607 research outputs found
Hair analysis of antidepressants and antipsychoticsâOverview of quantitative data
Antidepressant and antipsychotic drugs are regularly encountered in different aspects of forensic toxicology, and some cases require the examination of hair samples. In this study, common antidepressant and antipsychotic drugs regarding hair concentrations over the past decades were reviewed. Although numerous publications around method validations, case reports, or controlled dose studies were found, apparently there is a lack of comprehensive data for many substances. Information on the hair length and dosage across the publications varied largely, and case numbers were generally low except for several retrospective controlled dose studies. Many substances were described only in method validations or case reports, and data were obtained from small case numbers. On the contrary, clozapine, haloperidol, amitriptyline, nortriptyline, risperidone and its metabolite, methylphenidate, citalopram, chlorpromazine, chlorprothixene, and quetiapine had a well-founded database as these substances were investigated in controlled dose studies with higher case numbers. Given the advancements made in analytical techniques over the past years, gas chromatographyâmass spectrometry and liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry techniques were the methods of choice and allowed the detection of chemical compounds at low concentrations. The controversy around a potential use of hair analysis to estimate the dosage remains as dose-concentration studies provided divergent results. A harmonization on the investigated hair length as well as on the extraction protocol would be of favor to achieve better comparability. Although hair analysis research focused mainly on drug abuse, availability of more data on antidepressants and antipsychotics would help to gain better knowledge and assist other forensic investigators
Extracting Scattering Phase-Shifts in Higher Partial-Waves from Lattice QCD Calculations
L\"uscher's method is routinely used to determine meson-meson, meson-baryon
and baryon-baryon s-wave scattering amplitudes below inelastic thresholds from
Lattice QCD calculations - presently at unphysical light-quark masses. In this
work we review the formalism and develop the requisite expressions to extract
phase-shifts describing meson-meson scattering in partial-waves with
angular-momentum l<=6 and l=9. The implications of the underlying cubic
symmetry, and strategies for extracting the phase-shifts from Lattice QCD
calculations, are presented, along with a discussion of the signal-to-noise
problem that afflicts the higher partial-waves.Comment: 79 pages, 41 figure
Methods for removal of unwanted signals from gravity time-series : comparison using linear techniques complemented with analysis of system dynamics
We thanks the participants of the 35th General Assembly of the European Seismological Commission for comments on preliminary results. The authors are grateful to all IGETS contributors, particularly to the station operators and to ISDC/GFZ-Potsdam for providing the original gravity data used in this study. We also thank the developers of ATLANTIDA3.1 and UTide. Part of this work was performed using the ICSMB High Performance Computing Cluster, University of Aberdeen. We also thanks M. Thiel and A. Moura for reviewing a preliminary version and making comments on the methods section and M.A. AraÂŽujo for comments on Lyapunov exponents. Funding: A. Valencio is supported by CNPq, Brazil [206246/2014-5]; and received a travel grant from the School of Natural and Computing Sciences, University of Aberdeen [PO2073498], for a presentation including preliminary results.Peer reviewedPostprintPublisher PD
Experimental quantum tossing of a single coin
The cryptographic protocol of coin tossing consists of two parties, Alice and
Bob, that do not trust each other, but want to generate a random bit. If the
parties use a classical communication channel and have unlimited computational
resources, one of them can always cheat perfectly. Here we analyze in detail
how the performance of a quantum coin tossing experiment should be compared to
classical protocols, taking into account the inevitable experimental
imperfections. We then report an all-optical fiber experiment in which a single
coin is tossed whose randomness is higher than achievable by any classical
protocol and present some easily realisable cheating strategies by Alice and
Bob.Comment: 13 page
Clinical profiles and quality of care of subjects with type 2 diabetes according to their cardiovascular risk: an observational, retrospective study
Background: The European Society of Cardiology (ESC) recently defined cardiovascular risk classes for subjects with diabetes. Aim of this study was to explore the distribution of subjects with type 2 diabetes (T2D) by cardiovascular risk groups according to the ESC classification and to describe the quality indicators of care, with particular regard to cardiovascular risk factors. Methods: The study is based on data extracted from electronic medical records of patients treated at the 258 Italian diabetes centers participating in the AMD Annals initiative. Patients with T2D were stratified by cardiovascular risk. General descriptive indicators, measures of intermediate outcomes, intensity/appropriateness of pharmacological treatment for diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors, presence of other complications and overall quality of care were evaluated. Results: Overall, 473,740 subjects with type 2 diabetes (78.5% at very high cardiovascular risk, 20.9% at high risk and 0.6% at moderate risk) were evaluated. Among people with T2D at very high risk: 26.4% had retinopathy, 39.5% had albuminuria, 18.7% had a previous major cardiovascular event, 39.0% had organ damage, 89.1% had three or more risk factors. The use of DPP4-i markedly increased as cardiovascular risk increased. The prescription of secretagogues also increased and that of GLP1-RAs tended to increase. The use of SGLT2-i was still limited, and only slightly higher in subjects with very high cardiovascular risk. The overall quality of care, as summarized by the Q score, tended to be lower as the level of cardiovascular risk increased. Conclusions: A large proportion of subjects with T2D is at high or very high risk. Glucose-lowering drug therapies seem not to be adequately used with respect to their potential advantages in terms of cardiovascular risk reduction. Several actions are necessary to improve the quality of care
Domain wall QCD with physical quark masses
We present results for several light hadronic quantities (, ,
, , , , ) obtained from simulations of 2+1
flavor domain wall lattice QCD with large physical volumes and nearly-physical
pion masses at two lattice spacings. We perform a short, O(3)%, extrapolation
in pion mass to the physical values by combining our new data in a simultaneous
chiral/continuum `global fit' with a number of other ensembles with heavier
pion masses. We use the physical values of , and to
determine the two quark masses and the scale - all other quantities are outputs
from our simulations. We obtain results with sub-percent statistical errors and
negligible chiral and finite-volume systematics for these light hadronic
quantities, including: = 130.2(9) MeV; = 155.5(8) MeV; the
average up/down quark mass and strange quark mass in the scheme
at 3 GeV, 2.997(49) and 81.64(1.17) MeV respectively; and the neutral kaon
mixing parameter, , in the RGI scheme, 0.750(15) and the
scheme at 3 GeV, 0.530(11).Comment: 131 pages, 30 figures. Updated to match published versio
Applications of Nanoscale Materials in the Fields of Electrochemistry and Photoelectrochemistry
We have illustrated the important role played by the nanoscale materials in three-up-to-date
energy topics
Omeprazole and Ranitidine in the Prevention of Relapse in Patients with Duodenal Ulcer Disease
BACKGROUND: Although the eradication of Helicobacter pylori is of primary importance when initiating treatment, it is also important to have a strategy for patients who are H pylori-negative, fail to demonstrate eradication or have a tendency to become re-infected or relapse
- âŠ