15,722 research outputs found
Design of an integrated shallow water wave experiment
The experimental design and instrumentation for an integrated shallow-water surface gravity wave experiment is discussed. The experiment required the measurement of the water surface elevation, meteorological parameters, and directional spectra at a number of locations on a shallow lake. In addition, to acquire data under a wide range of conditions, an experimental period of three years was required. A system of telephone and radio modem links were installed to enable real-time monitoring of instrument performance at eight separate measurement locations on the lake. This system also enabled logging sessions to be optimized to ensure the maximum possible data return from this extended experimentIEEE Oceanic Engineering Societ
DNA fingerprinting analysis of coagulase negative staphylococci implicated in catheter related bloodstream infections
AIMS: The epidemiological assessment of cases of coagulase negative staphylococcal catheter related
bloodstream infection.
METHODS: Two hundred and thirty patients with suspected catheter related bloodstream infection were
evaluated over a two year period. Central venous catheters were cultured both endoluminally and
extraluminally. Peripheral blood, catheter hubs, skin entry, and skin control sites were also cultured.
Pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was used to DNA fingerprint coagulase negative staphylococci
isolated from patients with presumptive catheter related bloodstream infection.
RESULTS: Sixty cases of catheter related bloodstream infection were identified, 21 of which were
attributed to coagulase negative staphylococci. Two hundred and ninety four separate isolates of
coagulase negative staphylococci from the 21 cases of catheter related bloodstream infection were
subjected to PFGE (mean of 14 for each case). Catheter related bloodstream infection was only
confirmed by PFGE analysis in 16 of the 21 cases because in the remaining five cases peripheral blood
and central venous catheter coagulase negative staphylococci isolates were different. Skin entry, control
skin, and central venous catheter hub isolates matched peripheral blood isolates in six, four, and
seven cases, respectively. Coagulase negative staphylococci isolates could not be cultured from the
patients’ own skin in seven cases of catheter related bloodstream infection. Central venous catheter
lumens were colonised in all cases of catheter related bloodstream infection compared with 44–81%
of cases that had positive external surface catheter tip cultures, depending on the threshold used to
define significant growth.
CONCLUSIONS: Catheter related bloodstream infection as a result of coagulase negative staphylococci
may be over stated in about a quarter of cases, unless a discriminatory technique is used to fingerprint
isolates. No single, simplistic route of bacterial contamination of central venous catheters was identified,
but endoluminal catheter colonisation is invariably present in cases of catheter related
bloodstream infection.
The use of central venous catheters as a means of access for
monitoring and as a route of administration of drugs has
become almost mandatory in patients with serious
illnesses. Infections of central venous catheters are common
and coagulase negative staphylococci remain the most
frequent pathogens—for example, 37% of 1267 isolates in one
meta-analysis.Controversy remains over the source of, and
route of access by, these bacteria to the central venous
catheters. Recent developments, such as catheters with
antimicrobial properties, are an important advance,
but
until such issues are resolved it remains unclear how best to
reduce the risk of catheter related bloodstream infection.
“Pulsed field gel electrophoresis is well recognised as the
gold standard for fingerprinting coagulase negative staphylococci”
Because there are at least 33 distinct coagulase negative
staphylococci species that have been identified, and because
methods that use phenotyping alone cannot accurately
distinguish between strains of coagulase negative staphylococci,
DNA fingerprinting is required to clarify the epidemiology
of coagulase negative staphylococci catheter related bacterial
bloodstream infection. Despite the accepted difficulties in
determining the relatedness of coagulase negative staphylococci,
diagnostic laboratories routinely rely on limited
information from phenotypic tests to compare isolates fro
VLA neutral hydrogen imaging of compact groups
Images of the neutral hydrogen (H I) in the direction of the compact groups of galaxies, HCG 31, HCG 44, and HCG 79 are presented. The authors find in HCG 31 and HCG 79, emission contained within a cloud much larger than the galaxies as well as the entire group. The H I emission associated with HCG 44 is located within the individual galaxies but shows definite signs of tidal interactions. The authors imaged the distribution and kinematics of neutral hydrogen at the two extremes of group sizes represented in Hickson's sample. HCG 44 is at the upper limit while HCG 18, HCG 31, and HCG 79 are at the lower end. Although the number of groups that have been imaged is still very small, there may be a pattern emerging which describes the H I morphology of compact groups. The true nature of compact groups has been the subject of considerable debate and controversy. The most recent observational and theoretical evidence strongly suggests that compact groups are physically dense, dynamical systems that are in the process of merging into a single object (Williams and Rood 1987, Hickson and Rood 1988, Barnes 1989). The neutral hydrogen deficiency observed by Williams and Rood (1987) is consistent with a model in which frequent galactic collisions and interactions have heated some of the gas during the short lifetime of the group. The H I disks which are normally more extended than the luminous ones are expected to be more sensitive to collisions and to trace the galaxy's response to recent interactions. Very Large Array observations can provide in most cases the spatial resolution needed to confirm the dynamical interactions in these systems
Dorsalization of the neural tube by the non-neural ectoderm
The patterning of cell types along the dorsoventral axis of the spinal cord requires a complex set of inductive signals. While the chordamesoderm is a well-known source of ventralizing signals, relatively little is known about the cues that induce dorsal cell types, including neural crest. Here, we demonstrate that juxtaposition of the non-neural and neural ectoderm is sufficient to induce the expression of dorsal markers, Wnt-1, Wnt-3a and Slug, as well as the formation of neural crest cells. In addition, the competence of neural plate to express Wnt-1 and Wnt-3a appears to be stage dependent, occurring only when neural tissue is taken from stage 8–10 embryos but not from stage 4 embryos, regardless of the age of the non-neural ectoderm. In contrast to the induction of Wnt gene expression, neural crest cell formation and Slug expression can be induced when either stage 4 or stage 8–10 neural plates are placed in contact with the non-neural ectoderm. These data suggest that the non-neural ectoderm provides a signal (or signals) that specifies dorsal cell types within the neural tube, and that the response is dependent on the competence of the neural tissue
The external benefits of higher education
The private market benefits of education are widely studied at the micro level, although the magnitude of their macroeconomic impact is disputed. However, there are additional benefits of education, which are less well understood. In this paper the macroeconomic effects of external benefits of higher education are estimated using the “micro-to-macro” simulation approach. Two types of externalities are explored: technology spillovers and productivity spillovers in the labour market. These links are illustrated and the results suggest they could be very large. However, this is qualified by the dearth of microeconomic evidence, for which we hope to encourage further work
The Density of Lyman-alpha Emitters at Very High Redshift
We describe narrowband and spectroscopic searches for emission-line star
forming galaxies in the redshift range 3 to 6 with the 10 m Keck II Telescope.
These searches yield a substantial population of objects with only a single
strong (equivalent width >> 100 Angstrom) emission line, lying in the 4000 -
10,000 Angstrom range. Spectra of the objects found in narrowband-selected
samples at lambda ~5390 Angstroms and ~6741 Angstroms show that these very high
equivalent width emission lines are generally redshifted Lyman alpha 1216
Angstrom at z~3.4 and 4.5. The density of these emitters above the 5 sigma
detection limit of 1.5 e-17 ergs/cm^2/s is roughly 15,000 per square degree per
unit redshift interval at both z~3.4 and 4.5. A complementary deeper (1 sigma
\~1.0 e-18 ergs/cm^2/s) slit spectroscopic search covering a wide redshift
range but a more limited spatial area (200 square arcminutes) shows such
objects can be found over the redshift range 3 to 6, with the currently highest
redshift detected being at z=5.64. The Lyman alpha flux distribution can be
used to estimate a minimum star formation rate in the absence of reddening of
roughly 0.01 solar masses/Mpc^3/year (H_0 = 65 km/s/Mpc and q_0 = 0.5).
Corrections for reddening are likely to be no larger than a factor of two,
since observed equivalent widths are close to the maximum values obtainable
from ionization by a massive star population. Within the still significant
uncertainties, the star formation rate from the Lyman alpha-selected sample is
comparable to that of the color-break-selected samples at z~3, but may
represent an increasing fraction of the total rates at higher redshifts. This
higher-z population can be readily studied with large ground-based telescopes.Comment: 7 pages, 5 encapsulated figures; aastex, emulateapj, psfig and lscape
style files. Separate gif files for 2 gray-scale images also available at
http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/faculty/hu/emitters.html . Added discussion of
foreground contaminants. Updated discussion of comparison with external
surveys (Sec. 5 and Fig. 5). Note: continuum break strength limits (Fig. 3
caption) are correct here -- published ApJL text has a sign erro
Radio Observations of Infrared Luminous High Redshift QSOs
We present Very Large Array (VLA) observations at 1.4 GHz and 5 GHz of a
sample of 12 Quasi-stellar Objects (QSOs) at z = 3.99 to 4.46. The sources were
selected as the brightest sources at 250 GHz from the recent survey of Omont et
al. (2001). We detect seven sources at 1.4 GHz with flux densities, S_{1.4} >
50 microJy. These centimeter (cm) wavelength observations imply that the
millimeter (mm) emission is most likely thermal dust emission. The
radio-through-optical spectral energy distributions for these sources are
within the broad range defined by lower redshift, lower optical luminosity
QSOs. For two sources the radio continuum luminosities and morphologies
indicate steep spectrum, radio loud emission from a jet-driven radio source.
For the remaining 10 sources the 1.4 GHz flux densities, or limits, are
consistent with those expected for active star forming galaxies. If the radio
emission is powered by star formation in these systems, then the implied star
formation rates are of order 1e3 M_solar/year. We discuss the angular sizes and
spatial distributions of the radio emitting regions, and we consider briefly
these results in the context of co-eval black hole and stellar bulge formation
in galaxies.Comment: to appear in the A
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