02). Other medical complications (30 vs 27%) and surgical postoperative complications (33 vs 24%) were similar for both groups. The long-term function and complications were comparable for the groups.\n\nConclusion\n\nElderly patients who underwent IPAA had more comorbid PKC inhibitor conditions than younger patients. Except for rehospitalization for dehydration, medical and surgical postoperative complications were not different in the two groups.”
“The
multigrain blends of wheat-green gram-barley in the ratio of C(100:0:0); B1 (90:5:5); B2 (80:10:10); B3 (70:15:15) were co milled using a Buhler roller mill to produce nutritious flour. The studies showed that the yield of straight run flour (SRF) increased gradually with an increase in blending of green gram and barley with wheat. The highest SRF of 79.71% was obtained from the B3 blend. The coarse
bran decreased from 15.95% for the control sample to 9.52% for B3 blending. The milling yield of pollard and fine bran showed a decreasing trend from control to B3 blending. In general, flour yield decreased for reduction passages from C1 to C3 and reduction passages produced higher flour compared to break rolls for all blends. The multigrain milling resulted in an increase in protein(113.1-13.35%) and dietary fiber (2.91-4.65%) content of flour, but sedimentation values (52-38 ml), which is the index of flour strength, decreased significantly. The distributions of mineral matters and fat show wide variation CDK phosphorylation among the mill streams and concentrated in coarse and fine brans. The rheological properties of flour obtained showed increased water absorption (55.8-57.5%) and decreased dough stability(5.5-2.8 min), amylograph peak viscosity (388-335BU) and setback (265-224BU) with an increase of multigrain in blends. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.”
“Background: DSM-IV and DSM-5 provide identical symptom criteria and cut-off scores in defining mania and hypomania, a model seemingly counter-intuitive for classificatory differentiation.
We designed a study to examine the impact of such DSM criteria and JNK-IN-8 order propose alternative models. Methods: Prevalence and severity of hypo/manic symptoms as measured by the Mood Swings Questionnaire (MSQ) were compared in age and gender-matched bipolar I and II patients. Use of the MSQ allowed both DSM and additional items to be evaluated in terms of their capacity to differentiate the two bipolar conditions. Results: In comparison to bipolar II participants, the bipolar I participants reported higher prevalence scores on six MSQ symptoms, severity scores on twelve MSQ symptoms and total MSQ scores. While bipolar I and If participants reported similar prevalence rates of DSM-5 symptoms, bipolar I participants returned higher prevalence rates on five (non-DSM) MSQ items. Limitations: Bipolar sub-type was not formally assessed by a structured diagnostic interview.