14,789 research outputs found
Cerebral and cardiovascular effects of analgesic doses of ketamine during a target controlled general anesthesia: a prospective randomized study
Introduction: Ketamine is increasingly being used in various pain settings. The purpose of this study was to
assess the effect of an analgesic dose of ketamine in the bispectral index (BIS), spectral edge frequency (SEF-95), density spectral array (DSA), cerebral oximetry (rSO2) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) during general
anaesthesia with a target controlled infusion.
Methods: A prospective, single-blinded and randomized study on adult patients scheduled for elective spine
surgery was carried out. After anaesthesia induction with propofol, remifentanil and rocuronium, when a stable BIS
value (45-55) was achieved, an automatic recording of BIS, SEF-95, rSO2 and MAP values during 9 min was
performed to establish patients baseline values. Subsequently, patients were randomly assigned to receive a
ketamine bolus dose of 0.2 mg/kg, 0.5 mg/kg or 1 mg/kg; all variables were recorded for additional 9 min after the
ketamine bolus, in the absence of any surgical stimulus. A p-value <0.05 was considered significant in the statistical
analysis.
Results and discussion: Thirty-nine patients were enrolled in the study. Our results show a dose-related
increase of SEF-95 and BIS values. DSA demonstrate a shift in the frequency range and power distribution towards
higher frequencies. Our results do not show significant differences in MAP and rSO2 values.
Conclusion: When ketamine is used intraoperatively in analgesic doses, the anaesthetist should anticipate an
increase in SEF-95 and BIS values which will not be associated with the level of anaesthesia.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
A Comparative Review of Dimension Reduction Methods in Approximate Bayesian Computation
Approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) methods make use of comparisons
between simulated and observed summary statistics to overcome the problem of
computationally intractable likelihood functions. As the practical
implementation of ABC requires computations based on vectors of summary
statistics, rather than full data sets, a central question is how to derive
low-dimensional summary statistics from the observed data with minimal loss of
information. In this article we provide a comprehensive review and comparison
of the performance of the principal methods of dimension reduction proposed in
the ABC literature. The methods are split into three nonmutually exclusive
classes consisting of best subset selection methods, projection techniques and
regularization. In addition, we introduce two new methods of dimension
reduction. The first is a best subset selection method based on Akaike and
Bayesian information criteria, and the second uses ridge regression as a
regularization procedure. We illustrate the performance of these dimension
reduction techniques through the analysis of three challenging models and data
sets.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/12-STS406 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
X-ray powder diffraction of high-absorption materials at the XRD1 beamline off the best conditions: Application to (Gd,Nd)5Si4 compounds
Representative compounds of the new family of magnetic materials Gd5-xNdxSi4
were analyzed by X-ray diffraction at the XRD1 beamline at LNLS. To reduce
X-ray absorption, thin layers of the powder samples were mounted outside the
capillaries and measured in Debye-Scherrer geometry as usual. The X-ray
diffraction analyses and the magnetometry results indicate that the behavior of
the magnetic transition temperature as a function of Nd content may be directly
related to the average of the four smallest interatomic distances between
different rare earth sites of the majority phase of each compound. The quality
and consistency of the results show that the XRD1 beamline is able to perform
satisfactory X-ray diffraction experiments on high-absorption materials even
off the best conditions.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 3 table
DNA-psoralen: single-molecule experiments and first principles calculations
The authors measure the persistence and contour lengths of DNA-psoralen
complexes, as a function of psoralen concentration, for intercalated and
crosslinked complexes. In both cases, the persistence length monotonically
increases until a certain critical concentration is reached, above which it
abruptly decreases and remains approximately constant. The contour length of
the complexes exhibits no such discontinuous behavior. By fitting the relative
increase of the contour length to the neighbor exclusion model, we obtain the
exclusion number and the intrinsic intercalating constant of the psoralen-DNA
interaction. Ab initio calculations are employed in order to provide an
atomistic picture of these experimental findings.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures in re-print format 3 pages, 4 figures in the
published versio
Contextual Sensitivity in Grounded Theory: The Role of Pilot Studies
Grounded Theory is an established methodological approach for context specific inductive theory building. The grounded nature of the methodology refers to these specific contexts from which emergent propositions are drawn. Thus, any grounded theory study requires not only theoretical sensitivity, but also a good insight on how to design the research in the human activity systems to be studied. The lack of this insight may result in inefficient theoretical sampling or even erroneous purposeful sampling. These problems would not necessarily be critical, as it could be argued that through the elliptical process that characterizes grounded theory, remedial loops would always bring the researcher to the core of the theory. However, these elliptical remedial processes can take very long periods of time and result in catastrophic delays in research projects. As a strategy, this paper discusses, contrasts and compares the use of pilot studies in four different grounded theory projects. Each pilot brought different insights about the context, resulting in changes of focus, guidance to improve data collection instruments and informing theoretical sampling. Additionally, as all four projects were undertaken by researchers with little experience of inductive approaches in general and grounded theory in particular, the pilot studies also served the purpose of training in interviewing, relating to interviewees, memoing, constant comparison and coding. This last outcome of the pilot study was actually not planned initially, but revealed itself to be a crucial success factor in the running of the projects. The paper concludes with a theoretical proposition for the concept of contextual sensitivity and for the inclusion of the pilot study in grounded theory research designs
Dynamical demixing of a binary mixture under sedimentation
We investigate the sedimentation dynamics of a binary mixture, the species of
which differ by their Stokes coefficients but are identical otherwise. We
analyze the sedimentation dynamics and the morphology of the final deposits
using Brownian dynamics simulations for mixtures with a range of sedimentation
velocities of both species. We found a threshold in the sedimentation
velocities difference above which the species in the final deposit are
segregated. The degree of segregation increases with the difference in the
Stokes coefficients or the sedimentation velocities above the threshold. We
propose a simple mean-field model that captures the main features of the
simulated deposits
Temperature dependence of the coercive field in single-domain particle systems
The magnetic properties of Cu97Co3 and Cu90Co10 granular alloys were measured
over a wide temperature range (2 to 300K). The measurements show an unusual
temperature dependence of the coercive field. A generalized model is proposed
and explains well the experimental behavior over a wide temperature range. The
coexistence of blocked and unblocked particles for a given temperature rises
difficulties that are solved here by introducing a temperature dependent
blocking temperature. An empirical factor gamma arise from the model and is
directly related to the particle interactions. The proposed generalized model
describes well the experimental results and can be applied to other
single-domain particle system.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, revised version, accepted to Physical Review B on
29/04/200
Bistability, softening, and quenching of magnetic moments in Ni-filled carbon nanotubes
The authors apply first-principles calculations to investigate the interplay
between structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of nanostructures
composed of narrow nanotubes filled with metallic nanowires. The focus is on
the structural and magnetic responses of Ni-filled nanotubes upon radial
compression. Interestingly, metastable flattened structures are identified, in
which radially deformed nanotubes are stabilized by the interactions with the
encapsulated wire. Moreover, our results indicate a quenching of the magnetic
moment of the wire upon compression, as a result of the transfer of charge from
the to the orbitals of the atoms in the wire.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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