17 research outputs found

    White Matter Microstructural Differences between Essential Tremor and Parkinson Disease, Evaluated Using Advanced Diffusion MRI Biomarkers

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    Background: Essential tremor (ET) is a common slowly-progressive neurologic disorder. It is predominantly characterized by kinetic tremors involving bilateral upper limbs. Although ET shares motor similarities with Parkinson disease (PD), there is no known relationship between ET and PD. Methods: We studied white matter differences between 17 ET and 68 PD patients using standard diffusion tensor imaging and fixel-based analysis (FBA). Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging data were acquired from two scanners (General Electric (GE) and Philips) with different numbers of diffusion directions. Fractional anisotropy maps were generated by the Oxford Centre for Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain (FMRIB) Software Library (FSL), and FBA was performed using MRtrix3 to obtain fiber density, fiber bundle, and fiber density bundle cross-section. Results: Compared with PD, significantly lower values of fiber density, fiber bundle, and fiber density bundle cross-section were found in the corpus callosum and left tapetum of the ET group. Additionally, significantly lower functional anisotropy values were found in the ET compared to the PD group, principally in the corpus callosum, corona radiata, and cingulum. In conclusion, differences in white matter integrity between ET and PD were observed by both FBA-based metrics and diffusion tensor imaging. Conclusions: Advanced diffusion-based metrics may provide a better understanding of the white matter microstructural characteristics in disparate motor-associated diseases with different underlying phenotypes, such as ET and PD

    Spatial scales of bacterial community diversity at cold seeps (Eastern Mediterranean Sea)

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    Cold seeps are highly productive, fragmented marine ecosystems that form at the seafloor around hydrocarbon emission pathways. The products of microbial utilization of methane and other hydrocarbons fuel rich chemosynthetic communities at these sites, with much higher respiration rates compared with the surrounding deep-sea floor. Yet little is known as to the richness, composition and spatial scaling of bacterial communities of cold seeps compared with non-seep communities. Here we assessed the bacterial diversity across nine different cold seeps in the Eastern Mediterranean deep-sea and surrounding seafloor areas. Community similarity analyses were carried out based on automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (ARISA) fingerprinting and high-throughput 454 tag sequencing and were combined with in situ and ex situ geochemical analyses across spatial scales of a few tens of meters to hundreds of kilometers. Seep communities were dominated by Deltaproteobacteria, Epsilonproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria and shared, on average, 36% of bacterial types (ARISA OTUs (operational taxonomic units)) with communities from nearby non-seep deep-sea sediments. Bacterial communities of seeps were significantly different from those of non-seep sediments. Within cold seep regions on spatial scales of only tens to hundreds of meters, the bacterial communities differed considerably, sharing <50% of types at the ARISA OTU level. Their variations reflected differences in porewater sulfide concentrations from anaerobic degradation of hydrocarbons. This study shows that cold seep ecosystems contribute substantially to the microbial diversity of the deep-sea

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    Household Debt: Facts, Puzzles, Theories, and Policies

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