142 research outputs found

    Switching to nevirapine-based HAART in virologically-suppressed patients: influence of a longer twice-daily induction period on once-a-day dosing

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    We are conducting a multicenter, randomized, controlled, prospective, open trial to evaluate both the efficacy and toxicity of nevirapine (NVP) (given twice [BID] or once daily [QD]) in virologically-suppressed patients on a PIbased HAART. NVP BID dosing is maintained for 2 months after the switch in both groups

    Well-width dependence of exciton-phonon scattering in InxGa1 - xAs/GaAs single quantum wells

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    The temperature and density dependencies of the exciton dephasing time in In0.18Ga0.82As/GaAs single quantum wells with different thicknesses have been measured by degenerate four-wave mixing. The exciton-phonon scattering contribution to the dephasing is isolated by extrapolating the dephasing rate to zero-exciton density. From the temperature dependence of this rate we have deduced the linewidth broadening coefficients for acoustic and optical phonons. We find acoustic-phonon coefficients that increase from 1.6 to 3 μeV/K when increasing the well width from 1 to 4 nm. This is in quantitative agreement with theoretical predictions when the spatial extension of the exciton wave function, strongly penetrating into the GaAs barrier in thin InxGa1-xAs quantum wells, is taken into account. The optical-phonon coefficient does not show a systematic dependence on well thickness, and is comparable with the value for bulk GaAs

    A Prognostic Model for Estimating the Time to Virologic Failure in HIV-1 Infected Patients Undergoing a New Combination Antiretroviral Therapy Regimen

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>HIV-1 genotypic susceptibility scores (GSSs) were proven to be significant prognostic factors of fixed time-point virologic outcomes after combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) switch/initiation. However, their relative-hazard for the time to virologic failure has not been thoroughly investigated, and an expert system that is able to predict how long a new cART regimen will remain effective has never been designed.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We analyzed patients of the Italian ARCA cohort starting a new cART from 1999 onwards either after virologic failure or as treatment-naïve. The time to virologic failure was the endpoint, from the 90<sup>th </sup>day after treatment start, defined as the first HIV-1 RNA > 400 copies/ml, censoring at last available HIV-1 RNA before treatment discontinuation. We assessed the relative hazard/importance of GSSs according to distinct interpretation systems (Rega, ANRS and HIVdb) and other covariates by means of Cox regression and random survival forests (RSF). Prediction models were validated via the bootstrap and c-index measure.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The dataset included 2337 regimens from 2182 patients, of which 733 were previously treatment-naïve. We observed 1067 virologic failures over 2820 persons-years. Multivariable analysis revealed that low GSSs of cART were independently associated with the hazard of a virologic failure, along with several other covariates. Evaluation of predictive performance yielded a modest ability of the Cox regression to predict the virologic endpoint (c-index≈0.70), while RSF showed a better performance (c-index≈0.73, p < 0.0001 vs. Cox regression). Variable importance according to RSF was concordant with the Cox hazards.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>GSSs of cART and several other covariates were investigated using linear and non-linear survival analysis. RSF models are a promising approach for the development of a reliable system that predicts time to virologic failure better than Cox regression. Such models might represent a significant improvement over the current methods for monitoring and optimization of cART.</p

    Oral l-menthol reduces thermal sensation, increases work-rate and extends time to exhaustion, in the heat at a fixed rating of perceived exertion

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    PurposeThe study investigated the effect of a non-thermal cooling agent, l-menthol, on exercise at a fixed subjective rating of perceived exertion (RPE) in a hot environment.MethodEight male participants completed two trials at an exercise intensity between ‘hard’ and ‘very hard’, equating to 16 on the RPE scale at ~35 °C. Participants were instructed to continually adjust their power output to maintain an RPE of 16 throughout the exercise trial, stopping once power output had fallen by 30%. In a randomized crossover design, either l-menthol or placebo mouthwash was administered prior to exercise and at 10 min intervals. Power output, VO2, heart rate, core and skin temperature was monitored, alongside thermal sensation and thermal comfort. Isokinetic peak power sprints were conducted prior to and immediately after the fixed RPE trial.ResultsExercise time was greater (23:23 ± 3:36 vs. 21:44 ± 2:32 min; P = 0.049) and average power output increased (173 ± 24 vs. 167 ± 24 W; P = 0.044) in the l-menthol condition. Peak isokinetic sprint power declined from pre-post trial in the l-menthol l (9.0%; P = 0.015) but not in the placebo condition (3.4%; P = 0.275). Thermal sensation was lower in the l-menthol condition (P = 0.036), despite no changes in skin or core temperature (P > 0.05).Conclusion These results indicate that a non-thermal cooling mouth rinse lowered thermal sensation, resulting in an elevated work rate, which extended exercise time in the heat at a fixed RPE

    Group I afferent fibers: effects on cardiorespiratory system

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    Il panorama internazionale dell’epidemia : il rischio di AIDS nel Viaggiatore Internazionale

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    Vengono descritte le caratteristiche epidemiologiche della infezione da HIV in ambito internazionale, nazionale e regional

    Position/attitude control of a jet-propelled surface-vessel prototype via the simplex-vector sliding-mode approach

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    This note concerns the design and implementation of a position/attitude sliding-mode controller for a surface vessel prototype. The prototype is equipped with a special, recently patented (V. Arrichiello, et al., 2005), propulsion system based on hydrojets with variable output section. The sliding mode control design is based on the vector simplex method (G, Bartolini, et al., 1997). First we describe the structure and the working principle of the prototype. Then, we present an approximate dynamic model and describe the detailed derivation of the motion controller. Finally, the major implementation issues are discussed and some experimental results are shown

    Load swing damping in overhead cranes by sliding mode technique

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    Moving a suspended load is not an easy task when strict specifications on the swing angle and on the transfer time need to be satisfied. Nevertheless, these type of requirements are always present in industry because they are related to operation safety and cost. Intuitively, minimizing the cycle time and the load swing are conflicting requirements, and their satisfaction requires proper control actions, especially if some uncertainties in the system dynamics are present. In this paper we propose a simple control scheme based on second order sliding modes which is proved to be effective also in the case of poor knowledge of the system dynamics and/or parameters. Such controller has been tested on a laboratory-size model of an overhead crane by means of commercial devices, and some experimental results are reported within the paper
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