Publications by authors named "Joel Jacob"

Article Synopsis
  • - Pediatric hepatic abscesses are rare and often linked to intra-abdominal infections or biliary disease, with cases from foreign body ingestion being even less common, particularly in regions where such incidents occur frequently, like China.
  • - This report highlights an adolescent patient who developed a hepatic abscess after swallowing a fishbone, presenting with symptoms like vomiting, abdominal pain, and fever; initial imaging suggested malignancy due to a heterogeneous mass in the liver.
  • - Following the failure of broad-spectrum antibiotics, further imaging revealed the embedded fishbone, leading to successful surgical removal; this case underscores the need for healthcare providers to consider migrated foreign bodies when abscesses don't respond to typical treatments.
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Skeletal muscle contraction evokes numerous biochemical alterations that underpin exercise benefits. This present study aimed to elucidate the mechanism for electrical pulse stimulation (EPS)-induced antioxidant adaptation in C2C12 myotubes. We found that EPS significantly upregulated Nrf2 and a broad array of downstream antioxidant enzymes involved in multiple antioxidant systems.

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Artificial intelligence (AI) has come to play a pivotal role in revolutionizing medical practices, particularly in the field of pancreatic cancer detection and management. As a leading cause of cancer-related deaths, pancreatic cancer warrants innovative approaches due to its typically advanced stage at diagnosis and dismal survival rates. Present detection methods, constrained by limitations in accuracy and efficiency, underscore the necessity for novel solutions.

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Effluents from food, fermentation, and sugar industries contain a large quantity of glucose which has to be removed to limit the chemical oxygen demand (COD) of the water discharged. This work proposes novel thin-film nanocomposite (TFN) membranes incorporated with MgFeO and ZnFeO nanoparticles to address this concern. The nanoparticles synthesized by the sol-gel method was extensively characterized and then incorporated into the active polyamide layer of the thin-film composite polysulfone membranes.

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Commercially pure titanium (cpTi) remains the material of choice for dental implants due to its surface properties which promote osseointegration. Recently, zirconia (ZrO) has been used as an alternative material due to its immunity to corrosion, mechanical strength, and biocompatibility. Previous studies evaluating oral bacterial attachment and mammalian host cell response to cpTi and ZrO have yielded mixed results.

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Zirconia (ZrO) is an emerging alternative to titanium for dental implant systems due to its material properties including high mechanical strength and chemical stability. However, oral environmental factors such as bacterial adhesion and mechanical fatigue may trigger low-temperature degradation of ZrO, leading to reduced mechanical strength and potential implant fracture. Although failure modes of ZrO in orthopedic applications have been studied, they have yet to be thoroughly investigated in the context of dental implant systems.

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Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) disproportionately affects the African American population and usually presents with a constellation of symptoms. Along with hematologic, musculoskeletal, serous and skin involvement, the most common causes of morbidity are attributed to altered blood rheology causing accelerated atherosclerotic vascular disease (ASVD). ASVD occurs in predominantly premenopausal women at an age where ASVD is rare or uncommon.

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Amyloid-beta (Abeta), a peptide thought to play a crucial role in Alzheimer's disease (AD), has many targets that, in turn, activate different second-messenger cascades. Interestingly, Abeta has been found to markedly impair hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP). To identify a new pathway that might be responsible for such impairment, we analyzed the role of the nitric oxide (NO)/soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC)/cGMP/cGMP-dependent protein kinase (cGK)/cAMP-responsive element-binding protein (CREB) cascade because of its involvement in LTP.

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Approximately 2 million people in the United States suffer from Alzheimer's disease (AD), which is the most common cause of chronic dementia among the aging population. During the last 7 yr, excellent opportunities to screen drugs against AD have been provided by animal models of the disease. Because even in the fastest model, AD pathology does not start before the end of the second month, it has been necessary to wait at least until that age to inject drugs into the animal to assess whether they prevent, reduce, or revert synaptic impairment, plaque formation, and increase of beta-amyloid (Abeta) levels, the main features of the disease.

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The cavity of the larger molecule has less space for guests! Unlike the structure of the smaller annular cyclodextrins, that of the higher homologues of cycloamyloses (CAs) with more than ten glucose units contains a 90° kink between adjacent glucose residues within one half of the molecule and a 180° band flip between adjacent units in different halves (see depicted section of the CA14 structure) to yield butterfly-shaped structures with narrow, groovelike cavities.

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