16 research outputs found

    Tess data for asteroseismology: Timing verification

    Get PDF
    The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is NASA´s latest space telescope dedicated to the discovery of transiting exoplanets around nearby stars. Besides the main goal of the mission, asteroseismology is an important secondary goal and very relevant for the high-quality time series that TESS will make during its two-year all-sky survey. Using TESS for asteroseismology introduces strong timing requirements, especially for coherent oscillators. Although the internal clock on board TESS is precise in its own time, it might have a constant drift. Thus, it will need calibration, or else offsets might inadvertently be introduced. Here, we present simultaneous ground- and space-based observations of primary eclipses of several binary systems in the Southern ecliptic hemisphere, used to verify the reliability of the TESS timestamps. From 12 contemporaneous TESS/ground observations, we determined a time offset equal to 5.8 ± 2.5 s, in the sense that the barycentric time measured by TESS is ahead of real time. The offset is consistent with zero at the 2.3σ level. In addition, we used 405 individually measured mid-eclipse times of 26 eclipsing binary stars observed solely by TESS in order to test the existence of a potential drift with a monotonic growth (or decay) affecting the observations of all stars. We find a drift corresponding to σ drift = 0.009 ± 0.015 s day-1. We find that the measured offset is of a size that will not become an issue for comparing ground-based and space data for coherent oscillations for most of the targets observed with TESS.Fil: Essen, Carolina von. University Aarhus; DinamarcaFil: Lund, Mikkel N.. University Aarhus; DinamarcaFil: Handberg, Rasmus. University Aarhus; DinamarcaFil: Sosa, Marina Soledad. University Aarhus; Dinamarca. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto de Astrofísica La Plata. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísicas. Instituto de Astrofísica La Plata; ArgentinaFil: Gadeberg, Julie Thiim. University Aarhus; DinamarcaFil: Kjeldsen, Hans. University Aarhus; DinamarcaFil: Vanderspek, Roland K.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Estados UnidosFil: Mortensen, Dina S.. University Aarhus; DinamarcaFil: Mallonn, M.. Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam; AlemaniaFil: Mammana, Luis Antonio. Universidad Nacional de La Plata; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - San Juan. Complejo Astronómico "El Leoncito". Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Complejo Astronómico "El Leoncito". Universidad Nacional de la Plata. Complejo Astronómico "El Leoncito". Universidad Nacional de San Juan. Complejo Astronómico "El Leoncito"; ArgentinaFil: Morgan, Edward H.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Estados UnidosFil: Villaseñor, Jesus Noel S.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Estados UnidosFil: Fausnaugh, Michael M.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Estados UnidosFil: Ricker, George R.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Estados Unido

    Autoimmune hepatitis triggered by nitrofurantoin: a case series

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Drugs can occasionally trigger the onset of autoimmune liver disease.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>Three Caucasian women (aged 65, 42 and 74 years old) who were receiving long-term nitrofurantoin as prophylaxis against recurrent urinary tract infections developed hepatitic liver disease. Serological auto-antibody profiles and liver histology appearances were consistent with autoimmune hepatitis. Two of the patients presented with jaundice, and one required a prolonged hospital admission for liver failure. In all three patients nitrofurantoin was withdrawn, and long-term immunosuppressive therapy with prednisolone and azathioprine or mycophenolate was given. The patients responded well, with liver biochemistry returning to normal within a few months.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Although nitrofurantoin rarely causes autoimmune hepatitis, this antimicrobial is increasingly used as long-term prophylaxis against recurrent urinary tract infection. General practitioners and urologists who prescribe long-term nitrofurantoin therapy should be aware of this adverse effect.</p

    Hepatic safety of antibiotics used in primary care

    Get PDF
    Antibiotics used by general practitioners frequently appear in adverse-event reports of drug-induced hepatotoxicity. Most cases are idiosyncratic (the adverse reaction cannot be predicted from the drug's pharmacological profile or from pre-clinical toxicology tests) and occur via an immunological reaction or in response to the presence of hepatotoxic metabolites. With the exception of trovafloxacin and telithromycin (now severely restricted), hepatotoxicity crude incidence remains globally low but variable. Thus, amoxicillin/clavulanate and co-trimoxazole, as well as flucloxacillin, cause hepatotoxic reactions at rates that make them visible in general practice (cases are often isolated, may have a delayed onset, sometimes appear only after cessation of therapy and can produce an array of hepatic lesions that mirror hepatobiliary disease, making causality often difficult to establish). Conversely, hepatotoxic reactions related to macrolides, tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones (in that order, from high to low) are much rarer, and are identifiable only through large-scale studies or worldwide pharmacovigilance reporting. For antibiotics specifically used for tuberculosis, adverse effects range from asymptomatic increases in liver enzymes to acute hepatitis and fulminant hepatic failure. Yet, it is difficult to single out individual drugs, as treatment always entails associations. Patients at risk are mainly those with previous experience of hepatotoxic reaction to antibiotics, the aged or those with impaired hepatic function in the absence of close monitoring, making it important to carefully balance potential risks with expected benefits in primary care. Pharmacogenetic testing using the new genome-wide association studies approach holds promise for better understanding the mechanism(s) underlying hepatotoxicity

    Diagnostics and treatment of respiratory tract infections (excluding community-acquired pneumonia) in outpatient treated children without severe underlying diseases

    Full text link

    Tracer concentration mapping in a stream with hyperspectral images from unoccupied aerial systems

    No full text
    The release of anthropogenic chemicals to streams, stemming from contaminated sites, agriculture, urban sources, or accidental input, represents a significant threat to water resources and thus the health of humans and aquatic ecosystems. Predicting the transport and fate of chemicals is critical to quantifying contaminant concentrations and developing environmental quality standards (EQS). Tracer tests are a well-established tool for such hydrological investigations in various aquatic systems. In stream settings, the experiments have predominantly investigated longitudinal mixing and flow velocities by measuring the tracer concentration in a few discrete locations; few studies have focused on the transverse mixing properties. Recent progress in hyperspectral remote sensing from Unoccupied Aerial Systems (UAS) allows advancing the two-dimensional monitoring of tracer tests, by mapping the tracer concentration with a high spatial resolution in narrow streams with difficult accessibility. So far, such methods have mainly been demonstrated in controlled settings or in ocean waters, but rarely in optically complex streams. In this study, we evaluated the performance of a miniaturized hyperspectral imaging system and a consumer grade camera onboard a UAS, to map the concentration of the fluorescent tracer Rhodamine WT in a stream impacted by a contaminated site. In order to estimate tracer concentrations from the remotely sensed data, a ratio of the red and blue band was used for the RGB camera, while a vector-based method, estimating the spectral angle in regards to a reference spectrum, was applied for the continuum-removed hyperspectral data. The RGB camera performed well only in sections of the stream exposed to direct sunlight (R2: 0.83; nRMSE: 10.2%), failing to map the concentration in all locations, which included areas where direct sunlight was blocked by riparian trees (R2: 0.17; nRMSE: 26.19%). In contrast, the advanced spectral information allowed the hyperspectral- system to map the concentration well in all sections of the stream (R2: 0.78; nRMSE: 13.35%), regardless of illumination changes. This demonstrated the advantage of hyperspectral imaging systems for measuring water-leaving irradiance in hundreds of contiguous narrow spectral bands that also allow detecting finer absorption and emission features. The approach described here could help to improve the knowledge of contaminants mixing in streams, i.e. to predict the location of fully transverse mixing for contaminated sites discharging to streams via groundwater-surface water interactions, as well as general assumptions behind mixing and dilution models
    corecore