10,334 research outputs found
Disseminated eruptive giant mollusca contagiosa in an adult psoriasis patient during efalizumab therapy
Molluscum contagiosum is a common viral skin infection in children with atopic diathesis and not rare in HIV patients. We report a 45-year-old psoriasis patient who developed eruptive mollusca contagiosa during an antipsoriatic treatment with efalizumab. Copyright (C) 2008 S. Karger AG, Basel
Persistent fluctuations in stride intervals under fractal auditory stimulation
Copyright @ 2014 Marmelat et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.Stride sequences of healthy gait are characterized by persistent long-range correlations, which become anti-persistent in the presence of an isochronous metronome. The latter phenomenon is of particular interest because auditory cueing is generally considered to reduce stride variability and may hence be beneficial for stabilizing gait. Complex systems tend to match their correlation structure when synchronizing. In gait training, can one capitalize on this tendency by using a fractal metronome rather than an isochronous one? We examined whether auditory cues with fractal variations in inter-beat intervals yield similar fractal inter-stride interval variability as isochronous auditory cueing in two complementary experiments. In Experiment 1, participants walked on a treadmill while being paced by either an isochronous or a fractal metronome with different variation strengths between beats in order to test whether participants managed to synchronize with a fractal metronome and to determine the necessary amount of variability for participants to switch from anti-persistent to persistent inter-stride intervals. Participants did synchronize with the metronome despite its fractal randomness. The corresponding coefficient of variation of inter-beat intervals was fixed in Experiment 2, in which participants walked on a treadmill while being paced by non-isochronous metronomes with different scaling exponents. As expected, inter-stride intervals showed persistent correlations similar to self-paced walking only when cueing contained persistent correlations. Our results open up a new window to optimize rhythmic auditory cueing for gait stabilization by integrating fractal fluctuations in the inter-beat intervals.Commission of the European Community and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
The use of infrared thermography to detect the skin temperature response to physical activity
Physical activity has a noticeable effect on skin blood flow and temperature. The
thermal regulatory and hemodynamic processes during physical activity are controlled by two
conflicting mechanisms: the skin vasoconstriction induced by the blood flow demand to active
muscles and the skin vasodilation required by thermoregulation to increase warm blood flow
and heat conduction to the skin. The time-evolution of skin temperature during exercise can
give useful information about the adaptation of the subject as a function of specific type,
intensity and duration of exercise. In this paper, infrared thermography is used to investigate
the thermal response of skin temperature during running exercise on treadmill for a group of
seven healthy and trained runners. Two different treadmill exercises are considered: a graded
load exercise and a constant load exercise; for both exercises the duration was 30 minutes.
Within the limits due to the relatively small size of the sample group, results typically indicate
a fall in skin temperature during the initial stage of running exercise. As the exercise
progresses, the dynamics of the skin temperature response depends on the type of exercise
(graded versus constant load) and probably on the level of training of the subject
Molecular gas in nearby powerful radio galaxies
We report the detection of CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) emission from the central
region of nearby 3CR radio galaxies (z 0.03). Out of 21 galaxies, 8 have
been detected in, at least, one of the two CO transitions. The total molecular
gas content is below 10 \msun. Their individual CO emission exhibit, for 5
cases, a double-horned line profile that is characteristic of an inclined
rotating disk with a central depression at the rising part of its rotation
curve. The inferred disk or ring distributions of the molecular gas is
consistent with the observed presence of dust disks or rings detected optically
in the cores of the galaxies. We reason that if their gas originates from the
mergers of two gas-rich disk galaxies, as has been invoked to explain the
molecular gas in other radio galaxies, then these galaxies must have merged a
long time ago (few Gyr or more) but their remnant elliptical galaxies only
recently (last 10 years or less) become active radio galaxies. Instead, we
argue the the cannibalism of gas-rich galaxies provide a simpler explanation
for the origin of molecular gas in the elliptical hosts of radio galaxies (Lim
et al. 2000). Given the transient nature of their observed disturbances, these
galaxies probably become active in radio soon after the accretion event when
sufficient molecular gas agglomerates in their nuclei.Comment: 6 pages, including 2 figures,in "QSO Hosts and Their Environments",
ed. I. Marquez, in pres
Hubble Frontier Field Free-form Mass Mapping of the Massive Multiple-merging Cluster MACSJ0717.5+3745
published_or_final_versio
Hubble Frontier Field Free-form Mass Mapping of the Massive Multiple-merging Cluster MACSJ0717.5+3745
published_or_final_versio
Crystal Structure of the Rad3/XPD regulatory domain of Ssl1/p44
The Ssl1/p44 subunit is a core component of the yeast/mammalian general transcription factor TFIIH, which is involved in transcription and DNA repair. Ssl1/p44 binds to and stimulates the Rad3/XPD helicase activity of TFIIH. To understand the helicase stimulatory mechanism of Ssl1/p44, we determined the crystal structure of the N-terminal regulatory domain of Ssl1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Ssl1 forms a von Willebrand factor A fold in which a central six-stranded beta-sheet is sandwiched between three alpha helices on both sides. Structural and biochemical analyses of Ssl1/p44 revealed that the beta 4-alpha 5 loop, which is frequently found at the interface between von Willebrand factor A family proteins and cellular counterparts, is critical for the stimulation of Rad3/XPD. Yeast genetics analyses showed that double mutation of Leu-239 and Ser-240 in the beta 4-alpha 5 loop of Ssl1 leads to lethality of a yeast strain, demonstrating the importance of the Rad3-Ssl1 interactions to cell viability. Here, we provide a structural model for the Rad3/XPD-Ssl1/p44 complex and insights into how the binding of Ssl1/p44 contributes to the helicase activity of Rad3/XPD and cell viability.X1165Ysciescopu
Lung cancer in Chinese women: Evidence for an interaction between tobacco smoking and exposure to inhalants in the indoor environment
10.1289/ehp.0901587Environmental Health Perspectives11891257-126
Cardiovascular health status between standard and nonstandard workers in Korea
OBJECTIVES: The effect of employment insecurity on employee health is an important public health issue due to the recent effects of neoliberalism and the global financial crisis (2007-2008) on labor markets. This study aims to evaluate the differences in cardiovascular health status and the use of preventive screening services between standard and nonstandard workers. METHODS: Waged employees (N = 5,338) between the ages of 20 and 64 were grouped into standard (full-time, permanent) and nonstandard (part-time, temporary, or daily) employees. Data from the Fourth Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2007-2009, a nationwide representative survey, were examined, including cardiovascular health risk behaviors (tobacco, alcohol, physical inactivity), measured morbidities (blood pressure, blood glucose level, lipid profiles, body mass index), and the use of screening services for hypertension and diabetes mellitus. RESULTS: Female nonstandard employees tended to have higher blood pressure than did female standard employees (adjusted odds ratio, aOR 1.42, 95% confidence interval, CI 1.02 to 1.98). However, nonstandard employees (both men and women) were less likely to use preventive screening services for hypertension (aOR 0.72, 95% CI 0.54 to 0.94 in men; aOR 0.56, 95% CI 0.43 to 0.73 in women) and diabetes (aOR 0.58, 95% CI 0.43 to 0.79 in men; aOR 0.55, 95% CI 0.43 to 0.71 in women). CONCLUSION: Nonstandard work is associated with the underuse of screening services and poorer cardiovascular health in a specific population. Policies to reduce employment insecurity and encourage nonstandard employees to receive health screening services should be prioritized
- …