40 research outputs found

    The lipopolysaccharide model for the experimental induction of transient lameness and synovitis in Standardbred horses

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    An established lipopolysaccharide (LPS) model previously described in Warmbloods, was inconsistent in Standardbred horses, where lameness was not detected despite the presence of synovitis. The present study aimed to determine the dose of LPS from E. coli O55:B5 required to induce mild to moderate lameness following middle carpal joint injection in Standardbred horses and to quantitate the induced lameness over time, with and without anti-inflammatory pre-treatment. In a baseline trial, eight healthy, clinically sound Standardbred horses were used in a rule-based dose-escalation design trial, starting at a dose of 10 endotoxin units (EU). Lameness at trot was evaluated visually and quantitatively (using an inertial-sensor system and pressure plate analysis). Synovial fluid aspirates were analysed for total nucleated cell counts, total protein and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2). Following 2 months wash-out, the effective LPS-dose determined in the baseline trial was used to evaluate the effect of anti-inflammatory treatment. A mixed model for repeated measures with horse as random effect was used for analysis. After injection of 10 EU LPS, the desired degree of lameness was observed in the baseline trial, with maximal lameness at post-injection hour (PIH) 4, followed by a rapid decline and return to baseline by PIH 48. No lameness was observed following pre-treatment with meloxicam. In synovial fluid, PGE2 was significantly higher at PIH 8 and PIH 24 in the baseline trial compared with following meloxicam pre-treatment. In conclusion, injection of the middle carpal joint with 10 EU LPS consistently induces a transient lameness and synovitis in Standardbred horses

    The Physics of the B Factories

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    Symbolic Processing Of Poisson Series On A Hypercube Parallel Computer

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    In this report parallelization of a special-purpose computer algebra system, operating on Poisson series, is considered. The implementations dealing with parallelism on different levels have been performed on an nCUBE2 parallel computer. Application test problems in this work concern the computation of normal forms of ODEs. Algorithmical details and performance results (in terms of speed-up and efficiency) are presented. Keywords: computer algebra, formula manipulation, Poisson series, normal form of ODEs, parallel processing, hypercubes 1 Introduction Computer algebra algorithms often require a lot of computing time; it is therefore an important issue to try to parallelize such algorithms. We describe here the parallelization of a special purpose computer algebra system on an nCUBE2 parallel computer. The main purpose of this report is to show that parallelization can be implemented at the level of the elementary operations of the computer algebra system and more efficiently at the l..

    Twice weekly vs. daily chemotherapy for childhood tuberculosis

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    Background. Treating childhood tuberculosis places a large burden on health services, and ways of lessening this were sought. Methods. A randomized controlled trial was conducted to determine the effectiveness of fully intermittent twice weekly treatment for intrathoracic childhood tuberculosis and its effect on adherence to treatment, in comparison with daily (weekday) treatment. The setting was a district of Cape Town, South Africa, an area of high incident tuberculosis. We randomized 206 children with confirmed (4%), probable (94%) and suspected (2%) intrathoracic tuberculosis: 89 (median age, 25 months) received intermittent treatment; and 117 (median age, 28 months) received daily treatment. Intermittent treatment (twice weekly for 6 months) was isoniazid 15 mg/kg/dose, rifampin 15 mg/kg/dose and pyrazinamide 55 mg/kg/dose for 2 months, followed by isoniazid and rifampin only for 4 months. Daily treatment was isoniazid 10 mg/kg/day, rifampin 10 mg/kg/day and pyrazinamide 25 mg/kg/day on weekdays for 6 months. Results. At 6 months 97% of subjects were discharged, with treatment outcomes in the two groups equivalent at that time (P = 0.90) and at the 18- to 30- month follow-up. One relapse occurred in the twice weekly group (P = 0.25). Adherence was equivalent; 70 children (79%) on intermittent and 90 (77%) on daily treatment took 75% or more of the prescribed doses (P = 0.90). Nonadherence over the full course of therapy was significantly associated with nonadherence during the first month of treatment (P = 0.0002) and household crowding (P = 0.002). Conclusions. Six month fully intermittent antituberculosis treatment is an effective and acceptable alternative to daily treatment.Articl
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