1,934 research outputs found
Phylogenetic analysis and characterization of Korean orf virus from dairy goats: case report
An outbreak of orf virus infection in dairy goats in Korea was investigated. Suspected samples of the skin and lip of affected goats were sent to the laboratory for more exact diagnosis. Orf virus was detected by electron microscopy and viral DNA was identified by PCR. To reveal the genetic characteristics of the Korean strain (ORF/09/Korea), the sequences of the major envelope protein (B2L) and orf virus interferon resistance (VIR) genes were determined and then compared with published reference sequences. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the ORF/09/Korea strain was closest to the isolates (Taiping) from Taiwan. This is believed to be the first report on the molecular characterization of orf virus in Korea
Guidewire Breakage during Neurointerventional Procedures: a Report of Two Cases
We report on two cases of microguidewire breakage that occurred during endovascular treatment of intracranial aneurysms. The microguidewire can be broken when a part of the wire is stuck due to vascular tortuosity, and, subsequently, application of excessive rotational movement. The mechanical and physical properties of a microguidewire are also important factors in microguidewire breakage. We also suggest technical tips for avoidance of this problem
Idiopathic retroperitoneal fibrosis associated with Hashimoto's thyroiditis in a patient with a single functioning kidney
AbstractRetroperitoneal fibrosis (RPF) is a rare disease characterized by the presence of fibroinflammatory tissue around the abdominal aorta and ureteral entrapment in most cases. Idiopathic RPF is frequently reported in association with autoimmune diseases; however, there have been few reports of idiopathic RPF associated with Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Here, we report a case of idiopathic RPF with Hashimoto's thyroiditis in a patient with a single functioning kidney, which was successfully treated by corticosteroid therapy and transient intraureteral stent insertion with a double-J catheter
Carbon nanotube diode fabricated by contact engineering with self-assembled molecules
The authors report the construction of carbon nanotube Schottky diodes by covering a selectively exposed area of the electrode with self-assembling molecules. Two self-assembling molecules with different polarities, 2-aminoethanethiol and 3-mercaptopropionic acid, were used to modify the Fermi level lineup at the selected contact. The devices showed p -type behavior with symmetric I-V showing clear rectifying behavior after treatment of one contact with 2-aminoethanethiol. Their experiment, in conjunction with the results of ab initio electronic structure calculations, suggests that the diode action stems from the asymmetric Fermi level lineup between the bare and engineered contacts.open131
Chern-Simons Solitons, Chiral Model, and (affine) Toda Model on Noncommutative Space
We consider the Dunne-Jackiw-Pi-Trugenberger model of a U(N) Chern-Simons
gauge theory coupled to a nonrelativistic complex adjoint matter on
noncommutative space. Soliton configurations of this model are related the
solutions of the chiral model on noncommutative plane. A generalized
Uhlenbeck's uniton method for the chiral model on noncommutative space provides
explicit Chern-Simons solitons. Fundamental solitons in the U(1) gauge theory
are shaped as rings of charge `n' and spin `n' where the Chern-Simons level `n'
should be an integer upon quantization. Toda and Liouville models are
generalized to noncommutative plane and the solutions are provided by the
uniton method. We also define affine Toda and sine-Gordon models on
noncommutative plane. Finally the first order moduli space dynamics of
Chern-Simons solitons is shown to be trivial.Comment: latex, JHEP style, 23 pages, no figur
Determinants of respiratory symptom development in patients with chronic airflow obstruction
SummaryBackgroundThis study was undertaken to identify the determinants of respiratory symptom development in patients with chronic airflow obstruction (CAO).MethodsCategories of symptomatic and asymptomatic CAO were defined using questionnaire responses and spirometric results. We analyzed data obtained as part of the second South Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (Korean NHANES II).ResultsAmong 187 patients with CAO, 69 had no respiratory symptoms. CAO patients with symptoms were significantly older than those without symptoms (P=0.026), and hypertension was more common among symptomatic CAO patients than among asymptomatic CAO patients (P=0.005). According to questionnaire responses, symptomatic CAO patients had more difficulty in walking or lifting (P<0.001), required more help with personal care (P=0.01), and had poorer general health than asymptomatic CAO patients (P=0.008). Symptomatic CAO patients had higher fasting blood glucose levels than asymptomatic CAO patients (P=0.028). Symptomatic CAO patients had significantly lower forced expiratory volume in 1s (FEV1) (P=0.001), forced vital capacity (FVC) (P=0.008), and a ratio of FEV1/FVC than asymptomatic CAO patients (P<0.001). Statistically significant predictors of symptom development were as follows: age (odds ratio (OR) 1.04, P=0.028), hypertension (OR 4.41, P=0.008), fasting blood glucose (OR 1.02, P=0.034), FEV1 (OR 0.07, P=0.002), FVC (OR 0.08, P=0.009), FEV1/FVC (OR 0.00, P=0.001). Multiple logistic regression analyses revealed two independent factors associated with symptom development: FEV1/FVC (OR 0.001, P=0.002) and hypertension (OR 5.95, P=0.005).ConclusionsIn CAO, respiratory symptom development is significantly associated with low FEV1/FVC and the presence of hypertension
Current-voltage characteristics of diluted Josephson-junction arrays: scaling behavior at current and percolation threshold
Dynamical simulations and scaling arguments are used to study the
current-voltage (IV) characteristics of a two-dimensional model of resistively
shunted Josephson-junction arrays in presence of percolative disorder, at zero
external field. Two different limits of the Josephson-coupling concentration
are considered, where is the percolation threshold. For
and zero temperature, the IV curves show power-law behavior above a disorder
dependent critical current. The power-law behavior and critical exponents are
consistent with a simple scaling analysis. At and finite temperature ,
the results show the scaling behavior of a T=0 superconducting transition. The
resistance is linear but vanishes for decreasing with an apparent
exponential behavior. Crossover to non-linearity appears at currents
proportional to , with a thermal-correlation length exponent
consistent with the corresponding value for the diluted XY model at
.Comment: Revtex, 9 postscript pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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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