Browsing by Subject "Sulfides"
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Item Open Access MOntelukast as a potential CHondroprotective treatment following Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (MOCHA Trial): study protocol for a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial.(Trials, 2022-01) Jacobs, Cale A; Conley, Caitlin EW; Kraus, Virginia Byers; Lansdown, Drew A; Lau, Brian C; Li, Xiaojuan; Majumdar, Sharmila; Spindler, Kurt P; Lemaster, Nicole G; Stone, Austin VBackground
After anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction, patient-reported outcomes are improved 10 years post-surgery; however, cytokine concentrations remain elevated years after surgery with over 80% of those with combined ACL and meniscus injuries having posttraumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) within 10-15 years. The purpose of this multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled trial is to assess whether a 6-month course of oral montelukast after ACL reconstruction reduces systemic markers of inflammation and biochemical and imaging biomarkers of cartilage degradation.Methods
We will enroll 30 individuals undergoing primary ACL reconstruction to participate in this IRB-approved multicenter clinical trial. This trial will target those at greatest risk of a more rapid PTOA onset (age range 25-50 with concomitant meniscus injury). Patients will be randomly assigned to a group instructed to take 10 mg of montelukast daily for 6 months following ACL reconstruction or placebo. Patients will be assessed prior to surgery and 1, 6, and 12 months following surgery. To determine if montelukast alters systemic inflammation following surgery, we will compare systemic concentrations of prostaglandin E2, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, and pro-inflammatory cytokines between groups. We will also compare degradative changes on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) collected 1 and 12 months following surgery between groups with reductions in early biomarkers of cartilage degradation assessed with urinary biomarkers of type II collagen breakdown and bony remodeling.Discussion
There is a complex interplay between the pro-inflammatory intra-articular environment, underlying bone remodeling, and progressive cartilage degradation. PTOA affects multiple tissues and appears to be more similar to rheumatoid arthritis than osteoarthritis with respect to inflammation. There is currently no treatment to delay or prevent PTOA after ACL injury. Since there is a larger and more persistent inflammatory response after ACL reconstruction than the initial insult of injury, treatment may need to be initiated after surgery, sustained over a period of time, and target multiple mechanisms in order to successfully alter the disease process. This study will assess whether a 6-month postoperative course of oral montelukast affects multiple PTOA mechanisms. Because montelukast administration can be safely sustained for long durations and offers a low-cost treatment option, should it be proven effective in the current trial, these results can be immediately incorporated into clinical practice.Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04572256 . Registered on October 1, 2020.Item Open Access Subatomic deformation driven by vertical piezoelectricity from CdS ultrathin films.(Sci Adv, 2018-02-01) Wang, Xuewen; He, Xuexia; Zhu, Hongfei; Sun, Linfeng; Fu, Wei; Wang, Xingli; Hoong, Lai Chee; Wang, Hong; Zeng, Qingsheng; Zhao, Wu; Wei, Jun; Jin, Zhong; Shen, Zexiang; Liu, Jie; Zhang, Ting; Liu, ZhengDriven by the development of high-performance piezoelectric materials, actuators become an important tool for positioning objects with high accuracy down to nanometer scale, and have been used for a wide variety of equipment, such as atomic force microscopy and scanning tunneling microscopy. However, positioning at the subatomic scale is still a great challenge. Ultrathin piezoelectric materials may pave the way to positioning an object with extreme precision. Using ultrathin CdS thin films, we demonstrate vertical piezoelectricity in atomic scale (three to five space lattices). With an in situ scanning Kelvin force microscopy and single and dual ac resonance tracking piezoelectric force microscopy, the vertical piezoelectric coefficient (d 33) up to 33 pm·V(-1) was determined for the CdS ultrathin films. These findings shed light on the design of next-generation sensors and microelectromechanical devices.Item Open Access Sulfide and Accessory Mineral Assemblages in the Sulfur-Poor Regions of the Stillwater Complex, Montana, USA(2014) Aird, Hannah MaryLayered igneous intrusions such as the Stillwater Complex in Montana contain the most economic concentrations of platinum-group elements (PGE) in the world, yet the processes involved in the enrichment of these PGE remain unclear. Some researchers propose that the PGE were enriched into sulfide phases through purely magmatic processes, while others postulate that late-stage, high-temperature fluids caused remobilization of the more soluble elements upwards from the base of the crystal pile. Although much work has been carried out on the economic PGE-enriched ore zone (J-M reef), the silicate mineralogy and the bulk geochemistry of the Complex, the detailed petrographic trends have not been investigated. This dissertation comprises a detailed petrographic study into the assemblages associated with sulfide and other trace minerals throughout the stratigraphy.
Sampling was carried out from both surface outcrops and drill cores over four consecutive field seasons. Polished thin sections were produced which were then examined by petrographic microscope and electron microprobe. In addition, bulk rock analysis was carried out by x-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF).
In brief, the sulfide and trace mineral assemblage studies described below reveal a number of interesting observations. An upwards trend from pentlandite-rich to pyrrhotite-rich to chalcopyrite + pyrite-rich assemblages is observed below the reef, and the same trend occurs above the reef with the transition occurring just below the reef, in upper GN-I. Trace element analysis shows that Cu levels are higher above the reef than below it, and that although Zn and Cu contents are correlated below the reef, a restricted range of Zn contents occurs above the reef, while Cu is highly variable. As all `low-temperature' assemblages (those associated with extensive silicate alteration or the presence of greenschist facies minerals such as chlorite, clinozoisite and epidote) were discounted, the majority of sulfide assemblages present were either pristine(multiphase, often globular in shape, with no associated silicate alteration) or high-temperature (multiphase, with high-temperature minerals such as biotite, hornblende, carbonates, etc, and with little associated silicate alteration) in occurrence. Some differences were observed between the hanging-wall and footwall rocks, including the presence of native copper, sphalerite in a calcite-hornblende vein, and high-temperature carbonates in footwall and not hanging-wall rocks. The high-temperature carbonates observed comprise dolomite with exsolved patches of calcite. The textural relationships and Fe-Mn compositions of the Stillwater carbonates are similar to those of mantle carbonates. High-temperature desulfidation is also observed both above and below the reef, in the form of pyrite being converted to magnetite, and chalcopyrite to a Cu-Fe-oxide (delafossite). Both sets of assemblages are associated with little to no silicate alteration. When taken together, the upwards increase in Cu and S, the variable Cu contents above the reef, the native copper, high-temperature carbonates and high-temperature sphalerite-bearing veins below the reef, and the evidence for desulfidation are all most readily explained by the remobilization of selected phases by a high-temperature fluid. This dissertation provides evidence that the fluid present in the latter stages of Stillwater formation had a carbonic as well as a Cl-rich component, and would therefore have been efficient in PGE remobilization.