153 research outputs found
Transplantation tolerance: lessons from experimental rodent models
Immunological tolerance or functional unresponsiveness to a transplant is arguably the only approach that is likely to provide long-term graft survival without the problems associated with life-long global immunosuppression. Over the past 50 years, rodent models have become an invaluable tool for elucidating the mechanisms of tolerance to alloantigens. Importantly, rodent models can be adapted to ensure that they reflect more accurately the immune status of human transplant recipients. More recently, the development of genetically modified mice has enabled specific insights into the cellular and molecular mechanisms that play a key role in both the induction and maintenance of tolerance to be obtained and more complex questions to be addressed. This review highlights strategies designed to induce alloantigen specific immunological unresponsiveness leading to transplantation tolerance that have been developed through the use of experimental models
Air quality and error quantity: pollution and performance in a high-skilled, quality-focused occupation
We provide the first evidence that short-term exposure to air pollution affects the work performance of a group of highly-skilled, quality-focused employees. We repeatedly observe the decision-making of individual professional baseball umpires, quasi-randomly assigned to varying air quality across time and space. Unique characteristics of this setting combined with high-frequency data disentangle effects of multiple pollutants and identify previously under-explored acute effects. We find a 1 ppm increase in 3-hour CO causes an 11.5% increase in the propensity of umpires to make incorrect calls and a 10 mg/m3 increase in 12-hour PM2.5 causes a 2.6% increase. We control carefully for a variety of potential confounders and results are supported by robustness and falsification checks
Search for CP-violating Neutrino Non-Standard Interactions with the NOvA Experiment
This Letter reports a search for charge-parity (CP) symmetry violating
non-standard interactions (NSI) of neutrinos with matter using the NOvA
Experiment, and examines their effects on the determination of the standard
oscillation parameters. Data from
and
oscillation
channels are used to measure the effect of the NSI parameters
and . With 90% C.L. the magnitudes of
the NSI couplings are constrained to be
and . A degeneracy at
is reported, and we observe that the
presence of NSI limits sensitivity to the standard CP phase
The node of Ranvier in CNS pathology.
Healthy nodes of Ranvier are crucial for action potential propagation along myelinated axons, both in the central and in the peripheral nervous system. Surprisingly, the node of Ranvier has often been neglected when describing CNS disorders, with most pathologies classified simply as being due to neuronal defects in the grey matter or due to oligodendrocyte damage in the white matter. However, recent studies have highlighted changes that occur in pathological conditions at the node of Ranvier, and at the associated paranodal and juxtaparanodal regions where neurons and myelinating glial cells interact. Lengthening of the node of Ranvier, failure of the electrically resistive seal between the myelin and the axon at the paranode, and retraction of myelin to expose voltage-gated K(+) channels in the juxtaparanode, may contribute to altering the function of myelinated axons in a wide range of diseases, including stroke, spinal cord injury and multiple sclerosis. Here, we review the principles by which the node of Ranvier operates and its molecular structure, and thus explain how defects at the node and paranode contribute to neurological disorders
Sagliker effect (SE) and hypertensionologist hypertension in medical doctors and nurses. Multiple-salvo manual BP recordings which are medical harakiri procedures must be banned
16th European Meeting on Hypertension -- JUN 12-15, 2006 -- Madrid, SPAINWOS: 000240281002466…European Soc Hyperten
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