741 research outputs found
Interaction between Dimethylpolysiloxane and Autologous Plasma Triggering in Vitro Inflammation in Cultured PBMC
The data obtained from this study try to explain the mechanism of cellular immune response of dmps-injected recipients with in vitro-based method to get the description of immune responses that occurs in the body due to exposure to dmps which can lead to granuloma formation, followed by fibrosis. pbmc is taken from normal patients and patients with granulomas due to injection of dmps. And then, it was cultured for72 hours with rpmi treatment as a negative control, pha and lpsas a positive control, dmps only and dmps with the addition of autologous plasma. The purpose of the pbmc culture was to describe the activity of tnf-a, ifn-Îł, il-6, il13, il-10 and pbmc proliferation. There was no significant increase (p> 0.05) in proliferation of lymphocytes and monocytes in the dmps-treated group, both in normal patients and patients with granulomas. The role of autologous plasma was not observed in increasing cell proliferation. Nonetheless, autologous plasma had a role in increasing activity of tnf-a and il-6 significantly (p <0.05) in response to dmps exposure in both of patients. The data of this study indicated that dmps was able to trigger non specific inflammatory activity mediated by tnf-a and il-6 and it depended on each individual plasma proteins. Specific cellular immune response due to dmps exposure, as lymphocyte and monocyte proliferation, was not observe
Role of the Built Environment in the Recovery From COVID-19: Evidence From a GIS-Based Natural Experiment on the City Blocks in Wuhan, China
The built environment closely relates to the development of COVID-19 and post-disaster recovery. Nevertheless, few studies examine its impacts on the recovery stage and corresponding urban development strategies. This study examines the built environmentâs role in Wuhanâs recovery at the city block level through a natural experiment. We first aggregated eight built environmental characteristics (BECs) of 192 city blocks from the perspectives of density, infrastructure supply, and socioeconomic environment; then, the BECs were associated with the recovery rates at the same city blocks, based on the public âCOVID-19-freeâ reports of about 7,100 communities over the recovery stages. The results showed that three BECs, i.e., ânumber of nearby designated hospitals,â âgreen ratio,â and âhousing priceâ had significant associations with Wuhanâs recovery when the strict control measures were implemented. At the first time of reporting, more significant associations were also found with âaverage building age,â âneighborhood facility development level,â and âfacility management level.â In contrast, no associations were found for âcontrolled residential land-use intensityâ and âplot ratioâ throughout the stages. The findings from Wuhanâs recovery pinpointing evidence with implications in future smart and resilient urban development are as follows: the accessibility of hospitals should be comprehensive in general; and the average housing price of a city block can reflect its post-disaster recoverability compared to that of the other blocks
Multiple Functionality in Nanotube Transistors
Calculations of quantum transport in a carbon nanotube transistor show that
such a device offers unique functionality. It can operate as a ballistic
field-effect transistor, with excellent characteristics even when scaled to 10
nm dimensions. At larger gate voltages, channel inversion leads to resonant
tunneling through an electrostatically defined nanoscale quantum dot. Thus the
transistor becomes a gated resonant tunelling device, with negative
differential resistance at a tunable threshold. For the dimensions considered
here, the device operates in the Coulomb blockade regime, even at room
temperature.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Radius and chirality dependent conformation of polymer molecule at nanotube interface
Temperature dependent conformations of linear polymer molecules adsorbed at
carbon nanotube (CNT) interfaces are investigated through molecule dynamics
simulations. Model polyethylene (PE) molecules are shown to have selective
conformations on CNT surface, controlled by atomic structures of CNT lattice
and geometric coiling energy. PE molecules form entropy driven assembly
domains, and their preferred wrapping angles around large radius CNT (40, 40)
reflect the molecule configurations with energy minimums on a graphite plane.
While PE molecules prefer wrapping on small radius armchair CNT (5, 5)
predominantly at low temperatures, their configurations are shifted to larger
wrapping angle ones on a similar radius zigzag CNT (10, 0). A nematic
transformation around 280 K is identified through Landau-deGennes theory, with
molecule aligning along tube axis in extended conformationsComment: 19 pages, 7 figure2, submitted to journa
Pre-hospital management protocols and perceived difficulty in diagnosing acute heart failure
Aim To illustrate the pre-hospital management arsenals and protocols in different EMS units, and to estimate the perceived difficulty of diagnosing suspected acute heart failure (AHF) compared with other common pre-hospital conditions. Methods and results A multinational survey included 104 emergency medical service (EMS) regions from 18 countries. Diagnostic and therapeutic arsenals related to AHF management were reported for each type of EMS unit. The prevalence and contents of management protocols for common medical conditions treated pre-hospitally was collected. The perceived difficulty of diagnosing AHF and other medical conditions by emergency medical dispatchers and EMS personnel was interrogated. Ultrasound devices and point-of-care testing were available in advanced life support and helicopter EMS units in fewer than 25% of EMS regions. AHF protocols were present in 80.8% of regions. Protocols for ST-elevation myocardial infarction, chest pain, and dyspnoea were present in 95.2, 80.8, and 76.0% of EMS regions, respectively. Protocolized diagnostic actions for AHF management included 12-lead electrocardiogram (92.1% of regions), ultrasound examination (16.0%), and point-of-care testings for troponin and BNP (6.0 and 3.5%). Therapeutic actions included supplementary oxygen (93.2%), non-invasive ventilation (80.7%), intravenous furosemide, opiates, nitroglycerine (69.0, 68.6, and 57.0%), and intubation 71.5%. Diagnosing suspected AHF was considered easy to moderate by EMS personnel and moderate to difficult by emergency medical dispatchers (without significant differences between de novo and decompensated heart failure). In both settings, diagnosis of suspected AHF was considered easier than pulmonary embolism and more difficult than ST-elevation myocardial infarction, asthma, and stroke. Conclusions The prevalence of AHF protocols is rather high but the contents seem to vary. Difficulty of diagnosing suspected AHF seems to be moderate compared with other pre-hospital conditions
<i>Spitzer</i> microlens measurement of a massive remnant in a well-separated binary
We report the detection and mass measurement of a binary lens OGLE-2015-BLG-1285La,b, with the more massive component having M1 > 1.35 Mâ (80% probability). A main-sequence star in this mass range is ruled out by limits on blue light, meaning that a primary in this mass range must be a neutron star (NS) or black hole (BH). The system has a projected separation râ„ = 6.1 ± 0.4 AU and lies in the Galactic bulge. These measurements are based on the "microlens parallax" effect, i.e., comparing the microlensing light curve as seen from Spitzer, which lay at 1.25 AU projected from Earth, to the light curves from four ground-based surveys, three in the optical and one in the near-infrared. Future adaptive optics imaging of the companion by 30 m class telescopes will yield a much more accurate measurement of the primary mass. This discovery both opens the path and defines the challenges to detecting and characterizing BHs and NSs in wide binaries, with either dark or luminous companions. In particular, we discuss lessons that can be applied to future Spitzer and Kepler K2 microlensing parallax observations
Synthesis of Novel Porphyrin and its Complexes Covalently Linked to Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotubes and Study of their Spectroscopy
Novel covalent porphyrin and its complexes (Co2+, Zn2+) functionalized multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWNTs) have been successfully synthesized by the reaction of the carboxyl on the surface of MWNTs which was synthesized to use carbon radicals generated by the thermal decomposition of azodiisobutyronitrile (AIBN) with 5-p-hydroxyphenyl-10,15,20-triphenyl-porphyrin and its complexes (Co2+, Zn2+). Three resulting nanohybrids were characterized by spectroscopy (FT-IR, Raman, and UV-vis), TGA, and TEM. The quality of porphyrin attached to the MWNTs was determined from thermogravimeric analysis (TGA) of the MWNTs, which showed a weight loss of about 60%. The Raman and absorption spectroscopy data showed that the electronic properties of modified MWNTs were mostly retained, without damaging their one-dimensional electronic properties. From fluorescence measurements, it was observed that the porphyrin and its complexes (Co2+, Zn2+) were nearly quenched by MWNTs, indicating that this covalently modified mode facilitated the effective energy or electron transfer between the excited porphyrin moiety and the extended Ï-system of MWNTs
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