2,226 research outputs found
Positive impact of low-dose, high-energy radiation on bone in partial- and/or full-weightbearing mice
Astronauts traveling beyond low Earth orbit will be exposed to galactic cosmic radiation (GCR); understanding how high energy ionizing radiation modifies the bone response to mechanical unloading is important to assuring crew health. To investigate this, we exposed 4-mo-old female Balb/cBYJ mice to an acute space-relevant dose of 0.5 Gy 56Fe or sham (n = ~8/group); 4 days later, half of the mice were also subjected to a ground-based analog for 1/6 g (partial weightbearing) (G/6) for 21 days. Microcomputed tomography (µ-CT) of the distal femur reveals that 56Fe exposure resulted in 65-78% greater volume and improved microarchitecture of cancellous bone after 21 d compared to sham controls. Radiation also leads to significant increases in three measures of energy absorption at the mid-shaft femur and an increase in stiffness of the L4 vertebra. No significant effects of radiation on bone formation indices are detected; however, G/6 leads to reduced % mineralizing surface on the inner mid-tibial bone surface. In separate groups allowed 21 days of weightbearing recovery from G/6 and/or 56Fe exposure, radiation-exposed mice still exhibit greater bone mass and improved microarchitecture vs. sham control. However, femoral bone energy absorption values are no longer higher in the 56Fe-exposed WB mice vs. sham controls. We provide evidence for persistent positive impacts of high-LET radiation exposure preceding a period of full or partial weightbearing on bone mass and microarchitecture in the distal femur and, for full weightbearing mice only and more transiently, cortical bone energy absorption values
Raloxifene Enhances Material-Level Mechanical Properties of Femoral Cortical and Trabecular Bone
We have previously documented that raloxifene enhances the mechanical properties of dog vertebrae independent of changes in bone mass, suggesting a positive effect of raloxifene on material-level mechanical properties. The goal of this study was to determine the separate effects of raloxifene on the material-level mechanical properties of trabecular and cortical bone from the femur of beagle dogs. Skeletally mature female beagles (n = 12 per group) were treated daily for 1 yr with oral doses of vehicle or raloxifene (0.50 mg/kg d). Trabecular bone mechanical properties were measured at the femoral neck using reduced platen compression, a method that allows the trabecular bone to be tested without coring specimens. Cortical bone properties were assessed on prismatic beam specimens machined from the femoral diaphysis using both monotonic and dynamic (cyclic relaxation) four-point bending tests. Trabecular bone from raloxifene-treated animals had significantly higher ultimate stress (+130%), modulus (+89%), and toughness (+152%) compared with vehicle-treated animals. Cortical bone from raloxifene-treated animals had significantly greater toughness (+62%) compared with vehicle, primarily as a function of increased postyield displacement (+100%). There was no significant difference between groups in the percentage of stiffness loss during cortical bone cyclic relaxation tests. These results are consistent with previous data from the vertebrae of these same animals, showing raloxifene has positive effects on biomechanical properties independent of changes in bone volume/density. This may help explain how raloxifene reduces osteoporotic fractures despite modest changes in bone mass.This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants AR047838 and AR007581 and a research grant from Lilly Research Laboratories. This investigation used an animal facility constructed with support from Research Facilities Improvement Program Grant Number C06 RR10601-01 from the National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health.
Disclosure Summary: M.R.A. has research contracts from Eli Lilly and the Alliance for Better Bone Health. D.B.B. has research contracts from Eli Lilly, the Alliance for Better Bone Health, and Amgen; owns stock in Amgen, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, and Glaxo SmithKline; and is a speaker/consultant for Merck, Eli Lilly, the Alliance for Better Bone Health, and
Amgen. A.S.K. and M.C.K. have a family member employed by Eli Lilly. H.A.H. and W.A.H. have nothing to declare
A hierarchical search for gravitational waves from supermassive black hole binary mergers
We present a method to search for gravitational waves from coalescing
supermassive binary black holes in LISA data. The search utilizes the
-statistic to maximize over, and determine the values of, the
extrinsic parameters of the binary system. The intrinsic parameters are
searched over hierarchically using stochastically generated multi-dimensional
template banks to recover the masses and sky locations of the binary. We
present the results of this method applied to the mock LISA data Challenge 1B
data set.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, for GWDAW-12 proceedings edition of CQ
A coherent triggered search for single spin compact binary coalescences in gravitational wave data
In this paper we present a method for conducting a coherent search for single
spin compact binary coalescences in gravitational wave data and compare this
search to the existing coincidence method for single spin searches. We propose
a method to characterize the regions of the parameter space where the single
spin search, both coincident and coherent, will increase detection efficiency
over the existing non-precessing search. We also show example results of the
coherent search on a stretch of data from LIGO's fourth science run but note
that a set of signal based vetoes will be needed before this search can be run
to try to make detections.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
The impact of childhood malnutrition on mortality from pneumonia:a systematic review and network meta-analysis
IntroductionChildhood malnutrition is widespread in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) and increases the frequency and severity of infections such as pneumonia. We aimed to identify studies investigating pneumonia deaths in malnourished children and estimate mortality risk by malnutrition severity.MethodsWe conducted a systematic review of MEDLINE, EMBASE and Global Health databases to identify relevant studies. We used a network meta-analysis to derive ORs of death from pneumonia for moderately and severely underweight children using low weight-for-age, the most reported measure of malnutrition. We compared meta-estimates of studies conducted before and after 2000 to assess changes in mortality risk over time. We estimated the prevalence of underweight hospitalised children from hospital-based cohort studies and calculated the population attributable fraction of in-hospital pneumonia deaths from being underweight using our results.ResultsOur network meta-analysis included 33 544 underweight children from 23 studies. The estimated OR of death from pneumonia was 2.0 (95% CI 1.6 to 2.6) and 4.6 (95% CI 3.7 to 5.9) for children moderately and severely underweight, respectively. The OR of death from pneumonia for those severely underweight was 5.3 (95% CI 3.9 to 7.4) pre-2000 and remained high post-2000 at 4.1 (95% CI 3.0 to 6.0). Prevalence of underweight children hospitalised with pneumonia varied (median 40.2%, range 19.6–66.3) but was high across many LMIC settings. We estimated a median 18.3% (range 10.8–34.6) and 40.9% (range 14.7–69.9) of in-hospital pneumonia deaths were attributable to being moderately and severely underweight, respectively.ConclusionsThe risk of death from childhood pneumonia dramatically increases with malnutrition severity. This risk has remained high in recent years with an estimated over half of in-hospital pneumonia deaths attributable to child malnutrition. Prevention and treatment of all child malnutrition must be prioritised to maintain progress on reducing pneumonia deaths.</jats:sec
Does wage rank affect employees' well-being?
How do workers make wage comparisons? Both an experimental study and an analysis of 16,000 British employees are reported. Satisfaction and well-being levels are shown to depend on more than simple relative pay. They depend upon the ordinal rank of an individual's wage within a comparison group. “Rank” itself thus seems to matter to human beings. Moreover, consistent with psychological theory, quits in a workplace are correlated with pay distribution skewness
Silicon based substrate with calcium aluminosilicate environmental/thermal barrier layer
A barrier layer for a silicon containing substrate which inhibits the formation of gaseous species of silicon when exposed to a high temperature aqueous environment comprises a calcium alumino silicate
Silicon based substrate with calcium aluminosilicate/thermal barrier layer
A barrier layer for a silicon containing substrate which inhibits the formation of gaseous species of silicon when exposed to a high temperature aqueous environment comprises a calcium alumino silicate
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