497 research outputs found
Probability of ventricular fibrillation: allometric model based on the ST deviation
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Allometry, in general biology, measures the relative growth of a part in relation to the whole living organism. Using reported clinical data, we apply this concept for evaluating the probability of ventricular fibrillation based on the electrocardiographic ST-segment deviation values.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Data collected by previous reports were used to fit an allometric model in order to estimate ventricular fibrillation probability. Patients presenting either with death, myocardial infarction or unstable angina were included to calculate such probability as, <it>VF</it><sub><it>p </it></sub><it>= δ + β (ST)</it>, for three different ST deviations. The coefficients <it>δ </it>and <it>β </it>were obtained as the best fit to the clinical data extended over observational periods of 1, 6, 12 and 48 months from occurrence of the first reported chest pain accompanied by ST deviation.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>By application of the above equation in log-log representation, the fitting procedure produced the following overall coefficients: Average <it>β </it>= 0.46, with a maximum = 0.62 and a minimum = 0.42; Average <it>δ </it>= 1.28, with a maximum = 1.79 and a minimum = 0.92. For a 2 mm ST-deviation, the full range of predicted ventricular fibrillation probability extended from about 13% at 1 month up to 86% at 4 years after the original cardiac event.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>These results, at least preliminarily, appear acceptable and still call for full clinical test. The model seems promising, especially if other parameters were taken into account, such as blood cardiac enzyme concentrations, ischemic or infarcted epicardial areas or ejection fraction. It is concluded, considering these results and a few references found in the literature, that the allometric model shows good predictive practical value to aid medical decisions.</p
WINGS: a WIde-field nearby Galaxy-cluster survey III. Deep near-infrared photometry of 28 nearby clusters
Context. This is the third paper of a series devoted to the WIde-field Nearby
Galaxy-cluster Survey (WINGS).WINGS is a long term project aimed at gathering
wide-field, multiband imaging and spectroscopy of galaxies in a complete sample
of 77 X-ray selected nearby clusters (0.04<z<0.07) located far from the
galactic plane (b>20deg). The main goal of this project is to establish a local
reference sample for evolutionary studies of galaxies and galaxy clusters.
Aims. This paper presents the near-infrared (J,K) photometric catalogs of 28
clusters of the WINGS sample and describes the procedures followed to construct
them. Methods. The raw data has been reduced at CASU and special care has been
devoted to the final coadding, drizzling technique, astrometric solution and
magnitude calibration for the WFCAM pipeline processed data. We have
constructed the photometric catalogs based on the final calibrated coadded
mosaics (0.79 deg2) in J (19 clusters) and K (27 clusters) bands. A customized
interactive pipeline has been used to clean the catalogs and to make mock
images for photometric errors and completeness estimates. Results. We provide
deep near-infrared photometric catalogs (90% complete in detection rate at
total magnitudes J =20.5, K =19.4, and in classification rate at J = 19.5 and K
= 18.5), giving positions, geometrical parameters, total and aperture
magnitudes for all detected sources. For each field we classify the detected
sources as stars, galaxies and objects of "unknown" nature.Comment: Published by A&A501.851 - 15 pages, 3 tables, 13 figures. Catalogs
will be available via CDS and http://web.oapd.inaf.it/wing
Chronic oleoylethanolamide treatment decreases hepatic triacylglycerol level in rat liver by a pparγ/srebp-mediated suppression of fatty acid and triacylglycerol synthesis
none11noOleoylethanolamide (OEA) is a naturally occurring bioactive lipid belonging to the family of N-acylethanolamides. A variety of beneficial effects have been attributed to OEA, although the greater interest is due to its potential role in the treatment of obesity, fatty liver, and eating-related disorders. To better clarify the mechanism of the antiadipogenic effect of OEA in the liver, using a lipidomic study performed by1H-NMR, LC-MS/MS and thin-layer chromatography analyses we evaluated the whole lipid composition of rat liver, following a two-week daily treatment of OEA (10 mg kg−1 i.p.). We found that OEA induced a significant reduction in hepatic triacylglycerol (TAG) content and significant changes in sphingolipid composition and ceramidase activity. We associated the antiadipogenic effect of OEA to decreased activity and expression of key enzymes involved in fatty acid and TAG syntheses, such as acetyl-CoA carboxylase, fatty acid synthase, diacylglycerol acyltransferase, and stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1. Moreover, we found that both SREBP-1 and PPARγ protein expression were significantly reduced in the liver of OEA-treated rats. Our findings add significant and important insights into the molecular mechanism of OEA on hepatic adipogenesis, and suggest a possible link between the OEA-induced changes in sphingolipid metabolism and suppression of hepatic TAG level.openRomano A.; Friuli M.; Del Coco L.; Longo S.; Vergara D.; Del Boccio P.; Valentinuzzi S.; Cicalini I.; Fanizzi F.P.; Gaetani S.; Giudetti A.M.Romano, A.; Friuli, M.; Del Coco, L.; Longo, S.; Vergara, D.; Del Boccio, P.; Valentinuzzi, S.; Cicalini, I.; Fanizzi, F. P.; Gaetani, S.; Giudetti, A. M
The Shapes of BCGs and normal Ellipticals in Nearby Clusters
We compare the apparent axial ratio distributions of Brightest Cluster
Galaxies (BCGs) and normal ellipticals (Es) in our sample of 75 galaxy clusters
from the WINGS survey. Most BCGs in our clusters (69%) are classified as cD
galaxies. The sample of cDs has been completed by 14 additional cDs (non-BCGs)
we found in our clusters. We find that: (i) Es have triaxial shape, the
triaxiality sharing almost evenly the intrinsic axial ratios parameter space,
with a weak preference for prolateness; (ii) the BCGs have triaxial shape as
well. However, their tendence towards prolateness is much stronger than in the
case of Es. Such a strong prolateness appears entirely due to the sizeable
(dominant) component of cDs inside the WINGS sample of BCGs. In fact, while the
'normal'(non-cD) BCGs do not differ from Es, as far as the shape distribution
is concerned, the axial ratio distribution of BCG_cD galaxies is found to
support quite prolate shapes; (iii) our result turns out to be strongly at
variance with the only similar, previous analysis by Ryden et al.(1993)(RLP93),
where BCGs and Es were found to share the same axial ratio distribution; (iv)
our data suggest that the above discrepancy is mainly caused by the different
criteria that RLP93 and ourselves use to select the cluster samples, coupled
with a preference of cDs to reside in powerful X-ray emitting clusters; (v) the
GIF2 N-body results suggest that the prolateness of the BCGs (in particular the
cDs) could reflect the shape of the associated dark matter halos.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
WINGS-SPE Spectroscopy in the WIde-field Nearby Galaxy-cluster Survey
Aims. We present the results from a comprehensive spectroscopic survey of the
WINGS (WIde-field Nearby Galaxy-cluster Survey) clusters, a program called
WINGS-SPE. The WINGS-SPE sample consists of 48 clusters, 22 of which are in the
southern sky and 26 in the north. The main goals of this spectroscopic survey
are: (1) to study the dynamics and kinematics of the WINGS clusters and their
constituent galaxies, (2) to explore the link between the spectral properties
and the morphological evolution in different density environments and across a
wide range in cluster X-ray luminosities and optical properties. Methods. Using
multi object fiber fed spectrographs, we observed our sample of WINGS cluster
galaxies at an intermediate resolu- tion of 6-9 A and, using a
cross-correlation technique, we measured redshifts with a mean accuracy of
about 45 km/s. Results. We present redshift measurements for 6137 galaxies and
their first analyses. Details of the spectroscopic observations are reported.
The WINGS-SPE has about 30% overlap with previously published data sets,
allowing us to do both a complete comparison with the literature and to extend
the catalogs. Conclusions. Using our redshifts, we calculate the velocity
dispersion for all the clusters in the WINGS-SPE sample. We almost trip- licate
the number of member galaxies known in each cluster with respect to previous
works. We also investigate the X-ray luminosity vs. velocity dispersion
relation for our WINGS-SPE clusters, and find it to be consistent with the form
Lx proportional to sigma^4.Comment: 16 pages, 10 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in
Astronomy and Astrophysic
The red-sequence of 72 WINGS local galaxy clusters
We study the color-magnitude red sequence and blue fraction of 72 X-ray
selected galaxy clusters at z=0.04-0.07 from the WINGS survey, searching for
correlations between the characteristics of the red sequence and the
environment. We consider the slope and scatter of the red sequence, the number
ratio of red luminous-to-faint galaxies, the blue fraction and the fractions of
ellipticals, S0s and spirals that compose the red sequence. None of these
quantities correlate with the cluster velocity dispersion, X-ray luminosity,
number of cluster substructures, BCG prevalence over next brightest galaxies
and spatial concentration of ellipticals. Instead, the properties of the red
sequence depend strongly on local galaxy density. Higher density regions have a
lower RS scatter, a higher luminous-to-faint ratio, a lower blue fraction, and
a lower spiral fraction on the RS. Our results highlight the prominent effect
of the local density in setting the epoch when galaxies become passive and join
the red sequence, as opposed to the mass of the galaxy host structure.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Implementation of drift velocities and currents in SOLEDGE2D-EIRENE
International audienceIn order to improve cross-field transport description, drifts and currents have been implemented in SOLEDGE2D-EIRENE. The derivation of an equation for the electric potential is recalled. The resolution of current equation is tested in a simple slab case. WEST divertor simulations in forward-B and reverse-B fields are also discussed. A significant increase of ExB shear is observed in the forward-B configuration that could explain a favorable L-H transition in this case
Morphology of galaxies in the WINGS clusters
We present the morphological catalog of galaxies in nearby clusters of the
WINGS survey (Fasano et al. 2006). The catalog contains a total number of 39923
galaxies, for which we provide the automatic estimates of the morphological
type applying the purposely devised tool MORPHOT to the V-band WINGS imaging.
For ~3000 galaxies we also provide visual estimates of the morphological types.
A substantial part of the paper is devoted to the description of the MORPHOT
tool, whose application is limited, at least for the moment, to the WINGS
imaging only. The approach of the tool to the automation of morphological
classification is a non parametric and fully empiri- cal one. In particular,
MORPHOT exploits 21 morphological diagnostics, directly and easily computable
from the galaxy image, to provide two independent classifications: one based on
a Maximum Likelihood (ML), semi-analytical technique, the other one on a Neural
Network (NN) machine. A suitably selected sample of ~1000 visually clas- sified
WINGS galaxies is used to calibrate the diagnostics for the ML estimator and as
a training set in the NN machine. The final morphological estimator combines
the two techniques and proves to be effective both when applied to an
additional test sample of ~1000 visually classified WINGS galaxies and when
compared with small samples of SDSS galaxies visually classified by Fukugita et
al. (2007) and Nair et al. (2010). Finally, besides the galaxy morphology
distribution (corrected for field contamination) in the WINGS clusters, we
present the ellipticity ({\epsilon}), color (B-V) and Sersic index (n)
distributions for different morphological types, as well as the morphological
fractions as a function of the clustercentric distance (in units of R200).Comment: 27 pages, 25 figures, 4 Tables, accepted for publication on MNRA
CANDELS Observations of the Structural Properties and Evolution of Galaxies in a Cluster at z=1.62
We discuss the structural and morphological properties of galaxies in a
z=1.62 proto-cluster using near-IR imaging data from Hubble Space Telescope
Wide Field Camera 3 data of the Cosmic Assembly Near-IR Deep Extragalactic
Legacy Survey (CANDELS). The cluster galaxies exhibit a clear color-morphology
relation: galaxies with colors of quiescent stellar populations generally have
morphologies consistent with spheroids, and galaxies with colors consistent
with ongoing star formation have disk-like and irregular morphologies. The size
distribution of the quiescent cluster galaxies shows a deficit of compact (<
1kpc), massive galaxies compared to CANDELS field galaxies at z=1.6. As a
result the cluster quiescent galaxies have larger average effective sizes
compared to field galaxies at fixed mass at greater than 90% significance.
Combined with data from the literature, the size evolution of quiescent cluster
galaxies is relatively slow from z~1.6 to the present, growing as
(1+z)^(-0.6+/-0.1). If this result is generalizable, then it implies that
physical processes associated with the denser cluster region seems to have
caused accelerated size growth in quiescent galaxies prior to z=1.6 and slower
subsequent growth at z<1.6 compared to galaxies in the lower density field. The
quiescent cluster galaxies at z=1.6 have higher ellipticities compared to lower
redshift samples at fixed mass, and their surface-brightness profiles suggest
that they contain extended stellar disks. We argue the cluster galaxies require
dissipationless (i.e., gas-poor or "dry") mergers to reorganize the disk
material and to match the relations for ellipticity, stellar mass, size, and
color of early-type galaxies in z<1 clusters.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 14 pages in emulateapj format.
Replacement includes improvements from referee report, and updates and
additions to reference
Algorithm for identifying and separating beats from arterial pulse records
BACKGROUND: This project was designed as an epidemiological aid-selecting tool for a small country health center with the general objective of screening out possible coronary patients. Peripheral artery function can be non-invasively evaluated by impedance plethysmography. Changes in these vessels appear as good predictors of future coronary behavior. Impedance plethysmography detects volume variations after simple occlusive maneuvers that may show indicative modifications in arterial/venous responses. Averaging of a series of pulses is needed and this, in turn, requires proper determination of the beginning and end of each beat. Thus, the objective here is to describe an algorithm to identify and separate out beats from a plethysmographic record. A secondary objective was to compare the output given by human operators against the algorithm. METHODS: The identification algorithm detected the beat's onset and end on the basis of the maximum rising phase, the choice of possible ventricular systolic starting points considering cardiac frequency, and the adjustment of some tolerance values to optimize the behavior. Out of 800 patients in the study, 40 occlusive records (supradiastolic- subsystolic) were randomly selected without any preliminary diagnosis. Radial impedance plethysmographic pulse and standard ECG were recorded digitizing and storing the data. Cardiac frequency was estimated with the Power Density Function and, thereafter, the signal was derived twice, followed by binarization of the first derivative and rectification of the second derivative. The product of the two latter results led to a weighing signal from which the cycles' onsets and ends were established. Weighed and frequency filters are needed along with the pre-establishment of their respective tolerances. Out of the 40 records, 30 seconds strands were randomly chosen to be analyzed by the algorithm and by two operators. Sensitivity and accuracy were calculated by means of the true/false and positive/negative criteria. Synchronization ability was measured through the coefficient of variation and the median value of correlation for each patient. These parameters were assessed by means of Friedman's ANOVA and Kendall Concordance test. RESULTS: Sensitivity was 97% and 91% for the two operators, respectively, while accuracy was cero for both of them. The synchronism variability analysis was significant (p < 0.01) for the two statistics, showing that the algorithm produced the best result. CONCLUSION: The proposed algorithm showed good performance as expressed by its high sensitivity. The correlation analysis demonstrated that, from the synchronism point of view, the algorithm performed the best detection. Patients with marked arrhythmic processes are not good candidates for this kind of analysis. At most, they would be singled out by the algorithm and, thereafter, to be checked by an operator
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