96 research outputs found

    Orthogonality catastrophe and fractional exclusion statistics

    Get PDF
    We show that the N-particle Sutherland model with inverse-square and harmonic interactions exhibits orthogonality catastrophe. For a fixed value of the harmonic coupling, the overlap of the N-body ground state wave functions with two different values of the inverse-square interaction term goes to zero in the thermodynamic limit. When the two values of the inverse-square coupling differ by an infinitesimal amount, the wave function overlap shows an exponential suppression. This is qualitatively different from the usual power law suppression observed in the Anderson''s orthogonality catastrophe. We also obtain an analytic expression for the wave function overlaps for an arbitrary set of couplings, whose properties are analyzed numerically. The quasiparticles constituting the ground state wave functions of the Sutherland model are known to obey fractional exclusion statistics. Our analysis indicates that the orthogonality catastrophe may be valid in systems with more general kinds of statistics than just the fermionic type

    Whipple's Disease With Neurological Manifestations: Case Report

    Get PDF
    Whipple's disease (WD) is an uncommon multisystem condition caused by the bacillus Tropheryma whipplei. Central nervous system involvement is a classical feature of the disease observed in 20 to 40% of the patients. We report the case of a 62 yeards old man with WD that developed neurological manifestations during its course, and discuss the most usual signs and symptoms focusing on recent diagnostic criteria and novel treatment regimens.622 A342346Whipple, G.H., A hitherto undescribed disease characterized anatomically by deposits of fat and fatty acids in the intestinal and mesenteric lymphatic tissues (1907) Johns Hopkins Hosp Bull, 18, pp. 382-391Marth, T., Raoult, D., Whipple's disease (2003) Lancet, 36, pp. 239-246Gerard, A., Sarrot-Reynauld, F., Liozon, E., Neurologic presentation of Whipple disease: Report of 12 cases and review of the literature (2002) Medicine (Baltimore), 81, pp. 443-457Brown, A.P., Lane, J.C., Murayama, S., Vollmer, D.G., Whipple's disease presenting with isolated neurological symptoms: Case report (1990) J Neurosurg, 73, pp. 623-627Bostwick, D.G., Bensch, K.G., Burke, J.S., Whipple's disease presenting as aortic insufficiency (1981) N Engl J Med, 305, pp. 995-998Raoult, D., A febrile, blood culture-negative endocarditis (1999) Ann Intern Med, 131, pp. 144-146Chan, R.Y., Yannuzzi, L.A., Foster, C.S., Ocular Whipple's disease: Earlier definitive diagnosis (2001) Ophthalmology, 108, pp. 2225-2231Louis, E.D., Lynch, T., Kaufmann, P., Fahn, S., Odel, J., Diagnostic guidelines in central nervous system Whipple's disease (1996) Ann Neurol, 40, pp. 561-568Sieracki, J.C., Whipple's disease: Observations on systemic involvement (1958) Amer Med Asso Arch Pathol, 66, pp. 464-467Anderson, M., Neurology of Whipple's disease (2000) J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry, 68, pp. 2-5De Coene, B., Gilliard, C., Indekeu, P., Whipple's disease confined to the central nervous system (1996) Neuroradiology, 38, pp. 325-327Verhagen, W.I.M., Huygen, P.L.M., Dalman, J.E., Schuurmans, M.M.J., Whipple's disease and the central nervous system: A case report and a review of the literature (1996) Clin Neurol Neurosurg, 98, pp. 299-304Feldman, M., Hendler, R.S., Morrison, E.B., Acute meningoencephalitis after withdrawal of antibiotics in Whipple's disease (1980) Ann Intern Med, 93, pp. 709-711Schwartz, M.A., Selhorst, J.B., Ochs, A.L., Oculomasticatory myorhythmia: A unique movement disorder occurring in Whipple's disease (1986) Ann Neurol, 20, pp. 677-683Manzel, K., Tranel, D., Cooper, G., Cognitive and behavioral abnormalities in a case of central nervous system Whipple disease (2000) Arch Neurol, 57, pp. 399-403Halperin, J.J., Landis, D.M., Kleinman, G.M., Whipple's disease of the nervous system (1982) Neurology, 32, pp. 612-617Feurle, G.E., Volk, B., Waldherr, R., Cerebral Whipple's disease with negative jejunal histology (1979) N Engl J Med, 300, pp. 907-908Madoule, P., Ciaudio-Lacroix, C., Halimi, P., Osteoarticular lesions in Whipple's disease, a propos of a destructive form and review of the literature (1985) J Radiol, 66, pp. 345-350Brändle, M., Ammann, P., Spinas, G.A., Relapsing Whipple's disease presenting with hypopituitarism (1999) Clin Endocrinol, 50, pp. 399-403Topper, R., Gartung, C., Block, F., Neurologic complications in inflammatory bowel diseases (2002) Nervenarzt, 73, pp. 489-499Clarke, C.E., Falope, Z.F., Abdelhadi, H.A., Cervical myelopathy caused by Whipple's disease (1998) Neurology, 50, pp. 1505-1506Ramzan, N.N., Loftus, E., Burgart, L.J., Diagnosis and monitoring of Whipple disease by polymerase chain reaction (1997) Ann Intern Med, 126, pp. 520-527Von Herbay, A., Ditton, H.J., Scuhmacher, F., Whipple's disease: Staging and monitoring by cytology and polymerase chain reaction analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (1997) Gastroenterology, 113, pp. 434-441Kremer, S., Besson, G., Bonaz, B., Pasquier, B., Le Bas, J.F., Grand, S., Diffuse lesions in the CNS revealed by MR imaging in a case of Whipple disease (2001) Am J Neuroradiol, 22, pp. 493-495Romanul, F.C., Radvany, J., Rosales, R.K., Whipple's disease confined to the brain: A case studied clinically and pathologically (1977) J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry, 40, pp. 901-909Thompson, D.G., Leidingham, J.M., Howard, A.J., Brown, C.L., Meningitis in Whipple's disease (1978) BMJ, 2, pp. 14-15Feurle, G.E., Marth, T., An evaluation of antimicrobial treatment for Whipple's disease: Tetracycline versus trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (1994) Dig Dis Sci, 39, pp. 1642-1648Misbah, S.A., Mapstone, N.P., Whipple's disease revisited (2000) J Clin Pathol, 53, pp. 750-755Schnider, P.J., Reisinger, E.C., Berger, T., Krejs, G.J., Auff, E., Treatment guidelines in central nervous system Whipple's disease (1997) Ann Neurol, 41, pp. 561-56

    Nutritional Evaluation Of Children With Chronic Cholestatic Disease

    Get PDF
    Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)To evaluate the nutritional status of children with persistent cholestasis and to compare the anthropometric indices between children with and without liver cirrhosis and children with and without jaundice. Methods Children with persistent cholestasis, i.e. increased direct bilirrubin or changes in the canalicular enzyme gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT), were included. The anthropometric measures were weight (W), height or length (H), arm circumference (AC), triceps skinfold thickness (TST), arm muscle circumference (AMC), and body mass index (BMI). Results Ninety-one children with cholestasis, with current median age of 12 months, were evaluated. W/age (A) and H/A indices below -2 Z-scores were observed in 33% and 30.8% of patients, respectively. Concerning the W/H index and BMI, only 12% and 16% of patients, respectively, were below -2 Z-scores. Regarding AC, 43.8% of 89 evaluated patients had some depletion. Observing the TST, 64% of patients had depletion, and 71.1% of the 45 evaluated patients had some degree of depletion regarding the ACM index. Conclusion Evaluation using weight in patients with chronic liver diseases may overestimate the nutritional status due to visceromegaly, subclinical edema, or ascites. Indices that correlate weight and height, such as W/H and BMI, may also not show depletion because of the chronic condition in which there are depletion of both weight and height. TST, AC, and ACM are parameters that better estimate nutritional status and should be part of the management of patients with liver diseases and cholestasis. © 2015 Sociedade Brasileira de Pediatria.922197205CNPq, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e TecnológicoConselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq

    The economics of electricity generation from Gulf Stream currents

    Get PDF
    Hydrokinetic turbines harnessing energy from ocean currents represent a potential low carbon electricity source. This study provides a detailed techno-economic assessment of ocean turbines operating in the Gulf Stream off the North Carolina coast. Using hindcast data from a high-resolution ocean circulation model in conjunction with the US Department of Energy's reference model 4 (RM4) for ocean turbines, we examine resource quality and apply portfolio optimization to identify the best candidate sites for ocean turbine deployment. We find that the lowest average levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) from a single site can reach 400 /MWh.Byoptimallyselectinggeographicallydispersedsitesandtakingadvantageofeconomiesofscale,thevariationsintotalenergyoutputcanbereducedbyanorderofmagnitudewhilekeepingtheLCOEbelow300/MWh. By optimally selecting geographically dispersed sites and taking advantage of economies of scale, the variations in total energy output can be reduced by an order of magnitude while keeping the LCOE below 300 /MWh. Power take-off and transmission infrastructure are the largest cost drivers, and variation in resource quality can have a significant influence on the project LCOE. While this study focuses on a limited spatial domain, it provides a framework to assess the techno-economic feasibility of ocean current energy in other western boundary currents
    • …
    corecore