1,319 research outputs found
Stimulated Whole Blood Cytokine Release as a Biomarker of Immunosuppression in the Critically Ill
Objective: Reduced ex vivo lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulated whole blood pro-inflammatory cytokine release is a hallmark of immunosuppression in the critically ill and predicts adverse clinical outcomes. No standard technique for performing the assay currently exists. The impact of methodological heterogeneity was determined.
Design, Setting, Subjects, and Interventions: Clinical experimental study set in a research laboratory. Venous blood from 5 to 10 healthy volunteers/experiment (total participant group: 18 subjects, 72% men, mean age 32) was stimulated ex vivo to evaluate the effect of variables identified via literature review on tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) release. These included sample handling, stimulation technique, and incubation conditions. Reporting convention was additionally assessed.
Main Results: Measured TNFα release was significantly altered by source of LPS, concentration of LPS employed, duration and temperature of incubation prior to supernatant aspiration, and predilution of blood (repeated measures ANOVA, all P < 0.01). Sample handling prior to stimulation (anticoagulant employed, time to LPS addition, and storage temperature) also caused significant alterations in TNFα release. Considerable interindividual variation was observed (range 1,024–4,649 pg/mL, mean 2,339 pg/mL). Normalization by monocyte count and pretreatment with a cyclooxygenase inhibitor (indomethacin 10 μM) reduced the coefficient of variation from 47.17% to 32.09%.
Conclusions: Inconsistency in interlaboratory methodology and reporting impairs interpretation, comparability, and reproducibility of the ex vivo LPS-stimulated whole blood cytokine release assay. A standardized validated technique is required. The advent of trials of immunoadjuvant agents renders this a clinical imperative
Cellular Automaton for Realistic Modelling of Landslides
A numerical model is developed for the simulation of debris flow in
landslides over a complex three dimensional topography. The model is based on a
lattice, in which debris can be transferred among nearest neighbors according
to established empirical relationships for granular flows. The model is then
validated by comparing a simulation with reported field data. Our model is in
fact a realistic elaboration of simpler ``sandpile automata'', which have in
recent years been studied as supposedly paradigmatic of ``self-organized
criticality''.
Statistics and scaling properties of the simulation are examined, and show
that the model has an intermittent behavior.Comment: Revised version (gramatical and writing style cleanup mainly).
Accepted for publication by Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics. 16 pages, 98Kb
uuencoded compressed dvi file (that's the way life is easiest). Big (6Mb)
postscript figures available upon request from [email protected] /
[email protected]
Lyapunov spectra and nonequilibrium ensembles equivalence in 2D fluid mechanics
We perform numerical experiments to study the Lyapunov spectra of dynamical
systems associated with the Navier–Stokes (NS) equation in two spatial dimensions truncated over the Fourier basis. Recently new equations, called GNS equations, have been introduced and conjectured to be equivalent to the NS equations at large Reynolds numbers. The Lyapunov spectra of the NS and of the corresponding GNS systems overlap, adding evidence in favor of the conjectured equivalence already studied and partially extended in previous papers. We make use of the Lyapunov spectra to study a fluctuation relation which had been proposed to extend the “fluctuation theorem” to strongly dissipative systems. Preliminary results towards the formulation of a local version of the fluctuation formula are also presented
Approximate analytic expressions using Stokes model for tokamak polarimetry and their range of validity
The analysis of the polarimetry measurements has the aim of validating models (De Marco and Segre 1972 Plasma Phys. 14 245), with a careful attention to the clarification of their limits of application. In this paper a new approximation method is introduced, the so-called special constant Omega direction (SCOD), which gives an analytical solution to the polarimetry exact Stokes model equations. The available approximate solutions (including SCOD) of the polarimetry propagation equations are presented, compared and their application limits determined, using a reference tokamak configuration, which is a simplified equilibrium for a circular tokamak. The SCOD approximation is compared successfully to the Stokes model in the context also of equilibria evaluated for two JET discharges. The approximation methods are analytical or very simple mathematical expressions which can also be used in equilibrium codes for their optimization
Levi umbilical surfaces in complex space
We define a complex connection on a real hypersurface of \C^{n+1} which is
naturally inherited from the ambient space. Using a system of Codazzi-type
equations, we classify connected real hypersurfaces in \C^{n+1}, ,
which are Levi umbilical and have non zero constant Levi curvature. It turns
out that such surfaces are contained either in a sphere or in the boundary of a
complex tube domain with spherical section.Comment: 18 page
Emergent simplicity in microbial community assembly
Published in final edited form as: Science. 2018 August 03; 361(6401): 469–474. doi:10.1126/science.aat1168.A major unresolved question in microbiome research is whether the complex taxonomic architectures observed in surveys of natural communities can be explained and predicted by fundamental, quantitative principles. Bridging theory and experiment is hampered by the multiplicity of ecological processes that simultaneously affect community assembly in natural ecosystems. We addressed this challenge by monitoring the assembly of hundreds of soil- and plant-derived microbiomes in well-controlled minimal synthetic media. Both the community-level function and the coarse-grained taxonomy of the resulting communities are highly predictable and governed by nutrient availability, despite substantial species variability. By generalizing classical ecological models to include widespread nonspecific cross-feeding, we show that these features are all emergent properties of the assembly of large microbial communities, explaining their ubiquity in natural microbiomes.The funding for this work partly results from a Scialog Program sponsored jointly by the Research Corporation, for Science Advancement and. the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through grants to Yale University and Boston University by the Research Corporation and by the Simons Foundation. This work was also supported by a young; investigator award from the Human Frontier Science Program to A.S. (RGY0077/2016) and by NIH NIGMS grant 1R35GM119461 and a Simons Investigator as in the Mathematical Modeling of Living Systems (MMLS) to P.M.; D.S. and J.E.G. additionally acknowledge funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (purchase request no. HR0011515303, contract no.. HR0011-15-0-0091), the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-SC0012627), the NIH (T32GM100842, 5R01DE024468, R01GM121950, and Sub_P30DK036836_P&F), the National Science Foundation (1457695), the Human Frontier Science Program (RGP0020/2016) and the Boston University Interdisciplinary Biomedical Research Office. (Research Corporation, for Science Advancement; Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation; Boston University by the Research Corporation; Simons Foundation.; RGY0077/2016 - uman Frontier Science Program; 1R35GM119461 - NIH NIGMS grant; Simons Investigator as in the Mathematical Modeling of Living Systems (MMLS); HR0011515303 - Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency; HR0011-15-0-0091 - Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency; T32GM100842 - NIH; 5R01DE024468 - NIH; R01GM121950 - NIH; ub_P30DK036836 - NIH; 1457695 - National Science Foundation; RGP0020/2016 - Human Frontier Science Program; Boston University Interdisciplinary Biomedical Research Office)Accepted manuscrip
Monte-Carlo simulation of events with Drell-Yan lepton pairs from antiproton-proton collisions
The complete knowledge of the nucleon spin structure at leading twist
requires also addressing the transverse spin distribution of quarks, or
transversity, which is yet unexplored because of its chiral-odd nature.
Transversity can be best extracted from single-spin asymmetries in fully
polarized Drell-Yan processes with antiprotons, where valence contributions are
involved anyway. Alternatively, in single-polarized Drell-Yan the transversity
happens convoluted with another chiral-odd function, which is likely to be
responsible for the well known (and yet unexplained) violation of the Lam-Tung
sum rule in the corresponding unpolarized cross section. We present Monte-Carlo
simulations for the unpolarized and single-polarized Drell-Yan at different center-of-mass energies in both
configurations where the antiproton beam hits a fixed proton target or it
collides on another proton beam. The goal is to estimate the minimum number of
events needed to extract the above chiral-odd distributions from future
measurements at the HESR ring at GSI. It is important to study the feasibility
of such experiments at HESR in order to demonstrate that interesting spin
physics can be explored already using unpolarized antiprotons.Comment: Deeply revised text with improved discussion of kinematics and
results; added one table; 12 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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