1,259 research outputs found

    A Low-Cost Small Satellite Space Radar System

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    The advantages of space-based radar have been frequently noted for such applications as environmental monitoring, crop detection, soil-moisture determination, coastal ice measurement, and all-weather surveillance, to name just a few. The FLAPSTM ( Flat Parabolic Surface ) antenna technology developed by Malibu Research, enables the conception of a smallsatellite radar system. The design described in this paper is that of a lightweight surveillance satellite capable of being launched on a Pegasus booster. It is capable of detecting small ships and aircraft, such as may be required for drug-interdiction missions and other all-weather surveillance applications. The FLAPSTM antenna has many of the features of a phased array antenna at a small fraction of the cost or mass ordinarily associated with phased arrays. Moreover, a FLAPSTM antenna can be folded or rolled and stowed in a variety of ways to enhance the possibility of fitting within the limited volume available in a small ELV. We describe approaches to packaging and deployment of such an antenna, and the mating of these assemblies to a Fairchild-developed small satellite, and to the Pegasus air-launched vehicle. The satellite features a fiber-optic data bus, and the integration of an on-board processor with a solid-state recorder as has been provided to NASA for its recently launched Small Explorer satellite

    Electroencephalographic density spectral array monitoring during propofol/sevoflurane coadministration in children, an exploratory observational study

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    Introduction: Propofol and sevoflurane have a long history in pediatric anesthesia. Combining both drugs at low dose levels offers new opportunities. However, monitoring the hypnotic effects of this drug combination in children is challenging, because the currently available processed EEG-based systems are insufficiently validated in young children and the co-administration of anesthetics. This study investigated electroencephalographic density spectral array monitoring during propofol/sevoflurane coadministration with fixed sevoflurane- and variable propofol dosages. Patients and methods: We analyzed the density spectral array pattern recorded during propofol/sevoflurane anesthesia in pediatric patients from birth to 11 years of age. Data from 78 patients were suitable for analysis. The primary outcome parameter of this study was the correlation between variable propofol dosages and the expression of the four electroencephalogram frequency bands Ī², Ī±, Īø, and Ī“. The main secondary outcome parameters were the intra-operative total EEG power and the prevalence of burst suppression. Results: In patients above the age of 1 year, a dose-dependent correlation between the propofol dosage and the relative percentage of Ī² (āˆ’12.2%, p &lt; 0.001) and Ī“ (5.1%, p &lt; 0.001) was found. There was an age-dependent trend toward increasing mean EEG power, with the most significant increase in the first year of life. In 14.1% of our patients, at least one episode of burst suppression occurred. Conclusion: DSA-guided augmentation of propofol anesthesia with sevoflurane provides sufficient depth of anesthesia at doses usually considered sub-anesthetic in children, leading to less anesthetic drug exposure for the individual child.</p

    Electroencephalographic density spectral array monitoring during propofol/sevoflurane coadministration in children, an exploratory observational study

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    Introduction: Propofol and sevoflurane have a long history in pediatric anesthesia. Combining both drugs at low dose levels offers new opportunities. However, monitoring the hypnotic effects of this drug combination in children is challenging, because the currently available processed EEG-based systems are insufficiently validated in young children and the co-administration of anesthetics. This study investigated electroencephalographic density spectral array monitoring during propofol/sevoflurane coadministration with fixed sevoflurane- and variable propofol dosages. Patients and methods: We analyzed the density spectral array pattern recorded during propofol/sevoflurane anesthesia in pediatric patients from birth to 11 years of age. Data from 78 patients were suitable for analysis. The primary outcome parameter of this study was the correlation between variable propofol dosages and the expression of the four electroencephalogram frequency bands Ī², Ī±, Īø, and Ī“. The main secondary outcome parameters were the intra-operative total EEG power and the prevalence of burst suppression. Results: In patients above the age of 1 year, a dose-dependent correlation between the propofol dosage and the relative percentage of Ī² (āˆ’12.2%, p &lt; 0.001) and Ī“ (5.1%, p &lt; 0.001) was found. There was an age-dependent trend toward increasing mean EEG power, with the most significant increase in the first year of life. In 14.1% of our patients, at least one episode of burst suppression occurred. Conclusion: DSA-guided augmentation of propofol anesthesia with sevoflurane provides sufficient depth of anesthesia at doses usually considered sub-anesthetic in children, leading to less anesthetic drug exposure for the individual child.</p

    The Impact of Covid-19 on Children's Care Journeys in Scotland : An Analysis of the Administrative Data on 'Looked After' Children

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    This research provides detailed insights into the disruptions experienced within childrenā€™s social care throughout the initial 16 months of the Covid-19 pandemic, specifically in terms of entries to and exits from care, and the stability of childrenā€™s placements. It was found that the impact was substantial - with large reductions seen in the number of children and young people both entering and leaving care at this time, alongside a decrease in movement for children who remained in care. It is hoped that these insights will prove useful as Scotland seeks to recover from the pandemic and work towards fulfilling the ambitions of The Promise

    Contributions to the biodiversity of Vietnam ā€“ Results of VIETBIO inventory work and field training in Cuc Phuong National Park

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    VIETBIO [Innovative approaches to biodiversity discovery and characterisation in Vietnam] is a bilateral German-Vietnamese research and capacity building project focusing on the development and transfer of new methods and technology towards an integrated biodiversity discovery and monitoring system for Vietnam. Dedicated field training and testing of innovative methodologies were undertaken in Cuc Phuong National Park as part and with support of the project, which led to the new biodiversity data and records made available in this article collection. VIETBIO is a collaboration between the Museum fĆ¼r Naturkunde Berlin ā€“ Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science (MfN), the Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum, Freie UniversitƤt Berlin (BGBM) and the Vietnam National Museum of Nature (VNMN), the Institute of Ecology and Biological Resources (IEBR), the Southern Institute of Ecology (SIE), as well as the Institute of Tropical Biology (ITB); all Vietnamese institutions belong to the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology (VAST). The article collection "VIETBIO" (https://doi.org/10.3897/bdj.coll.63) reports original results of recent biodiversity recording and survey work undertaken in Cuc Phuong National Park, northern Vietnam, under the framework of the VIETBIO project. The collection consist of this ā€œmainā€ cover paper ā€“ characterising the study area, the general project approaches and activities, while also giving an extensive overview on previous studies from this area ā€“ followed by individual papers for higher taxa as studied during the project. The main purpose is to make primary biodiversity records openly available, including several new and interesting findings for this biodiversity-rich conservation area. All individual data papers with their respective primary records are expected to provide useful baselines for further taxonomic, phylogenetic, ecological and conservation-related studies on the respective taxa and, thus, will be maintained as separate datasets, including separate GUIDs also for further updating

    Heparanase deglycanation of syndecan-1 is required for binding of the epithelial-restricted prosecretory mitogen lacritin

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    Cell surface heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans are carbohydrate-rich regulators of cell migratory, mitogenic, secretory, and inflammatory activity that bind and present soluble heparin-binding growth factors (e.g., fibroblast growth factor, Wnt, Hh, transforming growth factor Ī², amphiregulin, and hepatocyte growth factor) to their respective signaling receptors. We demonstrate that the deglycanated core protein of syndecan-1 (SDC1) and not HS chains nor SDC2 or -4, appears to target the epithelial selective prosecretory mitogen lacritin. An important and novel step in this mechanism is that binding necessitates prior partial or complete removal of HS chains by endogenous heparanase. This limits lacritin activity to sites where heparanase appears to predominate, such as sites of exocrine cell migration, secretion, renewal, and inflammation. Binding is mutually specified by lacritin's C-terminal mitogenic domain and SDC1's N terminus. Heparanase modification of the latter transforms a widely expressed HS proteoglycan into a highly selective surface-binding protein. This novel example of cell specification through extracellular modification of an HS proteoglycan has broad implications in development, homeostasis, and disease

    Expression of LMP1 in epithelial cells leads to the activation of a select subset of NF-kappa B/Rel family proteins.

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    This study demonstrates that the Epstein-Barr virus protein LMP1 activates a specific subset of NF-kappa B/Rel proteins in the C33 epithelial cell line. Western immunoblot analysis used to analyze the intracellular distribution and abundance of the proteins present in these complexes demonstrated that levels of the p50 and p52 proteins were significantly elevated in the nuclei of LMP1-expressing cells. The data also suggest that LMP1 facilitates the translocation of p50 to the nucleus and may affect the processing of the p100 and p105 precursor proteins or the stability of p52 and p50

    Communications Biophysics

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    Contains reports on four research projects

    Caveats of fungal barcoding: a case study in Trametes s.lat. (Basidiomycota: Polyporales) in Vietnam reveals multiple issues with mislabelled reference sequences and calls for third-party annotations

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    DNA barcoding using the nuclear internal transcribed spacer (ITS) has become prevalent in surveys of fungal diversity. This approach is, however, associated with numerous caveats, including the desire for speed, rather than accuracy, through the use of automated analytical pipelines, and the shortcomings of reference sequence repositories. Here we use the case of a specimen of the bracket fungus Trametes s.lat. (which includes the common and widespread turkey tail, T. versicolor) to illustrate these problems. The material was collected in Vietnam as part of a biodiversity inventory including DNA barcoding approaches for arthropods, plants and fungi. The ITS barcoding sequence of the query taxon was compared against reference sequences in GenBank and the curated fungal ITS database UNITE, using BLASTn and MegaBLAST, and was subsequently analysed in a multiple alignment-based phylogenetic context through a maximum likelihood tree including related sequences. Our results initially indicated issues with BLAST searches, including the use of Frairwise local alignments and sorting through Total score and E value, rather than Percentage identity, as major shortcomings of the DNA barcoding approach. However, after thorough analysis of the results, we concluded that the single most important problem of this approach was incorrect sequence labelling, calling for the implementation of third-party annotations or analogous approaches in primary sequence repositories. In addition, this particular example revealed problems of improper fungal nomenclature, which required reinstatement of the genus name Cubamyces (= Leioirametes), with three new combinations: C. flavidus, C lactineus and C. menziesii. The latter was revealed as the correct identification of the query taxon, although the name did not appear among the best BLAST hits. While the best BLAST hits did correspond to the target taxon in terms of sequence data, their label names were misleading or unresolved, including [Fungal endophyte], [Uncultured fungus], Basidiomycota, Trametes cf. cubensis, Lenzites elegans and Geotrichum candidum (an unrelated ascomycetous contaminant). Our study demonstrates that accurate identification of fungi through molecular barcoding is currently not a fast-track approach that can be achieved through automated pipelines
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