750 research outputs found
Effective Rheology of Bubbles Moving in a Capillary Tube
We calculate the average volumetric flux versus pressure drop of bubbles
moving in a single capillary tube with varying diameter, finding a square-root
relation from mapping the flow equations onto that of a driven overdamped
pendulum. The calculation is based on a derivation of the equation of motion of
a bubble train from considering the capillary forces and the entropy production
associated with the viscous flow. We also calculate the configurational
probability of the positions of the bubbles.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Search for new phenomena in final states with an energetic jet and large missing transverse momentum in pp collisions at √ s = 8 TeV with the ATLAS detector
Results of a search for new phenomena in final states with an energetic jet and large missing transverse momentum are reported. The search uses 20.3 fb−1 of √ s = 8 TeV data collected in 2012 with the ATLAS detector at the LHC. Events are required to have at least one jet with pT > 120 GeV and no leptons. Nine signal regions are considered with increasing missing transverse momentum requirements between Emiss T > 150 GeV and Emiss T > 700 GeV. Good agreement is observed between the number of events in data and Standard Model expectations. The results are translated into exclusion limits on models with either large extra spatial dimensions, pair production of weakly interacting dark matter candidates, or production of very light gravitinos in a gauge-mediated supersymmetric model. In addition, limits on the production of an invisibly decaying Higgs-like boson leading to similar topologies in the final state are presente
Sporadic Colorectal Cancer Development Shows Rejuvenescence Regarding Epithelial Proliferation and Apoptosis
Background and Aims: Sporadic colorectal cancer (CRC) development is a sequential process showing age-dependency,
uncontrolled epithelial proliferation and decreased apoptosis. During juvenile growth cellular proliferation and apoptosis
are well balanced, which may be perturbed upon aging. Our aim was to correlate proliferative and apoptotic activities in
aging human colonic epithelium and colorectal cancer. We also tested the underlying molecular biology concerning the
proliferation- and apoptosis-regulating gene expression alterations.
Materials and Methods: Colorectal biopsies from healthy children (n1 = 14), healthy adults (n2 = 10), adult adenomas
(n3 = 10) and CRCs (n4 = 10) in adults were tested for Ki-67 immunohistochemistry and TUNEL apoptosis assay. Mitosis- and
apoptosis-related gene expression was also studied in healthy children (n1 = 6), adult (n2 = 41) samples and in CRC (n3 = 34)
in HGU133plus2.0 microarray platform. Measured alterations were confirmed with RT-PCR both on dependent and
independent sample sets (n1=6, n2=6, n3 = 6).
Results: Mitotic index (MI) was significantly higher (p,0.05) in intact juvenile (MI = 0.3360.06) and CRC samples
(MI = 0.4260.10) compared to healthy adult samples (MI = 0.1560.06). In contrast, apoptotic index (AI) was decreased in
children (0.1360.06) and significantly lower in cancer (0.0660.03) compared to healthy adult samples (0.1760.05). Eight
proliferation- (e.g. MKI67, CCNE1) and 11 apoptosis-associated genes (e.g. TNFSF10, IFI6) had altered mRNA expression both
in the course of normal aging and carcinogenesis, mainly inducing proliferation and reducing apoptosis compared to
healthy adults. Eight proliferation-associated genes including CCND1, CDK1, CDK6 and 26 apoptosis-regulating genes (e.g.
SOCS3) were differently expressed between juvenile and cancer groups mostly supporting the pronounced cell growth in
CRC.
Conclusion: Colorectal samples from children and CRC patients can be characterized by similarly increased proliferative and
decreased apoptotic activities compared to healthy colonic samples from adults. Therefore, cell kinetic alterations during
colorectal cancer development show uncontrolled rejuvenescence as opposed to the controlled cell growth in juvenile
colonic epithelium
Business process variant analysis based on mutual fingerprints of event logs
Comparing business process variants using event logs is a common use case in process mining. Existing techniques for process variant analysis detect statistically-significant differences between variants at the level of individual entities (such as process activities) and their relationships (e.g. directly-follows relations between activities). This may lead to a proliferation of differences due to the low level of granularity in which such differences are captured. This paper presents a novel approach to detect statistically-significant differences between variants at the level of entire process traces (i.e. sequences of directly-follows relations). The cornerstone of this approach is a technique to learn a directly-follows graph called mutual fingerprint from the event logs of the two variants. A mutual fingerprint is a lossless encoding of a set of traces and their duration using discrete wavelet transformation. This structure facilitates the understanding of statistical differences along the control-flow and performance dimensions. The approach has been evaluated using real-life event logs against two baselines. The results show that at a trace level, the baselines cannot always reveal the differences discovered by our approach, or can detect spurious differences.This research is partly funded by the Australian Research Council (DP180102839) and Spanish funds MINECO and FEDER (TIN2017-86727-C2-1-R).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
A study of empyema thoracis and role of intrapleural streptokinase in its management
BACKGROUND: Clinical spectrum, microbiology and outcome of empyema thoracis are changing. Intrapleural instillation of fibrinolytic agents is being increasingly used for management of empyema thoracis. The present study was carried out to describe the clinical profile and outcome of patients with empyema thoracis including those with chronic empyema and to study the efficacy and safety of intrapleural streptokinase in its management. METHODS: Clinical profile, etiological agents, hospital course and outcome of 31 patients (mean age 40 ± 16 years, M: F 25: 6) with empyema thoracis treated from 1998 to 2003 was analyzed. All patients were diagnosed on the basis of aspiration of frank pus from pleural cavity. Clinical profile, response to therapy and outcome were compared between the patients who received intrapleural streptokinase (n = 12) and those who did not (n = 19). RESULTS: Etiology was tubercular in 42% of the patients (n = 13) whereas the rest were bacterial. Amongst the patients in which organisms could be isolated (n = 13, 42%) Staphylococcus aureus was the commonest (n = 5). Intrapleural streptokinase was instilled in 12 patients. This procedure resulted in increase of drainage of pleural fluid in all patients. Mean daily pleural fluid drainage after streptokinase instillation was significantly higher for patients who received intrapleural streptokinase than those who did not (213 ml vs 57 ml, p = 0.006). Only one patient who was instilled streptokinase eventually required decortication, which had to be done in five patients (16.1%). Mean hospital stay was 30.2 ± 17.6 days whereas two patients died. CONCLUSIONS: Tubercular empyema is common in Indian patients. Intrapleural streptokinase appears to be a useful strategy to preserve lung function and reduce need for surgery in patients with late stage of empyema thoracis
Apoptosis Inducing Effect of Plumbagin on Colonic Cancer Cells Depends on Expression of COX-2
Plumbagin, a quinonoid found in the plants of the Plumbaginaceae, possesses
medicinal properties. In this study we investigated the anti-proliferative and
apoptotic activity of plumbagin by using two human colonic cancer cell lines,
HT29 and HCT15. IC50 of Plumbagin for HCT15 and HT29 cells (22.5 µM and
62.5 µM, respectively) were significantly different. To study the response
of cancer cells during treatment strategies, cells were treated with two
different concentrations, 15 µM, 30 µM for HCT15 and 50 µM, 75
µM for HT29 cells. Though activation of NFκB, Caspases-3, elevated
levels of TNF-α, cytosolic Cytochrome C were seen in both
HCT15 cells HT29 treated with plumbagin, aberrant apoptosis with decreased level
of pEGFR, pAkt, pGsk-3β, PCNA and Cyclin D1was observed only in 15 µM
and 30 µM plumbagin treated HCT15 and 75 µM plumbagin treated HT29
cells. This suggests that plumbagin induces apoptosis in both HCT15 cells and
HT29 treated, whereas, proliferation was inhibited only in 15 µM and 30
µM plumbagin treated HCT15 and 75 µM plumbagin treated HT29 cells,
but not in 50 µM plumbagin treated HT29 cells. Expression of COX-2 was
decreased in 75 µM plumbagin treated HT29 cells when compared to 50
µM plumbagin treated HT29 cells, whereas HCT15 cells lack COX. Hence the
observed resistance to induction of apoptosis in 50 µM plumbagin treated
HT29 cells are attributed to the expression of COX-2. In conclusion, plumbagin
induces apoptosis in colonic cancer cells through TNF-α mediated pathway
depending on expression of COX-2 expression
Unsupervised machine learning on encrypted data
In the context of Fully Homomorphic Encryption, which allows computations on encrypted data, Machine Learning has been one of the most popular applications in the recent past. All of these works, however, have focused on supervised learning, where there is a labeled training set that is used to configure the model.
In this work, we take the first step into the realm of unsupervised learning, which is an important area in Machine Learning and has many real-world applications, by addressing the clustering problem. To this end, we show how to implement the K-Means-Algorithm. This algorithm poses several challenges in the FHE context, including a division, which we tackle by using a natural encoding that allows division and may be of independent interest. While this theoretically solves the problem, performance in practice is not optimal, so we then propose some changes to the clustering algorithm to make it executable under more conventional encodings. We show that our new algorithm achieves a clustering accuracy comparable to the original K-Means-Algorithm, but has less than of its runtime
Functional Studies on the IBD Susceptibility Gene IL23R Implicate Reduced Receptor Function in the Protective Genetic Variant R381Q
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in several populations have demonstrated significant association of the IL23R gene with IBD (Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC)) and psoriasis, suggesting that perturbation of the IL-23 signaling pathway is relevant to the pathophysiology of these diseases. One particular variant, R381Q (rs11209026), confers strong protection against development of CD. We investigated the effects of this variant in primary T cells from healthy donors carrying IL23RR381 and IL23RQ381 haplotypes. Using a proprietary anti-IL23R antibody, ELISA, flow cytometry, phosphoflow and real-time RT-PCR methods, we examined IL23R expression and STAT3 phosphorylation and activation in response to IL-23. IL23RQ381 was associated with reduced STAT3 phosphorylation upon stimulation with IL-23 and decreased number of IL-23 responsive T-cells. We also observed slightly reduced levels of proinflammatory cytokine secretion in IL23RQ381 positive donors. Our study shows conclusively that IL23RQ381 is a loss-of-function allele, further strengthening the implication from GWAS results that the IL-23 pathway is pathogenic in human disease. This data provides an explanation for the protective role of R381Q in CD and may lead to the development of improved therapeutics for autoimmune disorders like CD
Development of a diagnostic protocol for dizziness in elderly patients in general practice: a Delphi procedure
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Dizziness in general practice is very common, especially in elderly patients. The empirical evidence for diagnostic tests in the evaluation of dizziness is scarce. Aim of our study was to determine which set of diagnostic tests should be part of a diagnostic protocol for evaluating dizziness in elderly patients in general practice.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We conducted a Delphi procedure with a panel of 16 national and international experts of all relevant medical specialities in the field of dizziness. A selection of 36 diagnostic tests, based on a systematic review and practice guidelines, was presented to the panel. Each test was described extensively, and data on test characteristics and methodological quality (assessed with the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies, QUADAS) were presented. The threshold for in- or exclusion of a diagnostic test was set at an agreement of 70%.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>During three rounds 21 diagnostic tests were selected, concerning patient history (4 items), physical examination (11 items), and additional tests (6 items). Five tests were excluded, although they are recommended by existing practice guidelines on dizziness. Two tests were included, although several practice guidelines question their diagnostic value. Two more tests were included that have never been recommended by practice guidelines on dizziness.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In this study we successfully combined empirical evidence with expert opinion for the development of a set of diagnostic tests for evaluating dizziness in elderly patients. This comprehensive set of tests will be evaluated in a cross-sectional diagnostic study.</p
Nightside clouds and disequilibrium chemistry on the hot Jupiter WASP-43b
Hot Jupiters are among the best-studied exoplanets, but it is still poorly understood how their chemical composition and cloud properties vary with longitude. Theoretical models predict that clouds may condense on the nightside and that molecular abundances can be driven out of equilibrium by zonal winds. Here we report a phase-resolved emission spectrum of the hot Jupiter WASP-43b measured from 5 μm to 12 μm with the JWST’s Mid-Infrared Instrument. The spectra reveal a large day–night temperature contrast (with average brightness temperatures of 1,524 ± 35 K and 863 ± 23 K, respectively) and evidence for water absorption at all orbital phases. Comparisons with three-dimensional atmospheric models show that both the phase-curve shape and emission spectra strongly suggest the presence of nightside clouds that become optically thick to thermal emission at pressures greater than ~100 mbar. The dayside is consistent with a cloudless atmosphere above the mid-infrared photosphere. Contrary to expectations from equilibrium chemistry but consistent with disequilibrium kinetics models, methane is not detected on the nightside (2σ upper limit of 1–6 ppm, depending on model assumptions). Our results provide strong evidence that the atmosphere of WASP-43b is shaped by disequilibrium processes and provide new insights into the properties of the planet’s nightside clouds. However, the remaining discrepancies between our observations and our predictive atmospheric models emphasize the importance of further exploring the effects of clouds and disequilibrium chemistry in numerical models
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