856 research outputs found
Telemedicine for Potential Application in Austere Military Environments:Neurosurgical Support for a Decompressive Craniectomy
Introduction: The main goal of this study was to assess the feasibility of a head-mounted display (HMD) providing telemedicine neurosurgical support during a decompressive craniectomy by a military surgeon who is isolated from readily available neurosurgical care. The secondary aim was to assess the usability perceived by the military surgeon and to evaluate technical aspects of the head-mounted display. Materials and Methods: After a standard concise lecture, 10 military surgeons performed a decompressive craniectomy on a AnubiFiX-embalmed post-mortem human head. Seven military surgeons used a HMD to receive telemedicine neurosurgical support. In the control group, three military surgeons performed a decompressive craniectomy without guidance. The performance of the decompressive craniectomy was evaluated qualitatively by the supervising neurosurgeon and quantified with the surgeons' operative performance tool. The military surgeons rated the usability of the HMD with the telehealth usability questionnaire. Results: All military surgeons performed a decompressive craniectomy adequately directly after a standard concise lecture. The HMD was used to discuss potential errors and reconfirmed essential steps. The military surgeons were very satisfied with the HMD providing telemedicine neurosurgical support. Military surgeons in the control group were faster. The HMD showed no hard technical errors. Conclusions: It is feasible to provide telemedicine neurosurgical support with a HMD during a decompressive craniectomy performed by a non-neurosurgically trained military surgeon. All military surgeons showed competence in performing a decom-pressive craniectomy after receiving a standardized concise lecture. The use of a HMD clearly demonstrated the potential to improve the quality of these neurosurgical procedures performed by military surgeons.</p
Drag on particles in a nematic suspension by a moving nematic-isotropic interface
We report the first clear demonstration of drag on colloidal particles by a moving nematic-isotropic
interface. The balance of forces explains our observation of periodic, strip-like structures that are produced by the movement of these particles
MicroRNAs preferentially target the genes with high transcriptional regulation complexity
Over the past few years, microRNAs (miRNAs) have emerged as a new prominent
class of gene regulatory factors that negatively regulate expression of
approximately one-third of the genes in animal genomes at post-transcriptional
level. However, it is still unclear why some genes are regulated by miRNAs but
others are not, i.e. what principles govern miRNA regulation in animal genomes.
In this study, we systematically analyzed the relationship between
transcription factors (TFs) and miRNAs in gene regulation. We found that the
genes with more TF-binding sites have a higher probability of being targeted by
miRNAs and have more miRNA-binding sites on average. This observation reveals
that the genes with higher cis-regulation complexity are more coordinately
regulated by TFs at the transcriptional level and by miRNAs at the
post-transcriptional level. This is a potentially novel discovery of mechanism
for coordinated regulation of gene expression. Gene ontology analysis further
demonstrated that such coordinated regulation is more popular in the
developmental genes.Comment: supplementary data available at http://www.bri.nrc.ca/wan
Faculty roles and role preferences in ten fields of professional study
Teaching faculty in ten entry-level professional fields reported varying amounts of time devoted to teaching, research, consulting, and professional practice but did not differ in time devoted to administration. The faculty member's own role view was most closely related to time use, but for time spent in teaching and research, faculty age and institutional type (but not gender) were also significant predictors. Even after several general demographic characteristics and environmental variables that potentially differentiate professional from discipline-based faculty are taken into account, different professional fields may be characterized by group climates which influence or reinforce certain faculty roles.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43598/1/11162_2004_Article_BF00991875.pd
CLASSY III: The Properties of Starburst-Driven Warm Ionized Outflows
We report the results of analyses of galactic outflows in a sample of 45
low-redshift starburst galaxies in the COS Legacy Archive Spectroscopic SurveY
(CLASSY), augmented by five additional similar starbursts with COS data. The
outflows are traced by blueshifted absorption-lines of metals spanning a wide
range of ionization potential. The high quality and broad spectral coverage of
CLASSY data enable us to disentangle the absorption due to the static ISM from
that due to outflows. We further use different line multiplets and doublets to
determine the covering fraction, column density, and ionization state as a
function of velocity for each outflow. We measure the outflow's mean velocity
and velocity width, and find that both correlate in a highly significant way
with the star-formation rate, galaxy mass, and circular velocity over ranges of
four orders-of-magnitude for the first two properties. We also estimate outflow
rates of metals, mass, momentum, and kinetic energy. We find that, at most,
only about 20% of silicon created and ejected by supernovae in the starburst is
carried in the warm phase we observe. The outflows' mass-loading factor
increases steeply and inversely with both circular and outflow velocity
(log-log slope -1.6), and reaches for dwarf galaxies. We find
that the outflows typically carry about 10 to 100% of the momentum injected by
massive stars and about 1 to 20% of the kinetic energy. We show that these
results place interesting constraints on, and new insights into, models and
simulations of galactic winds.Comment: 34 pages, 16 figures, 6 tables, submitted to Ap
MicroTar: predicting microRNA targets from RNA duplexes
BACKGROUND: The accurate prediction of a comprehensive set of messenger RNAs (targets) regulated by animal microRNAs (miRNAs) remains an open problem. In particular, the prediction of targets that do not possess evolutionarily conserved complementarity to their miRNA regulators is not adequately addressed by current tools. RESULTS: We have developed MicroTar, an animal miRNA target prediction tool based on miRNA-target complementarity and thermodynamic data. The algorithm uses predicted free energies of unbound mRNA and putative mRNA-miRNA heterodimers, implicitly addressing the accessibility of the mRNA 3' untranslated region. MicroTar does not rely on evolutionary conservation to discern functional targets, and is able to predict both conserved and non-conserved targets. MicroTar source code and predictions are accessible at , where both serial and parallel versions of the program can be downloaded under an open-source licence. CONCLUSION: MicroTar achieves better sensitivity than previously reported predictions when tested on three distinct datasets of experimentally-verified miRNA-target interactions in C. elegans, Drosophila, and mouse
CLASSY VII Ly\alpha\ Profiles: The Structure and Kinematics of Neutral Gas and Implications for LyC Escape in Reionization-Era Analogs
Lyman-alpha line profiles are a powerful probe of ISM structure, outflow
speed, and Lyman continuum escape fraction. In this paper, we present the
Ly line profiles of the COS Legacy Archive Spectroscopic SurveY, a
sample rich in spectroscopic analogs of reionization-era galaxies. A large
fraction of the spectra show a complex profile, consisting of a double-peaked
Ly emission profile in the bottom of a damped, Ly absorption
trough. Such profiles reveal an inhomogeneous interstellar medium (ISM). We
successfully fit the damped Ly absorption (DLA) and the Ly
emission profiles separately, but with complementary covering factors, a
surprising result because this approach requires no Ly exchange between
high- and low- paths. The combined distribution
of column densities is qualitatively similar to the bimodal distributions
observed in numerical simulations. We find an inverse relation between
Ly peak separation and the [O III]/[O II] flux ratio, confirming that
the covering fraction of Lyman-continuum-thin sightlines increases as the
Ly peak separation decreases. We combine measurements of Ly
peak separation and Ly red peak asymmetry in a diagnostic diagram which
identifies six Lyman continuum leakers in the CLASSY sample. We find a strong
correlation between the Ly trough velocity and the outflow velocity
measured from interstellar absorption lines. We argue that greater vignetting
of the blueshifted Ly peak, relative to the redshifted peak, is the
source of the well-known discrepancy between shell-model parameters and
directly measured outflow properties. The CLASSY sample illustrates how
scattering of Ly photons outside the spectroscopic aperture reshapes
Ly profiles as the distances to these compact starbursts span a large
range.Comment: 40 pages, 19 figures, 5 tables, submitted to ApJ, comments welcom
Overexpression of miR-128 specifically inhibits the truncated isoform of NTRK3 and upregulates BCL2 in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Neurotrophins and their receptors are key molecules in the regulation of neuronal differentiation and survival. They mediate the survival of neurons during development and adulthood and are implicated in synaptic plasticity. The human neurotrophin-3 receptor gene <it>NTRK3 </it>yields two major isoforms, a full-length kinase-active form and a truncated non-catalytic form, which activates a specific pathway affecting membrane remodeling and cytoskeletal reorganization. The two variants present non-overlapping 3'UTRs, indicating that they might be differentially regulated at the post-transcriptional level. Here, we provide evidence that the two isoforms of <it>NTRK3 </it>are targeted by different sets of microRNAs, small non-coding RNAs that play an important regulatory role in the nervous system.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We identify one microRNA (miR-151-3p) that represses the full-length isoform of <it>NTRK3 </it>and four microRNAs (miR-128, miR-485-3p, miR-765 and miR-768-5p) that repress the truncated isoform. In particular, we show that the overexpression of miR-128 - a brain enriched miRNA - causes morphological changes in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells similar to those observed using an siRNA specifically directed against truncated <it>NTRK3</it>, as well as a significant increase in cell number. Accordingly, transcriptome analysis of cells transfected with miR-128 revealed an alteration of the expression of genes implicated in cytoskeletal organization as well as genes involved in apoptosis, cell survival and proliferation, including the anti-apoptotic factor <it>BCL2</it>.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our results show that the regulation of <it>NTRK3 </it>by microRNAs is isoform-specific and suggest that neurotrophin-mediated processes are strongly linked to microRNA-dependent mechanisms. In addition, these findings open new perspectives for the study of the physiological role of miR-128 and its possible involvement in cell death/survival processes.</p
The remittances of migrant Tongan and Samoan nurses from Australia
BACKGROUND: Migration and remittances are of considerable importance in the small Pacific island states. There has been a significant migration of skilled health workers in recent decades to metropolitan fringe states, including Australia and New Zealand. This paper reports the findings of a re-analysis of survey of Samoan and Tongan migrants in Australia where the sample is split between nurse households and others. METHODS: The study analyzes the survey data with a view to comparing the remittance behaviour and determinants of remittances for nurses and other migrant households, using both descriptive, cross-tabulations and appropriate econometric methods. RESULTS: It is found that a significantly higher proportion of nurse households sent remittances home, and, on average remitted more. Remittances of nurse households did not decline significantly over time contrary to what has generally been predicted. This was in contrast to other migrant households in the sample, for whom remittances showed a sharp decline after 15 years absence. Remittances contribute much more to the income of migrant sending countries, than the cost of the additional human capital in nurse training. CONCLUSIONS: Given the shortage of nurses in Australia and New Zealand, and therefore the high demand for immigrant nurses, investment by Pacific island governments and families in nurse training constitutes a rational use of economic resources. Policies encouraging investment in home countries may be more effective than policies directly discouraging brain drain in contributing to national development
Local scale water-food nexus : use of borehole-garden permaculture to realise the full potential of rural water supplies in Malawi
Local-scale opportunities to address challenges of the water–food nexus in the developing world need to be embraced. Borehole-garden permaculture is advocated as one such opportunity that involves the sustainable use of groundwater spilt at hand-pump operated borehole supplies that is otherwise wasted. Spilt water may also pose health risks when accumulating as a stagnant pond. Rural village community use of this grey-water in permaculture projects to irrigate borehole gardens is proposed to primarily provide economic benefit whereby garden-produce revenue helps fund borehole water-point maintenance. Water-supply sustainability, increased food/nutrition security, health protection from malaria, and business opportunity benefits may also arise. Our goal has been to develop an, experience-based, framework for delivery of sustainable borehole-garden permaculture and associated benefits. This is based upon data collection and permaculture implementation across the rural Chikwawa District of Malawi during 2009–17. We use, stakeholder interviews to identify issues influencing uptake, gathering of stagnant pond occurrence data to estimate amelioration opportunity, quantification of permaculture profitability to validate economic potential, and critical assessment of recent permaculture uptake to identify continuing problems. Permaculture was implemented at 123 sites representing 6% of District water points, rising to 26% local area coverage. Most implementations were at, or near, newly drilled community-supply boreholes; hence, amelioration of prevalent stagnant ponds elsewhere remains a concern. The envisaged benefits of permaculture were manifest and early data affirm projected garden profitability and spin-off benefits of water-point banking and community micro-loan access. However, a diversity of technical, economic, social and governance issues were found to influence uptake and performance. Example issues include greater need for improved bespoke garden design input, on-going project performance assessment, and coordinated involvement of multi-sector governmental-development bodies to underpin the integrated natural-resource management required. The developed framework aims to manage the identified issues and requires the concerted action of all stakeholders. Based on the probable ubiquity of underlying issues, the framework is expected to be generalizable to the wider developing world. However, this particular application of permaculture represents a fraction of its greater potential opportunity for rural communities that should be explored
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