5,370 research outputs found
A new perspective on metformin therapy in type 1 diabetes
Metformin is quite frequently used off-label in type 1 diabetes to limit insulin dose requirement. Guidelines recommend that it can improve glucose control in those who are overweight and obese but evidence in support of this is limited. Recently-published findings from the REducing with MetfOrmin Vascular Adverse Lesions (REMOVAL) trial suggest that metformin therapy in type 1 diabetes can reduce atherosclerosis progression, weight and LDL-cholesterol levels. This provides a new perspective on metformin therapy in type 1 diabetes and suggests a potential role for reducing the long-term risk of cardiovascular disease
Photometric compliance of tablet screens and retro-illuminated acuity charts as visual acuity measurement devices
Mobile technology is increasingly used to measure visual acuity. Standards for chart-based acuity tests specify photometric requirements for luminance, optotype contrast and luminance uniformity. Manufacturers provide some photometric data but little is known about tablet performance for visual acuity testing. This study photometrically characterised seven tablet computers (iPad, Apple inc.) and three ETDRS (Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study) visual acuity charts with room lights on and off, and compared findings with visual acuity measurement standards. Tablet screen luminance and contrast were measured using nine points across a black and white checkerboard test screen at five arbitrary brightness levels. ETDRS optotypes and adjacent white background luminance and contrast were measured. All seven tablets (room lights off) exceeded the most stringent requirement for mean luminance (â„ 120 cd/m2) providing the nominal brightness setting was above 50%. All exceeded contrast requirement (Weber â„ 90%) regardless of brightness setting, and five were marginally below the required luminance uniformity threshold (Lmin/Lmax â„ 80%). Re-assessing three tablets with room lights on made little difference to mean luminance or contrast, and improved luminance uniformity to exceed the threshold. The three EDTRS charts (room lights off) had adequate mean luminance (â„ 120 cd/m2) and Weber contrast (â„ 90%), but all three charts failed to meet the luminance uniformity standard (Lmin/Lmax â„ 80%). Two charts were operating beyond manufacturerâs recommended lamp replacement schedule. With room lights on, chart mean luminance and Weber contrast increased, but two charts still had inadequate luminance uniformity. Tablet computers showed less inter-device variability, higher contrast, and better luminance uniformity than charts in both lights-on and lights-off environments, providing brightness setting was >50%. Overall, iPad tablets matched or marginally out-performed ETDRS charts in terms of photometric compliance with high contrast acuity standards
Pulsar magnetic alignment and the pulsewidth-age relation
Using pulsewidth data for 872 isolated radio pulsars we test the hypothesis
that pulsars evolve through a progressive narrowing of the emission cone
combined with progressive alignment of the spin and magnetic axes. The new data
provide strong evidence for the alignment over a time-scale of about 1 Myr with
a log standard deviation of around 0.8 across the observed population. This
time-scale is shorter than the time-scale of about 10 Myr found by previous
authors, but the log standard deviation is larger. The results are inconsistent
with models based on magnetic field decay alone or monotonic counter-alignment
to orthogonal rotation. The best fits are obtained for a braking index
parameter n_gamma approximately equal to 2.3, consistent the mean of the six
measured values, but based on a much larger sample of young pulsars. The
least-squares fitted models are used to predict the mean inclination angle
between the spin and magnetic axes as a function of log characteristic age.
Comparing these predictions to existing estimates it is found that the model in
which pulsars are born with a random angle of inclination gives the best fit to
the data. Plots of the mean beaming fraction as a function of characteristic
age are presented using the best-fitting model parameters.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Post-outburst X-ray flux and timing evolution of Swift J1822.3-1606
Swift J1822.3-1606 was discovered on 2011 July 14 by the Swift Burst Alert
Telescope following the detection of several bursts. The source was found to
have a period of 8.4377 s and was identified as a magnetar. Here we present a
phase-connected timing analysis and the evolution of the flux and spectral
properties using RXTE, Swift, and Chandra observations. We measure a spin
frequency of 0.1185154343(8) s and a frequency derivative of
at MJD 55761.0, in a timing analysis that include
significant non-zero second and third frequency derivatives that we attribute
to timing noise. This corresponds to an estimated spin-down inferred dipole
magnetic field of G, consistent with previous estimates
though still possibly affected by unmodelled noise. We find that the
post-outburst 1--10 keV flux evolution can be characterized by a
double-exponential decay with decay timescales of and
days. We also fit the light curve with a crustal cooling model which suggests
that the cooling results from heat injection into the outer crust. We find that
the hardness-flux correlation observed in magnetar outbursts also characterizes
the outburst of Swift J1822.3-1606. We compare the properties of Swift
J1822.3-1606 with those of other magnetars and their outbursts.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Influencing the perceived emotions of music with intent
Music is an immensely powerful affective medium that pervades our everyday life. With ever advancing technology, the reproduction and application of music for emotive and information transfer purposes has never been more prevalent. In this paper we introduce a rule-based engine for influencing the perceived emotions of music. Based on empirical music psychology, we attempt to formalise the relationship between musical elements and their perceived emotion. We examine the modification to structural aspects of music to allow for a graduated transition between perceived emotive states. This engine is intended to provide music reproduction systems with a finer grained control over this affective medium; where perceived musical emotion can be influenced with intent. This intent comes from both an external application and the audience. Using a series of affective computing technologies, an audienceâs response metrics and attitudes can be incorporated to model this intent. A generative feedback loop is set up between the external application, the influencing process and the audienceâs response to this, which together shape the modification of musical structure. The effectiveness of our rule system for influencing perceived musical emotion was examined in earlier work, with a small test study providing generally encouraging results
How tightly controlled do fluctuations in blood glucose levels need to be to reduce the risk of developing complications in people with Type 1 diabetes?
In 2011, the James Lind Alliance published a âtop 10â list of priorities for Type 1 diabetes research based on a structured consultation process. Whether reducing fluctuations in blood glucose can prevent longâterm microvascular and macrovascular complications was one of these. In this narrative review, 8 years on, we have assessed the updated evidence for the assertion that increased glucose variability plays an independent and clinically important role in the complications of Type 1 diabetes, over and above mean blood glucose and the effects of hypoglycaemia: the âglucose variability hypothesisâ. Although studies in cultured cells and ex vivo vessels have been suggestive, most studies in Type 1 diabetes have been small and/or crossâsectional, and based on âfingerâprickâ glucose measurements that capture glucose variability only in waking hours and are affected by missing data. A recent analysis of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial that formally imputed missing data found no independent effect of shortâterm glucose variability on longâterm complications. Few other highâquality longitudinal studies have directly addressed the glucose variability hypothesis in Type 1 diabetes. We conclude that there is little substantial evidence to date to support this hypothesis in Type 1 diabetes, although increasing use of continuous glucose monitoring provides an opportunity to test it more definitively. In the meantime, we recommend that control of glycaemia in Type 1 diabetes should continue to focus on the sustained achievement of target HbA1c and avoidance of hypoglycaemia
How tightly controlled do fluctuations in blood glucose levels need to be to reduce the risk of developing complications in people with Type 1 diabetes?
In 2011, the James Lind Alliance published a âtop 10â list of priorities for Type 1 diabetes research based on a structured consultation process. Whether reducing fluctuations in blood glucose can prevent longâterm microvascular and macrovascular complications was one of these. In this narrative review, 8 years on, we have assessed the updated evidence for the assertion that increased glucose variability plays an independent and clinically important role in the complications of Type 1 diabetes, over and above mean blood glucose and the effects of hypoglycaemia: the âglucose variability hypothesisâ. Although studies in cultured cells and ex vivo vessels have been suggestive, most studies in Type 1 diabetes have been small and/or crossâsectional, and based on âfingerâprickâ glucose measurements that capture glucose variability only in waking hours and are affected by missing data. A recent analysis of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial that formally imputed missing data found no independent effect of shortâterm glucose variability on longâterm complications. Few other highâquality longitudinal studies have directly addressed the glucose variability hypothesis in Type 1 diabetes. We conclude that there is little substantial evidence to date to support this hypothesis in Type 1 diabetes, although increasing use of continuous glucose monitoring provides an opportunity to test it more definitively. In the meantime, we recommend that control of glycaemia in Type 1 diabetes should continue to focus on the sustained achievement of target HbA1c and avoidance of hypoglycaemia
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