654 research outputs found
Psychological distress and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the Renfrew and Paisley (MIDSPAN) study
Background: This study examined whether psychological distress might be a predictor of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Method: The relation between psychological distress at baseline, measured by the general health questionnaire (GHQ), and chronic bronchitis three years later, as measured by the Medical Research Council (MRC) bronchitis questionnaire and forced expiratory flow in one second (FEV1), was examined in 1682 men and 2203 women from the Renfrew and Paisley (MIDSPAN) study. The analyses were run on men and women separately and adjustments were made for age, socioeconomic position, and lung function at baseline (FEV1). People with chronic diseases at baseline were then excluded to give a "healthy" baseline cohort. The effect of psychological distress on individual components of the MRC bronchitis questionnaire and FEV1 was also assessed.
Results: In multivariate analyses of the whole cohort baseline psychological distress in women was associated with reduced FEV1 at follow up (OR 1.31 95% CI 1.0 to 1.73) after adjustment. In women, in the healthy cohort, psychological distress was associated with chronic bronchitis (OR 2.00, 95% CI 1.16 to 3.46), symptoms of bronchial infection (OR 2.14, 95% CI 1.44 to 3.19), symptoms of breathlessness (OR 3.02, 95% CI 1.99 to 4.59), and reduced FEV1 (OR 1.62, 95% CI 1.13 to 2.32). In men psychological distress predicted symptoms of bronchial infection (OR 2.09, 95% CI 1.28 to 3.42).
Conclusion: This study supports research suggesting that psychological distress is associated with COPD and shows that psychological distress predicts COPD in women. The robustness of the association and the exact mechanism requires further investigation
Feasibility Study of a Bi-directional Centrifugal Pump for DBT class 45 CST Gearbox Used in Underground Coal mining Operation
This paper presents a feasibility study of using a bi-directional centrifugal pump into DBT’s Series 45 CST gearbox. The suitability of other pumps for cooling and the design of a new symmetrical centrifugal pump that would be suited to the series 45 CST gearbox have been reviewed with financial versus functionality and usability. The analysis and results of this study indicate that by introducing the newly designed bi-directional pump, DBT may save over 1850 per gearbox which is about a 26% saving on the current set-up, and thus bi-directional pump is reasonably feasible
Wick's Theorem and a New Perturbation Theory Around the Atomic Limit of Strongly Correlated Electron Systems
A new type of perturbation expansion in the mixing of localized orbitals
with a conduction-electron band in the Anderson model is
presented. It is built on Feynman diagrams obeying standard rules. The local
correlations of the unperturbed system (the atomic limit) are included exactly,
no auxiliary particles are introduced. As a test, an infinite-order ladder-type
resummation is analytically treated in the Kondo regime, recovering the correct
energy scale. An extension to the Anderson-lattice model is obtained via an
effective-site approximation through a cumulant expansion in on the
lattice. Relation to treatments in infinite spatial dimensions are indicated.Comment: selfextracting postscript file containing entire paper (10 pages)
including 3 figures, in case of trouble contact author for LaTeX-source or
hard copies (prep0994
Renormalized Parameters for Impurity Models
We show that the low energy behaviour of quite diverse impurity systems can
be described by a single renormalized Anderson model, with three parameters, an
effective level , an effective hybridization , and
a quasiparticle interaction . The renormalized parameters are
calculated as a function of the bare parameters for a number of impurity
models, including those with coupling to phonons and a Falikov-Kimball
interaction term. In the model with a coupling to phonons we determine where
the interaction of the quasiparticles changes sign as a function of the
electron-phonon coupling. In the model with a Falikov-Kimball interaction we
show that to a good approximation the low energy behaviour corresponds to that
of a bare Anderson model with a shifted impurity level.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures; Revised Sec. 2 and
Inhibition of γ-secretase induces G2/M arrest and triggers apoptosis in breast cancer cells
γ-Secretase activity is vital for the transmembrane cleavage of Notch receptors and the subsequent migration of their intracellular domains to the nucleus. Notch overexpression has been associated with breast, colon, cervical and prostate cancers. We tested the effect of three different γ-secretase inhibitors (GSIs) in breast cancer cells. One inhibitor (GSI1) was lethal to breast cancer cell lines at concentrations of 2 μM and above but had a minimal effect on the non-malignant breast lines. GSI1 was also cytotoxic for a wide variety of cancer cell lines in the NCI60 cell screen. GSI1 treatment resulted in a marked decrease in γ-secretase activity and downregulation of the Notch signalling pathway with no effects on expression of the γ-secretase components or ligands. Flow cytometric and western blot analyses indicated that GSI1 induces a G2/M arrest leading to apoptosis, through downregulation of Bcl-2, Bax and Bcl-XL. GSI1 also inhibited proteasome activity. Thus, the γ-secretase inhibitor GSI1 has a complex mode of action to inhibit breast cancer cell survival and may represent a novel therapy in breast cancer
On the correct continuum limit of the functional-integral representation for the four-slave-boson approach to the Hubbard model: Paramagnetic phase
The Hubbard model with finite on-site repulsion U is studied via the
functional-integral formulation of the four-slave-boson approach by Kotliar and
Ruckenstein. It is shown that a correct treatment of the continuum imaginary
time limit (which is required by the very definition of the functional
integral) modifies the free energy when fluctuation (1/N) corrections beyond
mean-field are considered. Our analysis requires us to suitably interpret the
Kotliar and Ruckenstein choice for the bosonic hopping operator and to abandon
the commonly used normal-ordering prescription, in order to obtain meaningful
fluctuation corrections. In this way we recover the exact solution at U=0 not
only at the mean-field level but also at the next order in 1/N. In addition, we
consider alternative choices for the bosonic hopping operator and test them
numerically for a simple two-site model for which the exact solution is readily
available for any U. We also discuss how the 1/N expansion can be formally
generalized to the four-slave-boson approach, and provide a simplified
prescription to obtain the additional terms in the free energy which result at
the order 1/N from the correct continuum limit.Comment: Changes: Printing problems (due to non-standard macros) have been
removed, 44 page
Hidden but Ubiquitous: The Pre-Rift Continental Mantle in the Red Sea Region
Volcanism in the western part of the Arabian plate resulted in one of the largest alkali basalt provinces in the world, where lava fields with sub-alkaline to alkaline affinity are scattered from Syria and the Dead Sea Transform Zone through western Saudi Arabia to Yemen. After the Afar plume emplacement (∼30 Ma), volcanism took place in Yemen and progressively propagated northward due to Red Sea rifting-related lithospheric thinning (initiated ∼27–25 Ma). Few lava fields were emplaced during the Mesozoic, with the oldest 200 Ma volcanic activity recorded in northern Israel. We report results from volcanic pipes in the Marthoum area, east of Harrat Uwayrid, where over a hundred pipes occupy a stratigraphic level in the early Ordovician Saq sandstones. Most of them are circular or elliptical features marked by craters aligned along NW-SE fractures in the sandstone resulting from phreatomagmatic explosions that occurred when rising magma columns came in contact with the water table in the porous sandstone host. These lavas have Sr-Pb-Nd-Hf isotopic compositions far from the Cenozoic Arabian alkaline volcanism field, being considerably more enriched in Nd-Hf and Pb isotopes than any other Arabian Plate lava ever reported. New K-Ar dating constrains their age from Late Cretaceous to Early Eocene, thus anticipating the Afar plume emplacement and the Red Sea rift. Basalt geochemistry indicates that these volcanic eruptions formed from low-degree partial melting of an enriched lithospheric mantle source triggered by local variations in the asthenosphere-lithosphere boundary. This mantle source has a composition similar to the HIMU-like enriched isotopic component reported in the East African Rift and considered to represent the lowermost lithospheric mantle of the Nubian Shield. The generated melt, mixed in different proportions with melt derived from a depleted asthenosphere, produces the HIMU-like character throughout the Cenozoic Arabian alkaline volcanism. Although apparently hidden, this enriched lithospheric component is therefore ubiquitous and widespread in the cratonic roots of the African and Arabian subcontinental mantle
Multiplet Effects in the Quasiparticle Band Structure of the Anderson Model
In this paper, we examine the mean field electronic structure of the
Anderson lattice model in a slave boson approximation, which should
be useful in understanding the physics of correlated metals with more than one
f electron per site such as uranium-based heavy fermion superconductors. We
find that the multiplet structure of the ion acts to quench the crystal
field splitting in the quasiparticle electronic structure. This is consistent
with experimental observations in such metals as .Comment: 9 pages, revtex, 3 uuencoded postscript figures attached at en
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