328 research outputs found
Dijagnostika na sustavima ulja kod brodskih motora
Prilikom uporabe ulja važno je izabrati odgovarajući tip ulja i održavati ga čistim, u granicama dozvoljenih parametara i bez nazočnosti vlage. Ispravan izbor podrazumijeva pravilan odabir baznog ulja, mjesta namjene, ispravne viskoznosti i ispravnih aditiva za odgovarajuću namjenu. Kontaminacija i degradacija ulja u eksploataciji se ne može potpuno spriječiti ali se mogu znatno usporiti, što je vrlo važno i za ulje i za strojne sustave. Pravilno održavanje ulja omogućuje maksimalnu produktivnost uz minimalne troškove. Pomoću pravovremenih analiza moguće je: ostvarivanje stalnog nadzora svih glavnih sustava stroja, otkrivanje problema u ranoj fazi te ustroj kompletne servisne povijesti stroja i ulja za njegovo podmazivanje. Time se smanjuju kvarovi strojeva kao i troškovi popravljanja, a smanjeni su i troškovi nabave ulja i njegova odlaganja.When using the oil it is important to choose the right type of oil and keep it clean, with correct specification and without the presence of moisture. The correct choice involves proper selection of base oil, of purpose, the correct viscosity and proper additives for appropriate purposes. The contamination and degradation of the oil in service can not be completely prevented, or may significantly slow down, which is very important for the oil and for machine systems. Proper maintenance of oil provides maximum productivity with minimal costs. With the timely analysis possible is the realization of permanent control of all the major systems of the machine, detect problems at an early stage and the establishment of a complete service history of the machine and its oil lubrication. This reduces machine breakdowns and repair costs, and decreased the cost of purchasing oil and its disposal
Strategies to Increase Early Discharges to Reduce Avoidable Patient Days and Improve Patient Flow
CREATING ALGORITHMS TO INCREASE THE NUMBERS OF HOSPITAL MORNING DISCHARGES RESULTING IN IMPROVED PATIENT FLOW
Discharging a percentage of patients early in the day helps to improve patient flow. This results in a reduction of Emergency Department congestion as well as peaks in patient numbers in the early to late afternoon on patient care units.
A cardiac unit in an academic tertiary medical center created a goal to increase the number of their discharges by 11 AM and to streamline key discharge planning activities. A root cause analysis was initiated and after identifying several barriers, two KPIs were developed using improvement measures of operational excellence. Post KPI inception, metric goals were exceeded within the established timeline.
Next steps include reviewing DRG specific readmission rates to make sure there are no negative impacts as a result of the established countermeasures. In addition, the unit will provide coaches for other care units interested in adopting these strategies
Achiral symmetry breaking and positive Gaussian modulus lead to scalloped colloidal membranes
In the presence of a non-adsorbing polymer, monodisperse rod-like particles
assemble into colloidal membranes, which are one rod-length thick liquid-like
monolayers of aligned rods. Unlike 3D edgeless bilayer vesicles, colloidal
monolayer membranes form open structures with an exposed edge, thus presenting
an opportunity to study physics of thin elastic sheets. Membranes assembled
from single-component chiral rods form flat disks with uniform edge twist. In
comparison, membranes comprised of mixture of rods with opposite chiralities
can have the edge twist of either handedness. In this limit disk-shaped
membranes become unstable, instead forming structures with scalloped edges,
where two adjacent lobes with opposite handedness are separated by a
cusp-shaped point defect. Such membranes adopt a 3D configuration, with cusp
defects alternatively located above and below the membrane plane. In the
achiral regime the cusp defects have repulsive interactions, but away from this
limit we measure effective long-ranged attractive binding. A phenomenological
model shows that the increase in the edge energy of scalloped membranes is
compensated by concomitant decrease in the deformation energy due to Gaussian
curvature associated with scalloped edges, demonstrating that colloidal
membranes have positive Gaussian modulus. A simple excluded volume argument
predicts the sign and magnitude of the Gaussian curvature modulus that is in
agreement with experimental measurements. Our results provide insight into how
the interplay between membrane elasticity, geometrical frustration and achiral
symmetry breaking can be used to fold colloidal membranes into 3D shapes.Comment: Main text: 25 pages, 6 figures. Supplementary information: 6 pages, 6
figure
The efficacy of vigorous-intensity exercise as an aid to smoking cessation in adults with elevated anxiety sensitivity: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Background: Although cigarette smoking is a leading cause of death and disability in the United States (US), over 40 million adults in the US currently smoke. Quitting smoking is particularly difficult for smokers with certain types of psychological vulnerability. Researchers have frequently called attention to the relation between smoking and anxiety-related states and disorders, and evidence suggests that panic and related anxiety vulnerability factors, specifically anxiety sensitivity (AS or fear of somatic arousal), negatively impact cessation. Accordingly, there is merit to targeting AS among smokers to improve cessation outcome. Aerobic exercise has emerged as a promising aid for smoking cessation for this high-risk (for relapse) group because exercise can effectively reduce AS and other factors predicting smoking relapse (for example, withdrawal, depressed mood, anxiety), and it has shown initial efficacy for smoking cessation. The current manuscript presents the rationale, study design and procedures, and design considerations of the Smoking Termination Enhancement Project (STEP).
Methods: STEP is a randomized clinical trial that compares a vigorous-intensity exercise intervention to a health and wellness education intervention as an aid for smoking cessation in adults with elevated AS. One hundred and fifty eligible participants will receive standard treatment (ST) for smoking cessation that includes cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). In addition, participants will be randomly assigned to either an exercise intervention (ST+EX) or a health and wellness education intervention (ST+CTRL). Participants in both arms will meet 3 times a week for 15 weeks, receiving CBT once a week for the first 7 weeks, and 3 supervised exercise or health and wellness education sessions (depending on randomization) per week for the full 15-week intervention. Participants will be asked to set a quit date for 6 weeks after the baseline visit, and smoking cessation outcomes as well as putative mediator variables will be measured up to 6 months following the quit date.
Discussion: The primary objective of STEP is to evaluate whether vigorous-intensity exercise can aid smoking cessation in anxiety vulnerable adults. If effective, the use of vigorous-intensity exercise as a component of smoking cessation interventions would have a significant public health impact. Specifically, in addition to improving smoking cessation treatment outcome, exercise is expected to offer benefits to overall health, which may be particularly important for smokers. The study is also designed to test putative mediators of the intervention effects and therefore has the potential to advance the understanding of exercise-anxiety-smoking relations and guide future research on this topic
The Best and Worst of Contracts Decisions: An Anthology
Five hundred years ago, the common law of contract was without substance. It was form-procedure. Plaintiffs picked a form of action, and common law judges made sure someone besides themselves answered all the hard questions; the parties, a jury, or a ritual determined the winner and the remedy. Judges ran a switch on a conflicts-resolution railway. Thomas More, when Chancellor of England (1529-33), urged judges to lay tracks and control the trains. The problem, he said, was that the judges, by the verdict of the jury[,] cast off all quarrels from themselves. The judges soon assumed greater authority, taking responsibility for the law\u27s substance. The consideration requirement was in place by 1539, and judges afterwards imposed doctrine upon doctrine. Over centuries, they created the common law of contract. That law is now mature, more or less, meaning that judges have tools to fix what they want to fix, and feel free to do so. The law they created-the common law of contract-is a remarkable intellectual and political achievement
Functional Diversity and Structural Disorder in the Human Ubiquitination Pathway
The ubiquitin-proteasome system plays a central role in cellular regulation and protein quality control (PQC). The system is built as a pyramid of increasing complexity, with two E1 (ubiquitin activating), few dozen E2 (ubiquitin conjugating) and several hundred E3 (ubiquitin ligase) enzymes. By collecting and analyzing E3 sequences from the KEGG BRITE database and literature, we assembled a coherent dataset of 563 human E3s and analyzed their various physical features. We found an increase in structural disorder of the system with multiple disorder predictors (IUPred - E1: 5.97%, E2: 17.74%, E3: 20.03%). E3s that can bind E2 and substrate simultaneously (single subunit E3, ssE3) have significantly higher disorder (22.98%) than E3s in which E2 binding (multi RING-finger, mRF, 0.62%), scaffolding (6.01%) and substrate binding (adaptor/substrate recognition subunits, 17.33%) functions are separated. In ssE3s, the disorder was localized in the substrate/adaptor binding domains, whereas the E2-binding RING/HECT-domains were structured. To demonstrate the involvement of disorder in E3 function, we applied normal modes and molecular dynamics analyses to show how a disordered and highly flexible linker in human CBL (an E3 that acts as a regulator of several tyrosine kinase-mediated signalling pathways) facilitates long-range conformational changes bringing substrate and E2-binding domains towards each other and thus assisting in ubiquitin transfer. E3s with multiple interaction partners (as evidenced by data in STRING) also possess elevated levels of disorder (hubs, 22.90% vs. non-hubs, 18.36%). Furthermore, a search in PDB uncovered 21 distinct human E3 interactions, in 7 of which the disordered region of E3s undergoes induced folding (or mutual induced folding) in the presence of the partner. In conclusion, our data highlights the primary role of structural disorder in the functions of E3 ligases that manifests itself in the substrate/adaptor binding functions as well as the mechanism of ubiquitin transfer by long-range conformational transitions. © 2013 Bhowmick et al
Broad Repertoire of T Cell Autoreactivity Directly from Islets of Donors with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D)
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease characterized by the infiltration of lymphocytes into the insulin-producing β-cells in the pancreas. We have isolated live T cells sorted or grown directly from the isolated, handpicked islets of human donors with T1D. We received ~500 islet equivalent EQ of variable purity (10-90%) from 12 donors with T1D (disease duration 0.42-20 years) and from seven control donors and two donors with type 2 diabetes (T2D). A total of 321 T cell lines and clones were derived from the islets of donors with T1D (3 lines from the 9 control donors). These are 131 CD4+ lines and clones, 47 CD8+ lines and 143 lines that contain both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. From 50 lines and clones examined to date, we have determined the autoreactivity of 19 and have seen a broad repertoire of T cell autoreactivity in the islets, including characterized targets and post-translationally modified targets. Autoreactivity of CD4+ T cell lines was to three different peptides from glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD; GAD115-127, GAD274-286, GAD555-567), proinsulin76-90, and to chromogranin A or proinsulin expressed by DR4+DQ8+ B cells transduced with lentivirus containing constructs with the open reading frames corresponding to whole autoantigens. Reactivity to modified peptides included the glucose-regulated protein 78 and islet amyloid polypeptide with arginine to citrulline modifications (GRP78292-305(Arg-Cit297) and IAPP65-84(Arg-Cit 73, 81)), deaminations (IA-2545-562(Gln-Glu 548, 551, 556), and to several insulin hybrid peptides. These autoreactive CD4+ T cell lines and clones secreted only pro-inflammatory cytokines (IFN-γ, TNFα) upon peptide stimulation. For CD8+ T cells from islets, from one donor with T1D, we saw binding of a pool of HLA-A2 pentamers loaded with insulin B10-18, IA-2797-805 and insulin specific glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic subunit related protein, IGRP265-273. These results have implications for the development of successful prevention and reversal therapeutic strategies in T1D
The potential of urinary metabolites for diagnosing multiple sclerosis
A definitive diagnostic test for multiple sclerosis (MS) does not exist; instead physicians use a combination of medical history, magnetic resonance imaging, and cerebrospinal fluid analysis (CSF). Significant effort has been employed to identify biomarkers from CSF to facilitate MS diagnosis; however none of the proposed biomarkers have been successful to date. Urine is a proven source of metabolite biomarkers and has the potential to be a rapid, non-invasive, inexpensive, and efficient diagnostic tool for various human diseases. Nevertheless, urinary metabolites have not been extensively explored as a source of biomarkers for MS. Instead, we demonstrate that urinary metabolites have significant promise for monitoring disease-progression, and response to treatment in MS patients. NMR analysis of urine permitted the identification of metabolites that differentiate experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE)-mice (prototypic disease model for MS) from healthy and MS drug-treated EAE mice
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