10,307 research outputs found

    Energy scales in 4f1 delafossite magnets: crystal-field splittings larger than the strength of spin-orbit coupling in KCeO2

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    Ytterbium-based delafossites with effective S=1/2 moments are investigated intensively as candidates for quantum spin-liquid ground states. While the synthesis of related cerium compounds has also been reported,many important details concerning their crystal, electronic, and magnetic structures are unclear. Here we analyze the S=1/2 system KCeO2, combining complementary theoretical methods. The lattice geometry was optimized and the band structure investigated using density functional theory extended to the level of a GGA+U calculation in order to reproduce the correct insulating behavior. The Ce 4f1 states were then analyzed in more detail with the help of ab initio wave-function-based computations. Unusually large effective crystal-field splittings of up to 320 meV are predicted, which puts KCeO2 in the strong field coupling regime. Our results reveal a subtle interplay between ligand-cage electrostatics and the trigonal field generated by the extended crystalline surroundings, relevant in the context of recent studies on tuning the nature of the ground-state wave function in 4f triangular-lattice and pyrochlore compounds. It also makes KCeO2 an interesting model system in relation to the effect of large crystal-field splittings on the anisotropy of intersite exchange in spin-orbit coupled quantum magnets.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, and 3 table

    Hypertension as the trigger for posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome in paediatric renal patients: An important diagnosis that should not be missed

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    Background. Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a reversible neurological condition presenting with seizures and visual disturbances and diagnosed on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Little is understood about its pathogenesis, particularly in children, but it is thought to be related to hypertension.Objectives. To review the presentation, diagnosis and outcome of PRES in paediatric renal patients at Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital, Johannesburg, South Africa, between 1 January 2000 and 31 January 2017 and compare these with published case reports to date.Methods. This was a retrospective analysis of five new cases and a review of the existing literature.Results. The five reported patients were all hypertensive at the time of diagnosis and presented with seizures. Most (91%) of the 64 reviewed patients were also hypertensive at initial presentation. All five of the reported and 91% of the reviewed patients presented with seizures. The most common pattern of change on MRI occurred in the parietal and occipital regions. Complete neurological recovery occurred in four of the five reported and 87.5% of the reviewed patients.Conclusion. All patients presented clinically with hypertensive crises and radiological evidence of PRES. Seizures were the most common presenting symptom. The prognosis for paediatric patients with PRES is favourable, so it is important to confirm the diagnosis in low-resource settings where intensive care is limited.

    Posterior urethral valves in South African boys: Outcomes and challenges

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    Background. Posterior urethral valves (PUV) are a common cause of congenital obstructive nephropathy. The outcome of patients with PUV at Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital in Johannesburg, South Africa, has not been documented previously.Objectives. To describe the outcome of patients diagnosed with PUV over a 29-year period from January 1985 to December 2013, and to analyse risk factors for chronic kidney disease.Methods. This was a retrospective record review of boys aged <14 years diagnosed with PUV at Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital. PUV was diagnosed by a voiding cystourethrogram (VCUG) and/or at cystoscopy. Valves were resected primarily or after vesicostomy. The glomerular filtration rate was calculated using the Schwartz formula, and stratified as normal or decreased for age at presentation and at the final visit.Results. Records of 181 patients were analysed. The diagnosis was made during the first year of life in 139 patients (76.8%). Clinical presentation included urinary tract infection (UTI) in 109 patients (60.2%), palpable bladder in 98 (54.1%), palpable kidney in 85 (46.9%), and poor urinary stream in 78 (43.1%). An ultrasound scan was reported normal in 10.9%. Vesicostomy was performed in 80 patients (44.2%) and primary valve ablation in 101 (55.8%), with vesicostomy being more prevalent in the pre-2000 era. The median duration of follow-up was 21 months (interquartile range 5 - 79) and renal outcome at last visit was normal in 117 patients (64.6%). The presence of bladder diverticula was associated with a favourable renal outcome. Thirteen patients (7.2%) died, and 102 (56.3%) defaulted from follow-up.Conclusions. PUV frequently presents with UTI and palpable bladder and/or kidneys. Findings on ultrasound were normal in 10.9% of our patients with PUV. A VCUG is indicated in the presence of palpable kidneys or bladder even if the ultrasound scan is normal. Bladder diverticula as a pressure-release mechanism are renoprotective. Vesicostomy or primary valve ablation did not affect final renal outcome. Chronic kidney disease occurred in 34.8% of patients after surgical correction. Adherence to scheduled appointments is problematic in this population. Long-term follow-up is mandatory.

    The thrombomodulin analog Solulin promotes reperfusion and reduces infarct volume in a thrombotic stroke model

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/86888/1/j.1538-7836.2011.04269.x.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/86888/2/JTH_4269_sm_Data-S1.pd

    The Pondicherry interpretation of quantum mechanics: An overview

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    An overview of the Pondicherry interpretation of quantum mechanics is presented. This interpretation proceeds from the recognition that the fundamental theoretical framework of physics is a probability algorithm, which serves to describe an objective fuzziness (the literal meaning of Heisenberg's term "Unschaerfe," usually mistranslated as "uncertainty") by assigning objective probabilities to the possible outcomes of unperformed measurements. Although it rejects attempts to construe quantum states as evolving ontological states, it arrives at an objective description of the quantum world that owes nothing to observers or the goings-on in physics laboratories. In fact, unless such attempts are rejected, quantum theory's true ontological implications cannot be seen. Among these are the radically relational nature of space, the numerical identity of the corresponding relata, the incomplete spatiotemporal differentiation of the physical world, and the consequent top-down structure of reality, which defies attempts to model it from the bottom up, whether on the basis of an intrinsically differentiated spacetime manifold or out of a multitude of individual building blocks.Comment: 18 pages, 1 eps figure, v3: with corrections made in proo

    Task Control Signals in Pediatric Tourette Syndrome Show Evidence of Immature and Anomalous Functional Activity

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    Tourette Syndrome (TS) is a pediatric movement disorder that may affect control signaling in the brain. Previous work has proposed a dual-networks architecture of control processing involving a task-maintenance network and an adaptive control network (Dosenbach et al., 2008). A prior resting-state functional connectivity MRI (rs-fcMRI) analysis in TS has revealed functional immaturity in both putative control networks, with “anomalous” correlations (i.e., correlations outside the typical developmental range) limited to the adaptive control network (Church et al., 2009). The present study used functional MRI (fMRI) to study brain activity related to adaptive control (by studying start-cues signals), and to task-maintenance (by studying signals sustained across a task set). Two hypotheses from the previous rs-fcMRI results were tested. First, adaptive control (i.e., start-cue) activity will be altered in TS, including activity inconsistent with typical development (“anomalous”). Second, group differences found in task-maintenance (i.e., sustained) activity will be consistent with functional immaturity in TS. We examined regions found through a direct comparison of adolescents with and without TS, as well as regions derived from a previous investigation that showed differences between unaffected children and adults. The TS group showed decreased start-cue signal magnitude in regions where start-cue activity is unchanged over typical development, consistent with anomalous adaptive control. The TS group also had higher magnitude sustained signals in frontal cortex regions that overlapped with regions showing differences over typical development, consistent with immature task-maintenance in TS. The results demonstrate task-related fMRI signal differences anticipated by the atypical functional connectivity found previously in adolescents with TS, strengthening the evidence for functional immaturity and anomalous signaling in control networks in adolescents with TS

    Moduli-Space Dynamics of Noncommutative Abelian Sigma-Model Solitons

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    In the noncommutative (Moyal) plane, we relate exact U(1) sigma-model solitons to generic scalar-field solitons for an infinitely stiff potential. The static k-lump moduli space C^k/S_k features a natural K"ahler metric induced from an embedding Grassmannian. The moduli-space dynamics is blind against adding a WZW-like term to the sigma-model action and thus also applies to the integrable U(1) Ward model. For the latter's two-soliton motion we compare the exact field configurations with their supposed moduli-space approximations. Surprisingly, the two do not match, which questions the adiabatic method for noncommutative solitons.Comment: 1+15 pages, 2 figures; v2: reference added, to appear in JHE

    Influence of a magnetic field on the antiferromagnetic order in UPt_3

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    A neutron diffraction experiment was performed to investigate the effect of a magnetic field on the antiferromagnetic order in the heavy fermion superconductor UPt_3. Our results show that a field in the basal plane of up to 3.2 Tesla, higher than H_c2(0), has no effect: it can neither select a domain nor rotate the moment. This has a direct impact on current theories for the superconducting phase diagram based on a coupling to the magnetic order.Comment: 7 pages, RevTeX, 3 postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Optimising use of electronic health records to describe the presentation of rheumatoid arthritis in primary care: a strategy for developing code lists

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    Background Research using electronic health records (EHRs) relies heavily on coded clinical data. Due to variation in coding practices, it can be difficult to aggregate the codes for a condition in order to define cases. This paper describes a methodology to develop ‘indicator markers’ found in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis (RA); these are a broader range of codes which may allow a probabilistic case definition to use in cases where no diagnostic code is yet recorded. Methods We examined EHRs of 5,843 patients in the General Practice Research Database, aged ≥30y, with a first coded diagnosis of RA between 2005 and 2008. Lists of indicator markers for RA were developed initially by panels of clinicians drawing up code-lists and then modified based on scrutiny of available data. The prevalence of indicator markers, and their temporal relationship to RA codes, was examined in patients from 3y before to 14d after recorded RA diagnosis. Findings Indicator markers were common throughout EHRs of RA patients, with 83.5% having 2 or more markers. 34% of patients received a disease-specific prescription before RA was coded; 42% had a referral to rheumatology, and 63% had a test for rheumatoid factor. 65% had at least one joint symptom or sign recorded and in 44% this was at least 6-months before recorded RA diagnosis. Conclusion Indicator markers of RA may be valuable for case definition in cases which do not yet have a diagnostic code. The clinical diagnosis of RA is likely to occur some months before it is coded, shown by markers frequently occurring ≥6 months before recorded diagnosis. It is difficult to differentiate delay in diagnosis from delay in recording. Information concealed in free text may be required for the accurate identification of patients and to assess the quality of care in general practice
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