29 research outputs found
On the correlation between fragility and stretching in glassforming liquids
We study the pressure and temperature dependences of the dielectric
relaxation of two molecular glassforming liquids, dibutyl phtalate and
m-toluidine. We focus on two characteristics of the slowing down of relaxation,
the fragility associated with the temperature dependence and the stretching
characterizing the relaxation function. We combine our data with data from the
literature to revisit the proposed correlation between these two quantities. We
do this in light of constraints that we suggest to put on the search for
empirical correlations among properties of glassformers. In particular, argue
that a meaningful correlation is to be looked for between stretching and
isochoric fragility, as both seem to be constant under isochronic conditions
and thereby reflect the intrinsic effect of temperature
Polymyositis/Dermatomyositis: the current position
Polymyositis/dermatomyositis are a heterogeneous group of diseases characterised by
skeletal muscle inflammation and necrosis.' 2
Since an excellent clinical description in 1903 by
Steiner of dermatomyositis, which is essentially
still valid,3 much progress has been made
towards our understanding of this group of
diseases. The most widely used clinical classification of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies is
the one proposed by Bohan and Peter in 1975.4
That was a landmark, providing guidelines in
clinical practice to accurate diagnosis of inflammatory myopathies and standardisation of
studies. Nonetheless, the classification was
based on clinical data. In view of recent
histological and immunological studies the classification proposed by Karpati et al in 1987
seems better to fit our current view of such
diseases5 (table 1). In this review we focus on
recent developments in polymyositis/dermatomyositis, analysing separately the currently
considered third major form of inflammatory
myopathy-inclusion body myositis