165 research outputs found
Light-cone fluctuations and the renormalized stress tensor of a massless scalar field
We investigate the effects of light-cone fluctuations over the renormalized
vacuum expectation value of the stress-energy tensor of a real massless
minimally coupled scalar field defined in a ()-dimensional flat space-time
with topology . For modeling the influence of
light-cone fluctuations over the quantum field, we consider a random
Klein-Gordon equation. We study the case of centered Gaussian processes. After
taking into account all the realizations of the random processes, we present
the correction caused by random fluctuations. The averaged renormalized vacuum
expectation value of the stress-energy associated with the scalar field is
presented
Fat Tissue’s Graft in Osteoarthritis Treatment: Indications, Preparations, and Results
Osteoarthritis (OA) represents one of the most common causes of joint pain and disability with related changes in bone morphology. In last years, this pathology is steadily increasing due to the continuous increase in the average life expectancy and the rate of active population. In recent years, there have been many conservative treatments for symptomatic gonarthrosis in order to reduce pain and delay or avoid the implantation of a knee prosthesis. The most studied and used was infiltrating treatment. Our group has been paying attention to regenerative medicine for many years, focusing on the characteristics of adipose tissue and the presence of multipotent mesenchymal cells, particularly in the vascular stromal area. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) of adipose tissue can commit toward the chondrogenic, osteogenic, adipogenic, myogenic, and neurogenic lineages. Our group has continued the studies in this field by submitting this to treatment patients with grade II–III arthrosis according to the scale of Kellgren-Lawrence or patients with IV degree of such scale inoperable for internal reasons. To date, with a 4-year follow-up, our results are satisfactory in terms of pain reduction, improvement in joint function, and recovery of daily and sports activities
Wind Direction Data from a Coastal HF Radar System in the Gulf of Naples (Central Mediterranean Sea)
Results on the accuracy of SeaSonde High Frequency (HF) radar wind direction measurements in the Gulf of Naples (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea, Central Mediterranean Sea) are here presented. The investigation was carried out for a winter period (2 February–6 March) and for one summer month (August) of the reference year 2009. HF radar measurements were compared with in situ recordings from a weather station and with model data, with the aim of resolving both small scale and large scale dynamics. The analysis of the overall performance of the HF radar system in the Gulf of Naples shows that the data are reliable when the wind speed exceeds a 5 m/s threshold. Despite such a limitation, this study confirms the potentialities of these systems as monitoring platforms in coastal areas and suggests further efforts towards their improvement
82. Cftr Gene Targeting in Murine ES Cells Mediated by the SFHR Technique
Small Fragment Homologous Recombination (SFHR)-mediated targeting is a gene therapy strategy where a specific genomic locus is modified through a target exchange between a small DNA fragment (SDF) and genomic DNA. Here we demonstrate that SFHR can stably introduce a 3-bp deletion (corresponding to |[Delta]|F508) within Cftr (Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator) locus in the genome of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. SDFs (about 6.4|[times]|105 molecules per cell) carrying the |[Delta]|F508 mutation were transfected by nucleofection protocol. About 12% of transcript corresponding to deleted allele was detected and about 60% of the electroporated cells no longer had measurable CFTR-dependent chloride efflux. The CFTR activity was also analyzed by measuring the chloride efflux by the fluorescence microscopy-coupled digital video imaging system in each ES cell colony, previously loaded with MQAE, a chloride sensitive dye. An average of 4-6 regions for each cell colony was analysed to verify the genotypic homogeneity of each colony. In fact all regions examined in each colony showed a similar significant chloride efflux after PKA activation. Moreover on twelve electroporated ES colonies analysed, eight were successfully mutated (Cl- efflux not significantly different from zero) while four colonies showed Cl-efflux CFTR-dependent not significantly different from the untreated ones
During Stably Suppressive Antiretroviral Therapy Integrated HIV-1 DNA Load in Peripheral Blood is Associated with the Frequency of CD8 Cells Expressing HLA-DR/DP/DQ
BACKGROUND: Characterising the correlates of HIV persistence improves understanding of disease pathogenesis and guides the design of curative strategies. This study investigated factors associated with integrated HIV-1 DNA load during consistently suppressive first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART).
METHOD: Total, integrated, and 2-long terminal repeats (LTR) circular HIV-1 DNA, residual plasma HIV-1 RNA, T-cell activation markers, and soluble CD14 (sCD14) were measured in peripheral blood of 50 patients that had received 1-14 years of efavirenz-based or nevirapine-based therapy.
RESULTS: Integrated HIV-1 DNA load (per 10(6) peripheral blood mononuclear cells) was median 1.9 log10 copies (interquartile range 1.7-2.2) and showed a mean difference of 0.2 log10 copies per 10 years of suppressive ART (95% confidence interval - 0.2, 0.6; p = 0.28). It was positively correlated with total HIV-1 DNA load and frequency of CD8(+)HLA-DR/DP/DQ(+) cells, and was also higher in subjects with higher sCD14 levels, but showed no correlation with levels of 2-LTR circular HIV-1 DNA and residual plasma HIV-1 RNA, or the frequency of CD4(+)CD38(+) and CD8(+)CD38(+) cells. Adjusting for pre-ART viral load, duration of suppressive ART, CD4 cell counts, residual plasma HIV-1 RNA levels, and sCD14 levels, integrated HIV-1 DNA load was mean 0.5 log10 copies higher for each 50% higher frequency of CD8(+)HLA-DR/DP/DQ(+) cells (95% confidence interval 0.2, 0.9; p = 0.01).
CONCLUSIONS: The observed positive association between integrated HIV-1 DNA load and frequency of CD8(+)DR/DP/DQ(+) cells indicates that a close correlation between HIV persistence and immune activation continues during consistently suppressive therapy. The inducers of the distinct activation profile warrant further investigation
Virological and immunological features of SARS-CoV-2-infected children who develop neutralizing antibodies
As the global COVID-19 pandemic progresses, it is paramount to gain knowledge on adaptive immunity to SARS-CoV-2 in children to define immune correlates of protection upon immunization or infection. We analyzed anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies and their neutralizing activity (PRNT) in 66 COVID-19-infected children at 7 (\ub12) days after symptom onset. Individuals with specific humoral responses presented faster virus clearance and lower viral load associated with a reduced in vitro infectivity. We demonstrated that the frequencies of SARS-CoV-2-specific CD4+CD40L+ T cells and Spike-specific B cells were associated with the anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies and the magnitude of neutralizing activity. The plasma proteome confirmed the association between cellular and humoral SARS-CoV-2 immunity, and PRNT+ patients show higher viral signal transduction molecules (SLAMF1, CD244, CLEC4G). This work sheds lights on cellular and humoral anti-SARS-CoV-2 responses in children, which may drive future vaccination trial endpoints and quarantine measures policies
Laboratory experiments reveal intrinsic self-sustained oscillations in ocean relevant rotating fluid flows
Several ocean Western Boundary Currents (WBCs) encounter a lateral gap along their path. Examples are the Kuroshio Current penetrating into the South China Sea through the Luzon Strait and the Gulf of Mexico Loop Current leaping from the Yucatan peninsula to Florida as part of the Gulf Stream system. Here, we present results on WBC relevant flows, generated in the world’s largest rotating platform, where the Earth’s sphericity necessary to support WBCs is realized by an equivalent topographic effect. The fluid is put in motion by a pump system, which produces a current that is stationary far from the gap. When the jet reaches the gap entrance, time-dependent patterns with complex spatial structures appear, with the jet leaking, leaping or looping through the gap. The occurrence of these intrinsic self-sustained periodic or aperiodic oscillations depending on current intensity is well known in nonlinear dynamical systems theory and occurs in many real systems. It has been observed here for the first time in real rotating fluid flows and is thought to be highly relevant to explain low-frequency variability in ocean WBCs
Entanglement entropy of two disjoint intervals and the recursion formula for conformal blocks
We reconsider the computation of the entanglement entropy of two disjoint intervals in a (1+1) dimensional conformal field theory by conformal block expansion of the 4-point correlation function of twist fields. We show that accurate results may be obtained by taking into account several terms in the operator product expansion of twist fields and by iterating the Zamolodchikov recursion formula for each conformal block. We perform a detailed analysis for the Ising conformal field theory and for the free compactified boson. Each term in the conformal block expansion can be easily analytically continued and so this approach also provides a good approximation for the von Neumann entropy
The RNA-Binding Protein KSRP Promotes Decay of β-Catenin mRNA and Is Inactivated by PI3K-AKT Signaling
β-catenin plays an essential role in several biological events including cell fate determination, cell proliferation, and transformation. Here we report that β-catenin is encoded by a labile transcript whose half-life is prolonged by Wnt and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase–AKT signaling. AKT phosphorylates the mRNA decay-promoting factor KSRP at a unique serine residue, induces its association with the multifunctional protein 14-3-3, and prevents KSRP interaction with the exoribonucleolytic complex exosome. This impairs KSRP's ability to promote rapid mRNA decay. Our results uncover an unanticipated level of control of β-catenin expression pointing to KSRP as a required factor to ensure rapid degradation of β-catenin in unstimulated cells. We propose KSRP phosphorylation as a link between phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase–AKT signaling and β-catenin accumulation
The association of indwelling urinary catheter with delirium in hospitalized patients and nursing home residents: an explorative analysis from the "Delirium Day 2015"
Backround: Use of indwelling urinary catheter (IUC) in older adults has negative consequences, including delirium.
Aim: This analysis, from the "Delirium Day 2015", a nationwide multicenter prevalence study, aim to evaluate the association of IUC with delirium in hospitalized and Nursing Homes (NHs) patients.
Methods: Patients underwent a comprehensive geriatric assessment, including the presence of IUC; inclusion criteria were age > 65 years, being Italian speaker and providing informed consent; exclusion criteria were coma, aphasia, end-of-life status. Delirium was assessed using the 4AT test (score ≥ 4: possible delirium; scores 1-3: possible cognitive impairment).
Results: Among 1867 hospitalized patients (mean age 82.0 ± 7.5 years, 58% female), 539 (28.9%) had IUC, 429 (22.9%) delirium and 675 (36.1%) cognitive impairment. IUC was significantly associated with cognitive impairment (OR 1.60, 95% CI 1.19-2.16) and delirium (2.45, 95% CI 1.73-3.47), this latter being significant also in the subset of patients without dementia (OR 2.28, 95% CI 1.52-3.43). Inattention and impaired alertness were also independently associated with IUC. Among 1454 NHs residents (mean age 84.4 ± 7.4 years, 70.% female), 63 (4.3%) had IUC, 535 (36.8%) a 4AT score ≥ 4, and 653 (44.9%) a 4AT score 1-3. The multivariate logistic regression analysis did not show a significant association between 4AT test or its specific items with IUC, neither in the subset of patients without dementia.
Discussion: We confirmed a significant association between IUC and delirium in hospitalized patients but not in NHs residents.
Conclusion: Environmental and clinical factors of acute setting might contribute to IUC-associated delirium occurrence
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