Publications

Export 145872 results:
Sort by: Author Title Type [ Year  (Desc)]
2023
Biccard, B. M., D. Smith, S. Peters, A. Boutall, G. Wilson, E. Coetzee, M. Flint, S. Gumede, S. Rayamajhi, S. Bannister, et al., "Exploring the cost-effectiveness of high versus low perioperative fraction of inspired oxygen in the prevention of surgical site infections among abdominal surgery patients in three low- and middle-income countries", BJA Open, vol. 7, pp. 100207, 2023. AbstractWebsite

Background This study assessed the potential cost-effectiveness of high (80–100%) vs low (21–35%) fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) at preventing surgical site infections (SSIs) after abdominal surgery in Nigeria, India, and South Africa. Methods Decision-analytic models were constructed using best available evidence sourced from unbundled data of an ongoing pilot trial assessing the effectiveness of high FiO2, published literature, and a cost survey in Nigeria, India, and South Africa. Effectiveness was measured as percentage of SSIs at 30 days after surgery, a healthcare perspective was adopted, and costs were reported in US dollars ($). Results High FiO2 may be cost-effective (cheaper and effective). In Nigeria, the average cost for high FiO2 was $216 compared with $222 for low FiO2 leading to a −$6 (95% confidence interval [CI]: −$13 to −$1) difference in costs. In India, the average cost for high FiO2 was $184 compared with $195 for low FiO2 leading to a −$11 (95% CI: −$15 to −$6) difference in costs. In South Africa, the average cost for high FiO2 was $1164 compared with $1257 for low FiO2 leading to a −$93 (95% CI: −$132 to −$65) difference in costs. The high FiO2 arm had few SSIs, 7.33% compared with 8.38% for low FiO2, leading to a −1.05 (95% CI: −1.14 to −0.90) percentage point reduction in SSIs. Conclusion High FiO2 could be cost-effective at preventing SSIs in the three countries but further data from large clinical trials are required to confirm this.

Azmi, G., A. Attia, and E. Shokir, "Exploring the Dominant Factors of Chemical Adsorption in Enhanced Oil Recovery: An Analytical Investigation", Egyptian Journal of Chemistry, vol. 66, no. 13: National Information and Documentation Centre (NIDOC), Academy of Scientific Research and Technology, ASRT, pp. 569-580, 2023. AbstractWebsite

Enhanced oil recovery (EOR) is a process for extracting oil that cannot be retrieved through the primary or secondary oil recovery techniques. A significant parameter that affects chemical (EOR) operations is chemical adsorption, which has a major impact on rock permeability, wettability, and the overall oil production.Therefore, dynamic flooding experiments on an unconsolidated sand-pack model was conducted to investigate the chemical adsorption by calculating the amount of adsorption and the residual resistance factor at different injection conditions (injected chemical types and concentrations, salinity, temperature, flow rate, lithology and additive nano-silica). Two chemicals, i.e., bio-polymer (xanthan gum, XG), and anionic surfactant (sodium dodecylbenzene sulphonate, SDBS) were used as displacement fluids in sandstone formations.Design Expert software was used to provide the number of experimental runs to each investigated factor, develop a predicted model for the amount of chemical adsorption and the residual resistance factor, and provide an optimum amount of chemical adsorption to enhance recovery.The results showed that increasing the biopolymer concentration from 500 to 1500 ppm in sandstone formation at different injection conditions (flowrate from 2 to 6 ml/min, salinities ranging from 0 to 10 wt%, and temperature from 20◦C to 70◦C) resulted in increasing chemical adsorption from an initial value of 0.2 mg/g to 1.15 mg/g after stabilized condition of chemical adsorption. Similar trend was observed in case of SDBS such that increasing the surfactant concentration from 2000 ppm to 5000 ppm resulted in increasing adsorption from an initial value of 0.11mg/g to 1.07mg/g at the same injection conditions. Using of nano-silica particles (NSP) as a co-injectant to the SDBS and XG enhanced the polymer adsorption by 67.8% and the surfactant adsorption by 60.2%. A previously proposed mechanism for the adsorption of XG/NSP and SDBS/NSP blends on sandstone was confirmed by the results obtained from the oil contact angle experiments. Finally, the adsorption optimization runs resulted in a recovery factor of 78.9% for the polymer folding, 67% for the surfactant, and 77% for the polymer-surfactant blend compared to 58% for the waterflooding base case.

Azmi, G. E., attiamahmoud attia, and E. M. E. - M. Shokir, "Exploring The Dominant Factors of Chemical Adsorption in Enhanced Oil Recovery: An Analytical investigation", Egypt. J. Chem. , vol. Vol. 66, issue 13, pp. 569-580, 2023.
ALKaisy, Q. H., J. S. Al-Saadi, A. K. J. AL-Rikabi, A. B. Altemimi, M. A. Hesarinejad, and T. G. Abedelmaksoud, "Exploring the health benefits and functional properties of goat milk proteins", Food Science & Nutrition, vol. 11, pp. 5641–5656, 2023. 5.pdf
Altemimi, A. B., S. M. Al-haliem, Z. T. Alkanan, M. J. Mohammed, M. A. Hesarinejad, M. A. A. Najm, A. Bouymajane, F. Cacciola, and T. G. Abedelmaksoud, "Exploring the phenolic profile, antibacterial, and antioxidant properties of walnut leaves (Juglans regia L.)", Food Science & Nutrition, vol. 11, pp. 845–6853, 2023. 8.pdf
El-Maksoud, A. A. A., M. A. Hesarinejad, and T. G. Abedelmaksoud, "EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF SPROUTED SOYBEAN AND SESAME HULL TO INCREASE NUTRITIONAL VALUE OF ICE CREAM", FOOD SYSTEMS, vol. 6, issue 3, pp. 403-408, 2023. 10.pdf
ADEL MAHMOUD AL SAMMAN, MOHAMED SHAKER AHMED, I. B. R. A. H. I. M. M. O. H. A. M. E. D. H. A. S. A. N. A. L. A. L. I., "EXPLORING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ADMINISTRATIVE EMPOWERMENT AND EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT IN ORGANIZATIONS: A QUANTITATIVE STUDY", The Seybold Report, vol. 18, no. 6, pp. 1994–2005, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Mohammad, W. S., S. Alotaibi, S. AlSayeid, N. AlKhalif, A. AlShaibani, and W. Elsais, "Exploring the Relationship between Muscular Strength, Flexibility, and mSEBT Test Performance in Saudi Arabian Women", Applied Sciences, vol. 13, issue 22, pp. 12355, 2023.
Guo, Z., P. Zhao, A. M. Senousi, X. Liu, and A. Mansourian, "Exploring the structural characteristics of intra-urban shared freight network and their associations with socioeconomic status", Travel Behaviour and Society, vol. 32, pp. 100576, 2023. AbstractWebsite

In recent years, shared freight systems have emerged in many cities as a new modality of freight transportation. However, little attention has been paid to the impact of a city’s socioeconomic status on the characteristics of a shared freight network. To fill this gap, in this study, the structural characteristics of an intra-urban shared freight network are measured from the perspective of complex networks, and the correlations between network structure and socioeconomic status are examined. A case study is conducted in Hong Kong using large amounts of GPS trajectory data for freight vehicles and socioeconomic data. The results show that socioeconomic variables such as population size, percentage of elderly residents, percentage of residents with a marital status classified as “other” (i.e., separated, widowed, or divorced), and percentage of residents employed in the tertiary sector have distinct correlations with the structural characteristics. These correlations display spatial non-stationarity. This research can potentially assist decision-makers in improving the operating efficiency of shared freight systems and the governance of digital freight transport.

Sakr, O. S., M. M. A. Zaitoun, M. Samer, M. Qubisi, A. H. Elshafeey, O. Jordan, and G. Borchard, "Explosomes: A new modality for DEB-TACE local delivery of sorafenib: In vivo proof of sustained release", Journal of Controlled Release, vol. 364, pp. 12 – 22, 2023. AbstractWebsite

The current medical practice in treating Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) using Drug Eluting Transarterial chemoembolization (DEB-TACE) technique is limited only to hydrophilic ionizable drugs, that can be attached ionically to the oppositely charged beads. This limitation has forced physicians to subscribe the more hydrophobic, first treatment option drugs, like sorafenib systemically via the oral route, thus flooding the patient system with a very powerful, non-specific, multiple-receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor that is associated with notorious side effects. In this paper, a new modality is introduced, where highly charged, drug loaded liposomes are added to oppositely charged DEBs in a manner causing them to “explode” and the drug is eventually attached to the beads in the lipid patches covering their surfaces; therefore we call them “Explosomes”. After fully describing the preparation process and in vitro characterization, this manuscript delves into an in vivo pharmacokinetic study over 50 New Zealand rabbits, where explosomal loading is challenged vs oral as well as current practice of emulsifying sorafenib in lipiodol. Over 14 days of follow up, and compared to other groups, explosomal loading of SRF on embolic beads proved to cause a slower release pattern with longer Tmax, lower Cmax and less washout to general circulation in healthy animals. This treatment modality opens a new untapped door for local sustained delivery of hydrophobic drugs in catheterized organs. © 2023 Elsevier B.V.

Sakr, O. S., M. M. A. Zaitoun, M. Samer, M. Qubisi, A. H. Elshafeey, O. Jordan, and G. Borchard, "Explosomes: A new modality for DEB-TACE local delivery of sorafenib: In vivo proof of sustained release", Journal of Controlled Release, vol. 364: Elsevier B.V., pp. 12 – 22, 2023. AbstractWebsite

The current medical practice in treating Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) using Drug Eluting Transarterial chemoembolization (DEB-TACE) technique is limited only to hydrophilic ionizable drugs, that can be attached ionically to the oppositely charged beads. This limitation has forced physicians to subscribe the more hydrophobic, first treatment option drugs, like sorafenib systemically via the oral route, thus flooding the patient system with a very powerful, non-specific, multiple-receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor that is associated with notorious side effects. In this paper, a new modality is introduced, where highly charged, drug loaded liposomes are added to oppositely charged DEBs in a manner causing them to “explode” and the drug is eventually attached to the beads in the lipid patches covering their surfaces; therefore we call them “Explosomes”. After fully describing the preparation process and in vitro characterization, this manuscript delves into an in vivo pharmacokinetic study over 50 New Zealand rabbits, where explosomal loading is challenged vs oral as well as current practice of emulsifying sorafenib in lipiodol. Over 14 days of follow up, and compared to other groups, explosomal loading of SRF on embolic beads proved to cause a slower release pattern with longer Tmax, lower Cmax and less washout to general circulation in healthy animals. This treatment modality opens a new untapped door for local sustained delivery of hydrophobic drugs in catheterized organs. © 2023 Elsevier B.V.

Sakr, O. S., M. M. A. Zaitoun, M. Samer, M. Qubisi, A. H. Elshafeey, O. Jordan, and G. Borchard, "Explosomes: A new modality for DEB-TACE local delivery of sorafenib: In vivo proof of sustained release", Journal of Controlled Release, vol. 364: Elsevier B.V., pp. 12 – 22, 2023. AbstractWebsite

The current medical practice in treating Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) using Drug Eluting Transarterial chemoembolization (DEB-TACE) technique is limited only to hydrophilic ionizable drugs, that can be attached ionically to the oppositely charged beads. This limitation has forced physicians to subscribe the more hydrophobic, first treatment option drugs, like sorafenib systemically via the oral route, thus flooding the patient system with a very powerful, non-specific, multiple-receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor that is associated with notorious side effects. In this paper, a new modality is introduced, where highly charged, drug loaded liposomes are added to oppositely charged DEBs in a manner causing them to “explode” and the drug is eventually attached to the beads in the lipid patches covering their surfaces; therefore we call them “Explosomes”. After fully describing the preparation process and in vitro characterization, this manuscript delves into an in vivo pharmacokinetic study over 50 New Zealand rabbits, where explosomal loading is challenged vs oral as well as current practice of emulsifying sorafenib in lipiodol. Over 14 days of follow up, and compared to other groups, explosomal loading of SRF on embolic beads proved to cause a slower release pattern with longer Tmax, lower Cmax and less washout to general circulation in healthy animals. This treatment modality opens a new untapped door for local sustained delivery of hydrophobic drugs in catheterized organs. © 2023 Elsevier B.V.

Brito-Zerón, P., A. Flores-Chávez, W. - F. Ng, I. F. Horváth, A. Rasmussen, R. Priori, C. Baldini, B. Armagan, B. Özkiziltaş, S. PRAPROTNIK, et al., "Exposure to air pollution as an environmental determinant of how Sjögren's disease is expressed at diagnosis.", Clinical and experimental rheumatology, vol. 41, issue 12, pp. 2448-2457, 2023. Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To analyse how the potential exposure to air pollutants can influence the key components at the time of diagnosis of Sjögren's phenotype (epidemiological profile, sicca symptoms, and systemic disease).

METHODS: For the present study, the following variables were selected for harmonization and refinement: age, sex, country, fulfilment of 2002/2016 criteria items, dry eyes, dry mouth, and overall ESSDAI score. Air pollution indexes per country were defined according to the OECD (1990-2021), including emission data of nitrogen and sulphur oxides (NO/SO), particulate matter (PM2.5 and 1.0), carbon monoxide (CO) and volatile organic compounds (VOC) calculated per unit of GDP, Kg per 1000 USD.

RESULTS: The results of the chi-square tests of independence for each air pollutant with the frequency of dry eyes at diagnosis showed that, except for one, all variables exhibited p-values <0.0001. The most pronounced disparities emerged in the dry eye prevalence among individuals inhabiting countries with the highest NO/SO exposure, a surge of 4.61 percentage points compared to other countries, followed by CO (3.59 points), non-methane (3.32 points), PM2.5 (3.30 points), and PM1.0 (1.60 points) exposures. Concerning dry mouth, individuals residing in countries with worse NO/SO exposures exhibited a heightened frequency of dry mouth by 2.05 percentage points (p<0.0001), followed by non-methane exposure (1.21 percentage points increase, p=0.007). Individuals inhabiting countries with the worst NO/SO, CO, and PM2.5 pollution levels had a higher mean global ESSDAI score than those in lower-risk nations (all p-values <0.0001). When systemic disease was stratified according to DAS into low, moderate, and high systemic activity levels, a heightened proportion of individuals manifesting moderate/severe systemic activity was observed in countries with worse exposures to NO/SO, CO, and PM2.5 pollutant levels.

CONCLUSIONS: For the first time, we suggest that pollution levels could influence how SjD appears at diagnosis in a large international cohort of patients. The most notable relationships were found between symptoms (dryness and general body symptoms) and NO/SO, CO, and PM2.5 levels.

Marwa Refaat Mandour*, S., A. shaimaa Hamouda, and S. O. Zayed, "EXPRESSION AND CORRELATION OF MICRORNA-34C AND CD68 IN DIFFERENT GRADES OF ORAL SQUAMOUS CELL CARCINOMA VERSUS NORMAL ORAL MUCOSA", Eur. Chem. Bull., vol. 12, issue (3), pp. 12(3), 2013-2041 , 2023.
Ali, S. M., D. O. Helmy, H. S. Abdel Hamid, and M. S. Mahmoud, "Expression of programmed death ligand1 (PD-L1) in gastric carcinoma (histopathological and immunohistochemical study). ", Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention, vol. 24, issue 7, pp. 2295, 2023. expression_of_death_lignad1_pd-l1_in_gastric_carcinoma.pdf
Adel, O., S. Ibrahim, K. Mahmoud, S. M. Galal, M. Fathi, and A. A. M. Seida, "Expression profile of genes related to pregnancy maintenance in Dromedary Camel during the first trimester", Animal Reproduction Science, vol. 251: Elsevier, pp. 107211, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Hussein, O. G., D. A. Ahmed, M. R. Rezk, M. A. Kawy, and Y. Rostom, "Exquisite integration of quality-by-design and green analytical approaches for simultaneous determination of xylometazoline and antazoline in eye drops and rabbit aqueous humor, application to stability study", Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis, vol. 235: Elsevier, pp. 115598, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Hussein, O. G., D. A. Ahmed, M. R. Rezk, M. A. Kawy, and Y. Rostom, "Exquisite integration of quality-by-design and green analytical approaches for simultaneous determination of xylometazoline and antazoline in eye drops and rabbit aqueous humor, application to stability study.", Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis, vol. 235, pp. 115598, 2023. Abstract

This work implements a stability indicating HPLC method developed to simultaneously determine xylometazoline (XYLO) and antazoline (ANT) in their binary mixture, rabbit aqueous humor and cited drug's degradates by applying analytical quality-by-design (AQbD) combined with green analytical chemistry (GAC) experiment for the first time. This integration was designed to maximize efficiency and minimize environmental impacts, as well as energy and solvent consumption. Analytical quality-by-design was applied to achieve our aim starting with evaluation of quality risk and scouting analysis, tracked via five parameters chromatographic screening using Placket-Burman design namely: pH, temperature, organic solvent percentage, flow rate, and wavelength detection. Recognizing the critical method parameters was done followed by optimization employing central composite design and Derringer's desirability toward assess optimum conditions that attained best resolution with satisfactory peak symmetry with short run time. Optimal chromatographic separation was attained by means of an XBridge® C18 (4.6 × 250 mm, 5 µm) column through isocratic elution using a mobile phase consists of phosphate buffer (pH 3.0): ethanol (60:40, by volume) at a 1.6 mL/min flow rate and 230.0 nm UV detection. Linearity acquired over a concentration range of 1.0-100.0 µg/mL and 0.5-100.0 µg/mL for XYLO and ANT, respectively. Furthermore, imperiling cited drugs' stock solutions to stress various conditions and satisfactory peaks of degradation products were obtained indicating that cited drugs are vulnerable to oxidative degradation and basic hydrolysis. Degradates' structures were elucidated using mass spectrometry. Applying various assessment tools; namely: analytical greenness (AGREE), green analytical procedure index (GAPI), analytical eco-scale, and national environmental method index (NEMI), Greenness method's evaluation was applied and proved to be green. In fact, the developed method is established to be perceptive, accurate, and selective to assess cited drugs for routine analysis.

Abdelall, Y. Y., "Extended Kappa Distribution in the Presence of Censored Data", Journal of Statistics Applications&Probability, vol. 12, pp. 1269-1286, 2023.
Ghazy, R. M., S. W. Elkhadry, S. Abdel-Rahman, S. H. N. Taha, N. Youssef, A. Elshabrawy, S. A. Ibrahim, S. Al Awaidy, T. Al-Ahdal, B. K. Padhi, et al., "External validation of the parental attitude about childhood vaccination scale", Frontiers in Public Health, vol. 11: Frontiers Media SA, pp. 1146792, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Tourism