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INCIDENCE OF COCCIDIA (EIMERIDAE) IN ADULT EWES AND LAMBS ON ST. CROIX
INCIDENCE OF COCCIDIA (EIMERIDAE) IN ADULT EWES AND LAMBS ON ST. CROI
A note on the Gauss decomposition of the elliptic Cauchy matrix
Explicit formulas for the Gauss decomposition of elliptic Cauchy type
matrices are derived in a very simple way. The elliptic Cauchy identity is an
immediate corollary.Comment: 5 page
Level rearrangement in exotic atoms and quantum dots
A presentation and a generalisation are given of the phenomenon of level
rearrangement, which occurs when an attractive long-range potential is
supplemented by a short-range attractive potential of increasing strength. This
problem has been discovered in condensate-matter physics and has also been
studied in the physics of exotic atoms. A similar phenomenon occurs in a
situation inspired by quantum dots, where a short-range interaction is added to
an harmonic confinement.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, RevTeX
Analysis of hydrogen diffusion in the three stage electro-permeation test
The presence of hydrogen traps within a metallic alloy influences the rate of
hydrogen diffusion. The electro-permeation (EP) test can be used to assess
this: the permeation of hydrogen through a thin metallic sheet is measured by
suitable control of hydrogen concentration on the front face and by recording
the flux of hydrogen that exits the rear face. Additional insight is achieved
by the more sophisticated three stage EP test: the concentration of free
lattice hydrogen on the front face is set to an initial level, is then dropped
to a lower intermediate value and is then restored to the initial level. The
flux of hydrogen exiting the rear face is measured in all three stages of the
test. In the present study, a transient analysis is performed of hydrogen
permeation in a three stage EP test, assuming that lattice diffusion is
accompanied by trapping and de-trapping. The sensitivity of the three stage EP
response to the depth and density of hydrogen traps is quantified. A
significant difference in permeation response can exist between the first and
third stages of the EP test when the alloy contains a high number density of
deep traps
Theory of unitarity bounds and low energy form factors
We present a general formalism for deriving bounds on the shape parameters of
the weak and electromagnetic form factors using as input correlators calculated
from perturbative QCD, and exploiting analyticity and unitarity. The values
resulting from the symmetries of QCD at low energies or from lattice
calculations at special points inside the analyticity domain can beincluded in
an exact way. We write down the general solution of the corresponding Meiman
problem for an arbitrary number of interior constraints and the integral
equations that allow one to include the phase of the form factor along a part
of the unitarity cut. A formalism that includes the phase and some information
on the modulus along a part of the cut is also given. For illustration we
present constraints on the slope and curvature of the K_l3 scalar form factor
and discuss our findings in some detail. The techniques are useful for checking
the consistency of various inputs and for controlling the parameterizations of
the form factors entering precision predictions in flavor physics.Comment: 11 pages latex using EPJ style files, 5 figures; v2 is version
accepted by EPJA in Tools section; sentences and figures improve
Hairy cell leukemia : experience at a tertiary cancer centre in Northern India
Background : The prognosis of Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) has improved markedly following treatment with cladribine (2- CdA), a nucleoside analogue. We reviewed data on patients with HCL treated in our department. Methods . Between 1995 and 2004, 23 patients with hairy cell leukemia (HCL) were diagnosed Patients median age was 48.5 years (range, 32 to 66 years), there were 18 males and 5 females. The common presenting symptoms were: fatigue (82.6%), fever (34.7%), abdominal discomfort (21.7%), arthralgia/bone pains (13%) and bleeding (17.3%). 22 of 23 (95.6%) patients had enlarged spleen, and hepatomegaly (65%). Lymph node enlargement was present in 17% of patients. Investigations revealedmedian Hb of 7.8g% (5.7 to 12.9 g%), thrombocytopenia (median 55000/cmm) and median WBC count of 3500/cmm (range, 600 to 20,200/cmm). Bicytopenia or pancytopenia was present in 87% and bone marrow fibrosis in 75% of cases. Immunophenotyping studies revealed expression of CD11C (60%), CD25 (60%), FMC7(47.8%), CD23(34.8%), CD103 in 39% of cases. 20 of 23 patients received treatment; two received treatment else where and one patient died of liver failure prior to treatment. 17 of 20 patients were treated with 2-CdA, 2 with interferon alfa (IFN-a) and one patient underwent splenectomy alone. Three patients received 2-CdA as second line therapy for treatment of relapse: this includes . one patient each, treated with IFN- α and splenectomy both and one patient received 2-cdA twice in view of relapse. Results . Following treatment with 2CdA . 95% of patients responded; complete-84.2% and partial response in 10.5%. one (5.2%) patient died of toxicity. Two patients relapsed at a mean follow up of 25 months. The common side effects were febrile episodes (n=10) and grade I-II myelosuppression. One patient died of toxicity to 2-CdA. This patient was a known case of multidrug resistant disseminated tuberculosis. He had severe myelosuppression with fungal sepsis with multiorgan failure and BM Aspirate was positive for AFB. Other infections documented were Pulmonary tuberculosis in 2 and herpes zoster in one patient. The patient who underwent Splenectomy achieved remission but relapsed after 3 years and was salvaged with 2-CdA again. Median time for normalization of blood counts after 2-CdA was 28 days and median time to regress spleen was 41.5 days . Conclusion . Present study confirms good outcome with 2-CdA (cladribine) therapy for patients of hairy cell leukemia
Treating and Preventing Influenza in Aged Care Facilities: A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial
PMCID: PMC3474842This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
Disease Introduction Is Associated With a Phase Transition in Bighorn Sheep Demographics
Ecological theory suggests that pathogens are capable of regulating or limiting host population dynamics, and this relationship has been empirically established in several settings. However, although studies of childhood diseases were integral to the development of disease ecology, few studies show population limitation by a disease affecting juveniles. Here, we present empirical evidence that disease in lambs constrains population growth in bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) based on 45 years of population‐level and 18 years of individual‐level monitoring across 12 populations. While populations generally increased (λ = 1.11) prior to disease introduction, most of these same populations experienced an abrupt change in trajectory at the time of disease invasion, usually followed by stagnant‐to‐declining growth rates (λ = 0.98) over the next 20 years. Disease‐induced juvenile mortality imposed strong constraints on population growth that were not observed prior to disease introduction, even as adult survival returned to pre‐invasion levels. Simulations suggested that models including persistent disease‐induced mortality in juveniles qualitatively matched observed population trajectories, whereas models that only incorporated all‐age disease events did not. We use these results to argue that pathogen persistence may pose a lasting, but under‐recognized, threat to host populations, particularly in cases where clinical disease manifests primarily in juveniles
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