336 research outputs found

    The bias of cosmic voids in the presence of massive neutrinos

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    Cosmic voids offer an extraordinary opportunity to study the effects of massive neutrinos on cosmological scales. Because they are freely streaming, neutrinos can penetrate the interior of voids more easily than cold dark matter or baryons, which makes their relative contribution to the mass budget in voids much higher than elsewhere in the Universe. In simulations it has recently been shown how various characteristics of voids in the matter distribution are affected by neutrinos, such as their abundance, density profiles, dynamics, and clustering properties. However, the tracers used to identify voids in observations (e.g., galaxies or halos) are affected by neutrinos as well, and isolating the unique neutrino signatures inherent to voids becomes more difficult. In this paper we make use of the DEMNUni suite of simulations to investigate the clustering bias of voids in Fourier space as a function of their core density and compensation. We find a clear dependence on the sum of neutrino masses that remains significant even for void statistics extracted from halos. In particular, we observe that the amplitude of the linear void bias increases with neutrino mass for voids defined in dark matter, whereas this trend gets reversed and slightly attenuated when measuring the relative void-halo bias using voids identified in the halo distribution. Finally, we argue how the original behaviour can be restored when considering observations of the total matter distribution (e.g. via weak lensing), and comment on scale-dependent effects in the void bias that may provide additional information on neutrinos in the future.Comment: 23 pages, 18 figure

    Analyse funktioneller Gene des Abbaues tertiÀrer Etherstrukturen in dem Bakterienstamm Aquincola tertiaricarbonis L108 anhand von knock-out Mutanten

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    The switch to unleaded fuels in the 1970s and the high air pollution in areas of high population density due to traffic particularly since the 1990s required the use of alternative fuel additives to achieve an improvement of the combustion. The utilization of oxygenated hydrocarbons as antiknock additives and so-called oxygenates provided a more complete and efficient combustion with simultaneously less harmful and polluting emissions. These include the synthetic ethers methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE), ethyl tert-butyl ether (ETBE), tert-amyl methyl ether (TAME) and tert-amyl ethyl ether (TAEE). MTBE has a particular position as within some years it became the dominant oxygenate worldwide. Since then, over 100.000 leakages, most often in close proximity to gas stations, resulted in just as many oxygenate-contaminated sites of soil and groundwater within few years. The high water solubility of these ethers leads to an especially fast and extensive spread of the contamination plumes. Ether-contaminated groundwater has a turpentine-like taste that is noticed already in really low concentrations. Thus, such water can no longer serve as drinking water and requires a counter-measure. The chemical parameters of oxygenates decrease the efficiency of otherwise successfully applied techniques such as adsorption or aeration. In addition the ethers proved recalcitrant against microbial attack. The search for microorganisms that could degrade these synthetic oxygenates indeed resulted in the enrichment of many isolates. The majority of these isolates oxidize the ethers in a cometabolic manner either partially or completely to CO2. However, only few cultures are capable of independent growth on these oxygenates. These include the beta-proteobacteria Methylibium petroleiphilum PM1 and Aquincola tertiaricarbonis L108, of which the latter is of particular interest for the present work. Strain L108 is characterized by good growth on MTBE and is presently the only known isolate which is able to mineralize ETBE, TAME and TAEE at similar rates. This work examined the seemingly particularly well adapted oxygenate ether metabolism of strain L108, that was formerly isolated from an aquifer highly contaminated with MTBE. Via diverse deletion studies key enzymes of the degradative metabolism and their genetic background were clearly identified. Hence, the results of this work contribute to verify so far just hypothesized metabolic steps by detailed enzymatic and genetic studies. Based on detected metabolites, first studies on MTBE biodegradation already postulated an oxidative pathway via TBA, 2-methyl-1,2-propane-diol (MPD) and 2-HIBA. In case of a monoxygenatic hydroxylation of the methoxy group of MTBE a hemiacetale results as reaction product, from which the tertiary alcohol TBA can be formed easily in subsequent reactions. By comparing wild type strain L108 with the spontaneous mutant strain L10, we were now able to clearly show that the cytochrome P-450 monoxygenase system EthABCD accounts solely for this MTBE-oxidizing activity. It is also the only enzyme catalyzing the corresponding hydroxylation of ETBE, TAME and TAEE. In strain L108 this enzyme complex is expressed constitutively. TBA, which is also generated from hydroxylation of ETBE, is, as postulated and verified by this study, degraded by a different monoxygenase resulting in MPD. Via Tn5-mediated mutations this enzyme was confirmed as Rieske non-heme mononuclear iron monooxygenase MdpJ. MPD is further altered to the corresponding branched acid 2-HIBA, presumably by two dehydrogenation reactions. For the degradation of 2-HIBA, diverse hypotheses exist on the basis of known enzymatic reactions. Another Tn5 mutation now gave evidence, that in the mentioned beta-proteobacteria the novel mutase HcmAB linearizes 2-HIBA to 3-hydroxybutyric acid (3-HB) dependent on cobalamin and coenzyme A (CoA). Sequence comparison revealed, that strain L108 acquired all three key enzyme complexes, EthABCD, MdpJ and HcmAB via horizontal gene transfer (HGT). For TAME and TAEE a completely new degradation pathway was found. In strain L108, the resulting degradation product tert-amyl alcohol (TAA) of these ethers is, like TBA, also specifically oxidized by MdpJ. In Tn5-deletion studies and metabolite analyzes, however, no hydroxylation could be detected. Instead, TAA is rather desaturated. Therefore within the metabolism no diols or acids analogue to MPD or 2-HIBA were formed. Instead, via MdpJ TAA is initially degraded to the unsaturated tertiary alcohol and hemiterpene 2-methyl-3-butene-2-ol. Prenol (3-methyl-2-buten-2-ol), prenal (3-methyl-2-buten-2-al) and 3-methyl crotonic acid were detected as additional metabolites. Hence, an isomerization of the branched acid by HcmAB is apparently irrelevant in TAA biodegradation. Accordingly it could be shown, that deletion mutants for HcmAB indeed could not grow on TBA, but are still able to grow on TAA, just as fast as the wild type, in fact. The tertiary alcohol 2-methyl-3-butene-2-ol is presumably transformed via another isomerase resulting in the primary alcohol prenol. Prenol is further oxidized by postulated dehydrogenases to 3-methyl crotonic acid. This would also be in correlation to the already observed degradation pathway of the monoterpene linalool in other bacteria. However, the responsible enzymes in strain L108 are not yet identified. Besides this principal gain of knowledge in the degradation of xenobiotic ether structures and the evolution of degradative microorganism, the now confirmed key enzymes EthB, MdpJ and HcmAB, respectively their coding genes, can be used as specific markers to monitor natural degradation processes in in situ studies. On this basis, the presence of active microorganisms and additionally - derived from the confirmed single key enzymes - a potentially complete degradation can be concluded. In the long run, it might be possible to stimulate the natural microbiological activity, e.g. via bioaugmentation with degradation specialists. Furthermore, regarding the potential progress of remediation procedures, potentially limiting steps can be distinguished via respective markers and narrowed down as possible cause of deficient degradation activity. However, such function-based monitoring requires specific verification. Therefore, subsequent studies have to analyze, if there is a sequence diversity among these three key enzymes. Previous sequence comparisons hypothesize that up to 60% accordance in the protein sequence in homologues of MdpJ and HcmA they can still be assumed to possess the same enzymatic function. This diversity has to be considered in the development of specific probes.:Bibliographische Darstellung Eidesstattliche ErklĂ€rung Danksagung Abstract Kurzfassung AbkĂŒrzungsverzeichnis 1. Einleitung 1.1. TertiĂ€re Ether als Benzin-Oxygenate - Hintergrund und Umweltproblematik 1.2. Mikrobiologischer Abbau tertiĂ€rer Ether 1.3. Postulierter Abbauweg 1.4. Monitoring-Tools fĂŒr biologischen Abbau 1.5. Ziel dieser Arbeit 1.6. Referenzen der Einleitung 2. Die initiale Etherspaltung des Stammes L108 2.1. Die Ethermonooxygenase EthB 2.2. Supplemental Material 3. Die spezifische Alkoholmonooxygenase MdpJ 3.1. Die Alkoholmonooxygenase MdpJ als Hydroxylase und Reduktase 3.2. Supplemental Material 4. Die 2-HIBA-Mutase HcmAB des Stammes L108 4.1. Die 2-HIBA-Mutase HcmAB 4.2. Supplemental Material 5. Der TAA-Abbau des Stammes L108 5.1. Der TAA-Abbau des Stammes L108 5.2. Supplemental Material 6. Diskussion 6.1. Nachweis der SchlĂŒsselenzyme in Stamm L108 durch Mutation 6.2. Nutzen fĂŒr den Nachweis natĂŒrlichen Abbaus 6.3. Der TAA-Metabolismus als neuartiger Abbauweg 6.4. Mikrobiologische Anpassung an Xenobiotika am Beispiel MTBE 6.5. Ausblick 6.6. Referenzen der Diskussion Anhang Curriculum Vitae Publikationsverzeichnis TagungsbeitrĂ€ge Nachweis ĂŒber Anteile der Co-AutorenDie EinfĂŒhrung bleifreien Benzins in den 1970er-Jahren und die hohe Emissionsbelastung von Ballungszentren durch den Straßenverkehr insbesondere seit den 1990er-Jahren erforderte den Einsatz alternativer Benzinadditive, um eine Verbesserung der Verbrennung zu erreichen. Die Nutzung sauerstoffhaltiger Kohlenwasserstoffe als Antiklopfmittel und als sogenannte Oxygenate bot sich an, da diese eine effizientere Verbrennung mit gleichzeitig niedrigeren gesundheits- und umweltschĂ€digenden Emissionen fördern. Zu den Oxygenaten gehören die synthetischen Ether Methyl-tert-butylether (MTBE), Ethyl-tert-butylether (ETBE), tert-Amylmethylether (TAME) und tert-Amylethylether (TAEE). Eine herausragende Stellung nimmt MTBE ein. Innerhalb weniger Jahre wurde es zum hauptsĂ€chlich verwendeten Oxygenat weltweit. Seitdem fĂŒhrten jedoch ĂŒber 100.000 Leckagen, zumeist in TankstellennĂ€he, innerhalb weniger Jahre zu ebenso zahlreichen Kontaminationen des Grundwassers mit Oxygenaten. Aufgrund der hohen Wasserlöslichkeit kommt es dabei zu einer besonders schnellen und großflĂ€chigen Ausbreitung der Ether. Derart belastetes Grundwasser weist schon bei geringsten Etherkonzentrationen einen als terpentinartig wahrgenommenen Geruch und Geschmack auf und kann daher nicht mehr als Trinkwasserzufuhr genutzt werden. Es bedarf einer Lösung dieses Problems. Die chemischen Parameter der Ether senken allerdings die Effizienz anderweitig erfolgreich genutzter technischer Sanierungsverfahren auf Basis von z. B. Adsorption oder Aerisierung. Auch gegenĂŒber mikrobiellen Abbau erweisen sie sich als rekalzitrant. Die Suche nach oxygenatabbauenden Mikroorganismen fĂŒhrte zwar zur Anreicherung vieler Isolate, welche die Oxygenate cometabolisch partiell oder sogar komplett oxidieren, nur sehr wenige Kulturen sind aber zu autarkem Wachstum auf diesen Ethern fĂ€hig. Dazu gehören die Beta-Proteobacteria Methylibium petroleiphilum PM1 und der dieser Arbeit zugrunde liegende Aquincola tertiaricarbonis L108. Der Stamm L108 zeichnet sich durch ein vergleichsweise gutes Wachstum auf MTBE aus und ist als bisher einzig bekanntes Isolat in der Lage, auch ETBE, TAME und TAEE Ă€hnlich schnell zu mineralisieren. Die vorliegende Arbeit handelt von dem scheinbar besonders gut an den Oxygenatabbau adaptierten Stoffwechsel des ursprĂŒnglich aus MTBE-kontaminiertem Grundwasser angereicherten Stammes L108. Durch verschiedene Deletionsstudien wurden SchlĂŒsselenzyme des Abbaus und deren genetischer Hintergrund eindeutig identifiziert. Die Ergebnisse der genetischen, enzymatischen und physiologischen Studien des Wildtyps im Vergleich zu den erzeugten DeletionsstĂ€mmen tragen dazu bei, bisher nur postulierte Reaktionsschritte zu verifizieren. Schon seit den ersten Studien zum MTBE-Abbau wird anhand markanter Metabolite ein oxidativer Abbau via TBA, 2-Methyl-1,2-propandiol (MPD) und 2-HydroxyisobuttersĂ€ure (2-HIBA) vermutet. Im Fall einer Hydroxylierung der Methoxygruppe von MTBE wird ein Hemiacetal als Reaktionsprodukt erzeugt, aus dem nachfolgend leicht der tertiĂ€re Alkohol TBA entstehen kann. Durch den Vergleich des Wildtyps mit der Spontanmutante Stamm L10 konnte jetzt gezeigt werden, dass hierfĂŒr allein das Cytochrom-P450-Monooxygenasesystem EthABCD verantwortlich ist. Dieses katalysiert auch exklusiv die entsprechende Hydroxylierung von ETBE, TAME und TAEE. In Stamm L108 wird das Enzym konstitutiv exprimiert. TBA, das auch aus der Hydroxylierung von ETBE resultiert, wird, wie postuliert und in dieser Arbeit verifiziert, durch eine weitere Monooxygenase zu MPD abgebaut. Durch eine Tn5-Transposon-vermittelte Mutation konnte verifiziert werden, dass es sich bei diesem Enzym um die Rieske-nicht-HĂ€m-Monooxygenase MdpJ handelt. MPD wird im weiteren Verlauf voraussichtlich durch zwei Dehydrogenierungen zur korrespondierenden, verzweigten SĂ€ure 2-HIBA gewandelt. Zum 2-HIBA-Abbau gibt es, basierend auf bekannten Enzymreaktionen, diverse Hypothesen. Anhand einer weiteren Tn5-Mutation konnte jetzt bestĂ€tigt werden, dass in den genannten beta-Proteobacteria die neuartige Mutase HcmAB wirksam ist, welche 2-HIBA abhĂ€ngig von Cobalamin und Coenzym A (CoA) zu 3-HydroxybuttersĂ€ure (3-HB) linearisiert. Sequenzvergleiche ergaben, dass Stamm L108 die SchlĂŒsselenzyme des Etherabbaus, EthABCD, MdpJ und HcmAB, durch horizontalen Gentransfer erworben hat. FĂŒr TAME und TAEE wurde ein völlig neuer Abbauweg gefunden. In Stamm L108 wird der beim Abbau dieser Ether entstehende tert-Amylalkohol (TAA) wie TBA ebenfalls exklusiv durch MdpJ oxidiert. Durch die Tn5-Deletionsstudien und durch Analyse der Metabolite konnte allerdings keine Hydroxylierung nachgewiesen werden. TAA wird durch MdpJ vielmehr desaturiert. Somit entstehen im Abbauweg keine zu MPD und 2-HIBA analogen Diole und SĂ€uren, sondern TAA wird zunĂ€chst durch MdpJ zu einem ungesĂ€ttigten tertiĂ€ren Alkohol, dem Hemiterpen 2-Methyl-3-buten-2-ol, abgebaut. Prenol (3-Methyl-2-buten-2-ol), Prenal (3-Methyl-2-buten-2-al) und 3-MethylcrotonsĂ€ure wurden als weitere Metabolite des TAA-Stoffwechsels detektiert. Somit spielt eine Isomerisierung einer tertiĂ€r verzweigten SĂ€ure durch HcmAB im TAA-Abbauweg offensichtlich keine Rolle. Entsprechend konnte gezeigt werden, dass Deletionsmutanten fĂŒr hcmAB zwar nicht mehr auf TBA, aber immer noch auf TAA wachsen können, und das genauso schnell, wie der Wildtyp. Der tertiĂ€re Alkohol 2-Methyl-3-buten-2-ol wird wahrscheinlich durch eine andere Isomerase zum primĂ€ren Alkohol Prenol umgewandelt und dieser dann durch Dehydrogenasen zur MethylcrotonsĂ€ure oxidiert. Dies wĂŒrde dem bereits in anderen Bakterien beobachteten Abbauweg des Monoterpens Linalool entsprechen. Die in Stamm L108 dafĂŒr verantwortlichen Enzyme wurden aber noch nicht identifiziert. Neben diesem grundsĂ€tzlichen Erkenntnisgewinn zum Abbau der xenobiotischen Etherverbindungen und der Evolution degradativer Mikroorganismen, können die hier bestĂ€tigten SchlĂŒssel-enzyme EthABCD, MdpJ und HcmAB bzw. deren codierende Gene als spezifische Marker zum Monitoring natĂŒrlicher Abbauprozesse fĂŒr in-situ-Untersuchungen genutzt werden. Auf dieser Basis kann auf die Anwesenheit aktiver Mikroorganismen und zudem noch - abgeleitet aus der PrĂ€senz der einzelnen SchlĂŒsselenzyme - auf einen potenziell kompletten Abbau geschlossen werden. Darauf aufbauend kann die natĂŒrliche mikrobiologische AktivitĂ€t durch nachfolgende biotechnologische Maßnahmen stimuliert werden, zum Beispiel durch eine Bioaugmentation mit Abbauspezialisten. Des weiteren können mögliche limitierende Schritte hinsichtlich des potenziellen Verlaufs der Sanierungsmaßnahme ĂŒber PrĂ€senztiter der betreffenden Marker gezielter verfolgt und als etwaige Ursachen defizitĂ€rer Abbauleistungen eingegrenzt werden. Voraussetzung fĂŒr dieses funktionsbasierte Monitoring ist allerdings der spezifische Nachweis. Somit sollte in nachfolgenden Studien analysiert werden, ob es bei den drei SchlĂŒsselenzymen eine SequenzdiversitĂ€t gibt. Die bisherigen Sequenzvergleiche lassen zumindest vermuten, dass bis etwa 60% Übereinstimmung der Proteinsequenzen bei Homologen von MdpJ und HcmA noch mit der gleichen Enzymfunktion zu rechnen ist. Diese DiversitĂ€t sollte bei der Entwicklung von spezifischen Sonden berĂŒcksichtigt werden.:Bibliographische Darstellung Eidesstattliche ErklĂ€rung Danksagung Abstract Kurzfassung AbkĂŒrzungsverzeichnis 1. Einleitung 1.1. TertiĂ€re Ether als Benzin-Oxygenate - Hintergrund und Umweltproblematik 1.2. Mikrobiologischer Abbau tertiĂ€rer Ether 1.3. Postulierter Abbauweg 1.4. Monitoring-Tools fĂŒr biologischen Abbau 1.5. Ziel dieser Arbeit 1.6. Referenzen der Einleitung 2. Die initiale Etherspaltung des Stammes L108 2.1. Die Ethermonooxygenase EthB 2.2. Supplemental Material 3. Die spezifische Alkoholmonooxygenase MdpJ 3.1. Die Alkoholmonooxygenase MdpJ als Hydroxylase und Reduktase 3.2. Supplemental Material 4. Die 2-HIBA-Mutase HcmAB des Stammes L108 4.1. Die 2-HIBA-Mutase HcmAB 4.2. Supplemental Material 5. Der TAA-Abbau des Stammes L108 5.1. Der TAA-Abbau des Stammes L108 5.2. Supplemental Material 6. Diskussion 6.1. Nachweis der SchlĂŒsselenzyme in Stamm L108 durch Mutation 6.2. Nutzen fĂŒr den Nachweis natĂŒrlichen Abbaus 6.3. Der TAA-Metabolismus als neuartiger Abbauweg 6.4. Mikrobiologische Anpassung an Xenobiotika am Beispiel MTBE 6.5. Ausblick 6.6. Referenzen der Diskussion Anhang Curriculum Vitae Publikationsverzeichnis TagungsbeitrĂ€ge Nachweis ĂŒber Anteile der Co-Autore

    SĂŒĂŸholz (Glycyrrhiza glabra) - Extrakt zur Regulierung von Falschem Mehltau im Öko-GemĂŒseanbau

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    A raw extract of licorice (Glycyrrhiza glabra) was tested against downy mildew in vegetables under semi-commercial conditions. In two greenhouse trials in cucumber, efficacies of ca. 70% were achieved (3% extract concentration) in either 7 or 10-11 day application intervals. Under open field conditions, weekly treatments resulted in ca. 2 week retardation of disease. In open field trials in lettuce, efficacies after weekly application of 5% G. glabra extract were variable, depending on disease pressure. In contrast, on lettuce seedlings in climate chambers, the extract reduced disease incidence of Bremia lactucae by 66 to 100%. In onion, applications of the extract at 6% concentration failed to control Peronospora destructor, despite of high efficacies under controlled conditions in the greenhouse. Overall, the G. glabra raw extract was highly effective in protected vegetables. Under field conditions low efficacies were most likely due to reduced rain fastness or UV-stability

    Bacterial Growth Kinetics under a Novel Flexible Methacrylate Dressing Serving as a Drug Delivery Vehicle for Antiseptics

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    A flexible methacrylate powder dressing (AltrazealÂź) transforms into a wound contour conforming matrix once in contact with wound exudate. We hypothesised that it may also serve as a drug delivery vehicle for antiseptics. The antimicrobial efficacy and influence on bacterial growth kinetics in combination with three antiseptics was investigated in an in vitro porcine wound model. Standardized in vitro wounds were contaminated with Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA; ATCC 33591) and divided into six groups: no dressing (negative control), methacrylate dressing alone, and combinations with application of 0.02% Polyhexamethylene Biguanide (PHMB), 0.4% PHMB, 0.1% PHMB + 0.1% betaine, 7.7 mg/mL Povidone-iodine (PVP-iodine), and 0.1% Octenidine-dihydrochloride (OCT) + 2% phenoxyethanol. Bacterial load per gram tissue was measured over five days. The highest reduction was observed with PVP-iodine at 24 h to log10 1.43 cfu/g, followed by OCT at 48 h to log10 2.41 cfu/g. Whilst 0.02% PHMB resulted in a stable bacterial load over 120 h to log10 4.00 cfu/g over 120 h, 0.1% PHMB + 0.1% betaine inhibited growth during the first 48 h, with slightly increasing bacterial numbers up to log10 5.38 cfu/g at 120 h. These results indicate that this flexible methacrylate dressing can be loaded with various antiseptics serving as drug delivery system. Depending on the selected combination, an individually shaped and controlled antibacterial effect may be achieved using the same type of wound dressing

    Statistical hadronization phenomenology in K/πK/\pi fluctuations at ultra-relativistic energies

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    We discuss the information that can be obtained from an analysis of fluctuations in heavy ion collisions within the context of the statistical model of particle production. We then examine the recently published experimental data on ratio fluctuations, and use it to obtain constraints on the statistical properties (physically relevant ensemble, degree of chemical equilibration, scaling across energies and system sizes) and freeze-out dynamics (amount of reinteraction between chemical and thermal freeze-out) of the system.Comment: Proceedings, SQM2009. Fig. 4, the main results figure, was wrong due to editing mistake, now correcte

    Quantification of left atrial strain and strain rate using Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance myocardial feature tracking: a feasibility study.

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    BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance myocardial feature tracking (CMR-FT) is a quantitative technique tracking tissue voxel motion on standard steady-state free precession (SSFP) cine images to assess ventricular myocardial deformation. The importance of left atrial (LA) deformation assessment is increasingly recognized and can be assessed with echocardiographic speckle tracking. However atrial deformation quantification has never previously been demonstrated with CMR. We sought to determine the feasibility and reproducibility of CMR-FT for quantitative derivation of LA strain and strain rate (SR) myocardial mechanics. METHODS: 10 healthy volunteers, 10 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and 10 patients with heart failure and preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) were studied at 1.5 Tesla. LA longitudinal strain and SR parameters were derived from SSFP cine images using dedicated CMR-FT software (2D CPA MR, TomTec, Germany). LA performance was analyzed using 4- and 2-chamber views including LA reservoir function (total strain [Δs], peak positive SR [SRs]), LA conduit function (passive strain [Δe], peak early negative SR [SRe]) and LA booster pump function (active strain [Δa], late peak negative SR [SRa]). RESULTS: In all subjects LA strain and SR parameters could be derived from SSFP images. There was impaired LA reservoir function in HCM and HFpEF (Δs [%]: HCM 22.1 ± 5.5, HFpEF 16.3 ± 5.8, Controls 29.1 ± 5.3, p \u3c 0.01; SRs [s⁻Âč]: HCM 0.9 ± 0.2, HFpEF 0.8 ± 0.3, Controls 1.1 ± 0.2, p \u3c 0.05) and impaired LA conduit function as compared to healthy controls (Δe [%]: HCM 10.4 ± 3.9, HFpEF 11.9 ± 4.0, Controls 21.3 ± 5.1, p \u3c 0.001; SRe [s]⁻Âč: HCM -0.5 ± 0.2, HFpEF -0.6 ± 0.1, Controls -1.0 ± 0.3, p \u3c 0.01). LA booster pump function was increased in HCM while decreased in HFpEF (Δa [%]: HCM 11.7 ± 4.0, HFpEF 4.5 ± 2.9, Controls 7.8 ± 2.5, p \u3c 0.01; SRa [s⁻Âč]: HCM -1.2 ± 0.4, HFpEF -0.5 ± 0.2, Controls -0.9 ± 0.3, p \u3c 0.01). Observer variability was excellent for all strain and SR parameters on an intra- and inter-observer level as determined by Bland-Altman, coefficient of variation and intraclass correlation coefficient analyses. CONCLUSIONS: CMR-FT based atrial performance analysis reliably quantifies LA longitudinal strain and SR from standard SSFP cine images and discriminates between patients with impaired left ventricular relaxation and healthy controls. CMR-FT derived atrial deformation quantification seems a promising novel approach for the study of atrial performance and physiology in health and disease states

    Digital health for migrants, ethnic and cultural minorities and the role of participatory development : a scoping review

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    Digital health interventions (DHIs) are increasingly used to address the health of migrants and ethnic minorities, some of whom have reduced access to health services and worse health outcomes than majority populations. This study aims to give an overview of digital health interventions developed for ethnic or cultural minority and migrant populations, the health problems they address, their effectiveness at the individual level and the degree of participation of target populations during development. We used the methodological approach of the scoping review outlined by Tricco. We found a total of 2248 studies, of which 57 were included, mostly using mobile health technologies, followed by websites, informational videos, text messages and telehealth. Most interventions focused on illness self-management, mental health and wellbeing, followed by pregnancy and overall lifestyle habits. About half did not involve the target population in development and only a minority involved them consistently. The studies we found indicate that the increased involvement of the target population in the development of digital health tools leads to a greater acceptance of their use
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