12,407 research outputs found
Cerebral autoregulation, brain injury, and the transitioning premature infant
Improvements in clinical management of the preterm infant have reduced the rates of the two most common forms of brain injury, such as severe intraventricular hemorrhage and white matter injury, both of which are contributory factors in the development of cerebral palsy. Nonetheless, they remain a persistent challenge and are associated with a significant increase in the risk of adverse neurodevelopment outcomes. Repeated episodes of ischemia–reperfusion represent a common pathway for both forms of injury, arising from discordance between systemic blood flow and the innate regulation of cerebral blood flow in the germinal matrix and periventricular white matter. Nevertheless, establishing firm hemodynamic boundaries, as a part of neuroprotective strategy, has challenged researchers. Existing measures either demonstrate inconsistent relationships with injury, as in the case of mean arterial blood pressure, or are not feasible for long-term monitoring, such as cardiac output estimated by echocardiography. These challenges have led some researchers to focus on the mechanisms that control blood flow to the brain, known as cerebrovascular autoregulation. Historically, the function of the cerebrovascular autoregulatory system has been difficult to quantify; however, the evolution of bedside monitoring devices, particularly near-infrared spectroscopy, has enabled new insights into these mechanisms and how impairment of blood flow regulation may contribute to catastrophic injury. In this review, we first seek to examine how technological advancement has changed the assessment of cerebrovascular autoregulation in premature infants. Next, we explore how clinical factors, including hypotension, vasoactive medications, acute and chronic hypoxia, and ventilation, alter the hemodynamic state of the preterm infant. Additionally, we examine how developmentally linked or acquired dysfunction in cerebral autoregulation contributes to preterm brain injury. In conclusion, we address exciting new approaches to the measurement of autoregulation and discuss the feasibility of translation to the bedside
On the log correction to the black hole area law
Various approaches to black hole entropy yield the area law with logarithmic
corrections, many involving a coefficient 1/2, and some involving 3/2. It is
pointed out here that the standard quantum geometry formalism is not consistent
with 3/2 and favours 1/2.Comment: 4 pages; added new result
Influence of the nature of confinement on the melting of Wigner molecules in quantum dots
We analyze the quantum melting of two-dimensional Wigner molecules (WM) in
confined geometries with distinct symmetries and compare it with corresponding
thermal melting. Our findings unfold complementary mechanisms that drive the
quantum and thermal crossovers in a WM and show that the symmetry of the
confinement plays no significant role in determining the quantum crossover
scale . This is because the zero-point motion screens the boundary effects
within short distances. The phase diagram as a function of thermal and quantum
fluctuations determined from independent criteria is unique, and shows
"melting" from the WM to both the classical and quantum "liquids." An
intriguing signature of weakening liquidity with increasing temperature, ,
is found in the extreme quantum regime. The crossover is associated with
production of defects. However, these defects appear to play distinct roles in
driving the quantum and thermal "melting." Our study will help comprehending
melting in a variety of experimental traps - from quantum dots to complex
plasma.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
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Intracranial Hemorrhage Due to Secondary Hypertension from Intracranial Large Vessel Occlusion
Simultaneous hemorrhagic and ischemic strokes have been previously reported in the literature. Typically, these occur in patients secondary to dialysis, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, or thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura.1,2,3 However, this is the unique case of a 62-year-old Asian female who presented with a hemorrhagic stroke suspected to be secondary to refractory hypertension from intracranial large vessel atherosclerotic flow limiting stenosis, with rapid subsequent large vessel occlusion and ischemic stroke. Questions arise such as ideal blood pressure parameters for dual management, timeliness of computed tomography angiography imaging in the emergency department for detection of large vessel occlusion during intracranial hemorrhage, and subsequent selection of treatment plan in the dual-lesion patient population
Floquet generation of Majorana end modes and topological invariants
We show how Majorana end modes can be generated in a one-dimensional system
by varying some of the parameters in the Hamiltonian periodically in time. The
specific model we consider is a chain containing spinless electrons with a
nearest-neighbor hopping amplitude, a p-wave superconducting term and a
chemical potential; this is equivalent to a spin-1/2 chain with anisotropic XY
couplings between nearest neighbors and a magnetic field applied in the
z-direction. We show that varying the chemical potential (or magnetic field)
periodically in time can produce Majorana modes at the ends of a long chain. We
discuss two kinds of periodic driving, periodic delta-function kicks and a
simple harmonic variation with time. We discuss some distinctive features of
the end modes such as the inverse participation ratio of their wave functions
and their Floquet eigenvalues which are always equal to +/- 1 for time-reversal
symmetric systems. For the case of periodic delta-function kicks, we use the
effective Hamiltonian of a system with periodic boundary conditions to define
two topological invariants. The first invariant is a well-known winding number
while the second invariant has not appeared in the literature before. The
second invariant is more powerful in that it always correctly predicts the
numbers of end modes with Floquet eigenvalues equal to +1 and -1, while the
first invariant does not. We find that the number of end modes can become very
large as the driving frequency decreases. We show that periodic delta-function
kicks in the hopping and superconducting terms can also produce end modes.
Finally, we study the effect of electron-phonon interactions (which are
relevant at finite temperatures) and a random noise in the chemical potential
on the Majorana modes.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures; added more numerical and analytical results
about second topological invariant, and a discussion of effects of
electron-phonon interactions and noise on Majorana end mode
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