279 research outputs found
The Spectrum of Fundus Autofluorescence Findings in Birdshot Chorioretinopathy
Objective. To describe the diverse patterns observed with the use of autofluorescence fundus photography (FAF) in patients with Birdshot chorioretinopathy (BSCR). Methods. A chart review of patients with BSCR seen at the Massachusetts Eye Research and Surgery Institution, who had autofluorescence fundus photography. The data obtained included age, gender, presence of the HLA-A29 haplotype, and current treatment. Results. Eighteen eyes with HLA-A29 associated BSCR were included. Four eyes presented with active inflammation. Correspondence of the lesions noted in the colour fundus photograph was observed in 3 eyes which were more easily identified with the FAF. Fifteen eyes had fundus lesions more numerous and evident in the FAF than in the colour fundus photograph.
Conclusion. Because FAF testing provides valuable insight into the metabolic state of the PR/RPE-complex, it may serve as a useful noninvasive assessment tool in patients with posterior uveitis in which the outer retina-RPE-choriocapillaries-complex is involved
Challenges in Markov chain Monte Carlo for Bayesian neural networks
Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods have not been broadly adopted in
Bayesian neural networks (BNNs). This paper initially reviews the main
challenges in sampling from the parameter posterior of a neural network via
MCMC. Such challenges culminate to lack of convergence to the parameter
posterior. Nevertheless, this paper shows that a non-converged Markov chain,
generated via MCMC sampling from the parameter space of a neural network, can
yield via Bayesian marginalization a valuable predictive posterior of the
output of the neural network. Classification examples based on multilayer
perceptrons showcase highly accurate predictive posteriors. The postulate of
limited scope for MCMC developments in BNNs is partially valid; an
asymptotically exact parameter posterior seems less plausible, yet an accurate
predictive posterior is a tenable research avenue
Post-Outburst Observations of V1647 Ori: Detection of a Brief Warm, Molecular Outflow
We present new observations of the fundamental ro-vibrational CO spectrum of
V1647 Ori, the young star whose recent outburst illuminated McNeil's Nebula.
Previous spectra, acquired during outburst in 2004 February and July, had shown
the CO emission lines to be broad and centrally peaked-similar to the CO
spectrum of a typical classical T Tauri star. In this paper, we present CO
spectra acquired shortly after the luminosity of the source returned to its
pre-outburst level (2006 February) and roughly one year later (2006 December
and 2007 February). The spectrum taken in 2006 February revealed blue-shifted
CO absorption lines superimposed on the previously observed CO emission lines.
The projected velocity, column density, and temperature of this outflowing gas
was 30 km/s, 3^{+2}_{-1}E18 cm^{-2$, and 700^{+300}_{-100} K, respectively. The
absorption lines were not observed in the 2006 December and 2007 February data,
and so their strengths must have decreased in the interim by a factor of 9 or
more. We discuss three mechanisms that could give rise to this unusual outflow.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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Serum Bovine Immunoglobulins Improve Inflammation and Gut Barrier Function in Persons with HIV and Enteropathy on Suppressive ART.
BackgroundSystemic inflammation persists in chronic HIV infection and is associated with increased rates of non-AIDS events such as cardiovascular and liver disease. Increased gut permeability and systemic exposure to microbial products are key drivers of this inflammation. Serum-derived bovine immunoglobulin/protein isolate (SBI) supports gut healing in other conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease.MethodsIn this randomized, double-blind study, participants receiving suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART) with chronic diarrhea received placebo or SBI at 2.5 g BID or 5 g BID for 4 weeks, followed by a 20-week placebo-free extension phase with SBI at either 2.5 or 5 g BID. Intestinal fatty acid binding protein (I-FABP), zonulin, flagellin, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and LPS-binding protein, and inflammatory markers were measured by ELISA or multiplex assays. Non-parametric tests were used for analysis.ResultsOne hundred three participants completed the study. By week 24 SBI significantly decreased circulating levels of I-FABP (-0.35 ng/μL, P=0.002) and zonulin (-4.90 ng/μL, P=0.003), suggesting improvement in gut damage, and interleukin-6 (IL-6) (-0.40 pg/μL, P=0.002), reflecting improvement in systemic inflammation. In participants with the lowest quartile of CD4+ T-cell counts at baseline (189-418 cells/μL), CD4+ T-cell counts increased significantly (26 cells/μL; P=0.002).ConclusionsOral SBI may decrease inflammation and warrants further exploration as a potential strategy to improve gut integrity and decrease systemic inflammation among persons receiving prolonged suppressive ART
Moxifloxacin Concentration and Proteomic Analysis of Aqueous Humor in Human Uveitis Associated with Oral Moxifloxacin Therapy
PURPOSE: The aim was to report the aqueous humor moxifloxacin concentration and proteome profile of an individual with bilateral uveitis-like syndrome with pigment dispersion.
METHODS: Multiple reactions monitoring mass spectrometry quantified the aqueous concentration of moxifloxacin in the affected individual. Shotgun proteomic analysis performed via liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) defined the protein profile in the affected individual and unaffected control samples.
RESULTS: Moxifloxacin was present at higher than expected levels in aqueous humor 18 days following oral administration. One-third of the proteins were identified by significantly lower spectral counts in the aqueous of the individual with moxifloxacin associated uveitis compared to the unaffected control.
CONCLUSION: Moxifloxacin was detected in aqueous humor 18 days following the completion of oral administration. These results suggest that moxifloxacin toxicity may be responsible for the uveitis-like syndrome with pigment dispersion syndrome induced by moxifloxacin therapy
Infrared High-Resolution Spectroscopy of Post-AGB Circumstellar Disks. I. HR 4049 - The Winnowing Flow Observed?
High-resolution infrared spectroscopy in the 2.3-4.6 micron region is
reported for the peculiar A supergiant, single-lined spectroscopic binary HR
4049. Lines from the CO fundamental and first overtone, OH fundamental, and
several H2O vibration-rotation transitions have been observed in the
near-infrared spectrum. The spectrum of HR 4049 appears principally in emission
through the 3 and 4.6 micron region and in absorption in the 2 micron region.
The 4.6 micron spectrum shows a rich 'forest' of emission lines. All the
spectral lines observed in the 2.3-4.6 micron spectrum are shown to be
circumbinary in origin. The presence of OH and H2O lines confirm the
oxygen-rich nature of the circumbinary gas which is in contrast to the
previously detected carbon-rich material. The emission and absorption line
profiles show that the circumbinary gas is located in a thin, rotating layer
near the dust disk. The properties of the dust and gas circumbinary disk and
the spectroscopic orbit yield masses for the individual stars, M_AI~0.58 Msolar
and M_MV~0.34 Msolar. Gas in the disk also has an outward flow with a velocity
of 1 km/s. The severe depletion of refractory elements but near-solar
abundances of volatile elements observed in HR 4049 results from abundance
winnowing. The separation of the volatiles from the grains in the disk and the
subsequent accretion by the star are discussed. Contrary to prior reports, the
HR 4049 carbon and oxygen isotopic abundances are typical AGB values:
12C/13C=6^{+9}_{-4} and 16O/17O>200.Comment: 42 pages, 14 figures, Accepted by Ap
Fluorine Abundances in the Large Magellanic Cloud and Omega Centauri: Evidence for Neutrino Nucleosynthesis?
The behavior of fluorine with metallicity has not yet been probed in any
stellar population. In this work, we present the first fluorine abundances
measured outside of the Milky Way from a sample of red giants in the Large
Magellanic Cloud (LMC), as well the Galactic globular cluster Omega Centauri.
The fluorine abundances are derived from vibration-rotation transitions of HF
using infrared spectra obtained with the Phoenix spectrograph on the Gemini
South 8.1m telescope. It is found that the abundance ratio of F/O declines as
the oxygen abundance decreases. The values of F/O are especially low in the two
Omega Cen giants; this very low value of F/O probably indicates that 19F
synthesis in asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars is not the dominant source of
fluorine in stellar populations. The observed decline in F/O with lower O
abundances is in qualitative agreement with what is expected if 19F is produced
via H- and He-burning sequences in very massive stars, with this fluorine then
ejected in high mass-loss rate Wolf-Rayet winds. A quantitative comparison of
observations with this process awaits results from more detailed chemical
evolution models incorporating the yields from Wolf-Rayet winds. Perhaps of
more significance is the quantitative agreement between the Galactic and LMC
results with predictions from models in which 19F is produced from neutrino
nucleosynthesis during core collpase in supernovae of Type II. The very low
values of F/O in Omega Cen are also in agreement with neutrino nucleosynthesis
models if the ``peculiar'' star formation history of Omega Cen, with 2-4
distinct episodes of star formation, is considered.Comment: 19 pages, 2 tables, 4 figures. In press to the Astronomical Journa
The 'Forbidden' Abundance of Oxygen in the Sun
We reexamine closely the solar photospheric line at 6300 A, which is
attributed to a forbidden line of neutral oxygen, and is widely used in
analyses of other late-type stars.
We use a three-dimensional time-dependent hydrodynamical model solar
atmosphere which has been tested successfully against observed granulation
patterns and an array of absorption lines. We show that the solar line is a
blend with a Ni I line, as previously suggested but oftentimes neglected.
Thanks to accurate atomic data on the [O I] and Ni I lines we are able to
derive an accurate oxygen abundance for the Sun: log epsilon (O) = 8.69 +/-
0.05 dex, a value at the lower end of the distribution of previously published
abundances, but in good agreement with estimates for the local interstellar
medium and hot stars in the solar neighborhood. We conclude by discussing the
implication of the Ni I blend on oxygen abundances derived from the [O I] 6300
A line in disk and halo stars.Comment: 16 pages, 3 eps figures included; a more compact PostScript version
created using emulateapj.sty is available from
http://hebe.as.utexas.edu/recent_publi.html; to appear in ApJ
Towards More Precise Survey Photometry for PanSTARRS and LSST: Measuring Directly the Optical Transmission Spectrum of the Atmosphere
Motivated by the recognition that variation in the optical transmission of
the atmosphere is probably the main limitation to the precision of ground-based
CCD measurements of celestial fluxes, we review the physical processes that
attenuate the passage of light through the Earth's atmosphere. The next
generation of astronomical surveys, such as PanSTARRS and LSST, will greatly
benefit from dedicated apparatus to obtain atmospheric transmission data that
can be associated with each survey image. We review and compare various
approaches to this measurement problem, including photometry, spectroscopy, and
LIDAR. In conjunction with careful measurements of instrumental throughput,
atmospheric transmission measurements should allow next-generation imaging
surveys to produce photometry of unprecedented precision. Our primary concerns
are the real-time determination of aerosol scattering and absorption by water
along the line of sight, both of which can vary over the course of a night's
observations.Comment: 41 pages, 14 figures. Accepted PAS
In vivo silencing of alpha-synuclein using naked siRNA
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Overexpression of α-synuclein (SNCA) in families with multiplication mutations causes parkinsonism and subsequent dementia, characterized by diffuse Lewy Body disease <it>post-mortem</it>. Genetic variability in <it>SNCA </it>contributes to risk of idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD), possibly as a result of overexpression. <it>SNCA </it>downregulation is therefore a valid therapeutic target for PD.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We have identified human and murine-specific siRNA molecules which reduce <it>SNCA in vitro</it>. As a proof of concept, we demonstrate that direct infusion of chemically modified (naked), murine-specific siRNA into the hippocampus significantly reduces <it>SNCA </it>levels. Reduction of <it>SNCA </it>in the hippocampus and cortex persists for a minimum of 1 week post-infusion with recovery nearing control levels by 3 weeks post-infusion.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We have developed naked gene-specific siRNAs that silence expression of <it>SNCA in vivo</it>. This approach may prove beneficial toward our understanding of the endogenous functional equilibrium of <it>SNCA</it>, its role in disease, and eventually as a therapeutic strategy for α-synucleinopathies resulting from <it>SNCA </it>overexpression.</p
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