694 research outputs found
Porotic Hyperostosis in the Eastern Mediterranean
Porotic hyperostosis is bone expansion caused by hypertrophy of blood-forming marrow. It usually affects the skull diploë in adults and the long bones, face, skull vault, and sometimes the trunk in children, often with some thinning and porosity in the cortex and even the formation of a double cortex (bone-in-bone) in severe infections. Excess formation of red cells in hematogenous marrow can come from sicklemia or thalassemia (especially in the homozygous form), from other hemolytic anemias including unusual blood defects like spherocytosis, and from iron deficiency anemia. Presumably hookworm, amebiasis and other dysenteries, endemic malaria, and even high-altitude anoxia can produce enough anemia to expand the bone marrow space in some people, though there is no detailed evidence for this
Origin of entropy convergence in hydrophobic hydration and protein folding
An information theory model is used to construct a molecular explanation why
hydrophobic solvation entropies measured in calorimetry of protein unfolding
converge at a common temperature. The entropy convergence follows from the weak
temperature dependence of occupancy fluctuations for molecular-scale volumes in
water. The macroscopic expression of the contrasting entropic behavior between
water and common organic solvents is the relative temperature insensitivity of
the water isothermal compressibility. The information theory model provides a
quantitative description of small molecule hydration and predicts a negative
entropy at convergence. Interpretations of entropic contributions to protein
folding should account for this result.Comment: Phys. Rev. Letts. (in press 1996), 3 pages, 3 figure
Branes on Generalized Calibrated Submanifolds
We extend previous results on generalized calibrations to describe
supersymmetric branes in supergravity backgrounds with diverse fields turned
on, and provide several new classes of examples. As an important application,
we show that supersymmetric D-branes in compactifications with field strength
fluxes, and on SU(3)-structure spaces, wrap generalized calibrated
submanifolds, defined by simple conditions in terms of the underlying globally
defined, but non-closed, 2- and 3-forms. We provide examples where the
geometric moduli of D-branes (for instance D7-branes in 3-form flux
configurations) are lifted by the generalized calibration condition. In
addition, we describe supersymmetric D6-branes on generalized calibrated
3-submanifolds of half-flat manifolds, which provide the mirror of B-type
D-branes in IIB CY compactifications with 3-form fluxes. Supersymmetric sets of
such D-branes carrying no homology charges are mirror to supersymmetric sets of
D-branes which are homologically non-trivial, but trivial in K-theory. As an
additional application, we describe models with chiral gauge sectors, realized
in terms of generalized calibrated brane box configurations of NS- and
D5-branes, which are supersymmetric but carry no charges, so that no
orientifold planes are required in the compactification.Comment: 40 pages, 3 figures, references adde
Asia-Pacific working group consensus on non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding: An update 2018
Non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding remains an important emergency condition, leading to significant morbidity and mortality. As endoscopic therapy is the 'gold standard' of management, treatment of these patients can be considered in three stages: pre-endoscopic treatment, endoscopic haemostasis and post-endoscopic management. Since publication of the Asia-Pacific consensus on non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding (NVUGIB) 7 years ago, there have been significant advancements in the clinical management of patients in all three stages. These include pre-endoscopy risk stratification scores, blood and platelet transfusion, use of proton pump inhibitors; during endoscopy new haemostasis techniques (haemostatic powder spray and over-the-scope clips); and post-endoscopy management by second-look endoscopy and medication strategies. Emerging techniques, including capsule endoscopy and Doppler endoscopic probe in assessing adequacy of endoscopic therapy, and the pre-emptive use of angiographic embolisation, are attracting new attention. An emerging problem is the increasing use of dual antiplatelet agents and direct oral anticoagulants in patients with cardiac and cerebrovascular diseases. Guidelines on the discontinuation and then resumption of these agents in patients presenting with NVUGIB are very much needed. The Asia-Pacific Working Group examined recent evidence and recommends practical management guidelines in this updated consensus statement
Twelve experiments in restorative justice: the Jerry Lee program of randomized trials of restorative justice conferences
We conducted and measured outcomes from the Jerry Lee Program of 12 randomized trials over two decades in Australia and the United Kingdom (UK), testing an identical method of restorative justice taught by the same trainers to hundreds of police officers and others who delivered it to 2231 offenders and 1179 victims in 1995–2004. The article provides a review of the scientific progress and policy effects of the program, as described in 75 publications and papers arising from it, including previously unpublished results of our ongoing analyses
Twelve experiments in restorative justice: the Jerry Lee program of randomized trials of restorative justice conferences
Objectives: We conducted and measured outcomes from the Jerry Lee Program of 12 randomized trials over two decades in Australia and the United Kingdom (UK), testing an identical method of restorative justice taught by the same trainers to hundreds of police officers and others who delivered it to 2231 offenders and 1179 victims in 1995–2004. The article provides a review of the scientific progress and policy effects of the program, as described in 75 publications and papers arising from it, including previously unpublished results of our ongoing analyses. Methods: After random assignment in four Australian tests diverting criminal or juvenile cases from prosecution to restorative justice conferences (RJCs), and eight UK tests of supplementing criminal or juvenile proceedings with RJCs, we followed intention-to-treat group differences between offenders for up to 18 years, and for victims up to 10 years. Results: We distil and modify prior research reports into 18 updated evidence-based conclusions about the effects of RJCs on both victims and offenders. Initial reductions in repeat offending among offenders assigned to RJCs (compared to controls) were found in 10 of our 12 tests. Nine of the ten successes were for crimes with personal victims who participated in the RJCs, with clear benefits in both short- and long-term measures, including less prevalence of post-traumatic stress symptoms. Moderator effects across and within experiments showed that RJCs work best for the most frequent and serious offenders for repeat offending outcomes, with other clear moderator effects for poly-drug use and offense seriousness. Conclusions: RJ conferences organized and led (most often) by specially-trained police produced substantial short-term, and some long-term, benefits for both crime victims and their offenders, across a range of offense types and stages of the criminal justice processes on two continents, but with important moderator effects. These conclusions are made possible by testing a new kind of justice on a programmatic basis that would allow prospective meta-analysis, rather than doing one experiment at a time. This finding provides evidence that funding agencies could get far more evidence for the same cost from programs of identical, but multiple, RCTs of the identical innovative methods, rather than funding one RCT at a time
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