Background: Oximes are used in addition to atropine to treat organophosphate poisoning. However, the efficiency of oximes is still a matter of debate. In vitro experiments suggested than new oximes are more potent than the commercial oximes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColloidal quantum dots (CQDs) have recently gained attention as materials for manufacturing optoelectronic devices in view of their tunable light absorption and emission properties and compatibility with low-temperature thin-film manufacture. The realization of CQD inkjet-printed infrared photodetectors has thus far been hindered by incompatibility between the chemical processes that produce state-of-the-art CQD solution-exchanged inks and the requirements of ink formulations for inkjet materials processing. To achieve inkjet-printed CQD solids with a high degree of reproducibility, as well as with the needed morphological and optoelectronic characteristics, we sought to overcome the mismatch among these processing conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe chemical structure of organophosphate compounds (OPs) is a well-known factor which modifies the acute toxicity of these compounds. We compared ventilation at rest and cholinesterase activities in male Sprague-Dawley rats poisoned with dimethyl paraoxon (DMPO) and diethyl paraoxon (DEPO) at a subcutaneous dose corresponding to 50% of the median lethal dose (MLD). Ventilation at rest was recorded by whole body plethysmography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColloidal quantum dots (CQDs) enable low-cost, high-performance optoelectronic devices including photovoltaics, photodetectors, LEDs, and lasers. Continuous-wave lasing in the near-infrared remains to be realized based on such materials, yet a solution-processed NIR laser would be of use in communications and interconnects. In infrared quantum dots, long-lived gain is hampered by a high rate of Auger recombination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The reference method for hemoglobin concentration measurement remains automated analysis in the laboratory. Although point-of-care devices such as the HemoCue® 201+ (HemoCue, Ängelholm, Sweden) provide immediate hemoglobin values, a noninvasive, spectrophotometry-based technology (Radical-7®; Masimo Corp., Irvine, CA) that provides continuous online hemoglobin (SpHb) measurements has been introduced.
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