Publications by authors named "Roy Broughton"

Article Synopsis
  • The study introduces a new passive device that regulates expiratory flow, which is important because unregulated flow can lead to lung injury in patients on mechanical ventilation.
  • It tested the device against various mechanical ventilation settings, finding significant reductions in peak expiratory flow, expiratory time, and dissipated energy, all of which can indicate less risk of lung injury.
  • Results showed a major decrease in peak expiratory flow and dissipated energy per breath, highlighting the device's effectiveness in improving ventilation safety without needing computer control or initial triggers.
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This work demonstrated the successful application of N-halamine technology for wound dressings rendered antimicrobial by facile and inexpensive processes. Four N-halamine compounds, which possess different functional groups and chemistry, were synthesized. The N-halamine compounds, which contained oxidative chlorine, the source of antimicrobial activity, were impregnated into or coated onto standard non-antimicrobial wound dressings.

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The preparation of alginate-chitosan fibers, through wet spinning technique, as well as the study of their properties as a function of chitosan's molecular weight and retention time in the coagulation bath, is presented and discussed in this work. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed that the fibers presented irregular and rough surfaces, with a grooved and heavily striated morphology distributed throughout the structure. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) showed that, with the exception of elongation at break, the incorporation of chitosan into the fibers improved their tensile properties.

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Microbial infection remains one of the most serious complications in several areas, particularly in medical devices, drugs, health care and hygienic applications, water purification systems, hospital and dental surgery equipment, textiles, food packaging, and food storage. Antimicrobials gain interest from both academic research and industry due to their potential to provide quality and safety benefits to many materials. However, low molecular weight antimicrobial agents suffer from many disadvantages, such as toxicity to the environment and short-term antimicrobial ability.

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