1.EVALUATION OF NUTRITIVE VALUE OF N-ALKANE GROWN YEAST
Zeying LI ; Xihe ZHAO ; Aizhong FU ; Yuhai LIU ; Yanjie SUN ; Daxun JIN
Acta Nutrimenta Sinica 1956;0(02):-
1.The nutrient content of yeast (Condida Y-17) grown on n-alkane studied in this experiment was comparable to that of the same type of yeast produced in other countries. Its content of lead, arsenic, mercury and benzo (a) pyrene were within the limit proposed by the Protein-Calorie Advisory Group of the United Nations System. The Content of its residual n-alkanes and total aromatic hydrocarbons were within or a little over that limit. It is a good supplementary protein feed.2.The corrected PER values were, yeast grown on n-alkane 1.18; deli pid and denucleic acid yeast grown on n-alkane 1.16; brewer's yeast 1.52; full fat soybean meal 1.81. The PER of yeast grown on n-alkane was significantly lower than those of other samples. When 0.3% DL-methionine was added to the diet, the corrected PER values increased: n-alkane grown yeast 2.32; delipid and denucleic acid n-alkane grown yeast 2.49; brewer's yeast 2.35; full fat soybean meal 2.28. The corrected PER value of casein used for correction was 2.43, it was standardized with ANRC reference protein (PER = 2.50).3.Yeast grown on n-alkane with and without removal of lipids and nucleic acid was fed to groups of rats at a dietary level of 25% and 35% respectively for 1 year. A stock diet group and a brewer's yeast diet group were used as control. In the first 3 months the weight gain and feed consumption of the rats fed n-alkanc grown yeast diet were lower than those of the two control groups. The male rats were more sensitive to the change of diet. In the later 9 months the difference of weight gain among different groups were not significant. The concentration of haemoglobin, red cell counts, white cell counts, GPTase activity, serum cholesterol levels and serum urea levels determined at the beginning and the end of the experiment were all in the normal ranges. The concentrations of n-alkanes and odd-chain fatty acids in the adipose tissue of the n-alkane grown yeast group were higher than those of the two control groups, and the difference was highly significant. The concentrations of total aromatic hydrocarbons and benzo(a) pyrene in the muscle of different groups of rats were 0.4-0.6 ppm and 0.4 ppb respectively. No detrimental effect was observed in pathological examination.4.When 5% fish meal or 3.5% casein was added to the 25% n-alkane grown yeast diet, the weight gain and feed consumption of weanling rats were improved significantly, though it was still inferior to those fed with stock diet.5.Strongly growth depressive effect was noted as the level of n-alkane grown yeast was increased to 20% in the diet. This depressive effect was neither due to the toxicity of the residual n-alkanes and aromatic hydrocarbons, nor due to the deficiencies of potassium and selenium in the diet. It might be the result of nutrient or nutrients imbalance of the diet. The appropriate amount of yeast grown on n-alkane used in mixed feed should not be more than 15%.
2.Qualitative analysis of the clinical head nurses' recognition of RBRVS
Zeying ZHAO ; Guiying ZHANG ; Yongfang ZHONG
Modern Clinical Nursing 2017;16(8):69-73
Objective To explore the recognition degree of resource based relative value scales (RBRVS) among the head nurses of different clinical departments and provide references for the hospitals to gradually adjust and improve the RBRVS performance allocation program. Method Toally 13 clinical head nurses were recruited and in-depth interviews were phenomenologically conducted. The acquired data were analyzed. Results Six themes were extracted: RBRVS's reflection of the value of nursing operation, avoidance of nonstandard registering and charging, differences in performance distribution across clinical departments, unreasonable allocation between internal medical and surgical departments, small numbers of chargeable nursing items, larger coefficient gap between doctors and nurses and inaccuracy in data collection. Conclusions RBRVS for performance evaluation is concerned about the work strength and technical difficulty, but less attention to quality problems is attached. In implementation, we should reasonably treat differences between the clinical departments, setting up reasonable gap coefficient and increasing their enthusiasm. Moreover, as the direct leaders of nursing teams, the nursing management should master the principles of RBRVS and improve the management ability of head nurses.
3.Research progress on the antibacterial properties of dental resin materials
ZHOU Zeying ; ZHANG Jingyue ; NIU Ju ; LIU Dandan ; ZHAO Wendi ; LIU Xiaoqiu
Journal of Prevention and Treatment for Stomatological Diseases 2021;29(9):638-643
Dental resin materials have been widely used in the treatment of dental defects. However, the polymerization shrinkage of the resin materials tends to cause microleakage and accumulation of bacterial plaque, which leads to secondary dental caries. Endowing dental resin with antibacterial properties is an important way to solve this problem. Adding antibacterial agents to dental resin is the main method to give it antibacterial properties. Antimicrobial agents are mainly divided into three types: release type, non-release type and mixed type. In terms of antibacterial effects, the selection and addition of antibacterial agents will affect the antibacterial and mechanical properties of dental resin materials; and the long-term antibacterial effect of antimicrobial agents in the oral cavity remains to be verified; as antimicrobial agents or other environmental factors can lead to drug resistance and even dormant persistent bacteria. In recent years, researchers have been committed to improving the antibacterial effect by modifying antibacterial agents. The sustained release of antimicrobial agents via carriers is also the main research direction. This paper reviews the research progress on the antibacterial properties of dental resin materials.