2,068 research outputs found
Rates of medial tibiofemoral joint space narrowing in osteoarthritis studies consistent despite methodological differences
SummaryRationaleMinimum tibiofemoral joint space width in the medial compartment (JSW) is the most well-established structural outcome measure for osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee. Its usefulness as a measure of therapeutic effectiveness in short-term studies is limited by the rate and variability of joint space narrowing (JSN) in the OA population. Microfocal radiography has been shown to improve reproducibility of JSW measurement compared to standard radiography, but measurement of magnification from microfocal knee films has been problematic, and JSN is yet to be investigated in a longitudinal microfocal study.ObjectiveTo establish the effect on JSW reproducibility of a new method of magnification measurement in microfocal radiographs. To report on and compare rates of medial tibiofemoral JSN and their variations in the placebo arms of microfocal and standard radiographic clinical trials in OA, using fluoroscopic semi-flexed (SF) knee positioning. To place in the context of published estimates of rates of JSN from comparable studies.MethodsUsing microfocal radiography, 36 patients were followed at a single centre for 2 years. Using standard radiography, 86 patients were followed for 1 year at a single centre, and 549 for 2 years in a multi-centre international study. Computerised JSW measurement was undertaken using enhanced and automated versions of existing algorithms. Rates of JSN were examined in the context of a review of published rates of JSN using a variety of techniques.ResultsReproducibility of JSW measurement from microfocal radiographs was improved by the new magnification measurement. Rates of JSN were similar across the studies, but more variable when using standard radiography. The rates of JSN were also consistent with those from previously published investigations; all estimates since 2000, bar one, being consistent with the value 0.05mm/year.ConclusionMicrofocal radiography using the new method lowered the variability of the rate of JSN, but the high cost and low availability of microfocal equipment remains a barrier to its more widespread use. The consistently low but highly variable rates of JSN seen in the review suggest that continued attempts to improve radiographic and mensural techniques are unlikely to significantly reduce required sample sizes
Space-time translational gauge identities in Abelian Yang-Mills gravity
We derive and calculate the space-time translational gauge identities in
quantum Yang-Mills gravity with a general class of gauge conditions involving
two arbitrary parameters. These identities of the Abelian group of translation
are a generalization of Ward-Takahasi-Fradkin identities and important for
general discussions of possible renormalization of Yang-Mills gravity with
translational gauge symmetry. The gauge identities in Yang-Mills gravity with a
general class of gauge conditions are substantiated by explicit calculations.Comment: 15 pages. To be published in The European Physical Journal - Plus
(2012
Exhaled nitric oxide predicts asthma relapse in children with clinical asthma remission
BACKGROUND: Nitric oxide in exhaled air (FE(NO)) is a marker of
eosinophilic airway inflammation. A study was undertaken to determine
whether FE(NO) predicts asthma relapse in asymptomatic asthmatic children
in whom inhaled corticosteroids are discontinued. METHODS: Forty children
(21 boys) of mean age 12.2 years on a median dose of 400 mug budesonide or
equivalent (range 100-400) were included. FE(NO) was measured before and
2, 4, 12, and 24 weeks after withdrawal of steroids. A relapse was defined
as more than one exacerbation per month, or need for beta agonist
treatment on 4 days per week for at least 2 weeks, or diurnal peak flow
variability of >20%. FE(NO) measurements were performed online with an
expiratory flow of 50 ml/s. RESULTS: Nine patients relapsed. Two and 4
weeks after withdrawal of steroids geometric mean FE(NO) in children who
were about to relapse was higher than in those who did not relapse: 35.3
ppb v 15.7 ppb at 2 weeks (ratio 2.3; 95% CI 1.2 to 4.1; p = 0.01) and
40.8 ppb v 15.9 ppb at 4 weeks (ratio 2.6; 95% CI 1.3 to 5.1). An FE(NO)
value of 49 ppb at 4 weeks after discontinuation of steroids had the best
combination of sensitivity (71%) and specificity (93%) for asthma relapse.
CONCLUSION: FE(NO) 2 and 4 weeks after discontinuation of steroids in
asymptomatic asthmatic children may be an objective predictor of asthma
relapse
(No) dynamical constraints on the mass of the black hole in two ULXs
We present the preliminary results of two Gemini campaigns to constrain the mass of the black hole in an ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX) via optical spectroscopy. Pilot studies of the optical counterparts of a number of ULXs revealed two candidates for further detailed study, based on the presence of a broad He II 4686 Ă… emission line. A sequence of 10 long-slit spectra were obtained for each object, and the velocity shift of the ULX counterpart measured. Although radial velocity variations are observed, they are not sinusoidal, and no mass function is obtained. However, the broad He II line is highly variable on timescales shorter than a day. If associated with the reprocessing of X-rays in the accretion disc, its breadth implies that the disc must be close to face-on
The Hopf algebra of Feynman graphs in QED
We report on the Hopf algebraic description of renormalization theory of
quantum electrodynamics. The Ward-Takahashi identities are implemented as
linear relations on the (commutative) Hopf algebra of Feynman graphs of QED.
Compatibility of these relations with the Hopf algebra structure is the
mathematical formulation of the physical fact that WT-identities are compatible
with renormalization. As a result, the counterterms and the renormalized
Feynman amplitudes automatically satisfy the WT-identities, which leads in
particular to the well-known identity .Comment: 13 pages. Latex, uses feynmp. Minor corrections; to appear in LM
Chern-Simons Solitons, Chiral Model, and (affine) Toda Model on Noncommutative Space
We consider the Dunne-Jackiw-Pi-Trugenberger model of a U(N) Chern-Simons
gauge theory coupled to a nonrelativistic complex adjoint matter on
noncommutative space. Soliton configurations of this model are related the
solutions of the chiral model on noncommutative plane. A generalized
Uhlenbeck's uniton method for the chiral model on noncommutative space provides
explicit Chern-Simons solitons. Fundamental solitons in the U(1) gauge theory
are shaped as rings of charge `n' and spin `n' where the Chern-Simons level `n'
should be an integer upon quantization. Toda and Liouville models are
generalized to noncommutative plane and the solutions are provided by the
uniton method. We also define affine Toda and sine-Gordon models on
noncommutative plane. Finally the first order moduli space dynamics of
Chern-Simons solitons is shown to be trivial.Comment: latex, JHEP style, 23 pages, no figur
The AdS/CFT/Unparticle Correspondence
We examine the correspondence between the anti-de Sitter (AdS) description of
conformal field theories (CFTs) and the unparticle description of CFTs. We show
how unparticle actions are equivalent to holographic boundary actions for
fields in AdS, and how massive unparticles provide a new type of infrared
cutoff that can be simply implemented in AdS by a soft breaking of conformal
symmetry. We also show that processes involving scalar unparticles with
dimensions d_s<2 or fermion unparticles with dimensions d_f<5/2 are insensitive
to ultraviolet cutoff effects. Finally we show that gauge interactions for
unparticles can be described by bulk gauge interactions in AdS and that they
correspond to minimal gauging of the non-local effective action, and we compute
the fermion unparticle production cross-section.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figur
Chern-Simons Solitons, Toda Theories and the Chiral Model
The two-dimensional self-dual Chern--Simons equations are equivalent to the
conditions for static, zero-energy solutions of the -dimensional gauged
nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation with Chern--Simons matter-gauge dynamics. In
this paper we classify all finite charge solutions by first
transforming the self-dual Chern--Simons equations into the two-dimensional
chiral model (or harmonic map) equations, and then using the Uhlenbeck--Wood
classification of harmonic maps into the unitary groups. This construction also
leads to a new relationship between the Toda and chiral model
solutions
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