1,048 research outputs found
Mean temperature and humidity variations, along with patient age, predict the number of visits for renal colic in a large urban Emergency Department: Results of a 9-year survey
Background: A marked geographic variability has been reported in stone disease, partially attributed to the Mean Annual Temperature (MAT), as well as to the seasonal fluctuations of climatic conditions. Accordingly, peaks in Emergency Department (ED) visits for renal colic are commonplace during the summer.
Materials and methods: The aim of this study was to assess the influence of day-by-day climate changes on the number of visits as a result of renal colic in the ED (City of Parma, northern Italy, temperate continental climate). A total of 10,802 colic episodes were retrieved from the database during a period of 3286 days (January 2002 to December 2010).
Results: The analysis of the data confirms a peak of renal colic cases during the summer, especially in July (maximum number of 4.1 cases of renal colic per day), and a winter nadir (minimum number of 2.7 cases of renal colic per day, in February). The linear regression analysis shows a high and significant correlation between the mean number of cases of renal colic per day and both the mean daily temperature (positive association, R = 0.93; p 70 years of age.
Conclusion: The combined data suggest that the hot and dry climate would favor an acceleration of the process of stone formation, which seems more pronounced in the older population
Adsorption and temperature-dependent decomposition of SO<sub>2</sub> on Cu(100) and Cu(111): A fast and high-resolution core-level spectroscopy study
The adsorption and temperature-dependent decomposition of SO2 on Cu(100) and Cu(111) have been studied by fast and high-resolution core-level photoemission. The analysis of the S 2p and O 1s data shows that molecular SO2 adsorption dominates at 170 K. On heating the SO2-covered surfaces to about room temperature, SO2 decomposes into SO+O+S. On further heating SO+O recombine to form SO2, which is the only species detected in corresponding temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) experiments. From the temperature- (time-) dependent S and O coverages a ‘‘TPD curve’’ can be constructed
Structural investigation of the Rh(110)-c(2x2)-CN phase
The Rh(110)-c(2x2)-CN phase has been examined by means of scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and full dynamical low-energy electron diffraction (LEED). From STM large c(2x2) domains are observed. The detailed LEED-IV structural analysis indicates that CN is located in the grooves of the (110) surface, approximately atop second layer rhodium atoms. The CN molecules lie almost flat with their bond axes oriented perpendicular to the rhodium troughs. An outward relaxation of the first substrate interlayer distance and a strong buckling of the second Rh layer are induced by CN adsorption. Calculated and experimental intensity curves are in good agreement. An exhaustive set of other possible adsorption sites and configurations was tested and excluded on the basis of reliability-factor analysis
DOMANDE E RISPOSTE SUL SISTEMA INTEGRATO DI VALUTAZIONE PREVENTIVA DELL'INQUINAMENTO ELETTROMAGNETICO AMBIENTALE A BASSISSIMA FREQUENZA PLEIA-CERT
L’ARPAT e l’IFAC-CNR collaborano ormai da oltre cinque anni allo sviluppo del Catasto degli Elettrodotti della Regione Toscana (CERT) e di un sistema integrato di applicazioni, denominato PLEIA (Power Line Electromagnetic Impact Assessment), per il suo utilizzo ai fini del calcolo del campo magnetico nello spazio circostante gli elettrodotti e, in particolare, della determinazione delle fasce di rispetto. Per rendere possibile a queste istituzioni un utilizzo corretto e consapevole degli strumenti realizzati e dei risultati da essi forniti, è stato indispensabile documentare innanzitutto i presupposti tecnici e metodologici che stanno alla base delle applicazioni sviluppate: a questo scopo, è venuto spontaneamente a crearsi un gruppo di lavoro informale tra esperti dell’ARPAT, dell’IFAC e della Regione Toscana. Il gruppo ha lavorato secondo un meccanismo virtuoso in cui, da un lato, si è cercato di formulare quesiti puntuali e ben definiti e, dall'altro, di rispondervi nel modo più chiaro ed esauriente possibile. Ne è scaturito un documento a domande e risposte che, opportunamente modificato, è riproposto in questa sede, perché mette in evidenza in modo semplice ma non banale alcuni rilevanti aspetti tecnici, e costituisce un buon documento introduttivo sulle potenzialità del sistema sviluppato. Le prime domande riguardano il sistema PLEIA-CERT in generale, mentre nella seconda parte si approfondiscono in particolare le modalità di calcolo delle fasce di rispetto che, anche alla luce di recenti sviluppi normativi, hanno assunto un ruolo di primaria importanza
Determinant-Gravity: Cosmological implications
We analyze the action as a possible alternative or addition to the Einstein gravity.
Choosing a particular form of we can restore the
Einstein gravity and, if , we obtain the cosmological constant
term. Taking and expanding the action in , we obtain as a leading term the Einstein Lagrangian with a cosmological
constant proportional to and a series of higher order operators. In
general case of non-vanishing and new cosmological
solutions for the Robertson-Walker metric are obtained.Comment: revtex format, 5 pages,8 figures,references adde
On the Spontaneous CP Breaking at Finite Temperature in a Nonminimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
We study the spontaneous CP breaking at finite temperature in the Higgs
sector in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model with a gauge singlet. We
consider the contribution of the standard model particles and that of stops,
charginos, neutralinos, charged and neutral Higgs boson to the one-loop
effective potential. Plasma effects for all bosons are also included. Assuming
CP conservation at zero temperature, so that experimental constraints coming
from, {\it e.g.}, the electric dipole moment of the neutron are avoided, and
the electroweak phase transition to be of the first order and proceeding via
bubble nucleation, we show that spontaneous CP breaking cannot occur inside the
bubble mainly due to large effects coming from the Higgs sector. However,
spontaneous CP breaking can be present in the region of interest for the
generation of the baryon asymmetry, namely inside the bubble wall. The
important presence of very tiny explicit CP violating phases is also commented.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figures available upon request, DFPD 94/TH/38 and SISSA
94/81-A preprint
Deep learning-based methods for prostate segmentation in magnetic resonance imaging
Magnetic Resonance Imaging-based prostate segmentation is an essential task for adaptive radiotherapy and for radiomics studies whose purpose is to identify associations between imaging features and patient outcomes. Because manual delineation is a time-consuming task, we present three deep-learning (DL) approaches, namely UNet, efficient neural network (ENet), and efficient residual factorized convNet (ERFNet), whose aim is to tackle the fully-automated, real-time, and 3D delineation process of the prostate gland on T2-weighted MRI. While UNet is used in many biomedical image delineation applications, ENet and ERFNet are mainly applied in self-driving cars to compensate for limited hardware availability while still achieving accurate segmentation. We apply these models to a limited set of 85 manual prostate segmentations using the k-fold validation strategy and the Tversky loss function and we compare their results. We find that ENet and UNet are more accurate than ERFNet, with ENet much faster than UNet. Specifically, ENet obtains a dice similarity coefficient of 90.89% and a segmentation time of about 6 s using central processing unit (CPU) hardware to simulate real clinical conditions where graphics processing unit (GPU) is not always available. In conclusion, ENet could be efficiently applied for prostate delineation even in small image training datasets with potential benefit for patient management personalization
Spectroscopic link between adsorption site occupation and local surface chemical reactivity
In this Letter we show that sequences of adsorbate-induced shifts of surface core level (SCL) x-ray photoelectron spectra contain profound information on surface changes of electronic structure and reactivity. Energy shifts and intensity changes of time-lapsed spectral components follow simple rules, from which adsorption sites are directly determined. Theoretical calculations rationalize the results for transition metal surfaces in terms of the energy shift of the d-band center of mass and this proves that adsorbate-induced SCL shifts provide a spectroscopic measure of local surface reactivity
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