3,042 research outputs found
Semiclassical Distorted Wave Model Analysis of the Formation Inclusive Spectrum
hyperon production inclusive spectra with GeV/c
measured at KEK on C and Si are analyzed by the semiclassical
distorted wave model. Single-particle wave functions of the target nucleus are
treated using Wigner transformation. This method is able to account for the
energy and angular dependences of the elementary process in nuclear medium
without introducing the factorization approximation frequently employed.
Calculations of the formation process, for which there
is no free parameter since the s.p. potential is known, demonstrate
that the present model is useful to describe inclusive spectra. It is shown
that in order to account for the experimental data of the formation
spectra a repulsive -nucleus potential is necessary whose magnitude is
not so strong as around 100 MeV previously suggested.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, accepted in Phys. Rev.
Testing one-body density functionals on a solvable model
There are several physically motivated density matrix functionals in the
literature, built from the knowledge of the natural orbitals and the occupation
numbers of the one-body reduced density matrix. With the help of the equivalent
phase-space formalism, we thoroughly test some of the most popular of those
functionals on a completely solvable model.Comment: Latex, 16 pages, 4 figure
Casimir Force on a Micrometer Sphere in a Dip: Proposal of an Experiment
The attractive Casimir force acting on a micrometer-sphere suspended in a
spherical dip, close to the wall, is discussed. This setup is in principle
directly accessible to experiment. The sphere and the substrate are assumed to
be made of the same perfectly conducting material.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure; to appear in J. Phys. A: Math. Ge
3',5'-Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate- and Ca2+-Calmodulin-Dependent Endogenous Protein Phosphorylation Activity in Membranes of the Bovine Chromaffin Secretory Vesicles: Identification of Two Phosphorylated Components as Tyrosine Hydroxylase and Protein Kinase Regulatory Subunit Type II
Abstract: Membranes of the secretory vesicles from bovine adrenal medulla were investigated for the presence of the endogenous protein phosphorylation activity. Seven phosphoprotein bands in the molecular weight range of 250,000 to 30,000 were observed by means of the sodium dodecyl sulphate electrophoresis and autoradiography. On the basis of the criteria of molecular weight, selective stimulation of the phosphorylation by cyclic AMP (as compared with cyclic GMP) and immunoprecipitation by specific antibodies, band 5 (molecular weight 60,300) was found to represent the phosphorylated form of the secretory vesicle-bound tyrosine hydroxylase. The electrophoretic mobility, the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of cyclic AMP in presence of Mg2+ and Zn,2+ respectively, and immunoreactivity toward antibodies showed band 6 to contain two forms of the regulatory subunits of the type II cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, distinguishable by their molecular weights (56,000 and 52,000, respectively). Phosphorylation of band 7 (molecular weight 29,800) was stimulated about 2 to 3 times by Ca2+ and calmodulin in the concentration range of both agents believed to occur in the secretory tissues under physiological conditions
Physical activity attenuates postprandial hyperglycaemia in homozygous TBC1D4 loss-of-function mutation carriers
Aims/hypothesis
The common muscle-specific TBC1D4 p.Arg684Ter loss-of-function variant defines a subtype of non-autoimmune diabetes in Arctic populations. Homozygous carriers are characterised by elevated postprandial glucose and insulin levels. Because 3.8% of the Greenlandic population are homozygous carriers, it is important to explore possibilities for precision medicine. We aimed to investigate whether physical activity attenuates the effect of this variant on 2 h plasma glucose levels after an oral glucose load.
Methods
In a Greenlandic population cohort (nâ=â2655), 2 h plasma glucose levels were obtained after an OGTT, physical activity was estimated as physical activity energy expenditure and TBC1D4 genotype was determined. We performed TBC1D4âphysical activity interaction analysis, applying a linear mixed model to correct for genetic admixture and relatedness.
Results
Physical activity was inversely associated with 2 h plasma glucose levels (β[main effect of physical activity] â0.0033 [mmol/l] / [kJ kgâ1 dayâ1], pâ=â6.5âĂâ10â5), and significantly more so among homozygous carriers of the TBC1D4 risk variant compared with heterozygous carriers and non-carriers (β[interaction] â0.015 [mmol/l] / [kJ kgâ1 dayâ1], pâ=â0.0085). The estimated effect size suggests that 1 h of vigorous physical activity per day (compared with resting) reduces 2 h plasma glucose levels by an additional ~0.7 mmol/l in homozygous carriers of the risk variant.
Conclusions/interpretation
Physical activity improves glucose homeostasis particularly in homozygous TBC1D4 risk variant carriers via a skeletal muscle TBC1 domain family member 4-independent pathway. This provides a rationale to implement physical activity as lifestyle precision medicine in Arctic populations.
Data repository
The Greenlandic Cardio-Metabochip data for the Inuit Health in Transition study has been deposited at the European Genome-phenome Archive (https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ega/dacs/EGAC00001000736) under accession EGAD00010001428
Magnetoplasmons in quantum rings
We have studied the structure and dipole charge density response of nanorings
as a function of the magnetic field using local-spin density functional theory.
Two small rings consisting of 12 and 22 electrons confined by a positively
charged background are used to represent the cases of a narrow and a wide ring.
The results are qualitatively compared with experimental data existing on
microrings and on antidots. A smaller ring containing 5 electrons is also
analyzed to allow for a closer comparison with a recent experiment on a two
electron quantum ring.Comment: Typeset using Revtex, 13 pages and 11 Postscript figure
Orthopaedic registries with patient-reported outcome measures
⢠Total joint arthroplasty is performed to decreased pain, restore function and productivity and improve quality of life.
⢠One-year implant survivorship following surgery is nearly 100%; however, self-reported satisfaction is 80% after total knee arthroplasty and 90% after total hip arthroplasty.
⢠Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are produced by patients reporting on their own health status directly without interpretation from a surgeon or other medical professional; a PRO measure (PROM) is a tool, often a questionnaire, that measures different aspects of patient-related outcomes.
⢠Generic PROs are related to a patientâs general health and quality of life, whereas a specific PRO is focused on a particular disease, symptom or anatomical region.
⢠While revision surgery is the traditional endpoint of registries, it is blunt and likely insufficient as a measure of success; PROMs address this shortcoming by expanding beyond survival and measuring outcomes that are relevant to patients â relief of pain, restoration of function and improvement in quality of life.
⢠PROMs are increasing in use in many national and regional orthopaedic arthroplasty registries.
⢠PROMs data can provide important information on value-based care, support quality assurance and improvement initiatives, help refine surgical indications and may improve shared decision-making and surgical timing.
⢠There are several practical considerations that need to be considered when implementing PROMs collection, as the undertaking itself may be expensive, a burden to the patient, as well as being time and labour intensive
Partial-wave analysis of the eta pi+ pi- system produced in the reaction pi-p --> eta pi+ pi- n at 18 GeV/c
A partial-wave analysis of 9082 eta pi+ pi- n events produced in the reaction
pi- p --> eta pi+ pi- n at 18.3 GeV/c has been carried out using data from
experiment 852 at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The data are dominated by
J^{PC} = 0^{-+} partial waves consistent with observation of the eta(1295) and
the eta(1440). The mass and width of the eta(1295) were determined to be 1282
+- 5 MeV and 66 +- 13 Mev respectively while the eta(1440) was observed with a
mass of 1404 +- 6 MeV and width of 80 +- 21 MeV. Other partial waves of
importance include the 1++ and the 1+- waves. Results of the partial wave
analysis are combined with results of other experiments to estimate f1(1285)
branching fractions. These values are considerably different from current
values determined without the aid of amplitude analyses.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure
The role of income inequality and social policies on income-related health inequalities in Europe
INTRODUCTION: The aim of the paper is to examine the role of income inequality and redistribution for income-related health inequalities in Europe. This paper contributes in two ways to the literature on macro determinants of socio-economic inequalities in health. First, it widens the distinctive focus of the research field on welfare state regimes to quantifiable measures such as social policy indicators. Second, looking at income differences completes studies on socio-economic health inequalities, which often analyse health inequalities based on educational differences. METHODS: Using data from the European Values Study (2008/2009), 42 European countries are available for analysis. Country characteristics are derived from SWIID, Eurostat, and ILO and include indicators for income inequality, social policies, and economic performance. The data is analysed by using a two-step hierarchical estimation approach: At the first stepâthe individual levelâthe effect of household income on self-assessed health is extracted and introduced as an indicator measuring income-related health inequalities at the second step, the country-level. RESULTS: Individual-level analyses reveal that income-related health inequalities exist all across Europe. Results from country-level analyses show that higher income inequality is significantly positively related to higher health inequalities while social policies do not show significant relations. Nevertheless, the results show the expected negative association between social policies and health inequalities. Economic performance also has a reducing influence on health inequalities. In all models, income inequality was the dominating explanatory effect for health inequalities. CONCLUSIONS: The analyses indicate that income inequality has more impact on health inequalities than social policies. On the contrary, social policies seemed to matter to all individuals regardless of socio-economic position since it is significantly positively linked to overall population health. Even though social policies are not significantly related to health inequalities, the power of public redistribution to impact health inequalities should not be downplayed. Social policies as a way of public redistribution are a possible instrument to reduce income inequalities which would in turn lead to a reduction in health inequalities
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