311 research outputs found

    Lattice microstructure design for cathode electrodes for high-performance lithium-ion batteries

    Get PDF
    The electrode geometry is an essential parameter affecting the cycling performance of batteries. In this work, the effect of lattice geometry of the cathode electrode on battery performance was studied by theoretical simulations keeping its volume constant. It was observed that the variation of the lattice geometry improves the cycling performance when compared to conventional planar geometry. The improvement of the cycling performance in the lattice geometry is related to variations in the electrolyte current density. It was demonstrated that the lattice geometry allows to improve the discharge performance in lithium-ion batteries at higher discharge rates.511F-603F-4B30 | Francisco MirandaN/

    Pharmacokinetic-Pharmacodynamic Modeling of the Antinociceptive Effect of Diclofenac in the Rat 1

    Get PDF
    ABSTRACT The relationship between the pharmacokinetics and the antinociceptive effect of diclofenac was evaluated using the paininduced functional impairment model in the rat. Male Wistar rats were injected with uric acid in the knee joint of the right hind limb, which induced its dysfunction. Once the dysfunction was complete, animals received a p.o. dose of 0.56, 1, 1.8, 3.2, 5.6 or 10 mg/kg of sodium diclofenac, and the antinociceptive effect and drug blood concentration were simultaneously evaluated at selected times for a period of 6 h. Diclofenac produced a dose-dependent antinociceptive effect, measured as a recovery of the functionality of the injured limb. However, the onset of the antinociceptive effect was delayed with respect to blood concentrations. Moreover, the effect lasted longer than expected from pharmacokinetic data. Therefore, when functionality index was plotted against diclofenac blood concentration, an anticlockwise hysteresis loop was observed for all doses. Hysteresis collapse was achieved using the effect-compartment model, and the plot of functionality index against diclofenac concentration in the effect-compartment data was well fitted by the sigmoidal E max model. Our data suggest slow equilibrium kinetics between diclofenac concentration in blood and at its site of action, which leads to a delayed onset of the antinociceptive effect as well as a longer duration of the response resulting from drug accumulation in synovial fluid. Diclofenac is an NSAID that has been shown to be effective for relieving pain in rheumatic and nonrheumatic diseases On the other hand, it has been established that the relationship between pharmacokinetic properties and pharmacologic effect is the basis for a more rational drug regimen design, because it allows prediction of the time course of the intensity of the effect There are reports wherein the anti-inflammatory and antinociceptive effect of diclofenac cannot be directly explained by circulating concentrations in animals Materials and Methods Animals. Male Wistar rats (weighing, 180-220 g) from our own breeding facilities [Crl:(WI)BR], were used in this study. Animals were housed in a room with controlled temperature (22 Ϯ 1°C) for at least 2 days before the study. Food was withheld for 12 h before the Received for publication May 10, 1996. 1 This work is supported by CONACYT, grant 0250-M. ABBREVIATIONS: AUC, area under the blood concentration-time curve; AUC E , area under the functionality index-time curve; C, blood concentration; C max , maximal concentration; E max , maximal effect; E max obs , maximal observed effect; Ke0, transference rate constant from site effect; PIFIR, pain-induced functional impairment model in the rat; PE, polyethylene; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; FI, functionality index

    Anti-tumour necrosis factor discontinuation in inflammatory bowel disease patients in remission: study protocol of a prospective, multicentre, randomized clinical trial

    Get PDF
    Background: Patients with inflammatory bowel disease who achieve remission with anti-tumour necrosis factor (anti-TNF) drugs may have treatment withdrawn due to safety concerns and cost considerations, but there is a lack of prospective, controlled data investigating this strategy. The primary study aim is to compare the rates of clinical remission at 1?year in patients who discontinue anti-TNF treatment versus those who continue treatment. Methods: This is an ongoing, prospective, double-blind, multicentre, randomized, placebo-controlled study in patients with Crohn?s disease or ulcerative colitis who have achieved clinical remission for ?6?months with an anti-TNF treatment and an immunosuppressant. Patients are being randomized 1:1 to discontinue anti-TNF therapy or continue therapy. Randomization stratifies patients by the type of inflammatory bowel disease and drug (infliximab versus adalimumab) at study inclusion. The primary endpoint of the study is sustained clinical remission at 1?year. Other endpoints include endoscopic and radiological activity, patient-reported outcomes (quality of life, work productivity), safety and predictive factors for relapse. The required sample size is 194 patients. In addition to the main analysis (discontinuation versus continuation), subanalyses will include stratification by type of inflammatory bowel disease, phenotype and previous treatment. Biological samples will be obtained to identify factors predictive of relapse after treatment withdrawal. Results: Enrolment began in 2016, and the study is expected to end in 2020. Conclusions: This study will contribute prospective, controlled data on outcomes and predictors of relapse in patients with inflammatory bowel disease after withdrawal of anti-TNF agents following achievement of clinical remission. Clinical trial reference number: EudraCT 2015-001410-1

    Real Wage Responsiveness to Unemployment in Spain: Asymmetries Along the Business Cycle

    Get PDF
    We estimate real wage cyclicality in the period compressed between 1987 and 2013 using a large administrative dataset of workers in Spain. Real wages are weakly procyclical in Spain and focusing on differences in different phases of the business cycle, we find that differences across expansions and recessions are significant, with an even lower real wage cyclicality in recessions. Furthermore, higher levels of unemployment do not translate into additional real wages adjustments when the economy is contracting, while lower levels of unemployment during expansions have incremental effects on wage elasticity. This general result holds after accounting for differences in tenure, type of contract and age categories. Nevertheless, wages of newly-hired workers are the most sensitive to the business cycle and exhibit the lowest asymmetric pattern between expansions and recessions. At the other end, wages of workers with more than six years of tenure can be characterized as the most protected against economic downturns. The same is true for fixed-term vs. permanent workers, as well as for young vs. older workers

    Wage inequality, segregation by skill and the price of capital in an assignment model

    Get PDF
    Some pieces of empirical evidence suggest that in the U.S., over the last few decades, (i) wage inequality between-plants has risen much more than wage inequality within-plants and (ii) there has been an increase in the segregation of workers by skill into separate plants. This paper presents a frictionless assignment model in which these two features can be explained simultaneously as the result of the decline in the relative price of capital. Additional implications of the model regarding the skill premium and the dispersion in labor productivity across plants are also consistent with the empirical evidence. [resumen de autor

    Credit Supply: Identifying Balance-Sheet Channels with Loan Applications and Granted Loans

    Get PDF
    To identify credit availability we analyze the extensive and intensive margins of lending with loan applications and all loans granted in Spain. We find that during the period analyzed both worse economic and tighter monetary conditions reduce loan granting, especially to firms or from banks with lower capital or liquidity ratios. Moreover, responding to applications for the same loan, weak banks are less likely to grant the loan. Our results suggest that firms cannot offset the resultant credit restriction by turning to other banks. Importantly the bank-lending channel is notably stronger when we account for unobserved time-varying firm heterogeneity in loan demand and quality

    A reference time scale for Site U1385 (Shackleton Site) on the SW Iberian Margin

    Get PDF
    Variations in sediment color contain very strong precession signals at Site U1385, and the amplitude modulation of these cycles provides a powerful tool for developing an orbitally-tuned age model. We tuned the U1385 record by correlating peaks in L* to the local summer insolation maxima at 37°N. The benthic δ18O record of Site U1385, when placed on the tuned age model, generally agrees with other time scales within their respective chronologic uncertainties. The age model is transferred to down-core data to produce a continuous time series of log(Ca/Ti) that reflect relative changes of biogenic carbonate and detrital sediment. Biogenic carbonate increases during interglacial and interstadial climate states and decreases during glacial and stadial periods. Much of the variance in the log(Ca/Ti) is explained by a linear combination of orbital frequencies (precession, tilt and eccentricity), whereas the residual signal reflects suborbital climate variability. The strong correlation between suborbital log(Ca/Ti) variability and Greenland temperature over the last glacial cycle at Site U1385 suggests that this signal can be used as a proxy for millennial-scale climate variability over the past 1.5 Ma. Millennial climate variability, as expressed by log(Ca/Ti) at Site U1385, was a persistent feature of glacial climates over the past 1.5 Ma, including glacial periods of the early Pleistocene (‘41-kyr world’) when boundary conditions differed significantly from those of the late Pleistocene (‘100-kyr world’). Suborbital variability was suppressed during interglacial stages and enhanced during glacial periods, especially when benthic δ18O surpassed ~ 3.3–3.5‰. Each glacial inception was marked by appearance of strong millennial variability and each deglaciation was preceded by a terminal stadial event. Suborbital variability may be a symptomatic feature of glacial climate or, alternatively, may play a more active role in the inception and/or termination of glacial cycles
    corecore