Publications

Export 8326 results:
Sort by: Author Title Type [ Year  (Desc)]
2023
Abdelghaffar, M., Y. Gamal, R. A. El-Khoribi, W. Soliman, Y. Badr, M. F. O. Hameed, and S. S. A. Obayya, "Highly sensitive V-shaped SPR PCF biosensor for cancer detection", Optical and Quantum Electronics, vol. 55, issue 5, pp. 472, 2023.
Mohamed, M., A. A. R. Hashem, M. F. Obeid, and A. Abu-Seida, "Histopathological and immunohistochemical profiles of pulp tissues in immature dogs’ teeth to two recently introduced pulpotomy materials", Clinical Oral Investigations, vol. 27, issue 6, pp. 3095–3103, 2023. pulpine-pulptomy.pdf
Abdelkhalek, Z. S., I. G. Mahmoud, H. Omair, M. Abdulhay, and M. A. Elmonem, "Homogentisate 1,2-dioxygenase (HGD) gene variants in young Egyptian patients with alkaptonuria.", Scientific reports, vol. 13, issue 1, pp. 14374, 2023. Abstract

Alkaptonuria (AKU) is a rare autosomal recessive metabolic disorder caused by pathogenic variants in the homogentisate 1,2-dioxygenase (HGD) gene. This leads to a deficient HGD enzyme with the consequent accumulation of homogentisic acid (HGA) in different tissues causing complications in various organs, particularly in joints, heart valves and kidneys. The genetic basis of AKU in Egypt is completely unknown. We evaluated the clinical and genetic spectrum of six pediatric and adolescents AKU patients from four unrelated Egyptian families. All probands had a high level of HGA in urine by qualitative GC/MS before genetic confirmation by Sanger sequencing. Recruited AKU patients were four females and two males (median age 13 years). We identified four different pathogenic missense variants within HGD gene. Detected variants included a novel variant c.1079G > T;p.(Gly360Val) and three recurrent variants; c.1078G > C;p.(Gly360Arg), c.808G > A;p.(Gly270Arg) and c.473C > T;p.(Pro158Leu). All identified variants were properly segregating in the four families consistent with autosomal recessive inheritance. In this study, we reported the phenotypic and genotypic spectrum of alkaptonuria for the first time in Egypt. We further enriched the HGD-variant database with another novel pathogenic variant. The recent availability of nitisinone may promote the need for genetic confirmation at younger ages to start therapy earlier and prevent serious complications.

Ali, D. E., S. M. Bassam, S. Ela, E. S. Habiba, E. A. Allam, E. M. Omar, D. A. Ghareeb, S. A. Abdulmalek, and E. Abdel-Sattar, "HR LC-MS/MS metabolomic profiling of Yucca aloifolia fruit and the potential neuroprotective effect on rotenone-induced Parkinson’s disease in rats", Plos One, vol. 18, issue 2, pp. e0282246, 2023.
Omar, M. A., R. A. El-Shiekh, D. H. Dawood, A. Temirak, and A. M. Srour, "Hydrazone–sulfonate hybrids as potential cholinesterase inhibitors: design, synthesis and molecular modeling simulation", Future Medicinal Chemistry, vol. 15, no. 24: Newlands Press Ltd London, UK, pp. 2269–2287, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Zaib, S., N. Rana, N. Hussain, H. A. Ogaly, A. A. Dera, and I. Khan, "Identification of potential inhibitors for the treatment of alkaptonuria using an integrated in silico computational strategy", Molecules, vol. 28, issue 6: MDPI, pp. 2623, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Ogunyemi, O. M., G. A. Gyebi, I. M. Ibrahim, A. M. Esan, C. O. Olaiya, M. M. Soliman, and G. E. - S. Batiha, "Identification of promising multi-targeting inhibitors of obesity from Vernonia amygdalina through computational analysis.", Molecular diversity, vol. 27, issue 1, pp. 1-25, 2023. Abstract

Vernonia amygdalina, a widely consumed West African food herb, can be a boon in the discovery of safe anti-obesity agents given the extensive reports on its anti-obesity and antidiabetic potentials. The main aim of this study was to screen 78 Vernonia-Derived Phytocompounds (VDPs) against the active site regions of Human Pancreatic Lipase (HPL), Human Pancreatic Amylase and Human Glucosidase (HG) as drug targets associated with obesity in silico. Structure-based virtual screening helped to identify Luteolin 7-O-glucuronoside and Andrographidoid D2 as hit compounds with dual targeting tendency towards the HPL and HG. Analysis of the molecular dynamic simulation trajectory files of the ligand-receptor complexes as computed from the thermodynamic parameters plots showed not only increased flexibility and greater interaction potential of the active site residues of the receptor towards the VDPs as indicated by the root mean square fluctuation but also higher stability as indicated by the root mean square deviation, radius of gyration and number of hydrogen bonds. The cluster analysis further showed that the interactions with important residues were preserved in the dynamic environment. These observations were further verified from Molecular Mechanics Generalized Born Surface Area Analysis, which also showed that residual contributions to the binding free energies were mainly from catalytic residues at the active sites of the enzymes. The hit compounds also feature desirable physicochemical properties and drug-likeness. This study provides in silico evidence for the inhibitory potential of phytochemicals from Vernonia amygdalina against two target enzymes in obesity.

ElNaggar, M. H., A. A. Elgazar, G. Gamal, S. M. Hamed, Z. M. Elsayed, M. K. El-Ashrey, A. Abood, M. A. El Hassab, A. M. Soliman, R. A. El-domany, et al., "Identification of sulphonamide-tethered N-((triazol-4-yl) methyl) isatin derivatives as inhibitors of SARS-CoV-2 main protease", Journal of enzyme inhibition and medicinal chemistry, vol. 38, no. 1: Taylor & Francis, pp. 2234665, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Sabry, M. M., R. F. Abdel-Rahman, H. M. Fayed, A. T. Taher, H. A. Ogaly, A. Albohy, S. H. El-Gayed, and R. M. Ibrahim, "Impact of Eucalyptus maculata hook resin exudate constituents on reducing COX-2 gene expression: In-vivo anti-inflammatory, molecular docking and dynamics studies", Journal of ethnopharmacology, vol. 314, pp. 116631, 2023.
Sabry, M. M., R. F. Abdel-Rahman, H. M. Fayed, A. T. Taher, H. A. Ogaly, A. Albohy, S. H. El-Gayed, and R. M. Ibrahim, "Impact of Eucalyptus maculata hook resin exudate constituents on reducing COX-2 gene expression: In-vivo anti-inflammatory, molecular docking and dynamics studies", Journal of Ethnopharmacology, vol. 314: Elsevier, pp. 116631, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Abbas, M., S. Abbott, M. Abbrescia, H. Abdalla, A. Abdelalim, S. AbuZeid, D. Aebi, A. Agapitos, A. Ahmad, A. Ahmed, et al., "Impact of magnetic field on the stability of the CMS GE1/1 GEM detector operation", Journal of Instrumentation, vol. 18, no. 11: IOP Publishing, pp. P11029, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Lasheen, A., H. F. Sindi, M. Nour, M. F. Shaaban, A. Osman, and H. H. Zeineldin, "Impact of Secondary Control Design on the Microgrid Domain of Stability Considering Reactive Power Sharing", IEEE Access, vol. 11, pp. 44454-44466, 2023. Abstract
n/a
AbdElsamea, G. A., M. Amr, A. M. N. Tolba, H. O. Elboraie, A. Soliman, B. A. - A. Hassan, F. Ali, and D. A. Osman, "Impact of weight loss on sexual and psychological functions and quality of life in females with sexual dysfunction: A forgotten avenue", Front. Psychol., vol. 14, 2023. sexual_dysfunction.pdf
Yoshida, A., M. Kim, M. Kuwana, N. Ravichandran, A. Makol, P. Sen, J. B. Lilleker, V. Agarwal, S. Kardes, J. Day, et al., "Impaired physical function in patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: results from the multicentre COVAD patient-reported e-survey.", Rheumatology (Oxford, England), vol. 62, issue 3, pp. 1204-1215, 2023. Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The assessment of physical function is fundamental in the management of patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs). We aimed to investigate the physical function of patients with IIMs compared with those with non-IIM autoimmune rheumatic diseases (AIRDs) utilizing Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Physical Function (PF) data obtained in the COVAD study, an international self-reported e-survey assessing the safety of COVID-19 vaccines in AIRDs.

METHODS: Demographics, AIRD diagnosis, disease activity, and PROMIS PF short form-10a data were extracted from the COVAD database. PROMIS PF-10a scores were compared between disease categories and stratified by disease activity. Factors affecting PROMIS PF-10a scores other than disease activity were identified by multivariable regression analysis in patients with inactive disease.

RESULTS: A total of 1057 IIM patients, 3635 non-IIM AIRD patients and 3981 healthy controls (HCs) responded to the COVAD e-survey from April to August 2021. Using a binomial regression model, the predicted mean of PROMIS PF-10a scores was significantly lower in IIM patients compared with non-IIM AIRD patients or HCs [36.3 (95% CI 35.5, 37.1) vs 41.3 (95% CI 40.2, 42.5) vs 46.2 (95% CI 45.8, 46.6), P < 0.001], irrespective of disease activity. The independent factors for lower PROMIS PF-10a scores in patients with inactive disease were older age, female, longer disease duration, and a diagnosis of inclusion body myositis or polymyositis.

CONCLUSION: Physical function is significantly impaired in IIMs compared with non-IIM AIRDs or HCs, even in patients with inactive disease. Our study highlights a critical need for better strategies to minimize functional disability in patients with IIMs.

El-Metwally, S. A., A. A. Abuelkhir, H. Elkady, M. S. Taghour, I. M. Ibrahim, D. Z. Husein, A. A. Alsfouk, A. Sultan, A. Ismail, S. Y. Elkhawaga, et al., "In vitro and in silico evaluation of new thieno [2, 3-d] pyrimidines as anti-cancer agents and apoptosis inducers targeting VEGFR-2", Computational Biology and Chemistry, vol. 106: Elsevier, pp. 107928, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Refate, A., Y. Mohamed, M. Mohamed, M. Sobhy, K. Samhy, O. Khaled, K. Eidaroos, H. Batikh, E. El-Kashif, S. El-Khatib, et al., "Influence of electrospinning parameters on biopolymers nanofibers, with emphasis on cellulose & chitosan", Heliyon: Elsevier, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Flores-Chávez, A., P. Brito-Zerón, W. - F. Ng, A. Szántó, A. Rasmussen, R. Priori, C. Baldini, B. Armagan, B. Özkiziltaş, S. PRAPROTNIK, et al., "Influence of exposure to climate-related hazards in the phenotypic expression of primary Sjögren's syndrome.", Clinical and experimental rheumatology, vol. 41, issue 12, pp. 2437-2447, 2023. Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To analyse how the key components at the time of diagnosis of the Sjögren's phenotype (epidemiological profile, sicca symptoms, and systemic disease) can be influenced by the potential exposure to climate-related natural hazards.

METHODS: For the present study, the following variables were selected for harmonisation and refinement: age, sex, country, fulfilment of 2002/2016 criteria items, dry eyes, dry mouth, and overall ESSDAI score. Climate-related hazards per country were defined according to the OECD and included seven climate-related hazard types: extreme temperature, extreme precipitation, drought, wildfire, wind threats, river flooding, and coastal flooding. Climatic variables were defined as dichotomous variables according to whether each country is ranked among the ten countries with the most significant exposure.

RESULTS: After applying data-cleaning techniques and excluding people from countries not included in the OECD climate rankings, the database study analysed 16,042 patients from 23 countries. The disease was diagnosed between 1 and 3 years earlier in people living in countries included among the top 10 worst exposed to extreme precipitation, wildfire, wind threats, river flooding, and coastal flooding. A lower frequency of dry eyes was observed in people living in countries exposed to wind threats, river flooding, and coastal flooding, with a level of statistical association being classified as strong (p<0.0001 for the three variables). The frequency of dry mouth was significantly lower in people living in countries exposed to river flooding (p<0.0001) and coastal flooding (p<0.0001). People living in countries included in the worse climate scenarios for extreme temperature (p<0.0001) and river flooding (p<0.0001) showed a higher mean ESSDAI score in comparison with people living in no-risk countries. In contrast, those living in countries exposed to worse climate scenarios for wind threats (p<0.0001) and coastal flooding (p<0.0001) showed a lower mean ESSDAI score in comparison with people living in no-risk countries.

CONCLUSIONS: Local exposure to extreme climate-related hazards plays a role in modulating the presentation of Sjögren across countries concerning the age at which the disease is diagnosed, the frequency of dryness, and the degree of systemic activity.

Osman, R. B., G. Khoder, B. Fayed, R. A. Kedia, Y. Elkareimi, and N. Alharbi, "Influence of Fabrication Technique on Adhesion and Biofilm Formation of to Conventional, Milled, and 3D-Printed Denture Base Resin Materials: A Comparative In Vitro Study.", Polymers, vol. 15, issue 8, 2023. Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the adhesion and biofilm formation of () on conventionally fabricated, milled, and 3D-printed denture base resin materials in order to determine the susceptibility of denture contamination during clinical use. Specimens were incubated with (ATCC 10231) for 1 and 24 h. Adhesion and biofilm formation of were assessed using the field emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM). The XTT (2,3-(2-methoxy-4-nitro-5-sulphophenyl)-5-[(phenylamino) carbonyl]-2H-tetrazolium hydroxide) assay was used for the quantification of fungal adhesion and biofilm formation. The data were analyzed using GraphPad Prism 8.02 for windows. One-way ANOVA with Tukey's post hoc testing were performed with a statistical significance level set at α = 0.05. The quantitative XTT biofilm assay revealed significant differences in the biofilm formation of between the three groups in the 24 h incubation period. The highest proportion of biofilm formation was observed in the 3D-printed group, followed by the conventional group, while the lowest candida biofilm formation was observed in the milled group. The difference in biofilm formation among the three tested dentures was statistically significant ( < 0.001). The manufacturing technique has an influence on the surface topography and microbiological properties of the fabricated denture base resin material. Additive 3D-printing technology results in increased candida adhesion and the roughest surface topography of maxillary resin denture base as compared to conventional flask compression and CAD/CAM milling techniques. In a clinical setting, patients wearing additively manufactured maxillary complete dentures are thus more susceptible to the development of candida-associated denture stomatitis and accordingly, strict oral hygiene measures and maintenance programs should be emphasized to patients.

Othman, E. Z., R. A. El-Ziat, H. M. Farag, and I. M. El-Sayed, "Influence of Gibberellic acid and Methionine on growth, flowering quality, leaf anatomical structure and genetic diversity of Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat plant", Emirates Journal of Food and Agriculture, vol. 35, issue 9, pp. 813-825, 2023.
Fathy, M. M., A. A. Elfiky, Y. S. Bashandy, M. M. Hamdy, A. M. Elgharib, I. M. Ibrahim, R. T. Kamal, A. S. Mohamed, A. M. Rashad, O. S. Ahmed, et al., "An insight into synthesis and antitumor activity of citrate and gallate stabilizing gold nanospheres", Scientific Reports, vol. 13, no. 1: Nature Publishing Group UK London, pp. 2749, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Donskov, A. O., S. L. Mackie, E. M. Hauge, C. E. Toro-Gutiérrez, I. T. Hansen, A. K. Hemmig, A. Van der Maas, T. Gheita, B. D. Nielsen, K. M. J. Douglas, et al., "An international survey of current management practices for polymyalgia rheumatica by general practitioners and rheumatologists.", Rheumatology (Oxford, England), vol. 62, issue 8, pp. 2797-2805, 2023. Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To explore current management practices for PMR by general practitioners (GPs) and rheumatologists including implications for clinical trial recruitment.

METHODS: An English language questionnaire was constructed by a working group of rheumatologists and GPs from six countries. The questionnaire focused on: 1: Respondent characteristics; 2: Referral practices; 3: Treatment with glucocorticoids; 4: Diagnostics; 5: Comorbidities; and 6: Barriers to research. The questionnaire was distributed to rheumatologists and GPs worldwide via members of the International PMR/Giant Cell Arteritis Study Group.

RESULTS: In total, 394 GPs and 937 rheumatologists responded to the survey. GPs referred a median of 25% of their suspected PMR patients for diagnosis and 50% of these were returned to their GP for management. In general, 39% of rheumatologists evaluated patients with suspected PMR >2 weeks after referral, and a median of 50% of patients had started prednisolone before rheumatologist evaluation. Direct comparison of initial treatment showed that the percentage prescribing >25 mg prednisolone daily for patients was 30% for GPs and 12% for rheumatologists. Diagnostic imaging was rarely used. More than half (56%) of rheumatologists experienced difficulties recruiting people with PMR to clinical trials.

CONCLUSION: This large international survey indicates that a large proportion of people with PMR are not referred for diagnosis, and that the proportion of treatment-naive patients declined with increasing time from referral to assessment. Strategies are needed to change referral and management of people with PMR, to improve clinical practice and facilitate recruitment to clinical trials.

Iqbal, A. M., M. M. Miah, M. M. Rasid, H. M. Alshehri, and M. S. Osman, "An investigation of two integro-differential KP hierarchy equations to find out closed form solitons in mathematical physics", Arab Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences, vol. 30, issue 1, pp. 535-545, 2023.
Ogunlakin, A. D., M. A. Sonibare, O. E. Yeye, G. A. Gyebi, D. I. K. Ayokunle, O. E. Arigbede, I. M. Ibrahim, A. I. Odugbemi, A. Jabeen, S. F. Shah, et al., "Isolation and characterization of novel hydroxyflavone from Kigelia africana (Lam.) Benth. fruit ethyl acetate fraction against CHO 1 and HeLa cancer cell lines: In vitro and in silico studies", Journal of Molecular Structure, vol. 1282: Elsevier, pp. 135180, 2023. Abstract
n/a
Abdelatty, M. A., N. Elmansy, M. M. Saleh, A. Salem, Sara Ahmed, A. A. Gadalla, M. F. Osman, and S. Mohamed, "Magnetic resonance imaging of pilonidal sinus disease: interobserver agreement and practical MRI reporting tips", European Radiology, vol. 34, issue August 2023, pp. 115-125, 2023.