548 research outputs found

    WPƁYW WYBORU KOLEJNOƚCI FAZ NA KRZYWĄ GĘSTOƚCI STRUMIENIA MAGNETYCZNEGO W LINII KABLOWEJ NAJWYĆ»SZYCH NAPIĘĆ

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    The article deals with the hygienic limits in the Czech Republic for electric and magnetic fields radiated by Extra High Voltage cables with focus on phase sequence selection for minimization of magnetic fields in the surroundings of cables and the change of magnetic flux density in the case of one cable set outage of EHV line.ArtykuƂ dotyczy limitĂłw ƛrodowiskowych w Republice Czeskiej dla pĂłl elektrycznych oraz magnetycznych w okolicach linii kablowych najwyĆŒszych napięć (NN), a zwƂaszcza wyborem kolejnoƛci faz w celu minimalizacji pĂłl magnetycznych w otoczeniu kabli oraz zmian gęstoƛci strumienia magnetycznego w przypadku awarii jednej wiązki kabli

    A Focus on Electromobility within Smart City Solutions- Charging Stations, Renewable Energy, and Air Quality Monitoring

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    This paper reviews some of the existing methods for charging electric vehicles, generating renewable energy, and storing it. Plans of practical implementation in the city of Brno are compared with the situation in Glasgow. Moreover, it is essential to pay attention to integrated solutions in order to increase efficiency. Energy harvesting and charging systems are combined with an air quality measurement system and integrated into LED street lights. The collected data are sent to a central server for evaluation. The use of smart solutions is a modern approach to saving energy and reducing CO2 emissions in many sectors. As an example, the described solutions can be applied dually, in both civilian and military sectors. Considering the potential benefits of easier logistics or quiet operation, the potential military exploitation of technological capabilities is discussed from the perspective of enhancing citizens’ security and safety in cities

    Growth variability of the Greenland smoothcockle Serripes groenlandicus (Brugiere 1789) affected by glacier induced changes in the Kongsfjorden ecosystem

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    Climate change forces retreat of Arctic glaciers and release of increased quantities of melt water and terrigenous material into coastal habitats of the Arctic such as the Kongsfjorden Ecosystem. The effect of this glacier induced physical parameters on growth and abundance of the Greenland smoothcockle (Serripes groenlandicus, BruguiĂšre 1798) were determined. Along Kongsfjorden, at five stations with increasing distance to the Kongsbreen glacier, specimen of the cockle were collected and physical parameters were measured. Effects on growth of S. groenlandicus were analyzed by measuring variability of annual increments obtained from cockles’ thin section. Towards the glacier front temperature and Chlorophyll a content of the water column decreased, whereas total suspended matter and sedimentation rates increased. Regression analysis revealed lowest growth rate at the station close to Kongsbreen. Average standard growth index (SGI) of S. groenlandicus was lowest at this station (-0.4884±0.1763 95%CI), highest at Ny Alesund (0.1523±0.1158 95%CI), and decreased towards the mouth of Kongsfjorden (-0.0217±0.0718 95%CI and -0.1310±0.0759 95%CI, respectively at the two outer stations). Multi regression analysis revealed a strong relationship between average SGI and temperature (P<0.001, RÂČ=0.75) as well as total sedimented material (P=0.018, RÂČ=0.80)

    Irbesartan for the treatment of hypertension in patients with the metabolic syndrome: A sub analysis of the Treat to Target post authorization survey. Prospective observational, two armed study in 14,200 patients

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    OBJECTIVES: The metabolic syndrome is a cluster of cardiovascular risk factors leading to an increased risk for the subsequent development of diabetes and cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Blocking the renin-angiotensin system has been shown to prevent cardiovascular disease and delay the onset of diabetes. Irbesartan is an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) which has been shown to possess peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARÎł) activating properties, and to have a favorable metabolic profile. Current discussion is whether the addition of small doses of hydrochlorothiazide changes this profile. Therefore the efficacy, safety and metabolic profile of Irbesartan either as monotherapy or in combination therapy was assessed in patients with the metabolic syndrome in a large observational cohort in primary care. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Multicenter, prospective, two-armed, post authorization study over 9 months in 14,200 patients with uncontrolled hypertension with and without the metabolic syndrome (doctors' diagnosis based on the Adult Treatment Panel III criteria 2001). Blood pressure was measured sphygmomanometrically and cardiovascular risk factors making up the criteria for the metabolic syndrome were assessed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure reduction, – response, and – normalization (systolic and diastolic), changes in fasting glucose, waist circumference (abdominal obesity), serum triglycerides and HDL cholesterol as well as the proportion of patients fulfilling the criteria for the metabolic syndrome. Number and nature of adverse events (AEs). RESULTS: After 9 month the use of Irbesartan in monotherapy resulted in a significant reduction of blood pressure (SBP: -26.3 ± 10.1 mmHg/DBP-13.0 ± 6.6 mmHg, both p < 0.0001) in patients with the metabolic syndrome. This was accompanied by a reduction in cardiovascular risk factors: HDL cholesterol (+3.6 ± 7.2 mg/dl in men, +3.8 ± 6.5 mg/dl in women, both p < 0.0001), serum triglycerides (-28.6 ± 52.1 mg/dl, p < 0.0001), fasting blood glucose (-8.4 ± 25.1 mg/dl, p < 0.0001) and waist circumference (-2.4 ± 11.9 cm in men, -1.2 ± 14.2 in women, both p < 0.0001) were significantly improved. Irbesartan combination therapy (12.5 mg HCTZ) in patients with the metabolic syndrome: blood pressure reduction (SBP: -27.5 ± 10.1 mmHg/DBP: -14.1 ± 6.6 mmHg, both p < 0.0001), improvement in HDL cholesterol (+4.0 ± 6.8 mg/dl in men, +3.4 ± 6.8 in women, both p < 0.0001), triglycerides (-34.1 ± 52.6 mg/dl, p < 0.0001), fasting blood glucose (-10.0 ± 24.7, p < 0.0001) and waist circumference (-3.2 ± 12.7 cm in men, -1.7 ± 14.4 in women, both p < 0.0001). Tolerability was excellent: only 0.6% of patients experienced an AE. CONCLUSION: There was a significant improvement in blood pressure and metabolic risk factors as a result of Irbesartan treatment. There was no evidence of a difference between monotherapy and combination therapy with regard to the cardiovascular risk profile

    Block Ciphers - Focus On The Linear Layer (feat. PRIDE): Full Version

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    The linear layer is a core component in any substitution-permutation network block cipher. Its design significantly influences both the security and the efficiency of the resulting block cipher. Surprisingly, not many general constructions are known that allow to choose trade-offs between security and efficiency. Especially, when compared to Sboxes, it seems that the linear layer is crucially understudied. In this paper, we propose a general methodology to construct good, sometimes optimal, linear layers allowing for a large variety of trade-offs. We give several instances of our construction and on top underline its value by presenting a new block cipher. PRIDE is optimized for 8-bit micro-controllers and significantly outperforms all academic solutions both in terms of code size and cycle count

    Anti-CD3 antibody treatment reduces scar formation in a rat model of myocardial infarction

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    Introduction: Antibody treatment with anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG) has been shown to be cardioprotective. We aimed to evaluate which single anti-T-cell epitope antibody alters chemokine expression at a level similar to ATG and identified CD3, which is a T-cell co-receptor mediating T-cell activation. Based on these results, the effects of anti-CD3 antibody treatment on angiogenesis and cardioprotection were tested in vitro and in vivo. Methods: Concentrations of IL-8 and MCP-1 in supernatants of human peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) cultures following distinct antibody treatments were evaluated by Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA). In vivo, anti-CD3 antibodies or vehicle were injected intravenously in rats subjected to acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Chemotaxis and angiogenesis were evaluated using tube and migration assays. Intracellular pathways were assessed using Western blot. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) were quantitatively evaluated using fluorescence-activated cell scanning, exoELISA, and nanoparticle tracking analysis. Also, microRNA profiles were determined by next-generation sequencing. Results: Only PBMC stimulation with anti-CD3 antibody led to IL-8 and MCP-1 changes in secretion, similar to ATG. In a rat model of AMI, systemic treatment with an anti-CD3 antibody markedly reduced infarct scar size (27.8% (Inter-quartile range; IQR 16.2–34.9) vs. 12.6% (IQR 8.3–27.2); p < 0.01). The secretomes of anti-CD3 treated PBMC neither induced cardioprotective pathways in cardiomyocytes nor pro-angiogenic mechanisms in human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVECs) in vitro. While EVs quantities remained unchanged, PBMC incubation with an anti-CD3 antibody led to alterations in EVs miRNA expression. Conclusion: Treatment with an anti-CD3 antibody led to decreased scar size in a rat model of AMI. Whereas cardioprotective and pro-angiogenetic pathways were unaltered by anti-CD3 treatment, qualitative changes in the EVs miRNA expression could be observed, which might be causal for the observed cardioprotective phenotype. We provide evidence that EVs are a potential cardioprotective treatment target. Our findings will also provide the basis for a more detailed analysis of putatively relevant miRNA candidates

    Interleukin‐6 initiates muscle‐ and adipose tissue wasting in a novel C57BL/6 model of cancer‐associated cachexia

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    BACKGROUND: Cancer‐associated cachexia (CAC) is a wasting syndrome drastically reducing efficacy of chemotherapy and life expectancy of patients. CAC affects up to 80% of cancer patients, yet the mechanisms underlying the disease are not well understood and no approved disease‐specific medication exists. As a multiorgan disorder, CAC can only be studied on an organismal level. To cover the diverse aetiologies of CAC, researchers rely on the availability of a multifaceted pool of cancer models with varying degrees of cachexia symptoms. So far, no tumour model syngeneic to C57BL/6 mice exists that allows direct comparison between cachexigenic‐ and non‐cachexigenic tumours. METHODS: MCA207 and CHX207 fibrosarcoma cells were intramuscularly implanted into male or female, 10–11‐week‐old C57BL/6J mice. Tumour tissues were subjected to magnetic resonance imaging, immunohistochemical‐, and transcriptomic analysis. Mice were analysed for tumour growth, body weight and ‐composition, food‐ and water intake, locomotor activity, O(2) consumption, CO(2) production, circulating blood cells, metabolites, and tumourkines. Mice were sacrificed with same tumour weights in all groups. Adipose tissues were examined using high‐resolution respirometry, lipolysis measurements in vitro and ex vivo, and radioactive tracer studies in vivo. Gene expression was determined in adipose‐ and muscle tissues by quantitative PCR and Western blotting analyses. Muscles and cultured myotubes were analysed histologically and by immunofluorescence microscopy for myofibre cross sectional area and myofibre diameter, respectively. Interleukin‐6 (Il‐6) was deleted from cancer cells using CRISPR/Cas9 mediated gene editing. RESULTS: CHX207, but not MCA207‐tumour‐bearing mice exhibited major clinical features of CAC, including systemic inflammation, increased plasma IL‐6 concentrations (190 pg/mL, P ≀ 0.0001), increased energy expenditure (+28%, P ≀ 0.01), adipose tissue loss (−47%, P ≀ 0.0001), skeletal muscle wasting (−18%, P ≀ 0.001), and body weight reduction (−13%, P ≀ 0.01) 13 days after cancer cell inoculation. Adipose tissue loss resulted from reduced lipid uptake and ‐synthesis combined with increased lipolysis but was not associated with elevated beta‐adrenergic signalling or adipose tissue browning. Muscle atrophy was evident by reduced myofibre cross sectional area (−21.8%, P ≀ 0.001), increased catabolic‐ and reduced anabolic signalling. Deletion of IL‐6 from CHX207 cancer cells completely protected CHX207(IL6KO)‐tumour‐bearing mice from CAC. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we present CHX207 fibrosarcoma cells as a novel tool to investigate the mediators and metabolic consequences of CAC in C57BL/6 mice in comparison to non‐cachectic MCA207‐tumour‐bearing mice. IL‐6 represents an essential trigger for CAC development in CHX207‐tumour‐bearing mice

    Trophic redundancy in benthic fish food webs increases with scarcity of prey items, in the Southern Baltic Sea

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    Bottom trawling is one of the main pressures on benthic ecosystems, directly impacting the targeted species and physically disturbing the seabed and the benthic invertebrate communities, in turn indirectly impacting benthivorous fish and the entire benthic food web structure and functioning. To predict the cascading effect of bottom trawling on benthic and demersal fish communities, it is crucial to understand the trophic interactions between benthic and demersal fish and benthic invertebrates. Here, we assessed the diet of benthic and demersal fish and the structure and functioning of the benthic food web in two areas in the German Baltic Sea, the Fehmarnbelt and the Odra Bank. The Fehmarnbelt benthic invertebrate community is characterized by a high number of species and biomass, contrary to the one on the Odra Bank which is species poor with high individual abundance but low biomass. We used mixing models based on stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen combined with stomach content analyses to estimate the fish diet at both sites, and we used community-wide trophic indices, derived from stable isotopes to compare the structure and functioning of the fish benthic food webs. We show that fish in the Fehmarnbelt can chose preferential prey items, resulting in higher trophic diversity, contrary to fish on the Odra Bank, which feed on all available prey species, resulting in higher trophic redundancy. We found that the generalist behavior of fish on the Odra Bank is likely the result of scarcity in prey items, the benthic invertebrate community being species poor with high abundance of small individuals. We demonstrate that the differences in structure and functioning of the benthic fish food web between the two sites was mainly driven by differences in the characteristics of the benthic prey communities

    Imaging Immune and Metabolic Cells of Visceral Adipose Tissues with Multimodal Nonlinear Optical Microscopy

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    Visceral adipose tissue (VAT) inflammation is recognized as a mechanism by which obesity is associated with metabolic diseases. The communication between adipose tissue macrophages (ATMs) and adipocytes is important to understanding the interaction between immunity and energy metabolism and its roles in obesity-induced diseases. Yet visualizing adipocytes and macrophages in complex tissues is challenging to standard imaging methods. Here, we describe the use of a multimodal nonlinear optical (NLO) microscope to characterize the composition of VATs of lean and obese mice including adipocytes, macrophages, and collagen fibrils in a label-free manner. We show that lipid metabolism processes such as lipid droplet formation, lipid droplet microvesiculation, and free fatty acids trafficking can be dynamically monitored in macrophages and adipocytes. With its versatility, NLO microscopy should be a powerful imaging tool to complement molecular characterization of the immunity-metabolism interface
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