854 research outputs found
Acute lung injury following intravascular complement activation; Association with toxic oxygen metabolites from neutrophils
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/23825/1/0000064.pd
Oxygen Radicals and Arachidonate Metabolites in Lung Injury a
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72476/1/j.1749-6632.1986.tb18477.x.pd
High (but Not Low) Urinary Iodine Excretion Is Predicted by Iodine Excretion Levels from Five Years Ago
Background: It has not been investigated whether there are associations between urinary iodine (UI) excretion measurements some years apart, nor whether such an association remains after adjustment for nutritional habits. The aim of the present study was to investigate the relation between iodine-creatinine ratio (ICR) at two measuring points 5 years apart. Methods: Data from 2,659 individuals from the Study of Health in Pomerania were analyzed. Analysis of covariance and Poisson regressions were used to associate baseline with follow-up ICR. Results: Baseline ICR was associated with follow-up ICR. Particularly, baseline ICR >300 mu g/g was related to an ICR >300 mu g/g at follow-up (relative risk, RR: 2.20; p < 0.001). The association was stronger in males (RR: 2.64; p < 0.001) than in females (RR: 1.64; p = 0.007). In contrast, baseline ICR <100 mu g/g was only associated with an ICR <100 mu g/g at follow-up in males when considering unadjusted ICR. Conclusions: We detected only a weak correlation with respect to low ICR. Studies assessing iodine status in a population should take into account that an individual with a low UI excretion in one measurement is not necessarily permanently iodine deficient. On the other hand, current high ICR could have been predicted by high ICR 5 years ago. Copyright (C) 2011 S. Karger AG, Base
Boosting Nearest-Neighbour to Long-Range Integrable Spin Chains
We present an integrability-preserving recursion relation for the explicit
construction of long-range spin chain Hamiltonians. These chains are
generalizations of the Haldane-Shastry and Inozemtsev models and they play an
important role in recent advances in string/gauge duality. The method is based
on arbitrary nearest-neighbour integrable spin chains and it sheds light on the
moduli space of deformation parameters. We also derive the closed chain
asymptotic Bethe equations.Comment: 10 pages, v2: reference added, minor changes, v3: published version
with added/updated reference
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Implementation of U.K. Earth system models for CMIP6
We describe the scientific and technical implementation of two models for a core set of
experiments contributing to the sixth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6).
The models used are the physical atmosphere-land-ocean-sea ice model HadGEM3-GC3.1 and the
Earth system model UKESM1 which adds a carbon-nitrogen cycle and atmospheric chemistry to
HadGEM3-GC3.1. The model results are constrained by the external boundary conditions (forcing data)
and initial conditions.We outline the scientific rationale and assumptions made in specifying these.
Notable details of the implementation include an ozone redistribution scheme for prescribed ozone
simulations (HadGEM3-GC3.1) to avoid inconsistencies with the model's thermal tropopause, and land use
change in dynamic vegetation simulations (UKESM1) whose influence will be subject to potential biases in
the simulation of background natural vegetation.We discuss the implications of these decisions for
interpretation of the simulation results. These simulations are expensive in terms of human and CPU
resources and will underpin many further experiments; we describe some of the technical steps taken to
ensure their scientific robustness and reproducibility
Qualitative methods: are you enchanted or are you alienated?
Copyright © 2007 SAGE Publications. Author's draft version; post-print. Final version published by Sage available on Sage Journals Online http://online.sagepub.com/Since the last report on qualitative methods
(Crang, 2005), many of the practical procedures
of doing qualitative research remain the
same. Human geographers continue to study
texts, to conduct interviews, to convene focus
groups and to engage in ethnography. Indeed,
it is hard, though perhaps not impossible,
to imagine what a radically new form of
qualitative research practice might look like.
So, for the time being, this suite of methods
remains the backbone of qualitative research in
human geography. Yet we would like to contend
that, while these activities continue as
before, there are changes in the way they are
being conceived and carried out, and related to
this there are transformations in the way these
methods are being used to make claims to
understanding and intervening in the world. In
the first of our three reports, it is this link
between qualitative methodologies and interpretative
strategies we would like to reflect on
Trialling technologies to reduce hospital in‐patient falls: an agential realist analysis
This paper analyses the 'failure' of a patient safety intervention. Our study was part of an RCT of bed and bedside chair pressure sensors linked to radio pagers to prevent bedside falls in older people admitted to hospital. We use agential realism within science and technology studies to examine the fall and its prevention as a situated phenomenon of knowledge that is made and unmade through intra-actions between environment, culture, humans and technologies. We show that neither the intervention (the pressure sensor system), nor the outcome (fall prevention) could be disentangled from the broader sociomaterial context of the ward, the patients, the nurses and (especially) their work through the RCT. We argue that the RCT design, by virtue of its unacknowledged assumptions, played a part in creating the negative findings. The study also raises wider questions about the kind of subjectivities, agencies and power relations these entanglements might effect and (re)produce in the hospital ward
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