247 research outputs found

    Sufficient Conditions for Fast Switching Synchronization in Time Varying Network Topologies

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    In previous work, empirical evidence indicated that a time-varying network could propagate sufficient information to allow synchronization of the sometimes coupled oscillators, despite an instantaneously disconnected topology. We prove here that if the network of oscillators synchronizes for the static time-average of the topology, then the network will synchronize with the time-varying topology if the time-average is achieved sufficiently fast. Fast switching, fast on the time-scale of the coupled oscillators, overcomes the descychnronizing decoherence suggested by disconnected instantaneous networks. This result agrees in spirit with that of where empirical evidence suggested that a moving averaged graph Laplacian could be used in the master-stability function analysis. A new fast switching stability criterion here-in gives sufficiency of a fast-switching network leading to synchronization. Although this sufficient condition appears to be very conservative, it provides new insights about the requirements for synchronization when the network topology is time-varying. In particular, it can be shown that networks of oscillators can synchronize even if at every point in time the frozen-time network topology is insufficiently connected to achieve synchronization.Comment: Submitted to SIAD

    Set up of a sampling strategy for the collection of animal-based welfare indicators during milking

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    We hypothesised milking time to be the period of the production process that allows observers to have closer contact with dairy goats, hence being the ideal location/time to assess certain animal-based welfare indicators. However, for the development of a practical welfare assessment scheme, observing all the animals during milking would be too time consuming. The aim of the present study was to define a sampling strategy that can reduce the observation time and at the same time produce a valid and unbiased result. We observed milking in two farms (Farm1: 303 goats; Farm2: 141 goats). In each farm, goats were housed in two pens, so we had a total of four pens (191 and 112 goats each in Farm1; 65 and 76 goats each in Farm2). We collected data on lameness, body condition score, cleanliness, teat and udder abnormality and overgrown claws. Data were compared by chisq test. We found significant differences (at least P<0.01) between farms for all the observed variables, except for lameness (P=0.08). Within each farm, no differences between pens were recorded. A minimum of 3 to a maximum of 6 milking groups were formed from each pen, depending on the size of the milking parlour. We compared the prevalence of each welfare indicator in the whole pen with its prevalence in each milking group. In most cases, each single milking group did not statistically differ from the whole pen, and the central groups were able to better reflect the welfare situation of the whole pen. However, a clear and often significant increase of the prevalence of lameness was observed in the last milking groups. Our preliminary results suggest that a reliable sampling strategy can be used during milking to gather information about the welfare condition of dairy goats, thus reducing the time needed for data collection. When more than one pen is present in a farm, it seems that one pen can give sufficient information to represent the whole farm welfare level for the considered variables, provided that observations are carried out on the central milking groups. This seems particularly important for lameness. Further observations in more farms are required in order to confirm this hypothesis

    Citalopram Enhances the Activity of Chloroquine in Resistant Plasmodium in Vitro and in Vivo 1

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    ABSTRACT Citalopram, is an extremely potent inhibitor of neuronal serotonin reuptake. It is structurally unrelated to other antidepressants, but it contains the chemical features associated with reversal of drug resistance and exhibits minimal cardiotoxic side effects and fewer of the anticholinergic and adrenolytic side effects associated with other psychotropic agents. Sensitivity tests to citalopram alone and in combination with chloroquine were performed against chloroquine-resistant and chloroquine-sensitive strains of Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium chabaudi. Citalopram alone showed intrinsic activity against the chloroquine-resistant strains of P. falciparum (IC 50 ϭ 1.51 Ϯ .6 M) but only limited activity against the chloroquine-sensitive strain (IC 50 ϭ 33.27 Ϯ 5.87 M) and no activity in vivo. The interaction of chloroquine and citalopram in vitro resulted in a synergistic response in the chloroquineresistant strain but there was no interaction between the drugs in the chloroquine-sensitive strain-a pattern found with other reversal agents. Citalopram enhanced chloroquine susceptibility in both strains of P. chabaudi, however, the potentiating effect was seen at lower doses in the chloroquine-resistant strain. The results of this study suggest that citalopram may have potential as a chemosensitizer in Plasmodium infections on the basis of the low toxicity of citalopram at concentrations potentiating chloroquine activity both in vitro and in vivo. Malaria is a significant source of global morbidity and mortality. Despite the development of new antimalarial agents such as mefloquine, halofantrine and the artemisins, chloroquine remains the drug of choice for the treatment of uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria infections, due to its low cost, rapid onset of action and its low toxicity. However, the efficacy of chloroquine has diminished due to the emergence and prevalence of chloroquine-resistant strains of P. falciparum (Wensdorfer and Payne, 1991). The rapid development and spread of resistance to chloroquine and other antimalarials, and the tremendous cost of drug development has emphasized the necessity to optimize the use of existing antimalarial agents A number of adjunct drugs have been identified from a wide variety of chemical classes including calcium-channel blockers Citalopram,1-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]-1-(4-fluorophenyl)-1,3dihydroisobenzofuran-5-carbonite), is an extremely potent inhibitor of neuronal serotonin reuptake The low toxicity coupled with the chemical similarity to chemosensitizers (resistance reversal agents) prompted us to investigate the chemosensitizing effect of citalopram in Plasmodium. In this study, we screened citalopram for chloroquine potentiating activity in chloroquine-resistant and chloroquine sensitive-parasites; both in vitro against P. falciparum and in a rodent malaria model (Plasmodium chabaudi). Methods Effect of Citalopram in Vitro Parasites. Two well-characterized isolates of P. falciparum were used for the drug assays. The chloroquine-resistant FCR-3 strain (IC 50 ϳ 150 nM) (donated by J. Freese, Research in diseases of the Tropical Environment, Durban, South Africa) and the chloroquine

    Phase Locking Induces Scale-Free Topologies in Networks of Coupled Oscillators

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    An initial unsynchronized ensemble of networking phase oscillators is further subjected to a growing process where a set of forcing oscillators, each one of them following the dynamics of a frequency pacemaker, are added to the pristine graph. Linking rules based on dynamical criteria are followed in the attachment process to force phase locking of the network with the external pacemaker. We show that the eventual locking occurs in correspondence to the arousal of a scale-free degree distribution in the original graph

    Changes in the Management of Patients having Radical Radiotherapy for Lung Cancer during the First Wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic in the UK.

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    AIMS: In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, guidelines on reduced fractionation for patients treated with curative-intent radiotherapy were published, aimed at reducing the number of hospital attendances and potential exposure of vulnerable patients to minimise the risk of COVID-19 infection. We describe the changes that took place in the management of patients with stage I-III lung cancer from April to October 2020. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Lung Radiotherapy during the COVID-19 Pandemic (COVID-RT Lung) is a prospective multicentre UK cohort study. The inclusion criteria were: patients with stage I-III lung cancer referred for and/or treated with radical radiotherapy between 2nd April and 2nd October 2020. Patients who had had a change in their management and those who continued with standard management were included. Data on demographics, COVID-19 diagnosis, diagnostic work-up, radiotherapy and systemic treatment were collected and reported as counts and percentages. Patient characteristics associated with a change in treatment were analysed using multivariable binary logistic regression. RESULTS: In total, 1553 patients were included (median age 72 years, 49% female); 93 (12%) had a change to their diagnostic investigation and 528 (34%) had a change to their treatment from their centre's standard of care as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Age ≥70 years, male gender and stage III disease were associated with a change in treatment on multivariable analysis. Patients who had their treatment changed had a median of 15 fractions of radiotherapy compared with a median of 20 fractions in those who did not have their treatment changed. Low rates of COVID-19 infection were seen during or after radiotherapy, with only 21 patients (1.4%) developing the disease. CONCLUSIONS: The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in changes to patient treatment in line with national recommendations. The main change was an increase in hypofractionation. Further work is ongoing to analyse the impact of these changes on patient outcomes

    Understanding the enhanced synchronization of delay-coupled networks with fluctuating topology

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    We study the dynamics of networks with coupling delay, from which the connectivity changes over time. The synchronization properties are shown to depend on the interplay of three time scales: the internal time scale of the dynamics, the coupling delay along the network links and time scale at which the topology changes. Concentrating on a linearized model, we develop an analytical theory for the stability of a synchronized solution. In two limit cases the system can be reduced to an “effective” topology: In the fast switching approximation, when the network fluctuations are much faster than the internal time scale and the coupling delay, the effective network topology is the arithmetic mean over the different topologies. In the slow network limit, when the network fluctuation time scale is equal to the coupling delay, the effective adjacency matrix is the geometric mean over the adjacency matrices of the different topologies. In the intermediate regime the system shows a sensitive dependence on the ratio of time scales, and specific topologies, reproduced as well by numerical simulations. Our results are shown to describe the synchronization properties of fluctuating networks of delay-coupled chaotic maps

    Task shifting to non-physician clinicians for integrated management of hypertension and diabetes in rural Cameroon: a programme assessment at two years

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The burden of non-communicable chronic diseases, such as hypertension and diabetes, increases in sub-Saharan Africa. However, the majority of the rural population does still not have access to adequate care. The objective of this study is to examine the effectiveness of integrating care for hypertension and type 2 diabetes by task shifting to non-physician clinician (NPC) facilities in eight rural health districts in Cameroon.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Of the 75 NPC facilities in the area, 69 (87%) received basic equipment and training in hypertension and diabetes care. Effectiveness was assessed after two years on status of equipment, knowledge among trained NPCs, number of newly detected patients, retention of patients under care, treatment cost to patients and changes in blood pressure (BP) and fasting plasma glucose (FPG) among treated patients.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Two years into the programme, of 54 facilities (78%) available for re-assessment, all possessed a functional sphygmomanometer and stethoscope (65% at baseline); 96% stocked antihypertensive drugs (27% at baseline); 70% possessed a functional glucose meter and 72% stocked oral anti-diabetics (15% and 12% at baseline). NPCs' performance on multiple-choice questions of the knowledge-test was significantly improved. During a period of two years, trained NPCs initiated treatment for 796 patients with hypertension and/or diabetes. The retention of treated patients at one year was 18.1%. Hypertensive and diabetic patients paid a median monthly amount of 1.4 and 0.7 Euro respectively for their medication. Among hypertensive patients with ≥ 2 documented visits (n = 493), systolic BP decreased by 22.8 mmHg (95% CI: -20.6 to -24.9; p < 0.0001) and diastolic BP by 12.4 mmHg (-10.9 to -13.9; p < 0.0001). Among diabetic patients (n = 79) FPG decreased by 3.4 mmol/l (-2.3 to -4.5; p < 0.001).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The integration of hypertension and diabetes into primary health care of NPC facilities in rural Cameroon was feasible in terms of equipment and training, accessible in terms of treatment cost and showed promising BP- and FPG-trends. However, low case-detection rates per NPC and a very high attrition among patients enrolled into care, limited the effectiveness of the programme.</p

    Histomorphological study of the spinal growth plates from the convex side and the concave side in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis

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    Asymmetrical growth of the vertebrae has been implicated as one possible etiologic factor in the pathogenesis of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. The longitudinal vertebral growth derives from the endochondral ossification of the vertebral growth plate. In the present study, the growth plates from the convex and concave side of the vertebrae were characterized by the method of histology and immunohistochemistry to evaluate the growth activity, cell proliferation, and apoptosis. Normal zoned architectures were observed in the convex side of the growth plate and disorganized architectures in the concave side. The histological grades were significantly different between the convex and the concave side of the growth plate in the apex vertebrae (P < 0.05). The histological difference was also found significant statistically between end vertebrae and apex vertebrae in the concave side of vertebral growth plates (P < 0.05). The proliferative potential indexes and apoptosis indexes of chondrocytes in the proliferative and hypertrophic zone in the convex side were significantly higher than that in the concave side in the apex vertebral growth plate (P < 0.05). There was a significant difference of the proliferative potential index (proliferating cell nuclear antigen, PCNA index) between convex side and concave side at the upper end vertebra (P < 0.05). The difference of the proliferative potential index and apoptosis index were found significant statistically in the concave side of the vertebral growth plate between end vertebrae and apex vertebrae (P < 0.05). The same result was also found for the apoptosis index (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate biotin nick end labeling assay, TUNEL index) in the convex side of vertebral growth plate between end vertebrae and apex vertebrae (P < 0.05). Some correlation were found between radiographic measurements and proliferation and apoptosis indexes. The difference in histological grades and cellular activity between the convex and concave side indicated that the bilateral growth plate of the vertebrae in AIS patients have different growth kinetics which may affect the curve progression
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