598 research outputs found

    Effect of nasal inflammation and of intranasal anti-inflammatory treatment on bronchial asthma

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    AbstractIt is logical to look upon the nose and the bronchi as integrated parts of one ‘united airway’ and we would like to advance the hypothesis that optimal management of airway disease, caused by inhaled allergens, may necessitate control of inflammation in all parts of the airways. Nasal inflammation can aggravate asthma symptoms, and there is a rationale for giving intranasal anti-inflammatory treatment to patients with asthma. (i) Inhaled allergens are predominantly deposited in the nose, whether a patient suffers from rhinitis, asthma or both. (ii) Antigen presentation consequently takes place in the nose, and the response of the airway immune system is thus initiated in the nasal mucous membrane. (iii) Antigen presentation in the nose may possibly induce cell recruitment and activation not only in the nasal mucosa but also in the lower airways. (iv) Suppression of nasal inflammation may therefore be necessary for optimal management of asthma

    Enterprise Governance in Transition – A Stakeholder Perspective

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    Mature market economies have thrived on very diverse systems of corporate governance. Transition economies in Central and Eastern Europe have entered the market economy with a special historical inheritance, and critical political decisions of key institutions that have a bearing on the new systems of governance evolving in the region. In this paper, I use an analytical stakeholder approach (different from a normative approach) to identify how the specific conditions in countries in transition have influenced the evolution of specific governance structures, and how this influences the workability of the system. I employ a broad definition of enterprise governance that incorporates fixed, residual and appropriated rights among a broad range of different stakeholders. The governance system is a function of the markets that the firm operates in, by state regulation, and by other specific firm and stakeholder conditions. Based on this definition, I analyse some general determinants behind the governance structure in a market economy, focussing on the distribution of rights among stake- holders. Governance systems in Western countries are used as a benchmark to explore the specific conditions for governance structures in economies in transition. Governance structures changed over different stages in the transition process, with privatisation being the single most important determining factor. Consequently, the role of different stakeholders varies across countries, and has evolved considerably over time. The specific conditions of the transition process have favoured insider ownership mostly in the form of management ownership, but in some cases, also broader employee ownership. However, the relative strength of insiders, especially employees, has declined considerably in later stages of the transition

    Zurek-Kibble Mechanism for the Spontaneous Vortex Formation in Nb−Al/Alox/NbNb-Al/Al_{ox}/Nb Josephson Tunnel Junctions: New Theory and Experiment

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    New scaling behavior has been both predicted and observed in the spontaneous production of fluxons in quenched Nb−Al/Alox/NbNb-Al/Al_{ox}/Nb annular Josephson tunnel junctions as a function of the quench time, τQ\tau_{Q}. The probability f1f_{1} to trap a single defect during the N-S phase transition clearly follows an allometric dependence on τQ\tau_{Q} with a scaling exponent σ=0.5\sigma = 0.5, as predicted from the Zurek-Kibble mechanism for {\it realistic} JTJs formed by strongly coupled superconductors. This definitive experiment replaces one reported by us earlier, in which an idealised model was used that predicted σ=0.25\sigma = 0.25, commensurate with the then much poorer data. Our experiment remains the only condensed matter experiment to date to have measured a scaling exponent with any reliability.Comment: Four pages, one figur

    New Experiments for Spontaneous Vortex Formation in Josephson Tunnel Junctions

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    It has been argued by Zurek and Kibble that the likelihood of producing defects in a continuous phase transition depends in a characteristic way on the quench rate. In this paper we discuss an improved experiment for measuring the Zurek-Kibble scaling exponent σ\sigma for the production of fluxons in annular symmetric Josephson Tunnel Junctions. We find σ≃0.5\sigma \simeq 0.5. Further, we report accurate measurements of the junction gap voltage temperature dependence which allow for precise monitoring of the fast temperature variations during the quench.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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