Publications by authors named "Toghill A"

The radical pair mechanism accounts for the magnetic field sensitivity of a large class of chemical reactions and is hypothesised to underpin numerous magnetosensitive traits in biology, including the avian compass. Traditionally, magnetic field sensitivity in this mechanism is attributed to radical pairs with weakly interacting, well-separated electrons; closely bound pairs were considered unresponsive to weak fields due to arrested spin dynamics. In this study, we challenge this view by examining the FAD-superoxide radical pair within cryptochrome, a protein hypothesised to function as a biological magnetosensor.

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The coupling between two or more objects can generally be categorized as strong or weak. In cavity quantum electrodynamics for example, when the coupling strength is larger than the loss rate the coupling is termed strong, and otherwise it is dubbed weak. Ultrastrong coupling, where the interaction energy is of the same order of magnitude as the bare energies of the uncoupled objects, presents a new paradigm for quantum physics and beyond.

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Introduction: Care home residents are at increased risk of infections and antibiotic prescription. Reduced antibiotic use from fewer infections would improve quality of life. The robiotics to educe nfections iar home reident (PRINCESS) trial aims to determine the efficacy and investigate mechanisms of daily probiotics on antibiotic use and incidence of infections in care home residents.

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Background: Emergency calls are frequently made to ambulance services for older people who have fallen, but ambulance crews often leave patients at the scene without any ongoing care. We evaluated a new clinical protocol which allowed paramedics to assess older people who had fallen and, if appropriate, refer them to community-based falls services.

Objectives: To compare outcomes, processes and costs of care between intervention and control groups; and to understand factors which facilitate or hinder use.

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Background: Health services research is expected to involve service users as active partners in the research process, but few examples report how this has been achieved in practice in trials. We implemented a model to involve service users in a multi-centre randomised controlled trial in pre-hospital emergency care. We used the generic Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) from our Clinical Trials Unit (CTU) as the basis for creating a model to fit the context and population of the SAFER 2 trial.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study was conducted over 12 months to examine the frequency and risk factors for antibiotic prescriptions and antibiotic-associated diarrhoea (AAD) among care home residents in South Wales.
  • The research involved 279 residents, revealing an incidence of 2.16 antibiotic prescriptions per resident per year and a 0.57 episodes per resident per year of AAD among those prescribed antibiotics.
  • The study found that AAD was more likely in residents given co-amoxiclav or those using incontinence pads, and less likely in residents from residential homes compared to nursing homes.*
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Background: Antibiotic prescribing rates in care homes are higher than in the general population. Antibiotics disrupt the normal gut flora, sometimes causing antibiotic-associated diarrhoea (AAD). Clostridium difficile (Hall and O'Toole 1935) Prévot 1938 is the most commonly identified cause of AAD.

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Thiamethoxam, a neonicotinoid insecticide, which is not mutagenic either in vitro or in vivo, caused an increased incidence of liver tumors in mice when fed in the diet for 18 months at concentrations in the range 500 to 2500 ppm. A number of dietary studies of up to 50 weeks duration have been conducted in order to identify the mode of action for the development of the liver tumors seen at the end of the cancer bioassay. Both thiamethoxam and its major metabolites have been tested in these studies.

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Thiamethoxam is a neonicotinoid insecticide that is not a mutagen, but it did cause a significant increase in liver cancer in mice, but not rats, in chronic dietary feeding studies. Previous studies in mice have characterized a carcinogenicity mode of action that involved depletion of plasma cholesterol, cell death, both as single cell necrosis and as apoptosis, and sustained increases in cell replication rates. In a study reported in this article, female rats have been exposed to thiamethoxam in their diet at concentrations of 0, 1000, and 3000 ppm for 50 weeks, a study design directly comparable to the mouse study in which the mode of action changes were characterized.

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2-Butoxyethanol, a forestomach carcinogen in mice exposed by inhalation, has been shown to enter the forestomach as a result of grooming and ingestion of material condensed on the skin and fur during exposure. The material entering the stomach concentrates in the forestomach region and persists for at least 48 h post-exposure. Mice given single oral doses of either 2-butoxyethanol or 2-butoxyacetic acid, daily for 10 days, developed a marked hyperkeratosis in the forestomach.

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Exposure of CD-1 mice to atmospheres of 40 and 160 ppm styrene, daily for up to 10 days, caused pulmonary toxicity characterised by focal loss of cytoplasm and focal crowding of non-ciliated Clara cells, particularly in the terminal bronchiolar region. The toxicity was accompanied by an increase in cell replication rates in terminal and large bronchioles of mice exposed for 3 days or longer. The toxicity and increased cell replication were no longer apparent after a 2-day break in exposure, but re-occurred when exposure was resumed.

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Inhaled styrene is known to be toxic to the nasal olfactory epithelium of both mice and rats, although mice are markedly more sensitive. In this study, the nasal tissues of mice exposed to 40 and 160 ppm styrene 6 h/day for 3 days had a number of degenerative changes including atrophy of the olfactory mucosa and loss of normal cellular organisation. Pretreatment of mice with 5-phenyl-1-pentyne, an inhibitor of both CYP2F2 and CYP2E1 completely prevented the development of a nasal lesion on exposure to styrene establishing that a metabolite of styrene, probably styrene oxide, is responsible for the observed nasal toxicity.

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Treatment of rats and mice with a single oral dose of dimethyldithiocarbamate (DMDTC; 250 mg/kg) had a marked effect on hepatic CYP2E1 and aldehyde dehydrogenase activities, measured in vitro, for up to 24 h after dosing. The same treatment did not affect CYP2A6, glutathione S-transferase, epoxide hydrolase, alcohol dehydrogenase activities or hepatic glutathione levels. As a consequence of the loss of CYP2E1 activity, butadiene metabolism in liver fractions from DMDTC treated rats and mice was markedly reduced, as was the metabolism of the mono-epoxide to the di-epoxide in mouse liver.

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