Infections from antibiotic resistant microorganisms are considered to be one of the greatest global public health challenges that result in huge annual economic losses. While genes that impart resistance to antibiotics (AbR) existed long before the discovery and use of antibiotics, anthropogenic uses of antibiotics in agriculture, domesticated animals, and humans are known to influence the prevalence of these genes in pathogenic microorganisms. It is critical to understand the role that natural and anthropogenic processes have on the occurrence and distribution of antibiotic resistance in microbial populations to minimize health risks associated with exposures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been shown that EPA Method 3060A does not adequately extract Cr(VI) from chromium ore processing residue (COPR). We modified various parameters of EPA 3060A toward understanding the transformation of COPR minerals in the alkaline extraction and improving extraction of Cr(VI) from NIST SRM 2701, a standard COPR-contaminated soil. Aluminum and Si were the major elements dissolved from NIST 2701, and their concentrations in solution were correlated with Cr(VI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSome barrier-island dunes damaged or destroyed by Hurricane Sandy's storm surges in October 2012 have been reconstructed using sediments dredged from back bays. These sand-, clay-, and iron sulfide-rich sediments were used to make berm-like cores for the reconstructed dunes, which were then covered by beach sand. In November 2013, we sampled and analyzed partially weathered materials collected from the cores of reconstructed dunes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the Inner Coastal Plain of New Jersey, arsenic (As) is released from glauconitic sediment to carbon- and nutrient-rich shallow groundwater. This As-rich groundwater discharges to a major area stream. We hypothesize that microbes play an active role in the mobilization of As from glauconitic subsurface sediments into groundwater in the Inner Coastal Plain of New Jersey.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Otol Rhinol Laryngol
October 1998
The extracorporeal shock wave treatment of parotid stones is a rather new therapy. Its usefulness was determined in a prospective study. Seventy-six patients (36 female, 40 male, 2 to 80 years of age) with symptomatic, sonographically detectable solitary sialoliths of the parotid gland were treated with an extracorporeal piezoelectric shock wave therapy after unsuccessful conservative therapy (sialagogues, gland massage, bougienage of the secretory duct).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColor-coded duplex sonography is being increasingly used in the head and neck as another method for diagnosis of such disorders as stenosis of arteries or veins or hemangiomas. A possible additional advantage of testing is the ability to differentiate benign from malignant tumors. Since the underlying cause of a suspicious lesion is most important for treatment strategies, we investigated histologically-proven benign and malignant cervical lymph nodes for determining the value of color-coded duplex sonography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNewly available minimally invasive methods have changed established treatment of human sialolithiasis during the past several years. After basic in vitro and in vivo investigations, two systems of shockwave treatment proved to be useful for clinical application: extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy (piezoelectric system) and intracorporeal laser lithotripsy (using a rhodamine-6G dye laser). Following our clinical experiences with these methods a differential scheme for managing sialolithiasis is recommended depending on localization of the calculi and their maximal diameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The effort to use minimally invasive strategies in the treatment of human sialolithiasis in principle seems to allow the clinical application of pneumatic lithotripsy because of the small diameters of the probes involved. While this kind of therapy is already used successfully in urology, we investigated the method during in vitro and animal experiments.
Materials And Methods: The treatment of stones and tissue utilized the pneumatic lithotripter "Lithoclast".
In order to improve the preoperative diagnosis of superficial skin tumors in the head and neck, 32 patients with 42 basal cell carcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas and malignant melanomas were investigated using different imaging techniques. All patients were examined preoperatively with high-frequency ultrasound (HFU), computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). New high-frequency ultrasonic scanners (15- and 20-MHz) having an axial resolution of 50-90 microns permit visualization of dermal and cartilaginous structures with an anatomical accuracy to a range of 15 mm in tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Color-coded duplex sonography is being increasingly used in the head and neck as another method of diagnosis of, for example, stenosis of arteries or veins or of hemangioma. Moreover, it is of greatest interest in having the ability to differentiate benign from malignant tumors. Since the underlying type of tumor is directly responsible for the (operative) treatment recommended we have investigated histologically proven benign and malignant parotid tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Extracorporeal lithotripsy is now used routinely for the treatment of salivary duct stones. The question arose whether electrohydraulic intracorporeal lithotripsy, which is applied in urology and gastroenterology, might also be useful in the treatment of this disease. Before its possible clinical application the influence of electrohydraulic intracorporeal shock waves on salivary stones in vitro and any influence on the tissue in the head and neck region (in vivo) had to be investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In the past, management of sialolithiasis required surgical extirpation of the afflicted gland, in case the concrements could not be removed by dilatation or dissection of the glandular duct. The aim of the present study was to investigate the safety and efficiency of extracorporeal shockwave lithotripsy of salivary gland stones in men.
Patients And Methods: 51 patients with symptomatic solitary salivary stones which could not be removed by conservative measures received extracorporeal piezoelectric shockwave treatment.
Before clinical application of an extracorporeal piezoelectric lithotripter to treat sialolithiasis, tissue reaction during shockwave application was examined in vitro and in experiments with animals. Application of shockwaves to human tissue in vitro showed neither macroscopic nor microscopic effects. In animal experiments, the acute experiment (16 rabbits, Chinchilla-Bastard) revealed minor bleeding in the parenchyma of the parotid gland, while the chronic experiment (14 rabbits, Chinichilla-Bastard) revealed no morphologic tissue damage to the parotid region of the rabbit, as a result of piezoelectric shockwaves.
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