Publications by authors named "N H Truong"

Polymeric nanoparticles (NPs) are promising tools used for immunomodulation and drug delivery in various disease contexts. The interaction between NP surfaces and plasma-resident biomolecules results in the formation of a biomolecular corona, which varies patient-to-patient and as a function of disease state. This study investigates how the progression of acute systemic inflammatory disease influences NP corona compositions and the corresponding effects on innate immune cell interactions, phenotypes, and cytokine responses.

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Background: The COVID pandemic led to the transition of residency applications to a virtual format and the expansion of residency programs' virtual presence.

Objective: The objective is to understand what information Obstetrics and Gynecology Residency interviewees prioritize and how influential program websites and social media platforms are.

Study Design: Electronic surveys were sent to fourth-year medical students and OBGYN residents and were available for 6 weeks in spring 2023.

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Background: Quitline counseling is an effective method for supporting smoking cessation, offering personalized and accessible assistance. Tobacco use is a significant public health issue among people living with HIV. In Vietnam, over 50% of men living with HIV use tobacco.

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Photoiniferter (PI) is a promising polymerization methodology, often used to overcome restrictions posed by thermal reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer (RAFT) polymerization. However, in the overwhelming majority of reports, high energy UV irradiation is required to effectively trigger photolysis of RAFT agents and facilitate the polymerization, significantly limiting its potential, scope, and applicability. Although visible light PI has emerged as a highly attractive alternative, most current approaches are limited to the synthesis of lower molecular weight polymers (i.

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Article Synopsis
  • Chemical recycling of polymers using ATRP typically requires high temperatures (around 170 °C), which leads to high energy consumption and reduced depolymerization yields due to end-group deterioration.
  • The introduction of initiators for continuous activator regeneration (ICAR) allows for significantly lower reaction temperatures, enabling depolymerization efficiency to increase from less than 1% to 96% at 120 °C.
  • ICAR methodology has been shown to eliminate harmful side reactions at lower temperatures, is scalable up to 1 g, and is effective for both chlorine and bromine terminated polymers, working well with various catalysts.
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