6,880 research outputs found

    Effect of Proton Pump Inhibitors on Risks of Upper and Lower Gastrointestinal Bleeding among Users of Low-Dose Aspirin: A Population-Based Observational Study

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    Estimates of the effect of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) on risks of upper and lower gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB and LGIB) among low-dose aspirin users in routine clinical practice are variable (UGIB) or lacking (LGIB). We aimed to establish these risks in the same observational study population. Using UK primary care data, we followed 199, 049 new users of low-dose aspirin (75-300 mg/day) and matched non-users at start of follow-up to identify incident UGIB/LGIB cases. In nested case-control analyses, adjusted odds ratios (ORs) were calculated for concomitant PPI use vs. past (discontinued) PPI use among current low-dose aspirin users. For UGIB (n = 987), ORs (95% CIs) were 0.69 (0.54-0.88) for >1 month PPI use and 2.65 (1.62-4.3) for 1 month PPI use and 1.12 (0.73-1.71) for 1 month) was associated with a significantly reduced UGIB risk. Neither short nor long-term PPI use affected LGIB risk

    Weightlifting overhead pressing derivatives : a review of the literature

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    This review examines the literature on weightlifting overhead pressing derivatives (WOPDs) and provides information regarding historical, technical, kinetic and kinematic mechanisms as well as potential benefits and guidelines to implement the use of WOPDs as training tools for sports populations. Only 13 articles were found in a search of electronic databases, which was employed to gather empirical evidence to provide an insight into the kinetic and kinematic mechanisms underpinning WOPDs. Practitioners may implement WOPDs such as push press, push jerk or split jerk from the back as well as the front rack position to provide an adequate stimulus to improve not only weightlifting performance but also sports performance as: (1) the use of WOPDs is an additional strategy to improve weightlifting performance; (2) WOPDs require the ability to develop high forces rapidly by an impulsive triple extension of the hips, knees and ankles, which is mechanically similar to many sporting tasks; (3) WOPDs may be beneficial for enhancing power development and maximal strength in the sport population; and, finally, (4) WOPDs may provide a variation in training stimulus for the sports population due to the technical demands, need for balance and coordination. The potential benefits highlighted in the literature provide a justification for the implementation of WOPDs in sports training. However, there is a lack of information regarding the longitudinal training effects that may result from implementing WOPDs

    Evidence for entanglement at high temperatures in an engineered molecular magnet

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    The molecular compound [Fe2_{2}(μ2\mu_{2}-oxo)(C3_{3}H4_{4}N2_{2})6_{6}(C2_{2}O4_{4})2_{2}] was designed and synthesized for the first time and its structure was determined using single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The magnetic susceptibility of this compound was measured from 2 to 300 K. The analysis of the susceptibility data using protocols developed for other spin singlet ground-state systems indicates that the quantum entanglement would remain at temperatures up to 732 K, significantly above the highest entanglement temperature reported to date. The large gap between the ground state and the first-excited state (282 K) suggests that the spin system may be somewhat immune to decohering mechanisms. Our measurements strongly suggest that molecular magnets are promising candidate platforms for quantum information processing

    Estudio comparativo de la reacción álcali-sílice (RAS) en áridos graníticos

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    The reaction between certain reactive components of aggregates (like opal and metaestable silica) and concrete pore solution is well documented. Nevertheless, in this study it has been shown that some aggregates, like granite, could develop a rapid or slow alkali-silica reaction (ASR) depending on the deleterious component involved. Mortar bars were cast with two granitic aggregates extracted from concrete cores drilled in two Spanish Dams affected by ASR, being classified as granitic rocks. The main difference between them is the reactive component: microcrystalline quartz in one case and strained and microcracked quartz in the other case. A petrographic examination was carried out in the mortar bars. Thin sections were cut and the alkalisilica gel was stained for an easier detection. Then, the thin sections were examinated with a stereomicroscope comparing the differences in the progress of the ASR for both aggregates. It can be concluded that the main mechanism of formation and storage of gel is associated to the micro-cracks instead of the subgrain boundaries.La reacción entre los componentes de la fase intersticial del hormigón y áridos con minerales como el ópalo o la sílice metaestable, se encuentra bien documentada. Sin embargo, en este estudio, se ha detectado que dentro de un mismo tipo de roca, como es el granito, puede haber diferencias en el tipo de reacción (lenta o rápida) dependiendo del componente reactivo que aparezca en la misma. Se han fabricado barras de mortero con los áridos extraídos de dos presas españolas afectadas por la reacción álcali-sílice. Estos áridos son rocas graníticas y la diferencia entre ambos reside en que una de las muestras contiene cuarzo microcristalino como componente reactivo y, la otra, cuarzo deformado. Mediante el estudio petrográfico de barras de mortero y el teñido del gel álcali-sílice se ha podido observar la evolución y progreso de la reacción para cada uno de los componentes reactivos. La principal conclusión que se puede extraer de este estudio es que la formación y almacenamiento del gel se asocia a microfracturas en lugar de a límites de grano

    Remarks on Bootstrap Percolation in Metric Networks

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    We examine bootstrap percolation in d-dimensional, directed metric graphs in the context of recent measurements of firing dynamics in 2D neuronal cultures. There are two regimes, depending on the graph size N. Large metric graphs are ignited by the occurrence of critical nuclei, which initially occupy an infinitesimal fraction, f_* -> 0, of the graph and then explode throughout a finite fraction. Smaller metric graphs are effectively random in the sense that their ignition requires the initial ignition of a finite, unlocalized fraction of the graph, f_* >0. The crossover between the two regimes is at a size N_* which scales exponentially with the connectivity range \lambda like_* \sim \exp\lambda^d. The neuronal cultures are finite metric graphs of size N \simeq 10^5-10^6, which, for the parameters of the experiment, is effectively random since N<< N_*. This explains the seeming contradiction in the observed finite f_* in these cultures. Finally, we discuss the dynamics of the firing front
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