scholarly journals A Multi-Sensor System for Sea Water Iodide Monitoring and Seafood Quality Assurance: Proof-of-Concept Study

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (13) ◽  
pp. 4464
Author(s):  
Alessandro Zompanti ◽  
Simone Grasso ◽  
Anna Sabatini ◽  
Luca Vollero ◽  
Giorgio Pennazza ◽  
...  

Iodine is a trace chemical element fundamental for a healthy human organism. Iodine deficiency affects about 2 billion people worldwide causing from mild to severe neurological impairment, especially in children. Nevertheless, an adequate nutritional intake is considered the best approach to prevent such disorders. Iodine is present in seawater and seafood, and its common forms in the diet are iodide and iodate; most iodide in seawater is caused by the biological reduction of the thermodynamically stable iodate species. On this basis, a multisensor instrument which is able to perform a multidimensional assessment, evaluating iodide content in seawater and seafood (via an electrochemical sensor) and discriminating when the seafood is fresh or defrosted quality (via a Quartz Micro balance (QMB)-based volatile and gas sensor), is strategic for seafood quality assurance. Moreover, an electronic interface has been opportunely designed and simulated for a low-power portable release of the device, which should be able to identify seafood over or under an iodide threshold previously selected. The electrochemical sensor has been successfully calibrated in the range 10–640 μg/L, obtaining a root mean square error in cross validation (RMSECV) of only 1.6 μg/L. Fresh and defrosted samples of cod, sea bream and blue whiting fish have been correctly discriminated. This proof-of-concept work has demonstrated the feasibility of the proposed application which must be replicated in a real scenario.

1994 ◽  
Vol 120 (2) ◽  
pp. 181-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. P. Diaz ◽  
L. mani-Ponset ◽  
E. Guyot ◽  
R. Connes

2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Cortegiani ◽  
Grazia Foresta ◽  
Giustino Strano ◽  
Maria Teresa Strano ◽  
Francesca Montalto ◽  
...  

Dysbaric accidents are usually referred to compressed air-supplied diving. Nonetheless, some cases of decompression illness are known to have occurred among breath-hold (BH) divers also, and they are reported in the medical literature. A male BH diver (57 years old), underwater fishing champion, presented neurological disorders as dizziness, sensory numbness, blurred vision, and left frontoparietal pain after many dives to a 30–35 meters sea water depth with short surface intervals. Symptoms spontaneously regressed and the patient came back home. The following morning, pain and neurological impairment occurred again and the diver went by himself to the hospital where he had a generalized tonic-clonic seizure and lost consciousness. A magnetic resonance imaging of the brain disclofsed a cortical T1-weighted hypointense area in the temporal region corresponding to infarction with partial hemorrhage. An early hyperbaric oxygen therapy led to prompt resolution of neurological findings. All clinical and imaging characteristics were referable to the Taravana diving syndrome, induced by repetitive prolonged deep BH dives. The reappearance of neurological signs after an uncommon 21-hour symptom-free interval may suggest an atypical case of Taravana syndrome.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (11) ◽  
pp. 199-205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luciano R. F. Branco ◽  
Rachel B. Ger ◽  
Dennis S. Mackin ◽  
Shouhao Zhou ◽  
Laurence E. Court ◽  
...  

BMC Cancer ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Y Brucker ◽  
Michael Bamberg ◽  
Walter Jonat ◽  
Matthias W Beckmann ◽  
Andreas Kämmerle ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 124 (3) ◽  
pp. 600-607 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Fiorucci ◽  
Luca Santucci ◽  
Paolo Gresele ◽  
Roberto Maffei Faccino ◽  
Piero del Soldato ◽  
...  

1988 ◽  
Vol 168 (2) ◽  
pp. 527-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Bhakdi ◽  
M Muhly ◽  
U Mannhardt ◽  
F Hugo ◽  
K Klapettek ◽  
...  

Staphylococcus aureus plays a major role as a bacterial pathogen in human medicine, causing diseases that range from superficial skin and wound to systemic nosocomial infections . The majority of S. aureus strains produces a toxin, a proteinaceous exotoxin whose hemolytic, dermonecrotic, and lethal properties have long been known (1-6). The toxin is secreted as a single- chained, nonglycosylated polypeptide with a M(r) of 3.4 x 10(4) (7, 8). The protein spontaneously binds to lipid monolayers and bilayers (9-14), producing functional transmembrane pores that have been sized to 1.5-2.0-nm diameters (15-18). The majority of pores formed at high toxin concentrations (20 μg/ml) is visible in the electron microscope as circularized rings with central pores of approximately 2 nm in diameter. The rings have been isolated, and molecular weight determinations indicate that they represent hexamers of the native toxin (7). We have proposed that transmembrane leakiness is due to embedment of these ring structures in the bilayer, with molecular flux occurring through the central channels (15, 19). Pore formation is dissectable into two steps (20, 21). Toxin monomers first bind to the bilayer without invoking bilayer leakiness . Membrane-bound monomers then laterally diffuse and associate to form non-covalently bonded oligomers that generate the pores. When toxin pores form in membranes of nucleated cells, they may elicit detrimental secondary effects by serving as nonphysiologic calcium channels, influx of this cation triggering diverse reactions, including release of potent lipid mediators originating from the arachidonate cascade (22-24). That α toxin represents an important factor of staphylococcal pathogenicity has been clearly established in several models of animal infections through the use of genetically engineered bacterial strains deleted of an active α toxin gene (25-27). Whether the toxin is pathogenetically relevant in human disease, however, is a matter of continuing debate. Doubts surrounding this issue originate from two main findings. First, whereas 60 percent hemolysis of washed rabbit erythrocytes is effected by approximately 75 ng/ml α toxin, approximately 100-fold concentrations are required to effect similar lysis of human cells (4-6, 13). The general consensus is that human cells display a natural resistance towards toxin attack. The reason for the wide inter-species variations in susceptibility towards α toxin is unknown but does not seem to be due to the presence or absence of high-affinity binding sites on the respective target cells (20, 21). Second, low-density lipoprotein (28) and neutralizing antibodies present in plasma of all healthy human individuals inactivate a substantial fraction of α toxin in vitro. These inactivating mechanisms presumably further raise the concentration threshold required for effective toxin attack, and it is most unlikely that such high toxin levels will ever be encountered during infections in the human organism. The aforegoing arguments rest on the validity of two general assumptions. First, the noted natural resistance of human erythrocytes to α toxin must be exhibited by other human cells. Second, toxin neutralization by plasma components, usually tested and quantified after their preincubation with toxin in vitro, must be similarly effective under natural conditions, and protection afforded by these components must not be restricted to specific cell species.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (20) ◽  
pp. 4026
Author(s):  
Anna Sabatini ◽  
Alessandro Zompanti ◽  
Simone Grasso ◽  
Luca Vollero ◽  
Giorgio Pennazza ◽  
...  

The technologies most suitable for monitoring the ecosystem of inland waters are image spectrometry and electrochemical sensors. The reason is that these instruments are able to ensure accuracy in the surveillance of very large areas through reliable and frequent measurements performed remotely. Electrochemical systems provide low-cost, miniaturized, reliable sensors that can be organized, when equipped with commercial on the shelf (COTS) low-power radio components implementing LoRaWAN, Sigfox or NB-IoT communications, in a dense network of sensors achieving the aforementioned requirements. In this work, a low-cost, low-size and low-noise electrochemical sensor endowed with protocols for network configuration, management and monitoring is presented. The electronic interface of the sensor allows high reproducible responses. As proof of concept for its utilization in inland water monitoring, the device has been tested for water composition analysis, bacteria identification and frequent pollutant detection: atrazine, dichloromethane and tetrachloroethene. The results are promising, and future investigations will be oriented to unlock the true potential of a general-purpose approach exploiting the continuous fusion of distributed data in each of the three considered application scenarios. A new device, with reduced power consumption and size, has been also developed and tested; this new device should be a node of a large network for inland water monitoring.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document