1,329 research outputs found
Microarray based expression profiling of BRCA1 mutated human tumours using a breast-specific platform to identify a profile of BRCA1 deficiency
Exoanal ultrasound of the anal sphincter: normal anatomy and sphincter defects
To describe the sonographic appearance of normal anal sphincter anatomy and sphincter defects evaluated with a conventional 5 MHz convex transducer placed on the perineum. Design Prospective, single-blind study. Setting Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Michigan Medical Center, USA. Population Twenty-five women with symptoms of faecal incontinence, 11 asymptomatic nulliparous women, and 32 asymptomatic parous women. Methods A convex scanner was placed on the perineum with the woman in lithotomy position. Images were taken at three levels of the sphincter canal. Pictures were evaluated by two examiners who were blinded to the case history of the women and to the results of each other for the presence or absence of sphincter defects. Main outcome measures Description of anal sphincter appearance on endoanal ultrasound. Reproducibilty of the evaluation of sphincter defects. Results The internal anal sphincter is visible as a hypoechoic circle; the external anal sphincter shows a hyperechoic pattern. Proximally the sling of the puborectalis muscle is visible. Sphincter defects were detected in 20 women. In all five women who subsequently underwent surgery, the presence and location of the defect was confirmed at the time of surgery. Examiners were in agreement 100% of the time on the presence or absence of internal defects. They disagreed in one patient on the presence of an external defect. Conclusion Exoanal ultrasound provides information on normal anatomy and on defects of the anal sphincter.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75125/1/j.1471-0528.1997.tb12056.x.pd
Bursty egocentric network evolution in Skype
In this study we analyze the dynamics of the contact list evolution of
millions of users of the Skype communication network. We find that egocentric
networks evolve heterogeneously in time as events of edge additions and
deletions of individuals are grouped in long bursty clusters, which are
separated by long inactive periods. We classify users by their link creation
dynamics and show that bursty peaks of contact additions are likely to appear
shortly after user account creation. We also study possible relations between
bursty contact addition activity and other user-initiated actions like free and
paid service adoption events. We show that bursts of contact additions are
associated with increases in activity and adoption - an observation that can
inform the design of targeted marketing tactics.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. Social Network Analysis and Mining (2013
Correlated dynamics in egocentric communication networks
We investigate the communication sequences of millions of people through two
different channels and analyze the fine grained temporal structure of
correlated event trains induced by single individuals. By focusing on
correlations between the heterogeneous dynamics and the topology of egocentric
networks we find that the bursty trains usually evolve for pairs of individuals
rather than for the ego and his/her several neighbors thus burstiness is a
property of the links rather than of the nodes. We compare the directional
balance of calls and short messages within bursty trains to the average on the
actual link and show that for the trains of voice calls the imbalance is
significantly enhanced, while for short messages the balance within the trains
increases. These effects can be partly traced back to the technological
constrains (for short messages) and partly to the human behavioral features
(voice calls). We define a model that is able to reproduce the empirical
results and may help us to understand better the mechanisms driving technology
mediated human communication dynamics.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Elevated Paracellular Glucose Flux across Cystic Fibrosis Airway Epithelial Monolayers Is an Important Factor for Pseudomonas aeruginosa Growth.
People with cystic fibrosis (CF) who develop related diabetes (CFRD) have accelerated pulmonary decline, increased infection with antibiotic-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa and increased pulmonary exacerbations. We have previously shown that glucose concentrations are elevated in airway surface liquid (ASL) of people with CF, particularly in those with CFRD. We therefore explored the hypotheses that glucose homeostasis is altered in CF airway epithelia and that elevation of glucose flux into ASL drives increased bacterial growth, with an effect over and above other cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)-related ASL abnormalities. The aim of this study was to compare the mechanisms governing airway glucose homeostasis in CF and non-CF primary human bronchial epithelial (HBE) monolayers, under normal conditions and in the presence of Ps. aeruginosa filtrate. HBE-bacterial co-cultures were performed in the presence of 5 mM or 15 mM basolateral glucose to investigate how changes in blood glucose, such as those seen in CFRD, affects luminal Ps. aeruginosa growth. Calu-3 cell monolayers were used to evaluate the potential importance of glucose on Ps. aeruginosa growth, in comparison to other hallmarks of the CF ASL, namely mucus hyperviscosity and impaired CFTR-dependent fluid secretions. We show that elevation of basolateral glucose promotes the apical growth of Ps. aeruginosa on CF airway epithelial monolayers more than non-CF monolayers. Ps. aeruginosa secretions elicited more glucose flux across CF airway epithelial monolayers compared to non-CF monolayers which we propose increases glucose availability in ASL for bacterial growth. In addition, elevating basolateral glucose increased Ps. aeruginosa growth over and above any CFTR-dependent effects and the presence or absence of mucus in Calu-3 airway epithelia-bacteria co-cultures. Together these studies highlight the importance of glucose as an additional factor in promoting Ps. aeruginosa growth and respiratory infection in CF disease
A network medicine approach to quantify distance between hereditary disease modules on the interactome
We introduce a MeSH-based method that accurately quantifies similarity between heritable diseases at molecular level. This method effectively brings together the existing information about diseases that is scattered across the vast corpus of biomedical literature. We prove that sets of MeSH terms provide a highly descriptive representation of heritable disease and that the structure of MeSH provides a natural way of combining individual MeSH vocabularies. We show that our measure can be used effectively in the prediction of candidate disease genes. We developed a web application to query more than 28.5 million relationships between 7,574 hereditary diseases (96% of OMIM) based on our similarity measure
A comparison of probe-level and probeset models for small-sample gene expression data
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Statistical methods to tentatively identify differentially expressed genes in microarray studies typically assume larger sample sizes than are practical or even possible in some settings.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The performance of several probe-level and probeset models was assessed graphically and numerically using three spike-in datasets. Based on the Affymetrix GeneChip, a novel nested factorial model was developed and found to perform competitively on small-sample spike-in experiments.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Statistical methods with test statistics related to the estimated log fold change tend to be more consistent in their performance on small-sample gene expression data. For such small-sample experiments, the nested factorial model can be a useful statistical tool. This method is implemented in freely-available R code (affyNFM), available with a tutorial document at <url>http://www.stat.usu.edu/~jrstevens</url>.</p
Holographic aspects of three dimensional QCD from string theory
We study two aspects of 3D QCD with massless fermions in a holographic set-up
from string theory, based on D3/D7 branes; parity anomaly and baryons as baby
Skyrmions. We first give a novel account of parity anomaly of 3D QCD with odd
number of flavors from the IR holographic viewpoint by observing a subtle point
in D7 brane embeddings with a given fixed UV theory. We also discuss its UV
origin in terms of weakly coupled D-brane pictures. We then focus on the
parity-symmetric case of even number of N_F flavors, and study baryons in the
holographic model. We identify the monopoles of U(N_F) gauge theory dynamically
broken down to U(N_F/2)x U(N_F/2) in the holographic 4 dimensional bulk as a
holographic counter-part of 3D baby-Skyrmions for baryons in large N limit, and
work out some details how the mapping goes. In particular, we show that the
correct baryon charges emerge from the Witten effect with a space-varying theta
angle.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures; v2: references added with comments, typos
corrected; v3: more references added; v4: holographic baryon profile and the
analysis of its baryon charge is significantly revised, correcting errors in
the previous discussio
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A new perspective of the climatological features of upper-level cut-off lows in the Southern Hemisphere
This study presents a detailed view of the seasonal variability of upper-level cut-off lows (COLs) in the Southern Hemisphere. The COLs are identified and tracked using data from a 36-year period of the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecast reanalysis (ERA-Interim). The objective identification of the COLs uses a new approach, which is based on 300 hPa relative vorticity minima, and three restrictive criteria of the presence of a cold-core, stratospheric potential vorticity intrusion, and cut-off cyclonic circulation. The highest COL activity is in agreement with previous studies, located near three main continental areas (Australia, South America, and Africa), with maximum frequencies usually observed in the austral autumn. The COL mean intensity values show a marked seasonal and spatial variation, with maximum (minimum) values during the austral winter (summer), a unique feature that has not been observed previously in studies based on the geopotential. The link between intensity and lysis is examined, and finds that weaker systems are more susceptible to lysis in the vicinity of the Andes Cordillera, associated with the topographic Rossby wave. Lysis and genesis regions are close to each other, confirming that COLs are quasi-stationary systems. Also, COLs tend to move eastward and are faster over the higher latitudes. The mean growth/decay rates coincide with the major genesis and lysis density regions, such as the significant decay values across the Andes all year. As a consequence of using vorticity for the tracking method a longer lifetime of COLs is detected than in other studies, but this does not affect the total frequency of occurrence. Comparisons with other studies suggest that the differences in seasonality are due to uncertainties in the reanalyses and the methods used to identify COLs
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