115 research outputs found
Thyroid dysfunction in type 2 diabetes mellitus patients attending diabetic clinic in a tertiary care centre: a cross-sectional study
Background: Thyroid disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus are two common co-existing endocrinopathies found in the general population. Since thyroid dysfunction complicates the metabolic derangement observed in diabetes, its treatment is necessary in order to achieve stability of metabolic control. Therefore, the aim of the present investigation was to estimate the functional thyroid disorders and the associated factors in type 2 diabetes patients.Methods: In 230 diabetic patients, the blood sugar level and thyroid function tests were performed and compared. Most of the patients were in the age group of 51-60 years (36.08%).Results: The prevalence of thyroid dysfunction in diabetic patients was 15.21% with a higher rate in female patients. Subclinical hypothyroidism (12.17%) was the commonest thyroid dysfunction.Conclusions: The data suggest that subclinical hypothyroidism was more prevalent in type 2 diabetes mellitus, and may confer a greater risk of diabetic complications. It is therefore important to diagnose thyroid dysfunction in diabetic patients and the practice should be inculcated in diabetic care
Structural Studies on Alkylisocyanate Polymers by Thermal Degradation Tandem Mass Spectrometry
AbstractHomopolymers and copolymers of alkylisocyanates having n-hexyl, 2,6-dimethylheptyl, 3,7-dimethyloctyl, and (2,2-dimethyl-1,3-dioxolan-4-yl)methyl substituents underwent thermal degradation in the course of desorption electron ionization to yield trimers and monomers that were characterized in situ by tandem mass spectrometry. The trimers were trisubstituted cyanuric acids, the protonated molecules displaying a characteristic series of alkene eliminations on collision-induced dissociation to yield protonated cyanuric acid, m/z 130. Confirmation of the identity of the pyrolysates was obtained by using two types of MS3 experiments: the reaction intermediate scan and the two-dimensional familial scan. The ion chemistry of the trimers and of the protonated monomer, the alkylisocyanate, was elucidated. Among the many interesting fragmentation processes undergone by the ionized trimers were α and β CC bond cleavages and charge-remote fragmentations, which provided information on branching in the alkyl substituent. The dioxolane-containing substituent showed unique ion chemistry. The monomer distribution in the copolymers was deduced from the abundances of the various protonated trimers. The distribution was found to be random in all copolymers except that containing the dioxolane substituent
"The fruits of independence": Satyajit Ray, Indian nationhood and the spectre of empire
Challenging the longstanding consensus that Satyajit Ray's work is largely free of ideological concerns and notable only for its humanistic richness, this article shows with reference to representations of British colonialism and Indian nationhood that Ray's films and stories are marked deeply and consistently by a distinctively Bengali variety of liberalism. Drawn from an ongoing biographical project, it commences with an overview of the nationalist milieu in which Ray grew up and emphasizes the preoccupation with colonialism and nationalism that marked his earliest unfilmed scripts. It then shows with case studies of Kanchanjangha (1962), Charulata (1964), First Class Kamra (First-Class Compartment, 1981), Pratidwandi (The Adversary, 1970), Shatranj ke Khilari (The Chess Players, 1977), Agantuk (The Stranger, 1991) and Robertsoner Ruby (Robertson's Ruby, 1992) how Ray's mature work continued to combine a strongly anti-colonial viewpoint with a shifting perspective on Indian nationhood and an unequivocal commitment to cultural cosmopolitanism. Analysing how Ray articulated his ideological positions through the quintessentially liberal device of complexly staged debates that were apparently free, but in fact closed by the scenarist/director on ideologically specific notes, this article concludes that Ray's reputation as an all-forgiving, ‘everybody-has-his-reasons’ humanist is based on simplistic or even tendentious readings of his work
A Quintessentially Geometric Model
We consider string inspired cosmology on a solitary -brane moving in the
background of a ring of branes located on a circle of radius . The motion of
the -brane transverse to the plane of the ring gives rise to a radion field
which can be mapped to a massive non-BPS Born-Infeld type field with a cosh
potential. For certain bounds of the brane tension we find an inflationary
phase is possible, with the string scale relatively close to the Planck scale.
The relevant perturbations and spectral indices are all well within the
expected observational bounds. The evolution of the universe eventually comes
to be dominated by dark energy, which we show is a late time attractor of the
model. However we also find that the equation of state is time dependent, and
will lead to late time Quintessence.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures. References and comments adde
Search for DCC in 158A GeV Pb+Pb Collisions
A detailed analysis of the phase space distributions of charged particles and
photons have been carried out using two independent methods. The results
indicate the presence of nonstatistical fluctuations in localized regions of
phase space.Comment: Talk at the PANIC99 Conference, June 9-16, 199
Present Status and Future of DCC Analysis
Disoriented Chiral Condensates (DCC) have been predicted to form in high
energy heavy ion collisions where the approximate chiral symmetry of QCD has
been restored. This leads to large imbalances in the production of charged to
neutral pions. Sophisticated analysis methods are being developed to
disentangle DCC events out of the large background of events with
conventionally produced particles. We present a short review of current
analysis methods and future prospects.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. Invited talk presented at the 13th International
Conference on Ultrarelativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (Quark Matter 97),
Tsukuba, Japan, 1-5 Dec 199
Multiplicity Distributions and Charged-neutral Fluctuations
Results from the multiplicity distributions of inclusive photons and charged
particles, scaling of particle multiplicities, event-by-event multiplicity
fluctuations, and charged-neutral fluctuations in 158 GeV Pb+Pb
collisions are presented and discussed. A scaling of charged particle
multiplicity as and photons as have been observed, indicating violation of naive wounded nucleon model.
The analysis of localized charged-neutral fluctuation indicates a
model-independent demonstration of non-statistical fluctuations in both charged
particles and photons in limited azimuthal regions. However, no correlated
charged-neutral fluctuations are observed.Comment: Talk given at the International Symposium on Nuclear Physics
(ISNP-2000), Mumbai, India, 18-22 Dec 2000, Proceedings to be published in
Pramana, Journal of Physic
Coupled dark energy: Towards a general description of the dynamics
In dark energy models of scalar-field coupled to a barotropic perfect fluid,
the existence of cosmological scaling solutions restricts the Lagrangian of the
field \vp to p=X g(Xe^{\lambda \vp}), where X=-g^{\mu\nu} \partial_\mu \vp
\partial_\nu \vp /2, is a constant and is an arbitrary function.
We derive general evolution equations in an autonomous form for this Lagrangian
and investigate the stability of fixed points for several different dark energy
models--(i) ordinary (phantom) field, (ii) dilatonic ghost condensate, and
(iii) (phantom) tachyon. We find the existence of scalar-field dominant fixed
points (\Omega_\vp=1) with an accelerated expansion in all models
irrespective of the presence of the coupling between dark energy and dark
matter. These fixed points are always classically stable for a phantom field,
implying that the universe is eventually dominated by the energy density of a
scalar field if phantom is responsible for dark energy. When the equation of
state w_\vp for the field \vp is larger than -1, we find that scaling
solutions are stable if the scalar-field dominant solution is unstable, and
vice versa. Therefore in this case the final attractor is either a scaling
solution with constant \Omega_\vp satisfying 0<\Omega_\vp<1 or a
scalar-field dominant solution with \Omega_\vp=1.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures; minor clarifications added, typos corrected and
references updated; final version to appear in JCA
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