6,054 research outputs found
Comparison of visual and optical quality of monofocal versus multifocal intraocular lenses
Objective: To compare visual quality in patients implanted with Tecnis ® monofocal (ZCB00) and multifocal (ZMB00) intraocular lenses taking into account their optical quality measured in vitro with an eye model.
Methods: In total, 122 patients participated in this study: 44 implanted with monofocal and 78 with multifocal intraocular lenses. Measurements of visual acuity and contrast sensitivity were performed. The optical quality of the intraocular lenses was evaluated in three image planes (distance, intermediate and near) using an eye model on a test bench. The metric considered was the area under the curve of the modulation transfer function.
Results: Optical quality at the far focus of the monofocal intraocular lens (area under the curve of the modulation transfer function = 66.97) was considerably better than that with the multifocal lens (area under the curve of the modulation transfer function = 32.54). However, no significant differences were observed between groups at the distance-corrected visual acuity. Distance-corrected near vision was better in the multifocal (0.15 ± 0.20 logMAR) than that in the monofocal group (0.43 ± 0.21 logMAR, p < 0.001), which correlated with the better optical quality at near reached by the multifocal intraocular lens (area under the curve of the modulation transfer function = 29.11) in comparison with the monofocal intraocular lens (area under the curve of the modulation transfer function = 5.0). In intermediate vision, visual acuity was 0.28 ± 0.16 logMAR (multifocal) and 0.36 ± 0.14 logMAR (monofocal) with p = 0.014, also in good agreement with the values measured in the optical quality (area under the curve of the modulation transfer function = 10.69 (multifocal) and 8.86 (monofocal)). The contrast sensitivity was similar in almost all frequencies. Pelli–Robson was slightly better in the monofocal (1.73) than in the multifocal group (1.64; p = 0.023).
Conclusion: Patients implanted with multifocal ZMB00 achieved a distance visual acuity similar to those implanted with monofocal ZCB00, but showed significantly better intermediate and near visual acuity. A correlation was found between intraocular lenses’ optical quality and patients’ visual acuity. Contrast sensitivity was very similar between the multifocal and monofocal groups
Exploiting lipid and polymer nanocarriers to improve the anticancer sonodynamic activity of chlorophyll
Sonodynamic therapy is an emerging approach that uses low-intensity ultrasound to activate a sonosensitizer agent triggering its cytotoxicity for selective cancer cell killing. Several molecules have been proposed as sonosensitizer agents, but most of these, as chlorophyll, are strongly hydrophobic with a low selectivity towards cancer tissues. Nanocarriers can help to deliver more efficiently the sonosensitizer agents in the target tumor site, increasing at the same time their sonodynamic effect, since nanosystems act as cavitation nuclei. Herein, we propose the incorporation of unmodified plant-extracted chlorophyll into nanocarriers with different composition and structure (i.e., liposomes, solid lipid nanoparticles and poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles) to obtain aqueous formulations of this natural pigment. The nanocarriers have been deeply characterized and then incubated with human prostatic cancer cells (PC-3) and spheroids (DU-145) to assess the influence of the different formulations on the chlorophyll sonodynamic effect. The highest sonodynamic cytotoxicity was obtained with chlorophyll loaded into poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles, showing promising results for future clinical investigations on sonodynamic therapy
The INTEGRAL view of the Soft Gamma-ray Repeater SGR 1806-20
We present the results obtained by INTEGRAL on the Soft-Gamma Ray Repeater
SGR 1806-20. In particular we report on the temporal and spectral properties of
the bursts detected during a moderately active period of the source in
September and October 2003 and on the search for quiescent emission.Comment: To appear in the proceedings (ESA-SP) of the 5th INTEGRAL Workshop,
"The INTEGRAL UNIVERSE", Munich, 16-20 February 200
Perturbative expansions from Monte Carlo simulations at weak coupling: Wilson loops and the static-quark self-energy
Perturbative coefficients for Wilson loops and the static-quark self-energy
are extracted from Monte Carlo simulations at weak coupling. The lattice
volumes and couplings are chosen to ensure that the lattice momenta are all
perturbative. Twisted boundary conditions are used to eliminate the effects of
lattice zero modes and to suppress nonperturbative finite-volume effects due to
Z(3) phases. Simulations of the Wilson gluon action are done with both periodic
and twisted boundary conditions, and over a wide range of lattice volumes (from
to ) and couplings (from to ).
A high precision comparison is made between the simulation data and results
from finite-volume lattice perturbation theory. The Monte Carlo results are
shown to be in excellent agreement with perturbation theory through second
order. New results for third-order coefficients for a number of Wilson loops
and the static-quark self-energy are reported.Comment: 36 pages, 15 figures, REVTEX documen
Inhibition of a-Synuclein Aggregation and Mature Fibril Disassembling With a Minimalistic Compound, ZPDm
Synucleinopathies are a group of disorders characterized by the accumulation of a-Synuclein amyloid inclusions in the brain. Preventing a-Synuclein aggregation is challenging because of the disordered nature of the protein and the stochastic nature of fibrillogenesis, but, at the same time, it is a promising approach for therapeutic intervention in these pathologies. A high-throughput screening initiative allowed us to discover ZPDm, the smallest active molecule in a library of more than 14.000 compounds. Although the ZPDm structure is highly related to that of the previously described ZPD-2 aggregation inhibitor, we show here that their mechanisms of action are entirely different. ZPDm inhibits the aggregation of wild-type, A30P, and H50Q a-Synuclein variants in vitro and interferes with a-Synuclein seeded aggregation in protein misfolding cyclic amplification assays. However, ZPDm distinctive feature is its strong potency to dismantle preformed a-Synuclein amyloid fibrils. Studies in a Caenorhabditis elegans model of Parkinson’s Disease, prove that these in vitro properties are translated into a significant reduction in the accumulation of a-Synuclein inclusions in ZPDm treated animals. Together with previous data, the present work illustrates how different chemical groups on top of a common molecular scaffold can result in divergent but complementary anti-amyloid activities
Symbolic powers of monomial ideals and Cohen-Macaulay vertex-weighted digraphs
In this paper we study irreducible representations and symbolic Rees algebras
of monomial ideals. Then we examine edge ideals associated to vertex-weighted
oriented graphs. These are digraphs having no oriented cycles of length two
with weights on the vertices. For a monomial ideal with no embedded primes we
classify the normality of its symbolic Rees algebra in terms of its primary
components. If the primary components of a monomial ideal are normal, we
present a simple procedure to compute its symbolic Rees algebra using Hilbert
bases, and give necessary and sufficient conditions for the equality between
its ordinary and symbolic powers. We give an effective characterization of the
Cohen--Macaulay vertex-weighted oriented forests. For edge ideals of transitive
weighted oriented graphs we show that Alexander duality holds. It is shown that
edge ideals of weighted acyclic tournaments are Cohen--Macaulay and satisfy
Alexander dualityComment: Special volume dedicated to Professor Antonio Campillo, Springer, to
appea
LLAMA Millimeter and Submillimeter Observatory. Update on its Science Opportunities
The Large Latin American Millimeter Array (LLAMA for short) is a joint
scientific and technological undertaking of Argentina and Brazil whose goal is
to install and to operate an observing facility capable of performing
observations of the Universe at millimeter and sub-millimeter wavelengths. It
will consist of a 12m ALMA-like antenna with the addition of two Nasmyth
cabins. LLAMA is located at 4850m above sea level in the Puna Saltenia, in the
northwest region of Argentina. When completed, LLAMA will be equipped with six
ALMA receivers covering Bands 1, 2+3, 5, 6, 7, and 9, which will populate the
two Nasmyth cabins. We summarize here the main ideas related with the Science
that LLAMA could accomplish on different astronomical topics, gathered from the
experience of a group of international experts on each field.Comment: 11 pages, contributed paper to the workshop "Prospects for
low-frequency radio astronomy in South America", held in Buenos Aires, Nov
2022; to appear in the RevMexAA-S
Betti numbers for numerical semigroup rings
We survey results related to the magnitude of the Betti numbers of numerical
semigroup rings and of their tangent cones.Comment: 22 pages; v2: updated references. To appear in Multigraded Algebra
and Applications (V. Ene, E. Miller Eds.
Two-loop Anomalous Dimensions of Heavy Baryon Currents in Heavy Quark Effective Theory
We present results on the two-loop anomalous dimensions of the heavy baryon
HQET currents with arbitrary Dirac matrices
and . From our general result we obtain the two-loop
anomalous dimensions for currents with quantum numbers of the ground state
heavy baryons , and . As a by-product of our
calculation and as an additional check we rederive the known two-loop anomalous
dimensions of mesonic scalar, pseudoscalar, vector, axial vector and tensor
currents in massless QCD as well as in HQET.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures are included in PostScript forma
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