3,302 research outputs found
Symptom complexes in patients with seropositive arthralgia and in patients newly diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis: a qualitative exploration of symptom development
Objective: The aim of this study was to explore symptoms and symptom development during the earliest phases of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in patients with seropositive arthralgia and patients newly diagnosed with RA
Stochastic series expansion method with operator-loop update
A cluster update (the ``operator-loop'') is developed within the framework of
a numerically exact quantum Monte Carlo method based on the power series
expansion of exp(-BH) (stochastic series expansion). The method is generally
applicable to a wide class of lattice Hamiltonians for which the expansion is
positive definite. For some important models the operator-loop algorithm is
more efficient than loop updates previously developed for ``worldline''
simulations. The method is here tested on a two-dimensional anisotropic
Heisenberg antiferromagnet in a magnetic field.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Properties of lightly doped t-J two-leg ladders
We have numerically investigated the doped t-J ladder using exact
diagonalization. We have studied both the limit of strong inter-chain coupling
and isotropic coupling. The ladder scales to the Luther-Emery liquid regime in
the strong inter-chain coupling limit. In this strong coupling limit there is a
simple picture of the excitation spectrum that can be continued to explain the
behavior at isotropic coupling. At J=0 we have indications of a ferromagnetic
ground state. At a large the ladder is phase separated into holes and a
Heisenberg ladder. At intermediate coupling the ground state shows hole pairing
with a modified d-wave symmetry. The excitation spectrum separates into a
limited number of quasiparticles which carry charge and spin and a triplet magnon mode. At half-filling the former vanish but the latter
evolves continuously into the magnon band of the spin liquid. At low doping the
quasiparticles form a dilute Fermi gas with a strong attraction but
simultaneously the Fermi wave vector, as would be measured in photoemission, is
large. The dynamical structure factors are calculated and are found to be very
similar to calculations on 2D clusters
X-ray Bright Active Galactic Nuclei in Massive Galaxy Clusters I: Number Counts and Spatial Distribution
We present an analysis of the X-ray bright point source population in 43
massive clusters of galaxies observed with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. We
have constructed a catalog of 4210 rigorously selected X-ray point sources in
these fields, which span a survey area of 4.2 square degrees. This catalog
reveals a clear excess of sources when compared to deep blank-field surveys,
which amounts to roughly 1 additional source per cluster, likely Active
Galactic Nuclei (AGN) associated with the clusters. The excess sources are
concentrated within the virial radii of the clusters, with the largest excess
observed near the cluster centers. The average radial profile of the excess
X-ray sources of the cluster are well described by a power law (N(r) ~ r^\beta)
with an index of \beta ~ -0.5. An initial analysis using literature results on
the mean profile of member galaxies in massive X-ray selected clusters
indicates that the fraction of galaxies hosting X-ray AGN rises with increasing
clustercentric radius, being approximately 5 to 10 times higher near the virial
radius than in the central regions. This trend is qualitatively similar to that
observed for star formation in cluster member galaxies.Comment: 18 Pages, 10 Figures, Submitted to MNRAS. Please contact Steven
Ehlert ([email protected]) for higher resolution figures. Updated to
reflect small changes requested by referee. This version has been accepted
into MNRA
Quantum Monte Carlo in the Interaction Representation --- Application to a Spin-Peierls Model
A quantum Monte Carlo algorithm is constructed starting from the standard
perturbation expansion in the interaction representation. The resulting
configuration space is strongly related to that of the Stochastic Series
Expansion (SSE) method, which is based on a direct power series expansion of
exp(-beta*H). Sampling procedures previously developed for the SSE method can
therefore be used also in the interaction representation formulation. The new
method is first tested on the S=1/2 Heisenberg chain. Then, as an application
to a model of great current interest, a Heisenberg chain including phonon
degrees of freedom is studied. Einstein phonons are coupled to the spins via a
linear modulation of the nearest-neighbor exchange. The simulation algorithm is
implemented in the phonon occupation number basis, without Hilbert space
truncations, and is exact. Results are presented for the magnetic properties of
the system in a wide temperature regime, including the T-->0 limit where the
chain undergoes a spin-Peierls transition. Some aspects of the phonon dynamics
are also discussed. The results suggest that the effects of dynamic phonons in
spin-Peierls compounds such as GeCuO3 and NaV2O5 must be included in order to
obtain a correct quantitative description of their magnetic properties, both
above and below the dimerization temperature.Comment: 23 pages, Revtex, 11 PostScript figure
Spin Wave Instability of Itinerant Ferromagnet
We show variationally that instability of the ferromagnetic state in the
Hubbard model is largely controlled by softening of a long-wavelength spin-wave
excitation, except in the over-doped strong-coupling region where the
individual-particle excitation becomes unstable first. A similar conclusion is
drawn also for the double exchange ferromagnet. Generally the spin-wave
instability may be regarded as a precursor of the metal-insulator transition.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Allocation to highly sensitized patients based on acceptable mismatches results in low rejection rates comparable to non-sensitized patients
Whereas regular allocation avoids unacceptable mismatches on the donor organ, allocation to highly sensitized patients within the Eurotransplant Acceptable Mismatch (AM) program is based on the patient's HLA phenotype plus acceptable antigens. These are HLA antigens to which the patient never made antibodies, determined by extensive laboratory testing. AM patients have superior long-term graft survival compared to highly sensitized patients in regular allocation. Here, we questioned whether the AM program also results in lower rejection rates. From the PROCARE cohort, consisting of all Dutch kidney transplants 1995-2005, we selected deceased donor single transplants with minimum one HLA mismatch and determined the cumulative 6-month rejection incidence for patients in AM or regular allocation. Additionally, we determined the effect of minimal matching criteria of one HLA-B plus one HLA-DR, or two HLA-DR antigens on rejection incidence. AM patients showed significantly lower rejection rates than highly immunized patients in regular allocation, comparable to non-sensitized patients, independent of other risk factors for rejection. Contrasting to highly sensitized patients in regular allocation, minimal matching criteria did not affect rejection rates in AM patients. Allocation based on acceptable antigens leads to relatively low risk transplants for highly sensitized patients with rejection rates similar to non-immunized individuals. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.</p
Identification of major dioxin-like compounds and androgen receptor antagonist in acid-treated tissue extracts of high trophic-level animals
We evaluated the applicability of combining in vitro bioassays with instrument analyses to identify potential endocrine disrupting pollutants in sulfuric acid-treated extracts of liver and/or blubber of high trophic-level animals. Dioxin-like and androgen receptor (AR) antagonistic activities were observed in Baikal seals, common cormorants, raccoon dogs, and finless porpoises by using a panel of rat and human cell-based chemical-activated luciferase gene expression (CALUX) reporter gene bioassays. On the other hand, no activity was detected in estrogen receptor α (ERα)-, glucocorticoid receptor (GR)-, progesterone receptor (PR)-, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ2 (PPARγ2)-CALUX assays with the sample amount applied. All individual samples (n = 66) showed dioxin-like activity, with values ranging from 21 to 5500 pg CALUX-2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin equivalent (TEQ)/g-lipid. Because dioxins are expected to be strong contributors to CALUX-TEQs, the median theoretical contribution of dioxins calculated from the result of chemical analysis to the experimental CALUX-TEQs was estimated to explain up to 130% for all the tested samples (n = 54). Baikal seal extracts (n = 31), but not other extracts, induced AR antagonistic activities that were 8-150 μg CALUX-flutamide equivalent (FluEQ)/g-lipid. p,p′-DDE was identified as an important causative compound for the activity, and its median theoretical contribution to the experimental CALUX-FluEQs was 59% for the tested Baikal seal tissues (n = 25). Our results demonstrate that combining in vitro CALUX assays with instrument analysis is useful for identifying persistent organic pollutant-like compounds in the tissue of wild animals on the basis of in vitro endocrine disruption toxicity. © 2011 American Chemical Society
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