1,461 research outputs found
Finite-size critical scaling in Ising spin glasses in the mean-field regime
We study in Ising spin glasses the finite-size effects near the spin-glass
transition in zero field and at the de Almeida-Thouless transition in a field
by Monte Carlo methods and by analytical approximations. In zero field, the
finite-size scaling function associated with the spin-glass susceptibility of
the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick mean-field spin-glass model is of the same form as
that of one-dimensional spin-glass models with power-law long-range
interactions in the regime where they can be a proxy for the Edwards-Anderson
short-range spin-glass model above the upper critical dimension. We also
calculate a simple analytical approximation for the spin-glass susceptibility
crossover function. The behavior of the spin-glass susceptibility near the de
Almeida-Thouless transition line has also been studied, but here we have only
been able to obtain analytically its behavior in the asymptotic limit above and
below the transition. We have also simulated the one-dimensional system in a
field in the non-mean-field regime to illustrate that when the Imry-Ma droplet
length scale exceeds the system size one can then be erroneously lead to
conclude that there is a de Almeida-Thouless transition even though it is
absent.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Numerical studies of a one-dimensional 3-spin spin-glass model with long-range interactions
We study a p-spin spin-glass model to understand if the finite-temperature
glass transition found in the mean-field regime of p-spin models, and used to
model the behavior of structural glasses, persists in the non-mean-field
regime. By using a 3-spin spin-glass model with long-range power-law diluted
interactions we are able to continuously tune the (effective) space dimension
via the exponent of the interactions. Monte Carlo simulations of the spin-glass
susceptibility and the two-point finite-size correlation length show that deep
in the non-mean-field regime the finite-temperature transition is lost, whereas
this is not the case in the mean-field regime, in agreement with the prediction
of Moore and Drossel [Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 217202 (2002)] that 3-spin models
are in the same universality class as an Ising spin glass in a magnetic field.
However, slightly in the non-mean-field region, we find an apparent transition
in the 3-spin model, in contrast to results for the Ising spin glass in a
field. This may indicate that even larger sizes are needed to probe the
asymptotic behavior in this region.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, 1 tabl
Rhabdomyolysis in an HIV cohort: epidemiology, causes and outcomes.
BackgroundThe Literature on rhabdomyolysis in the HIV-positive population is sparse and limited. We aimed to explore the incidence, patient characteristics, etiologies and outcomes of rhabdomyolysis in a cohort of HIV-positive patients identified through the Johns Hopkins HIV clinical registry between June 1992 and April 2014.MethodsA retrospective analysis of 362 HIV-positive patients with non-cardiac CK elevation ≥1000 IU/L was performed. Both inpatients and outpatients were included. Incidence rate and potential etiologies for rhabdomyolysis were ascertained. The development of acute kidney injury (AKI, defined as doubling of serum creatinine), need for dialysis, and death in the setting of rhabdomyolysis were determined. Logistic regression was used to evaluate the association of peak CK level with the development of AKI.ResultsThree hundred sixty two cases of rhabdomyolysis were identified in a cohort of 7079 patients with a 38,382 person years follow-up time. The incidence rate was nine cases per 1000 person-years (95% CI: 8.5-10.5). Infection was the most common etiology followed by compression injury and drug/alcohol use. One-third of cases had multiple potential etiologies. AKI developed in 46% of cases; 20% of which required dialysis. Thirteen percent died during follow-up. After adjustment, AKI was associated with higher CK (OR 2.05 for each 1-log increase in CK [95% CI: 1.40-2.99]), infection (OR 5.48 [95% CI 2.65-11.31]) and higher HIV viral load (OR 1.22 per 1-log increase [95% CI: 1.03-1.45]).ConclusionRhabdomyolysis in the HIV-positive population has many possible causes and is frequently multifactorial. HIV-positive individuals with rhabdomyolysis have a high risk of AKI and mortality
Psychiatric profiles of mothers who take Ecstasy/MDMA during pregnancy: Reduced depression 1 year after giving birth and quitting Ecstasy
Background:
The recreational drug MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) or ‘Ecstasy’ is associated with heightened psychiatric distress and feelings of depression. The Drugs and Infancy Study (DAISY) monitored the psychiatric symptom profiles of mothers who used Ecstasy/MDMA while pregnant, and followed them over the first year post-partum.
Methods:
We compared 28 young women whom took MDMA during their pregnancy with a polydrug control group of 68 women who took other psychoactive drugs while pregnant. The Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) was completed for several periods: The first trimester of pregnancy; and 1, 4 and 12 months after childbirth. Recreational drug use was monitored at each time point.
Results:
During the first trimester of pregnancy, MDMA-using mothers reported higher depression scores than the polydrug controls. At 1 year after childbirth, their BSI depression scores were significantly lower, now closer to the control group values. At the same time point, their self-reported use of MDMA became nearly zero, in contrast to their continued use of Cannabis/marijuana, nicotine and alcohol. We found significant symptom reductions in those with BSI obsessive-compulsive and interpersonal sensitivity, following Ecstasy/MDMA cessation.
Conclusions:
The findings from this unique prospective study of young recreational drug-using mothers are consistent with previous reports of improved psychiatric health after quitting MDMA
History of the Innovation of Damage Control for Management of Trauma Patients: 1902-2016
Objective: To review the history of the innovation of damage control (DC) for management of trauma patients. Background: DC is an important development in trauma care that provides a valuable case study in surgical innovation. Methods: We searched bibliographic databases (1950-2015), conference abstracts (2009-2013), Web sites, textbooks, and bibliographies for articles relating to trauma DC. The innovation of DC was then classified according to the Innovation, Development, Exploration, Assessment, and Long-term study model of surgical innovation. Results: The innovation\u27\u27 of DC originated from the use of therapeutic liver packing, a practice that had previously been abandoned after World War II because of adverse events. It then developed\u27\u27 into abbreviated laparotomy using rapid conservative operative techniques.\u27\u27 Subsequent exploration\u27\u27 resulted in the application of DC to increasingly complex abdominal injuries and thoracic, peripheral vascular, and orthopedic injuries. Increasing use of DC laparotomy was followed by growing reports of postinjury abdominal compartment syndrome and prophylactic use of the open abdomen to prevent intra-abdominal hypertension after DC laparotomy. By the year 2000, DC surgery had been widely adopted and was recommended for use in surgical journals, textbooks, and teaching courses ( assessment\u27\u27 stage of innovation). Long-term study\u27\u27 of DC is raising questions about whether the procedure should be used more selectively in the context of improving resuscitation practices. Conclusions: The history of the innovation of DC illustrates how a previously abandoned surgical technique was adapted and readopted in response to an increased understanding of trauma patient physiology and changing injury patterns and trauma resuscitation practices
Spin glasses in a field: Three and four dimensions as seen from one space dimension
We study the existence of a line of transitions of an Ising spin glass in a
magnetic field-known as the de Almeida-Thouless line-using one-dimensional
power-law diluted Ising spin-glass models. We choose the power-law exponent to
have values that approximately correspond to three- and four-dimensional
nearest-neighbor systems and perform a detailed finite-size scaling analysis of
the data for large linear system sizes, both using a new approach proposed
recently [Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 267201 (2009)], as well as traditional
approaches. Our results for the model corresponding to a three-dimensional
system are consistent with there being no de Almeida-Thouless line, although
the new finite-size scaling approach does not rule one out. For the model
corresponding to four space dimensions, the new and traditional finite-size
scaling analyses give conflicting results, indicating the need for a better
understanding of finite-size scaling of spin glasses in a magnetic field.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, loads of fun
Behaviour of infants with Down syndrome and their mothers in the still-face procedure
There has been limited study of how the constitutional characteristics of infants with Down syndrome (DS) influence the patterning of their relations with caregivers. To assess natural and perturbed interactions between infants with DS and their mothers, we tested ten 6-month-old infants with DS and 20 typically developing (TD) 4-month-old of similar mental age. Participants were videotaped with their mothers in a natural face-to-face interaction, a brief period when the mothers adopted a still-face, and a subsequent reengagement phase. There was little to distinguish the infants in the initial phase of natural interaction, but the mothers of infants with DS were more likely to show assertive warmth, and unlike in the case of mothers of TD infants, high maternal directiveness tended to be associated with lower levels of infant looking and lack of fussing. During the still-face episode, infants of both groups showed reduced looking and smiling, although infants with DS tended to show lower levels of fussing and fewer in this group showed fussing in the reengagement phase. Therefore DS infants were somewhat similar to TD infants of comparable mental age in being responsive to the still-face procedure, but showed indications of group differences in intense emotional reactivity
Identification of a Likely Radio Counterpart of the Rapid Burster
We have identified a likely radio counterpart to the low-mass X-ray binary
MXB 1730-335 (the Rapid Burster). The counterpart has shown 8.4 GHz radio
on/off behavior correlated with the X-ray on/off behavior as observed by the
RXTE/ASM during six VLA observations. The probability of an unrelated, randomly
varying background source duplicating this behavior is 1-3% depending on the
correlation time scale. The location of the radio source is RA 17h 33m 24.61s;
Dec -33d 23' 19.8" (J2000), +/- 0.1". We do not detect 8.4 GHz radio emission
coincident with type II (accretion-driven) X-ray bursts. The ratio of radio to
X-ray emission during such bursts is constrained to be below the ratio observed
during X-ray persistent emission at the 2.9-sigma level. Synchrotron bubble
models of the radio emission can provide a reasonable fit to the full data set,
collected over several outbursts, assuming that the radio evolution is the same
from outburst to outburst, but given the physical constraints the emission is
more likely to be due to ~hour-long radio flares such as have been observed
from the X-ray binary GRS 1915+105.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ (no changes
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