6 research outputs found

    Area-preserving diffeomorphisms in gauge theory on a non-commutative plane: a lattice study

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    We consider Yang-Mills theory with the U(1) gauge group on a non-commutative plane. Perturbatively it was observed that the invariance of this theory under area-preserving diffeomorphisms (APDs) breaks down to a rigid subgroup SL(2,R). Here we present explicit results for the APD symmetry breaking at finite gauge coupling and finite non-commutativity. They are based on lattice simulations and measurements of Wilson loops with the same area but with a variety of different shapes. Our results are consistent with the expected loss of invariance under APDs. Moreover, they strongly suggest that non-perturbatively the SL(2,R) symmetry does not persist either.Comment: 28 pages, 15 figures, published versio

    Test-retest Reliability of the VOR as Measured via Vorteq in Healty Subjects

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    To determine the reliability of the vestibolo-ocular reflex test measured via Vorteq, 16 subjects underwent head-autorotation test at the frequencies 1-5 Hz. All patients underwent the re-test. No linear correlation was observed between the measurements, i.e., no repeatability of the same measurements at the various frequencies. The Head Auto-Rotation Test by Vorteq has demonstrated advantages: patients are not disturbed by the active head movements; the full test protocol, lasts only a few minutes; the method enables the vestibolo-ocular reflex to be evaluated at high head-rotation frequencies. However, the test has disadvantages: poor test-retest inter-individual repeatability, wide standard deviations of results with heterogeneous inter-individual spread with regard to phase and asymmetry values especially at high rotation frequencies. In the light of the above findings, it can be seen that the test-retest of the Vorteq system is not sufficiently reliable and hence cannot be used in clinical practice

    Total intravenous anaesthesia in endoscopic sinus-nasal surgery.

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    Aim of this randomized study (64 patients) was to improve the control of bleeding during functional endoscopic sinusal surgery by means of controlled hypotension achieved through either total intravenous anaesthesia using remifentanyl and propofol (27 patients), or inhaled using isoflurane and fentanyl (37 patients). The following parameters were monitored before administration of anaesthesia (T0), then after 15 (T1), and 30 minutes (T2): systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressure; heart rate; concentration of tele-exhaled carbon dioxide (PetCO2) and percentage of peripheral saturation of haemoglobin (SPO2); bleeding according to the Fromme-Boezaart scale at T2. Mean arterial pressure values were maintained between 60-70 mmHg throughout surgery. At T0, systolic arterial pressure, diastolic arterial pressure and mean arterial pressure values were seen to overlap in the two groups. Both types of anaesthesia were effective in reducing the pressure values of T0-T1 and T1-T2 trends (p<0.0001). Systolic arterial pressure at T1 is lower with total intravenous anaesthesia compared to isoflurane and fentanyl (p=0.02). PetCO2 and heart rate show a decreasing trend independently of the type of anaesthesia employed. In conclusion, the hypotensive effect of total intravenous anaesthesia and of isoflurane and fentanyl is equivalent, but only total intravenous anaesthesia is effective in reducing bleeding during functional endoscopic sinusal surgery
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