502 research outputs found

    An Enu Mutagenesis Screen For Dominant Genetic Modifiers Of Thrombosis In The Factor 5 Leiden Mouse

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/106055/1/jth03031.pd

    Ultrasonographic assessment of splenic volume at presentation and after anti-malarial therapy in children with malarial anaemia

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    Background: Splenic enlargement is a component of the host response to malaria and may also influence the genesis and progression of malarial anaemia. Few cross-sectional and no longitudinal studies have assessed the relationship between splenic volume measured ultrasonographically and haemoglobin concentrations in children with malaria. Methods: Fifteen Papua New Guinean children with severe malarial anaemia (SMA; haemoglobin <50 g/L) and ten with moderate malarial anaemia (MMA; 51-99 g/L) were recruited. The SMA patients were given intramuscular artemether followed by oral artemisinin combination therapy (ACT), and were transfused one unit of packed cells 0.3-4.0 days post-admission. The MMA patients were treated with ACT. Splenic enlargement (Hackett's grade, subcostal distance and ultrasonographically determined volume) and haemoglobin concentrations were measured on days 0, 1, 2, 3, 7, 14, 28, and 42. Results: Associations between Hackett's grade, subcostal distance and splenic volume were modest (r(s) = 0.90). Mean splenic volume had fallen by approximately 50 % at day 14 in children with MMA ( P = 0.30). There was no change in haemoglobin in the MMA group during follow-up but a rise in the SMA group to day 7 ( P <= 0.05 vs days 0, 1, 2, and 3) which paralleled the packed cell volume transfused. Conclusions: Clinical assessment of splenomegaly is imprecise compared with ultrasonography. Serial splenic volumes and haemoglobin concentrations suggest that the spleen does not influence post-treatment haemoglobin, including after transfusion

    New Lower Bound on Fermion Binding Energies

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    We derive a new lower bound for the ground state energy EF(N,S)E^{\rm F}(N,S) of N fermions with total spin S in terms of binding energies EF(N1,S±1/2)E^{\rm F}(N-1,S \pm 1/2) of (N-1) fermions. Numerical examples are provided for some simple short-range or confining potentials.Comment: 4 pages, 1 eps figur

    High-precision B(E2) measurements of semi-magic Ni 58,60,62,64 by Coulomb excitation

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    High-precision reduced electric-quadrupole transition probabilities B(E2;01+→21+) have been measured from single-step Coulomb excitation of semi-magic Ni58,60,62,64 (Z=28) beams at 1.8 MeV per nucleon on a natural carbon target. The energy loss of the

    Electromagnetic properties of the 21+ state in 134Te: Influence of core excitation on single-particle orbits beyond 132Sn

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    The g factor and B(E2) of the first excited 2+ state have been measured following Coulomb excitation of the neutron-rich semimagic nuclide 134Te (two protons outside 132Sn) produced as a radioactive beam. The precision achieved matches related g-factor m

    Fertility, Living Arrangements, Care and Mobility

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    There are four main interconnecting themes around which the contributions in this book are based. This introductory chapter aims to establish the broad context for the chapters that follow by discussing each of the themes. It does so by setting these themes within the overarching demographic challenge of the twenty-first century – demographic ageing. Each chapter is introduced in the context of the specific theme to which it primarily relates and there is a summary of the data sets used by the contributors to illustrate the wide range of cross-sectional and longitudinal data analysed

    Possible origins of macroscopic left-right asymmetry in organisms

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    I consider the microscopic mechanisms by which a particular left-right (L/R) asymmetry is generated at the organism level from the microscopic handedness of cytoskeletal molecules. In light of a fundamental symmetry principle, the typical pattern-formation mechanisms of diffusion plus regulation cannot implement the "right-hand rule"; at the microscopic level, the cell's cytoskeleton of chiral filaments seems always to be involved, usually in collective states driven by polymerization forces or molecular motors. It seems particularly easy for handedness to emerge in a shear or rotation in the background of an effectively two-dimensional system, such as the cell membrane or a layer of cells, as this requires no pre-existing axis apart from the layer normal. I detail a scenario involving actin/myosin layers in snails and in C. elegans, and also one about the microtubule layer in plant cells. I also survey the other examples that I am aware of, such as the emergence of handedness such as the emergence of handedness in neurons, in eukaryote cell motility, and in non-flagellated bacteria.Comment: 42 pages, 6 figures, resubmitted to J. Stat. Phys. special issue. Major rewrite, rearranged sections/subsections, new Fig 3 + 6, new physics in Sec 2.4 and 3.4.1, added Sec 5 and subsections of Sec
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