1,380 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Serum albumin and hospitalization among pediatric patients with end-stage renal disease who started dialysis therapy.
BackgroundHypoalbuminemia is a strong predictor of hospitalization and mortality among adult dialysis patients. However, data are scant on the association between serum albumin and hospitalization among children new to dialysis.MethodsIn a retrospective cohort study of children 1-17 years old with end-stage renal disease receiving dialysis therapy in a large US dialysis organization 2007-2011, we examined the association of serum albumin with hospitalization frequency and total hospitalization days using a negative binomial regression model.ResultsAmong 416 eligible patients, median (interquartile range) age was 14 (10-16) years and mean ± SD baseline serum albumin level was 3.7 ± 0.8 g/dL. Two hundred sixty-six patients (64%) were hospitalized during follow-up with an incidence rate of 2.2 (95%CI, 1.9-2.4) admissions per patient-year. There was a U-shaped association between serum albumin and hospitalization frequency; hospitalization rates (95%CI) were 2.7 (2.2-3.2), 1.9 (1.5-2.4), 1.6 (1.3-1.9), and 2.7 (1.7-3.6) per patient-year among patients with serum albumin levels < 3.5, 3.5- < 4.0, 4.0- < 4.5, and ≥ 4.5 g/dL, respectively. Case mix-adjusted hospitalization incidence rate ratios (IRRs) (95%CI) were 1.63 (1.24-2.13), 1.32 (1.10-1.58), and 1.25 (1.06-1.49) at serum albumin levels 3.0, 3.5, and 4.5 g/dL, respectively (reference: 4.0 g/dL). Similar trends were observed in hospitalization days. These associations remained robust against further adjustment for laboratory variables associated with malnutrition and inflammation.ConclusionsBoth high and low serum albumin were associated with higher hospitalization in children starting dialysis. Because the observed association is novel and not fully explainable especially for high serum albumin levels, interpreting the results requires caution and further studies are needed to confirm and elucidate this association before clinical recommendations are made
A Two Micron All-Sky Survey View of the Sagittarius Dwarf Galaxy: II. Swope Telescope Spectroscopy of M Giant Stars in the Dynamically Cold Sagittarius Tidal Stream
We present moderate resolution (~6 km/s) spectroscopy of 284 M giant
candidates selected from the Two Micron All Sky Survey photometry. Radial
velocities (RVs) are presented for stars mainly in the south, with a number
having positions consistent with association to the trailing tidal tail of the
Sagittarius (Sgr) dwarf galaxy. The latter show a clear RV trend with orbital
longitude, as expected from models of the orbit and destruction of Sgr. A
minimum 8 kpc width of the trailing stream about the Sgr orbital midplane is
implied by verified RV members. The coldness of this stream (dispersion ~10
km/s) provides upper limits on the combined contributions of stream heating by
a lumpy Galactic halo and the intrinsic dispersion of released stars, which is
a function of the Sgr core mass. The Sgr trailing arm is consistent with a
Galactic halo containing one dominant, LMC-like lump, however some lumpier
halos are not ruled out. An upper limit to the total M/L of the Sgr core is 21
in solar units. A second structure that roughly mimics expectations for
wrapped, leading Sgr arm debris crosses the trailing arm in the Southern
Hemisphere; however, this may also be an unrelated tidal feature. Among the <13
kpc M giants toward the South Galactic Pole are some with large RVs that
identify them as halo stars, perhaps part of the Sgr leading arm near the Sun.
The positions and RVs of Southern Hemisphere M giants are compared with those
of southern globular clusters potentially stripped from the Sgr system and
support for association of Pal 2 and Pal 12 with Sgr debris is found. Our
discussion includes description of a masked-filtered cross-correlation
methodology that achieves better than 1/20 of a resolution element RVs in
moderate resolution spectra.Comment: 41 pages, 6 figures, Astronomical Journal, in press (submitted Nov.
24, 2003; tentatively scheduled for July 2004 issue
The Look-back Time Evolution of Far-Ultraviolet Flux from the Brightest Cluster Elliptical Galaxies at z < 0.2
We present the GALEX UV photometry of the elliptical galaxies in Abell
clusters at moderate redshifts (z < 0.2) for the study of the look-back time
evolution of the UV upturn phenomenon. The brightest elliptical galaxies (M_r <
-22) in 12 remote clusters are compared with the nearby giant elliptical
galaxies of comparable optical luminosity in the Fornax and Virgo clusters. The
sample galaxies presented here appear to be quiescent without signs of massive
star formation or strong nuclear activity, and show smooth, extended profiles
in their UV images indicating that the far-UV (FUV) light is mostly produced by
hot stars in the underlying old stellar population. Compared to their
counterparts in nearby clusters, the FUV flux of cluster giant elliptical
galaxies at moderate redshifts fades rapidly with ~ 2 Gyrs of look-back time,
and the observed pace in FUV - V color evolution agrees reasonably well with
the prediction from the population synthesis models where the dominant FUV
source is hot horizontal-branch stars and their progeny. A similar amount of
color spread (~ 1 mag) in FUV - V exists among the brightest cluster elliptical
galaxies at z ~ 0.1, as observed among the nearby giant elliptical galaxies of
comparable optical luminosity.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Special GALEX ApJ Supplement,
December 200
WALLABY Early Science - I. The NGC 7162 Galaxy Group
We present Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY) early
science results from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP)
observations of the NGC 7162 galaxy group. We use archival HIPASS and Australia
Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) observations of this group to validate the new
ASKAP data and the data reduction pipeline ASKAPsoft. We detect six galaxies in
the neutral hydrogen (HI) 21-cm line, expanding the NGC 7162 group membership
from four to seven galaxies. Two of the new detections are also the first HI
detections of the dwarf galaxies, AM 2159-434 and GALEXASC J220338.65-431128.7,
for which we have measured velocities of and km s,
respectively. We confirm that there is extended HI emission around NGC 7162
possibly due to past interactions in the group as indicated by the
offset between the kinematic and morphological major axes for NGC 7162A, and
its HI richness. Taking advantage of the increased resolution (factor of
) of the ASKAP data over archival ATCA observations, we fit a tilted
ring model and use envelope tracing to determine the galaxies' rotation curves.
Using these we estimate the dynamical masses and find, as expected, high dark
matter fractions of for all group members. The
ASKAP data are publicly available.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
NGC 2770 - a supernova Ib factory?
NGC 2770 has been the host of three supernovae of Type Ib during the last 10
years, SN 1999eh, SN 2007uy and SN 2008D. SN 2008D attracted special attention
due to the serendipitous discovery of an associated X-ray transient. In this
paper, we study the properties of NGC 2770 and specifically the three SN sites
to investigate whether this galaxy is in any way peculiar to cause a high
frequency of SNe Ib. We model the global SED of the galaxy from broadband data
and derive a star-formation and SN rate comparable to the values of the Milky
Way. We further study the galaxy using longslit spectroscopy covering the major
axis and the three SN sites. From the spectroscopic study we find subsolar
metallicities for the SN sites, a high extinction and a moderate star-formation
rate. In a high resolution spectrum, we also detect diffuse interstellar bands
in the line-of-sight towards SN 2008. A comparison of NGC 2770 to the global
properties of a galaxy sample with high SN occurance (at least 3 SN in the last
100 years) suggests that NGC 2770 is not particularly destined to produce such
an enhancement of observed SNe observed. Its properties are also very different
from gamma-ray burst host galaxies. Statistical considerations on SN Ib
detection rates give a probability of ~1.5% to find a galaxy with three Ib SNe
detected in 10 years. The high number of rare Ib SNe in this galaxy is
therefore likely to be a coincidence rather than special properties of the
galaxy itself. NGC 2770 has a small irregular companion, NGC 2770B, which is
highly starforming, has a very low mass and one of the lowest metallicities
detected in the nearby universe as derived from longslit spectroscopy. In the
most metal poor part, we even detect Wolf-Rayet features, against the current
models of WR stars which require high metallicities.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Ap
GALEX UV Color Relations for Nearby Early-Type Galaxies
We use GALEX/optical photometry to construct color-color relationships for
early-type galaxies sorted by morphological type. We have matched objects in
the GALEX GR1 public release and the first IR1.1 internal release, with the RC3
early-type galaxies having a morphological type -5.5<T<-1.5 with mean error in
T<1.5, and mean error on (B-V)T<0.05. After visual inspection of each match, we
are left with 130 galaxies with a reliable GALEX pipeline photometry in the
far-UV and near-UV bands. This sample is divided into Ellipticals (-5.5<T<-3.5)
and Lenticulars (-3.5<T<-1.5). After correction for the Galactic extinction,
the color-color diagrams FUV-NUV vs. (B-V)_{Tc} are plotted for the two
subsamples. We find a tight anti-correlation between the FUV-NUV and (B-V)_{Tc}
colors for Ellipticals, the UV color getting bluer when the (B-V)_{Tc} get
redder. This relationship very likely is an extension of the color-metallicity
relationship into the GALEX NUV band. We suspect that the main source of the
correlation is metal line blanketing in the NUV band. The FUV-NUV vs B-V
correlation has larger scatter for lenticular galaxies; we speculate this
reflects the presence of low level star formation. If the latter objects (i.e.
those that are blue both in FUV-NUV and B-V) are interpreted as harboring
recent star formation activity, this would be the case for a few percent (~4%)
of Ellipticals and ~15% of Lenticulars; this would make about 10% of early-type
galaxies with residual star formation in our full sample of 130 early-type
galaxies. We also plot FUV-NUV vs. the Mg_2 index and central velocity
dispersion. We find a tight anti-correlation between FUV-NUV and the Mg_2
index(...).Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJS (abstract
abridged), typos corrected in section 2.
GALEX UV Color-Magnitude Relations and Evidence for Recent Star Formation in Early-type Galaxies
We have used the GALEX UV photometric data to construct a first
near-ultraviolet (NUV) color-magnitude relation (CMR) for the galaxies
pre-classified as early-type by SDSS studies. The NUV CMR is a powerful tool
for tracking the recent star formation history in early-type galaxies, owing to
its high sensitivity to the presence of young stellar populations. Our NUV CMR
for UV-weak galaxies shows a well-defined slope and thus will be useful for
interpreting the restframe NUV data of distant galaxies and studying their star
formation history. Compared to optical CMRs, the NUV CMR shows a substantially
larger scatter, which we interpret as evidence of recent star formation
activities. Roughly 15% of the recent epoch (z < 0.13) bright (M[r] < -22)
early-type galaxies show a sign of recent (< 1Gyr) star formation at the 1-2%
level (lower limit) in mass compared to the total stellar mass. This implies
that low level residual star formation was common during the last few billion
years even in bright early-type galaxies.Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer
(GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issue. Links to the full set of
papers will be available at http://www.galex.caltech.edu/PUBLICATIONS/ after
November 22, 200
Correlations in the orientations of galaxy clusters
The relative orientation of clusters' major elongation axes and clusters'
angular momentum is studied using a large N-body simulation in a box of 500
Mpc/h base length for a standard LambdaCDM model. Employing the technique of
mark correlation functions, we successfully separated the correlations in the
orientation from the well known clustering signal traced by the two-point
correlation function. The correlations in the orientation are highly
significant for our sample of 3000 clusters. We found an alignment of
neighboring clusters, i.e. an enhanced probability of the major elongation axes
of neighboring cluster pairs to be in parallel with each other. At 10 Mpc/h
separation the amplitude of this signal is ~10% above the value expected from
random orientations, and it vanishes on scales larger than 15 Mpc/h. The
``filamentary'' alignment between clusters' major elongation axes and the lines
pointing towards neighboring clusters shows even stronger deviations from
random orientation, which can be detected out to scales of 100 Mpc/h, both in
2D and 3D analyses. Similarly, strong correlations of the angular momentum were
seen. Also a clear signal in the scalar correlation of the absolute value of
the angular momentum, the spin parameter and the mass was found. They extend up
to 50 Mpc/h and have an amplitude of 40%, 15%, and 10% above a random
distribution at 10 Mpc/h separation, respectively.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, A&A, accepted 28/08/0
Kidney Function and Cardiovascular Events in Postmenopausal Women: The Impact of Race and Ethnicity in the Women’s Health Initiative
Kidney disease disproportionately affects minority populations including African Americans and Hispanics; therefore, understanding the relationship of kidney function to cardiovascular (CV) outcomes within different racial/ethnic groups is of considerable interest. We investigated the relationship between kidney function and CV events and assessed effect modification by race/ethnicity in the Women’s Health Initiative
- …