3,393 research outputs found
Pedicle Screw-Associated Violation of the Adjacent Unfused Facet Joint: Clinical Outcomes and Fusion Rates
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review of a prospective randomized trial.
OBJECTIVES: To compare outcome scores and fusion rates in patients with and without pedicle screw-associated facet joint violation (FJV) after a single-level lumbar fusion.
METHODS: Clinical outcomes data and computed tomography (CT) imaging were reviewed for 157 patients participating in a multicenter prospective trial. Post-operative CT scans at 12-months follow-up were examined for fusion status and FJV. Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) included Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and Visual Analog Scale (VAS) for leg and low back pain. Chi-square test of independence was used to compare proportions between groups on categorical measures. Two-sample t-test was used to identify differences in mean patient outcome scores. Logistic regression models were performed to determine association between FJV and fusion rates.
RESULTS: Of the 157 patients included, there were 18 (11.5%) with FJV (Group A) and 139 (88.5%) without FJV (Group B). Patients with FJV experienced less improvement in ODI (P = .004) and VAS back pain scores (P = .04) vs patients without FJV. There was no difference in mean VAS leg pain (P = .4997). The rate of fusion at 12-months for patients with FJV (27.8%) was lower compared to those without FJV (71.2%) (P = .0002). Patients with FJV were 76% less likely to have a successful fusion at 12-months.
CONCLUSION: Pedicle screw-associated violation of the adjacent unfused facet joint during single-level lumbar fusion is associated with less improvement in back pain, back pain-associated disability, and a lower fusion rate at 1-year after surgery
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Identification of Orch3, a Locus Controlling Dominant Resistance to Autoimmune Orchitis, as Kinesin Family Member 1C
Experimental autoimmune orchitis (EAO), the principal model of non-infectious testicular inflammatory disease, can be induced in susceptible mouse strains by immunization with autologous testicular homogenate and appropriate adjuvants. As previously established, the genome of DBA/2J mice encodes genes that are capable of conferring dominant resistance to EAO, while the genome of BALB/cByJ mice does not and they are therefore susceptible to EAO. In a genome scan, we previously identified Orch3 as the major quantitative trait locus controlling dominant resistance to EAO and mapped it to chromosome 11. Here, by utilizing a forward genetic approach, we identified kinesin family member 1C (Kif1c) as a positional candidate for Orch3 and, using a transgenic approach, demonstrated that Kif1c is Orch3. Mechanistically, we showed that the resistant Kif1c allele leads to a reduced antigen-specific T cell proliferative response as a consequence of decreased MHC class II expression by antigen presenting cells, and that the L→P and S→P polymorphisms distinguishing the BALB/cByJ and DBA/2J alleles, respectively, can play a role in transcriptional regulation. These findings may provide mechanistic insight into how polymorphism in other kinesins such as KIF21B and KIF5A influence susceptibility and resistance to human autoimmune diseases
SN2012ab: A Peculiar Type IIn Supernova with Aspherical Circumstellar Material
We present photometry, spectra, and spectropolarimetry of supernova (SN)
2012ab, mostly obtained over the course of days after discovery. SN
2012ab was a Type IIn (SN IIn) event discovered near the nucleus of spiral
galaxy 2MASXJ12224762+0536247. While its light curve resembles that of SN
1998S, its spectral evolution does not. We see indications of CSM interaction
in the strong intermediate-width emission features, the high luminosity (peak
at absolute magnitude ), and the lack of broad absorption features in
the spectrum. The H emission undergoes a peculiar transition. At early
times it shows a broad blue emission wing out to km
and a truncated red wing. Then at late times (
100days) it shows a truncated blue wing and a very broad red emission wing
out to roughly km . This late-time broad red wing
probably arises in the reverse shock. Spectra also show an asymmetric
intermediate-width H component with stronger emission on the red side
at late times. The evolution of the asymmetric profiles requires a density
structure in the distant CSM that is highly aspherical. Our spectropolarimetric
data also suggest asphericity with a strong continuum polarization of % and depolarization in the H line, indicating asphericity in the
CSM at a level comparable to that in other SNe IIn. We estimate a mass-loss
rate of for km extending back at least 75yr prior to the
SN. The strong departure from axisymmetry in the CSM of SN 2012ab may suggest
that the progenitor was an eccentric binary system undergoing eruptive mass
loss.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
Stretchable Self-Healable Semiconducting Polymer Film for Active-Matrix Strain-Sensing Array
Skin-like sensory devidces shoud be stretchable and self-healable to meet the demands for future electronic skin applications. Despite recent notable advances in skin-inspired electronic materials, it remains challenging to confer these desired functionalities to an active semiconductor. Here, we report a strain-sensitive, stretchable, and autonomously self-healable semiconducting film achieved through blending of a polymer semiconductor and a self-healable elastomer, both of which are dynamically cross-linked by metal coordination. We observed that by controlling the percolation threshold of the polymer semiconductor, the blend film became strain sensitive, with a gauge factor of 5.75 x 105 at 100% strain in a stretchable transistor. The blend film is also highly stretchable (fracture strain, \u3e1300%) and autonomously self-healable at room temperature. We proceed to demonstrate a fully integrated 5 x 5 stretchable active-matrix transistor sensor array capable of detecting strain distribution through surface deformation
Developing GIS-based eastern equine encephalitis vector-host models in Tuskegee, Alabama
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>A site near Tuskegee, Alabama was examined for vector-host activities of eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus (EEEV). Land cover maps of the study site were created in ArcInfo 9.2<sup>® </sup>from QuickBird data encompassing visible and near-infrared (NIR) band information (0.45 to 0.72 μm) acquired July 15, 2008. Georeferenced mosquito and bird sampling sites, and their associated land cover attributes from the study site, were overlaid onto the satellite data. SAS 9.1.4<sup>® </sup>was used to explore univariate statistics and to generate regression models using the field and remote-sampled mosquito and bird data. Regression models indicated that <it>Culex erracticus </it>and Northern Cardinals were the most abundant mosquito and bird species, respectively. Spatial linear prediction models were then generated in Geostatistical Analyst Extension of ArcGIS 9.2<sup>®</sup>. Additionally, a model of the study site was generated, based on a Digital Elevation Model (DEM), using ArcScene extension of ArcGIS 9.2<sup>®</sup>.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>For total mosquito count data, a first-order trend ordinary kriging process was fitted to the semivariogram at a partial sill of 5.041 km, nugget of 6.325 km, lag size of 7.076 km, and range of 31.43 km, using 12 lags. For total adult <it>Cx. erracticus </it>count, a first-order trend ordinary kriging process was fitted to the semivariogram at a partial sill of 5.764 km, nugget of 6.114 km, lag size of 7.472 km, and range of 32.62 km, using 12 lags. For the total bird count data, a first-order trend ordinary kriging process was fitted to the semivariogram at a partial sill of 4.998 km, nugget of 5.413 km, lag size of 7.549 km and range of 35.27 km, using 12 lags. For the Northern Cardinal count data, a first-order trend ordinary kriging process was fitted to the semivariogram at a partial sill of 6.387 km, nugget of 5.935 km, lag size of 8.549 km and a range of 41.38 km, using 12 lags. Results of the DEM analyses indicated a statistically significant inverse linear relationship between total sampled mosquito data and elevation (R<sup>2 </sup>= -.4262; p < .0001), with a standard deviation (SD) of 10.46, and total sampled bird data and elevation (R<sup>2 </sup>= -.5111; p < .0001), with a SD of 22.97. DEM statistics also indicated a significant inverse linear relationship between total sampled <it>Cx. erracticus </it>data and elevation (R<sup>2 </sup>= -.4711; p < .0001), with a SD of 11.16, and the total sampled Northern Cardinal data and elevation (R<sup>2 </sup>= -.5831; p < .0001), SD of 11.42.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These data demonstrate that GIS/remote sensing models and spatial statistics can capture space-varying functional relationships between field-sampled mosquito and bird parameters for determining risk for EEEV transmission.</p
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Modeling the Compatibility of Biological and Economic Objectives on a Forested Landscape
An integrated model combining a wildlife population simulation model and timber harvest and growth models was developed to explore the tradeoffs between the likelihood of persistence of a hypothetical wildlife species and timber harvest volumes on a landscape in the Central Oregon Cascades. Simulated annealing, a heuristic optimization technique, was used to solve for harvest schedules that maximized the likelihood of species persistence relative to a given timber harvest volume constraint over a 100 year planning period. By solving this problem for a range of different harvest volumes a production possibility frontier is developed that shows the relative tradeoffs between timber harvest volumes and likelihood of species persistence on this landscape. Although the results are specific to the wildlife species and the landscape analyzed, the approach is general and may provide a structure for future models that will allow land managers and forest planners to become more informed about the tradeoffs among competing resources.Key words: forest management, tradeoff analysis, wildlife population modeling, simulated annealin
Radio Astronomy
Contains reports on eleven research projects.National Science Foundation (Grant AST79-25075)National Science Foundation (Grant AST79-20984)National Science Foundation (Grant AST79-19553)U.S. Navy - Office of Naval Research (Contract N00014-80-C-0348)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NAG2-50)MIT Sloan Fund for Basic ResearchJoint Services Electronics Program(Contract DAAG80-C-0104)Lockheed Aircraft Corporation (Contract LS90B4860F)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NAG5-10)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Contract NAS5-22929)U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Grant 04-8-MO1-1)California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory (Contract LZ-727891)California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory Subcontract 956059California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory Task Order RD-15
Radio Astronomy
Contains reports on sixteen research projects.National Science Foundation (Grant AST81-21416)National Science Foundation (Grant AST80-22864)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Contract S-10665-C)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Contract NAGW373)National Science Foundation (Grant AST79-19553)National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Grant 04-8-M01-1)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NAG5-10)National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Contract NAS5-22929)Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Contract MDA 903-82-K-0521)Intelsat (Contract Intel-188)Joint Services Electronics Program (Contract DAAG29-80-C-0104)Lockheed Missiles and Space Company (Contract LS90B4860F
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