19 research outputs found
The difficult way in diagnostics of neurological manifestations of Sjogren's disease. Case report
Sjogren's disease is an immunoinflammatory rheumatic disease that is characterized by damage to the secreting epithelial glands with the development of parenchymal sialadenitis with xerostomia and keratoconjunctivitis sicca with hypolacrymia. Due to the high heterogeneity of clinical manifestations of this disease, diagnosis is difficult. This article presents a clinical case of a patient with a detailed description of the manifestation, course, and treatment of Sjogren's disease with a rare combination of extraglandular complications in the form of polymyositis and secondary polyneuropathy
Genome-wide significant association with seven novel multiple sclerosis risk loci
Objective: A recent large-scale study in multiple sclerosis (MS) using the ImmunoChip platform reported on 11 loci that showed suggestive genetic association with MS. Additional data in sufficiently sized and independent data sets are needed to assess whether these loci represent genuine MS risk factors.
Methods: The lead SNPs of all 11 loci were genotyped in 10â
796 MS cases and 10â
793 controls from Germany, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Austria and Russia, that were independent from the previously reported cohorts. Association analyses were performed using logistic regression based on an additive model. Summary effect size estimates were calculated using fixed-effect meta-analysis.
Results: Seven of the 11 tested SNPs showed significant association with MS susceptibility in the 21â
589 individuals analysed here. Meta-analysis across our and previously published MS case-control data (total sample size n=101â
683) revealed novel genome-wide significant association with MS susceptibility (p<5Ă10â8) for all seven variants. This included SNPs in or near LOC100506457 (rs1534422, p=4.03Ă10â12), CD28 (rs6435203, p=1.35Ă10â9), LPP (rs4686953, p=3.35Ă10â8), ETS1 (rs3809006, p=7.74Ă10â9), DLEU1 (rs806349, p=8.14Ă10â12), LPIN3 (rs6072343, p=7.16Ă10â12) and IFNGR2 (rs9808753, p=4.40Ă10â10). Cis expression quantitative locus effects were observed in silico for rs6435203 on CD28 and for rs9808753 on several immunologically relevant genes in the IFNGR2 locus.
Conclusions: This study adds seven loci to the list of genuine MS genetic risk factors and further extends the list of established loci shared across autoimmune diseases
Genome-wide significant association with seven novel multiple sclerosis risk loci
Objective: A recent large-scale study in multiple sclerosis (MS) using the ImmunoChip platform reported on 11 loci that showed suggestive genetic association with MS. Additional data in sufficiently sized and independent data sets are needed to assess whether these loci represent genuine MS risk factors.
Methods: The lead SNPs of all 11 loci were genotyped in 10â
796 MS cases and 10â
793 controls from Germany, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Austria and Russia, that were independent from the previously reported cohorts. Association analyses were performed using logistic regression based on an additive model. Summary effect size estimates were calculated using fixed-effect meta-analysis.
Results: Seven of the 11 tested SNPs showed significant association with MS susceptibility in the 21â
589 individuals analysed here. Meta-analysis across our and previously published MS case-control data (total sample size n=101â
683) revealed novel genome-wide significant association with MS susceptibility (p<5Ă10â8) for all seven variants. This included SNPs in or near LOC100506457 (rs1534422, p=4.03Ă10â12), CD28 (rs6435203, p=1.35Ă10â9), LPP (rs4686953, p=3.35Ă10â8), ETS1 (rs3809006, p=7.74Ă10â9), DLEU1 (rs806349, p=8.14Ă10â12), LPIN3 (rs6072343, p=7.16Ă10â12) and IFNGR2 (rs9808753, p=4.40Ă10â10). Cis expression quantitative locus effects were observed in silico for rs6435203 on CD28 and for rs9808753 on several immunologically relevant genes in the IFNGR2 locus.
Conclusions: This study adds seven loci to the list of genuine MS genetic risk factors and further extends the list of established loci shared across autoimmune diseases
A Cryogenic Silicon Interferometer for Gravitational-wave Detection
The detection of gravitational waves from compact binary mergers by LIGO has
opened the era of gravitational wave astronomy, revealing a previously hidden
side of the cosmos. To maximize the reach of the existing LIGO observatory
facilities, we have designed a new instrument that will have 5 times the range
of Advanced LIGO, or greater than 100 times the event rate. Observations with
this new instrument will make possible dramatic steps toward understanding the
physics of the nearby universe, as well as observing the universe out to
cosmological distances by the detection of binary black hole coalescences. This
article presents the instrument design and a quantitative analysis of the
anticipated noise floor
A Cryogenic Silicon Interferometer for Gravitational-wave Detection
The detection of gravitational waves from compact binary mergers by LIGO has opened the era of gravitational wave astronomy, revealing a previously hidden side of the cosmos. To maximize the reach of the existing LIGO observatory facilities, we have designed a new instrument able to detect gravitational waves at distances 5 times further away than possible with Advanced LIGO, or at greater than 100 times the event rate. Observations with this new instrument will make possible dramatic steps toward understanding the physics of the nearby Universe, as well as observing the Universe out to cosmological distances by the detection of binary black hole coalescences. This article presents the instrument design and a quantitative analysis of the anticipated noise floor
First low-frequency Einstein@Home all-sky search for continuous gravitational waves in Advanced LIGO data
We report results of a deep all-sky search for periodic gravitational waves from isolated neutron stars in data from the first Advanced LIGO observing run. This search investigates the low frequency range of Advanced LIGO data, between 20 and 100 Hz, much of which was not explored in initial LIGO. The search was made possible by the computing power provided by the volunteers of the Einstein@Home project. We find no significant signal candidate and set the most stringent upper limits to date on the amplitude of gravitational wave signals from the target population, corresponding to a sensitivity depth of 48.7 [1/root Hz]. At the frequency of best strain sensitivity, near 100 Hz, we set 90% confidence upper limits of 1.8 x 10(-25). At the low end of our frequency range, 20 Hz, we achieve upper limits of 3.9 x 10(-24). At 55 Hz we can exclude sources with ellipticities greater than 10(-5) within 100 pc of Earth with fiducial value of the principal moment of inertia of 10(38) kg m(2)
Search for intermediate mass black hole binaries in the first observing run of Advanced LIGO
During their first observational run, the two Advanced LIGO detectors attained an unprecedented sensitivity, resulting in the first direct detections of gravitational-wave signals produced by stellar-mass binary black hole systems. This paper reports on an all-sky search for gravitational waves (GWs) from merging intermediate mass black hole binaries (IMBHBs). The combined results from two independent search techniques were used in this study: the first employs a matched-filter algorithm that uses a bank of filters covering the GW signal parameter space, while the second is a generic search for GW transients (bursts). No GWs from IMBHBs were detected; therefore, we constrain the rate of several classes of IMBHB mergers. The most stringent limit is obtained for black holes of individual mass
100 M â, with spins aligned with the binary orbital angular momentum. For such systems, the merger rate is constrained to be less than
0.93 Gpcâ3yrâ1 in comoving units at the 90% confidence level, an improvement of nearly 2 orders of magnitude over previous upper limits
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All-fiber polarization-maintaining mode-locked laser operated at 980ânm
For the first time, to the best of our knowledge, we present an all-fiber polarization-maintaining passively mode-locked picosecond laser operated at 980 nm. The laser cavity had a ring configuration with a semiconductor saturable absorber mirror as a mode-locking element. As an active medium, we used a specially designed cladding-pumped . Yb-doped fiber with reduced cladding-to-core diameter ratio. The laser was self-starting and operated in the net cavity normal dispersion regime, where a spectral profile of the gain medium acted as a filter element. By intracavity spectral filtering, we achieved about 40 dB dominance of the signal wavelength at 980 nm over 1 mu m emission in a highly stable picosecond pulsed regime. The corresponding simulation was performed to extend the knowledge about laser operation. (C) 2020 Optical Society of America12 month embargo; published online: 9 April 2020This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]