5,314 research outputs found
Recent advances in minimally invasive colorectal cancer surgery
Laparoscopy has improved surgical treatment of various diseases due to its limited surgical trauma and has developed as an interesting therapeutic alternative for the resection of colorectal cancer. Despite numerous clinical advantages (faster recovery, less pain, fewer wound and systemic complications, faster return to work) the laparoscopic approach to colorectal cancer therapy has also resulted in unusual complications, i.e. ureteral and bladder injury which are rarely observed with open laparotomy. Moreover, pneumothorax, cardiac arrhythmia, impaired venous return, venous thrombosis as well as peripheral nerve injury have been associated with the increased intraabdominal pressure as well as patient's positioning during surgery. Furthermore, undetected small bowel injury caused by the grasping or cauterizing instruments may occur with laparoscopic surgery. In contrast to procedures performed for nonmalignant conditions, the benefits of laparoscopic resection of colorectal cancer must be weighed against the potential for poorer long-term outcomes of cancer patients that still has not been completely ruled out. In laparoscopic colorectal cancer surgery, several important cancer control issues still are being evaluated, i.e. the extent of lymph node dissection, tumor implantation at port sites, adequacy of intraperitoneal staging as well as the distance between tumor site and resection margins. For the time being it can be assumed that there is no significant difference in lymph node harvest between laparoscopic and open colorectal cancer surgery if oncological principles of resection are followed. As far as the issue of port site recurrence is concerned, it appears to be less prevalent than first thought (range 0-2.5%), and the incidence apparently corresponds with wound recurrence rates observed after open procedures. Short-term (3-5 years) survival rates have been published by a number of investigators, and survival rates after laparoscopic surgery appears to compare well with data collected after conventional surgery for colorectal cancer. However, long-term results of prospective randomized trials are not available. The data published so far indicate that the oncological results of laparoscopic surgery compare well with the results of the conventional open approach. Nonetheless, the limited information available from prospective studies leads us to propose that minimally invasive surgery for colorectal cancer surgery should only be performed within prospective trials
Investigation into the limits of perturbation theory at low Q^2 using HERA deep inelastic scattering data
A phenomenological study of the final combined HERA data on inclusive deep
inelastic scattering (DIS) has been performed. The data are presented and
investigated for a kinematic range extending from values of the four-momentum
transfer, , above 10 GeV down to the lowest values observable at
HERA of = 0.045 GeV and Bjorken , = 6
10. The data are well described by fits based on perturbative quantum
chromodynamics (QCD) using collinear factorisation and evolution of the parton
densities encompassed in the DGLAP formalism from the highest down to
of a few GeV. The Regge formalism can describe the data up to 0.65 GeV. The complete data set can be described by a new fit
using the ALLM parameterisation. The region between the Regge and the
perturbative QCD regimes is of particular interest.Comment: 38 pages, 13 figure
Comorbidity of respiratory and cardiovascular diseases among the elderly residing close to mine dumps in South Africa: A cross-sectional study
Background. Pollution arising from mine dumps in South Africa (SA) has been a source of concern to nearby communities.Objective. To investigate whether comorbidity of respiratory and cardiovascular diseases among elderly persons (≥55 years) was associated with proximity to mine dumps.Methods. Elderly persons in communities 1 - 2 km (exposed) and ≥5 km (unexposed) from five preselected mine dumps in Gauteng and North West provinces in SA were included in a cross-sectional study.Results. Exposed elderly persons had a significantly higher prevalence of cardiovascular and respiratory diseases than those who were unexposed. Multiple logistic regression analysis indicated that living close to mine dumps was significantly associated with asthma + hypertension (odds ratio (OR) 1.67; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.22 - 2.28), asthma + pneumonia (OR 1.86; 95% CI 1.14 - 3.04), emphysema + arrhythmia (OR 1.38; 95% CI 1.07 - 1.77), emphysema + myocardial infarction (OR 2.01; 95% CI 1.73 - 2.54), emphysema + pneumonia (OR 3.36; 95% CI 1.41 - 7.98), hypertension + myocardial infarction (OR 1.60; 95% CI 1.04 - 2.44) and hypertension + pneumonia (OR 1.34; 95% CI 1.05 - 1.93).Conclusion. Detrimental associations between comorbidity of the health outcomes and proximity to mine dumps were observed among the elderly in SA
Single-Particle Diffusion-Coefficient on Surfaces with Ehrlich-Schwoebel-Barriers
The diffusion coefficient of single particles in the presence of
Ehrlich-Schwoebel barriers (ESB)is considered. An exact expression is given for
the diffusion coefficient on linear chains with random arrangements of ESB. The
results are extended to surfaces having ESB with uniform extension in one or
both directions. All results are verified by Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX2e, 6 eps-figure
L-arginine: A unique amino acid for improving depressed wound immune function following hemorrhage
Objective: To determine whether L-arginine has any salutary effects on wound immune cell function following trauma-hemorrhage. Background. Depressed wound immune function contributes to an increased incidence of wound infections following hemorrhage. Although administration of L-arginine has been shown to restore depressed cell-mediated immune responses following hemorrhage potentially by maintaining organ blood flow, it remains unknown whether Larginine has any salutary effects on the depressed local immune response at the wound site. Methods: Male mice were subjected to a midline laparotomy and polyvinyl sponges were implanted subcutaneously in the abdominal wound prior to hemorrhage (35 +/- 5 mm Hg for 90 min and resuscitation) or sham operation. During resuscitation mice received 300 mg/kg body weight L-arginine or saline (vehicle). Sponges were harvested 24 h thereafter, wound fluid collected and wound immune cells cultured for 24 h in the presence of LPS. Pro- (IL-1beta, IL-6) and anti-inflammatory (IL-10) cytokines were determined in the supernatants and the wound fluid. In addition, wounds were stained for IL-6 immunohistochemically. In a separate set of animals, skin and muscle blood flow was determined by microspheres. Results: The capacity of wound immune cells to release IL-1beta and IL-6 in vitro was significantly depressed in hemorrhaged mice receiving vehicle. Administration of L-arginine, however, improved wound immune cell function. In contrast, in vivo the increased IL-6 release at the wound site was decreased in L-arginine-treated mice following hemorrhage. Moreover, IL-10 levels were significantly increased in the wound fluid in hemorrhaged animals receiving L-arginine compared to vehicle-treated mice. In addition, the depressed skin and muscle blood flow after hemorrhage was restored by L-arginine. Conclusions: Thus, L-arginine might improve local wound cell function by decreasing the inflammatory response at the wound site. Since L-arginine protected wound immune cell function this amino acid might represent a novel and useful adjunct to fluid resuscitation for decreasing wound complications following hemorrhage. Copyright beta 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel
Near-Infrared Studies of V1280 Sco (Nova Scorpii 2007)
We present spectroscopic and photometric results of Nova V1280 Sco which was
discovered in outburst in early 2007 February. The large number of spectra
obtained of the object leads to one of the most extensive, near-infrared
spectral studies of a classical nova. The spectra evolve from a P-Cygni phase
to an emission-line phase and at a later stage is dominated by emission from
the dust that formed in this nova. A detailed model is computed to identify and
study characteristics of the spectral lines. Inferences from the model address
the vexing question of which novae have the ability to form dust. It is
demonstrated, and strikingly corroborated with observations, that the presence
of lines in the early spectra of low-ionization species like Na and Mg -
indicative of low temperature conditions - appear to be reliable indicators
that dust will form in the ejecta. It is theoretically expected that mass loss
during a nova outburst is a sustained process. Spectroscopic evidence for such
a sustained mass loss, obtained by tracing the evolution of a P-Cygni feature
in the Brackett gamma line, is presented here allowing a lower limit of 25-27
days to be set for the mass-loss duration. Photometric data recording the
nova's extended 12 day climb to peak brightness after discovery is used to
establish an early fireball expansion and also show that the ejection began
well before maximum brightness. The JHK light curves indicate the nova had a
fairly strong second outburst around 100 days after the first.Comment: Accepted in MNRAS. The paper contains 8 figures and 4 tables. Few
typographical errors were correcte
New triple systems in the RasTyc sample of stellar X-ray sources
During the study of a large set of late-type stellar X-ray sources, we
discovered a large fraction of multiple systems. In this paper we investigate
the orbital elements and kinematic properties of three new spectroscopic triple
systems as well as spectral types and astrophysical parameters (T_eff, log g,
vsin i, log N(Li)) of their components. We conducted follow-up optical
observations, both photometric and spectroscopic at high resolution, of these
systems. We used a synthetic approach and the cross-correlation method to
derive most of the stellar parameters. We estimated reliable radial velocities
and deduced the orbital elements of the inner binaries. The comparison of the
observed spectra with synthetic composite ones, obtained as the weighted sum of
three spectra of non-active reference stars, allowed us to determine the
stellar parameters for each component of these systems. We found all are only
composed of main sequence stars. These three systems are certainly stable
hierarchical triples composed of short-period inner binaries plus a tertiary
component in a long-period orbit. From their kinematics and/or Lithium content,
these systems result to be fairly young.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (on July 22, 2008
Eclipsing Binaries in the OGLE Variable Star Catalog. IV. The Pre-Contact, Equal-Mass Systems
We used the database of eclipsing binaries detected by the OGLE microlensing
project in the pencil-beam search volume toward Baade's Window to define a
sample of 74 detached, equal-mass, main-sequence binary stars with short
orbital periods in the range 0.19<P<8 days. The logarithmic slope of the period
distribution, logN propto (-0.8 pm 0.2) logP, was used to infer the
angular-momentum-loss (AML) efficiency for the late, rapidly-rotating members
of close binaries. It is very likely that the main cause of the negative slope
is a discovery selection bias that progressively increases with the orbital
period length. Assuming a power-law dependence for the correction for the bias:
bias propto -C logP (with C ge 0), the AML braking-efficiency exponent alpha in
dH/dt = P^-alpha can take any value alpha = (-1.1 pm 0.2) + C. Very simple
considerations of discovery biases suggest C simeq 4/3, which would give an AML
braking law very close to the "saturated" one, with no dependence on the
period. However, except for plausibility arguments, we have no firm data to
support this estimate of C, so that alpha remains poorly constrained. The
results signal the utmost importance of the detection bias evaluation for
variable star databases used in analyses similar to the one presented in this
study.Comment: accepted by AJ, October 1999. AASTEX-4. 9 PS figures and 3 table
- …