89 research outputs found
Alternative treatments for autism : prevalence and predictors
Autism is a heterogeneous neurodevelopmental disorder for which a large variety of treatments are offered, including alternative treatments. Vaccine-related treatments (treatments falsely claiming to cure autism by addressing its alleged cause: routine childhood vaccines such as MMR) continue to be offered worldwide, despite widespread evidence against the effectiveness and even possible harm related to these treatments. We analysed the use of alternative treatments in two studies: a survey study (N = 1989, autistic adults and parents/legal representatives of individuals with autism) and a clinical care study (N = 4520, patient files from a treatment center for autism). Both studies found a relatively high frequency of alternative treatments (23.0–30.7%) – in children even 46.4% -, mostly in combination with mainstream treatment. In the survey study vaccine-related treatments were used by 3.2% of all individuals with autism (and 6.7% of autistic children), and alternative treatment use was predicted by co-occurring diagnoses, younger age of diagnosis and mainstream treatment use. In the clinical care study, patients who had received treatment from a homeo-/osteopath more often had highly educated parents from Dutch/Western background and were more often enrolled in special education. Alternative treatments are widely used and should be included in treatment guidelines. Parents, practitioners and individuals with autism should be both advised and warned about the benefits and risks of these treatments. More research is needed to better understand the choice for and effect of alternative treatments for autism, and mainstream care should be improved
Dirac electrons in graphene-based quantum wires and quantum dots
In this paper we analyse the electronic properties of Dirac electrons in
finite-size ribbons and in circular and hexagonal quantum dots made of
graphene.Comment: Contribution for J. Phys.: Cond. Mat. special issue on graphene
physic
International bullous diseases group: consensus on diagnostic criteria for epidermolysis bullosa acquisita
BACKGROUND:
Epidermolysis bullosa acquisita (EBA) is a complex autoimmune bullous disease disease with variable clinical presentations and multiple possible diagnostic tests, making an international consensus on the diagnosis of EBA essential. -----
OBJECTIVES:
To obtain an international consensus on the clinical and diagnostic criteria for EBA. -----
METHODS:
The International Bullous Diseases Group (IBDG) met three times to discuss the clinical and diagnostic criteria for EBA. For the final voting exercise, 22 experts from 14 different countries voted on 50 different items. When > 30% disagreed with a proposal, a discussion was held and re-voting carried out. -----
RESULTS:
In total, 48 of 50 proposals achieved consensus after discussion. This included nine diagnostic criteria, which are summarized in a flow chart. The IBDG was unable to determine one procedure that would be applicable worldwide. A limitation of the study is that differential diagnosis of bullous systemic lupus erythematosus has not been addressed. -----
CONCLUSIONS:
This first international consensus conference established generally agreed-upon clinical and laboratory criteria defining the clinical classification of and diagnostic testing for EBA. Holding these voting exercises in person with the possibility of discussion prior to voting has advantages in reaching consensus over Delphi exercises with remote voting
Integrin α11β1 regulates cancer stromal stiffness and promotes tumorigenicity and metastasis in non-small cell lung cancer
Integrin α11β1 is a stromal cell-specific receptor for fibrillar collagens and is overexpressed in carcinoma-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). We have investigated its direct role in cancer progression by generating severe combined immune deficient (SCID) mice deficient in integrin α11 (α11) expression. The growth of A549 lung adenocarcinoma cells and two patient-derived non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) xenografts in these α11 knockout (α11(-/-)) mice was significantly impeded, as compared with wild-type (α11(+/+)) SCID mice. Orthotopic implantation of a spontaneously metastatic NCI-H460SM cell line into the lungs of α11(-/-) and α11(+/+) mice showed significant reduction in the metastatic potential of these cells in the α11(-/-) mice. We identified that collagen cross-linking is associated with stromal α11 expression, and the loss of tumor stromal α11 expression was correlated with decreased collagen reorganization and stiffness. This study shows the role of integrin α11β1, a receptor for fibrillar collagen in differentiation of fibroblasts into CAFs. Furthermore, our data support an important role for α11 signaling pathway in CAFs, promoting tumor growth and metastatic potential of NSCLC cells and being closely associated with collagen cross-linking and the organization and stiffness of fibrillar collagen matrices
Ab-o'th-yate at the Isle of Man
Literatura dialectal. -- Lancashire. -- Pertenece a la colecciĂłn 1800-1950 del Salamanca Corpus. -- Prosa. -- Benjamin Brierley. -- Ab-o'th-yate at the Isle of Man. -- 1869. -- Primera ediciĂłn.[EN] Fiction letters written in the Lancashire dialect.
[ES] Cartas escritas en el dialecto de Lancashire
Transient and sustained incentive effects on electrophysiological indices of cognitive control in younger and older adults
Preparing for upcoming events, separating task-relevant from task-irrelevant information and efficiently responding to stimuli all require cognitive control. The adaptive recruitment of cognitive control depends on activity in the dopaminergic reward system as well as the frontoparietal control network. In healthy aging, dopaminergic neuromodulation is reduced, resulting in altered incentive-based recruitment of control mechanisms. In the present study, younger adults (18–28 years) and healthy older adults (66–89 years) completed an incentivized flanker task that included gain, loss, and neutral trials. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded at the time of incentive cue and target presentation. We examined the contingent negative variation (CNV), implicated in stimulus anticipation and response preparation, as well as the P3, which is involved in the evaluation of visual stimuli. Both younger and older adults showed transient incentive-based modulation of CNV. Critically, cue-locked and target-locked P3s were influenced by transient and sustained effects of incentives in younger adults, while such modulation was limited to a sustained effect of gain incentives on cue-P3 in older adults.
Overall, these findings are in line with an age-related reduction in the flexible recruitment of preparatory and target-related cognitive control processes in the presence of motivational incentives
OC6 Phase Ia: CFD Simulations of the Free-Decay Motion of the DeepCwind Semisubmersible
Currently, the design of floating offshore wind systems is primarily based on mid-fidelity models with empirical drag forces. The tuning of the model coefficients requires data from either experiments or high-fidelity simulations. As part of the OC6 (Offshore Code Comparison Collaboration, Continued, with Correlation, and unCertainty (OC6) is a project under the International Energy Agency Wind Task 30 framework) project, the present investigation explores the latter option. A verification and validation study of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models of the DeepCwind semisubmersible undergoing free-decay motion is performed. Several institutions provided CFD results for validation against the OC6 experimental campaign. The objective is to evaluate whether the CFD setups of the participants can provide valid estimates of the hydrodynamic damping coefficients needed by mid-fidelity models. The linear and quadratic damping coefficients and the equivalent damping ratio are chosen as metrics for validation. Large numerical uncertainties are estimated for the linear and quadratic damping coefficients; however, the equivalent damping ratios are more consistently predicted with lower uncertainty. Some difference is observed between the experimental and CFD surge-decay motion, which is caused by mechanical damping not considered in the simulations that likely originated from the mooring setup, including a Coulomb-friction-type force. Overall, the simulations and the experiment show reasonable agreement, thus demonstrating the feasibility of using CFD simulations to tune mid-fidelity models.</jats:p
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