556 research outputs found

    Same same but different: Code-Switching in Schweizer SMS – ein Vergleich zwischen vier Sprachen

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    This study examines the formal and functional aspects of code-switching (CS) in a Swiss corpus of 26'000 text messages (SMS). Four corpora (Swiss-German, French, Italian and Romansh) are compared with regard to the absolute number of CS, the languages used for CS, the grammatical properties of the CS elements and their potential functions. The aim is to find out: a) which patterns are representative of one or more individual lan-guages and b) which patterns are characteristic for SMS-communication in general and/or are valid for Switzerland as a whole. With regard to the differences in the number of CS and the languages used, the respective patterns seem to mirror the different lan-guage contact situations in Switzerland. As for the described CS-types, the corpora under scrutiny seem to share the extensive use of one-token alternations (isolated items) that carry out framing functions and may point out a shared type of minimal multilingual practice

    "EEG abnormalities" may represent a confounding factor in celiac disease. A 4-year follow-up family report

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    Objective: The occurrence of celiac disease (CD), electroencephalographic (EEG) abnormalities (with "subtle" seizures or even without any clinical seizures), and neurological disorders has been reported since the 1980s, though there has been no definitive consensus about the possible causal relationship. This topic is further complicated by the occurrence in infancy of 'clinical-EEG pictures' called 'benign epilepsy of infancy'. Methods and results: Here, we report a 4-year follow-up on two siblings with newly diagnosed biopsy-proven celiac disease showing EEG abnormalities not responsive to a gluten-free diet. Conclusions: This family report indicates that in patients with neurologically asymptomatic CD and EEG abnormalities, it is advisable to make a differential diagnosis between EEG abnormalities associated with CD and an incidental association with cortical hyperexcitability, with "subtle" seizures or even without any clinical seizures. Practice implications: A long follow-up may sometimes be required, as it was in the family described here, to clarify the etiopathogenetic and therapeutic relationships between clinical and EEG features in CD

    Secondo contributo alla conoscenza della flora esotica dell'Arcipelago Toscano, Italia

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    Si presenta qui un secondo contributo per la realizzazione di una Checklist della flora esotica dell'Arcipelago Toscano. Per ogni taxon sono riportati lo status di naturalizzazione, sia per ciascuna isola che per l'intero Arcipelago, e i dati relativi alla distribuzione locale. Delle 31 specie elencate, 18 risultano nuove per il territorio dell'Arcipelago Toscano, tra le quali 4 nuove per l'intera Toscana; le restanti sono nuove per una o più isole

    Circulating MicroRNAs in Elderly Type 2 Diabetic Patients

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    The circulating microRNAs (miRNAs) associated with type 2 diabetes (T2D) in elderly patients are still being defined. To identify novel miRNA biomarker candidates for monitoring responses to sitagliptin in such patients, we prospectively studied 40 T2D patients (age > 65) with HbA1c levels of 7.5–9.0% on metformin. After collection of baseline blood samples (t0), the dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPP-IV) inhibitor (DPP-IVi) sitagliptin was added to the metformin regimen, and patients were followed for 15 months. Patients with HbA1c0.5% after 3 and 15 months of therapy were classified as “responders” (group R, n = 34); all others were classified as “nonresponders” (group NR, n = 6). Circulating miRNA profiling was performed on plasma collected in each group before and after 15 months of therapy (t0 and t15). Intra- and intergroup comparison of miRNA profiles pinpointed three miRNAs that correlated with responses to sitagliptin: miR-378, which is a candidate biomarker of resistance to this DPP-IVi, and miR-126-3p and miR-223, which are associated with positive responses to the drug. The translational implications are as immediate as evident, with the possibility to develop noninvasive diagnostic tools to predict drug response and development of chronic complications

    Graphene decoupling through oxygen intercalation on Gr/Co and Gr/Co/Ir interfaces

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    We perform a density functional theory study of the effects of oxygen adsorption on the structural and electronic properties of Gr/Co(0001) and Gr/Co/Ir(111) interfaces. In both interfaces, the graphene-Co distance increases with increasing O concentration. The oxygen intercalation effectively decreases the electronic interaction, preventing the hybridization of graphene states with Co dd-orbitals, hence (partly) restoring the typical Dirac cone of pristine graphene. In the case of graphene/Co 1ML/Ir(111), which presents a moir\'e pattern, the interplay between the O distribution and the continuous change of the graphene-Co registry can be used to tune graphene corrugation and electronic properties. The computed electronic properties are in very good agreement with previously reported angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy and photoemission electron microscopy measurements for Gr/Co(0001).Comment: 15 pages, 15 figure

    Sonic hedgehog medulloblastoma cancer stem cells mirnome and transcriptome highlight novel functional networks

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    Molecular classification has improved the knowledge of medulloblastoma (MB), the most common malignant brain tumour in children, however current treatments cause severe side effects in patients. Cancer stem cells (CSCs) have been described in MB and represent a sub population characterised by self-renewal and the ability to generate tumour cells, thus representing the reservoir of the tumour. To investigate molecular pathways that characterise this sub population, we isolated CSCs from Sonic Hedgehog Medulloblastoma (SHH MB) arisen in Patched 1 (Ptch1) heterozygous mice, and performed miRNA-and mRNA-sequencing. Comparison of the miRNA-sequencing of SHH MB CSCs with that obtained from cerebellar Neural Stem Cells (NSCs), allowed us to obtain a SHH MB CSC miRNA differential signature. Pathway enrichment analysis in SHH MB CSCs mirnome and transcriptome was performed and revealed a series of enriched pathways. We focused on the putative targets of the SHH MB CSC miRNAs that were involved in the enriched pathways of interest, namely pathways in cancer, PI3k-Akt pathway and protein processing in endoplasmic reticulum pathway. In silico analysis was performed in SHH MB patients and identified several genes, whose expression was associated with worse overall survival of SHH MB patients. This study provides novel candidates whose functional role should be further investigated in SHH MB

    Efficient GW calculations via the interpolation of the screened interaction in momentum and frequency space: The case of graphene

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    The calculation of the GW self-energy may be a computational challenge due to the double convolution integrals over frequency and transferred momentum. In this work, we combine the recently developed multipole approximation (MPA) with the W-av method. MPA accurately approximates full-frequency response functions using a small number of poles, while W-av improves the convergence with respect to the Brillouin zone (BZ) sampling in 2D materials. The combination of these techniques is applied to obtain an accurate G0W0 QP band structure of graphene. The screened interaction of graphene shows a complex low-energy frequency dependence, that is poorly described with plasmon pole approximations (PPA), and a sharp q dependence of the dynamical dielectric function over momentum transfer, making standard BZ integration techniques inefficient. Within the present development, we compare the calculated QP band structure of graphene finding an excellent agreement with angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) measurements

    Is drop-out from obesity treatment a predictable and preventable event?

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    BACKGROUND: Attrition is an important but understudied issue that plays a vital role in the successful treatment of obesity. To date, most studies focusing on attrition rates and/or its predictors have been based on pretreatment data routinely collected for other purposes. Our study specifically aims at identifying the predictors of drop-out focusing on empirically or theoretically-based factors. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective observational study in an academic outpatient clinical nutrition service in Pavia, Italy. We examined a total of 98 adult obese patients (36 males, 62 females) who underwent a 6-month dietary behavioral weight-loss treatment at our Center. Pre-treatment and treatment-related variables were collected or calculated from clinical charts in order to discriminate those subjects who completed treatment from those who abandoned it before its completion. Multivariable regression analysis was used to identify the independent predictors of drop-out. RESULTS: The drop-out rates were 21% at 1 month and 57% at 6 months. Compared with completers, noncompleters were significantly younger in terms of age at first dieting attempt (24.0 ± 10.7 vs. 31.3 ± 11.2 years, P = 0.005), had lower diastolic blood pressure (87.8 ± 9.7 vs. 92.7 ± 11.4 mmHg, P = 0.022), had a lower baseline body fat percentage (38.5 ± 6.4 vs. 41.2 ± 4.4% weight, P = 0.015), and had a lower percentage of early weight loss (-1.8 ± 1.8% vs. -3.1 ± 2.1%, P = 0.035). Moreover, noncompleters significantly differed from completers with regard to type of referral (34.1% vs. 53.3% sent by a physician, P = 0.036) and SCL-90 anger-hostility subscale (0.83 ± 0.72 vs. 0.53 ± 0.51, P = 0.022). A multivariable logistic regression analysis including pre-treatment variables showed that body fat percentage (P = 0.030) and SCL-90 anger-hostility subscale (P = 0.021) were independently associated with attrition. In a multivariable model considering both pre-treatment and treatment-related factors, attrition was found to be independently related to the age at first dieting attempt (P = 0.016) and the achievement of early weight loss (P = 0.029). CONCLUSIONS: Our data confirm that psychopathological tracts, early dieting attempts, and a poor initial treatment response are key independent predictors of drop-out from obesity treatment

    Tumour T1 changes in vivo are highly predictive of response to chemotherapy and reflect the number of viable tumour cells – a preclinical MR study in mice

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    BACKGROUND: Effective chemotherapy rapidly reduces the spin–lattice relaxation of water protons (T(1)) in solid tumours and this change (ΔT(1)) often precedes and strongly correlates with the eventual change in tumour volume (TVol). To understand the biological nature of ΔT(1), we have performed studies in vivo and ex vivo with the allosteric mTOR inhibitor, everolimus. METHODS: Mice bearing RIF-1 tumours were studied by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to determine TVol and T(1), and MR spectroscopy (MRS) to determine levels of the proliferation marker choline and levels of lipid apoptosis markers, prior to and 5 days (endpoint) after daily treatment with vehicle or everolimus (10 mg/kg). At the endpoint, tumours were ablated and an entire section analysed for cellular and necrotic quantification and staining for the proliferation antigen Ki67 and cleaved-caspase-3 as a measure of apoptosis. The number of blood-vessels (BV) was evaluated by CD31 staining. Mice bearing B16/BL6 melanoma tumours were studied by MRI to determine T(1) under similar everolimus treatment. At the endpoint, cell bioluminescence of the tumours was measured ex vivo. RESULTS: Everolimus blocked RIF-1 tumour growth and significantly reduced tumour T(1) and total choline (Cho) levels, and increased polyunsaturated fatty-acids which are markers of apoptosis. Immunohistochemistry showed that everolimus reduced the %Ki67(+) cells but did not affect caspase-3 apoptosis, necrosis, BV-number or cell density. The change in T(1) (ΔT(1)) correlated strongly with the changes in TVol and Cho and %Ki67(+). In B16/BL6 tumours, everolimus also decreased T(1) and this correlated with cell bioluminescence; another marker of cell viability. Receiver-operating-characteristic curves (ROC) for everolimus on RIF-1 tumours showed that ΔT(1) had very high levels of sensitivity and specificity (ROC(AUC) = 0.84) and this was confirmed for the cytotoxic patupilone in the same tumour model (ROC(AUC) = 0.97). CONCLUSION: These studies suggest that ΔT(1) is not a measure of cell density but reflects the decreased number of remaining viable and proliferating tumour cells due to perhaps cell and tissue destruction releasing proteins and/or metals that cause T(1) relaxation. ΔT(1) is a highly sensitive and specific predictor of response. This MRI method provides the opportunity to stratify a patient population during tumour therapy in the clinic
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