Betalabs Scientific

Betalabs  Scientific Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Betalabs Scientific, 36900, Nairobi.

Betalabs Scientific is a laboratory consultancy and supplies business.We offer consultancy services and supply high quality laboratory reagents & consumables.Our motto remains "Always for better labs". Consultancy services includes:
Lab set up ,design and location
Lab equipment procurement
Business growth
Lab staff recruitment and hiring
Staff training
Product promotion and marketing
Quality cont

rol
Lab documentation
Quality management system
We also supplies lab diagnostic kits and consumables.

If you thought you have seen all
16/01/2021

If you thought you have seen all

Knowing is not enough without doing it.
11/08/2019

Knowing is not enough without doing it.

What is the diagnosis?
11/02/2019

What is the diagnosis?

21/09/2018

We cannot achieve Universal Health as a Country with imported medical tools, equipment and drugs the burden will be too high to sustain.We must therefore re look at our training,innovation and management of our medical resources.We must ask ourselves what are we good at,which field are we good in, then put forward our best foot and start from there. We shall not improve if we remain NET consumers,what are we giving to the world?That should be our question.

Just have a look and  know more about Zika Virus.
12/02/2016

Just have a look and know more about Zika Virus.

Zika Virus- Structure, Genome, Symptoms, Transmission, Pathogenesis, Diagnosis. Zika Virus (ZIKV) is mosquito-borne emerging flavivirus which was first identified in Zika Forest of Uganda in 1947 in rhesus monkeys.

01/02/2016

Biologists Develop Method for Antibiotic Susceptibility Testing
Staphylococcus aureus

A team of biologists and biomedical researchers at UC San Diego has developed a new method to determine if bacteria are susceptible to antibiotics within a few hours, an advance that could slow the appearance of drug resistance and allow doctors to more rapidly identify the appropriate treatment for patients with life threatening bacterial infections.

In a paper published online this week in the journal EBioMedicine, the scientists reported the development of a rapid susceptibility test for Staphylococcus aureus, a bacterium that causes some 60 percent of hospital-acquired infections and which has spread in communities, causing pneumonia and a variety of skin and tissue infections in both healthy and immune-compromised individuals.

The development is important, say biomedical scientists, because of the critical need for physicians to rapidly discriminate between drug resistant strains (commonly termed MRSA for methicillin-resistant S. aureus) and drug sensitive strains, since these infections can progress rapidly, especially MRSA strains with additional resistance to newer antibiotics designed to treat pathogens that are now appearing in hospitals.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, antibiotic resistance causes two million illnesses and 23,000 deaths annually, costing the U.S. economy approximately $20-billion a year in direct health care costs and nearly eight million extra days in the hospital. Indeed, bacteria are evolving resistance to antibiotics much more quickly than global biomedical research efforts are delivering new drugs to market, leading to the appearance of infections caused by bacteria that are now resistant to every therapy.

Rapid antimicrobial susceptibility testing allows doctors to discriminate between infections caused by drug sensitive bacteria, which can be treated with safe and effective antibiotics developed in what scientists call the golden age of drug discovery (the mid-20th century) such as penicillin, and those caused by drug resistant bacteria, which might require newer antibiotics, such as daptomycin or cubicin. This approach will decrease the emergence of resistance by reserving the newest drugs for those infections where they are most needed.

The interdisciplinary team at UC San Diego was comprised of two infectious-disease specialists in the School of Medicine, Victor Nizet, MD, and George Sakoulas, MD; two biologists in the Division of Biological Sciences, Kit and Joe Pogliano; and Diana Quach, a bioengineering graduate student. The scientists applied a method previously developed in the Pogliano laboratories for drug discovery to antibiotic susceptibility testing.

“Previously we developed a microscopy-based method that performs an autopsy on bacterial cells that allows us to determine how each cell died, and we have shown that this method can identify new antibiotics and help understand how these antibiotics work,” said Kit Pogliano, a professor of biology at UC San Diego who headed the research team. “We tested to see if this method could be applied to antibiotic susceptibility testing. Surprisingly, we not only found that our method was able to accurately differentiate sensitive S. aureus strains from resistant MRSA strains, but that we were able to identify two subgroups of MRSA strains, one of which is susceptible to combinations of antibiotics that could be used in the hospital. We are excited by the accuracy and speed of this test, as well as by its unanticipated ability to identify these two types of MRSA infections, which would have been missed by other tests.”

Examining single cells has two key advantages over other testing methods, say the researchers. First, it is rapid, cutting days off the time for typical culture-based assays. It often takes days for a doctor to receive information on resistance, and this means that patients with life-threatening infections are often treated with the assumption that the infection is drug-resistant. Second, this method does not rely on having any detailed understanding of the bacterium causing the infection, or of the genes that convey resistance. This is particularly important in this case, since resistance to the drugs used to treat MRSA infections arise by several evolutionary pathways via different combinations of mutations, and it could also provide rapid treatment information for newly emerging bacterial pathogens, such as that which caused the infections transmitted by endoscopes.

“Regardless of the type of bacterium, a healthy and growing bacterium looks different from a dead bacterium, so whenever we detect a difference in how the cells look, we know that the bacterium is sensitive to the antibiotic we have applied. When we combine careful culture conditions, cutting edge imaging methods and a detailed quantitative analysis, we can turn this simple approach into a reliable test,” said Joe Pogliano, a professor of biology.

“Rapid and precise identification of antibiotic sensitivity patterns allows the most potent and effective drug to be administered,” said Nizet, a professor of pediatrics and pharmacy. "Equally important, more specific antibiotic therapy can help preserve the normal bacteria living in our gut microbiome that play an important role in our health and immune system function.”

The UC San Diego biologists say their new method has the potential to be applied to many different types of bacteria. “Our new method worked surprising well at rapidly detecting antibiotic resistant strains of S. aureus,” said Diana Quach, a graduate student and lead author on the study. “We are now optimizing it to provide a more accurate test for other types of antibiotic resistant bacteria, such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa.”

This method is being commercialized by Linnaeus Bioscience Inc. so that it can enter clinical use via the industrial market. The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH grants AI095125 and GM073898).

Merry christmas and a happy new year to you all.
24/12/2015

Merry christmas and a happy new year to you all.

24/12/2015

Merry Christmas and happy new year for all our esteemed partners and clients for your continued support.Betalabs love and value you so much.

20/11/2015

Boyle's Law Explained

In 1662, Robert Boyle discovered that when held at a constant temperature, the volume and pressure of a gas are inversely proportionate. Put simply, when the volume goes up, pressure drops, and vice versa.

The mathematic equation is equally as simple: PV=K where P=Pressure, V=Volume, and K is simply a constant.

This has become a basic principle in chemistry, now called "Boyle's law" and is included as a special case into the more general ideal gas law.
Examples in Real Life

You have probably been well acquainted with Boyle's law for most of your life, and haven't even realized it. We experience examples of it on a regular basis. Several times a day, we might use it as a tool, while we also sometimes recognize it as a killer.

Ever filled up a tire? You will generally fill it to somewhere between 30-35 PSI (Pounds per square inch). This is a measurement of pressure. As you put more and more air into the tire, you are forcing all the gas molecules to get packed together, reducing their volume. As long as the air temperature remains the same, you are experiencing a real life example of this law as you watch your PSI change.

If you ever see this sign, always ask a scientist working in the laboratory about such biohazards. It is recommended tha...
20/11/2015

If you ever see this sign, always ask a scientist working in the laboratory about such biohazards. It is recommended that you always wear a face mask and anti-bacterial gloves when dealing with such substances.

You may also see this sign on the packaging of hypodermic needles, samples and living tissues to be analysed. It is common etiquette for scientists to dispose of hypodermic needles in a sharps container.

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36900
Nairobi
36900

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+254772374254

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