23 research outputs found
Electronic structure investigation of CoO by means of soft X-ray scattering
The electronic structure of CoO is studied by resonant inelastic soft X-ray
scattering spectroscopy using photon energies across the Co 2p absorption
edges. The different spectral contributions from the energy-loss structures are
identified as Raman scattering due to d-d and charge-transfer excitations. For
excitation energies close to the L3 resonance, the spectral features are
dominated by quartet-quartet and quartet-doublet transitions of the 3d7
configuration. At excitation energies corresponding to the satellites in the Co
2p X-ray absorption spectrum of CoO, the emission features are instead
dominated by charge-transfer transitions to the 3d8L-1 final state. The spectra
are interpreted and discussed with the support of simulations within the single
impurity Anderson model with full multiplet effects which are found to yield
consistent spectral functions to the experimental data.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables,
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.65.20510
Invasive fungal infections in neutropenic enterocolitis: A systematic analysis of pathogens, incidence, treatment and mortality in adult patients
BACKGROUND: Neutropenic enterocolitis is a life-threatening complication most frequently occurring after intensive chemotherapy in acute leukaemias. Gramnegative bacteria constitute the most important group of causative pathogens. Fungi have also been reported, but their practical relevance remains unclear. The guidelines do not address concrete treatment recommendations for fungal neutropenic enterocolitis. METHODS: Here, we conducted a metaanalysis to answer the questions: What are frequency and mortality of fungal neutropenic enterocolitis? Do frequencies and microbiological distribution of causative fungi support empirical antimycotic therapy? Do reported results of antimycotic therapy in documented fungal neutropenic enterocolitis help with the selection of appropriate drugs? Following a systematic search, we extracted and summarised all detail data from the complete literature. RESULTS: Among 186 articles describing patients with neutropenic enterocolitis, we found 29 reports describing 53 patients with causative fungal pathogens. We found no randomised controlled trial, no good quality cohort study and no good quality case control study on the role of antifungal treatment. The pooled frequency of fungal neutropenic enterocolitis was 6.2% calculated from all 860 reported patients and 3.4% calculated from selected representative studies only. In 94% of the patients, Candida spp. were involved. The pooled mortality rate was 81.8%. Most authors did not report or perform antifungal therapy. CONCLUSION: In patients with neutropenic enterocolitis, fungal pathogens play a relevant, but secondary role compared to bacteria. Evidence concerning therapy is very poor, but epidemiological data from this study may provide helpful clues to select empiric antifungal therapy in neutropenic enterocolitis
Spin-flip low-energy electron-exchange scattering in NiO (100)
Fromme B, Schmitt M, Kisker E, Gorschlüter A. Spin-flip low-energy electron-exchange scattering in NiO (100). Phys.Rev. 1994;B 50:1874
Spin-flip low-energy electron-exchange scattering in NiO (100)
Fromme B, Hylla A, Koch C, Kisker E, Gorschlüter A, Merz H. Spin-flip low-energy electron-exchange scattering in NiO (100). J. Magn.Magn. Mat. 1995;148:181