Publications by authors named "O R Benjamin"

Article Synopsis
  • - Histoplasmosis, typically linked to AIDS, also significantly affects cancer patients, with most cases reported from the USA and a majority being adults presenting symptoms like fever and lymphadenopathy.
  • - Out of 34 cases studied, 73.5% were associated with hematological cancers, and diagnosis was primarily achieved through histopathology and culture methods.
  • - Favorable outcomes were noted in 70.6% of cases, but histoplasmosis remains underdiagnosed in Africa, underlining the need for better screening in cancer patients to enhance diagnosis and treatment outcomes.
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Virgin olive oil (VOO) quality is defined by both chemical and sensory parameters. While the chemical parameters are objective and measured using instrument-based methods, sensory quality evaluation is based upon human panels, which can be subjective, have less repeatability, suffer from fatigue, and require long and costly training. Tasting biases could be minimized by a trained panel, but using humans as a testing instrument is inevitably prone to various psychological biases, stimulus-related factors, and carry-over effects.

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Article Synopsis
  • - A 40-year-old woman in Nigeria presented with neck swelling and abdominal pain, leading to an initial diagnosis of sepsis and micronutrient deficiency based on her blood tests.
  • - Despite antibiotic treatment, her condition worsened with additional symptoms like fever and fatigue, eventually being diagnosed with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma after a lymph node biopsy.
  • - A later blood test revealed yeast cells suggesting histoplasmosis, highlighting the importance of considering this diagnosis in cancer patients and the value of blood smears for detection.
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Objective markers of pathophysiological processes underlying lifetime depression and mania/hypomania risk can provide biologically informed targets for novel interventions to help prevent the onset of affective disorders in individuals with subsyndromal symptoms. Greater activity within and functional connectivity (FC) between the central executive network (CEN), supporting emotional regulation (ER) subcomponent processes such as working memory (WM), the default mode network (DMN), supporting self-related information processing, and the salience network (SN), is thought to interfere with cognitive functioning and predispose to depressive disorders. Using an emotional n-back paradigm designed to examine WM and ER capacity, we examined in young adults: (1) relationships among activity and FC in these networks and lifetime depression and mania/hypomania risk; (2) the extent to which these relationships were specific to lifetime depression risk versus lifetime mania/hypomania risk; (3) whether findings in a first, Discovery sample n = 101, 63 female, age = 23.

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This article shares the findings from survey conducted between November 2021 and April 2022 across the three senatorial districts of Kwara state, Nigeria. The survey was carried out across 1120 households with information on the head of households, individuals in the households, household demographic characteristics, education, work experience, household youth and middle-aged employment status. The survey included both open-ended and close-ended questions, and the resulting data in excel format.

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