284 research outputs found
X-ray-provoked non-Mendelian transgenerational oncodeterminants
Cancer is the most important risk of radiation exposure. There is a definite lack of suitable test systems, human epidemiological data are only available for certain radiation types, especially not for charged particles. We use the Xiphophorus model which is genetically well characterized. As a prelude to experiments with heavy ions we report here on results obtained with x-rays to establish the necessary baseline for future studies. Apart from this direct aim we hope to obtain also a better insight in the genetical determination of cancer formation
Compactness for Holomorphic Supercurves
We study the compactness problem for moduli spaces of holomorphic supercurves
which, being motivated by supergeometry, are perturbed such as to allow for
transversality. We give an explicit construction of limiting objects for
sequences of holomorphic supercurves and prove that, in important cases, every
such sequence has a convergent subsequence provided that a suitable extension
of the classical energy is uniformly bounded. This is a version of Gromov
compactness. Finally, we introduce a topology on the moduli spaces enlarged by
the limiting objects which makes these spaces compact and metrisable.Comment: 38 page
The critically ill patient after hepatobiliary surgery
BACKGROUND: We analyzed the causes and results of utilization of critical care services in the special care unit in patients after surgical procedures performed by the hepatobiliary surgical service during a 23-month period. RESULTS: Thirty-two of 537 patients (6.0%) required postoperative admission to the special care unit. Twenty-one patients were admitted directly from operating room or from recovery room because of inability to wean from ventilator (n = 10), hypovolemic shock (n = 4), myocardial ischemia or infarction (n = 2), sepsis (n = 2), upper gastrointestinal bleeding (n = 2), and acute renal failure (n =1). Eleven postoperative patients were admitted from floor care for respiratory failure (n = 4), cardiac dysrhythmia or infarction (n = 4), sepsis (n = 2), and upper gastrointestinal bleeding (n = 1). Thirty-eight per cent of patients (n = 12) admitted to the special care unit after surgery died. By multivariate analysis, total postoperative stay in the special care unit that was greater than median total duration of stay of 4.5 days was the only independent predictor of mortality (P = 0.041). CONCLUSIONS: Respiratory failure was the predominant component of all complications after hepatobiliary surgery. No clinically useful predictors of eventual outcome could be identified
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Associations between gestational age and childhood sleep: a national retrospective cohort study
Background: Both sleep quality and quantity are essential for normal brain development throughout childhood, however, the association between preterm birth and sleep problems in preschoolers is not yet clear, and the effects of gestational age across the full range from preterm to post-term has not been examined. Our study investigated the sleep outcomes of children born at very-preterm (41 weeks).
Methods: A national retrospective cohort study was conducted with 114,311 children aged 3-5 years old in China. Children’s daily sleep hours and pediatric sleep disorders defined by the Children’s Sleep Habits Questionnaire (CSHQ) were reported by parents. Linear regressions and logistic regression models were applied to examine gestational age at birth with the sleep outcomes of children.
Results: Compared with full-term children, a significantly higher CSHQ score, and hence worse sleep, was observed in very-preterm (β=1·827), moderate-preterm (β=1·409), late-preterm (β=0·832), early-term (β=0·233) and post-term (β=0·831) children, all p41) was also seen in very-preterm (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]=1·287 95% confidence interval [CI] (1·157, 1·433)), moderate-preterm (AOR=1·249 95% CI (1·110, 1·405)), late-preterm (AOR=1·111 95% CI (1·052, 1·174)), and post-term (AOR=1·139 95% CI (1·061, 1·222)), all p<0·001. Shorter sleep duration was also found in very-preterm (β=-0·303), moderate-preterm (β=-0·282), late-preterm (β=-0·201), early-term (β=-0·068), and post-term (β=-0·110) compared with full-term children, all p<0·01. Preterm and post-term born children had different sleep profiles as suggested by subscales of the CSHQ.
Conclusions: Every degree of premature, early-term, and post-term birth, compared to full-term, have an association with sleep disorders and shortened daily sleep duration. Preterm, early-term, and post-term should therefore all be monitored with an increased threat of sleep disorder that requires long-term monitoring for adverse sleep outcomes in preschoolers
Low Expression of Bax Predicts Poor Prognosis in Resected Non-small Cell Lung Cancer Patients with Non-squamous Histology†
doi:10.1093/jjco/hyn089 Objective: The present study evaluated the prognostic significance of apoptosis-related proteins p53, Bax and galectin-3 in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with surgical resection. Methods: We investigated the expression of these proteins and their association with clinicopathologic characteristics including disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) i
Optical Magnetometry
Some of the most sensitive methods of measuring magnetic fields utilize
interactions of resonant light with atomic vapor. Recent developments in this
vibrant field are improving magnetometers in many traditional areas such as
measurement of geomagnetic anomalies and magnetic fields in space, and are
opening the door to new ones, including, dynamical measurements of bio-magnetic
fields, detection of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), magnetic-resonance
imaging (MRI), inertial-rotation sensing, magnetic microscopy with cold atoms,
and tests of fundamental symmetries of Nature.Comment: 11 pages; 4 figures; submitted to Nature Physic
A large sample study of spin relaxation and magnetometric sensitivity of paraffin-coated Cs vapor cells
We have manufactured more than 250 nominally identical paraffin-coated Cs
vapor cells (30 mm diameter bulbs) for multi-channel atomic magnetometer
applications. We describe our dedicated cell characterization apparatus. For
each cell we have determined the intrinsic longitudinal, \sGamma{01}, and
transverse, \sGamma{02}, relaxation rates. Our best cell shows
\sGamma{01}/2\pi\approx 0.5 Hz, and \sGamma{02}/2\pi\approx 2 Hz. We find a
strong correlation of both relaxation rates which we explain in terms of
reservoir and spin exchange relaxation. For each cell we have determined the
optimal combination of rf and laser powers which yield the highest sensitivity
to magnetic field changes. Out of all produced cells, 90% are found to have
magnetometric sensitivities in the range of 9 to 30 fTHz. Noise analysis shows
that the magnetometers operated with such cells have a sensitivity close to the
fundamental photon shot noise limit
The specificity and patterns of staining in human cells and tissues of p16INK4a antibodies demonstrate variant antigen binding
The validity of the identification and classification of human cancer using antibodies to detect biomarker proteins depends upon antibody specificity. Antibodies that bind to the tumour-suppressor protein p16INK4a are widely used for cancer diagnosis and research. In this study we examined the specificity of four commercially available anti-p16INK4a antibodies in four immunological applications. The antibodies H-156 and JC8 detected the same 16 kDa protein in western blot and immunoprecipitation tests, whereas the antibody F-12 did not detect any protein in western blot analysis or capture a protein that could be recognised by the H-156 antibody. In immunocytochemistry tests, the antibodies JC8 and H-156 detected a predominately cytoplasmic localised antigen, whose signal was depleted in p16INK4a siRNA experiments. F-12, in contrast, detected a predominately nuclear located antigen and there was no noticeable reduction in this signal after siRNA knockdown. Furthermore in immunohistochemistry tests, F-12 generated a different pattern of staining compared to the JC8 and E6H4 antibodies. These results demonstrate that three out of four commercially available p16INK4a antibodies are specific to, and indicate a mainly cytoplasmic localisation for, the p16INK4a protein. The F-12 antibody, which has been widely used in previous studies, gave different results to the other antibodies and did not demonstrate specificity to human p16INK4a. This work emphasizes the importance of the validation of commercial antibodies, aside to the previously reported use, for the full verification of immunoreaction specificity
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