3,962 research outputs found
The Influence of Tibial Positioning on the Diagnostic Accuracy of Combined Posterior Cruciate Ligament and Posterolateral Rotatory Instability of the Knee
Background: To determine if tibial positioning affects the external rotation of the tibia in a dial test for posterolateral rotatory instability combined with posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) injuries. Methods: Between April 2007 and October 2007, 16 patients with a PCL tear and posterolateral rotatory instability were diagnosed using a dial test. The thigh-foot angle was measured at both 30 Ā° and 90 Ā° of knee fl exion with an external rotation stress applied to the tibia in 2 different positions (reduction and posterior subluxation). The measurements were performed twice by 2 orthopedic surgeons. Results: In posterior subluxation, the mean side-to-side difference in the thigh-foot angle was 11.56 Ā± 3.01 Ā° at 30 Ā° of knee fl exion and 11.88 Ā± 4.03 Ā° at 90 Ā° of knee flexion. In the sequential dial test performed with the tibia reduced, the mean side-to-side difference was 15.94 Ā± 4.17 Ā° (p < 0.05) at 30 Ā° of knee fl exion and 16.88 Ā± 4.42 Ā° (p = 0.001) at 90 Ā° of knee fl exion. The mean tibial external rotation was 5.31 Ā± 2.86 Ā° and 6.87 Ā± 3.59 Ā° higher in the reduced position than in the posterior subluxation at both 30Ā° and 90 Ā° of knee fl exion. Conclusions: In the dial test, reducing the tibia with an anterior force increases the ability of an examiner to detect posterolateral rotary instability of the knee combined with PCL injuries
DialogCC: An Automated Pipeline for Creating High-Quality Multi-Modal Dialogue Dataset
As sharing images in an instant message is a crucial factor, there has been
active research on learning an image-text multi-modal dialogue models. However,
training a well-generalized multi-modal dialogue model remains challenging due
to the low quality and limited diversity of images per dialogue in existing
multi-modal dialogue datasets. In this paper, we propose an automated pipeline
to construct a multi-modal dialogue dataset, ensuring both dialogue quality and
image diversity without requiring minimum human effort. In our pipeline, to
guarantee the coherence between images and dialogue, we prompt GPT-4 to infer
potential image-sharing moments - specifically, the utterance, speaker,
rationale, and image description. Furthermore, we leverage CLIP similarity to
maintain consistency between aligned multiple images to the utterance. Through
this pipeline, we introduce DialogCC, a high-quality and diverse multi-modal
dialogue dataset that surpasses existing datasets in terms of quality and
diversity in human evaluation. Our comprehensive experiments highlight that
when multi-modal dialogue models are trained using our dataset, their
generalization performance on unseen dialogue datasets is significantly
enhanced. We make our source code and dataset publicly available.Comment: NAACL 202
Supramolecular Complexation of \u3cem\u3eN\u3c/em\u3e-Alkyl- and \u3cem\u3eN\u3c/em\u3e,\u3cem\u3eN\u3c/em\u3eā²-Dialkylpiperazines with Cucurbit[6]uril in Aqueous Solution and in the Solid State
Water seeds: Complex stoichiometry/composition and degree of oligomerization (oligomeric supramolecular complex formation) of cucurbit[6]uril (CB[6]) with N-alkyl- and N,Nā²-dialkylpiperazine were investigated in aqueous solutions by means of isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), ESI-MS, NMR and light scattering measurements. Complex stoichiometry/composition and degree of oligomerization (oligomeric supramolecular complex formation) of cucurbit[6]uril (CB[6]) with N-alkyl- and N,Nā²-dialkylpiperazine were investigated in aqueous solutions by means of isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), ESI-MS, NMR and light scattering measurements. It was found that the complex stability and the degree of oligomerization increase with elongating the alkyl chain attached to the piperazine core. X-ray crystallographic studies revealed a clear correlation between the structure of CB[6]āalkylpiperazine crystals obtained from aqueous solutions and the molecular weight/properties of hostāguest oligomers existed in the solution as supramolecular āseedsā of crystal formation
Segregation analysis of mandibular prognathism in Korean orthognathic surgery patients and their families
Objective: To investigate the existence of genetic influences on the incidence of mandibular prognathism (MP) in Korean Class Ill patients. Materials and Methods: The probands consisted of 100 Class Ill patients with MP (51 men and 49 women; mean age, 22.1 +/- 5.2 years; SNA, 81.2 degrees +/- 3.2 degrees; SNB, 84.1 degrees +/- 3.9 degrees) who underwent orthognathic surgery. Using three-generation pedigree charts, questionnaires, and clinical examinations, general information and information regarding MP for a total of 3777 relatives of the probands (1911 men and 1866 women) was ascertained. Familial correlations of MP between possible pairs in the pedigree were estimated. Heritability (h(2)) of MP under various models was estimated. Segregation analysis was conducted under the assumption of the nonpolygenic multivariate logistic model and finite polygenic mixed model. One-, two-, and three-susceptibility-type models were evaluated. Results: Among 3777 relatives, 199 (97 men and 102 women) were affected with MP (5.3%). Correlation coefficients of MP incidence in full siblings and in parent-offspring were .2003 and .2036, respectively (all P < .001). The h(2) of MP was estimated as 21.5% after adjusting for sex and founder effects. Two- and three susceptibility-type models showed that the general model fit better than the other models. MP incidence did not have a major gene transmission model and was influenced by numerous minor effect genes and their additive effects. Conclusion: These results suggest that the inherited susceptibility to MP in Korean Class Ill patients might be due to the summation of minor effects from a variety of different genes and/or influence of environmental factors, rather than Mendelian transmission of major genes.OAIID:oai:osos.snu.ac.kr:snu2013-01/102/0000004298/12SEQ:12PERF_CD:SNU2013-01EVAL_ITEM_CD:102USER_ID:0000004298ADJUST_YN:YEMP_ID:A072100DEPT_CD:852CITE_RATE:1.184FILENAME:segregation-ao-2013-final.pdfDEPT_NM:ģ¹ģź³¼ķź³¼SCOPUS_YN:YCONFIRM:
Cellular stress-induced up-regulation of FMRP promotes cell survival by modulating PI3K-Akt phosphorylation cascades
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Fragile X syndrome (FXS), the most commonly inherited mental retardation and single gene cause of autistic spectrum disorder, occurs when the Fmr1 gene is mutated. The product of Fmr1, fragile X linked mental retardation protein (FMRP) is widely expressed in HeLa cells, however the roles of FMRP within HeLa cells were not elucidated, yet. Interacting with a diverse range of mRNAs related to cellular survival regulatory signals, understanding the functions of FMRP in cellular context would provide better insights into the role of this interesting protein in FXS. Using HeLa cells treated with etoposide as a model, we tried to determine whether FMRP could play a role in cell survival.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Apoptotic cell death was induced by etoposide treatment on Hela cells. After we transiently modulated FMRP expression (silencing or enhancing) by using molecular biotechnological methods such as small hairpin RNA virus-induced knock down and overexpression using transfection with FMRP expression vectors, cellular viability was measured using propidium iodide staining, TUNEL staining, and FACS analysis along with the level of activation of PI3K-Akt pathway by Western blot. Expression level of FMRP and apoptotic regulator BcL-xL was analyzed by Western blot, RT-PCR and immunocytochemistry.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>An increased FMRP expression was measured in etoposide-treated HeLa cells, which was induced by PI3K-Akt activation. Without FMRP expression, cellular defence mechanism via PI3K-Akt-Bcl-xL was weakened and resulted in an augmented cell death by etoposide. In addition, FMRP over-expression lead to the activation of PI3K-Akt signalling pathway as well as increased FMRP and BcL-xL expression, which culminates with the increased cell survival in etoposide-treated HeLa cells.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Taken together, these results suggest that FMRP expression is an essential part of cellular survival mechanisms through the modulation of PI3K, Akt, and Bcl-xL signal pathways.</p
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