85 research outputs found
A stochastic model of the influence of buffer gas collisions on Mollow spectra
In this paper we consider the influence of collisional fluctuations on the
Mollow spectra of resonance fluorescence (RF). The fluctuations are taken into
account by a simple shift of the constant detuning, involved in a set of
optical Bloch equations by collision frequency noise which is modelled by a
two-step random telegraph signal (RTS). We consider in detail the Mollow
spectra for RF in the case of an arbitrary detuning of the laser frequency,
where the emitter is a member of a statistical ensemble in thermodynamic
equilibrium with the buffer gas at temperature which is treated as a
colored environment, and velocity is distributed with the Maxwell-Boltzmann
density
A case of hepatic cyst-induced internal jugular venous thrombosis
• Echocardiography can demonstrate hepatic cyst–induced right atrial compression. • Hepatic cyst–induced blood flow stasis can cause internal jugular venous thrombus. • Laparoscopic deroofing of hepatic cysts is a safe and effective treatment
Antifungal activity against Candida albicans biofilm of Coffea robusta monofloral honey from Vietnam
Coffee (Coffea robusta) flower honey is one of the highest-yielding kinds of honey in Vietnam. Nevertheless, there is little research on the antifungal activity associated with this type of honey. Therefore, this study was conducted to investigate the antifungal activity against C. albicans of Vietnamese coffee monofloral honey and its potential effects on biofilm formation. This study was conducted using the broth microdilution method. The results showed that coffee flower honey was resistant to Candida albicans strain with minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and with minimum fungicidal concentration (MFC) values of 50% and 70% (w/v), respectively. No change in the antifungal activity of honey and the antifungal agent (Amphotericin B) against the C. albicans strain occurred after five consecutive exposures. When using SEM, honey at MIC (w/v) strongly affected the two stages of C. albicans biofilm formation. The surface structure of the biofilm, deformed, distorted, and atrophied phenotypes impacted by honey were also observed. Expression of transcriptional-level genes involved in biofilm formation, quorum-sensing, and stress survival was analyzed by RT-qPCR in honey-treated and untreated biofilms. The present study showed the antifungal activity of Vietnamese coffee flower honey against C. albicans
Long-term outcomes of primary cardiac malignant tumors: Difference between African American and Caucasian population
BACKGROUND: The survival outcome for primary cardiac malignant tumors (PMCTs) based on race has yet to be fully elucidated in previously published literature. This study aimed to address the general long-term outcome and survival rate differences in PMCTs among African Americans and Caucasian populations.
METHODS: The 18 cancer registries database from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program from 1975 to 2016 were utilized. Ninety-four African American (AA) and 647 Caucasian (CAU) patients from the SEER registry were available for survival analysis. The log-rank test was used to compare the difference in mortality between two populations and presented by the Kaplan-Meier curves. A multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression was used to determine the independent predictors of all-cause mortality.
RESULTS: The overall 30-day, 1-year, and 5-year survival rates were 74%, 44.3%, and 16.6%, respectively, with a median survival of 10 months. There was no significant difference in survival rate between the two races (p-value = 0.55). The 1-year survival rate improved significantly during the study timeline in the AA population (13.3% during 1975-1998, 40.9% during 1999-2004, 50% during 2005-2010, and 59.7% during 2011-2016, p-value = 0.0064). Age of diagnosis, type of tumor, disease stage, and chemotherapy administration are the main factors that predict survival outcomes of PMCT patients. Interactive nomogram was developed based on significant predictors.
CONCLUSIONS: PMCTs have remained one of the most lethal diseases with poor survival outcome. Survival rate improved during the timeline in AA patients, but in general, racial differences in survival outcome were not observed
History-sensitive accumulation rules for life-time prediction under variable loading
This is the post-print version of the article. The official published version can be obtained from the link below - Copyright @ 2011 SpringerA general form of temporal strength conditions under variable creep loading is employed to formulate several new phenomenological accumulation rules based on the constant-loading durability diagram. Unlike the well-known Robinson rule of linear accumulation of partial life-times, the new rules allow to describe the life-time sensibility to the load sequence, observed in experiments. Comparison of the new rules with experimental data shows that they fit the data much more accurately than the Robinson rule
Extracting causal relations on HIV drug resistance from literature
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In HIV treatment it is critical to have up-to-date resistance data of applicable drugs since HIV has a very high rate of mutation. These data are made available through scientific publications and must be extracted manually by experts in order to be used by virologists and medical doctors. Therefore there is an urgent need for a tool that partially automates this process and is able to retrieve relations between drugs and virus mutations from literature.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this work we present a novel method to extract and combine relationships between HIV drugs and mutations in viral genomes. Our extraction method is based on natural language processing (NLP) which produces grammatical relations and applies a set of rules to these relations. We applied our method to a relevant set of PubMed abstracts and obtained 2,434 extracted relations with an estimated performance of 84% for F-score. We then combined the extracted relations using logistic regression to generate resistance values for each <drug, mutation> pair. The results of this relation combination show more than 85% agreement with the Stanford HIVDB for the ten most frequently occurring mutations. The system is used in 5 hospitals from the Virolab project <url>http://www.virolab.org</url> to preselect the most relevant novel resistance data from literature and present those to virologists and medical doctors for further evaluation.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The proposed relation extraction and combination method has a good performance on extracting HIV drug resistance data. It can be used in large-scale relation extraction experiments. The developed methods can also be applied to extract other type of relations such as gene-protein, gene-disease, and disease-mutation.</p
Effect of a Dual Task on Postural Control in Dyslexic Children
Several studies have examined postural control in dyslexic children; however, their results were inconclusive. This study investigated the effect of a dual task on postural stability in dyslexic children. Eighteen dyslexic children (mean age 10.3±1.2 years) were compared with eighteen non-dyslexic children of similar age. Postural stability was recorded with a platform (TechnoConcept®) while the child, in separate sessions, made reflex horizontal and vertical saccades of 10° of amplitude, and read a text silently. We measured the surface and the mean speed of the center of pressure (CoP). Reading performance was assessed by counting the number of words read during postural measures. Both groups of children were more stable while performing saccades than while reading a text. Furthermore, dyslexic children were significantly more unstable than non-dyslexic children, especially during the reading task. Finally, the number of words read by dyslexic children was significantly lower than that of non-dyslexic children and, in contrast to the non-dyslexic children. In line with the U-shaped non-linear interaction model, we suggest that the attention consumed by the reading task could be responsible for the loss of postural control in both groups of children. The postural instability observed in dyslexic children supports the hypothesis that such children have a lack of integration of multiple sensorimotor inputs
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