406 research outputs found

    Compression ultrasonography for false femoral artery aneurysms: Hypocoagulability is a cause of failure

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    Objectives:false femoral artery aneurysm is an occasional complication of percutaneous cardiovascular radiological procedures. Compression ultrasonography causes thrombosis non-invasively, reducing need for operative intervention. The technique fails in a proportion of cases. Analysis was undertaken to identify causes of failure.Design:prospective open study.Materials and Methods:patients presenting with false femoral artery aneurysm since 1984 were identified from a computerised database (BIPAS). Since 1993 compression ultrasonography has been performed as first line treatment according to a standard protocol. Prospectively collected ultrasonographic data and case notes were reviewed to identify causes of failed compression.Results:false femoral artery aneurysm occurred as a complication in 32/26 687 (0.12%) cardiovascular radiological procedures. Eighteen aneurysms were treated by compression. The technique was successful in 11/18 (61%) cases but primary failure occurred in seven cases. Six out of seven had bleeding abnormalities (Chi-squared analysis with Yates correction 10.55, p=0.0012), four were anticoagulated and compression was subsequently successful following reversal of warfarin therapy in three of these patients. In 4/18 cases surgical repair was necessary.Conclusions:compression ultrasonography is an effective treatment of false femoral aneurysms, however, hypocoagulability is a significant cause of failure. For patients in whom anticoagulation cannot be reversed, primary surgical repair should be considered

    The Psychiatry Access Center: A New Opportunity for Innovative Residency Training

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    A recently introduced PGY-1 rotation in an innovative, managed care oriented program offers many training advantages for residents. The rotation offers first-year residents intensive interviewing-skills training, experience with obtaining and documenting the psychiatric history and physical examination, and in the process, offers early exposure to a managed care environment. The Psychiatry Access Center employs non-resident clinicians to perform urgent evaluations and all admissions to the main psychiatric hospital. The service has been tested successfully without requiring resident work, and therefore allows the integration of residents into the system via a new rotation designed to focus exclusively on educational needs

    Axonal Preservation in Deep Subcortical White Matter Lesions in the Ageing Brain

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    Cerebral white matters lesions (WML) are seen in 94% of the population aged 64 and over and are associated with cognitive decline and depression. We used immunohistochemistry and stereological methods on post mortem brain samples derived from the Medical Research Council Cognitive Function and Ageing Study (MRC-CFAS) cohort to investigate the axonal density within deep subcortical lesions. There was no significant difference between the lesional and control white matter, therefore, we conclude that there is axonal preservation within these lesions that are characterized by demyelination

    Observational consequences of the Standard Model Higgs inflation variants

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    We consider the possibility to observationally differentiate the Standard Model (SM) Higgs driven inflation with non-minimal couplingto gravity from other variants of SM Higgs inflation based on the scalar field theories with non-canonical kinetic term such as Galileon-like kinetic term and kinetic term with non-minimal derivative coupling to the Einstein tensor. In order to ensure consistent results, we study the SM Higgs inflation variants by using the same method, computing the full dynamics of the background and perturbations of the Higgs field during inflation at quantum level. Assuming that all the SM Higgs inflation variants are consistent theories, we use the MCMC technique to derive constraints on the inflationnoary parameters and the Higgs boson mass from their fit to WMAP7+SN+BAO data set. We conclude that a combination of a Higgs mass measurement by the LHC and accurate determination by the PLANCK satellite of the spectral index of curvature perturbations and tensor-to-scalar ratio will enable to distinguish among these models. We also show that the consistency relations of the SM Higgs inflation variants are distinct enough to differentiate the models.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figure

    Study of BDπB\to D^{**} \pi decays

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    We investigate the production of the novel PP-wave mesons D0D^{*}_{0} and D1(D1)D^{\prime}_{1} (D_{1}), identified as JP=0+J^{P}=0^+ and 1+1^+, in heavy BB meson decays, respectively. With the heavy quark limit, we give our modelling wave functions for the scalar meson D0D^{*}_{0}. Based on the assumptions of color transparency and factorization theorem, we estimate the branching ratios of BD0πB\to D^{*}_{0} \pi decays in terms of the obtained wave functions. Some remarks on D1()D^{(\prime)}_{1} productions are also presented.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, Revtex4, to be published in Phys. Rev.

    Longitudinal measures of RNA expression and disease activity in FSHD muscle biopsies

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    Advances in understanding the pathophysiology of facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD) have led to the discovery of candidate therapeutics, and it is important to identify markers of disease activity to inform clinical trial design. For drugs that inhibit DUX4 expression, measuring DUX4 or DUX4-target gene expression might be an interim measure of drug activity; however, only a subset of FHSD muscle biopsies shows evidence of DUX4 expression. Our prior study showed that MRI T2-STIR-positive muscles had a higher probability of showing DUX4 expression than muscles with normal MRI characteristics. In the current study, we performed a 1-year follow-up assessment of the same muscle with repeat MRI and muscle biopsy. There was little change in MRI characteristics over the 1-year period and, similar to the initial evaluation, MRI T2-STIR-postive muscles had a higher expression of DUX4-regulated genes, as well as genes associated with inflammation, extracellular matrix and cell cycle. Compared to the initial evaluation, overall the level of expression in these gene categories remained stable over the 1-year period; however, there was some variability for each individual muscle biopsied. The pooled data from both the initial and 1-year follow-up evaluations identified several FSHD subgroups based on gene expression, as well as a set of genes-composed of DUX4-target genes, inflammatory and immune genes and cell cycle control genes-that distinguished all of the FSHD samples from the controls. These candidate markers of disease activity need to be replicated in independent datasets and, if validated, may provide useful measures of disease progression and response to therapy.Functional Genomics of Muscle, Nerve and Brain Disorder

    Our friend in the north: the origins, evolution and appeal of the cult of St Duthac of Tain in later Middle Ages

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    St Duthac of Tain was one of the most popular Scottish saints of the later middle ages. From the late fourteenth century until the reformation devotion to Duthac outstripped that of Andrew, Columba, Margaret and Mungo, and Duthac's shrine in Easter Ross became a regular haunt of James IV (1488-1513) and James V (1513-42). Hitherto historians have tacitly accepted the view of David McRoberts that Duthac was one of several local saints whose emergence and popularity in the fifteenth century was part of a wider self-consciously nationalist trend in Scottish religious practice. This study looks beyond the paradigm of nationalism to trace and explain the popularity of St Duthac from the shadowy origins of the cult to its heyday in the early sixteenth century

    The composition of the protosolar disk and the formation conditions for comets

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    Conditions in the protosolar nebula have left their mark in the composition of cometary volatiles, thought to be some of the most pristine material in the solar system. Cometary compositions represent the end point of processing that began in the parent molecular cloud core and continued through the collapse of that core to form the protosun and the solar nebula, and finally during the evolution of the solar nebula itself as the cometary bodies were accreting. Disentangling the effects of the various epochs on the final composition of a comet is complicated. But comets are not the only source of information about the solar nebula. Protostellar disks around young stars similar to the protosun provide a way of investigating the evolution of disks similar to the solar nebula while they are in the process of evolving to form their own solar systems. In this way we can learn about the physical and chemical conditions under which comets formed, and about the types of dynamical processing that shaped the solar system we see today. This paper summarizes some recent contributions to our understanding of both cometary volatiles and the composition, structure and evolution of protostellar disks.Comment: To appear in Space Science Reviews. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11214-015-0167-

    Search for direct production of charginos and neutralinos in events with three leptons and missing transverse momentum in √s = 7 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector

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    A search for the direct production of charginos and neutralinos in final states with three electrons or muons and missing transverse momentum is presented. The analysis is based on 4.7 fb−1 of proton–proton collision data delivered by the Large Hadron Collider and recorded with the ATLAS detector. Observations are consistent with Standard Model expectations in three signal regions that are either depleted or enriched in Z-boson decays. Upper limits at 95% confidence level are set in R-parity conserving phenomenological minimal supersymmetric models and in simplified models, significantly extending previous results
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