1,913 research outputs found
Histological features of the distal third metacarpal bone in thoroughbred racehorses, with and without lateral condylar fractures
A detailed histopathological study of the distal third metacarpal bone of Thoroughbred racehorses was undertaken to characterize lesions observed previously on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The bones were selected and grouped on the basis of MRI features. Representative sections in different planes were processed for histopathology. All lesions observed in the articular cartilage (AC) and subchondral bone (SCB) were recorded and graded with a scoring system, based partially on the Osteoarthritis Research Society International grading system. The scoring system included the severity of the lesion. Descriptive statistics and linear mixed effects models were performed. A positive correlation was observed between the severity of histopathological changes in the superficial and deeper osteochondral tissues, and between the number of race starts and AC score. Age was not correlated with AC or SCB score. A moderate variation in AC and SCB scores was observed between the groups; however, there were differences within individual bones. Bones with focal palmar necrosis (FPN) showed significant differences in the histological scoring of the AC compared with bones without FPN. Bones with incomplete fractures or larger areas of bone remodelling showed significant differences in SCB pathology when compared with bones with FPN. Haematoidin was detected in areas with excessive SCB and cancellous bone sclerosis and/or irregular bone density. This finding is suggestive of poor blood perfusion in these areas
Kinetics of acute hepatitis B virus infection in humans
Using patient data from a unique single source outbreak of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, we have characterized the kinetics of acute HBV infection by monitoring viral turnover in the serum during the late incubation and clinical phases of the disease in humans. HBV replicates rapidly with minimally estimated doubling times ranging between 2.2 and 5.8 d (mean 3.7 ± 1.5 d). After a peak viral load in serum of nearly 1010 HBV DNA copies/ml is attained, clearance of HBV DNA follows a two or three phase decay pattern with an initial rapid decline characterized by mean half-life (t1/2) of 3.7 ± 1.2 d, similar to the t1/2 observed in the noncytolytic clearance of covalently closed circular DNA for other hepadnaviruses. The final phase of virion clearance occurs at a variable rate (t1/2 of 4.8 to 284 d) and may relate to the rate of loss of infected hepatocytes. Free virus has a mean t1/2 of at most 1.2 ± 0.6 d. We estimate a peak HBV production rate of at least 1013 virions/day and a maximum production rate of an infected hepatocyte of 200–1,000 virions/day, on average. At this peak rate of virion production we estimate that every possible single and most double mutations would be created each day
Statistics of extinction and survival in Lotka-Volterra systems
We analyze purely competitive many-species Lotka-Volterra systems with random
interaction matrices, focusing the attention on statistical properties of their
asymptotic states. Generic features of the evolution are outlined from a
semiquantitative analysis of the phase-space structure, and extensive numerical
simulations are performed to study the statistics of the extinctions. We find
that the number of surviving species depends strongly on the statistical
properties of the interaction matrix, and that the probability of survival is
weakly correlated to specific initial conditions.Comment: Previous version had error in authors. 11 pages, including 5 figure
Single-grain and multi-grain OSL dating of river terrace sediments in the Tabernas Basin, SE Spain
River terraces represent important records of landscape response to e.g. base-level change and tectonic movement. Both these driving forces are important in the southern Iberian Peninsula. In this study, Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating was used to date two principal river terraces in the Tabernas Basin, SE Spain. A total of 23 samples was collected from the fluvial terraces for dating using quartz OSL. Sixteen of the samples could not be dated because of low saturation levels (e.g. typical 2xD0 < 50 Gy). The remaining seven samples (5 fossil and 2 modern analogues) were investigated using both multi-grain and single-grain analysis. Single grain results show that: (i) measurements from multi-grain aliquots overestimate ages by up to ∼ 4 ka for modern analogues and young samples (<5 ka), presumably because (ii) the presence of many saturated grains has biased the multi-grain results to older ages. Despite the unfavourable luminescence characteristics we are able to present the first numerical ages for two terrace aggradation stages in the Tabernas Basin, one at ∼16 ka and the other within the last 2 ka
Comparison of equations for the calculation of LDL-cholesterol in hospitalized patients
BACKGROUND : The Friedewald equation is widely used to calculate LDL-C for cardiovascular risk prediction but
is less accurate with comorbidities and extreme lipid values. Several novel formulae have been reported to
outperform the Friedewald formula.
METHODS : We examined 14,219 lipid profiles and evaluated four formulae (Friedewald, Chen, de Cordova, Hattori)
and compared these to direct measurement of LDL-C across various triglyceride (TG), total cholesterol (TC) and
HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C) ranges using Beckman reagents and instruments. Linear regression and ROC analysis
were performed.
RESULTS : The de Cordova formula showed a high correlation with directly measured LDL-C (r= 0.90, P b 0.001),
comparable to the Friedewald calculated values for directly measured LDL-C (r = 0.95, P b 0.001). The de
Cordova formula was favorable in some ranges of HDL, TC and the lowest TG range (r = 0.97, P b 0.001) but
performed least well in comparison with the three other LDL-C calculations (AUC=0.8331), demonstrating inconsistent
bias. The Chen formula performed better than Friedewald (AUC = 0.9049). The Hattori formula
outperformed all formulae including Friedewald over various ranges of lipid values (AUC= 0.9097).
CONCLUSIONS : We observe favorable correlations of the de Cordova formula with Friedewald at low TG values.
However, the Hattori formula appears to be best for application in hospitalized patients, even at extreme lipid
values.http://www.elsevier.com/locate/clinchim2016-04-30hb201
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