1,306 research outputs found
In vivo selection of resistant E. coli after ingestion of milk with added drug residues.
Antimicrobial resistance represents a major global threat to modern medicine. In vitro studies have shown that very low concentrations of drugs, as frequently identified in the environment, and in foods and water for human and animal consumption, can select for resistant bacteria. However, limited information is currently available on the in vivo impact of ingested drug residues. The objective of our study was to evaluate the effect of feeding preweaned calves milk containing antimicrobial drug residues (below the minimum inhibitory concentration), similar to concentrations detected in milk commonly fed to dairy calves, on selection of resistant fecal E. coli in calves from birth to weaning. At birth, thirty calves were randomly assigned to a controlled feeding trial where: 15 calves were fed raw milk with no drug residues (NR), and 15 calves were fed raw milk with drug residues (DR) by adding ceftiofur, penicillin, ampicillin, and oxytetracycline at final concentrations in the milk of 0.1, 0.005, 0.01, and 0.3 µg/ml, respectively. Fecal samples were rectally collected from each calf once a week starting at birth prior to the first feeding in the trial (pre-treatment) until 6 weeks of age. A significantly greater proportion of E. coli resistant to ampicillin, cefoxitin, ceftiofur, streptomycin and tetracycline was observed in DR calves when compared to NR calves. Additionally, isolates from DR calves had a significant decrease in susceptibility to ceftriaxone and ceftiofur when compared to isolates from NR calves. A greater proportion of E. coli isolates from calves in the DR group were resistant to 3 or more antimicrobial drugs when compared to calves in the ND group. These findings highlight the role that low concentrations of antimicrobial drugs have on the evolution and selection of resistance to multiple antimicrobial drugs in vivo
Ingestion of Milk Containing Very Low Concentration of Antimicrobials: Longitudinal Effect on Fecal Microbiota Composition in Preweaned Calves.
Although antimicrobial drugs are central to combat disease in modern medicine, the use of these drugs can have undesired consequences for human and animal health. One consequence is the post-therapy excretion of pharmacological agents, such as the elimination of drug residues at very low concentrations in the milk of lactating mammals. Limited information is currently available on the impact from the exposure of the gut microbiota to drug residues using in vivo natural models. The objective of our study was to address this knowledge gap and evaluate the effect on the fecal microbiota composition from feeding preweaned dairy calves raw milk with residual concentrations of ampicillin, ceftiofur, penicillin, and oxytetracycline from birth to weaning. At birth, thirty calves were randomly assigned to a controlled feeding trial where: 15 calves were fed raw milk with no drug residues (NR), and 15 calves were fed raw milk with drug residues (DR) by adding ceftiofur, penicillin, ampicillin, and oxytetracycline at final concentrations in the milk of 0.1, 0.005, 0.01, and 0.3 μg/ml, respectively. Fecal samples were rectally collected from each calf once a week starting at birth, prior to the first feeding in the trial (pre-treatment), until 6 weeks of age. Sequencing of the microbial 16S rRNA genes was conducted using the Illumina MiSeq, which provides a high resolution of the microbiota down to the genus level. Discriminant analysis showed that, except for pre-treatment samples, calves fed milk with drug residues and calves fed milk without drug residues easily discriminated at the genus level on their weekly microbial profile. However, analysis comparing the abundance of taxon between NR and DR showed significant differences only at the genus levels, and not at the phylum, class, order or family levels. These results suggest that although drug residues can result in clear discriminate gut microbial communities, they do not result in disruption of taxonomic levels above the genus
Lande-like formula for the g factors of hole-nanowire subband edges
We have analyzed theoretically the Zeeman splitting of hole-quantum-wire
subband edges. As is typical for any bound state, their g factor depends on
both an intrinsic g factor of the material and an additional contribution
arising from a finite bound-state orbital angular momentum. We discuss the
quantum-confinement-induced interplay between bulk-material and orbital
effects, which is nontrivial due to the presence of strong spin-orbit coupling.
A compact analytical formula is provided that elucidates this interplay and can
be useful for predicting Zeeman splitting in generic hole-wire geometries.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Pseudocontact shifts and paramagnetic susceptibility in semiempirical and quantum chemistry theories
Pseudocontact shifts are traditionally described as a function of the
anisotropy of the paramagnetic susceptibility tensor, according to the
semiempirical theory mainly developed by Kurland and McGarvey (R.J. Kurland and
B.R. McGarvey, J. Magn. Reson. 2, 286 (1970)). The paramagnetic susceptibility
tensor is required to be symmetric. Applying point-dipole approximation to the
quantum chemistry theory of hyperfine shift, pseudocontact shifts are found to
scale with a non-symmetric tensor that differs by a factor g/ge from the
paramagnetic susceptibility tensor derived within the semiempirical framework.
We analyze the foundations of the Kurland-McGarvey pseudocontact shift
expression and recall that it is inherently based on the Russell-Saunders (LS)
coupling approximation for the spin-orbit coupling. We show that the difference
between the semiempirical and quantum chemistry pseudocontact shift expressions
arises directly from the different treatment of the orbital contribution to the
hyperfine coupling
On the hyperfine interaction in rare-earth Van Vleck paramagnets at high magnetic fields
An influence of high magnetic fields on hyperfine interaction in the
rare-earth ions with non-magnetic ground state (Van Vleck ions) is
theoretically investigated for the case of ion in axial symmetrical
crystal electric field (ethylsulphate crystal). It is shown that magnetic-field
induced distortions of -electron shell lead to essential changes in
hyperfine magnetic field at the nucleus. The proposed theoretical model is in
agreement with recent experimental data.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, submitted to J. Phys. : Cond. Mat
Magnetic Coupling Between Non-Magnetic Ions: Eu3+ in EuN and EuP
We consider the electronic structure of, and magnetic exchange (spin)
interactions between, nominally nonmagnetic Eu^3+ ions (4f^6, S=3, L=3, J=0)
within the context of the rocksalt structure compounds EuN and EuP. Both
compounds are ionic [Eu^3+; N^3- and P^3-] semimetals similar to isovalent GdN.
Treating the spin polarization within the 4f shell, and then averaging
consistent with the J=0 configuration, we estimate semimetallic band overlaps
(Eu 5d with pnictide 2p or 3p) of ~0.1 eV (EuN) and ~1.0 eV (EuP) that increase
(become more metallic) with pressure. The calculated bulk modulus is 130 (86)
GPa for EuN (EuP). Exchange (spin-spin) coupling calculated from correlated
band theory is small and ferromagnetic in sign for EuN, increasing in magnitude
with pressure. Conversely, the exchange coupling is antiferromagnetic in sign
for EuP and is larger in magnitude, but decreases with compression. Study of a
two-site model with S_1*S_2 coupling within the J=0,1 spaces of each ion
illustrates the dependence of the magnetic correlation functions on the model
parameters, and indicates that the spin coupling is sufficient to alter the Van
Vleck susceptibility. We outline a scenario of a spin-correlation transition in
a lattice of S=3, L=3, J=0 nonmagnetic ions
Exchange Interaction Between Three and Four Coupled Quantum Dots: Theory and Applications to Quantum Computing
Several prominent proposals have suggested that spins of localized electrons
could serve as quantum computer qubits. The exchange interaction has been
invoked as a means of implementing two qubit gates. In this paper, we analyze
the strength and form of the exchange interaction under relevant conditions. We
find that, when several spins are engaged in mutual interactions, the
quantitative strengths or even qualitative forms of the interactions can
change. It is shown that the changes can be dramatic within a Heitler-London
model. Hund-Mulliken calculations are also presented, and support the
qualititative conclusions from the Heitler-London model. The effects need to be
considered in spin-based quantum computer designs, either as a source of gate
error to be overcome or a new interaction to be exploited.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures. v3: Added Hund-Mulliken calculations in 3-dots
case. A few small corrections. This version submitted to PR
Theoretical Analysis of the "Double-q" Magnetic Structure of CeAl2
A model involving competing short-range isotropic Heisenberg interactions is
developed to explain the "double-q" magnetic structure of CeAl. For
suitably chosen interactions, terms in the Landau expansion quadratic in the
order parameters explain the condensation of incommensurate order at
wavevectors in the star of (1/2 , 1/2 , 1/2), where
is the cubic lattice constant. We show that the fourth order terms in the
Landau expansion lead to the formation of the so-called "double-q" magnetic
structure in which long-range order develops simultaneously at two
symmetry-related wavevectors, in striking agreement with the magnetic structure
determinations. Based on the value of the ordering temperature and of the
Curie-Weiss of the susceptibility, we estimate that the nearest
neighbor interaction is ferromagnetic, with K and the
next-nearest neighbor interaction is antiferromagnetic with K.
We also briefly comment on the analogous phenomenon seen in the similar system
TmS.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
Four-photon interference: a realizable experiment to demonstrate violation of EPR postulates for perfect correlations
Bell's theorem reveals contradictions between the predictions of quantum
mechanics and the EPR postulates for a pair of particles only in situations
involving imperfect statistical correlations. However, with three or more
particles, contradictions emerge even for perfect correlations. We describe an
experiment which can be realized in the laboratory, using four-photon entangled
states generated by parametric down-conversion, to demonstrate this
contradiction at the level of perfect correlations.Comment: publishe
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