1,359 research outputs found
The potential therapeutic effects of creatine supplementation on body composition and muscle function in cancer
Low muscle mass in individuals with cancer has a profound impact on quality of life and independence and is associated with greater treatment toxicity and poorer prognosis. Exercise interventions are regularly being investigated as a means to ameliorate treatment-related adverse effects, and nutritional/supplementation strategies to augment adaptations to exercise are highly valuable. Creatine (Cr) is a naturally-occurring substance in the human body that plays a critical role in energy provision during muscle contraction. Given the beneficial effects of Cr supplementation on lean body mass, strength, and physical function in a variety of clinical populations, there is therapeutic potential in individuals with cancer at heightened risk for muscle loss. Here, we provide an overview of Cr physiology, summarize the evidence on the use of Cr supplementation in various aging/clinical populations, explore mechanisms of action, and provide perspectives on the potential therapeutic role of Cr in the exercise oncology setting
Mechanical Properties and Fracture Dynamics of Silicene Membranes
As graphene became one of the most important materials today, there is a
renewed interest on others similar structures. One example is silicene, the
silicon analogue of graphene. It share some the remarkable graphene properties,
such as the Dirac cone, but presents some distinct ones, such as a pronounced
structural buckling. We have investigated, through density functional based
tight-binding (DFTB), as well as reactive molecular dynamics (using ReaxFF),
the mechanical properties of suspended single-layer silicene. We calculated the
elastic constants, analyzed the fracture patterns and edge reconstructions. We
also addressed the stress distributions, unbuckling mechanisms and the fracture
dependence on the temperature. We analysed the differences due to distinct edge
morphologies, namely zigzag and armchair
General rules for bosonic bunching in multimode interferometers
We perform a comprehensive set of experiments that characterize bosonic
bunching of up to 3 photons in interferometers of up to 16 modes. Our
experiments verify two rules that govern bosonic bunching. The first rule,
obtained recently in [1,2], predicts the average behavior of the bunching
probability and is known as the bosonic birthday paradox. The second rule is
new, and establishes a n!-factor quantum enhancement for the probability that
all n bosons bunch in a single output mode, with respect to the case of
distinguishable bosons. Besides its fundamental importance in phenomena such as
Bose-Einstein condensation, bosonic bunching can be exploited in applications
such as linear optical quantum computing and quantum-enhanced metrology.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, and supplementary material (4 pages, 1 figure
Global Alfven Wave Heating of the Magnetosphere of Young Stars
Excitation of a Global Alfven wave (GAW) is proposed as a viable mechanism to
explain plasma heating in the magnetosphere of young stars. The wave and basic
plasma parameters are compatible with the requirement that the dissipation
length of GAWs be comparable to the distance between the shocked region at the
star's surface and the truncation region in the accretion disk. A two-fluid
magnetohydrodynamic plasma model is used in the analysis. A current carrying
filament along magnetic field lines acts as a waveguide for the GAW. The
current in the filament is driven by plasma waves along the magnetic field
lines and/or by plasma crossing magnetic field lines in the truncated region of
the disk of the accreting plasma. The conversion of a small fraction of the
kinetic energy into GAW energy is sufficient to heat the plasma filament to
observed temperatures.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, aheatf.tex, 2 figure
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