Bulb samples from a range of onion cultivars grown over three consecutive years were freeze-dried and the resulting powders extracted using three previously reported methods. The extracts were analyzed for fructose, glucose, and sucrose content using HPLC coupled with ELSD, and for fructans using MALDI-MS. The three methods gave differing results, indicating that the extraction procedure is crucial in the determination of the concentration and ratios of nonstructural carbohydrates in onion bulbs. O'Donoghue et al.'s method (O'Donoghue, E. M.; Somerfield, S. D.; Shaw, M.; Bendall, M.; Hedderly, D.; Eason, J.; Sims, I. J. Agric. Food Chem. 2004, 52, 5383-5390), which utilized a more polar solvent (62.5% (v/v) aqueous methanol) and also had the benefit of shorter extraction times and lower temperatures, was far superior to 80% (v/v) ethanol-based methods in extracting significantly greater amounts of fructose, glucose, and sucrose from all onion bulbs tested. Discrepancies between and within cultivars tested also demonstrated that the ratio of monosaccharides to sucrose was affected by extraction method, such that some caution should be given to interpreting some previous work on elucidating the nonstructural carbohydrate composition in onion.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf063170p | DOI Listing |
JMIR AI
January 2025
Department of Information Systems and Business Analytics, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, United States.
Background: In the contemporary realm of health care, laboratory tests stand as cornerstone components, driving the advancement of precision medicine. These tests offer intricate insights into a variety of medical conditions, thereby facilitating diagnosis, prognosis, and treatments. However, the accessibility of certain tests is hindered by factors such as high costs, a shortage of specialized personnel, or geographic disparities, posing obstacles to achieving equitable health care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJMIR Med Inform
January 2025
Department of Systems Design Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
Background: While expert optometrists tend to rely on a deep understanding of the disease and intuitive pattern recognition, those with less experience may depend more on extensive data, comparisons, and external guidance. Understanding these variations is important for developing artificial intelligence (AI) systems that can effectively support optometrists with varying degrees of experience and minimize decision inconsistencies.
Objective: The main objective of this study is to identify and analyze the variations in diagnostic decision-making approaches between novice and expert optometrists.
Phys Rev Lett
December 2024
Quantinuum, 303 S. Technology Court, Broomfield, Colorado 80021, USA.
Although quantum mechanics underpins the microscopic behavior of all materials, its effects are often obscured at the macroscopic level by thermal fluctuations. A notable exception is a zero-temperature phase transition, where scaling laws emerge entirely due to quantum correlations over a diverging length scale. The accurate description of such transitions is challenging for classical simulation methods of quantum systems, and is a natural application space for quantum simulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Netw Open
January 2025
Department of Pediatrics, The Children's Hospital at Montefiore, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.
Importance: Pediatric obesity and hypertension are highly correlated. To mitigate both conditions, provision of counseling on nutrition, lifestyle, and weight to children with high blood pressure (BP) measurements is recommended.
Objective: To examine racial and ethnic disparities in receipt of nutrition, lifestyle, and weight counseling among patients with high BP at pediatric primary care visits stratified by patients' weight status.
Qual Life Res
January 2025
Department of Health Psychology, Faculty of Medical Sciences, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV, Groningen, The Netherlands.
Purpose: This study aimed to identify trajectories of BMI, obesity-specific health-related quality of life (HR-QoL), and depression trajectories from pre-surgery to 24 months post-bariatric metabolic surgery (BMS), and explore their associations, addressing subgroup differences often hidden in group-level analyses.
Method: Patients with severe obesity (n = 529) reported their HR-QoL and depression before undergoing BMS, and at 12 and 24 months post-operation. Latent Class Growth Analysis was used to identify trajectories of BMI, HR-QoL and depression.
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