Giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath is a slowly growing benign tumor. It usually arises from the tendon sheath and periarticular soft tissue of small joints. However, it may infrequently involve the large joints emerging around the knee, elbow, and hip joints. Giant cell tumor of the tibialis tendon sheath is rarely reported in the foot and ankle joint. Here, we report the first case in the medical literature of bilateral mirror-symmetrical giant cell tumor of the tendon sheath in the foot and ankle. A 12-year-old male presented with a bilateral and mirror-image mass on his ankles extending to the foot. It was painless but affected his gait and footwear. Staged complete resection was done first on the right then on the left side, with no recurrence after 1 year. The role of genes can be argued for this presentation and giant cell tumor's etiology, owing to the bilateralism and mirror-image presentation. Studies are needed to explore this genetic aspect and its role in management.Promotion of good mental health in young people is important. Our aim was to evaluate the consistency and magnitude of the efficacy of universal/selective interventions to promote good mental health. A systematic PRISMA/RIGHT-compliant meta-analysis (PROSPERO CRD42018088708) search of Web of Science until 04/31/2019 identified original studies comparing the efficacy of universal/selective interventions for good mental health vs a control group, in samples with a mean age less then 35 years. Meta-analytical random-effects model, heterogeneity statistics, assessment of publication bias, study quality and sensitivity analyses investigated the efficacy (Hedges' g=effect size, ES) of universal/selective interventions to promote 14 good mental health outcomes defined a-priori. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/jh-x-119-01.html 276 studies were included (total participants 159,508, 79,142 interventions and 80,366 controls), mean age=15.0 (SD=7.4); female=56.0%. There was a significant overall improvement in 10/13 good mental health outcome categories that could be young people. Future research should consolidate and extend these findings. To synthesize the diverse body of literature on sexual and gender minority youth (SGMY) and sexual health education. We conducted a systematic search of the literature on SGMY and sexual health education, including SGMY perspectives on sexual health education, the acceptability or effectiveness of programs designed for SGMY, and SGMY-specific results of sexual health education programs delivered to general youth populations. A total of 32 articles were included. Sixteen qualitative studies with SGMY highlight key perspectives underscoring how youth gained inadequate knowledge from sexual health education experiences and received content that excluded their identities and behaviors. Thirteen studies examined the acceptability or effectiveness of sexual health interventions designed for SGMY from which key characteristics of inclusive sexual health education relating to development, content, and delivery emerged. One study found a sexual health education program delivered to a general population of youth was also acceptable for a subsample of sexual minority girls. Future research on SGMY experiences should incorporate populations understudied, including younger adolescents, sexual minority girls, and transgender persons. Further, the effectiveness of inclusive sexual health education in general population settings requires further study. Future research on SGMY experiences should incorporate populations understudied, including younger adolescents, sexual minority girls, and transgender persons. Further, the effectiveness of inclusive sexual health education in general population settings requires further study.The present study investigated differences in white matter (WM) integrity between 96 young people with affective and/or psychotic symptoms classified at an early stage of mental disorder (i.e. 'attenuated syndrome'; stage 1b), 85 young people classified at a more advanced stage of mental disorder (i.e. 'discrete disorder'; stage 2), and 81 demographically matched healthy controls using diffusion tensor imaging. The relationship between WM integrity (indexed by fractional anisotropy; FA) across the tracts and neuropsychological functioning was also investigated. A significant reduction in FA was identified in those with more advanced disorder in the body of the corpus callosum. Clinical stage groups were associated with significant neuropsychological impairment, which was significantly greater in those with discrete disorders. Compared to those in the earlier stage of disorder, participants at the later clinical stage showed decreased FA in the body of the corpus callosum that was associated with worse performance in attentional set formation maintenance, shifting and flexibility. These results provide further support for clinical staging of mental disorder and highlight the potential for utilising neuroanatomical biomarkers to support the classification of stages of mental disorder in the future.The application of laboratory-generated biochar and activated carbon adsorbents in gold iodized solution for the recycling of waste mobile phone printed circuit boards (WMPCBs) is investigated. This research aims to solve problems associated with the existing gold recovery technologies of WMPCBs. Currently, the disposal of WMPCBs is expensive, involves complex processes, and contributes to secondary pollution. In this study, laboratory-generated biochar is produced from corn straw, wheat straw, and wood chips by pyrolysis. The effects of factors on the adsorption efficiency are investigated, and the optimal operating conditions for biochar and activated carbon adsorption are determined. The following optimal parameters were found for activated carbon temperature = 25 °C, particle size = 40-60 mesh, dosage = 0.05 g/10 mL, pH = 7, reaction time = 2 h, and oscillation frequency = 200 r/min. The adsorption efficiency reached 98.6%. For biochar, optimization involved raw material from corn straw at a pyrolysis temperature = 700 °C, reaction time = 5 h, oscillation frequency = 200 r/min, pH = 3, dosage = 0.15 g/10 mL, and temperature = 50 °C. An adsorption efficiency of 98% was achieved. The two adsorbents were compared, and results demonstrated that the adsorption properties of the laboratory-generated biochar were slightly inferior to those of the activated carbon; however, they were similar. Biochar adsorption can reuse waste, which may not only solve the current problems related to WMPCB recycling, but can help to achieve a "win-win" situation of increased environmental protection and sustainable utilization of resources.