1,321 research outputs found
The effect on rat thymocytes of the simultaneous invivo exposure to 50-Hz electric and magnetic field and to continuous light.
Thymus plays an important role in the immune system and can be modulated by numerous environmental factors, including electromagnetic fields (EMF). The present study has been undertaken with the aim to investigate the role of long-term exposure to extremely low frequency electric and magnetic fields (ELF-EMF) on thymocytes of rats housed in a regular dark/light cycle or under continuous light. Male Sprague-Dawley rats, 2 months old, were exposed or sham exposed for 8 months to 50-Hz sinusoidal EMF at two levels of field strength (1 kV/m, 5 microT and 5 kV/m, 100 microT, respectively). Thymus from adult animals exhibits signs of gradual atrophy mainly due to collagen deposition and fat substitution. This physiological involution may be accelerated by continuous light exposure that induces a massive death of thymocytes. The concurrent exposure to continuous light and to ELF-EMF did not change significantly the rate of mitoses compared to sham-exposed rats, whereas the amount of cell death was significantly increased, also in comparison with animals exposed to EMF in a 12-h dark-light cycle. In conclusion, long-term exposure to ELF-EMF, in animals housed under continuous light, may reinforce the alterations due to a photic stress, suggesting that, in vivo, stress and ELF-EMF exposure can act in synergy determining a more rapid involution of the thymus and might be responsible for an increased susceptibility to the potentially hazardous effects of ELF-EM
Predicting the response to a triptan in migraine using deep attack phenotyping: A feasibility study
Background: Triptans, specific symptomatic medications for migraine, are not effective in a proportion of patients, or in all attacks, hence the importance of identifying predictors of response. Our aim was to investigate the association between the efficacy of oral frovatriptan 2.5 mg and clinical characteristics of migraine attacks. Methods: We enrolled 29 consecutive patients affected by migraine without aura at the Headache Center of \u201cMondino\u201d Institute of Pavia. Each patient was given a diary and asked to record prospectively the features of three consecutive migraine attacks while using frovatriptan. A generalized estimating equations approach was used to determine phenotypic features associated with the pain free response at 2 hours. Results: Participants provided complete data for 85 attacks. Thirty of these (34%) patients reported being pain free 2 hours after taking frovatriptan 2.5 mg intake. Unilateral pain, presence of phonophobia, presence of one or more cranial autonomic symptoms and presence of one or more premonitory symptom were each associated with being pain free at 2 hours. Conclusions: The response to frovatriptan was associated with particular features of the migraine attack, either before or during the pain phase of attacks. The data support larger studies to explore detailed attack phenotyping, with particular attention to early signs, to enable individualized treatment in migraine
Gravitational Entropy and Quantum Cosmology
We investigate the evolution of different measures of ``Gravitational
Entropy'' in Bianchi type I and Lema\^itre-Tolman universe models.
A new quantity behaving in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics
is introduced. We then go on and investigate whether a quantum calculation of
initial conditions for the universe based upon the Wheeler-DeWitt equation
supports Penrose's Weyl Curvature Conjecture, according to which the Ricci part
of the curvature dominates over the Weyl part at the initial singularity of the
universe. The theory is applied to the Bianchi type I universe models with dust
and a cosmological constant and to the Lema\^itre-Tolman universe models. We
investigate two different versions of the conjecture. First we investigate a
local version which fails to support the conjecture. Thereafter we construct a
non-local entity which shows more promising behaviour concerning the
conjecture.Comment: 20 pages, 7 ps figure
Elastic electron scattering from 3-hydroxytetrahydrofuran: experimental and theoretical studies
We report the results of measurements and calculations for elastic electron scattering from 3-hydroxytetrahydrofuran (C4H8O2). The measurements are performed with a crossed electron-target beam apparatus and the absolute cross-sections are determined using the relative flow technique. The calculations are carried out using the Schwinger multichannel method in the static-exchange plus polarization (SEP) approximation. A set of angular differential cross-sections (DCS) is provided at five incident energies (6.5, 8, 10, 15 and 20 eV) over an angular range of 20–130°, and the energy dependence of the elastic DCS at a scattering angle of 120° is also presented. Integral elastic and elastic momentum transfer cross-sections have also been derived and calculated. The results are compared with those of recent measurements and calculations for the structurally similar molecule tetrahydrofuran (C4H8O)
Early pathological gambling in co-occurrence with semantic variant primary progressive aphasia: A case report
We have comprehensively documented a case of semantic variant of primary progressive aphasia (sv-PPA) presenting with early-onset pathological gambling (PG). While a growing number of studies have shown the presence of behavioral alterations in patients with sv-PPA, PG has been observed only in the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bv-FTD). To date, no case of PG with the co-occurrence of prominent semantic deficits at the onset of the disease has been reported in the literature. Impulse disorders at onset may wrongly lead to a misdiagnosis (ie, psychiatric disorders). Therefore, a wider characterization of cognitive/aphasia symptoms in patients presenting impulse disorders and predominant language dysfunctions is recommended
Recommended from our members
Treatment satisfaction, adherence and behavioral assessment in patients de – escalating from natalizumab to interferon beta
Background: De-escalating natalizumab (NTZ) to interferon beta 1b (IFN B 1B) is a possible treatment option in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients interrupting NTZ because of increased risk of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). The aim of this study was to evaluate satisfaction and adherence to treatment, behavioral and fatigue changes in patients switched to IFN B 1B compared to continued NTZ treatment. Methods: A 1 year, prospective, randomized, rater-blinded, parallel-group study. Nineteen relapsing remitting (RR) MS patients, randomly assigned to undergo either NTZ (n = 10) or IFN B 1B (n = 9) treatment, who had previously received NTZ for at least 12 months with disease stability and fearing or at risk for PML were included. Patients underwent behavioral and treatment assessments at baseline, after 24-week and 1 year follow-up. Behavioral assessment included measures of cognition, fatigue and quality of life. Treatment assessment included measures of satisfaction, persistence and adherence to treatment. Clinical-radiological disease activity and safety were also assessed. Results: Baseline characteristics of patients were similar between groups except for Euro Quality Visual Analogue Scale, being higher in the NTZ group (p = 0.04). Within-group comparisons at the three time points, as well as interaction analysis of treatment effect over time did not show any statistically significant differences in behavioral or treatment assessments, but a coherent trend favoring NTZ over IFN B 1B. Conclusions: De-escalating NTZ to IFN B 1B is feasible and associated with overall good patient related outcome and persistently stable behavioral measures
Plasma Inflammatory Cytokines Are Elevated in ALS
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease which
leads to death in a median time of 2–3 years. Inflammation has been claimed important
to the ALS pathogenesis, but its role is still not well-characterized. In the present study, a
panel of five cytokines (IL-2, IL-6, IL-10, IFN-gamma, and TNF-alpha)measured in plasma
has been investigated in ALS. These biomarkers of inflammation were measured in a
population-based cohort of 79 patients with ALS and 79 age- and sex-matched healthy
controls using the Bio-Plex technology (Bio-Rad). All the five cytokines were significantly
increased in plasma samples of patients compared with controls (p < 0.0001), with IL-6
having the highest median concentration (10.11 pg/ml) in the ALS group. Furthermore,
IL-6 was the plasma cytokine with the highest discrimination ability between patients and
controls according to the receiver operating characteristic analysis (area under the curve
= 0.93). At a cut-off point of 5.71 pg/ml, it was able to classify patients and controls with
91% of sensitivity and 87% of specificity. In the ALS group, plasma IL-6 concentration
correlated with demographic (age: rs = 0.25, p = 0.025) and clinical (revised ALS
Functional Rating Scale at evaluation: rs = −0.32, p = 0.007; Manual Muscle Testing: rs
=−0.33, p=0.004; progression: rs=0.29, p=0.0395) parameters. In line with previous
studies, our results confirm that inflammatory cytokines are elevated in ALS, supporting
a possible role of inflammation in disease mechanism and progression. However, the
precise role of inflammation in ALS needs to be further investigated on larger samples
and with more mechanistic studies
- …