Publications by authors named "K Thoi Thoi Singha"

Orbital trauma can result in significant complications, particularly when accompanied by foreign body entrapment. Wooden foreign bodies are rare but carry a high risk of infection and chronic inflammation. In these cases, immediate surgical intervention is critical for restoring orbital anatomy and preventing complications.

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Purpose: Chromobacterium violaceum is an opportunistic environmental pathogen, which act as a potential source of antimicrobial resistance genes. Acquisition of such genes by non-susceptible organisms, aided by mobile genetic elements possess a serious clinical threat. With the rise and expansion of carbapenem resistance worldwide, the present study investigates two carbapenem non-susceptible Chromobacterium violaceum isolates through whole genome sequencing.

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Background: We described molecular characteristics, phenotypic expression, and genetic origins of known δ and hitherto undescribed δ variants in both heterozygotes and homozygotes found in Thai, Burmese, and Laotian subjects.

Methods: A family and 19 unrelated subjects with absent or decreased hemoglobin (Hb) A levels referred to three thalassemia diagnostic centers in the north, northeast, and south of Thailand were recruited. Hematological parameters were recorded, and Hb analysis was done using capillary electrophoresis.

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This study explores the integration of black soldier fly larvae (BSFL) as a complementary functional ingredient to increase the soybean meal (SBM) inclusion in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) diets. Six experimental diets were formulated including a control diet as fishmeal (FM), an SBM-based diet, and 2.5% and 5% whole-body (WB) or defatted (DB) BSFL-supplemented SBM-based diets.

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Unlabelled: Bacterial degradation of hydrocarbons during co-metabolism with glucose often resulted in variable degradation efficiency. This study explored the mechanistic understanding of the metabolic response during co-metabolism in DR1 using a metabolomics approach. We reported that glucose slowed the growth rate of DR1 with a 7-h lag phase in a combined media containing crude oil, glucose, and biosurfactant, yet glucose supplement enhanced the degradation rates by 31% for dodecane and 18% for triacontane compared to culture amended with crude oil and biosurfactant.

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