839 research outputs found
The incidence and outcome of septic shock patients in the absence of early-goal directed therapy
INTRODUCTION: The purpose of the present study was to measure the incidence and outcome of septic patients presenting at the emergency department (ED) with criteria for early goal-directed therapy (EGDT). METHOD: This hospital-based, retrospective, observational study using prospectively collected electronic databases was based in a teaching hospital in Melbourne, Australia. We conducted outcome-blinded electronic screening of patients with infection admitted via the ED from 1 January 2000 to 30 June 2003. We obtained data on demographics, laboratory and clinical features on admission. We used paper records to confirm electronic identification of candidates for EGDT and to study their treatment. We followed up all patients until hospital discharge or death. RESULTS: Of 4,784 ED patients with an infectious disease diagnosis, only 50 fulfilled published clinical inclusion criteria for EGDT (EGDT candidates). Of these patients, 37 (74%) survived their hospital admission, two (4%) died in the ED, eight (16%) died in the intensive care unit and three (6%) died in the ward. After review of all ward cardiac arrests and non-NFR ('not for resuscitation') ward deaths, we identified a further two potential candidates for EGDT for an overall mortality of 28.8% (15 out of 52 patients). Analysis of treatment showed that twice as many (70%) of the EGDT candidates received vasopressor therapy in the ED, and their initial mean central venous pressure (10.8 mmHg) was almost twice that in patients from the EGDT study conducted by Rivers and coworkers. CONCLUSION: In an Australian teaching hospital candidates for EGDT were uncommon and, in the absence of an EGDT protocol, their mortality was lower than that reported with EGDT
Revealing the Superfluid Lambda Transition in the Universal Thermodynamics of a Unitary Fermi Gas
We have observed the superfluid phase transition in a strongly interacting
Fermi gas via high-precision measurements of the local compressibility, density
and pressure down to near-zero entropy. Our data completely determine the
universal thermodynamics of strongly interacting fermions without any fit or
external thermometer. The onset of superfluidity is observed in the
compressibility, the chemical potential, the entropy, and the heat capacity. In
particular, the heat capacity displays a characteristic lambda-like feature at
the critical temperature of . This is the first clear
thermodynamic signature of the superfluid transition in a spin-balanced atomic
Fermi gas. Our measurements provide a benchmark for many-body theories on
strongly interacting fermions, relevant for problems ranging from
high-temperature superconductivity to the equation of state of neutron stars.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
There is variability in the attainment of developmental milestones in the CDKL5 disorder
Background: Individuals with the CDKL5 disorder have been described as having severely impaired development. A few individuals have been reported having attained more milestones including walking and running. Our aim was to investigate variation in attainment of developmental milestones and associations with underlying genotype. Methods: Data was sourced from the International CDKL5 Disorder Database, and individuals were included if they had a pathogenic or probably pathogenic CDKL5 mutation and information on early development. Kaplan-Meier time-to-event analyses investigated the occurrence of developmental milestones. Mutations were grouped by their structural/functional consequence, and Cox regression was used to investigate the relationship between genotype and milestone attainment. Results: The study included 109 females and 18 males. By 5 years of age, only 75% of the females had attained independent sitting and 25% independent walking whilst a quarter of the males could sit independently by 1 year 3 months. Only one boy could walk independently. No clear relationship between mutation group and milestone attainment was present, although females with a late truncating mutation attained the most milestones. Conclusion: Attainment of developmental milestones is severely impaired in the CDKL5 disorder, with the majority who did attain skills attaining them at a late age. It appears as though males are more severely impaired than the females. Larger studies are needed to further investigate the role of genotype on clinical variability
Cold gas in elliptical galaxies
We explore the evolution of the cold gas (molecular and neutral hydrogen) of
elliptical galaxies and merger remnants ordered into a time sequence on the
basis of spectroscopic age estimates. We find that the fraction of cold gas in
early merger remnants decreases significantly for ~1-2 Gyr, but subsequent
evolution toward evolved elliptical systems sees very little change. This trend
can be attributed to an initial gas depletion by strong star-formation which
subsequently declines to quiescent rates. This explanation is consistent with
the merger picture for the formation of elliptical galaxies. We also explore
the relation between HI-to-H2 mass ratio and spectroscopic galaxy age, but find
no evidence for a statistically significant trend. This suggests little net HI
to H2 conversion for the systems in the present sample.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
An optical/NIR survey of globular clusters in early-type galaxies. I. Introduction and data reduction procedures
Context: The combination of optical and near-infrared (NIR) colours has the
potential to break the age/metallicity degeneracy and offers a better
metallicity sensitivity than optical colours alone. Previous studies of
extragalactic globular clusters (GCs) with this colour combination, however,
have suffered from small samples or have been restricted to a few galaxies.
Aims: We compile a homogeneous and representative sample of GC systems with
multi-band photometry to be used in subsequent papers where ages and
metallicity distributions will be studied. Methods: We acquired deep K-band
images of 14 bright nearby early-type galaxies. The images were obtained with
the LIRIS near-infrared spectrograph and imager at the William Herschel
Telescope (WHT) and combined with optical ACS g and z images from the Hubble
Space Telescope public archive. Results: For the first time GC photometry of 14
galaxies are observed and reduced homogeneously in this wavelength regime. We
achieved a limiting magnitude of K~20-21. For the majority of the galaxies we
detect about 70 GCs each. NGC4486 and NGC4649, the cluster-richest galaxies in
the sample contain 301 and 167 GCs, respectively. We present tables containing
coordinates, photometry and sizes of the GCs available.Comment: A&A accepted, 18 pages, 13 figure
The Breakdown of Preformed Peritoneal Advanced Glycation End Products by Intraperitoneal Alagebrium
It has been demonstrated that inhibitors of advanced glycation end products (AGE), such as aminoguanidine, can suppress peritoneal AGE in rats on peritoneal dialysis (PD). However, it is unknown whether late administration of a putative cross-link breaker, alagebrium, could reverse peritoneal AGE. We therefore compared alagebrium with aminoguanidine in their ability to reverse peritoneal AGE in rats on PD. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into 3 groups: group I dialyzed with 4.25% glucose solution for all exchanges; group II dialyzed with 4.25% glucose solution containing aminoguanidine, and group III dialyzed with 4.25% glucose solution containing alagebrium for last 8 weeks of 12-week dialysis period. Dialysis exchanges were performed 2 times a day for 12 weeks. Immunohistochemistry was performed using a monoclonal anti-AGE antibody. One-hour PET was performed for comparison of transport characteristics. The immunolabelling of AGE in peritoneal membrane was markedly decreased in the alagebrium group. Consistent with this, the alagebrium group exhibited significantly higher D/Do glucose and lower D/P urea, suggesting low peritoneal membrane transport. But there were no significant differences between the control and the aminoguanidine group. These results suggest that the alagebrium may be the optimal therapeutic approach, compared with treatment with inhibitors of AGE formation, in rats on PD
Constraints on mass loss and self-enrichment scenarios for the globular clusters of the Fornax dSph
Recently, high-dispersion spectroscopy has demonstrated conclusively that
four of the five globular clusters (GCs) in the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy
are very metal-poor with [Fe/H]<-2. The remaining cluster, Fornax 4, has
[Fe/H]=-1.4. This is in stark contrast to the field star metallicity
distribution which shows a broad peak around [Fe/H]=-1 with only a few percent
of the stars having [Fe/H]<-2. If we only consider stars and clusters with
[Fe/H]<-2 we thus find an extremely high GC specific frequency, SN=400,
implying by far the highest ratio of GCs to field stars known anywhere. We
estimate that about 1/5-1/4 of all stars in the Fornax dSph with [Fe/H]<-2
belong to the four most metal-poor GCs. These GCs could, therefore, at most
have been a factor of 4-5 more massive initially. Yet, the Fornax GCs appear to
share the same anomalous chemical abundance patterns known from Milky Way GCs,
commonly attributed to the presence of multiple stellar generations within the
clusters. The extreme ratio of metal-poor GC- versus field stars in the Fornax
dSph is difficult to reconcile with scenarios for self-enrichment and early
evolution of GCs in which a large fraction (90%-95%) of the first-generation
stars have been lost. It also suggests that the GCs may not have formed as part
of a larger population of now disrupted clusters with an initial power-law mass
distribution. The Fornax dSph may be a rosetta stone for constraining theories
of the formation, self-enrichment and early dynamical evolution of star
clusters.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for A&A Letter
Central Structural Parameters of Early-Type Galaxies as Viewed with HST/NICMOS
We present surface photometry for the central regions of a sample of 33
early-type (E, S0, and S0/a) galaxies observed at 1.6 microns (H band) using
the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). We employ a new technique of two-dimensional
fitting to extract quantitative parameters for the bulge light distribution and
nuclear point sources, taking into consideration the effects of the
point-spread function. Parameterizing the bulge profile with a ``Nuker'' law,
we confirm that the central surface-brightness distributions largely fall into
two categories, each of which correlates with the global properties of the
galaxies. ``Core'' galaxies tend to be luminous ellipticals with boxy or pure
elliptical isophotes, whereas ``power-law'' galaxies are preferentially lower
luminosity systems with disky isophotes. Unlike most previous studies, however,
we do not find a clear gap in the distribution of inner cusp slopes; several
objects have inner cusp slopes (0.3 < gamma < 0.5) which straddle the regimes
conventionally defined for core and power-law type galaxies. The nature of
these intermediate objects is unclear. We draw attention to two objects in the
sample which appear to be promising cases of galaxies with isothermal cores
that are not the brightest members of a cluster. Unresolved nuclear point
sources are found in about 50% of the sample galaxies, roughly independent of
profile type, with magnitudes in the range m^{nuc}_H = 12.8 to 17.4 mag, which
correspond to M_H^{nuc} = -12.8 to -18.4 mag. (Abridged)Comment: To appear in The Astronomical Journal. Latex, 24 pages and 17 JPEG
image
A Magnetohydrodynamic Model for the Formation of Episodic Jets
Episodic ejection of plasma blobs have been observed in many black hole
systems. While steady, continuous jets are believed to be associated with
large-scale open magnetic fields, what causes the episodic ejection of blobs
remains unclear. Here by analogy with the coronal mass ejection on the Sun, we
propose a magnetohydrodynamical model for episodic ejections from black holes
associated with the closed magnetic fields in an accretion flow. Shear and
turbulence of the accretion flow deform the field and result in the formation
of a flux rope in the disk corona. Energy and helicity are accumulated and
stored until a threshold is reached. The system then loses its equilibrium and
the flux rope is thrust outward by the magnetic compression force in a
catastrophic way. Our calculations show that for parameters appropriate for the
black hole in our Galactic center, the plasmoid can attain relativistic speeds
in about 35 minutes.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; the finalized version to appear in MNRA
Plasmoids in Reconnecting Current Sheets: Solar and Terrestrial Contexts Compared
Magnetic reconnection plays a crucial role in violent energy conversion
occurring in the environments of high electrical conductivity, such as the
solar atmosphere, magnetosphere, and fusion devices. We focus on the
morphological features of the process in two different environments, the solar
atmosphere and the geomagnetic tail. In addition to indirect evidence that
indicates reconnection in progress or having just taken place, such as auroral
manifestations in the magnetosphere and the flare loop system in the solar
atmosphere, more direct evidence of reconnection in the solar and terrestrial
environments is being collected. Such evidence includes the reconnection inflow
near the reconnecting current sheet, and the outflow along the sheet
characterized by a sequence of plasmoids. Both turbulent and unsteady
Petschek-type reconnection processes could account for the observations. We
also discuss other relevant observational consequences of both mechanisms in
these two settings. While on face value, these are two completely different
physical environments, there emerge many commonalities, for example, an Alfven
speed of the same order of magnitude, a key parameter determining the
reconnection rate. This comparative study is meant as a contribution to current
efforts aimed at isolating similarities in processes occurring in very
different contexts in the heliosphere, and even in the universe.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, in press at J. Geophys. Res. (Space Physics),
for the special NESSC section on Comparative Aspects of Magnetic Reconnectio
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