Which of the following is/are appropriate care and maintenance of centrifuges? I. Proper balancing of centrifuge tubes. II. Avoid long time exposure of the rotors to alkaline solution and acidic buffers. III. Cleaning centrifuges and rotors with coarse brushes and then wash them with distilled or de-ionized water after every run. IV. For overnight storage, the rotors are left upside down and then positioned in a safe and dry place.

Which of the following is/are appropriate care and maintenance of centrifuges? I. Proper balancing of centrifuge tubes. II. Avoid long time exposure of the rotors to alkaline solution and acidic buffers. III. Cleaning centrifuges and rotors with coarse brushes and then wash them with distilled or de-ionized water after every run. IV. For overnight storage, the rotors are left upside down and then positioned in a safe and dry place. Correct Answer I, II, and IV only

Only option I, II and IV are appropriate care and maintenance of centrifuges. However, cleaning centrifuges and rotors with coarse brushes may cause damage to the protective layers of rotors. Therefore, option iii is wrong.

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Fever in the season of dengue is sending Calcuttans scurrying to hospitals for admission, triggering a shortage of beds that has forced some private health care institutes to even postpone planned surgeries. Apollo Gleneagles Hospitals on the Bypass had 504 patients in its care as on Thursday of whom 70 had been admitted with fever. Belle Vue Clinic had 180 patients, 32 of them with dengue. Calcutta Medical Research Institute had 350 patients 60 of them with fever. The number of people admitted for treatment of fever caused by dengue or any undiagnosed illness has been rising every day across hospitals for more than a fortnight. "There has been heavy pressure on all private hospitals for admission of dengue and cases of unknown fever since the beginning of August. Now it is a surge," said Pradip Tondon, President of the Association of Hospitals of Eastern India. In July, four to five patients were getting admitted with fever on an average in every hospital. The number has since ballooned with the Calcutta Municipal Corporation apparently in denial about the extent of the dengue outbreak and the Government focused on playing down the threat. Such has been the rush of patients with fever that some hospitals are calling up people to postpone admissions planned in advance, mostly for surgeries. "We have told many people to come only when we call them to confirm availability of beds," said an official at Belle Vue.
The Government's "playing down the threat" means