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Comparison of sample preparation techniques for the detection and quantification of twenty-three drugs in oral fluidHwang, Hajin 08 July 2020 (has links)
Forensic toxicology is a branch of science that involves the analysis of drugs and other substances in biological fluids and tissues such as blood, urine, and oral fluid to aid medical or legal investigation of death, poisoning, and drug use. Due to the various components of different matrices, efficient and effective sample preparation techniques are necessary for reliable and accurate analysis. Following sample clean-up, a sensitive, specific, and robust method is ideal for consistent detection, identification, and quantitation of analytes. With the rise of drug abuse, there is a growing need to develop a single method that can target multiple classes of drugs quickly and effectively.
This study validated two different sample preparation techniques for the detection and quantitation of six drug classes comprised of twenty-three drugs and metabolites in oral fluid. The drug classes were as follows: amphetamines, local anesthetics, opioids, hallucinogens, antidepressants, and novel psychoactive substances (NPS). Amphetamines used were amphetamine, methamphetamine, 3,4-methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA), 3,4-methylenedioxy-N-ethylamphetamine (MDEA), and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). Local anesthetics contained benzoylecgonine (BZE), cocaine, and lidocaine. Opioids included codeine, methadone, morphine, 6-monoacetylmorphine (6-MAM), fentanyl, and oxycodone. Hallucinogens included lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) and phencyclidine (PCP). Antidepressants were amitriptyline, citalopram, fluoxetine, and trazodone. Lastly, NPS included ethylone, α-pyrrolidinopentiophenone (α-PVP), and 2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodophenethylamine N-(2-methoxybenzyl) (25I-NBOMe). Supported liquid extraction (SLE) and solid phase extraction (SPE) were assessed followed by confirmatory analysis by liquid chromatography (LC)-tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS).
Both methods were validated according to guidelines in the Standard Practices for Method Validation in Forensic Toxicology set by the American Academy of Forensic Science (AAFS) Standards Board (ASB). Parameters assessed include calibration model, bias, precision, limit of detection (LOD), limit of quantitation (LOQ), dilution integrity, ion suppression/enhancement, interference studies, and stability. Matrix recovery was added as another parameter. All calibration models were 0.99 or greater and all compounds were stable for at least 72 hours. Bias, precision, LOD, LOQ, dilution integrity, and interferences were similar between both methods. SLE yielded slightly better LOD and LOQ values. SLE had greater values of matrix recovery as well as lower levels of ionization suppression/enhancement.
Overall, SLE was determined to be the better method of sample preparation for this panel of drugs in oral fluid. Not only did it yield higher values for several of the parameters assessed but it also was more efficient (1 hour versus 2 hours) while using less solvent.
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The Influence of Selected Personal and Environmental Variables on the Quality of Elementary Principals' Administrative InternshipsFleenor, James Russell 17 April 2001 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationships among selected personal and environmental variables and the quality of elementary principals' administrative internships. Two research questions were used to investigate the influence of the variables on the quality of the internships. Procedural and experiential internship characteristics as identified by previous research were used as the basis for the dependent variable. Personal and environmental variables were identified from a review of the literature and through anecdotal experiences.
Surveys were sent to 400 elementary school principals across the United States. The dependent variable involvement was regressed on 17 personal and environmental independent variables using a stepwise regression procedure. Results of the stepwise multiple regression for total quality performed in this study indicated that 39% of the variation in overall internship quality was explained by the intern's belief that the internship was worthwhile, the intern's level of work-related responsibility, whether or not the intern was a part of a cohort during their principal preparation program, and the length of the administrative internship.
This study should be beneficial to colleges, universities, and other entities and individuals who are interested in the development of effective administrative internships in principal preparation programs. / Ed. D.
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NCLEX PreparationMerriman, Carolyn S. 01 November 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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The intraoral television micromeasurement of cavity margin deteriorationHorwitz, Burton Allan, 1937- January 1966 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / The purpose of this study was to demonstrate
the clinical application of the television microscope
for direct intraoral micromeasurement of
cavity margin deterioration. Mesiocclusal alloy
restorations were placed in fifty-one maxillary
second deciduous molars. A cast gold overlay
with two proximal margin observation holes, one
hole in the occlusal one-third and one hole in the
gingival one-third, was fabricated for each restored
tooth. The mesiobuccal proximal margins
of the restorations were observed by the television
microscope, and the marginal deterioration was
electronically measured at intervals of one week,
two weeks, four weeks, 12 weeks, 24 weeks, and
36 weeks postoperatively. The average gingival
marginal deterioration ranged from 4.9 microns at
one week to 37.8 microns at 36 weeks; the average
occlusal marginal deterioration ranged from 5. 4
microns at one week to 60.1 microns at 36 weeks.
The data indicated that the gingival area of the
proximal margin deteriorated at a faster rate
during the first 12 weeks postoperatively, and the
occlusal area of the gingival margin deteriorated at
a faster rate during the last 24 weeks. Greater
marginal alloy flash in the gingival area was
believed to be responsible for the initial
gingival deterioration, and repeated masticatory
stresses was believed to be major causative factor
for the occlusal deterioration during the last 24 weeks
of the study.
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Preparation and Characterization of Cation Selective Permeable MembraneMohamed, Mohamed M. K. 11 1900 (has links)
Abstract
Heavy metals are used in many industrial processes and their cations are either valuable or environmentally harmful to discharge in wastewater. Thus, it is necessary to separate heavy metals in wastewater treatment. Amongst several technical methods of separation, use of permeable membranes is an important one. For separation processes, membranes can be selective towards a target heavy metal cation either against mono-valent common cations or against other similar heavy metal cations.
Synthesis of selective permeable membranes for separation purposes is an area of continuous research to meet specific needs in different applications. One of the common applications of selective separation by a permeable membrane is cation/anion separation processes using cation exchange and anion exchange membranes. Another application of selective permeable membranes is the separation of mono-valent cations from other higher valence cations.
Some researchers have focused on specific selective separation of heavy metal cation from other heavy metal cations having the same valent charge. Some use chelating particulates dispersed in a neutral polymeric membrane matrix and others applied a thin chelating film on the surface of a commercial cation exchange membrane.
In this work, the synthesis of novel permeable selective membranes and their use for selective separation between two di-valent heavy metal cations is presented. Three different sets of membranes were prepared in non-imprinted and imprinted forms. The ion imprinted membranes form is prepared by pre-reacting the target metal ion with the selective chelating monomer before applying in situ polymerization step, and in the non-imprinted membranes form this step is not considered. Their morphological and chemical structures were determined and their separation performances were investigated using a diffusion dialysis technique.
The first membrane (non-imprinted polyvinylidene fluoride-divinylbenzyl-triethylenetetramine (PVDF/diVB-TETA) and Cu-imprinted PVDF/diVB-TETA-Cu forms) was prepared by in situ polymerization of the chelating monomer divinylbenzyl-triethylenetetramine diVB-TETA (or diVB-TETA-Cu) within a PVDF substrate, using a divinylbenzene cross-linker. Fourier transform infrared FT-IR spectroscopy showed the successful in situ polymerization of the chelating monomer within the PVDF texture. The permeation study showed that the ion-imprinted membrane has a Cu2+ selectivity factor of 3.78, while the non-imprinted membrane has a Cu2+ selectivity factor of 1.65. In addition the Cu2+ permeation flux in the imprinted membrane is 3.9 time that in the non-imprinted membrane
For the second membrane, the synthesis is similar to the first membrane for both non-imprinted and imprinted forms (polyvinylidene fluoride-divinylbenzyl-triethylenetetramine-N,N'-methylenebis(acrylamide) (PVDF/diVB-TETA-N) and PVDF/diVB-TETA-N-Cu respectively), except that the used cross-linker was N,N'-methylenebis(acrylamide). In addition, sodium 4-vinylbenzyl sulfonate was added in selected percentages, (5-15% mol), to enhance the permeation flux. FT-IR spectroscopy analysis of the prepared membranes confirmed the chemical structure of diVB-TETA-N and sulfonate group into PVDF. Permeation and selective separation studies for the prepared membranes showed that the ion-imprinted membrane has a higher selectivity for copper permeation over the non-imprinted membrane. However imprinted membrane showed a lower flux for the permeated cations than that of the non-imprinted membranes The addition of the sulfonate groups to the prepared membranes enhanced the flux of the permeated cations, but the copper selective permeation decreased for both types (non-imprinted and ion-imprinted). Moreover, the ion-imprinted membrane PVDF/diVB-TETA-N-Cu showed a lower flux for the permeated cations than that of the non-imprinted membranes PVDF/diVB-TETA-N. Selective separation factors decreased to unity when the content of the sulfonate groups increased to 15% mol. Ion imprinted membrane prepared with 10% of sulfonate group showed optimum copper selectivity factor (α = 30304) and permeation flux for copper (0.4949 μmol cm‒2 h‒1)
The third membrane (non-imprinted Selemion TM cation exchange membrane-divinylbenzyl-triethylenetetramine (CMV-S/diVB-TETA) and ion-imprinted CMV-S/diVb-TETA-Cu forms) was prepared by in situ polymerization of the chelating monomer, diVB-TETA (or diVB-TETA-Cu), on the surface of the commercial cation exchange membrane, Selemion, using divinylbenzene as cross-linker. FT-IR spectroscopy confirmed the chemical structure of the chelating polymer on the CMV-S membrane surface. Permeation study showed that ion-imprinted CMV-S/diVB-TETA-Cu membrane reached high separation factor (α = 17), yet the flux is low (0.0391 μmol cm‒2 h‒1). Non-imprinted CMV-S/diVB-TETA membrane of thickness (0.115±0.005 mm) using cross-linker (10% DVB) showed reasonable copper selectivity factor (α = 2.723) and permeation flux (0.433 μmol cm‒2 h‒1) / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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A survey of recreation major graduates entering the field of public recreation relating their work responsibilities to their college preparationPenney, John B. January 1964 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / 2999-01-01
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Timing of Motor Preparation for Indirectly Cued vs. Directly Cued Movements During a Visuomotor Mental Rotation TaskDrummond, Neil M. 21 September 2012 (has links)
Previous investigations comparing direct versus indirectly cued movements have consistently shown that indirectly cued movements take longer to prepare (Neely and Heath, 2010) and involve the recruitment of additional brain areas (Connolly et al., 2000). This increase in processing time has been associated with the additional cognitive transformations required of the task (Neely and Heath, 2010). In the present study we investigated whether differences between direct versus indirectly cued movements are also reflected in the time course of motor preparation. Participants performed a targeting task, moving directly to the location of a visual cue (i.e., directly cued movement) or to a location that differed by 60˚, 90˚, or 120˚ with respect to the visual cue provided (i.e., indirectly cued movements). Participants were instructed to initiate their movements concurrently with an anticipated go-signal. To examine the time course of motor preparation, a startling acoustic stimulus (SAS, 124dB) was randomly presented 150 ms, 500 ms, or 1000 ms prior to the go-signal. Results from the startle trials revealed that the time course of motor preparation was similar regardless of the angle of rotation required and hence whether it was a direct or indirectly cued trial. Specifically, motor preparation was delayed until less than 500 ms prior to movement initiation for both direct and indirectly cued movements. These findings indicate that similar motor preparation strategies are engaged for both types of cued movements, suggesting that the time to prepare a motor response may be similar regardless of whether a cognitive transformation is required.
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Timing of Motor Preparation for Indirectly Cued vs. Directly Cued Movements During a Visuomotor Mental Rotation TaskDrummond, Neil M. 21 September 2012 (has links)
Previous investigations comparing direct versus indirectly cued movements have consistently shown that indirectly cued movements take longer to prepare (Neely and Heath, 2010) and involve the recruitment of additional brain areas (Connolly et al., 2000). This increase in processing time has been associated with the additional cognitive transformations required of the task (Neely and Heath, 2010). In the present study we investigated whether differences between direct versus indirectly cued movements are also reflected in the time course of motor preparation. Participants performed a targeting task, moving directly to the location of a visual cue (i.e., directly cued movement) or to a location that differed by 60˚, 90˚, or 120˚ with respect to the visual cue provided (i.e., indirectly cued movements). Participants were instructed to initiate their movements concurrently with an anticipated go-signal. To examine the time course of motor preparation, a startling acoustic stimulus (SAS, 124dB) was randomly presented 150 ms, 500 ms, or 1000 ms prior to the go-signal. Results from the startle trials revealed that the time course of motor preparation was similar regardless of the angle of rotation required and hence whether it was a direct or indirectly cued trial. Specifically, motor preparation was delayed until less than 500 ms prior to movement initiation for both direct and indirectly cued movements. These findings indicate that similar motor preparation strategies are engaged for both types of cued movements, suggesting that the time to prepare a motor response may be similar regardless of whether a cognitive transformation is required.
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Comparison of digital and optical criteria used for detecting sound dentin a thesis submitted in partial fulfillment ... in restorative dentistry (operative) ... /Anderson, Maxwell H. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 1982.
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Comparison of digital and optical criteria used for detecting sound dentin a thesis submitted in partial fulfillment ... in restorative dentistry (operative) ... /Anderson, Maxwell H. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 1982.
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