Displaying publications 61 - 69 of 69 in total

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  1. Chew YL, Chan EW, Tan PL, Lim YY, Stanslas J, Goh JK
    PMID: 21306653 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-11-12
    Many medicinal plants from Leguminosae family can be found easily in Malaysia. These plants have been used as traditional medicines by local ethnic groups, where they are prepared as decoction, pastes for wound infections, and some have been eaten as salad. This paper focused on the assessment of antioxidant potential, antibacterial activity and classes of phytochemicals of nine plants from the Leguminosae family.
  2. Wong SK, Lim YY, Abdullah NR, Nordin FJ
    PMID: 21232161 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-11-3
    Studies have shown that the barks and roots of some Apocynaceae species have anticancer and antimalarial properties. In this study, leaf extracts of five selected species of Apocynaceae used in traditional medicine (Alstonia angustiloba, Calotropis gigantea, Dyera costulata, Kopsia fruticosa and Vallaris glabra) were assessed for antiproliferative (APF) and antiplasmodial (APM) activities, and analysed for total alkaloid content (TAC), total phenolic content (TPC) and radical-scavenging activity (RSA). As V. glabra leaf extracts showed wide spectrum APF and APM activities, they were further screened for saponins, tannins, cardenolides and terpenoids.
  3. Ong LC, Chandran V, Lim YY, Chen AH, Poh BK
    Singapore Med J, 2010 Mar;51(3):247-52.
    PMID: 20428748
    The aim of this study was to identify factors associated with poor academic achievement during the early school years.
  4. Lai HY, Lim YY, Kim KH
    PMID: 20429956 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-10-15
    Blechnum orientale Linn. (Blechnaceae) is used ethnomedicinally for the treatment of various skin diseases, stomach pain, urinary bladder complaints and sterilization of women. The aim of the study was to evaluate antioxidant, anticancer and antibacterial activity of five solvent fractions obtained from the methanol extract of the leaves of Blechnum orientale Linn.
  5. Lim YY, Prang KH, Cysique L, Pietrzak RH, Snyder PJ, Maruff P
    Behav Res Methods, 2009 Nov;41(4):1190-200.
    PMID: 19897828 DOI: 10.3758/BRM.41.4.1190
    Verbal memory tests-although important to the neuropsychological assessment of memory-are biased to many cultures. In the present article, we highlighted the limitations associated with the direct translation of tests and word matching, as well as the lack of ecological validity and cultural appropriateness when tests developed in one culture are used in another. To overcome these limitations, a verbal memory paradigm was developed that framed the memory assessment with a shopping-list format, but that developed culturally specific stimuli for the different language groups. The aim of the present study was to determine the equivalence of this shopping list memory test in different cultural and language groups. Eighty-three adults from English-, French-, Malay-, and Chinese-speaking cultures participated in four experiments. The results of all the experiments indicated that performance of verbal list learning is equivalent, irrespective of the language used. These results support the use of this methodology for minimizing cross-cultural test bias, and have important implications for testing culturally and linguistically diverse individuals.
  6. Lai HY, Lim YY, Tan SP
    Biosci Biotechnol Biochem, 2009 Jun;73(6):1362-6.
    PMID: 19502733
    Leaf extracts of five medicinal ferns, Acrostichum aureum L. (Pteridaceae), Asplenium nidus L. (Aspleniaceae), Blechnum orientale L. (Blechnaceae), Cibotium barometz (L.) J. Sm. (Cyatheaceae) and Dicranopteris linearis (Burm.) underwood var. linearis (Gleicheniaceae), were investigated for their total phenolic content (TPC), and antioxidative, tyrosinase inhibiting and antibacterial activities. The antioxidative activity was measured by assays for radical scavenging against 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH), ferric ion reducing power (FRP), beta-carotene bleaching (BCB) and ferrous ion chelating (FIC). The results revealed B. orientale to possess the highest amount of total polyphenols and strongest potential as a natural antioxidative, tyrosinase inhibiting and antibacterial agent as demonstrated by its strong activities in all related bioassays. The other ferns with antioxidative potential were C. barometz and D. linearis. Except for A. aureum, all ferns showed antibacterial activity which may justify their usage in traditional medicines.
  7. Lim YY, Liew LP
    J Colloid Interface Sci, 2002 Nov 15;255(2):425-7.
    PMID: 12505092
    The rate of autooxidation of 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol (3,5-DTBC) in the presence of micelles formed from mixing equal concentrations of [Cu(C(12)-tmed)Br(2)] (where C(12)-tmed is N,N,N'-trimethyl-N'-dodecylethylenediamine) and several amino acids has been investigated. It was found that the rate in air-saturated solution is very much dependent on pH, which affects the availability of copper(II) coordination site for the catechol and the degree of micellization. At a given pH, the rates in [Cu(C(12)-tmed)Br(2)] micellar media are greatly enhanced in the presence sodium halide.
  8. Ship CP, Zainudin A, Lim YY
    J Colloid Interface Sci, 1999 Sep 1;217(1):211-213.
    PMID: 10441432
    The rate of hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyldiphenylphosphate in the presence of micellized [Cu(C(12)tmed)(L)](+) where C(12)tmed is N,N,N'-trimethyl-N'-dodecylethylenediamine and L is the anion part of the amino acid has been investigated. It was found that the observed maximum rate obtained under the excess surfactant over the substrate condition depends very much on the ability of the amino acid ligand to form a mixed-chelate complex with the [Cu(C(12)tmed)](2+) moiety. In general, a chelating ligand with better coordination ability gives a slower rate because of the reduction in the supply of Cu-OH nucleophile in the micelle. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.
  9. Lim YY, Lim KH
    J Colloid Interface Sci, 1997 Dec 01;196(1):116-9.
    PMID: 9441659
    Micellar properties of binary mixed surfactants of a surface active mixed copper(II) chelate, [Cu(C12-tmed)(acac)Cl] (where C12-tmed is N,N,N'-trimethyl-N'-dodecylethylenediamine) with three common surfactants, viz. sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB), and octaethylene glycol monododecyl ether (C12E8), were investigated by surface tensiometry, ESR, and UV-visible absorption techniques. The surface tension data were treated with Rubingh's method for mixed micelle formation and Rosen's method for mixed monolayer formation at the aqueous solution/air interface. It was found that in the mixed micelle there is strong attractive interaction between cationic copper surfactant and anonic dodecyl sulfate while there is almost ideal mixing between copper surfactant and CTAB and C12E8. From the ESR and UV-visible studies, a mixed block-type arrangement of head groups is proposed. Copyright 1997 Academic Press. Copyright 1997Academic Press
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