616 research outputs found
Could myocarditis, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and Guillain-Barré syndrome be caused by one or more infectious agents carried by rodents?
The numbers of small rodents in northern Sweden fluctuate heavily, peaking every 3 or 4 years. We found that the incidence of Guillain-Barré syndrome and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, as well as the number of deaths caused by myocarditis, followed the fluctuations in numbers of bank voles, although with different time lags. An environmental factor, such as an infectious agent, has been suggested for all three diseases. We hypothesize that Guillain-Barré syndrome, myocarditis, and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in humans in Sweden are caused by one or more infectious agents carried by small rodents. Also, a group of novel picornaviruses recently isolated from these small rodents is being investigated as the possible etiologic agent(s)
Wavefunction extended Lagrangian Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics
Extended Lagrangian Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics [Niklasson, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 100 123004 (2008)] has been generalized to the propagation of the
electronic wavefunctions. The technique allows highly efficient first
principles molecular dynamics simulations using plane wave pseudopotential
electronic structure methods that are stable and energy conserving also under
incomplete and approximate self-consistency convergence. An implementation of
the method within the planewave basis set is presented and the accuracy and
efficiency is demonstrated both for semi-conductor and metallic materials.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Continuous growth reference from 24th week of gestation to 24 months by gender
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Growth charts and child growth assessment have become prime global instruments in child health practice over the 30 years. An updated, continuous growth standard that bridges size at birth values with postnatal growth values can improve child growth screening and monitoring.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This novel growth chart was constructed from two sources of information. Size at birth (weight, length and head circumference) reference values were updated based on information of normal deliveries (i.e. singleton live births without severe congenital malformation, with healthy mothers and born vaginally) from the Swedish Medical Birth Registry, 1990â1999 (n = 810393). Weight was evaluated using logarithmic transformation as for postnatal weight. Standard deviations were estimated from data within the empirical mean ± 1.0 SD for each gestational week and gender. These values were smoothed by empirical curve-fitting together with values from our recently published postnatal growth reference including 3650 longitudinally followed children from birth to final height <abbrgrp><abbr bid="B9">9</abbr></abbrgrp>. Timescale and weight axes were made logarithmic in order to magnify the early time part of the graph.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>This study presents the first continuous gender specific growth chart from birth irrespective of gestational age at birth until 2 years of age for weight, length and head circumference. Birth weight at 40 weeks of gestation increased approximately 100 gram and length increased only 1 mm compared with earlier Swedish reference from 1977â81. The curve is now less S-shaped as compared with earlier curves and compared with 4 curves from other countries and with more constant variation over the whole range.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our values picture the unrestricted pattern of growth improving the detection of a deviating growth pattern, when the growth of an individual infant is plotted on the charts. Especially for very preterm infants age corrected growth can be more easily evaluated although it must be recognized that the early comparison is with what is estimated as normal growth in uterus. The reference values are useful in child health care systems for population screening, but also in research or in the clinic for evaluating various growth promoting interventions â either nutritional, surgical or therapeutic â that might affect a child in early life.</p
Correlation effects and the high-frequency spin susceptibility of an electron liquid: Exact limits
Spin correlations in an interacting electron liquid are studied in the
high-frequency limit and in both two and three dimensions. The third-moment sum
rule is evaluated and used to derive exact limiting forms (at both long- and
short-wavelengths) for the spin-antisymmetric local-field factor, . In two dimensions is found to diverge as at long wavelengths,
and the spin-antisymmetric exchange-correlation kernel of time-dependent spin
density functional theory diverges as in both two and three dimensions.
These signal a failure of the local-density approximation, one that can be
redressed by alternative approaches.Comment: 5 page
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