8,401 research outputs found
Accuracy of a New Wrist Cuff Oscillometric Blood Pressure Device: Comparisons with Intraarterial and Mercury Manometer Measurements
Accurate measurement of arterial blood pressure is of great importance for the diagnosis and treatment of hypertension. Because of the chronic nature of antihypertensive drug therapy, the involvement of the patient in blood pressure control is desirable. Such an involvement, however, is only feasible if simple, user-friendly, and precise blood pressure measurement devices are available. In this study we tested a new wrist cuff oscillometric blood pressure measurement device in 100 consecutive patients undergoing cardiac catheterization. Blood pressures were simultaneously taken intraarterially (axillary artery) and with a mercury manometer and stethoscope or noninvasive measurement device (OMRON R3). Intraarterial measurements were directly compared with two measurements taken in random order with either an arm cuff mercury manometer or the wrist cuff device. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure as assessed with the mercury manometer was higher, especially when compared with the intraarterial and the wrist cuff values, which were comparable. Correlations of blood pressure values with intraarterial measurement were 0.86 systolic and 0.75 diastolic (P < .01) for the wrist cuff and 0.84 systolic (P < .01) and 0.59 diastolic (P < .05) for the mercury manometer measurements. Reproducibility of both measurements was good for the wrist cuff device ([systolic/diastolic]: r = 0.94/0.92; P < .01) and the mercury manometer (r = 0.97/0.88; P < .01). Both methods overestimated high diastolic values, whereas only the wrist cuff underestimated high systolic values. Thus, the new oscillometric wrist cuff blood pressure measurement device measures arterial blood pressure with great accuracy and reproducibility. As compared with intraarterial values, the wrist cuff device overestimated high diastolic and underestimated high systolic blood pressure values. Blood pressure values as measured by the mercury manometer were higher than intraarterial values and those of the wrist cuff. Both noninvasive devices overestimated high diastolic value
Genome-wide association and genome partitioning reveal novel genomic regions underlying variation in gastrointestinal nematode burden in a wild bird
Acknowledgements This study was funded by a BBSRC studentship (MA Wenzel) and NERC grants NE/H00775X/1 and NE/D000602/1 (SB Piertney). The authors are grateful to Fiona Leckie, Andrew MacColl, Jesús Martínez-Padilla, François Mougeot, Steve Redpath, Pablo Vergara† and Lucy M.I. Webster for samples; Keliya Bai, Daisy Brickhill, Edward Graham, Alyson Little, Daniel Mifsud, Lizzie Molyneux and Mario Röder for fieldwork assistance; Gillian Murray-Dickson and Laura Watt for laboratory assistance; Heather Ritchie for helpful comments on manuscript drafts; and all estate owners, factors and keepers for access to field sites, most particularly Stuart Young and Derek Calder (Edinglassie), Simon Blackett, Jim Davidson and Liam Donald (Invercauld and Glas Choille), Richard Cooke and Fred Taylor† (Invermark) and T. Helps (Catterick).Peer reviewedPostprin
The role of parasite-driven selection in shaping landscape genomic structure in red grouse (Lagopus lagopus scotica)
Acknowledgements This study was funded by a BBSRC studentship (MAW) and NERC grants NE/H00775X/1 and NE/D000602/1 (SBP). The authors are grateful to Mario Röder and Keliya Bai for fieldwork assistance, and all estate owners, factors and keepers for access to field sites, most particularly MJ Taylor and Mike Nisbet (Airlie), Neil Brown (Allargue), RR Gledson and David Scrimgeour (Delnadamph), Andrew Salvesen and John Hay (Dinnet), Stuart Young and Derek Calder (Edinglassie), Kirsty Donald and David Busfield (Glen Dye), Neil Hogbin and Ab Taylor (Glen Muick), Alistair Mitchell (Glenlivet), Simon Blackett, Jim Davidson and Liam Donald (Invercauld), Richard Cooke and Fred Taylor† (Invermark), Shaila Rao and Christopher Murphy (Mar Lodge), and Ralph Peters and Philip Astor (Tillypronie). S.B.P. and S.M.R. conceived and designed the study. M.A.W. performed field and laboratory work. A.D. and M.C.J. developed SNP markers. M.A.W. analysed the data. M.A.W. and S.B.P. wrote the manuscript.Peer reviewedPostprin
Chemical synthesis of tripeptide thioesters for the biotechnological incorporation into the myxobacterial secondary metabolite argyrin via mutasynthesis
The argyrins are secondary metabolites from myxobacteria with antibiotic activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Studying their
structure–activity relationship is hampered by the complexity of the chemical total synthesis. Mutasynthesis is a promising approach where simpler and fully synthetic intermediates of the natural product’s biosynthesis can be biotechnologically incorporated.
Here, we report the synthesis of a series of tripeptide thioesters as mutasynthons containing the native sequence with a dehydroalanine (Dha) Michael acceptor attached to a sarcosine (Sar) and derivatives. Chemical synthesis of the native sequence ᴅ-Ala-DhaSar thioester required revision of the sequential peptide synthesis into a convergent strategy where the thioester with sarcosine was
formed before coupling to the Dha-containing dipeptide
Model for floodplain management in urbanizing areas
A target land use pattern found using a dynamic programming model is shown to be a useful reference for comparing the success of floodplain management policies. At least in the test case, there is interdependence in the land use allocation for floodplain management--that is, a good solution includes some reduction of current land use in the floodplain and some provision of detention storage.
For the test case, current floodplain management policies are not sufficient; some of the existing floodplain use should be removed. Although specific land use patterns are in part sensitive to potential error in land value data and to inaccuracy in the routing model, the general conclusion that some existing use must be removed is stable within the range of likely error. Trend surface analysis is shown to be a potentially useful way of generating bid price data for use in land use allocation models. Sensitivity analysis of the dynamic programming model with respect to routing of hydrographs is conducted through simulation based on expected distributions of error.U.S. Geological SurveyU.S. Department of the InteriorOpe
Interaction induced collapse of a section of the Fermi sea in in the zig-zag Hubbard ladder
Using the next-nearest neighbor (zig-zag) Hubbard chain as an one
dimemensional model, we investigate the influence of interactions on the
position of the Fermi wavevectors with the density-matrix renormalization-group
technique (DMRG). For suitable choices of the hopping parameters we observe
that electron-electron correlations induce very different renormalizations for
the two different Fermi wavevectors, which ultimately lead to a complete
destruction of one section of the Fermi sea in a quantum critical point
Galactic Abundances: Report of Working Group 3
We summarize the various methods and their limitations and strengths to derive galactic abundances from in-situ and remote-sensing measurements, both from ground-based observations and from instruments in space. Because galactic abundances evolve in time and space it is important to obtain information with a variety of different methods covering different regions from the Very Local Insterstellar Medium (VLISM) to the distant galaxy, and different times throughout the evolution of the galaxy. We discuss the study of the present-day VLISM with neutral gas, pickup ions, and Anomalous Cosmic Rays, the study of the local interstellar medium (ISM) at distances <1.5 kpc utilizing absorption line measurements in H I clouds, and the study of galactic cosmic rays, sampling contemporary (~15 Myr) sources in the local ISM within a few kiloparsec of the solar system. Solar system abundances, derived from solar abundances and meteorite studies are discussed in several other chapters of this volume. They provide samples of matter from the ISM from the time of solar system format ion, about 4.5 Gyr ago. The evolution of galactic abundances on longer time scales is discussed in the context of nuclear synthesis in the various contributing stellar objects
Numerical study of the one-dimensional quantum compass model
The ground state magnetic phase diagram of the one-dimensional quantum
compass model (QCM) is studied using the numerical Lanczos method. A detailed
numerical analysis of the low energy excitation spectrum is presented. The
energy gap and the spin-spin correlation functions are calculated for finite
chains. Two kind of the magnetic long-range orders, the Neel and a type of the
stripe-antiferromagnet, in the ground state phase diagram are identified. Based
on the numerical analysis, the first and second order quantum phase transitions
in the ground state phase diagram are identified.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1105.211
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