Introduction: There is a great need for new approaches early in drug discovery that have the potential to improve clinical translation of compound-mediated cardiovascular effects. Current approaches frequently rely on in vivo animal models or in vitro tissue bath preparations, both of which are low throughput and costly. An in vitro surrogate screen for blood pressure using primary human cells may serve as a higher throughput method to quickly select compounds void of this secondary pharmacology and potentially improve late-stage drug development outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
March 2021
We report the color conversion performance of amber and red emitting quantum dots (QDs) on InGaN solid-state lighting (SSL) light emitting diode (LED) packages. Spherical quantum well (SQW) architectures (CdS/CdSeS/CdS) were prepared using a library of thio- and selenourea synthesis reagents and high throughput synthesis robotics. CdS/CdSeS QDs with narrow luminescence bands were coated with thick CdS shells (thickness = 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The Comprehensive In Vitro Proarrhythmia Assay (CiPA) initiative differentiates torsadogenic risk of 28 drugs affecting ventricular repolarization based on multiple in vitro human derived ionic currents. However, a standardized prospective assessment of the electrophysiologic effects of these drugs in an integrated in vivo preclinical cardiovascular model is lacking. This study questioned whether QTc interval prolongation in a preclinical in vivo model could detect clinically reported QTc prolongation and assign torsadogenic risk for ten CiPA drugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHighly efficient capillary columns packed with superficially porous particles were created for use in ultrahigh pressure liquid chromatography. Superficially porous particles around 1.5μm in diameter were packed into fused silica capillary columns with 30, 50, and 75μm internal diameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite widely divergent public perceptions and goals, hotels and hospitals share many core characteristics. Both serve demanding and increasingly well-informed clienteles, both employ a large hierarchy of workers with varying levels of responsibility, and both have payments that are increasingly tied to customer/patient evaluations. In the hotel industry, decades of management experience and market research have led to widespread improvements and innovations that improve customer satisfaction.
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