In order to maintain habitats status and prevent the degradation of ecosystems, the ecological water requirement should be considered in the plannings, especially for the arid and semi-arid regions. In this paper the effect of the Planning for Protection and Utilization of Luyanghu Wetland on the ecological water requirement of Luyanghu wetland was analyzed. The results indicated that the ecological water requirement in the planning was far more than the actual quantity which will intensify the severity of the local water shortage without suspicion. At last it was advised to apply the method of ecological benefit evaluation to deciding the best feasible scheme for the best ecological benefit.
Subsurface flow constructed wetland (SSFCW) has been applied for wastewater treatment for several decades. In recent years, the combination of ferric-carbon micro-electrolysis (Fe/C-M/E) and SSFCW was proven to be an effective method of multifarious sewage treatment. However, Ferric substrate created a relatively reductive condition, decreased the oxidation efficiency of NH4+-N, and blocked the following denitrification process, which led to the low removal efficiencies of NH4+-N and total nitrogen (TN). In this study, partial aeration was introduced into the ferric-carbon micro-electrolysis SSFCW (Fe/C-M/E CW) system to solve the problem above. The water quality and nitrogen-related functional genes of bacteria on the surface of substrate were measured for mechanism exploration. The results showed that, the removal efficiencies of NH4+-N and total phosphorus (TP) in an aerated Fe/C-M/E CW system were 96.97% ± 6.06% and 84.62% ± 8.47%, much higher than 43.33% ± 11.27% and 60.16% ± 2.95% in the unaerated Fe/C-M/E CW systems. However, the TN removal in Fe/C-M/E CW system was not enhanced by aeration, which could be optimized by extending more anoxic section for denitrification.
BACKGROUND
Alveolar soft part sarcoma (ASPS) is an extremely rare malignant sarcoma, accounting for less than 1% of all soft-tissue sarcomas. However, limited information is available on multimodal imaging [computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and positron emission computed tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT)] of ASPS.
CASE SUMMARY
This study reports a case of a 35-year-old female patient with ASPS of the left thigh with lung metastasis. The patient presented with a 1-year history of a palpable mass in the lower extremity, which exhibited rapid growth for 3 wk. CT, MRI, and F-deoxyglucose PET/CT examinations were performed. CT showed a slightly hypodense or isodense mass with patchy calcifications. On MRI examination, the mass manifested hyperintensity on T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and diffusion-weighted images with some signal voids. PET/CT images demonstrated an intensely hypermetabolic mass in the left thigh and hypermetabolic nodules in lungs.
CONCLUSION
ASPS should be considered as a possible diagnosis when a slow-growing mass is detected in the soft tissue of the extremities, with hyperintensity and numerous signal voids on T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and diffusion-weighted images and intense F-deoxyglucose uptake on PET/CT. ASPS can have calcifications on CT.
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