4,959 research outputs found
NONLINEAR ROSSBY ADJUSTMENT IN A CHANNEL - BEYOND KELVIN WAVES
Nonlinear advective adjustment of a discontinuity in free-surface height under gravity and rotation is considered, using the method of contour dynamics. After linear wave-adjustment has set up an interior jet and boundary currents in a wide ([dbl greater-than sign] one Rossby radius) channel, fluid surges down-channel on both walls, rather than only that wall supporting a down-channel Kelvin wave. A wedgelike intrusion of low potential vorticity fluid on this wall, and a noselike intrusion of such fluid on the opposite wall, serve to reverse the sign of relative vorticity in the pre-existing currents. For narrower channels, a coherent boundary-trapped structure of low potential vorticity fluid is ejected at one wall, and shoots ahead of its parent fluid. The initial tendency for the current to concentrate on the ‘right-hand’ wall (the one supporting a down-channel Kelvin wave in the northern hemisphere) is defeated as vorticity advection shifts the maximum to the left-hand side. Ultimately fluid washes downstream everywhere across even wide channels, leaving the linearly adjusted upstream condition as the final state. The time necessary for this to occur grows exponentially with channel width. The width of small-amplitude boundary currents in linear theory is equal to Rossby's deformation radius, yet here we find that the width of the variation in velocity and potential vorticity fields deviates from this scale across a large region of space and time. Comparisons of the contour dynamics solutions, valid for small amplitude, and integration of the shallow-water equations at large amplitude, show great similarity. Boundary friction strongly modifies these results, producing fields more closely resembling the linear wave-adjusted state. Observed features include those suggestive of coastally trapped gravity currents. Analytical results for the evolution of vorticity fronts near boundaries are given in support of the numerical experiments
Long-term efficacy and safety of dichlorphenamide for treatment of primary periodic paralysis
Introduction/Aim:
Long-term efficacy and safety of dichlorphenamide (DCP) were characterized in patients with primary periodic paralysis (PPP).
Methods:
Patients with PPP in a double-blind, placebo-controlled study were randomly assigned to receive DCP 50 mg twice daily or placebo for 9 weeks, followed by a 52-week open-label DCP treatment phase (DCP/DCP and placebo/DCP populations). Efficacy (attack rate, severity-weighted attack rate) and safety were assessed in patients completing the study (61 weeks). In this post hoc analysis, efficacy and safety data were pooled from hyperkalemic and hypokalemic substudies.
Results:
Sixty-three adults (age, 19-76 years) completed the double-blind phase; 47 (74.6%) of these patients completed 61 weeks. There were median decreases in weekly attack and severity-weighted attack rates from baseline to week 61 (DCP/DCP [n = 25], −1.00 [P < .0001]; placebo/DCP [n = 20], −0.63 [P = .01] and DCP/DCP, −2.25 [P < .0001]; placebo/DCP, −1.69 [P = .01]). Relatively smaller median decreases in weekly attack and severity-weighted attack rates occurred from weeks 9 to 61 among patients receiving DCP continuously (n = 26; −0.14 [P = .1] and −0.24 [P = .09]) than among those switching from placebo to DCP after 9 weeks (n = 16; −1.04 [P = .049] and −2.72 [P = .08]). Common adverse events (AEs) were paresthesia and cognition-related events, which typically first occurred within 1 month of blinded treatment initiation and in rare cases led to treatment discontinuation. Dose reductions were frequently associated with common AE resolution.
Discussion:
One-year open-label DCP treatment after a 9-week randomized, controlled study confirmed long-term DCP remains safe and effective for chronic use. Tolerability issues (paresthesia, cognition-related AEs) were manageable in most patients
Engineering self-organising helium bubble lattices in tungsten
The self-organisation of void and gas bubbles in solids into a superlattices is an intriguing nanoscale phenomenon. Despite the discovery of these lattices 30 years ago, the atomistics behind the ordering mechanisms responsible for the formation of these nanostructures are yet to be fully elucidated. Here we report on the direct observation via transmission electron microscopy of the formation of bubble lattices under He+ ion bombardment. By careful control of the irradiation conditions, it has been possible to engineer the bubble size and spacing of the superlattice leading to important conclusions about the significance of vacancy supply in determining the physical characteristics of the system. Furthermore, no bubble lattice alignment was observed in the directions pointing to a key driving mechanism for the formation of these ordered nanostructures being the two-dimensional diffusion of self-interstitial atoms
Effect of tacrolimus (FK506) in dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa: rationale and preliminary results.
Comparing High Dimensional Word Embeddings Trained on Medical Text to Bag-of-Words For Predicting Medical Codes
Word embeddings are a useful tool for extracting knowledge from the free-form text contained in electronic health records, but it has become commonplace to train such word embeddings on data that do not accurately reflect how language is used in a healthcare context. We use prediction of medical codes as an example application to compare the accuracy of word embeddings trained on health corpora to those trained on more general collections of text. It is shown that both an increase in embedding dimensionality and an increase in the volume of health-related training data improves prediction accuracy. We also present a comparison to the traditional bag-of-words feature representation, demonstrating that in many cases, this conceptually simple method for representing text results in superior accuracy to that of word embeddings
Profiles of physical, emotional and psychosocial wellbeing in the Lothian birth cohort 1936
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Physical, emotional, and psychosocial wellbeing are important domains of function. The aims of this study were to explore the existence of separable groups among 70-year olds with scores representing physical function, perceived quality of life, and emotional wellbeing, and to characterise any resulting groups using demographic, personality, cognition, health and lifestyle variables.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We used latent class analysis (LCA) to identify possible groups.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Results suggested there were 5 groups. These included High (n = 515, 47.2% of the sample), Average (n = 417, 38.3%), and Poor Wellbeing (n = 37, 3.4%) groups. The two other groups had contrasting patterns of wellbeing: one group scored relatively well on physical function, but low on emotional wellbeing (Good Fitness/ Low Spirits,n = 60, 5.5%), whereas the other group showed low physical function but relatively well emotional wellbeing (Low Fitness/Good Spirits, n = 62, 5.7%). Salient characteristics that distinguished all the groups included smoking and drinking behaviours, personality, and illness.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Despite there being some evidence of these groups, the results also support a largely one-dimensional construct of wellbeing in old age—for the domains assessed here—though with some evidence that some individuals have uneven profiles.</p
Predicting Multiple ICD-10 Codes from Brazilian-Portuguese Clinical Notes
ICD coding from electronic clinical records is a manual, time-consuming and
expensive process. Code assignment is, however, an important task for billing
purposes and database organization. While many works have studied the problem
of automated ICD coding from free text using machine learning techniques, most
use records in the English language, especially from the MIMIC-III public
dataset. This work presents results for a dataset with Brazilian Portuguese
clinical notes. We develop and optimize a Logistic Regression model, a
Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), a Gated Recurrent Unit Neural Network and a
CNN with Attention (CNN-Att) for prediction of diagnosis ICD codes. We also
report our results for the MIMIC-III dataset, which outperform previous work
among models of the same families, as well as the state of the art. Compared to
MIMIC-III, the Brazilian Portuguese dataset contains far fewer words per
document, when only discharge summaries are used. We experiment concatenating
additional documents available in this dataset, achieving a great boost in
performance. The CNN-Att model achieves the best results on both datasets, with
micro-averaged F1 score of 0.537 on MIMIC-III and 0.485 on our dataset with
additional documents.Comment: Accepted at BRACIS 202
Multiscale molecular profiling of pathological bone resolves sexually dimorphic control of extracellular matrix composition.
Collagen assembly during development is essential for successful matrix mineralisation, which determines bone quality and mechanocompetence. However, the biochemical and structural perturbations that drive pathological skeletal collagen configuration remain unclear. Deletion of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in bone forming osteoblasts (OBs) induces sex-specific alterations in extracellular matrix (ECM) conformation and mineralisation coupled to vascular changes, which are augmented in males. Whether this phenotypic dimorphism arises as a result of the divergent control of ECM composition and its subsequent arrangement is unknown and is the focus of this study. Herein, we have used a murine osteocalcin-specific Vegf knockout (OcnVEGFKO) and performed ex vivo multiscale analysis at the tibiofibular junction of both sexes. Furthermore, we also deleted Vegf in vitro in OBs extracted from male and female mice in an attempt to link sex-specific matrix signatures to deviations in gene expression. Label-free and non-destructive polarisation-resolved second harmonic generation microscopy (p-SHG) revealed a reduction in collagen fibre number in males following the loss of VEGF, complemented by observable defects in matrix organisation by backscattered electron scanning electron microscopy. This was accompanied only in males by localised divergence in collagen orientation, determined by p-SHG anisotropy measurements, as a result of OcnVEGFKO. Raman spectroscopy confirmed the effect on collagen was linked to molecular dimorphic VEGF effects on collagen-specific proline and hydroxyproline, and collagen intra-stand stability, in addition to matrix carbonation and mineralisation. Vegf deletion in male and female murine OB cultures in vitro further highlighted divergence in genes regulating local ECM structure including Adamts2, Spp1, Mmp9 and Lama1 The current results demonstrate the utility of macromolecular imaging and spectroscopic modalities for the detection of collagen arrangement and ECM composition in pathological bone. Linking the sex-specific genetic regulators to matrix signatures could be important for treatment of dimorphic bone disorders which clinically manifest in both pathological nano and macro-level disorganisation
Nanoantenna-enhanced ultrafast nonlinear spectroscopy of a single gold nanoparticle
Optical nanoantennas are a novel tool to investigate previously unattainable
dimensions in the nanocosmos. Just like their radio-frequency equivalents,
nanoantennas enhance the light-matter interaction in their feed gap. Antenna
enhancement of small signals promises to open a new regime in linear and
nonlinear spectroscopy on the nanoscale. Without antennas especially the
nonlinear spectroscopy of single nanoobjects is very demanding. Here, we
present for the first time antenna-enhanced ultrafast nonlinear optical
spectroscopy. In particular, we utilize the antenna to determine the nonlinear
transient absorption signal of a single gold nanoparticle caused by mechanical
breathing oscillations. We increase the signal amplitude by an order of
magnitude which is in good agreement with our analytical and numerical models.
Our method will find applications in linear and nonlinear spectroscopy of
nanoobjects, ranging from single protein binding events via nonlinear tensor
elements to the limits of continuum mechanics
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