43 research outputs found

    Fidarsi o no del ColorChecker?

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    Il ColorChecker \ue8 uno strumento usato nel campo della fotografia digitale per eseguire una calibrazione cromatica. Il pannello composto da 24 tasselli a colori viene inserito all\u2019interno di una fotografia digitale per avere una acquisizione di valori di riferimento noti. L\u2019idea \ue8 quella che conoscendo i valori del ColorChecker e correggendo quelli relativi acquisiti si pu\uf2 calibrare cromaticamente tutta l\u2019immagine. L\u2019obiettivo di questo lavoro \ue8 testare i limiti e l\u2019affidabilit\ue0 dell\u2019uso del ColorChecker. A questo scopo sono state acquisite immagini fotografiche digitali a colori contenenti il ColorChecker a diverse condizioni di illuminazione e distanze dall\u2019obiettivo. Dopo aver corretto le immagini rispetto a un punto di bianco ottenuto dall\u2019apposito tassello del ColorChecker, \ue8 stata valutata la variabilit\ue0 dei tasselli colorati rispetto ai dati di fabbrica. Sono stati inoltre misurati il range dinamico relativo del ColorChecker e la linearit\ue0 dei valori di luminanza dei tasselli in scala di grigi rapportati ai valori corrispondenti dei dati di fabbrica

    Durability of bioprosthetic aortic valves in patients under the age of 60 years - Rationale and design of the international INDURE registry

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    Background: There is an ever-growing number of patients requiring aortic valve replacement (AVR). Limited data is available on the long-term outcomes and structural integrity of bioprosthetic valves in younger patients undergoing surgical AVR. Methods: The INSPIRIS RESILIA Durability Registry (INDURE) is a prospective, open-label, multicentre, international registry with a follow-up of 5 years to assess clinical outcomes of patients younger than 60 years who undergo surgical AVR using the INSPIRIS RESILIA aortic valve. INDURE will be conducted across 20-22 sites in Europe and Canada and intends to enrol minimum of 400 patients. Patients will be included if they are scheduled to undergo AVR with or without concomitant root replacement and/or coronary bypass surgery. The primary objectives are to 1) determine VARC-2 defined time-related valve safety at one-year (depicted as freedom from events) and 2) determine freedom from stage 3 structural valve degeneration (SVD) presenting as morphological abnormalities and severe haemodynamic valve degeneration at 5 years. Secondary objectives include the assessment of the haemodynamic performance of the valve, all stages of SVD, potential valve-in-valve procedures, clinical outcomes (in terms of New York Heart Association [NYHA] function class and freedom from valve-related rehospitalisation) and change in patient quality-of-life. Discussion: INDURE is a prospective, multicentre registry in Europe and Canada, which will provide much needed data on the long-term performance of bioprosthetic valves in general and the INSPIRIS RESILIA valve in particular. The data may help to gather a deeper understanding of the longevity of bioprosthetic valves and may expand the use of bioprosthetic valves in patients under the age of 60 years. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03666741 (registration received September, 12th, 2018)

    Durability of bioprosthetic aortic valves in patients under the age of 60 years - Rationale and design of the international INDURE registry

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    Background: There is an ever-growing number of patients requiring aortic valve replacement (AVR). Limited data is available on the long-term outcomes and structural integrity of bioprosthetic valves in younger patients undergoing surgical AVR. Methods: The INSPIRIS RESILIA Durability Registry (INDURE) is a prospective, open-label, multicentre, international registry with a follow-up of 5 years to assess clinical outcomes of patients younger than 60 years who undergo surgical AVR using the INS

    A decade of living lobar lung transplantation: recipient outcomes

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    AbstractObjectiveLiving lobar lung transplantation was developed as a procedure for patients considered too ill to await cadaveric transplantation.MethodsOne hundred twenty-eight living lobar lung transplantations were performed in 123 patients between 1993 and 2003. Eighty-four patients were adults (age, 27 ± 7.7 years), and 39 were pediatric patients (age, 13.9 ± 2.9 years).ResultsThe primary indication for transplantation was cystic fibrosis (84%). At the time of transplantation, 67.5% of patients were hospitalized, and 17.9% were intubated. One-, 3-, and 5-year actuarial survival among living lobar recipients was 70%, 54%, and 45%, respectively. There was no difference in actuarial survival between adult and pediatric living lobar recipients (P = .65). There were 63 deaths among living lobar recipients, with infection being the predominant cause (53.4%), followed by obliterative bronchiolitis (12.7%) and primary graft dysfunction (7.9%). The overall incidence of acute rejection was 0.8 episodes per patient. Seventy-eight percent of rejection episodes were unilateral. Age, sex, indication, donor relationship, preoperative hospitalization status, use of preoperative steroids, and HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-DR typing did not influence survival. However, patients on ventilators preoperatively had significantly worse outcomes (odds ratio, 3.06, P = .03; Kaplan-Meier P = .002), and those undergoing retransplantation had an increased risk of death (odds ratio, 2.50).ConclusionThese results support the continued use of living lobar lung transplantation in patients deemed unable to await a cadaveric transplantation. We consider patients undergoing retransplantations and intubated patients to be at significantly high risk because of the poor outcomes in these populations

    More than two decades after the introduction of Limnoperna fortunei (Dunker 1857) in La Plata Basin

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    <div><p>Abstract The golden mussel, Limnoperna fortunei, is an Asian freshwater bivalve introduced in South America in the beginning of the 1990’s, probably through ballast water releases in La Plata River estuary. It dispersed north through ParanĂĄ, Uruguay and Paraguay Rivers. The study evaluated the macroscale (18° to 34° S; 45° to 60° W) distribution of L. fortunei (larval stages) in the main rivers and reservoirs of La Plata Basin. Samplings were performed through 68 ”m vertical plankton net hauls. Limnological variables were simultaneously determined. Larvae abundance correlated significantly with oxygen (positively) in summer, with temperature (positively) in winter and with total phosphorus and total nitrogen (both negatively) in winter. We expected densities to decrease towards north (latitudinal gradient) and increase in lentic conditions (reservoirs). Despite maximum density was found near the introduction point (La Plata River) similar value was also observed 2,000 km north (Paraguay River). The first hypothesis was refuted. The second hypothesis was partially accepted. Abundances were consistently higher in summer. Higher trophic conditions and fast flow seem to inhibit population growth. Food resources (chlorophyll a) locally influenced temporal variation. Limnoperna fortunei is widely distributed in La Plata basin, reaching high larval densities superior to 10,000 ind. m-3, in all major sub-basins. The species exhibits a high intrinsic dispersal ability (free planktonic larvae), wide tolerance to environmental factors and dispersion is potentialized by natural dispersion processes (e.g. fauna displacement) and human facilitation (e.g. commercial navigation).</p></div

    In experimental diabetes the fall of lens carnitine levels is an initial important and selective event.

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    Carnitine is present in the eye tissues of the rabbit and the highest concentration is found in the lens. In streptozotocin-diabetic rats, the carnitine loss of the lens is an initial and important event. At 8 days after the induction of diabetes, the carnitine content in the rat lens was reduced by 63% compared to control. The loss of lens carnitine continued at 15 and 45 days after the induction. Total carnitine level in the serum was diminished by 15 days, and the reduction in percentage term was much lower in comparison to the loss of lens carnitine. In the rabbit after alloxan-diabetes induction, there is an extensive loss of carnitine in the lens: -85% after 4 months. The carnitine levels in the other eye tissues seem substantially unaffected. The loss of lens carnitine was present even with an inconsistent hyperglycaemia. No difference was found in serum carnitine levels between controls and alloxan-treated rabbits. The role of carnitine in lens is still unclear, but its loss may be related to the appearance of cataract. A derivative of carnitine, acetylcarnitine, might prevent the processes involved in the formation of cataracts by a pharmacological action, as has been shown for aspirin
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