Predicting whether a student will be successful on the National Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses (NCLEX-RN
®
) has been an important endeavor for faculty in schools of nursing for the past 2 decades. Extensive documentation exists in the literature concerning research aimed at exploring the academic and nonacademic predictors of success on the NCLEX-RN. Reviews of the findings of these studies indicate that various factors emerge as academic predictors of success. The results of this study suggest that first-time success on the NCLEX-RN can be predicted with a high level of accuracy using existing student data. The findings also support the belief that it is possible to identify students who may be at risk for unsuccessful first time performance on the NCLEX-RN. Early identification of at-risk students will promote timely intervention strategies to optimize the students' potential for success.
Hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5,-triazine (RDX) is a toxic and mobile groundwater contaminant common to military sites. This study compared in situ RDX degradation rates following bioaugmentation with Gordonia sp. strain KTR9 (henceforth KTR9) to rates under biostimulation conditions in an RDX-contaminated aquifer in Umatilla, OR. Bioaugmentation was achieved by injecting site groundwater (6000 L) amended with KTR9 cells (10(8) cells mL(-1)) and low carbon substrate concentrations (<1 mM fructose) into site wells. Biostimulation (no added cells) was performed by injecting groundwater amended with low (<1 mM fructose) or high (>15 mM fructose) carbon substrate concentrations in an effort to stimulate aerobic or anaerobic microbial activity, respectively. Single-well push-pull tests were conducted to measure RDX degradation rates for each treatment. Average rate coefficients were 1.2 day(-1) for bioaugmentation and 0.7 day(-1) for high carbon biostimulation; rate coefficients for low carbon biostimulation were not significantly different from zero (p values ≥0.060). Our results suggest that bioaugmentation with KTR9 is a feasible strategy for in situ biodegradation of RDX and, at this site, is capable of achieving RDX concentration reductions comparable to those obtained by high carbon biostimulation while requiring ~97% less fructose. Bioaugmentation has potential to minimize substrate quantities and associated costs, as well as secondary groundwater quality impacts associated with anaerobic biostimulation processes (e.g., hydrogen sulfide, methane production) during full-scale RDX remediation.
Low-density lipoproteins (LDL) are oxidatively modified on interaction with haem proteins. The interaction of ruptured erythrocytes with LDL induces oxidative damage as detected by alterations in electrophorctic mobility and the peroxidation of the polyunsaturated fatty acyl chains. Difference spectroscopy reveals that the amplification of the oxidative process by the hacm protein is related to the transition of [he oxidation state of the haemoglobin in the erythrocyte lysate from the oxy [x-Fei'-O1] to the ferry1 [X-Fe "'=O] form. The incorporation of the lipid-soluble antioxidant, butylated hydroxy toluene, al specific time points during the LDL-erythrocyte interaction prolongs the lag phase to oxidation and eliminates the oxy-to.ferryl conversion of the haemoglobin. The timescale of this haem conversion is related WI the antioxidant status of the LDL.
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