78 research outputs found
The excited hadron spectrum in lattice QCD using a new method of estimating quark propagation
Progress in determining the spectrum of excited baryons and mesons in lattice
QCD is described. Large sets of carefully-designed hadron operators have been
studied and their effectiveness in facilitating the extraction of excited-state
energies is demonstrated. A new method of stochastically estimating the
low-lying effects of quark propagation is proposed which will allow reliable
determinations of temporal correlations of single-hadron and multi-hadron
operators.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, talk given at Hadron 2009, Tallahassee, Florida,
December 1, 200
Nucleon, and excited states in lattice QCD
The energies of the excited states of the Nucleon, and are
computed in lattice QCD, using two light quarks and one strange quark on
anisotropic lattices. The calculation is performed at three values of the light
quark mass, corresponding to pion masses = 392(4), 438(3) and 521(3)
MeV. We employ the variational method with a large basis of interpolating
operators enabling six energies in each irreducible representation of the
lattice to be distinguished clearly. We compare our calculation with the
low-lying experimental spectrum, with which we find reasonable agreement in the
pattern of states. The need to include operators that couple to the expected
multi-hadron states in the spectrum is clearly identified.Comment: Revised for publication. References added, Table VI expanded to add
strange baryon multiparticle thresholds and multiparticle thresholds added to
Figs. 4, 5 and 6. 15 pages, 6 figure
First results from 2+1 dynamical quark flavors on an anisotropic lattice: light-hadron spectroscopy and setting the strange-quark mass
We present the first light-hadron spectroscopy on a set of
dynamical, anisotropic lattices. A convenient set of coordinates that
parameterize the two-dimensional plane of light and strange-quark masses is
introduced. These coordinates are used to extrapolate data obtained at the
simulated values of the quark masses to the physical light and strange-quark
point. A measurement of the Sommer scale on these ensembles is made, and the
performance of the hybrid Monte Carlo algorithm used for generating the
ensembles is estimated.Comment: 24 pages. Hadron Spectrum Collaboratio
Beneficial effects of physical activity in an HIV-infected woman with lipodystrophy: a case report
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Lipodystrophy is common in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy, and presents with morphologic changes and metabolic alterations that are associated with depressive behavior and reduced quality of life. We examined the effects of exercise training on morphological changes, lipid profile and quality of life in a woman with human immunodeficiency virus presenting with lipodystrophy.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>A 31-year-old Latin-American Caucasian woman infected with human immunodeficiency virus participated in a 12-week progressive resistance exercise training program with an aerobic component. Her weight, height, skinfold thickness, body circumferences, femur and humerus diameter, blood lipid profile, maximal oxygen uptake volume, exercise duration, strength and quality of life were assessed pre-exercise and post-exercise training. After 12 weeks, she exhibited reductions in her total subcutaneous fat (18.5%), central subcutaneous fat (21.0%), peripheral subcutaneous fat (10.7%), waist circumference (WC) (4.5%), triglycerides (9.9%), total cholesterol (12.0%) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (8.6%). She had increased body mass (4.6%), body mass index (4.37%), humerus and femur diameter (3.0% and 2.3%, respectively), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (16.7%), maximal oxygen uptake volume (33.3%), exercise duration (37.5%) and strength (65.5%). Quality of life measures improved mainly for psychological and physical measures, independence and social relationships.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>These findings suggest that supervised progressive resistance exercise training is a safe and effective treatment for evolving morphologic and metabolic disorders in adults infected with HIV receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy, and improves their quality of life.</p
A systematic review of the effects of exercise interventions on body composition in HIV+ adults
Over the years, physical activity and exercise have been used to positively impact the health and quality of life of persons infected with HIV and, more recently, has been associated with a spectrum of body composition changes. The aim of this review was to examine the effects of various exercise interventions on body composition in HIV positive adults, using a search strategy of randomized, controlled trials (RCTs). A systematic review was performed by five independent reviewers using a predetermined protocol adapted from previous research for assessing the articles for inclusion, the extracted data, and methodological quality. Eight RCTs involving 430 (26% female) HIV positive adults performing exercise a minimum of thrice weekly for at least six weeks were finally selected: Four were progressive resistance training (PRT) studies, three were aerobic training (AT) studies, and one involved yoga. In the PRT studies, there were significant increases in three anthropometric measures, namely, body mass, sum of skinfolds and sum of limb girths. In the AT studies, significant decreases were found in seven anthropometric measures, namely, body mass index, waist-hip ratio, body mass, triceps skinfold, waist circumference and sum of skinfolds. With yoga, the changes were nonsignificant. Exercise contributes to improved body composition and, when applied safely, appears to be beneficial for adults living with HIV/AIDS. However, these findings should be interpreted cautiously due to the relatively few RCTs published to date. Future studies would benefit from increased attention to sample size, female participants, participant follow-up, complete statistical analysis and intention-to-treat analysis.Scopu
Improved Measurement of Branching Fractions for pipi Transitions among Upsilon(nS)States
Using samples of (5.93 +/- 0.10) x 10^6 Upsilon(3S) decays and (9.11 +/-
0.14) x 10^6 Upsilon(2S) decays collected with the CLEO detector, we report
improved measurements of the branching fractions for the following five
transitions: B(Upsilon(3S)-->Upsilon(1S) pi^+ pi^-) = (4.46 +/- 0.01 +/-
0.13)%, B(Upsilon(2S)-->Upsilon(1S) pi^+ pi^-) = (18.02 +/- 0.02 +/- 0.61)%,
B(Upsilon(3S)-->Upsilon(1S) pi^0 pi^0) = (2.24 +/- 0.09 +/- 0.11)%,
B(Upsilon(2S)-->Upsilon(1S) pi^0 pi^0) = (8.43 +/- 0.16 +/- 0.42)% and
B(Upsilon(3S)-->Upsilon(2S) pi^0 pi^0) = (1.82 +/- 0.09 +/- 0.12)%. In each
case the first uncertainty reported is statistical, while the second is
systematic.Comment: 11 pages, available at http://www.lns.cornell.edu/public/CLNS/,
Accepted for Publication in Phys. Rev.
Developing an Objective Evaluation Method to Estimate Diabetes Risk in Community-Based Settings
Exercise interventions often aim to affect abdominal obesity and glucose tolerance, two significant risk factors for type 2 diabetes. Because of limited financial and clinical resources in community and university-based environments, intervention effects are often measured with interviews or questionnaires and correlated with weight loss or body fat indicated by body bioimpedence analysis (BIA). However, self-reported assessments are subject to high levels of bias and low levels of reliability. Because obesity and body fat are correlated with diabetes at different levels in various ethnic groups, data reflecting changes in weight or fat do not necessarily indicate changes in diabetes risk. To determine how exercise interventions affect diabetes risk in community and university-based settings, improved evaluation methods are warranted.
We compared a noninvasive, objective measurement technique--regional BIA--with whole-body BIA for its ability to assess abdominal obesity and predict glucose tolerance in 39 women. To determine regional BIA's utility in predicting glucose, we tested the association between the regional BIA method and blood glucose levels.
Regional BIA estimates of abdominal fat area were significantly correlated (r = 0.554, P < 0.003) with fasting glucose. When waist circumference and family history of diabetes were added to abdominal fat in multiple regression models, the association with glucose increased further (r = 0.701, P < 0.001).
Regional BIA estimates of abdominal fat may predict fasting glucose better than whole-body BIA as well as provide an objective assessment of changes in diabetes risk achieved through physical activity interventions in community settings
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