITY

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    Objective: In the present system, the green synthesis of silver nanoparticles using marine the red alga Spyridia fusiformis and antibacterial activity was carried out.Methods: The seaweed extract was used for the synthesis of AgNPs at room temperature. The silver nanoparticles were characterized by using UV–Visible spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, transmission electron microscope and X-ray diffraction (XRD) techniques. The antibacterial activity of biosynthesized silver nanoparticles was carried out by disc diffusion method against pathogenic bacteria.Results: The UV-visible spectroscopy revealed surface plasmon resonance at 450 nm. The FT-IR measurements showed the possible functional groups responsible for the formation of nanoparticles. The X-ray diffraction analysis showed that the particles were crystalline in nature. TEM micrograph has shown the formation of silver nanoparticles with the size in the range of 5–50 nm. The silver nanoparticles synthesized from the S. fusiformis showed higher activity and proved their efficacy in controlling the pathogenic bacterial strains. The nanoparticles showed highest inhibition activity on K. pneumaniae and S. aureus up to 26 and 24±0.01 mm at 100 μg/ml of nanoparticles.Conclusion: The synthesised AgNPs have shown the best antibacterial activity against human pathogens E. coli, K. pneumoniae, S. aureus and P. aeruginosa. The above eco-friendly AgNPs synthesis procedure could be a viable solution for industrial applications in the future and therapeutic needs
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