211 research outputs found

    Long-term Ultrasonographic Follow-up Study of Gastric Motility in Patients with Functional Dyspepsia

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    Although patients with functional dyspepsia complain of epigastric symptoms, the relation between these symptoms and gastric motility remains controversial. There are few reports on the clinical course of functional dyspepsia, including changes in gastric motility, observed over a considerably long period. We conducted a study to examine association between changes in symptoms and changes in ultrasonographically evaluated gastric motility over a long-term follow-up period in patients with functional dyspepsia. Forty patients (18 men, 22 women; mean age, 53.7 years) with functional dyspepsia were followed up by medical interview, physical examination, endoscopy, and ultrasonography for gastric motility. Follow-up ranged from 1.0 to 7.8 years (mean, 3.0 years). Ultrasonographic evaluation of gastric motility included gastric emptying rate and antral contractions. During the follow-up period, patients were treated with proton pump inhibitors, H2-blockers, or prokinetics. Symptoms improved in 21 patients (group A), but symptoms persisted or worsened in 19 patients (group B). There were no significant differences in clinical characteristics between the two groups. Gastric motility improved in group A but not in group B. In conclusion, improved gastric motility appears to correspond to and may explain improved symptoms in some patients with functional dyspepsia

    Tunable tunnel coupling in a double quantum antidot with cotunneling via localized state

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    Controlling tunnel coupling between quantum antidots (QADs) in the quantum Hall (QH) regime is problematic. We propose and demonstrate a scheme for tunable tunnel coupling between two QADs by utilizing a cotunneling process via a localized state as a third QAD. The effective tunnel coupling can be tuned by changing the localized level even with constant nearest-neighbor tunnel couplings. We systematically study the variation of transport characteristics in the effectively triple QAD system at the Landau level filling factor ν=2\nu =2. The tunable tunnel coupling is clarified by analyzing the anti-crossing of Coulomb blockade peaks in the charge stability diagram, in agreement with numerical simulations based on the master equation. The scheme is attractive for studying coherence and interaction in QH systems.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure

    Train Performance - Evaluation and Monitoring by Torque Meter Applications and Process Gas Compressor / Steam Turbine Train Fouling and Washing Mitigation

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    LectureThe systematic monitoring and evaluation of turbomachinery is an important diagnostic tool in the execution of a long-term maintenance plan as well as the prevention of unexpected outages due to machinery breakdown. This paper introduces the typical causes of performance deterioration in compressors and steam turbines and the phenomena related to their causes. In addition, this paper also introduces how to evaluate performance, based on site monitoring techniques are explained by combining typical evaluation results with torque measurement and maximum power limit control. Evaluation of these results can determine if deterioration in performance, caused by a change in the internal flow conditions, has occurred. Finally, typical results from on-line washing techniques for compressors and steam turbines will be introduced and the power recovery rate after on-line washing, measured by the torque meter, will be discussed

    Relationship between acetaldehyde concentration in mouth air and characteristics of microbiota of tongue dorsum in Japanese healthy adults: a cross-sectional study

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    Acetaldehyde, associated with consumption of alcoholic beverages, is known to be a carcinogen and to be related to the tongue dorsum. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between acetaldehyde concentration in mouth air and bacterial characteristics on the tongue dorsum. Methodology: Thirty-nine healthy volunteers participated in the study. Acetaldehyde concentrations in mouth air were evaluated by a high-sensitivity semiconductor gas sensor. A 16S rRNA gene sequencing technique was used to compare microbiomes between two groups, focusing on the six samples with the highest acetaldehyde concentrations (HG) and the six samples with lowest acetaldehyde concentrations (LG). Results: Acetaldehyde concentration increased in correlation with the increase in bacterial count (p=0.048). The number of species observed in the oral microbiome of the HG was higher than that in the oral microbiome of the LG (p=0.011). The relative abundances of Gemella sanguinis, Veillonella parvula and Neisseria flavescens in the oral microbiome of the HG were higher than those in the oral microbiome of the LG (p<0.05). Conclusion: Acetaldehyde concentration in mouth air was associated with bacterial count, diversity of microbiome, and relative abundance of G. sanguinis, V. parvula, and N. flavescens

    Three-flavor quark mass dependence of baryon spectra in holographic QCD

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    We introduce the strange quark mass to the Sakai-Sugimoto model of holographic QCD. We compute mass shifts in the spectra of three-flavor baryons at the leading order in perturbation in quark masses. Comparison with experimental data shows an agreement only qualitatively.Comment: 17 pages, v2: minor corrections, v3: published versio

    A simple flow cytometric scoring system is useful for distinguishing myelodysplastic syndromes from non-clonal anemic disorders

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    Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are a myeloid neoplasm characterized by abnormal differentiation, ineffective hematopoiesis, and genetic instability with enhanced risk of transforming to acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The diagnosis of MDS is principally made based on the percentage of blasts in the bone marrow and peripheral blood, type and degree of dysplasia and the presence of ring sideroblasts. Recently, for making an accurate diagnosis of MDS, the aberrant antigen expression detection of hematopoietic cells by flow cytometry has been reported to be a useful. However, the diagnostic systems utilized in those studies are rather complicated. We modified an existing flow cytometric scoring system (FCMSS) based on aberrancies in the myeloid lineage and evaluated its usefulness in diagnosing various anemic disorders, including myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). The flow cytometric score was significantly higher in MDS patients than in those with other anemic disorders, the exception being megaloblastic anemia (i.e., Vitamin B12 deficiency, folate deficiency). The data suggest that our FCMSS may provide useful information for making the diagnosis of MDS and other anemic disorders

    Factors Associated with Inadequate Tissue Yield in EUS-FNA for Gastric SMT

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    Aims. Our aim was to identify the factors that made the specimens inadequate and nondiagnostic in endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) biopsy of suspected submucosal tumors (SMTs). Methods. From August 2001 to October 2009, 47 consecutive patients with subepithelial hypoechoic tumors originating in the fourth sonographic layer of the gastric wall suspected as GIST by standard EUS in Chiba University hospital underwent EUS-FNA for histologic diagnosis. We evaluated patient age, sex, location of lesion, size, pattern of growth in a stomach, and pattern of echography retrospectively. We defined a case of gaining no material or an insufficient material for immunohistological diagnosis as nondiagnostic. Results. The diagnostic yield of EUS-FNA for the diagnosis of gastric SMTs was 74.5%. Multivariate logistic regression analysis identified that age of under 60 years (compared with patients older than 60 years: odds ratio [OR] = 11.91, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.761–80.48) and location of SMT at lower third area (compared with upper or middle third area: OR = 10.62, 95% CI = 1.290–87.42) were the predictive factors for inadequate tissue yield in EUS-FNA. Conclusions. The factors associated with inadequate tissue yield in EUS-FNA were younger age and the location of lesion at lower third area in stomach

    Change in tongue pressure and the related factors after esophagectomy: a short-term, longitudinal study.

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    BACKGROUND: Dysphagia is a prominent symptom after esophagectomy and may cause aspiration pneumonia. Swallowing evaluation after esophagectomy can predict and help control the incidence of postoperative pneumonia. The aim of this study was to clarify whether the change in tongue pressure was associated with any related factor and postoperative dysphagia/pneumonia in patients with esophageal cancer after esophagectomy. METHODS: Fifty-nine inpatients (41 males and 18 females; 33-77 years old) who underwent esophagectomy participated in this study. Measurement of tongue pressure and the repetitive saliva swallowing test (RSST) was performed before esophagectomy (baseline) and at 2 weeks postoperatively. The general data were collected from patients' medical records, including sex, age, type of cancer, cancer stage, location of cancer, operative approach, history of previous chemotherapy, surgical duration, amount of bleeding during surgery, incidences of postoperative complications, intubation period, period between surgery and initiation of oral alimentation, and intensive care unit (ICU) stay, blood chemical analysis, and lifestyle. RESULTS: Tongue pressure decreased significantly after esophagectomy (p = 0.011). The decrease of tongue pressure was significantly associated with length of ICU stay and preoperative tongue pressure on multiple regression analysis (p  CONCLUSIONS: The decrease in tongue pressure was significantly associated with the length of ICU stay, preoperative tongue pressure, and the incidence of dysphagia and pneumonia among inpatient after esophagectomy
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