304 research outputs found
Resonances in a spring-pendulum: algorithms for equivariant singularity theory
A spring-pendulum in resonance is a time-independent Hamiltonian model system for formal reduction to one degree of freedom, where some symmetry (reversibility) is maintained. The reduction is handled by equivariant singularity theory with a distinguished parameter, yielding an integrable approximation of the Poincaré map. This makes a concise description of certain bifurcations possible. The computation of reparametrizations from normal form to the actual system is performed by Gröbner basis techniques.
Subtherapeutic triazole concentrations as result of a drug-drug interaction with lumacaftor/ivacaftor
Lumacaftor/ivacaftor (Orkambi®, LUM/IVA) is indicated for the treatment of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients aged ≥ 2 years with homozygous F580del mutation in the CFTR gene. Triazole fungal agents are used to treat fungal disease in CF. The use of triazoles is limited by pharmacokinetic challenges, such as drug-drug interactions. The most notable drug-drug interaction between triazoles and LUM/IVA is due to strong induction of CYP3A4 and UGT by LUM. In this real-world retrospective observational study, we described the effect of LUM/IVA on the trough concentration of triazoles. Concomitant use of LUM/IVA with itraconazole, posaconazole or voriconazole resulted in subtherapeutic triazole levels in 76% of the plasma samples. In comparison, in patients with triazole agents without LUM/IVA only 30.6% of the plasma samples resulted in subtherapeutic concentrations. Subtherapeutic plasma concentrations of triazoles should be considered in CF patients on LUM/IVA and further research is warranted for other dosing strategies and alternative antifungal therapy.</p
Subtherapeutic triazole concentrations as result of a drug-drug interaction with lumacaftor/ivacaftor
Lumacaftor/ivacaftor (Orkambi®, LUM/IVA) is indicated for the treatment of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients aged ≥ 2 years with homozygous F580del mutation in the CFTR gene. Triazole fungal agents are used to treat fungal disease in CF. The use of triazoles is limited by pharmacokinetic challenges, such as drug-drug interactions. The most notable drug-drug interaction between triazoles and LUM/IVA is due to strong induction of CYP3A4 and UGT by LUM. In this real-world retrospective observational study, we described the effect of LUM/IVA on the trough concentration of triazoles. Concomitant use of LUM/IVA with itraconazole, posaconazole or voriconazole resulted in subtherapeutic triazole levels in 76% of the plasma samples. In comparison, in patients with triazole agents without LUM/IVA only 30.6% of the plasma samples resulted in subtherapeutic concentrations. Subtherapeutic plasma concentrations of triazoles should be considered in CF patients on LUM/IVA and further research is warranted for other dosing strategies and alternative antifungal therapy.</p
The Elliptic Billiard: Subtleties of Separability
Some of the subtleties of the integrability of the elliptic quantum billiard
are discussed. A well known classical constant of the motion has in the quantum
case an ill-defined commutator with the Hamiltonian. It is shown how this
problem can be solved. A geometric picture is given revealing why levels of a
separable system cross. It is shown that the repulsions found by Ayant and
Arvieu are computational effects and that the method used by Traiber et al. is
related to the present picture which explains the crossings they find. An
asymptotic formula for the energy-levels is derived and it is found that the
statistical quantities of the spectrum P(s) and \Delta(L) have the form
expected for an integrable system.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, 3 Figures (postscript). Submitted to European
Journal of Physic
Modulation of irinotecan-induced diarrhea by cotreatment with neomycin in cancer patients
This study was designed to evaluate irinotecan (CPT-11) disposition and
pharmacodynamics in the presence and absence of the broad-spectrum
antibiotic neomycin. Seven evaluable cancer patients experiencing diarrhea
graded > or =2 after receiving CPT-11 alone (350 mg/m(2) i.v. once every 3
weeks) received the same dose combined with oral neomycin at 1000 mg three
times per day (days -2 to 5) in the second course. Neomycin had no effect
on the systemic exposure of CPT-11 and its major metabolites (P > or =
0.22). However, it changed fecal beta-glucuronidase activity from 7.03 +/-
1.76 microg/h/mg (phenolphthalein assay) to undetectable levels and
decreased fecal concentrations of the pharmacologically active metabolite
SN-38. Although neomycin had no significant effect on hematological
toxicity (P > 0.05), diarrhea ameliorated in six of seven patients (P =
0.033). Our findings indicate that bacterial beta-glucuronidase plays a
crucial role in CPT-11-induced diarrhea without affecting enterocycling
and systemic SN-38 levels
New Results for Diffusion in Lorentz Lattice Gas Cellular Automata
New calculations to over ten million time steps have revealed a more complex
diffusive behavior than previously reported, of a point particle on a square
and triangular lattice randomly occupied by mirror or rotator scatterers. For
the square lattice fully occupied by mirrors where extended closed particle
orbits occur, anomalous diffusion was still found. However, for a not fully
occupied lattice the super diffusion, first noticed by Owczarek and Prellberg
for a particular concentration, obtains for all concentrations. For the square
lattice occupied by rotators and the triangular lattice occupied by mirrors or
rotators, an absence of diffusion (trapping) was found for all concentrations,
except on critical lines, where anomalous diffusion (extended closed orbits)
occurs and hyperscaling holds for all closed orbits with {\em universal}
exponents and . Only one point on these critical lines can be related to a
corresponding percolation problem. The questions arise therefore whether the
other critical points can be mapped onto a new percolation-like problem, and of
the dynamical significance of hyperscaling.Comment: 52 pages, including 18 figures on the last 22 pages, email:
[email protected]
An Intersecting Loop Model as a Solvable Super Spin Chain
In this paper we investigate an integrable loop model and its connection with
a supersymmetric spin chain. The Bethe Ansatz solution allows us to study some
properties of the ground state. When the loop fugacity lies in the physical
regime, we conjecture that the central charge is for integer .
Low-lying excitations are examined, supporting a superdiffusive behavior for
. We argue that these systems are interesting examples of integrable
lattice models realizing conformal field theories.Comment: latex file, 7 page
Thermodynamic formalism for systems with Markov dynamics
The thermodynamic formalism allows one to access the chaotic properties of
equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium systems, by deriving those from a dynamical
partition function. The definition that has been given for this partition
function within the framework of discrete time Markov chains was not suitable
for continuous time Markov dynamics. Here we propose another interpretation of
the definition that allows us to apply the thermodynamic formalism to
continuous time.
We also generalize the formalism --a dynamical Gibbs ensemble construction--
to a whole family of observables and their associated large deviation
functions. This allows us to make the connection between the thermodynamic
formalism and the observable involved in the much-studied fluctuation theorem.
We illustrate our approach on various physical systems: random walks,
exclusion processes, an Ising model and the contact process. In the latter
cases, we identify a signature of the occurrence of dynamical phase
transitions. We show that this signature can already be unravelled using the
simplest dynamical ensemble one could define, based on the number of
configuration changes a system has undergone over an asymptotically large time
window.Comment: 64 pages, LaTeX; version accepted for publication in Journal of
Statistical Physic
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