956 resultados para PHARMACEUTICAL RESIDUES
Resumo:
Retention of sugarcane leaves and tops on the soil surface after harvesting has almost completely replaced burning of crop residues in the Australian sugar industry. Long term retention of residue is believed to improve soil fertility to the extent that nitrogen (N) fertilizer applications might be reduced by up to 40 kg N/ha/y. However, the fate of N in the extreme environment of the wet tropics is not known with certainty. Indices of potential N mineralisation and nitrification were developed and indicate that potential N fertility is greater in the wet tropics compared to more southern cane growing areas, and is enhanced under residue retention. Field results from the wet tropics support this prediction, but indicate high soil ammonium-N concentrations relative to nitrate-N.
Resumo:
This research deals with the production of pectic oligosaccharides (POS) from agro-industrial residues, with specific focus on development of continuous cross flow enzyme membrane reactor. Pectic oligosaccharides have recently gained attention due to their prebiotic activity. Lack of information on the continuous production of POS from agro-industrial residues formed the basis for the present study. Four residues i.e sugar beet pulp, onion hulls, pressed pumpkin cake and berry pomace were taken to study their pectin content. Based on the presence of higher galacturonic acid and arabinose (both homogalacturonan and rhamnogalacturonan) in sugar beet pulp and galacturonic acid (only homogalacturonan) in onion hulls, further optimization of different extraction methods of pectin (causing minimum damage to pectic chain) from these residues were done. The most suitable extractant for sugar beet pulp and onion hulls were nitric acid and sodium hexametaphosphate respectively. Further the experiments on the continuous production of POS from sugar beet pulp in an enzyme membrane reactor was initiated. Several optimization experiments indicated the optimum enzyme (Viscozyme) as well as feed concentration (25 g/L) to be used for producing POS from sugar beet pulp in an enzyme membrane reactor. The results highlighted that steady state POS production with volumetric and specific productivity of 22g/L/h and 11 g/gE/h respectively could be achieved by continuous cross flow filtration of sugar beet pulp pectic extract over 10 kDa membrane at residence time of 20 min. The POS yield of about 80% could be achieved using above conditions. Also, in this thesis preliminary experiments on the production and characterization of POS from onion hulls were conducted. The results revelaed that the most suitable enzyme for POS production from onion hulls is endo-polygalacturonase M2. The POS produced from onion hulls were present in the form of DP1 -DP10 in substituted as well as unsubstituted forms. This study clearly demonstrates that continuous production of POS from pectin rich sources can be achieved by using cross flow continuous enzyme membrane reactor.
Resumo:
Lo scopo di questa ricerca di dottorato è stato lo studio di una forma di dosaggio flessibile e personalizzabile, indirizzata alle necessità individuali di ogni paziente, per il trattamento dell’iperplasia prostatica benigna. La terapia proposta prevede l’utilizzo di due farmaci, un alfa bloccante (farmaco A) e un inibitore delle 5- fosfodiesterasi (farmaco B) e, somministrati in una singola forma di dosaggio contenenti differenti dosi e combinazioni dei due farmaci. Lo sviluppo di un sistema di rilascio per la somministrazione orale di farmaco A e farmaco B è stato realizzato grazie alla tecnologia Dome Matrix. La tecnologia si basa sull’assemblaggio di moduli utilizzati come elementi di controllo del rilascio. L’assemblaggio dei moduli può essere ottenuto attraverso diverse configurazioni. Sono stati quindi realizzati sistemi assemblati in grado di galleggiare sul contenuto gastrico; la prolungata permanenza della forma farmaceutica nello stomaco favorisce la solubilizzazione dei due principi attivi che quindi potrebbero raggiungere il sito di assorbimento nel primo tratto intestinale già in dispersione molecolare, condizione ideale per essere assorbiti. La prima parte della ricerca è stata focalizzata sulla realizzazione di un sistema assemblato a rilascio modificato di farmaco A. Moduli contenenti diversi dosaggi di farmaco sono stati assemblati in varie configurazioni e dosi differenti per ottenere una forma di dosaggio flessibile, adattabile alle esigenze terapeutiche del paziente. La seconda parte del lavoro di tesi ha riguardato la realizzazione di un sistema assemblato, contenente entrambi i farmaci in associazione. L’ultima parte della ricerca è stata svolta presso la “University of Texas at Austin” sotto la supervisione del Professor Nicholas Peppas. Il lavoro svolto è stato focalizzato sullo studio delle caratteristiche di rigonfiamento dei singoli moduli di farmaco e dei loro sistemi assemblati; il comportamento di tali sistemi è stato investigato anche grazie all’utilizzo della tecnica di tomografia computerizzata a raggi X.
Resumo:
Western Yiddish, the spoken language of the traditional Jewish society in the German- and Dutch-speaking countries, was abandoned by its speakers at the end of the 18th in favour of the emerging standard varieties: Dutch and German, respectively. Remnants of Western Yiddish varieties, however, remained a medium of discourse in remote provinces and could be found well into the 19th and sometimes the 20th century in some South-western areas of Germany and Switzerland, the Alsace, some areas of the Netherlands and in parts of the German province of Westphalia. It appears that rural Jewish communities sometimes preserved in-group vernaculars, which were based on Western Yiddish. Sources discovered in 2004 in the town of Aurich prove that Jews living in East Frisia, a Low-German speaking peninsula in the North-west of Germany, used a variety based on Western Yiddish until the Second World War. It appears that until the Holocaust a number of small, close-knit Jewish communities East Frisia, which depended economically mainly on cattle-trading and butchery, kept certain specific cultural features, among them the vernacular which they spoke alongside Low German and Standard German. The sources consist of two amateur theatre plays, a memoir and two word lists written in 1902, 1928 and the 1980s, respectively. In the monograph these sources are documented and annotated as well as analyzed linguistically against the background of rural Jewish life in Northern Germany. The study focuses on traces of language contact with Low German, processes of language change and on the question of the function of the variety in day-to-day life in a rural Jewish community.