652 research outputs found

    Results of angular-stable locked intramedullary nails in the treatment of distal tibia fractures

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    AbstractIntroductionIntramedullary nailing in distal tibial fracture is controversial because of a lack of stability. The present study sought to assess radiological and clinical results for a new “angular-stable” locking system in difficult indications for intramedullary nailing.Material and methodA prospective study recruited 41 patients (41 tibias) with distal tibial fracture consecutively managed using angular-stable locked intramedullary nails. Radiologic assessment comprised AP and lateral lower-limb views, taken postoperatively and through to last follow-up. The mean distance was measured between fracture and joint line. Fusion, with or without malunion, primary reduction defect, non-union and secondary displacement were recorded, as were all complications.ResultsMean follow-up was 18±5 months; 3 patients were lost to follow-up. Mean fracture distance from the joint line was 63±25mm. Fusion was achieved within 3 months in 29 cases (76%); delayed fusion in 7 patients (18%) required secondary dynamization at a mean 3 months, with favorable evolution. Revision surgery was required in 2 cases: 1 for secondary displacement exceeding 10°, and 1 for non-union at 7 months. Other complications mainly comprised 4 malunions of less than 10° due to primary reduction defect.ConclusionAngular-stable locked lower-limb intramedullary nailing provided a very satisfactory fusion rate, with few complications. It is, however, a demanding procedure, especially as regards fracture reduction and nail positioning in the distal fragment.Prospective cohort studylevel IV

    Flying phase mask for the printing of long submicron-period stitchingless gratings

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    International audienceLong and stitchingless gratings are printed by means of a read/write head comprising a phase mask illuminated by an intensity modulated laser beam and a reference grating displacement sensor which dictates the modulation period real time. A nearly perfect grating copying is achieved by fixing the sensor grating scale and the written grating substrate on a long platform sliding under the read/write hea

    Exploring the impact of clonal definition on B-cell diversity: implications for the analysis of immune repertoires

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    The adaptive immune system has the extraordinary ability to produce a broad range of immunoglobulins that can bind a wide variety of antigens. During adaptive immune responses, activated B cells duplicate and undergo somatic hypermutation in their B-cell receptor (BCR) genes, resulting in clonal families of diversified B cells that can be related back to a common ancestor. Advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies have enabled the high-throughput characterization of B-cell repertoires, however, the accurate identification of clonally related BCR sequences remains a major challenge. In this study, we compare three different clone identification methods on both simulated and experimental data, and investigate their impact on the characterization of B-cell diversity. We observe that different methods lead to different clonal definitions, which affects the quantification of clonal diversity in repertoire data. Our analyses show that direct comparisons between clonal clusterings and clonal diversity of different repertoires should be avoided if different clone identification methods were used to define the clones. Despite this variability, the diversity indices inferred from the repertoires’ clonal characterization across samples show similar patterns of variation regardless of the clonal identification method used. We find the Shannon entropy to be the most robust in terms of the variability of diversity rank across samples. Our analysis also suggests that the traditional germline gene alignment-based method for clonal identification remains the most accurate when the complete information about the sequence is known, but that alignment-free methods may be preferred for shorter sequencing read lengths. We make our implementation freely available as a Python library cdiversity

    Sex Differences in the Behavioral and Synaptic Consequences of a Single in vivo Exposure to the Synthetic Cannabimimetic WIN55,212-2 at Puberty and Adulthood

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    Heavy cannabis consumption among adolescents is associated with significant and lasting neurobiological, psychological and health consequences that depend on the age of first use. Chronic exposure to cannabinoid agonists during the perinatal period or adolescence alters social behavior and prefrontal cortex (PFC) activity in adult rats. However, sex differences on social behavior as well as PFC synaptic plasticity after acute cannabinoid activation remain poorly explored. Here, we determined that the consequences of a single in vivo exposure to the synthetic cannabimimetic WIN55,212-2 differently affected PFC neuronal and synaptic functions after 24 h in male and female rats during the pubertal and adulthood periods. During puberty, single cannabinoid exposure (SCE) reduced play behavior in females but not males. In contrast, the same treatment impaired sociability in both sexes at adulthood. General exploration and memory recognition remained normal at both ages and both sexes. At the synaptic level, SCE ablated endocannabinoid-mediated synaptic plasticity in the PFC of females of both ages and heightened excitability of PFC pyramidal neurons at adulthood, while males were spared. In contrast, cannabinoid exposure was associated with impaired long-term potentiation (LTP) specifically in adult males. Together, these data indicate behavioral and synaptic sex differences in response to a single in vivo exposure to cannabinoid at puberty and adulthood

    Design and construction of a Cherenkov imager for charge measurement of nuclear cosmic rays

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    A proximity focusing Cherenkov imager called CHERCAM, has been built for the charge measurement of nuclear cosmic rays with the CREAM instrument. It consists of a silica aerogel radiator plane across from a detector plane equipped with 1,600 1" diameter photomultipliers. The two planes are separated by a ring expansion gap. The Cherenkov light yield is proportional to the charge squared of the incident particle. The expected relative light collection accuracy is in the few percents range. It leads to an expected single element separation over the range of nuclear charge Z of main interest 1 < Z < 26. CHERCAM is designed to fly with the CREAM balloon experiment. The design of the instrument and the implemented technical solutions allowing its safe operation in high altitude conditions (radiations, low pressure, cold) are presented.Comment: 24 pages, 19 figure

    Pattern and process in Amazon tree turnover, 1976-2001

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    Previous work has shown that tree turnover, tree biomass and large liana densities have increased in mature tropical forest plots in the late twentieth century. These results point to a concerted shift in forest ecological processes that may already be having significant impacts on terrestrial carbon stocks, fluxes and biodiversity. However, the findings have proved controversial, partly because a rather limited number of permanent plots have been monitored for rather short periods. The aim of this paper is to characterize regional-scale patterns of 'tree turnover' (the rate with which trees die and recruit into a population) by using improved datasets now available for Amazonia that span the past 25 years. Specifically, we assess whether concerted changes in turnover are occurring, and if so whether they are general throughout the Amazon or restricted to one region or environmental zone. In addition, we ask whether they are driven by changes in recruitment, mortality or both. We find that: (i) trees 10 cm or more in diameter recruit and die twice as fast on the richer soils of southern and western Amazonia than on the poorer soils of eastern and central Amazonia; (ii) turnover rates have increased throughout Amazonia over the past two decades; (iii) mortality and recruitment rates have both increased significantly in every region and environmental zone, with the exception of mortality in eastern Amazonia; (iv) recruitment rates have consistently exceeded mortality rates; (v) absolute increases in recruitment and mortality rates are greatest in western Amazonian sites; and (vi) mortality appears to be lagging recruitment at regional scales. These spatial patterns and temporal trends are not caused by obvious artefacts in the data or the analyses. The trends cannot be directly driven by a mortality driver (such as increased drought or fragmentation-related death) because the biomass in these forests has simultaneously increased. Our findings therefore indicate that long-acting and widespread environmental changes are stimulating the growth and productivity of Amazon forests

    K pi scattering for isospin 1/2 and 3/2 in lattice QCD

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    We simulate K pi scattering in s-wave and p-wave for both isospins I=1/2, 3/2 using quark-antiquark and meson-meson interpolating fields. We extract the elastic phase shifts delta at several values of the K-pi relative momenta. The resulting phases exhibit qualitative agreement with the experimental phases in all four channels. We express the s-wave phase shifts near threshold in terms of the scattering length and the effective range. Our K pi system has zero total momentum and is simulated on a single ensemble with two dynamical quarks, so results apply for mpi=266 MeV and mK=552 MeV in our simulation. The backtracking contractions in both I=1/2 channels are handled by the use of Laplacian-Heavyside smeared quarks within the distillation method. Elastic phases are extracted from the energy levels using Luscher's relations. In all four channels we observe the expected K(n)pi(-n) scattering states, which are shifted due to the interaction. In both attractive I=1/2 channels we observe additional states that are related to resonances; we attribute them to K_0^*(1430) in s-wave and K*(892), K*(1410) and K*(1680) in p-wave.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, version published in PR
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