7,800 research outputs found
The Isgur-Wise Function to from Sum Rules in the Heavy Quark Effective Theory
Radiative corrections to both perturbative and non-perturbative contributions
are added to existing calculations of the Isgur-Wise function . To
this end, we develop a method for calculating two-loop integrals in the heavy
quark effective theory involving two different scales. The inclusion of
terms causes to decrease as compared to the lowest
order result and shows the importance of quantum effects. The slope parameter
violates the bound given by de Rafael and Taron.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures (not included), (LaTeX), HD-THEP-92-4
Asymptotics of the perturbative series for f_{B^*}/f_B
We investigate the structure of the leading IR renormalon singularity in the
QCD/HQET matching coefficients for heavy-light quark currents beyond the
large-\beta_0 limit. From this result, we derive the large-order behaviour of
the perturbative series for these coefficients, and for ratios of meson matrix
elements, such as f_{B^*}/f_B.Comment: 45 pages, 2 eps figures. v2: small corrections, reference added. v3:
reference added. v4: errors in some equations of Appendix B, in (5.8) and
Table 2 corrected, numerical changes are very small. Paper also available
from http://www-ttp.physik.uni-karlsruhe.de/Preprints
Implementing a 48 h EWTD-compliant rota for junior doctors in the UK does not compromise patients’ safety : assessor-blind pilot comparison
Background: There are currently no field data about the effect of implementing European Working Time Directive (EWTD)-compliant rotas in a medical setting. Surveys of doctors’ subjective opinions on shift work have not provided reliable objective data with which to evaluate its efficacy.
Aim: We therefore studied the effects on patient's safety and doctors’ work-sleep patterns of implementing an EWTD-compliant 48 h work week in a single-blind intervention study carried out over a 12-week period at the University Hospitals Coventry & Warwickshire NHS Trust. We hypothesized that medical error rates would be reduced following the new rota.
Methods: Nineteen junior doctors, nine studied while working an intervention schedule of <48 h per week and 10 studied while working traditional weeks of <56 h scheduled hours in medical wards. Work hours and sleep duration were recorded daily. Rate of medical errors (per 1000 patient-days), identified using an established active surveillance methodology, were compared for the Intervention and Traditional wards. Two senior physicians blinded to rota independently rated all suspected errors.
Results: Average scheduled work hours were significantly lower on the intervention schedule [43.2 (SD 7.7) (range 26.0–60.0) vs. 52.4 (11.2) (30.0–77.0) h/week; P < 0.001], and there was a non-significant trend for increased total sleep time per day [7.26 (0.36) vs. 6.75 (0.40) h; P = 0.095]. During a total of 4782 patient-days involving 481 admissions, 32.7% fewer total medical errors occurred during the intervention than during the traditional rota (27.6 vs. 41.0 per 1000 patient-days, P = 0.006), including 82.6% fewer intercepted potential adverse events (1.2 vs. 6.9 per 1000 patient-days, P = 0.002) and 31.4% fewer non-intercepted potential adverse events (16.6 vs. 24.2 per 1000 patient-days, P = 0.067). Doctors reported worse educational opportunities on the intervention rota.
Conclusions: Whilst concerns remain regarding reduced educational opportunities, our study supports the hypothesis that a 48 h work week coupled with targeted efforts to improve sleep hygiene improves patient safety
OA01-06 LB. HIV-1 plasma RNA and risk of HIV-1 transmission
Background: Non-sterilizing HIV-1 vaccines may provide public health benefits if they significantly reduce plasma HIV-1 RNA, thus potentially reducing infectiousness. Quantification of reduction in plasma HIV-1 RNA needed to decrease HIV-1 transmission is useful for design of efficacy trials of candidate HIV-1 vaccines. We modeled the relationship between plasma HIV-1 RNA and HIV-1 transmission using data from a prospective study of African heterosexual HIV-1 serodiscordant couples. Methods: 3408 HIV-1-infected participants with CD4 counts ≥250 cells/mm3 enrolled in the Partners in Prevention HSV/HIV Transmission Study and their partners were followed for ≤24 months. HIV-1 transmission events were assessed for viral genetic linkage within the enrolled partnership by determining HIV-1 env and gag sequences from partners. The relationship between plasma HIV-1 RNA over time and risk of genetically linked HIV-1 transmission was evaluated with a Cox model with a natural cubic spline. Results: 84 post-enrollment linked HIV-1 transmissions were observed. HIV-1 incidence increased rapidly and non-linearly with higher plasma HIV-1: from 0.53 transmissions per 100 person-years for plasma HIV-1 RNA 1,000,000 copies/mL (p<0.0001). Baseline HIV-1 RNA in men was, on average, 0.4 log10 higher than in women; no significant difference in risk of transmission for a given HIV-1 level was observed between men and women (p = 0.17). Given the distribution of plasma HIV-1 RNA in this population of stable cohabiting couples, our modeling predicts that a 0.74 log10 reduction in average plasma HIV-1 RNA in the population would be required for a 50% reduction in HIV-1 transmission risk. Conclusion: This analysis provides a detailed description of the relationship between plasma HIV-1 RNA and risk of heterosexual HIV-1 transmission. These findings suggest targets for reduction in HIV-1 RNA for use in evaluating non-sterilizing HIV-1 vaccine candidates in HIV-1 infected persons to reduce risk of heterosexual HIV-1 transmission
Precise Response Time Analysis for Multiple DAG Tasks with Intra-task Priority Assignment
In many real-time application domains, there are execution dependencies, such tasks may be formulated as multiple Directed Acyclic Graphs (DAGs) and scheduled with intra-task (i.e., intra-DAG) priority assignment. The worst-case completion time of a DAG must be bounded and schedulability analysis must be conducted during the design phase to estimate the required hardware resources. Typical examples include automotive systems and Ultra-Reliable Low Latency Communications (URLLC), which is the ``to-business'' protocol in 5G technologies, deployed in industrial automation for instance. To bound the execution time of multiple DAGs, there are two key factors to analyze: the intra-task interference for a single DAG and the inter-task interference between DAGs. While extensive efforts have been invested, the existing methods either still contain a large degree of pessimism or are even erroneous due to errors in the derived analysis. In this paper, we first provide an in-depth analysis of the limitation and defects of the existing methods. Inspired by these observations, we construct novel response time analysis for multiple DAG tasks with arbitrary intra-task priority assignment. Our analysis precisely accounts for both the intra- and inter-task interference by fully exploring the node parallelism in each DAG as well as between DAGs. Extensive experimental results show that the proposed analysis obtains tighter bounds and improves the system scheduability by at least 300\% compared to state-of-the-art approaches. This improvement is even larger when the scheduling pressure is relatively high, up to 100\% versus 0\% in many cases. This work notably advances the use of response time analysis in the industry. Practitioners have to resort to either potentially unsafe measurement results or significant resource over-provisioning when precise analysis is unavailable
Two-loop corrections to the Isgur-Wise function in QCD sum rules
We complete the QCD sum rule analysis of the Isgur Wise form factor
at next-to-leading order in renormalization-group improved
perturbation theory. To this end, the exact result for the two-loop corrections
to the perturbative contribution is derived using the heavy quark effective
theory. Several techniques for the evaluation of two-loop integrals involving
two different types of heavy quark propagators are discussed in detail, among
them the methods of integration by parts and differential equations. The
order- corrections to the Isgur-Wise function turn out to be small
and well under control. At large recoil, they tend to decrease the form factor
by .Comment: 24 pages (REVTEX), 2 figures available upon request, SLAC-PUB-599
An observational study of patient characteristics associated with the mode of admission to acute stroke services in North East, England
Objective
Effective provision of urgent stroke care relies upon admission to hospital by emergency ambulance and may involve pre-hospital redirection. The proportion and characteristics of patients who do not arrive by emergency ambulance and their impact on service efficiency is unclear. To assist in the planning of regional stroke services we examined the volume, characteristics and prognosis of patients according to the mode of presentation to local services.
Study design and setting
A prospective regional database of consecutive acute stroke admissions was conducted in North East, England between 01/09/10-30/09/11. Case ascertainment and transport mode were checked against hospital coding and ambulance dispatch databases.
Results
Twelve acute stroke units contributed data for a mean of 10.7 months. 2792/3131 (89%) patients received a diagnosis of stroke within 24 hours of admission: 2002 arrivals by emergency ambulance; 538 by private transport or non-emergency ambulance; 252 unknown mode. Emergency ambulance patients were older (76 vs 69 years), more likely to be from institutional care (10% vs 1%) and experiencing total anterior circulation symptoms (27% vs 6%). Thrombolysis treatment was commoner following emergency admission (11% vs 4%). However patients attending without emergency ambulance had lower inpatient mortality (2% vs 18%), a lower rate of institutionalisation (1% vs 6%) and less need for daily carers (7% vs 16%). 149/155 (96%) of highly dependent patients were admitted by emergency ambulance, but none received thrombolysis.
Conclusion
Presentations of new stroke without emergency ambulance involvement were not unusual but were associated with a better outcome due to younger age, milder neurological impairment and lower levels of pre-stroke dependency. Most patients with a high level of pre-stroke dependency arrived by emergency ambulance but did not receive thrombolysis. It is important to be aware of easily identifiable demographic groups that differ in their potential to gain from different service configurations
Intracellular mechanisms underlying the nicotinic enhancement of LTP in the rat dentate gyrus
We have previously shown that activation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) enhanced long-term potentiation (LTP) in the rat dentate gyrus in vitro via activation of α7 nAChR. In the present studies, mechanisms underlying the acute and chronic nicotinic enhancement of LTP were examined. In particular, the involvement of activation of intracellular kinases was examined using selective kinase antagonists, and the effects of enhancing cholinergic function with positive allosteric modulators of the α7 nAChR and with acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitors were also investigated. Activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) was found to be involved in the induction of the acute nicotinic enhancement of LTP, although not control LTP. In contrast, activation of the tyrosine kinase Src, Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, Janus kinase 2 and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase was not involved in the acute nicotinic enhancement of LTP, although Src activation was necessary for control LTP. Moreover, activation of phosphoinositide 3-kinase was involved in the acute nicotinic enhancement of LTP to a much lesser extent than in control LTP. Chronic nicotine enhancement of LTP was found to be dependent on PKA, ERK and Src kinases. Acute nicotinic enhancement of LTP was occluded by chronic nicotine treatment. The positive allosteric modulator PNU-120596 was found to strongly reduce the threshold for nicotinic enhancement of LTP, an affect mediated via the α7 nAChR as it was blocked by the selective antagonist methyllycaconitine. The AChE inhibitors tacrine and physostigmine enhanced control LTP
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