1,416 research outputs found
UK Heart Surgery: What Patients Can Expect from their Surgeons
This report presents selected findings from the National Adult Cardiac Surgery Audit for heart operations that took place between 2001/2 and 2010/11, alongside other information about cardiac surgery in the UK
Some remarks on a new exotic spacetime for time travel by free fall
This work is essentially a review of a new spacetime model with closed causal
curves, recently presented in another paper (Class. Quantum Grav.
\textbf{35}(16) (2018), 165003). The spacetime at issue is topologically
trivial, free of curvature singularities, and even time and space orientable.
Besides summarizing previous results on causal geodesics, tidal accelerations
and violations of the energy conditions, here redshift/blueshift effects and
the Hawking-Ellis classification of the stress-energy tensor are examined.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures. Submitted as a contribution to the proceedings
of "DOMOSCHOOL - International Alpine School of Mathematics and Physics,
Domodossola 2018". Possible text overlaps with my previous work
arXiv:1803.08214, of which this is essentially a review. Additional results
concerning redshift/blueshift effects and the classification of the
stress-energy tensor are presented her
Minimally invasive versus conventional aortic valve replacement: a propensity-matched study from the UK National Data
Minimally invasive aortic valve replacement (MIAVR) has been demonstrated as a safe and effective option but remains underused. We aimed to evaluate outcomes of isolated MIAVR compared with conventional aortic valve replacement (CAVR).Data from The National Institute for Cardiovascular Outcomes Research (NICOR) were analyzed at seven volunteer centers (2006-2012). Primary outcomes were in-hospital mortality and midterm survival. Secondary outcomes were postoperative length of stay as well as cumulative bypass and cross-clamp times. Propensity modeling with matched cohort analysis was used.Of 307 consecutive MIAVR patients, 151 (49%) were performed during the last 2 years of study with a continued increase in numbers. The 307 MIAVR patients were matched on a 1:1 ratio. In the matched CAVR group, there was no statistically significant difference in in-hospital mortality [MIAVR, 4/307,(1.3%); 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.4%-3.4% vs CAVR, 6/307 (2.0%); 95% CI, 0.8%-4.3%; P = 0.752]. One-year survival rates in the MIAVR and CAVR groups were 94.4% and 94.6%, respectively. There was no statistically significant difference in midterm survival (P = 0.677; hazard ratio, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.56-1.46). Median postoperative length of stay was lower in the MIAVR patients by 1 day (P = 0.009). The mean cumulative bypass time (94.8 vs 91.3 minutes; P = 0.333) and cross-clamp time (74.6 vs 68.4 minutes; P = 0.006) were longer in the MIAVR group; however, this was significant only in the cross-clamp time comparison.Minimally invasive aortic valve replacement is a safe alternative to CAVR with respect to operative and 1-year mortality and is associated with a shorter postoperative stay. Further studies are required in high-risk (logistic EuroSCORE > 10) patients to define the role of MIAVR
Amazonian chemical weathering rate derived from stony meteorite finds at Meridiani Planum on Mars
© The Author(s) 2016.Spacecraft exploring Mars such as the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity, as well as the Mars Science Laboratory or Curiosity rover, have accumulated evidence for wet and habitable conditions on early Mars more than 3 billion years ago. Current conditions, by contrast, are cold, extremely arid and seemingly inhospitable. To evaluate exactly how dry today's environment is, it is important to understand the ongoing current weathering processes. Here we present chemical weathering rates determined for Mars. We use the oxidation of iron in stony meteorites investigated by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity at Meridiani Planum. Their maximum exposure age is constrained by the formation of Victoria crater and their minimum age by erosion of the meteorites. The chemical weathering rates thus derived are ~1 to 4 orders of magnitude slower than that of similar meteorites found in Antarctica where the slowest rates are observed on Earth
Placebo response in trichotillomania
Background: Trichotillomania is a functionally impairing, often overlooked disorder with no FDA-approved medications indicated for its treatment. The ability of clinical trials to detect beneficial effects of pharmacologic treatment in trichotillomania has been hampered by the high placebo response rate. Very little is known about baseline demographic and clinical characteristics that may be predictive of placebo response in such patients.
Methods: 104 participants assigned to placebo were pooled from five double-blind trials conducted at three sites in the United States and Canada. Participants were classified as placebo responders or non-responders based on a cut-off of 35% reduction in symptom severity on the Massachusetts General Hospital Hair Pulling Scale (MGH-HPS). Baseline group differences were characterized using t-tests and equivalent non-parametric tests as appropriate.
Results: Thirty-one percent of individuals assigned to placebo treatment showed a significant clinical response to placebo. Placebo responders (n=32) and non-responders (n=72) did not differ significantly on any demographic or clinical variable.
Discussion: Predictors of placebo response for trichotillomania remain elusive and do not appear similar to those reported for other mental health disorders.Dr. Grant has received research grant support from TLC Foundation for BFRBs, NIDA, NIAAA, National Center for Responsible Gaming, Brainsway, Psyadon and Takeda Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Chamberlain’s involvement in this project was funded by a Wellcome Trust Clinical Fellowship (110049/Z/15/Z). Dr. Odlaug has received research funding from the TLC Foundation for BFRBs. Dr Keuthen has received research support from the TLC Foundation for BFRBs and Forest Laboratories
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Apparatus for centrifuge modelling of twin-tunnel construction
In urban areas it is common for pairs of tunnels to be used as a method for building rapid transit systems. Driven by
an increasing population and demand for services, tunnels are more widespread in their use than at any previous time. Construction of any form of tunnel causes ground movements which have the potential to damage existing surface and
sub-surface structures. Modern tunnelling practice aims to reduce these movements to a minimum but there is still a requirement for accurate assessments of possible damage to structures resulting from settlements. For tunnels driven in clay, superposition of settlement predictions made by considering a single tunnel is an accepted method used to estimate movements around pairs of tunnels. Previous research, particularly numerical studies, has indicated that this may not necessarily be sufficient. In this paper a series of centrifuge model tests designed to investigate settlements related to twin-tunnel construction are described. The development of the experimental apparatus for sequential twin-tunnel construction with variable centre-to-centre spacing and volume loss is described in detail
Fast 3D shape screening of large chemical databases through alignment-recycling
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Large chemical databases require fast, efficient, and simple ways of looking for similar structures. Although such tasks are now fairly well resolved for graph-based similarity queries, they remain an issue for 3D approaches, particularly for those based on 3D shape overlays. Inspired by a recent technique developed to compare molecular shapes, we designed a hybrid methodology, alignment-recycling, that enables efficient retrieval and alignment of structures with similar 3D shapes.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using a dataset of more than one million PubChem compounds of limited size (< 28 heavy atoms) and flexibility (< 6 rotatable bonds), we obtained a set of a few thousand diverse structures covering entirely the 3D shape space of the conformers of the dataset. Transformation matrices gathered from the overlays between these diverse structures and the 3D conformer dataset allowed us to drastically (100-fold) reduce the CPU time required for shape overlay. The alignment-recycling heuristic produces results consistent with <it>de novo </it>alignment calculation, with better than 80% hit list overlap on average.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Overlay-based 3D methods are computationally demanding when searching large databases. Alignment-recycling reduces the CPU time to perform shape similarity searches by breaking the alignment problem into three steps: selection of diverse shapes to describe the database shape-space; overlay of the database conformers to the diverse shapes; and non-optimized overlay of query and database conformers using common reference shapes. The precomputation, required by the first two steps, is a significant cost of the method; however, once performed, querying is two orders of magnitude faster. Extensions and variations of this methodology, for example, to handle more flexible and larger small-molecules are discussed.</p
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