159 research outputs found
A numerical method to compute derivatives of functions of large complex matrices and its application to the overlap Dirac operator at finite chemical potential
We present a method for the numerical calculation of derivatives of functions
of general complex matrices. The method can be used in combination with any
algorithm that evaluates or approximates the desired matrix function, in
particular with implicit Krylov-Ritz-type approximations. An important use case
for the method is the evaluation of the overlap Dirac operator in lattice
Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) at finite chemical potential, which requires the
application of the sign function of a non-Hermitian matrix to some source
vector. While the sign function of non-Hermitian matrices in practice cannot be
efficiently approximated with source-independent polynomials or rational
functions, sufficiently good approximating polynomials can still be constructed
for each particular source vector. Our method allows for an efficient
calculation of the derivatives of such implicit approximations with respect to
the gauge field or other external parameters, which is necessary for the
calculation of conserved lattice currents or the fermionic force in Hybrid
Monte-Carlo or Langevin simulations. We also give an explicit deflation
prescription for the case when one knows several eigenvalues and eigenvectors
of the matrix being the argument of the differentiated function. We test the
method for the two-sided Lanczos approximation of the finite-density overlap
Dirac operator on realistic gauge field configurations on lattices with
sizes as large as and .Comment: 26 pages elsarticle style, 5 figures minor text changes, journal
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Research in Crops and Soils: A Progress Report
The Experiment Station Agronomy Farm, located 1 mile east of Brookings, is representative of a large area of land in eastern South Dakota. It consists of 160 acres which are laid out in various soil and crop experiments. The soil, commonly called loam and classified as Vienna loam, is in a good state of fertility. Results of the experiments on this farm will indicate what may be expected from similar soil management, cropping systems, and crop varieties on the same type of soil and under comparable climatic conditions. Numerous experiments are in progress on this farm. The information in this circular is a progress report on those experiments for which results can now be evaluated. Further results will be published at intervals as the experiments progress
Incremental Value of Computed Tomography Perfusion for Final Infarct Prediction in Acute Ischemic Cerebellar Stroke
Background
The diagnosis of ischemic cerebellar stroke is challenging because of nonspecific symptoms and very limited accuracy of commonly applied computed tomography (CT) imaging. Advances in CT perfusion imaging provide increasing value in the detection of posterior circulation stroke, but the prognostic value remains unclear. We aimed to identify imaging parameters that predict morphologic outcome in cerebellar stroke patients using advanced CT including wholeâbrain CT perfusion (WBâCTP).
Methods and Results
We selected all subjects with cerebellar WBâCTP perfusion deficits and followâupâconfirmed cerebellar infarction from a consecutive cohort with suspected stroke who underwent WBâCTP. PosteriorâcirculationâAcuteâStrokeâPrognosisâEarlyâCTâScore (pcâASPECTS) was determined on noncontrast CT, CT angiography source images, and on parametric WBâCTP maps. Cerebellar perfusion deficit volumes on all maps and the final infarction volume on followâup imaging were quantified. Uniâ and multivariate regression analyses were performed. Sixty patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. pcâASPECTS on CT angiography source images (Ă, â9.239; 95% CI, â14.220 to â4.259; P0.05).
Conclusions
In contrast to noncontrast CT and CT angiography, WBâCTP imaging contains prognostic information for morphologic outcome in patients with acute cerebellar stroke
The CHK1 inhibitor MU380 significantly increases the sensitivity of human docetaxel-resistant prostate cancer cells to gemcitabine through the induction of mitotic catastrophe.
As treatment options for patients with incurable metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) are considerably limited, novel effective therapeutic options are needed. Checkpoint kinase 1 (CHK1) is a highly conserved protein kinase implicated in the DNA damage response (DDR) pathway that prevents the accumulation of DNA damage and controls regular genome duplication. CHK1 has been associated with prostate cancer (PCa) induction, progression, and lethality; hence, CHK1 inhibitors SCH900776 (also known as MK-8776) and the more effective SCH900776 analog MU380 may have clinical applications in the therapy of PCa. Synergistic induction of DNA damage with CHK1 inhibition represents a promising therapeutic approach that has been tested in many types of malignancies, but not in chemoresistant mCRPC. Here, we report that such therapeutic approach may be exploited using the synergistic action of the antimetabolite gemcitabine (GEM) and CHK1 inhibitors SCH900776 and MU380 in docetaxel-resistant (DR) mCRPC. Given the results, both CHK1 inhibitors significantly potentiated the sensitivity to GEM in a panel of chemo-naĂŻve and matched DR PCa cell lines under 2D conditions. MU380 exhibited a stronger synergistic effect with GEM than clinical candidate SCH900776. MU380 alone or in combination with GEM significantly reduced spheroid size and increased apoptosis in all patient-derived xenograft 3D cultures, with a higher impact in DR models. Combined treatment induced premature mitosis from G1 phase resulting in the mitotic catastrophe as a prestage of apoptosis. Finally, treatment by MU380 alone, or in combination with GEM, significantly inhibited tumor growth of both PC339-DOC and PC346C-DOC xenograft models in mice. Taken together, our data suggest that metabolically robust and selective CHK1 inhibitor MU380 can bypass docetaxel resistance and improve the effectiveness of GEM in DR mCRPC models. This approach might allow for dose reduction of GEM and thereby minimize undesired toxicity and may represent a therapeutic option for patients with incurable DR mCRPC
Cost-effectiveness of short-protocol emergency brain MRI after negative non-contrast CT for minor stroke detection
OBJECTIVES To investigate the cost-effectiveness of supplemental short-protocol brain MRI after negative non-contrast CT for the detection of minor strokes in emergency patients with mild and unspecific neurological symptoms. METHODS The economic evaluation was centered around a prospective single-center diagnostic accuracy study validating the use of short-protocol brain MRI in the emergency setting. A decision-analytic Markov model distinguished the strategies \textquotedblno additional imaging\textquotedbl and \textquotedbladditional short-protocol MRI\textquotedbl for evaluation. Minor stroke was assumed to be missed in the initial evaluation in 40% of patients without short-protocol MRI. Specialized post-stroke care with immediate secondary prophylaxis was assumed for patients with detected minor stroke. Utilities and quality-of-life measures were estimated as quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Input parameters were obtained from the literature. The Markov model simulated a follow-up period of up to 30 years. Willingness to pay was set to 26,304 (CT only: $27,109). Cumulative calculated effectiveness in the CT-only group was 14.25 QALYs (short-protocol MRI group: 14.31 QALYs). In the deterministic sensitivity analysis, additional short-protocol MRI remained the dominant strategy in all investigated ranges. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis results from the base case analysis were confirmed, and additional short-protocol MRI resulted in lower costs and higher effectiveness. CONCLUSION Additional short-protocol MRI in emergency patients with mild and unspecific neurological symptoms enables timely secondary prophylaxis through detection of minor strokes, resulting in lower costs and higher cumulative QALYs. KEY POINTS ⢠Short-protocol brain MRI after negative head CT in selected emergency patients with mild and unspecific neurological symptoms allows for timely detection of minor strokes. ⢠This strategy supports clinical decision-making with regard to immediate initiation of secondary prophylactic treatment, potentially preventing subsequent major strokes with associated high costs and reduced QALY. ⢠According to the Markov model, additional short-protocol MRI remained the dominant strategy over wide variations of input parameters, even when assuming disproportionally high costs of the supplemental MRI scan
MiR-205-driven downregulation of cholesterol biosynthesis through SQLE-inhibition identifies therapeutic vulnerability in aggressive prostate cancer
Prostate cancer (PCa) shows strong dependence on the androgen receptor (AR) pathway. Here, we show that squalene epoxidase (SQLE), an enzyme of the cholesterol biosynthesis pathway, is overexpressed in advanced PCa and its expression correlates with poor survival. SQLE expression is controlled by micro-RNA 205 (miR-205), which is significantly downregulated in advanced PCa. Restoration of miR-205 expression or competitive inhibition of SQLE led to inhibition of de novo cholesterol biosynthesis. Furthermore, SQLE was essential for proliferation of AR-positive PCa cell lines, including abiraterone or enzalutamide resistant derivatives, and blocked transactivation of the AR pathway. Inhibition of SQLE with the FDA approved antifungal drug terbinafine also efficiently blocked orthotopic tumour growth in mice. Finally, terbinafine reduced levels of prostate specific antigen (PSA) in three out of four late-stage PCa patients. These results highlight SQLE as a therapeutic target for the treatment of advanced PCa
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