1,058 research outputs found
Radiological anatomy of the ambient cistern in children
Ambient cistern (AC) is a thin extension of the subarachnoid space surrounding
the brainstem at the level of the mesencephalon and pons. Despite various
definitions, it constitutes an important landmark in clinical assessment of intracranial
volume reserve. Although it is indisputably useful, there exists no
defined standard for radiological examination for the dimensions and ranges
in specific age groups. This paper aims to describe the ambient cistern anatomically
and give the ranges of dimensions for proper radiological interpretation.
The study was performed on 160 axial computed tomography (CT) examinations
of Polish children of both sexes, aged 1-18 years, admitted to the
hospital because of mild brain concussion. Pictures were made using a Siemens
8-row CT scanner, without contrast administration. We estimated distances
at the level of the pons and midbrain, based on axial cross-sections,
according to standard radiological protocol. The parameters included the width
of the AC in its anterior and posterior part, the width of the tentorial notch,
and the distance from the pons and sella. All measurements were analyzed
statistically with StatSoft Statistica 8.0 software. The average width of the AC
differs between age groups. It is greatest at 1-3 years (2.8 ± 0.6 mm) and
lowest at 4-10 years (2.4 ± 0.6 mm). AC is more likely to be greater in its
anterior part in boys. The distance from the sella to the pons is greatest in 1-3-year-old girls (6.9 ± 1.3 mm), and the tentorial notch is widest in the 15-18-year-old group (24.6 ± 2.4 mm). Dimensions of the AC correlate with intracranial
reserve volume. This is particularly visible in the youngest children. Thin
and narrow AC is not always a sign of raised intracranial pressure. It may be
specific for the child’s age. (Folia Morphol 2010; 69, 2: 78-83
Conformation of hexadecylphosphocholine, an anticancer drug, by molecular dynamics and NMR methods
Decoherence-Free Quantum Information Processing with Four-Photon Entangled States
Decoherence-free states protect quantum information from collective noise,
the predominant cause of decoherence in current implementations of quantum
communication and computation. Here we demonstrate that spontaneous parametric
down-conversion can be used to generate four-photon states which enable the
encoding of one qubit in a decoherence-free subspace. The immunity against
noise is verified by quantum state tomography of the encoded qubit. We show
that particular states of the encoded qubit can be distinguished by local
measurements on the four photons only.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figures, revtex
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The effect of relationship status on communicating emotions through touch
Research into emotional communication to date has largely focused on facial and vocal expressions. In contrast, recent studies by Hertenstein, Keltner, App, Bulleit, and Jaskolka (2006) and Hertenstein, Holmes, McCullough, and Keltner (2009) exploring nonverbal communication of emotion discovered that people could identify anger, disgust, fear, gratitude, happiness, love, sadness and sympathy from the experience of being touched on either the arm or body by a stranger, without seeing the touch. The study showed that strangers were unable to communicate the self-focused emotions embarrassment, envy and pride, or the universal emotion surprise. Literature relating to touch indicates that the interpretation of a tactile experience is significantly influenced by the relationship between the touchers (Coan, Schaefer, & Davidson, 2006). The present study compared the ability of romantic couples and strangers to communicate emotions solely via touch. Results showed that both strangers and romantic couples were able to communicate universal and prosocial emotions, whereas only romantic couples were able to communicate the self-focused emotions envy and pride
The positive impact of agile retrospectives on the collaboration of distributed development teams – A practical approach on the example of Bosch engineering GmbH
To counteract competitive pressure, increasing customer requirements and growing product complexity successful distributed collaboration in product development is vital. Companies have to face new challenges, such as efficiency losses in communication. To overcome these challenges agile working practices, such as agile retrospectives, could be beneficial. The objective of this scientific work is to evaluate the benefit of agile working practices on the example of agile retrospectives, for the improvement of collaboration in distributed development teams. Based on literature analysis, qualitative and quantitative expert interviews following the DRM by Blessing and Chakrabarti, this scientific work shows that agile working practices have a high potential to improve distributed collaboration. To address this potential, several virtual agile retrospectives are developed and conducted within a distributed team at Bosch Engineering GmbH. The evaluation of this approach results in a high potential of agile retrospectives indicating an improvement tendency. Especially iteratively implemented virtual agile retrospectives have a positive impact on successful distributed collaboration
Acyl coenzyme a: 2-acyl-sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity in rat liver microsomes
2-Acylglycerol-3-phosphate can be acylated by acyl-CoA in the presence of microsomal preparations from rat liver. With optimal amounts of substrate, the acyltransferase reaction to the 1-position occurred at about one tenth the rate observed for the 2-position. Oleate was esterified more rapidly than palmitate or stearate under the conditions used. The enzymic activity catalyzing esterification of the primary hydroxyl seems to be different from that for the secondary hydroxyl.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/33532/1/0000031.pd
Hexadecylphosphocholine, a new ether lipid analogue. Studies on the antineoplastic activity in vitro and in vivo.
Hexadecylphosphocholine (He-PC) is a new compound synthesized according to the minimal structural requirements deducted from studies with other ether lipids. In vitro studies on He-PC revealed remarkable antineoplastic activity on HL60, U937, Raji and K562 leukemia cell lines. In addition, He-PC, applied orally, showed a superior effect in the treatment of dimethylbenzanthracene-induced rat mammary carcinomas when compared to intravenously administered cyclophosphamide. After oral application He-PC was well absorbed from the intestine and metabolized in the liver by phospholipases C and D. During a 5-week treatment no hematotoxic effects were detected. In a clinical pilot study on breast cancer patients with widespread skin involvement, topically applied He-PC showed skin tumor regressions without local or systemic side effects
Erratum to: The impact of benzodiazepine use in patients enrolled in opioid agonist therapy in Northern and rural Ontario
Community standards for open cell migration data
Cell migration research has become a high-content field. However, the quantitative information encapsulated in these complex and high-dimensional datasets is not fully exploited owing to the diversity of experimental protocols and non-standardized output formats. In addition, typically the datasets are not open for reuse. Making the data open and Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR) will enable meta-analysis, data integration, and data mining. Standardized data formats and controlled vocabularies are essential for building a suitable infrastructure for that purpose but are not available in the cell migration domain. We here present standardization efforts by the Cell Migration Standardisation Organisation (CMSO), an open community-driven organization to facilitate the development of standards for cell migration data. This work will foster the development of improved algorithms and tools and enable secondary analysis of public datasets, ultimately unlocking new knowledge of the complex biological process of cell migration
Systemic Disease-Induced Salivary Biomarker Profiles in Mouse Models of Melanoma and Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
Background: Saliva (oral fluids) is an emerging biofluid poised for detection of clinical diseases. Although the rationale for oral diseases applications (e.g. oral cancer) is intuitive, the rationale and relationship between systemic diseases and saliva biomarkers are unclear. Methodology/Principal Findings: In this study, we used mouse models of melanoma and non-small cell lung cancer and compared the transcriptome biomarker profiles of tumor-bearing mice to those of control mice. Microarray analysis showed that salivary transcriptomes were significantly altered in tumor-bearing mice vs. controls. Significant overlapping among transcriptomes of mouse tumors, serum, salivary glands and saliva suggests that salivary biomarkers have multiple origins. Furthermore, we identified that the expression of two groups of significantly altered transcription factors (TFs) Runx1, Mlxipl, Trim30 and Egr1, Tbx1, Nr1d1 in salivary gland tissue of melanoma-bearing mice can potentially be responsible for 82.6 % of the up-regulated gene expression and 62.5 % of the down-regulated gene expression, respectively, in the saliva o
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