Institution
Cochin University of Science and Technology
Education•Kochi, Kerala, India•
About: Cochin University of Science and Technology is a education organization based out in Kochi, Kerala, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Thin film & Natural rubber. The organization has 5382 authors who have published 7690 publications receiving 103827 citations. The organization is also known as: CUSAT & Cochin University.
Topics: Thin film, Natural rubber, Microstrip antenna, Dielectric, Catalysis
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The results suggest the glucose lowering effect of Costus pictus to be associated with the potentiation of insulin release from pancreatic islets and enhancement of peripheral utilization of glucose.
52 citations
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TL;DR: The cichlid oscar Astronotus ocellatus has worldwide commercial value in the pet fish industry because of its early maturation, relatively high fecundity, ability to identify its caretaker and also to alter colouration amongst conspecifics.
Abstract: The cichlid oscar Astronotus ocellatus has worldwide commercial value in the pet fish industry because of its early maturation, relatively high fecundity, ability to identify its caretaker and also to alter colouration amongst conspecifics. Pathogenic strains of Aeromonas veronii resistant to multiple antibiotics were isolated from A. ocellatus individuals showing signs of infectious abdominal dropsy. The moribund fish showed haemorrhage in all internal organs, and pure cultures could be obtained from the abdominal fluid. The isolates recovered were biochemically identified as A. veronii biovar sobria and genetically confirmed as A. veronii based on 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis (GenBank accession no. FJ573179). The RAPD profile using 3 primers (OPA-3, OPA-4 and OPD-20) generated similar banding patterns for all isolates. They displayed cytotoxic and haemolytic activity and produced several exoenzymes which were responsible for the pathogenic potential of the isolates. In the representative isolate MCCB 137, virulence genes such as enterotoxin act, haemolytic toxin aerA, type 3 secretion genes such as aexT, ascVand ascF-ascG, and gcat (glycerophospholipid-cholesterol acyltransferase) could be amplified. MCCB 137 exhibited a 50% lethal dose (LD50) of 10(5.071) colony-forming units ml(-1) in goldfish and could be subsequently recovered from lesions as well as from the internal organs. This is the first description of a virulent A. veronii from oscar.
52 citations
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TL;DR: Intrapatient comparative analysis is of major importance to the effectiveness of the diagnosis of melanoma and introducing IPCA using the ugly duckling sign in computer-assisted diagnosis systems would be expected to improve performance.
Abstract: Importance Understanding the contribution of the ugly duckling sign (a nevus that is obviously different from the others in a given individual) in intrapatient comparative analysis (IPCA) of nevi may help improve the detection of melanoma. Objectives To assess the agreement of dermatologists on identification of the ugly duckling sign and estimate the contribution of IPCA to the diagnosis of melanoma. Design, Setting, and Participants The same 2089 digital images of the nevi of a sample of 80 patients (mean age, 42 years [range, 19-80 years]; 33 men and 47 women), as well as 766 dermoscopic images from a subset of 30 patients (mean age, 40 years [range, 21-75 years]; 12 men and 18 women), were randomly presented to the same 9 dermatologists for blinded assessment from September 22, 2011, to April 1, 2013. The first experiment was designed to mimic an IPCA situation, with images of all nevi of each patient shown to the dermatologists, who were asked to identify ugly duckling nevi (UDN). The second experiment was designed to mimic a lesion-focused analysis to identify morphologically suspicious nevi. Data analysis was conducted from November 1, 2012, to June 1, 2013. Main Outcomes and Measures Number of nevi labeled UDN and morphologically suspicious nevi, specificity of lesion-focused analysis and IPCA, and number of nevi identified for biopsy. Results Of the 2089 clinical images of nevi from 80 patients (median number of nevi per patient, 26 [range, 8-81]) and 766 dermoscopic images (median number of nevi per patient, 19 [range, 8-81]), all melanomas were labeled UDN and as morphologically suspicious nevi by the 9 dermatologists. The median number of UDN detected per patient was 0.8 among the clinical images of nevi (mean, 1.0; range, 0.48-2.03) and 1.26 among the dermoscopic images (mean, 1.4; range, 1.00-2.06). The propensity to consider more or fewer nevi as having ugly duckling signs was independent of the presentation (clinical or dermoscopic). The agreement among the dermatologists regarding UDN was lower with dermoscopic images (mean pairwise agreement, 0.53 for clinical images and 0.50 for dermoscopic images). The specificity of IPCA was 0.96 for clinical images and 0.95 for dermoscopic images vs 0.88 and 0.85, respectively, for lesion-focused analysis. When both IPCA and lesion-focused analyses were used, the number of nevi considered for biopsy was reduced by a factor of 6.9 compared with lesion-focused analysis alone. Conclusions and Relevance Intrapatient comparative analysis is of major importance to the effectiveness of the diagnosis of melanoma. Introducing IPCA using the ugly duckling sign in computer-assisted diagnosis systems would be expected to improve performance.
52 citations
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TL;DR: The study indicated suitability of the aqueous extract of C. tagal as a possible prophylaxis for WSSV infection in shrimp, the first report on the anti W SSV property of the mangrove plant C.tagal.
52 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the deformation characteristics of reinforced geopolymer concrete beams at ambient temperature is similar to that of the reinforced cement concrete beams and could be predicted using strain compatibility approach, however, when they are exposed to elevated temperatures, the strain compatible approach underestimates the degradation of deformation behavior.
Abstract: Flexural behaviour of fly ash based geopolymer concrete beams exposed to elevated temperatures (200 °C, 400 °C, 600 °C and 800 °C) has been discussed in this paper Beams of size 150 mm (W) × 200 mm (D) × 1100 mm (L) were cast with 052% reinforcing steel Cover to the reinforcement has been varied (20 mm, 30 mm and 40 mm) and the geopolymer concrete used had a cube compressive strength of 57 MPa The deformation characteristics, moment–curvature relationship and cracking behaviour were observed It could be concluded that, the deformation characteristics of reinforced geopolymer concrete beams at ambient temperature is similar to that of the reinforced cement concrete beams and could be predicted using strain compatibility approach However, when they are exposed to elevated temperatures, the strain compatibility approach underestimates the deformation behaviour of reinforced geopolymer concrete beams Further, ductility of the geopolymer concrete beams reduces rapidly with the increase in exposure temperature Approximate equation has been proposed to predict the service load crack width of geopolymer concrete beams after exposure to elevated temperatures
52 citations
Authors
Showing all 5433 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Pulickel M. Ajayan | 176 | 1223 | 136241 |
Maxime Dougados | 134 | 1054 | 69979 |
Sabu Thomas | 102 | 1554 | 51366 |
Philippe Ravaud | 101 | 618 | 41409 |
David P. Salmon | 99 | 419 | 43935 |
Jérôme Bertherat | 85 | 438 | 24794 |
Luc Mouthon | 84 | 564 | 26238 |
Xavier Bertagna | 74 | 285 | 18738 |
Alfred Mahr | 73 | 229 | 22581 |
Nicolas Roche | 72 | 629 | 22845 |
Charles Chapron | 71 | 378 | 18048 |
Benoit Terris | 61 | 234 | 13353 |
François Goffinet | 60 | 532 | 14433 |
Xavier Puéchal | 60 | 316 | 13240 |
Pascal Laugier | 58 | 482 | 10518 |