BackgroundCountries in the Southeast Asia region have a high prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth, such as roundworm, whipworm, and hookworms [Ancylostoma duodenale, Necator americanus, Ancylostoma ceylanicum]. Recent molecular-based surveys have revealed that A. ceylanicum, a zoonotic hookworm, is likely the second most prevalent hookworm species infecting humans in that part of the world, while others have noted that this infection is an emerging public health risk not only for indigenous people but also for visitors from other countries.Case presentationWe recently encountered four cases of A. ceylanicum infection in Japanese individuals who returned from Southeast Asia and Papua New Guinea. Case 1 was a 25-year-old male who stayed in a rainforest in Malaysia for 4 weeks, where he developed abdominal pain and diarrhea in the third week. Eleven adult worms (five males, six females) were expelled after treatment with pyrantel pamoate and identified as A. ceylanicum based on morphological characteristics and DNA sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) gene. Case 2 was a 26-year-old male who spent 2 years as an overseas cooperation volunteer for agriculture in Papua New Guinea. He did not note any symptoms at that time, though eggs were detected in feces samples at a medical check-up examination after returning. Although collection of adult worms was unsuccessful, DNA analysis of the eggs for cox1 and the ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS)-1 and ITS-2 genes demonstrated that they were A. ceylanicum. Case 3 was a 47-year-old male who spent 1 month in a rural village in Lao People’s Democratic Republic and began suffering from watery diarrhea from the third week. A total of nine adult worms (three males, six females) were collected by endoscopic procedures and following treatment with pyrantel pamoate. Morphological examination and molecular analyses of the cox1 gene showed that they were A. ceylanicum. Case 4 was a 27-year-old male who participated in group travel to India for 5 days. Three weeks after returning, he developed abdominal pain and diarrhea. Hookworm eggs were found in feces samples and developed into larvae in culture, which were identified as A. ceylanicum based on molecular analysis of the cox1 gene. Eosinophilia was observed in all of the cases prior to treatment.ConclusionsA. ceylanicum should be recognized as an important etiologic pathogen of hookworm diseases in travelers to countries in the Southeast Asia and West Pacific Ocean regions.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1186/s41182-018-0087-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
We have used conventional X-ray powder diffraction to study one of the largest volume inorganic mixed oxide unit supercell structures done so far. This necessitated some SAXS-like observations at low angles from < 2° 2θ to concord with electron diffraction, which had indicated an 8×8×8 huge volume supercell of a fluorite-type basic sub-cell.Emphasis is on the detection of, possibly very weak, fingerprint, low-angle/long lines/peaks which will indicate the (often unsuspected) presence of complex polytypic arrangements of simple very strong basic sub-cells and so facilitate synthetic studies.
Magnesium ferrite MgFe 2 O 4 was synthesized with two different methods, spark plasma sintering (SPS) and conventional solid-state reaction sintering (SSRS), and thermoelectric properties were investigated. SPS processing was found to yield two attractive features: SPS at 900°C enabled retaining the submicron particle size of 0.3-0.5 lm from ball-milling, leading to lower thermal conductivity, 3 W/mK@300 K. 1200°C SPS sintering led to the same sample grain size of 1.0-3.0 lm as SSRS, but still exhibited significantly lower thermal conductivity of 4.3 W/mK@300 K compared to the SSRS sample with 14 W/mK@300 K, which exhibited neck formation between particles. Furthermore, while the finer microstructuring led to a reduction in the thermal conductivity, the resistivity of SPS MgFe 2 O 4 showed little dependence on the particle size at expected thermoelectric working temperatures above 523 K, which indicates success to some degree of phonon selective scattering due to differences in mean-free-paths of electrons and phonons. As a process, SPS samples are found to exhibit four-to sevenfold enhancement of ZT compared to the conventional SSRS sample. While the maximum ZT in the present samples is relatively low, taking a value of 0.07 for the SPS 1200°C sintered sample, the processing insights may be utilized for similar systems.
Traditional Japanese Bizen stoneware is produced by firing a specific type of green clay in a wood-fired kiln at approximately 1200 °C. During this process, single crystalline branched dendrite-like particles of Al-substituted ε-Fe2O3 (ε-Fe1.7Al0.3O3) with widths and lengths of approximately 15 and 30 μm, respectively, are formed on the surface of the ceramic. Composite particles consisting of ε-Fe2O3 epitaxially connected to spinel structure compounds [comprising the Fe-substituted spinel (Mg,Fe)(Al,Fe)2O4 and γ-Fe2O3)] with lengths of approximately 3 μm are also generated. The present work clarified the crystallographic relationship between ε-Fe2O3 and the spinel structure compounds. In addition, brown-colored samples similar to Bizen pottery and with surface Al-substituted ε-Fe2O3 particles were prepared by heating clay with K2CO3 under a 10 vol % CO gas and 90 vol % Ar gas mixture using an electric furnace instead of a firewood kiln. Hence, a traditional method was adapted to achieve the industrial production of ε-Fe2O3 crystals.
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