Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne viral infection that produces characteristic abnormalities in routine blood tests, yet these hematologic changes are typically analysed separately for each parameter rather than as a combined multivariate profile. This study investigated whether the joint hematologic profile of adult dengue patients in Bangladesh is systematically displaced from healthy adult reference values. We analysed a cohort of laboratory-confirmed adult dengue cases from a Bangladeshi hospital and focused on four core hematologic indices: haemoglobin, white blood cell count, platelet count, and platelet distribution width (PDW). External adult reference means were used to define a healthy location vector, and robust multivariate inference was carried out using the rank-based location test of Utts and Hettmansperger (1980). Sex-specific (male, female) and pooled (all adults) analyses were performed after careful data cleaning, outlier diagnostics, and checks of non-normality. Across all sex-specific and pooled analyses, the same multivariate profile emerged: haemoglobin, white-cell, and platelet levels were consistently lower than their healthy reference means, whereas PDW was higher, indicating greater platelet-size variability. The Utts–Hettmansperger test strongly rejected the null hypothesis of equality with the healthy reference vector in every analysis, documenting a large and coherent displacement of the dengue group in the four-dimensional hematologic space. Taken together, these results provide robust, distribution-free statistical evidence that adult dengue fever in Bangladesh is associated with a stable, biologically interpretable shift in core blood indices, integrating leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and altered platelet morphology into a single multivariate summary. This study demonstrates that robust rank-based multivariate location tests can enhance traditional laboratory interpretation by quantifying the joint displacement of key blood indices in infectious-disease cohorts such as adult dengue.
Employing phase-change materials (PCM) is considered a very efficient and cost-effective option for addressing the mismatch between the energy supply and the demand. The high storage density, little temperature degradation, and ease of material processing register the PCM as a key candidate for the thermal energy storage system. However, the sluggish response rates during their melting and solidification processes limit their applications and consequently require the inclusion of heat transfer enhancers. This research aims to investigate the potential enhancement of circular fins on intensifying the PCM thermal response in a vertical triple-tube casing. Fin arrays of non-uniform dimensions and distinct distribution patterns were des
... Show MoreThe simulation of passively Q-switching is four non – linear first order differential equations. The optimization of passively Q-switching simulation was carried out using the constrained Rosenbrock technique. The maximization option in this technique was utilized to the fourth equation as an objective function; the parameters, γa, γc and β as were dealt with as decision variables. A FORTRAN program was written to determine the optimum values of the decision variables through the simulation of the four coupled equations, for ruby laser Q–switched by Dy +2: CaF2.For different Dy +2:CaF2 molecules number, the values of decision variables was predicted using our written program. The relaxation time of Dy +2: CaF2, used with ruby was
... Show MoreIn this work the radioactive wastes in the Old Russian
Cemetery Al -Tuwaitha site were classified according to risks for
workers who are involved in the retrieval process. The exposure
assessment results expressed as estimates of radionuclide intakes by
inhalation and ingestion, exposure rates and duration for external
exposure pathways, and committed effective dose equivalents to
individuals from all relevant radionuclides and pathways. Results
showed the presence of natural radionuclides Ra-226, Th-234 and K-
40, as well as the produced radionuclide Cs-137 and Eu-152 in the
cemetery wells. The absorbed doses from the waste were classified to
two categories; exempt waste and low level waste according to