504 research outputs found
An epidemiological study of neuropathic pain symptoms in Canadian adults
The reported prevalence of neuropathic pain ranges from 6.9% to 10%; however the only Canadian study reported 17.9%. The objective of this study was to describe the epidemiology of neuropathic pain in Canada. A cross-sectional survey was conducted in a random sample of Canadian adults. The response rate was 21.1% (1504/7134). Likely or possible neuropathic pain was defined using a neuropathic pain-related diagnosis and a positive outcome on the Self-Report Leeds Assessment of Neuropathic Symptoms and Signs pain scale (S-LANSS) or the Douleur Neuropathique 4 (DN4) Questions. The prevalence of likely neuropathic pain was 1.9% (S-LANSS) and 3.4% (DN4) and that of possible neuropathic pain was 5.8% (S-LANSS) and 8.1% (DN4). Neuropathic pain was highest in economically disadvantaged males. There is a significant burden of neuropathic pain in Canada. The low response rate and a slightly older and less educated sample than the Canadian population may have led to an overestimate of neuropathic pain. Population prevalence varies by screening tool used, indicating more work is needed to develop reliable measures. Population level screening targeted towards high risk groups should improve the sensitivity and specificity of screening, while clinical examination of those with positive screening results will further refine the estimate of prevalence
Determination of Inter-Phase Line Tension in Langmuir Films
A Langmuir film is a molecularly thin film on the surface of a fluid; we
study the evolution of a Langmuir film with two co-existing fluid phases driven
by an inter-phase line tension and damped by the viscous drag of the underlying
subfluid. Experimentally, we study an 8CB Langmuir film via digitally-imaged
Brewster Angle Microscopy (BAM) in a four-roll mill setup which applies a
transient strain and images the response. When a compact domain is stretched by
the imposed strain, it first assumes a bola shape with two tear-drop shaped
reservoirs connected by a thin tether which then slowly relaxes to a circular
domain which minimizes the interfacial energy of the system. We process the
digital images of the experiment to extract the domain shapes. We then use one
of these shapes as an initial condition for the numerical solution of a
boundary-integral model of the underlying hydrodynamics and compare the
subsequent images of the experiment to the numerical simulation. The numerical
evolutions first verify that our hydrodynamical model can reproduce the
observed dynamics. They also allow us to deduce the magnitude of the line
tension in the system, often to within 1%. We find line tensions in the range
of 200-600 pN; we hypothesize that this variation is due to differences in the
layer depths of the 8CB fluid phases.Comment: See (http://www.math.hmc.edu/~ajb/bola/) for related movie
Line tension and structure of smectic liquid crystal multilayers at the air-water interface
At the air/water interface, 4,-8-alkyl[1,1,-biphenyl]-4-carbonitrile (8CB)
domains with different thicknesses coexist in the same Langmuir film, as
multiple bilayers on a monolayer. The edge dislocation at the domain boundary
leads to line tension, which determines the domain shape and dynamics. By
observing the domain relaxation process starting from small distortions, we
find that the line tension is linearly dependent on the thickness difference
between the coexisting phases in the film. Comparisons with theoretical
treatments in the literature suggest that the edge dislocation at the boundary
locates near the center of the film, which means that the 8CB multilayers are
almost symmetric with respect to the air/water interface.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
On classical super-radiance in Kerr-Newman-anti-de Sitter black holes
We study in detail the modes of a classical scalar field on a
Kerr-Newman-anti-de Sitter (KN-AdS) black hole. We construct sets of basis
modes appropriate to the two possible boundary conditions (``reflective'' and
``transparent'') at time-like infinity, and consider whether super-radiance is
possible. If we employ ``reflective'' boundary conditions, all modes are
non-super-radiant. On the other hand, for ``transparent'' boundary conditions,
the presence of super-radiance depends on our definition of positive frequency.
For those KN-AdS black holes having a globally time-like Killing vector, the
natural choice of positive frequency leads to no super-radiance. For other
KN-AdS black holes, there is a choice of positive frequency which gives no
super-radiance, but for other choices there will, in general, be
super-radiance.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, v2: minor changes, references adde
Systematic Review of Gut Microbiota and Major Depression
Background: Recently discovered relationships between the gastrointestinal microbiome and the brain have implications for psychiatric disorders, including major depressive disorder (MDD). Bacterial transplantation from MDD patients to rodents produces depression-like behaviors. In humans, case-control studies have examined the gut microbiome in healthy and affected individuals. We systematically reviewed existing studies comparing gut microbial composition in MDD and healthy volunteers.Methods: A PubMed literature search combined the terms “depression,” “depressive disorder,” “stool,” “fecal,” “gut,” and “microbiome” to identify human case-control studies that investigated relationships between MDD and microbiota quantified from stool. We evaluated the resulting studies, focusing on bacterial taxa that were different between MDD and healthy controls.Results: Six eligible studies were found in which 50 taxa exhibited differences (p < 0.05) between patients with MDD and controls. Patient characteristics and methodologies varied widely between studies. Five phyla—Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, Fusobacteria, and Protobacteria—were represented; however, divergent results occurred across studies for all phyla. The largest number of differentiating taxa were within phylum Firmicutes, in which nine families and 12 genera differentiated the diagnostic groups. The majority of these families and genera were found to be statistically different between the two groups in two identified studies. Family Lachnospiraceae differentiated the diagnostic groups in four studies (with an even split in directionality). Across all five phyla, nine genera were higher in MDD (Anaerostipes, Blautia, Clostridium, Klebsiella, Lachnospiraceae incertae sedis, Parabacteroides, Parasutterella, Phascolarctobacterium, and Streptococcus), six were lower (Bifidobacterium, Dialister, Escherichia/Shigella, Faecalibacterium, and Ruminococcus), and six were divergent (Alistipes, Bacteroides, Megamonas, Oscillibacter, Prevotella, and Roseburia). We highlight mechanisms and products of bacterial metabolism as they may relate to the etiology of depression.Conclusions: No consensus has emerged from existing human studies of depression and gut microbiome concerning which bacterial taxa are most relevant to depression. This may in part be due to differences in study design. Given that bacterial functions are conserved across taxonomic groups, we propose that studying microbial functioning may be more productive than a purely taxonomic approach to understanding the gut microbiome in depression
Coarsening Dynamics of Domains in Lipid Membranes
We investigate isothermal diffusion and growth of micron-scale liquid domains within membranes of free-floating giant unilamellar vesicles with diameters between 80 and 250 Am. Domains appear after a rapid temperature quench, when the membrane is cooled through a miscibility phase transition such that coexisting liquid phases form. In membranes quenched far from a miscibility critical point, circular domains nucleate and then progress within seconds to late stage coarsening in which domains grow via two mechanisms 1), collision and coalescence of liquid domains, and 2), Ostwald ripening. Both mechanisms are expected to yield the same growth exponent, alpha = 1/3, where domain radius grows as time(alpha). We measure alpha = 0.28 +/- 0.05, in excellent agreement. In membranes close to a miscibility critical point, the two liquid phases in the membrane are bicontinuous. A quench near the critical composition results in rapid changes in morphology of elongated domains. In this case, we measure alpha = 0.50 +/- 0.16, consistent with theory and simulation
Can the "brick wall" model present the same results in different coordinate representations?
By using the 't Hooft's "brick wall" model and the Pauli-Villars
regularization scheme we calculate the statistical-mechanical entropies arising
from the quantum scalar field in different coordinate settings, such as the
Painlev\'{e} and Lemaitre coordinates. At first glance, it seems that the
entropies would be different from that in the standard Schwarzschild coordinate
since the metrics in both the Painlev\'{e} and Lemaitre coordinates do not
possess the singularity at the event horizon as that in the Schwarzschild-like
coordinate. However, after an exact calculation we find that, up to the
subleading correction, the statistical-mechanical entropies in these
coordinates are equivalent to that in the Schwarzschild-like coordinate. The
result is not only valid for black holes and de Sitter spaces, but also for the
case that the quantum field exerts back reaction on the gravitational field
provided that the back reaction does not alter the symmetry of the spacetime.Comment: 8 pages, Phys. Rev. D in pres
Low Mass X-ray Binaries and Globular Clusters in Early-Type Galaxies
(Abridged) A high fraction of the Low Mass X-ray Binaries (LMXBs) in
early-type galaxies are associated with globular clusters (GCs). Here, we
discuss the correlations between LMXBs and GCs in a sample of four early-type
galaxies. There is some evidence that the fraction of LMXBs associated with GCs
(f_X-GC) increases along the Hubble sequence from spiral bulges to S0s to Es to
cDs. On the other hand, the fraction of globular clusters which contain X-ray
sources appears to be roughly constant at f_GC-X ~ 4%. There is a strong
tendency for the X-ray sources to be associated with the optically more
luminous GCs. However, this correlation is consistent with a constant
probability of finding a LMXB per unit optical luminosity; it seems to result
primarily from the larger number of stars in optically luminous GCs. The
probability of finding a bright LMXB per unit optical luminosity in the GCs is
about 1.5e-7 LMXBs per L_solar,I for L_X >~ 1e38 erg/s, and rises to about
2.0e-7 LMXBs per L_solar,I at lower X-ray luminosities, L_X >~ 3e37 erg/s. This
frequency appears to be roughly constant for different galaxies, including the
bulges of the Milky Way and M31. There is a tendency for the X-ray sources to
be found preferentially in redder GCs. This seems to indicate that the
evolution of X-ray binaries in a GC is affected either by the metallicity or
age of the GC, with younger and/or more metal rich GCs having more LMXBs. There
is a weak tendency for the brightest LMXBs, whose luminosities exceed the
Eddington luminosity for a 1.4 M_solar neutron star, to avoid GCs. That may
indicate that black hole X-ray are somewhat less likely to be found in GCs, as
seems to be true in our Galaxy.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, 595, in press. 44 pages with 16 embedded
Postscript figure
The 2010 Canadian Cardiovascular Society guidelines for the diagnosis and management of heart failure update: Heart failure in ethnic minority populations, heart failure and pregnancy, disease management, and quality improvement/assurance programs
Since 2006, the Canadian Cardiovascular Society heart failure (HF) guidelines have published annual focused updates for cardiovascular care providers. The 2010 Canadian Cardiovascular Society HF guidelines update focuses on an increasing issue in the western world - HF in ethnic minorities - and in an uncommon but important setting - the pregnant patient. Additionally, due to increasing attention recently given to the assessment of how care is delivered and measured, two critically important topics - disease management programs in HF and quality assurance - have been included. Both of these topics were written from a clinical perspective. It is hoped that the present update will become a useful tool for health care providers and planners in the ongoing evolution of care for HF patients in Canada. © 2010 Pulsus Group Inc. All rights reserved
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