516 research outputs found
Exercising heart failure patients:cardiac protection through preservation of mitochondrial function and substrate utilization?
Current heart failure (HF) therapy remains unable to substantially improve exercise capacity. Studies have shown that exercise training has beneficial effects on the heart in both health and disease. How mitochondria respond to exercise in this setting has, however, received less attention in literature. These beneficial effects may include protective changes in mitochondrial function and adaptations in substrate utilization. This review describes exercise-induced changes in cardiac metabolism, including changes in mitochondrial function and substrate utilization and their effects on cardiac function. We conclude that exercising HF patients can improve mitochondrial function and optimize substrate utilization, eventually improving or restoring cardiac function. This suggests that exercise itself should be incorporated in the HF treatment plan, to improve cardiac function and in term exercise capacity. Extending knowledge on mechanisms by which exercise exerts protective effects could potentially lead to development of therapies directed at improving mitochondrial function and substrate utilization in HF.</p
Discrete charging of metallic grains: Statistics of addition spectra
We analyze the statistics of electrostatic energies (and their differences)
for a quantum dot system composed of a finite number of electron islands
(metallic grains) with random capacitance-inductance matrix , for which the
total charge is discrete, (where is the charge of an electron and
is an integer). The analysis is based on a generalized charging model,
where the electrons are distributed among the grains such that the
electrostatic energy E(N) is minimal. Its second difference (inverse
compressibility) represents the spacing between
adjacent Coulomb blockade peaks appearing when the conductance of the quantum
dot is plotted against gate voltage. The statistics of this quantity has been
the focus of experimental and theoretical investigations during the last two
decades. We provide an algorithm for calculating the distribution function
corresponding to and show that this function is piecewise
polynomial.Comment: 21 pages, no figures, mathematical nomenclature (except for Abstract
and Introduction
Book review: Gerald D. Feldman, Austrian banks in the period of National Socialism
Even though Germany, Austria, and Hungary experienced a major financial crisis simultaneously in 1931, of the three, only Germany's and Austria's episodes have been investigated in depth. This article offers a thorough assessment of the missing piece. It finds that, just like Germany, Hungary also experienced a twin crisis. The primary reason for the weakness of the financial sector was banks’ excessive exposure to agricultural loans. The fragility of the currency was the result of an early balance-of-payments crisis in 1928/9. The vulnerability of the banking and monetary systems culminated in a twin crisis in 1931
And the first shall be the last
This study analyzes the puzzle of Hungarian economic drifting in a long run perspective. The underlying puzzle for the investigation is why bad policies are invariably popular and good policies unpopular, thus why political and economic rationality never overlap. The first part of the article summarizes in eight points the basic features of the postwar period. Then six lessons are offered, which might be useful for other countries in transition or for students of comparative economics and politics, lessons that can be generalized on the basis of the individual country experience
Developmental perspectives on Europe
The crisis of 2008–2009 has ended, stockmarkets skyrocketed in 2012–2013, while growth of the real sector remained sluggish in Europe. This article attempts to explain the latter puzzle. Analyzing long term factors, the costs of short-termism in crisis management become obvious. The limitations of EU as a growth engine are highlighted
Reduced hospital stay, morphine consumption, and pain intensity with local infiltration analgesia after unicompartmental knee arthroplasty: A randomized double–blind study of 40 patients
Background and purpose The degree of postoperative pain is usually moderate to severe following knee arthroplasty. We investigated the efficacy of local administration of analgesics into the operating area, both intraoperatively and postoperatively
Enrichment of homologs in insignificant BLAST hits by co-complex network alignment
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Homology is a crucial concept in comparative genomics. The algorithm probably most widely used for homology detection in comparative genomics, is BLAST. Usually a stringent score cutoff is applied to distinguish putative homologs from possible false positive hits. As a consequence, some BLAST hits are discarded that are in fact homologous.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Analogous to the use of the genomics context in genome alignments, we test whether conserved functional context can be used to select candidate homologs from insignificant BLAST hits. We make a co-complex network alignment between complex subunits in yeast and human and find that proteins with an insignificant BLAST hit that are part of homologous complexes, are likely to be homologous themselves. Further analysis of the distant homologs we recovered using the co-complex network alignment, shows that a large majority of these distant homologs are in fact ancient paralogs.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our results show that, even though evolution takes place at the sequence and genome level, co-complex networks can be used as circumstantial evidence to improve confidence in the homology of distantly related sequences.</p
- …