2,229 research outputs found
Case Hepatic Endometriosis: A Continuing Diagnostic Dilemma
Background. Intraparenchymal endometriosis of liver is rare. It may present as liver tumour and the diagnosis is not usually established till after surgery.
Case Outline. A 48-year-old postmenopausal woman presented with right upper quadrant pain and a cystic liver mass. Liver function tests and tumour markers (αFP, CEA, CA 19-9, and CA 125) were normal. Radiological imaging (USS, CT and MRI) suggested a thick walled cystic mass involving segments IV and VIII with complex intracystic septations. Frozen section at operation suggested a benign cystadenoma. The cyst was enucleated using a CUSA (Cavitron ultrasonic aspirator). The final histology confirmed endometriosis.
Discussion. Eleven cases of hepatic endometrioma have been reported and only four in postmenopausal women. Preoperative diagnosis poses a challenge and so far none of the cases have been diagnosed preoperatively. Surgery remains the treatment of choice. Accurate diagnosis at time of operation may avoid extensive liver surgery and its associated morbidity
Loss of solutions in shear banding fluids in shear banding fluids driven by second normal stress differences
Edge fracture occurs frequently in non-Newtonian fluids. A similar
instability has often been reported at the free surface of fluids undergoing
shear banding, and leads to expulsion of the sample. In this paper the
distortion of the free surface of such a shear banding fluid is calculated by
balancing the surface tension against the second normal stresses induced in the
two shear bands, and simultaneously requiring a continuous and smooth meniscus.
We show that wormlike micelles typically retain meniscus integrity when shear
banding, but in some cases can lose integrity for a range of average applied
shear rates during which one expects shear banding. This meniscus fracture
would lead to ejection of the sample as the shear banding region is swept
through. We further show that entangled polymer solutions are expected to
display a propensity for fracture, because of their much larger second normal
stresses. These calculations are consistent with available data in the
literature. We also estimate the meniscus distortion of a three band
configuration, as has been observed in some wormlike micellar solutions in a
cone and plate geometry.Comment: 23 pages, to be published in Journal of Rheolog
The Sagnac Phase Shift suggested by the Aharonov-Bohm effect for relativistic matter beams
The phase shift due to the Sagnac Effect, for relativistic matter beams
counter-propagating in a rotating interferometer, is deduced on the bases of a
a formal analogy with the the Aharonov-Bohm effect. A procedure outlined by
Sakurai, in which non relativistic quantum mechanics and newtonian physics
appear together with some intrinsically relativistic elements, is generalized
to a fully relativistic context, using the Cattaneo's splitting technique. This
approach leads to an exact derivation, in a self-consistently relativistic way,
of the Sagnac effect. Sakurai's result is recovered in the first order
approximation.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, 2 EPS figures. To appear in General Relativity and
Gravitatio
Short Time Behavior in De Gennes' Reptation Model
To establish a standard for the distinction of reptation from other modes of
polymer diffusion, we analytically and numerically study the displacement of
the central bead of a chain diffusing through an ordered obstacle array for
times . Our theory and simulations agree quantitatively and show
that the second moment approaches the often viewed as signature of
reptation only after a very long transient and only for long chains (N > 100).
Our analytically solvable model furthermore predicts a very short transient for
the fourth moment. This is verified by computer experiment.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, 4 ps file
Recommended from our members
Teamworking under Lean in UK public services: lean teams and team targets in Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs (HMRC)
The authors of The Machine that Changed the World were in no doubt about the importance of teamworking in lean production: ‘in the end’, they say [Womack, J., Jones, D, & Roos, D. (1990). The machine that changed the world. New York: Rawson Associates, p. 99], ‘it is the dynamic work team that emerges as the heart of the lean factory’. It is with this bold statement in mind that we seek to explore and develop our conceptual and practical understanding of how teamworking operates under Lean. We examine these issues in the context of a high-profile case of Lean implementation in the UK public sector, the Pacesetter programme of the UK's tax assessment and collection service, Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs (HMRC). We find that although the teams themselves were ostensibly set up on a lean basis, they were largely unable to operate as such as a result of the pressures they faced to meet their work targets. The operation of the teams thus retained, and was shaped by, characteristics of the pre-existing ‘target-based’ mode of teamworking. This, in turn, suggests particular ways in which we might better understand how Lean interacts with the context or environment into which it is introduced. These findings also to some degree run counter to the overwhelmingly negative account of Lean put forward in other recent studies of HMRC [e.g. Carter, B., Danford, A., Howcroft, D., Richardson, H., Smith, A., & Taylor, P. (2013a). Taxing times: Lean working and the creation of (in)efficiencies in HM Revenue and Customs. Public Administration, 91, 83–97]
Effective Soft-Core Potentials and Mesoscopic Simulations of Binary Polymer Mixtures
Mesoscopic molecular dynamics simulations are used to determine the large
scale structure of several binary polymer mixtures of various chemical
architecture, concentration, and thermodynamic conditions. By implementing an
analytical formalism, which is based on the solution to the Ornstein-Zernike
equation, each polymer chain is mapped onto the level of a single soft colloid.
From the appropriate closure relation, the effective, soft-core potential
between coarse-grained units is obtained and used as input to our mesoscale
simulations. The potential derived in this manner is analytical and explicitly
parameter dependent, making it general and transferable to numerous systems of
interest. From computer simulations performed under various thermodynamic
conditions the structure of the polymer mixture, through pair correlation
functions, is determined over the entire miscible region of the phase diagram.
In the athermal regime mesoscale simulations exhibit quantitative agreement
with united atom simulations. Furthermore, they also provide information at
larger scales than can be attained by united atom simulations and in the
thermal regime approaching the phase transition.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, 3 table
Topological effects in ring polymers: A computer simulation study
Unconcatenated, unknotted polymer rings in the melt are subject to strong
interactions with neighboring chains due to the presence of topological
constraints. We study this by computer simulation using the bond-fluctuation
algorithm for chains with up to N=512 statistical segments at a volume fraction
\Phi=0.5 and show that rings in the melt are more compact than gaussian chains.
A careful finite size analysis of the average ring size R \propto N^{\nu}
yields an exponent \nu \approx 0.39 \pm 0.03 in agreement with a Flory-like
argument for the topologica interactions. We show (using the same algorithm)
that the dynamics of molten rings is similar to that of linear chains of the
same mass, confirming recent experimental findings. The diffusion constant
varies effectively as D_{N} \propto N^{-1.22(3) and is slightly higher than
that of corresponding linear chains. For the ring sizes considered (up to 256
statistical segments) we find only one characteristic time scale \tau_{ee}
\propto N^{2.0(2); this is shown by the collapse of several mean-square
displacements and correlation functions onto corresponding master curves.
Because of the shrunken state of the chain, this scaling is not compatible with
simple Rouse motion. It applies for all sizes of ring studied and no sign of a
crossover to any entangled regime is found.Comment: 20 Pages,11 eps figures, Late
The distribution of pond snail communities across a landscape: separating out the influence of spatial position from local habitat quality for ponds in south-east Northumberland, UK
Ponds support a rich biodiversity because the heterogeneity of individual ponds creates, at the landscape scale, a diversity of habitats for wildlife. The distribution of pond animals and plants will be influenced by both the local conditions within a pond and the spatial distribution of ponds across the landscape. Separating out the local from the spatial is difficult because the two are often linked. Pond snails are likely to be affected by both local conditions, e.g. water hardness, and spatial patterns, e.g. distance between ponds, but studies of snail communities struggle distinguishing between the two. In this study, communities of snails were recorded from 52 ponds in a biogeographically coherent landscape in north-east England. The distribution of snail communities was compared to local environments characterised by the macrophyte communities within each pond and to the spatial pattern of ponds throughout the landscape. Mantel tests were used to partial out the local versus the landscape respective influences. Snail communities became more similar in ponds that were closer together and in ponds with similar macrophyte communities as both the local and the landscape scale were important for this group of animals. Data were collected from several types of ponds, including those created on nature reserves specifically for wildlife, old field ponds (at least 150 years old) primarily created for watering livestock and subsidence ponds outside protected areas or amongst coastal dunes. No one pond type supported all the species. Larger, deeper ponds on nature reserves had the highest numbers of species within individual ponds but shallow, temporary sites on farm land supported a distinct temporary water fauna. The conservation of pond snails in this region requires a diversity of pond types rather than one idealised type and ponds scattered throughout the area at a variety of sites, not just concentrated on nature reserves
Mechanisms explaining transitions between tonic and phasic firing in neuronal populations as predicted by a low dimensional firing rate model
Several firing patterns experimentally observed in neural populations have
been successfully correlated to animal behavior. Population bursting, hereby
regarded as a period of high firing rate followed by a period of quiescence, is
typically observed in groups of neurons during behavior. Biophysical
membrane-potential models of single cell bursting involve at least three
equations. Extending such models to study the collective behavior of neural
populations involves thousands of equations and can be very expensive
computationally. For this reason, low dimensional population models that
capture biophysical aspects of networks are needed.
\noindent The present paper uses a firing-rate model to study mechanisms that
trigger and stop transitions between tonic and phasic population firing. These
mechanisms are captured through a two-dimensional system, which can potentially
be extended to include interactions between different areas of the nervous
system with a small number of equations. The typical behavior of midbrain
dopaminergic neurons in the rodent is used as an example to illustrate and
interpret our results.
\noindent The model presented here can be used as a building block to study
interactions between networks of neurons. This theoretical approach may help
contextualize and understand the factors involved in regulating burst firing in
populations and how it may modulate distinct aspects of behavior.Comment: 25 pages (including references and appendices); 12 figures uploaded
as separate file
Astrophysical evidence for the existence of black holes
Following a short account of the history of the idea of black holes, we
present a review of the current status of the search for observational evidence
of their existence aimed at an audience of relativists rather than astronomers
or astrophysicists. We focus on two different regimes: that of stellar-mass
black holes and that of black holes with the masses of galactic nuclei.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, TeX forma
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