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2024
Dissanayake, D. M. I. H., M. A. Alsherbiny, C. Stack, D. Chang, C. G. Li, K. Kaur, and D. J. Bhuyan, "Exploring the broad-spectrum pharmacological activity of two less studied Australian native fruits: chemical characterisation using LCMS-driven metabolomics", Food & Function, vol. 15, issue 12: Royal Society of Chemistry, pp. 6610-6628, 2024. Abstract
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Biancari, F., T. Juvonen, S. - M. Cho, F. J. Hernández Pérez, C. L'Acqua, A. A. Arafat, M. M. AlBarak, M. Laimoud, I. Djordjevic, R. Samalavicius, et al., "External validation of the PC-ECMO score in postcardiotomy veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.", The International journal of artificial organs, pp. 3913988241237701, 2024. Abstract

Reliable stratification of the risk of early mortality after postcardiotomy veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (V-A-ECMO) remains elusive. In this study, we externally validated the PC-ECMO score, a specific risk scoring method for prediction of in-hospital mortality after postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO. Overall, 614 patients who required V-A-ECMO after adult cardiac surgery were gathered from an individual patient data meta-analysis of nine studies on this topic. The AUC of the logistic PC-ECMO score in predicting in-hospital mortality was 0.678 (95%CI 0.630-0.726;  < 0.0001). The AUC of the logistic PC-ECMO score in predicting on V-A-ECMO mortality was 0.652 (95%CI 0.609-0.695;  < 0.0001). The Brier score of the logistic PC-ECMO score for in-hospital mortality was 0.193, the slope 0.909, the calibration-in-the-large 0.074 and the expected/observed mortality ratio 0.979. 95%CIs of the calibration belt of fit relationship between observed and predicted in-hospital mortality were never above or below the bisector ( = 0.072). The present findings suggest that the PC-ECMO score may be a valuable tool in clinical research for stratification of the risk of patients requiring postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO.

Ahmed, M. S., A. Alsamman, and K. Chebbi, "Feedback trading in the cryptocurrency market", Studies in Economics and Finance, vol. 41, no. 1: Emerald Publishing Limited, pp. 46–63, 2024. Abstract
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Ahmed, M. M. A., L. Xu, X. - S. Bai, Z. O. Hassan, M. Abdullah, J. Sim, E. Cenker, W. L. Roberts, and A. M. Elbaz, "Flame stabilization and pollutant emissions of turbulent ammonia and blended ammonia flames: A review of the recent experimental and numerical advances", Fuel Communications, vol. 20, pp. 100127, 2024.
Sandhu, N. K., N. Ravichandraan, A. Nune, J. Day, P. Sen, E. Nikiphorou, A. L. Tan, M. Joshi, S. Saha, S. K. Shinjo, et al., "Flares of autoimmune rheumatic disease following COVID-19 infection: Observations from the COVAD study.", International journal of rheumatic diseases, vol. 27, issue 1, pp. e14961, 2024.
Sihag, S., M. A. Zahran, H. Abdel-Shafy, V. Chhokar, A. Kumar, S. Abou-Bakr, M. S. Hassanane, and H. E. Rushdi, "Genetic Diversity of GPAM, DGAT1, and SCD1 Lipogenic Candidate Genes In Egyptian and Indian Buffalo", Egyptian Journal of Veterinary Sciences (EJVS) , pp. 1-14, 2024.
Ziade, N., M. Aoude, I. Hmamouchi, N. R, J. B. Lilleker, P. Sen, M. Joshi, V. Agarwal, S. Kardes, J. Day, et al., "Global disparities in the treatment of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: results from an international online survey study.", Rheumatology (Oxford, England), vol. 63, issue 3, pp. 657-664, 2024. Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We aimed to explore current practice and interregional differences in the treatment of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs). We triangulated these observations considering countries' gross national income (GNI), disease subtypes, and symptoms using patient-reported information.

METHODS: A cross-sectional ancillary analysis of the 'COVID-19 vaccination in auto-immune disease' (COVAD) e-survey containing demographic characteristics, IIM subtypes (DM, PM, IBM, anti-synthetase syndrome [ASSD], immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy [IMNM], overlap myopathies [OM]), current symptoms (surrogate for organ involvement) and treatments (corticosteroids [CS], immunomodulators [IM], i.e. antimalarials, immunosuppressants [IS], IVIG, biologic treatments and targeted-synthetic small molecules). Treatments were presented descriptively according to continents, GNI, IIM and organ involvement, and associated factors were analysed using multivariable binary logistic regressions.

RESULTS: Of 18 851 respondents from 94 countries, 1418 with IIM were analysed (age 61 years, 62.5% females). DM (32.4%), IBM (24.5%) and OM (15.8%) were the most common subtypes. Treatment categories included IS (49.4%), CS (38.5%), IM (13.8%) and IVIG (9.4%). Notably, treatments varied across regions, GNI categories (IS mostly used in higher-middle income, IM in lower-middle income, IVIG and biologics largely limited to high-income countries), IIM subtypes (IS and CS associated with ASSD, IM with OM and DM, IVIG with IMNM, and biologic treatments with OM and ASSD) and disease manifestations (IS and CS with dyspnoea). Most inter-regional treatment disparities persisted after multivariable analysis.

CONCLUSION: We identified marked regional treatment disparities in a global cohort of IIM. These observations highlight the need for international consensus-driven management guidelines considering patient-centred care and available resources.

El-kenawy, E. - S. M., N. Bailek, K. Bouchouicha, B. Zerouali, M. A. Hassan, A. Kuriqi, B. Jamil, I. Colak, A. Khalil, and Abdelhameed Ibrahim, "Global scale solar energy harnessing: An advanced intra-hourly diffuse solar irradiance predicting framework for solar energy projects", Neural Computing and Applications: Springer London London, pp. 1-14, 2024. Abstract
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Zhang, H., G. Targher, C. D. Byrne, S. U. Kim, V. W. - S. Wong, L. Valenti, M. Glickman, J. Ponce, C. S. Mantzoros, J. Crespo, et al., "A global survey on the use of the international classification of diseases codes for metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease.", Hepatology international, 2024. Abstract

BACKGROUND: With the implementation of the 11th edition of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) and the publication of the metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) nomenclature in 2020, it is important to establish consensus for the coding of MAFLD in ICD-11. This will inform subsequent revisions of ICD-11.

METHODS: Using the Qualtrics XM and WJX platforms, questionnaires were sent online to MAFLD-ICD-11 coding collaborators, authors of papers, and relevant association members.

RESULTS: A total of 890 international experts in various fields from 61 countries responded to the survey. We also achieved full coverage of provincial-level administrative regions in China. 77.1% of respondents agreed that MAFLD should be represented in ICD-11 by updating NAFLD, with no significant regional differences (77.3% in Asia and 76.6% in non-Asia, p = 0.819). Over 80% of respondents agreed or somewhat agreed with the need to assign specific codes for progressive stages of MAFLD (i.e. steatohepatitis) (92.2%), MAFLD combined with comorbidities (84.1%), or MAFLD subtypes (i.e., lean, overweight/obese, and diabetic) (86.1%).

CONCLUSIONS: This global survey by a collaborative panel of clinical, coding, health management and policy experts, indicates agreement that MAFLD should be coded in ICD-11. The data serves as a foundation for corresponding adjustments in the ICD-11 revision.

Aboshady, H. M., A. Gavriilidou, N. Ghanem, M. A. Radwan, A. Elnahas, R. Agamy, N. H. Fahim, M. H. Elsawy, A. - M. B. M. Shaarawy, A. M. Abdel-Hafeez, et al., "Gut Microbiota Diversity of Local Egyptian Cattle Managed in Different Ecosystems.", Animals : an open access journal from MDPI, vol. 14, issue 18, 2024. Abstract

The animal gastrointestinal tract contains a complex microbiome whose composition ultimately reflects the co-evolution of microorganisms with their animal host and their host's environment. This study aimed to gain insights into the adaptation of the microbiota of local Egyptian cattle to three different ecosystems (Upper Egypt, Middle Egypt, and Lower Egypt) distributed across 11 governorates (with an average of 12 animals per governorate) using amplicon sequencing. We analyzed the microbiota from 136 fecal samples of local Egyptian cattle through a 16S rRNA gene sequencing approach to better understand the fecal microbial diversity of this breed which developed under different ecosystems. An alpha diversity analysis showed that the fecal microbiota of the Egyptian cattle was not significantly diverse across areas, seasons, sexes, or farm types. Meanwhile, microbiota data revealed significant differences in richness among age groups ( = 0.0018). The microbial community differed significantly in the distribution of its relative abundance rather than in richness across different ecosystems. The taxonomic analysis of the reads identified and as the dominant phyla, accounting for over 93% of the total bacterial community in Egyptian cattle. Middle Egypt exhibited a different microbial community composition compared to Upper and Lower Egypt, with a significantly higher abundance of and and a lower abundance of in this region than the other two ecosystems. Additionally, Middle Egypt had a significantly higher relative abundance of the family and the genera than Lower and Upper Egypt. These results suggest a difference in the adaptation of the fecal microbial communities of Egyptian cattle raised in Middle Egypt. At the genus level, eleven genera were significantly different among the three ecosystems including , , , , , , , , , , and . These significant differences in microbiota composition may impact the animal's adaptation to varied environments.

Algendy, A. Y., P. Rometsch, and X. - G. Chen, "Impact of hot rolling temperature on the mechanical properties and microstructural evolution of hot/cold-rolled AA5083 with Sc and Zr microalloying", Materials Science and Engineering: A, vol. 896, pp. 146275, 2024.
Yoshida, A., Y. Li, V. Maroufy, M. Kuwana, S. Sazliyana Shaharir, A. Makol, P. Sen, J. B. Lilleker, V. Agarwal, E. Kadam, et al., "Impaired health-related quality of life in idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: a cross-sectional analysis from the COVAD-2 e-survey.", Rheumatology advances in practice, vol. 8, issue 2, pp. rkae028, 2024. Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To investigate health-related quality of life in patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs) compared with those with non-IIM autoimmune rheumatic diseases (AIRDs), non-rheumatic autoimmune diseases (nrAIDs) and without autoimmune diseases (controls) using Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) instrument data obtained from the second COVID-19 vaccination in autoimmune disease (COVAD-2) e-survey database.

METHODS: Demographics, diagnosis, comorbidities, disease activity, treatments and PROMIS instrument data were analysed. Primary outcomes were PROMIS Global Physical Health (GPH) and Global Mental Health (GMH) scores. Factors affecting GPH and GMH scores in IIMs were identified using multivariable regression analysis.

RESULTS: We analysed responses from 1582 IIM, 4700 non-IIM AIRD and 545 nrAID patients and 3675 controls gathered through 23 May 2022. The median GPH scores were the lowest in IIM and non-IIM AIRD patients {13 [interquartile range (IQR) 10-15] IIMs 13 [11-15] non-IIM AIRDs 15 [13-17] nrAIDs 17 [15-18] controls,  < 0.001}. The median GMH scores in IIM patients were also significantly lower compared with those without autoimmune diseases [13 (IQR 10-15) IIMs 15 (13-17) controls,  < 0.001]. Inclusion body myositis, comorbidities, active disease and glucocorticoid use were the determinants of lower GPH scores, whereas overlap myositis, interstitial lung disease, depression, active disease, lower PROMIS Physical Function 10a and higher PROMIS Fatigue 4a scores were associated with lower GMH scores in IIM patients.

CONCLUSION: Both physical and mental health are significantly impaired in IIM patients, particularly in those with comorbidities and increased fatigue, emphasizing the importance of patient-reported experiences and optimized multidisciplinary care to enhance well-being in people with IIMs.

Lakshmanan, G., A. B. Altemimi, C. Sivaraj, J. Selvakumari, L. Karthik, K. Saravanan, V. Viswanathan, A. Pandian, F. Cacciola, M. R. Ali, et al., "Imperatorin from the aerial parts of Cleome viscosa L.: a characterization study and evaluation of the antibacterial activity", Natural Product Research, vol. 38, issue 5, pp. 848-855, 2024.
Lakshmanana, G., A. B. Altemimic, C. Sivaraje, J. Selvakumarif, L. Karthikg, K. Saravananh, V. Viswanathani, A. Pandianj, F. Cacciolak, M. R. Alil, et al., "Imperatorin from the aerial parts of Cleome viscosa L.: a characterization study and evaluation of the antibacterial activity", Natural Product Research, vol. 38, issue 5, pp. 848–855, 2024. 2.pdf
Grace, S. R., and G. N. Chhatria, "Improved oscillation criteria for second order quasilinear dynamic equations of noncanonical type", Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo Series 2, vol. 73, no. 1: Springer International Publishing Cham, pp. 127–140, 2024. Abstract
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Fayad, M. A., T. M. Aljuwaya, T. M. Alhuzaymi, H. S. Majdi, A. J. Sultan, M. T. Chaichan, T. Badawy, and M. Sobhi, "Incorporating of TiO2 with oxygenated fuel and post-injection strategy in CRDI diesel engine equipped with EGR: A step towards lower NOX, PM and enhance soot oxidation reactivity", Case Studies in Thermal Engineering, vol. 53, issue 2214-157X, pp. 103894, 2024.
Liu, M., F. Liu, M. A. Alsherbiny, X. Li, Y. Huang, F. Yan, Y. Wang, C. G. Li, F. Jiang, and W. Cheng, Inhibition of type I interferon signalling is involved in the anti-atherogenic effects of Andrographis paniculata, , 2024. Abstract
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Xu, S. H., S. T. Wang, Z. C. Wang, Y. Lu, T.Y. Tao, Q. F. Huang, z Lu, H.Y. Wang, Y. Z. Su, A. Gharib, et al., "Integrative analyses of transcriptome, microRNA-seq and metabolome reveal insights into exogenous melatonin-mediated salt tolerance during seed germination of maize", Plant Growth Regulation, vol. 103, pp. 689–704, 2024. 10725_2024_1138_moesm1_esm.pdf
Biancari, F., T. Mäkikallio, A. Loforte, A. Kaserer, V. G. Ruggieri, S. - M. Cho, J. K. Kang, M. Dalén, H. Welp, K. Jónsson, et al., "Inter-institutional analysis of the outcome after postcardiotomy veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.", The International journal of artificial organs, vol. 47, issue 1, pp. 25-34, 2024. Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Patients requiring postcardiotomy veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (V-A-ECMO) have a high risk of early mortality. In this analysis, we evaluated whether any interinstitutional difference exists in the results of postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO.

METHODS: Studies on postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO were identified through a systematic review for individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis. Analysis of interinstitutional results was performed using direct standardization, estimation of observed/expected in-hospital mortality ratio and propensity score matching.

RESULTS: Systematic review of the literature yielded 31 studies. Data from 10 studies on 1269 patients treated at 25 hospitals were available for the present analysis. In-hospital mortality was 66.7%. The relative risk of in-hospital mortality was significantly higher in six hospitals. Observed versus expected in-hospital mortality ratio showed that four hospitals were outliers with significantly increased mortality rates, and one hospital had significantly lower in-hospital mortality rate. Participating hospitals were classified as underperforming and overperforming hospitals if their observed/expected in-hospital mortality was higher or lower than 1.0, respectively. Among 395 propensity score matched pairs, the overperforming hospitals had significantly lower in-hospital mortality (60.3% vs 71.4%,  = 0.001) than underperforming hospitals. Low annual volume of postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO tended to be predictive of poor outcome only when adjusted for patients' risk profile.

CONCLUSIONS: In-hospital mortality after postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO differed significantly between participating hospitals. These findings suggest that in many centers there is room for improvement of the results of postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO.

Zhang, L., M. El-Shabrawi, L. A. Baur, C. D. Byrne, G. Targher, M. Kehar, G. Porta, W. S. Lee, S. Lefere, S. Turan, et al., "An international multidisciplinary consensus on pediatric metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease.", Med (New York, N.Y.), 2024. Abstract

BACKGROUND: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is highly prevalent in children and adolescents, particularly those with obesity. NAFLD is considered a hepatic manifestation of the metabolic syndrome due to its close associations with abdominal obesity, insulin resistance, and atherogenic dyslipidemia. Experts have proposed an alternative terminology, metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD), to better reflect its pathophysiology. This study aimed to develop consensus statements and recommendations for pediatric MAFLD through collaboration among international experts.

METHODS: A group of 65 experts from 35 countries and six continents, including pediatricians, hepatologists, and endocrinologists, participated in a consensus development process. The process encompassed various aspects of pediatric MAFLD, including epidemiology, mechanisms, screening, and management.

FINDINGS: In round 1, we received 65 surveys from 35 countries and analyzed these results, which informed us that 73.3% of respondents agreed with 20 draft statements while 23.8% agreed somewhat. The mean percentage of agreement or somewhat agreement increased to 80.85% and 15.75%, respectively, in round 2. The final statements covered a wide range of topics related to epidemiology, pathophysiology, and strategies for screening and managing pediatric MAFLD.

CONCLUSIONS: The consensus statements and recommendations developed by an international expert panel serve to optimize clinical outcomes and improve the quality of life for children and adolescents with MAFLD. These findings emphasize the need for standardized approaches in diagnosing and treating pediatric MAFLD.

FUNDING: This work was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (82070588, 82370577), the National Key R&D Program of China (2023YFA1800801), National High Level Hospital Clinical Research Funding (2022-PUMCH-C-014), the Wuxi Taihu Talent Plan (DJTD202106), and the Medical Key Discipline Program of Wuxi Health Commission (ZDXK2021007).

Leitch, A. C., T. M. Abdelghany, A. Charlton, M. Cooke, and M. C. Wright, "Ionic Liquid 1-Octyl-3-Methylimidazolium (M8OI) Is Mono-Oxygenated by CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 in Adult Human Liver.", Journal of xenobiotics, vol. 14, issue 3, pp. 907-922, 2024. Abstract

Environmental sampling around a landfill site in the UK previously identified the methylimidazolium ionic liquid, 1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium (M8OI), in the soil. More recently, M8OI was shown to be detectable in sera from 5/20 PBC patients and 1/10 controls and to be oxidised on the alkyl chain in the human liver. The objective of this study was to examine the metabolism of M8OI in humans in more detail. In human hepatocytes, M8OI was mono-oxygenated to 1-(8-Hydroxyoctyl)-3-methyl-imidazolium (HO8IM) then further oxidised to 1-(7-carboxyheptyl)-3-methyl-1H-imidazol-3-ium (COOH7IM). The addition of ketoconazole-in contrast to a range of other cytochrome P450 inhibitors-blocked M8OI metabolism, suggesting primarily CYP3A-dependent mono-oxygenation of M8OI. Hepatocytes from one donor produced negligible and low levels of HO8IM and COOH7IM, respectively, on incubation with M8OI, when compared to hepatocytes from other donors. This donor had undetectable levels of CYP3A4 protein and low CYP3A enzyme activity. Transcript expression levels for other adult CYP3A isoforms-CYP3A5 and CYP3A43-suggest that a lack of CYP3A4 accounted primarily for this donor's low rate of M8OI oxidation. Insect cell (supersome) expression of various human CYPs identified CYP3A4 as the most active CYP mediating M8OI mono-oxygenation, followed by CYP3A5. HO8IM and COOH7IM were not toxic to human hepatocytes, in contrast to M8OI, and using a pooled preparation of human hepatocytes from five donors, ketoconazole potentiated M8OI toxicity. These data demonstrate that CYP3A initiates the mono-oxygenation and detoxification of M8OI in adult human livers and that CYP3A4 likely plays a major role in this process.

Joshi, M., N. Darooka, S. Saha, S. Dyball, P. Sen, P. Yaadav, M. Javaid, E. Kadam, S. K. Shinjo, D. Dey, et al., "Listening to patients, for the patients: The COVAD Study-Vision, organizational structure, and challenges.", International journal of rheumatic diseases, vol. 27, issue 5, pp. e15161, 2024. Abstract

BACKGROUND: The pandemic presented unique challenges for individuals with autoimmune and rheumatic diseases (AIRDs) due to their underlying condition, the effects of immunosuppressive treatments, and increased vaccine hesitancy.

OBJECTIVES: The COVID-19 vaccination in autoimmune diseases (COVAD) study, a series of ongoing, patient self-reported surveys were conceived with the vision of being a unique tool to gather patient perspectives on AIRDs. It involved a multinational, multicenter collaborative effort amidst a global lockdown.

METHODS: Leveraging social media as a research tool, COVAD collected data using validated patient-reported outcomes (PROs). The study, comprising a core team, steering committee, and global collaborators, facilitated data collection and analysis. A pilot-tested, validated survey, featuring questions regarding COVID-19 infection, vaccination and outcomes, patient demographics, and PROs was circulated to patients with AIRDs and healthy controls (HCs).

DISCUSSION: We present the challenges encountered during this international collaborative project, including coordination, data management, funding constraints, language barriers, and authorship concerns, while highlighting the measures taken to address them.

CONCLUSION: Collaborative virtual models offer a dynamic new frontier in medical research and are vital to studying rare diseases. The COVAD study demonstrates the potential of online platforms for conducting large-scale, patient-focused research and underscores the importance of integrating patient perspective into clinical care. Care of patients is our central motivation, and it is essential to recognize their voices as equal stakeholders and valued partners in the study of the conditions that affect them.

El-Zawawy, M. A., C. Lal, and M. Conti, "A Location-Aware and Healing Attestation Scheme for Air-Supported Internet of Vehicles", IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems, vol. 25, issue 2, pp. 2017 - 2033, 2024.
Hayrapetyan, A., A. Tumasyan, W. Adam, J. W. Andrejkovic, T. Bergauer, S. Chatterjee, K. Damanakis, M. Dragicevic, A. Escalante Del Valle, P. S. Hussain, et al., "Measurement of the Higgs boson production via vector boson fusion and its decay into bottom quarks in proton-proton collisions at $$$\backslash$sqrt $\{$s$\}$ $$= 13 TeV", Journal of High Energy Physics, vol. 2024, no. 1: Springer, pp. 1–54, 2024. Abstract
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Hayrapetyan, A., A. Tumasyan, W. Adam, J. W. Andrejkovic, T. Bergauer, S. Chatterjee, K. Damanakis, M. Dragicevic, P. S. Hussain, M. Jeitler, et al., Measurement of the production cross section of a Higgs boson with large transverse momentum in its decays to a pair of $$\backslash$tau $ leptons in proton-proton collisions at $$\backslash$sqrt $\{$s$\}$ $= 13 TeV, , 2024. Abstract
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