Publications by authors named "Pauling C"

Introduction: Paediatric fractures are common but can be easily missed on radiography leading to potentially serious implications including long-term pain, disability and missed opportunities for safeguarding in cases of inflicted injury. Artificial intelligence (AI) tools to assist fracture detection in adult patients exist, although their efficacy in children is less well known. This study aims to evaluate whether a commercially available AI tool (certified for paediatric use) improves healthcare professionals (HCPs) detection of fractures, and how this may impact patient care in a retrospective simulated study design.

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Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague, is endemic in certain regions due to a stable transmission cycle between rodents and their associated fleas. In addition, fleas are believed to serve as reservoirs that can occasionally cause enzootic plague cycles and explosive epizootic outbreaks that increase human exposure. However, transmission by fleas is inefficient and associated with a shortened lifespan of the flea and rodent hosts, indicating that there remain significant gaps in our understanding of the vector-animal cycle of Y.

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Dysbiosis of the microbiome correlates with many neurological disorders, yet very little is known about the chemistry that controls the production of neuromodulatory molecules by gut microbes. Here, we found that an enzyme glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) of a gut microbe forms multiple neuromodulatory molecules such as γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), hypotaurine, taurine, homotaurine, and β-alanine. We evolved GAD and doubled its taurine productivity.

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Objectives: Artificial intelligence (AI) tools are becoming more available in modern healthcare, particularly in radiology, although less attention has been paid to applications for children and young people. In the development of these, it is critical their views are heard.

Materials And Methods: A national, online survey was publicised to UK schools, universities and charity partners encouraging any child or young adult to participate.

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Missed fractures are a costly healthcare issue, not only negatively impacting patient lives, leading to potential long-term disability and time off work, but also responsible for high medicolegal disbursements that could otherwise be used to improve other healthcare services. When fractures are overlooked in children, they are particularly concerning as opportunities for safeguarding may be missed. Assistance from artificial intelligence (AI) in interpreting medical images may offer a possible solution for improving patient care, and several commercial AI tools are now available for radiology workflow implementation.

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is the causative agent of bubonic plague, a deadly flea-borne disease responsible for three historic pandemics. Today annual cases of human disease occur worldwide following exposure to . infected fleas that can be found within the rodent population where plague activity cycles between epizootic outbreaks and extended periods of apparent quiescence.

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As in many places, heritage narratives in Ōtautahi Christchurch remain focused on colonial times. To expand these narratives, we examined three subfossil mataī () excavated along a 700 m arc during residential subdivision earthworks. Characterisation used N, radiocarbon, and ring width measurements.

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Plague, caused by Yersinia pestis, is a flea-borne disease that is endemic in areas throughout the world due to its successful maintenance in a sylvatic cycle, mainly in areas with temperate climates. Burrowing rodents are thought to play a key role in the enzootic maintenance as well as epizootic outbreaks of plague. In the United States, prairie dogs (Cynomys), rodents (Muridae), and ground squirrels (Spermophilus) are susceptible to infection and are parasitized by fleas that transmit plague.

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With the limited availability of genomic sequence information and no established methods for genetic knockdowns or the creation of transgenic fleas and flea cell lines, we have adopted Drosophila melanogaster as a model for the study of the insect life cycle of Yersinia pestis. Infection of Drosophila larvae can be used to model early colonization of fleas, while the established embryonic cell lines can be used to model insect-pathogen interactions that underlie the unique capacity of Y. pestis to colonize the gut of its flea host.

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Due to the intensive management of the scimitar-horned oryx, Oryx dammah, involving both captivity and reintroductions, understanding the stress associated with environmental situations this endangered species might experience would be particularly helpful. Fecal cortisol levels were measured across seasons, between captive management programs, and among varying reproductive states in animals held at Fossil Rim Wildlife Center (FRWC) and Kansas City Zoo (KCZ). A total of 72 samples were collected from FRWC and 69 samples were collected from KCZ.

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The scimitar-horned oryx, , an endangered species extinct in the wild, is managed in various captive management programs and is the focus of reintroduction efforts. Management variability can contribute to substantial parasite load differences, which can affect deworming programs and potentially transfer parasites to different regions with translocations. Parasite studies in are lacking.

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This article describes a phased approach for teaching baccalaureate nursing students critical analysis of health care policy, including refinement of existing policy or the foundation to create new policy. Central to this approach is the application of an innovative framework, the Grand View Critical Analysis Model, which was designed to provide a conceptual base for the authentic learning experience. Students come to know the interconnectedness and the importance of the model, which includes issue selection and four phases: policy focus, colleagueship analysis, evidence-based practice analysis, and policy analysis and development.

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Data from plating experiments indicated that Halobacterium cutirubrum NRC34001 has at least two separate restriction-modification systems. A spontaneous or induced loss of one or both systems resulted in four restriction-modification phenotypes. There was a positive correlation between changes in gas vacuolation phenotypes and either restriction-modification system.

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The DNAs from bacteriophages Hh-1 and Hh-3 that infect Halobacterium halobium were characterized. Both phages contain linear double-stranded DNA and show no relatedness based on restriction endonuclease fragment patterns. Hh-1 DNA has 67.

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A marine psychrophilic Vibrio sp., Ant-300, recovered from starvation after the addition of 1 volume of complete nutrient medium to 9 volumes of starvation menstruum. Turbidity (measured by optical density), viable cell counts, cell size (measured from electron micrographs), and cellular concentrations of protein, DNA, and RNA were monitored with recovery time.

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Levels of DNA, RNA, protein, ATP, glutathione, and radioactivity associated with [S]methionine-labeled cellular protein were estimated at various times during the starvation-survival process of a marine psychrophilic heterotrophic Vibrio sp., Ant-300. Values for the macromolecules were analyzed in terms of total, viable, and respiring cells.

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BActeriophages infecting extremely halophilic bacteria of the genus Halobacterium have been isolated from fermented anchovy sauce. Two distinct phages, designated Hh-1 and Hh-3, have been characterized. Both Hh-1 and Hh-3 are more tolerant of suspension in solutions of low ionic strength that their host bacteria.

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When Escherichia coli carrying a thermosensitive mutation in DNA ligase was grown at the restrictive temperature, several functions associated with the SOS system were induced. These included lambda prophage induction, W-reactivation and W-mutagenesis of ultraviolet-irradiated lambda phage, and recA protein synthesis, all of which were lexA+ recA+ recB+ dependent and chloramphenicol sensitive, and lexA+-dependent filamentation. These results indicate that ligase-deficient growth leads to the induction of the SOS system, and that all the above functions may respond to common induction signals.

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We have examined DNA strand breakage, DNA degradation, and the rate of DNA synthesis in lig and lig-recB strains of Escherichia coli K12 incubated in the presence and absence of 3 mug/ml chloramphenicol. Substantial DNA strand breakage and DNA degradation is observed in the lig strain upon growth at 40 degrees C; however, such strand breakage and DNA degradation is not observed in th lig-recB strainl Incubation of the lig strain at 40 degrees C in the presence of 3 mug/ml chloramphenicol reduces the amount of DNA strand breakage and DNA degradation to the level observed in the lig-recB strain. Together, these results demonstrate that exonuclease V (the recBC gene product) is responsible for the increased DNA degradation associated with DNA ligase deficiency.

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Strand breaks accumulated in the DNA of a temperature-sensitive DNA ligase mutant of Escherichia coli growing at the restrictive temperature, as detected by zone sedimentation through alkaline sucrose density gradients. The rate of strand breakage was increased by concomitant thymine starvation. Rifampicin and chloramphenicol inhibited the accumulation of strand breaks in the DNA.

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DNA ligase deficiency is shown to induce generalized mutator activity in E. coli. This mutator activity is unaffected by 3 mug/ml of chloramphenicol but is abolished both in lig-recA double mutants and by incubation with 20 mug/ml of chloramphenicol.

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Near-ultraviolet irradiation of actively growing yeast cells leads to cell death by two distinct mechanisms. The first type of cell death is evident after low doses of near-ultraviolet light (3 times 10-4 ergs times mm- minus 2) and is due to a reversible inactivation of the respiratory capacity of the cell. In studies with yeast mitochondrial membranes the quinones were identified as the site of inactivation by determining the relative levels of the following oxidase activities after irradiation: exogenous NADH, endogenous NADH (via isocitrate dehydrogenase), succinate, and D-lactate oxidases.

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To clarify the relationship between thymineless death and thymineless mutagenesis, the induction of arginine revertants of Escherichia coli TAU-bar by thymine starvation was examined in physiological terms. Induced revertants were detectable both on minimal medium lacking arginine and minimal medium supplemented with 1 mug of arginine per ml. Substantial thymineless mutagenesis occurred during the period before the onset of thymineless death.

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Survival and the synthesis of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), ribonucleic acid (RNA), and protein were measured during incubation of a thymine auxotroph of Escherichia coli in a series of media containing thymine concentrations below the optimal level of 2 mug/ml. The rate of increase in viable count gradually diminishes to no net growth with 0.2 mug/ml.

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