3,902 research outputs found

    A Personal Reflection on the Last Half of the First Twenty-Five Years: Approaching the Millennium

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    25th Anniversary Special Reflection Sectio

    Spaces of Freedom for Citizens and Asylees in the EU and U.S.

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    If the Doctrine Loosely Fits, Wear It: Constitutional Adjudication in State Alienage Cases

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    This Article examines the Supreme Court\u27s approach to state legislative classifications based on alienage. He argues that the Court has freely permitted such classifications, under the equal protection clause, based on the use of the special public interest exception and the public/political function doctrine. The author examines the Court\u27s methods of adjudication and its interpretation of principles in this area, and examines the consequences for aliens and our system. He concludes that an appropriate standard of review requires an important governmental objective served by a closely drawn legislative classification, and recommends that a quasi-interpretivist method of adjudication be applied to the equal protection clause

    Spaces of Freedom for Citizens and Asylees in the EU and U.S.

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    Vincent R. Vasey Symposium: Foreword

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    Dedication Remarks

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    Keller Hall Dedicatory Speec

    Jacqueline de Proyart

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    Madame de Proyart était une femme de conviction, en particulier chrétienne ; de réflexion, comme le montrent la qualité et l’étendue de son œuvre ; d’action aussi au sein du monde universitaire. Professeur et chercheur de qualité, elle a été administrateur, au sein des universités de Poitiers puis de Bordeaux, mais aussi dans le cadre de l’Association française des russisants, qu’elle a dirigée avec talent pendant de nombreuses années avec le concours précieux de Sophie Lazarus. Il me semble..

    Affinity proteomics reveals elevated muscle proteins in plasma of children with cerebral malaria

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    Systemic inflammation and sequestration of parasitized erythrocytes are central processes in the pathophysiology of severe Plasmodium falciparum childhood malaria. However, it is still not understood why some children are more at risks to develop malaria complications than others. To identify human proteins in plasma related to childhood malaria syndromes, multiplex antibody suspension bead arrays were employed. Out of the 1,015 proteins analyzed in plasma from more than 700 children, 41 differed between malaria infected children and community controls, whereas 13 discriminated uncomplicated malaria from severe malaria syndromes. Markers of oxidative stress were found related to severe malaria anemia while markers of endothelial activation, platelet adhesion and muscular damage were identified in relation to children with cerebral malaria. These findings suggest the presence of generalized vascular inflammation, vascular wall modulations, activation of endothelium and unbalanced glucose metabolism in severe malaria. The increased levels of specific muscle proteins in plasma implicate potential muscle damage and microvasculature lesions during the course of cerebral malaria

    The metabolic effects of intermittent versus continuous feeding in critically ill patients

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    Intermittent (or bolus) feeding regimens in critically ill patients have been of increasing interest to clinicians and scientists. Changes in amino acid, fat and carbohydrate metabolites over time might yet deliver other benefits (e.g. modulation of the circadian rhythm and sleep, and impacts on ghrelin secretion, insulin resistance and autophagy). We set out to characterise these changes in metabolite concentration. The Intermittent versus Continuous Feeding in Critically Ill paitents study (NCT02358512) was an eight-centre single-blinded randomised controlled trial. Patients were randomised to received a continuous (control arm) or intermittent (6x/day, intervention arm) enteral feeding regimen. Blood samples were taken on trial days 1, 7 and 10 immediately before and 30 min after intermittent feeds, and at equivalent timepoints in the control arm. A pre-planned targeted metabolomic analysis was performend using Nuclear Resonance Spectroscopy. Five hundred and ninety four samples were analysed from 75 patients. A total of 24 amino acid-, 19 lipid based-, and 44 small molecule metabolite features. Across the main two axes of variation (40–60% and 6–8% of variance), no broad patterns distinguished between intermittent or continuous feeding arms, across intra-day sampling times or over the 10 days from initial ICU admission. Logfold decreases in abundance were seen in metabolites related to amino acids (Glutamine − 0.682; Alanine − 0.594), ketone body metabolism (Acetone − 0.64; 3-Hydroxybutyric Acid − 0.632; Acetonacetic Acid − 0.586), fatty acid (carnitine − 0.509) and carbohydrate metabolism (Maltose − 0.510; Citric Acid − 0.485). 2–3 Butanediol, a by-product of sugar-fermenting microbial metabolism also decreased (− 0.489). No correlation was seen with change in quadriceps muscle mass for any of the 20 metabolites varying with time (all p > 0.05). Increasing severity of organ failure was related to increasing ketone body metabolism (3 Hydroxybutyric Acid-1 and − 3; p = 0.056 and p = 0.014), carnitine deficiency (p = 0.002) and alanine abundancy (p − 0.005). A 6-times a day intermittent feeding regimen did not alter metabolite patterns across time compared to continuous feeding in critically ill patients, either within a 24 h period or across 10 days of intervention. Future research on intermittent feeding regimens should focus on clinical process benefits, or extended gut rest and fasting
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