Institution
University of Patras
Education•Pátrai, Greece•
About: University of Patras is a education organization based out in Pátrai, Greece. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catalysis. The organization has 13372 authors who have published 31263 publications receiving 677159 citations. The organization is also known as: Panepistímio Patrón.
Topics: Population, Catalysis, Finite element method, Nonlinear system, Graphene
Papers published on a yearly basis
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122 citations
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TL;DR: An indium-based seal augmented with an adhesive, developed to maintain a vacuum between two sheets of glass, avoids the high temperatures required to produce a seal in evacuated glazings to date as mentioned in this paper.
122 citations
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TL;DR: The significant relationships occurred among the tested biological parameters in both bioassays, further reinforce CBZ-mediated pro-oxidant effects on species, widely used in ecotoxicological and toxicological studies and provide a more comprehensive view on its environmental fate and ecot toxicological risk evaluation.
Abstract: This study investigates the pro-oxidant behavior of the antiepileptic drug carbamazepine (CBZ) on the marine algal species Dunaliella tertiolecta and the immune defense-related hemocytes of mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis. A phytotoxicity test, performed in a first step, showed a significant inhibition of the growth rate and the chlorophyll alpha (Chl-α) content in algae after exposure for 24 h to different concentrations of CBZ (1-200 mg L(-1)). On the other hand, the increased levels of lipid peroxidation products, such as MDA, measured in 24 h CBZ-treated cells were attenuated with time (48-96 h), followed by a significant recovery of both the algal growth rate and the Chl-α content in all cases. The latter could be related to the concomitant enhancement of total carotenoids in CBZ-treated algae with time, which in turn could protect algal growth and survival against CBZ-induced oxidative stress. On the other hand, the increased levels of cell death, superoxide anions ((·)O2 (-)), nitric oxides (NO, in terms of nitrites, NO2 (-)) and MDA content observed in mussel hemocytes exposed to environmentally relevant (0.01-1 μg L(-1)) and/or higher (10 and 100 μg L(-1)) concentrations of the drug, clearly indicate the ability of CBZ to induce oxidative effects on cells of non-target species, such as mussels, affecting thus their overall health status. The significant relationships occurred among the tested biological parameters in both bioassays, further reinforce CBZ-mediated pro-oxidant effects on species, widely used in ecotoxicological and toxicological studies and provide a more comprehensive view on its environmental fate and ecotoxicological risk evaluation.
121 citations
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TL;DR: A new image prior is introduced and used in image restoration based on products of spatially weighted total variations (TV) which provides this prior with the flexibility to better capture local image features than previous TV based priors.
Abstract: In this paper, a new image prior is introduced and used in image restoration. This prior is based on products of spatially weighted total variations (TV). These spatial weights provide this prior with the flexibility to better capture local image features than previous TV based priors. Bayesian inference is used for image restoration with this prior via the variational approximation. The proposed restoration algorithm is fully automatic in the sense that all necessary parameters are estimated from the data and is faster than previous similar algorithms. Numerical experiments are shown which demonstrate that image restoration based on this prior compares favorably with previous state-of-the-art restoration algorithms.
121 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown that increasing the vitamin D intake can ameliorate the impact of low UVB availability on serum 25(OH)D status in Europe, while all locations exhibited significant seasonal variation in UVB.
Abstract: Low vitamin D status is common in Europe. The major source of vitamin D in humans is ultraviolet B (UVB)-induced dermal synthesis of cholecalciferol, whereas food sources are believed to play a lesser role. Our objectives were to assess UVB availability (Jm−2) across several European locations ranging from 35° N to 69° N, and compare these UVB data with representative population serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) data from Ireland (51–54° N), Iceland (64° N) and Norway (69° N), as exemplars. Vitamin D-effective UVB availability was modelled for nine European countries/regions using a validated UV irradiance model. Standardized serum 25(OH)D data was accessed from the EC-funded ODIN project. The results showed that UVB availability decreased with increasing latitude (from 35° N to 69° N), while all locations exhibited significant seasonal variation in UVB. The UVB data suggested that the duration of vitamin D winters ranged from none (at 35° N) to eight months (at 69° N). The large seasonal fluctuations in serum 25(OH)D in Irish adults was much dampened in Norwegian and Icelandic adults, despite considerably lower UVB availability at these northern latitudes but with much higher vitamin D intakes. In conclusion, increasing the vitamin D intake can ameliorate the impact of low UVB availability on serum 25(OH)D status in Europe.
121 citations
Authors
Showing all 13529 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Thomas J. Meyer | 120 | 1078 | 68519 |
Thoralf M. Sundt | 112 | 755 | 55708 |
Chihaya Adachi | 112 | 908 | 61403 |
Eleftherios P. Diamandis | 110 | 1064 | 52654 |
Roland Siegwart | 105 | 1154 | 51473 |
T. Geralis | 99 | 808 | 52221 |
Spyros N. Pandis | 97 | 377 | 51660 |
Michael Tsapatsis | 77 | 375 | 20051 |
George K. Karagiannidis | 76 | 653 | 24066 |
Eleftherios Mylonakis | 75 | 448 | 21413 |
Matthias Mörgelin | 75 | 332 | 18711 |
Constantinos C. Stoumpos | 75 | 194 | 27991 |
Raymond Alexanian | 75 | 211 | 21923 |
Mark J. Ablowitz | 74 | 374 | 27715 |
John Lygeros | 73 | 667 | 21508 |