142 research outputs found

    A Fast Splitting Method for efficient Split Bregman Iterations

    Full text link
    In this paper we propose a new fast splitting algorithm to solve the Weighted Split Bregman minimization problem in the backward step of an accelerated Forward-Backward algorithm. Beside proving the convergence of the method, numerical tests, carried out on different imaging applications, prove the accuracy and computational efficiency of the proposed algorithm

    Improved myocardial perfusion in chronic diabetic mice by the up-regulation of pLKB1 and AMPK signaling

    Get PDF
    Previous studies related impaired myocardial microcirculation in diabetes to oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction. Thus, this study was aimed to determine the effect of up-regulating pAMPK-pAKT signaling on coronary microvascular reactivity in the isolated heart of diabetic mice. We measured coronary resistance in wild-type and streptozotocin (STZ)-treated mice, during perfusion pressure changes. Glucose, insulin, and adiponectin levels in plasma and superoxide formation, NOx levels and heme oxygenase (HO) activity in myocardial tissue were determined. In addition, the expression of HO-1, 3-nitrotyrosine, pLKB1, pAMPK, pAKT, and peNOS proteins in control and diabetic hearts were measured. Coronary response to changes in perfusion pressure diverged from control in a time-dependent manner following STZ administration. The responses observed at 28 weeks of diabetes (the maximum time examined) were mimicked by L-NAME administration to control animals and were associated with a decrease in serum adiponectin and myocardial pLKB1, pAMPK, pAKT, and pGSK-3 expression. Cobalt protoporphyrin treatment to induce HO-1 expression reversed the microvascular reactivity seen in diabetes towards that of controls. Up-regulation of HO-1 was associated with an increase in adiponectin, pLKB1, pAKT, pAMPK, pGSK-3, and peNOS levels and a decrease in myocardial superoxide and 3-nitrotyrosine levels. In the present study we describe the time course of microvascular functional changes during the development of diabetes and the existence of a unique relationship between the levels of serum adiponectin, pLKB1, pAKT, and pAMPK activation in diabetic hearts. The restoration of microvascular function suggests a new therapeutic approach to even advanced cardiac microvascular derangement in diabetes

    A novel biweekly multidrug regimen of gemcitabine, oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), and folinic acid (FA) in pretreated patients with advanced colorectal carcinoma

    Get PDF
    Previous results suggest that GEM affects 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) metabolism and pharmacokinetics in cancer patients, while combined with oxaliplatin, levo-folinic acid, and 5-FU (GOLF regimen), at doses achievable in cancer patients, determines high cytotoxic and proapoptotic antitumour activity in colon cancer cells in vitro. On these bases we designed a phase I–II clinical trial testing the GOLF regimen in patients with metastatic colorectal carcinoma, who had received at least a prior line of chemotherapy. In total, 29 patients (20 males and nine females) enrolled in the study received every 2 weeks, gemcitabine (patients #1–3 received 600 mgm2; patients # 4–6 received 850 mgm2; while patients # 7–29 received 1000 mgm2) on the day 1, levo-folinic acid (100 mgm2) on the days 1 and 2; 5-fluorouracil (400 mgm2) in bolus injection, followed by a 22-h continuous infusion (800 mgm2) on the days 1 and 2, and oxaliplatin (85 mgm2), 6 h after the 5-FU bolus on day 2. The most frequent side effect was grade I–II haematological toxicity. In total, 28 patients were evaluable for response: three achieved a complete response, nine a partial response, 10 had a stable disease, and six progressed. The average time to progression and overall survival of the patients was, respectively, 7.26 and 22 months. Our GOLF combination is well tolerated and seems promising for the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer

    Cooking pots, tableware, and the changing sounds of sociability in Italy, 1300–1700

    Get PDF
    This article considers how the sounds produced by the preparation and consumption of meals in Italy changed between around 1300 and 1700. It argues that by focusing on sound, and by using ecological approaches, we can rediscover obscured connections between different categories of material objects. By examining material and textual evidence for three categories of objects associated with cooking and dining – metalwork, ceramics, and glass – the article traces changes in the material cultures of kitchen and table, and the clear impact these changes had on domestic soundscapes. It considers these sound-producing objects as agents of social interaction, exploring the social relationships they constructed, and the role sound played in those relationships. The article then focuses on the practices of cooking and dining, and the way they shaped the sound of objects. Finally, the article situates objects and social practices within the spatial context of the home, tracing an increasing impetus to manage and control specific types of sound in relation to gender. In the discourse on hospitality, noise came to signify a badly-managed, and therefore morally dubious, household, while silence testified to decorous and authoritative domestic management

    A fast subgradient algorithm in image super-resolution

    Get PDF
    In this paper we propose an epsilon-subgradient method for solving a constrained minimization problem arising in super-resolution imaging applications. The method, compared to the state-of-the-art methods for single image super-resolution on some test problems, proves to be very efficient, both for the reconstruction quality and the computational time

    An iterative algorithm for large size least-squares constrained regularization problems

    No full text
    In this paper we propose an iterative algorithm to solve large size linear inverse ill posed problems. The regularization problem is formulated as a constrained optimization problem. The dual Lagrangian problem is iteratively solved to compute an approximate solution. Before starting the iterations, the algorithm computes the necessary smoothing parameters and the error tolerances from the data. The numerical experiments performed on test problems show that the algorithm gives good results both in terms of precision and computational efficiency

    Parallel image restoration with domain decomposition

    No full text
    In this paper we present parallel algorithms to solve the problem of image restoration when the Point Spread Function is Space Variant. The problem has a very high computational complexity and it is very hard to solve it on scalar computers. The algorithms are based on the decomposition of the image spatial domain and on the solution of both constrained and unconstrained restoration subproblems of size smaller than the original. The main results can be summarized as follows: (a) the quality of restorations do not depend on the number of subdomains; (b) the unconstrained restoration is scalable and efficient even with a large number of processors while the constrained restoration is efficient for subdomains of more than 50Ă—50 pixels. The numerical tests have been executed on a Cray T3E with 128 processors and on a network of workstations

    An experiment in image restoration using transputer networks

    No full text
    The problem of image restoration, with a blurring function linear, space-variant and nonseparable, has been solved on a transputer network, using primitives of Parasoft express environment and A.C.S. Arnia Library. A domain decomposition strategy has been introduced to split the problem among the processors. Some interesting computational results are reported. © 1995, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved
    • …
    corecore