7,503 research outputs found
Remote sensing of snowpack density using shortwave radiation
Albedo or satellite radiance measurements can be used to estimate average snowpack density by means of a multiple linear equation. The in situ data equation predicted density with a correlation (sq r) of 0.79 and a standard error of 0.027 gm/cu cm. The data from LANDSAT-1 were not as significant in a similar equation, possibly because of the large field of view
A study of prediction methods for the high angle-of-attack aerodynamics of straight wings and fighter aircraft
Work is described dealing with two areas which are dominated by the nonlinear effects of vortex flows. The first area concerns the stall/spin characteristics of a general aviation wing with a modified leading edge. The second area concerns the high-angle-of-attack characteristics of high performance military aircraft. For each area, the governing phenomena are described as identified with the aid of existing experimental data. Existing analytical methods are reviewed, and the most promising method for each area used to perform some preliminary calculations. Based on these results, the strengths and weaknesses of the methods are defined, and research programs recommended to improve the methods as a result of better understanding of the flow mechanisms involved
Comparison of the prognostic value of measures of the tumor inflammatory cell infiltrate and tumor-associated stroma in patients with primary operable colorectal cancer
The aim of the present study was to compare the clinical utility of two measures of the
inflammatory cell infiltrate - a H&E-based assessment of the generalised inflammatory cell
infiltrate (the Klintrup-Mäkinen (KM) grade), and an immunohistochemistry-based
assessment of combined CD3+ and CD8+ T-cell density (the “Immunoscore”), in conjunction
with assessment of the tumor stroma percentage (TSP) in patients undergoing resection of
stage I-III colorectal cancer (CRC). 246 patients were identified from a prospectively
maintained database of CRC resections in a single surgical unit. Assessment of KM grade
and TSP was performed using full H&E sections. CD3+ and CD8+ T-cell density was
assessed on full sections and the Immunoscore calculated. KM grade and Immunoscore were
strongly associated (P<0.001). KM grade stratified cancer-specific survival (CSS) from 88%
to 66% (P=0.002) and Immunoscore from 93% to 61% (P<0.001). Immunoscore further
stratified survival of patients independent of KM grade from 94% (high KM, Im4) to 60%
(low KM, Im0/1). Furthermore, TSP stratified survival of patients with a weak inflammatory
cell infiltrate (low KM: from 75% to 47%; Im0/1: from 71% to 38%, both P<0.001) but not
those with a strong inflammatory infiltrate. On multivariate analysis, only Immunoscore (HR
0.44, P<0.001) and TSP (HR 2.04, P<0.001) were independently associated with CSS. These
results suggest that the prognostic value of an immunohistochemistry-based assessment of the
inflammatory cell infiltrate is superior to H&E-based assessment in patients undergoing
resection of stage I-III CRC. Furthermore, assessment of the tumor-associated stroma, using
TSP, further improves prediction of outcome
Cancer and systemic inflammation: treat the tumour and treat the host
Determinants of cancer progression and survival are multifactorial and host responses are increasingly appreciated to have a major role. Indeed, the development and maintenance of a systemic inflammatory response has been consistently observed to confer poorer outcome, in both early and advanced stage disease. For patients, cancer-associated symptoms are of particular importance resulting in a marked impact on day-to-day quality of life and are also associated with poorer outcome. These symptoms are now recognised to cluster with one another with anorexia, weight loss and physical function forming a recognised cluster whereas fatigue, pain and depression forming another. Importantly, it has become apparent that these symptom clusters are associated with presence of a systemic inflammatory response in the patient with cancer. Given the understanding of the above, there is now a need to intervene to moderate systemic inflammatory responses, where present. In this context the rationale for therapeutic intervention using nonselective anti-inflammatory agents is clear and compelling and likely to become a part of routine clinical practice in the near future. The published literature on therapeutic intervention using anti-inflammatory agents for cancer-associated symptoms was reviewed. There are important parallels with the development of useful treatments for the systemic inflammatory response in patients with rheumatological disease and cardiovascular disease
Tunneling spectra of strongly coupled superconductors: Role of dimensionality
We investigate numerically the signatures of collective modes in the
tunneling spectra of superconductors. The larger strength of the signatures
observed in the high-Tc superconductors, as compared to classical low-Tc
materials, is explained by the low dimensionality of these layered compounds.
We also show that the strong-coupling structures are dips (zeros in the d2I/dV2
spectrum) in d-wave superconductors, rather than the steps (peaks in d2I/dV2)
observed in classical s-wave superconductors. Finally we question the
usefulness of effective density of states models for the analysis of tunneling
data in d-wave superconductors.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Factors associated with the efficacy of polyp detection during routine flexible sigmoidoscopy
Objective: Flexible sigmoidoscopy reduces the incidence of colonic cancer through the detection and removal of premalignant adenomas. However, the efficacy of the procedure is variable. The aim of the present study was to examine factors associated with the efficacy of detecting polyps during flexible sigmoidoscopy.
Design and patients: Retrospective observational cohort study of all individuals undergoing routine flexible sigmoidoscopy in NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde from January 2013 to January 2016.
Results: A total of 7713 patients were included. Median age was 52 years and 50% were male. Polyps were detected in 1172 (13%) patients. On multivariate analysis, increasing age (OR 1.020 (1.016–1.023) p<0.001), male sex (OR 1.23 (1.10–1.38) p<0.001) and the use of any bowel preparation (OR 3.55 (1.47–8.57) p<0.001) were associated with increasing numbers of polyps being detected. There was no significant difference in the number of polyps found in patients who had received an oral laxative preparation compared with an enema (OR 3.81 (1.57–9.22) vs 3.45 (1.43–8.34)), or in those who received sedation versus those who had not (OR 1.00 vs 1.04 (0.91–1.17) p=0.591). Furthermore, the highest number of polyps was found when the sigmoidoscope was inserted to the descending colon (OR 1.30 (1.04–1.63)).
Conclusions: Increasing age, male sex and the utilisation of any bowel preparation were associated with an increased polyp detection rate. However, the use of sedation or oral laxative preparation appears to confer no additional benefit. In addition, the results indicate that insertion to the descending colon optimises the efficacy of flexible sigmoidoscopy polyp detection
Microtearing turbulence saturation via electron temperature flattening at low-order rational surfaces
Microtearing instability is one of the major sources of turbulent transport
in high- tokamaks. These modes lead to very localized transport at
low-order rational magnetic field lines, and we show that they can saturate by
flattening the local temperature gradient. This saturation process depends
crucially on the density of rational surfaces, and thus the system-size, and
gives rise to a worse-than-gyro-Bohm transport scaling for system-sizes typical
of existing tokamaks and simulations
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