578 research outputs found
Percutaneous gastrostomy: troubleshooting complications
Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy
was first described in 1980 (Gauderer
et al, 1980), superseding surgical
gastrostomy as a means of providing
long-term enteral nutrition. Despite
the commonality of this procedure, its
associated morbidity and mortality rates are
significant, with directly attributable rates of
1:30 and 1:150 respectively.
Poor patient selection and poor
management are the principal factors
contributing to adverse outcomes. The 2004
National Confidential Enquiry into Patient
Outcome and Death recorded that 19%
of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy
procedures performed were âfutile or not
indicated at allâ. This article provides a
practical approach to avoiding and treating
complications associated with percutaneous
endoscopic gastrostomy feeding
Alcohol Intake and Blood Pressure: A Systematic Review Implementing a Mendelian Randomization Approach
Using a mendelian randomization approach Sarah Lewis and colleagues find strong support for the hypothesis that alcohol intake has a marked effect on blood pressure and the risk of hypertension
On the Enforcement of Trade Embargoes by the Merchant Guilds
Compensation from rulers of trading centres to merchants whose property rights had been violated was a notable feature of early European international trade. We demonstrate in a repeated-game model that demands for compensation made threats by merchant guilds to impose trade boycotts self-enforcing for individual merchants, thus removing incentives for embargo breaking that could otherwise have rendered guilds powerless. Long-distance merchants were thus protected from predation by medieval city rulers, possibly providing a foundation for the trade expansion of the `Commercial Revolution'. We also
address the frequently neglected issue of whether the guilds and cities would have agreed on the level of trade which they wished to support
On the Enforcement of Trade Embargoes by the Merchant Guilds
Compensation from rulers of trading centres to merchants whose property rights had been violated was a notable feature of early European international trade. We demonstrate in a repeated-game model that demands for compensation made threats by merchant guilds to impose trade boycotts self-enforcing for individual merchants, thus removing incentives for embargo breaking that could otherwise have rendered guilds powerless. Long-distance merchants were thus protected from predation by medieval city rulers, possibly providing a foundation for the trade expansion of the `Commercial Revolution'. We also
address the frequently neglected issue of whether the guilds and cities would have agreed on the level of trade which they wished to support
Charged quantum dot micropillar system for deterministic light-matter interactions
This work was funded by the Future Emerging Technologies (FET) programme within the Seventh Framework Programme for Research of the European Commission, FET-Open, FP7-284743 [project Spin Photon Angular Momentum Transfer for Quantum Enabled Technologies (SPANGL4Q)] and the German Ministry of Education and research (BMBF) and Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [project Solid State Quantum Networks (SSQN)]. J.G.R. is sponsored by the EPSRC fellowship EP/M024458/1.Quantum dots (QDs) are semiconductor nanostructures in which a three-dimensional potential trap produces an electronic quantum confinement, thus mimicking the behavior of single atomic dipole-like transitions. However, unlike atoms, QDs can be incorporated into solid-state photonic devices such as cavities or waveguides that enhance the light-matter interaction. A near unit efficiency light-matter interaction is essential for deterministic, scalable quantum-information (QI) devices. In this limit, a single photon input into the device will undergo a large rotation of the polarization of the light field due to the strong interaction with the QD. In this paper we measure a macroscopic (âŒ6â) phase shift of light as a result of the interaction with a negatively charged QD coupled to a low-quality-factor (QâŒ290) pillar microcavity. This unexpectedly large rotation angle demonstrates that this simple low-Q-factor design would enable near-deterministic light-matter interactions.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Synovial changes detected by ultrasound in people with knee osteoarthritis - a meta-analysis of observational studies
Objectives
To examine the prevalence of synovial effusion, synovial hypertrophy and positive Doppler signal (DS) detected by ultrasound (US) in people with knee osteoarthritis (OA) and/or knee pain compared to that in the general population.
Method
A systematic literature search was undertaken in Medline, EMBASE, Allied and Complementary Medicine, PubMed Web of Science, and SCOPUS databases in May 2015. Frequencies of US abnormalities in people with knee OA/pain, in the general population or asymptomatic controls were pooled using the random effects model. Publication bias and heterogeneity between studies were examined.
Results
Twenty four studies in people with knee pain/OA and five studies of the general population or asymptomatic controls met the inclusion criteria. The pooled prevalence of US effusion, synovial hypertrophy and positive DS in people with knee OA/pain were 51.5% (95% CI 40.2 to 62.8), 41.5% (26.3â57.5) and 32.7% (8.34â63.24), respectively, which were higher than those in the general population or asymptomatic controls (19.9% (95%CI 7.8â35.3%), 14.5% (0â58.81), and 15.8 (3.08â35.36), respectively). People with knee OA (ACR criteria or radiographic OA) had greater prevalence of US abnormalities than people with knee pain (P = 0.037, P = 0.010 and P = 0.009, respectively).
Conclusions
US detected effusion, synovial hypertrophy and DS are more common in people with knee OA/pain, compared to the general population. These abnormalities relate more to presence of OA structural changes than to pain
Quantum modulation of a coherent state wavepacket with a single electron spin
The interaction of quantum objects lies at the heart of fundamental quantum
physics and is key to a wide range of quantum information technologies.
Photon-quantum-emitter interactions are among the most widely studied.
Two-qubit interactions are generally simplified into two quantum objects in
static well-defined states . In this work we explore a fundamentally new
dynamic type of spin-photon interaction. We demonstrate modulation of a
coherent narrowband wavepacket with another truly quantum object, a quantum dot
with ground state spin degree of freedom. What results is a quantum modulation
of the wavepacket phase (either 0 or {\pi} but no values in between), a new
quantum state of light that cannot be described classically.Comment: Supplementary Information available on reques
Efficient Quantum Photonic Phase Shift in a Low Q-Factor Regime
This work was funded by the Future Emerging Technologies (FET)-Open FP7-284743 [project Spin Photon Angular Momentum Transfer for Quantum Enabled Technologies (SPANGL4Q)] and the German Ministry of Education and research (BMBF) and Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) (EP/M024156/1, EP/N003381/1 and EP/M024458/1). J.J.H. was supported by the Bristol Quantum Engineering Centre for Doctoral Training, EPSRC grant EP/L015730/1. We acknowledge the GW4 network for funding of A.Y.Solid-state quantum emitters have long been recognised as the ideal platform to realize integrated quantum photonic technologies. We demonstrate that a self-assembled negatively charged quantum dot (QD) in a low Q-factor photonic micropillar is a suitable design for deterministic polarisation switching and spin-photon entanglement. We show this by measuring a shift in phase of an input single photon of at least 2Ï/3. As we explain in the text, this is strong experimental proof that input photons can interact with the emitter deterministically. A deterministic photon-emitter interaction is a viable and scalable means to achieve several vital functionalities such as single photon switches and entanglement gates. Our experimentally determined value is limited by mode mismatch between the input laser and the cavity, QD spectral fluctuations and spin relaxation. When on-resonance we estimate that up to âŒ80% of the collected photons couple into the cavity mode and have interacted with the QD and undergone a phase shift of Ï.PostprintPeer reviewe
Near-threshold high spin amplification in a 1300 nm GaInNAs spin laser
Using continuous-wave optical pumping of a spin-VCSEL at room temperature, we find high spin amplification of the pump close to threshold within the communications wavelength window, here at 1300 nm. This facilitates a strong switch from left to right circularly polarised light emission, which has potential applications in polarisation encoding for data communications. We use a simple spin flip model to fit the experimental results and discuss the VCSEL parameters that affect this amplification
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