Peach palm fruit mesocarp (Bactris gasipaes var. gasipaes) is already consumed in the Northern region of Brazil, after its cooking and is known as a source of starch and carotenoids and like all fruits it has low storage stability. This work characterized the starch extracted from the mesocarp of peach palm fruit using with water in terms of its physical and chemical properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study evaluated the effect of amylases on the formation, and characteristics of retrograded starches using sweet potato (SPS), cassava (CAS) and high amylose maize (HAS) starches. The starches were gelatinized, hydrolyzed with fungal or maltogenic α-amylase, de-branched and retrograded. The modified starches were then analyzed for digestibility, chain size distribution, relative crystallinity and crystallite size, thermal properties and the proportion of double helices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe starch industry has grown quickly, and starch production has expanded around the world because it is a very versatile ingredient, despite limits in some foodstuffs. So, this study aimed to analyze morphology, physic and chemical characteristics of the starch extracted from three different parts (bottom, middle and top) of the young bamboo culm of B. vulgaris (SB, SM, and ST, respectively).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe search for new and natural ingredients has been stimulated by the food and non-food industries, and the fresh young bamboo culm of Dendrocalamus asper emerges as promising for industrial production due to its composition with >10% of starch. So, this study aimed to characterize starch, extracted in aqueous solution, from three different parts (bottom, middle and top) of the young bamboo culm of D. asper (SB, SM and ST, respectively).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To test the hypothesis that Chagas disease predisposes to optic nerve and retinal nerve fiber layer alterations.
Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study including 41 patients diagnosed with Chagas disease and 41 controls, paired by sex and age. The patients underwent ophthalmologic examinations, including intraocular pressure measurements, optic nerve and retinal nerve fiber layer screening with retinography, optical coherence tomography, and standard automated perimetry.
The effect of the molecular structure of sweet potato (SPS), cassava (CAS) and high amylose maize (HAS) starches on the susceptibility to fungal and maltogenic α-amylases was investigated. The logarithm of the slope (LOS) and non-linear least-squares (NLLS) methods were used for fitting hydrolysis kinetics data. The malto-oligosaccharides released during hydrolysis were quantified and the hydrolysis residues were analyzed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To assess the efficacy and safety of the new Susanna glaucoma drainage device (SGDD) in patients with neovascular and refractory glaucomas.
Materials And Methods: In this prospective study, patients with neovascular glaucoma or refractory glaucomas (defined as eyes with previous trabeculectomy failure) were enrolled. All eyes had to have intraocular pressure (IOP) above 21 mm Hg despite maximum tolerated topical medication, or recent documentation of anatomic and/or functional progression.
Objective: The aim of the present study was to characterize sickle cell disease retinopathy in children and teenagers from Bahia, the state in northeastern Brazil with the highest incidence and prevalence of sickle cell disease.
Methods: A group of 51 sickle cell disease patients (36 hemoglobin SS and 15 hemoglobin SC) with ages ranging from 4 to 18 years was studied. Ophthalmological examinations were performed in all patients.
Purpose: The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence and severity of ocular complications in patients with mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS).
Methods: Twenty-nine patients with diagnosis of mucopolysaccharidosis were studied. Age, gender, visual acuity, presence of strabismus, refractive error, fundus examination, intraocular pressure, central corneal thickness and ocular echography were assessed for each individual.
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the fluctuation of intraocular pressure measurements obtained by Goldmann applanation tonometry, dynamic contour tonometry, and corneal compensated non-contact tonometry during office hours in glaucoma and healthy participants. This study also aims at correlating the intraocular pressure fluctuations with fluctuations of corneal hysteresis, central corneal thickness, mean central corneal curvature and ocular pulse amplitude.
Methods: A total of 12 controls (24 eyes) and 21 patients (38 eyes) with open-angle glaucoma were recruited.
Case report of a woman with the diagnosis of primary open-angle glaucoma who was submitted to a successful surgical procedure of deep sclerectomy in the right eye. In the postoperative period, at month 3, the surgical procedure was evaluated with ultrasound biomicroscopy (UBM) utilizing two distinct equipments (UBM 840-Zeiss; UBM-VUMAX-Sonomed), with 50-MHz transducers. The diagnostic method of ultrasound biomicroscopy can be utilized as a non invasive method to evaluate the internal architecture of the eye at the topography of deep sclerectomy.
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