916 research outputs found
Stability of Relativistic Matter with Magnetic Fields for Nuclear Charges up to the Critical Value
We give a proof of stability of relativistic matter with magnetic fields all
the way up to the critical value of the nuclear charge .Comment: LaTeX2e, 12 page
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Oxygen isotope ratios of large cosmic spherules: Carbonaceous and ordinary chondrite parent bodies
Population pharmacokinetics of the two enantiomers of tramadol and O -demethyl tramadol after surgery in children
International audienceBACKGROUND : Few data are available on the stereoselective pharmacokinetics of tramadol in children. The aim of this study was to develop a population pharmacokinetic model for the (+)- and (-)-enantiomers of tramadol and its O-demethyl tramadol metabolite (M1) in children.METHODS : Twenty-five children (1-8 yr) were included in this study. Tramadol was administered after surgery by continuous infusion (loading dose, 2 mg kg(-1) i.v. over 10 min followed by continuous infusion of 8 mg kg(-1) over 24 h). If pain relief was inadequate, additional 1 mg kg(-1) i.v. bolus doses of tramadol were given over 10 min. A two-compartment structural model was used with NONMEM.RESULTS : For both enantiomers of tramadol, weight was the only patient characteristic parameter showing significant covariate effects on clearance (CL). CL increased by 5.7-6.1 litre h(-1) between 8-12 and 13-16 kg, and by 2.4-3.3 litre h(-1) between 13-16 and 17-33 kg. The rate constants associated with the metabolite elimination [0.144 h(-1), (+)-M1 and 0.18 h(-1), (-)-M1] were smaller than the elimination rate constants of the parent drugs [0.243 h(-1), (+)-tramadol and 0.241 h(-1), (-)-tramadol], suggesting that the metabolite disposition was rate-limited by its elimination. The presence of two subpopulations of patients was suspected on the basis of the observed bimodal distributions of the AUC(M1)/AUC(tramadol) ratios.CONCLUSIONS : The results of this study combine relationships between tramadol CL and patient covariates that may be useful for dose adjustment. Polymorphism is likely to contribute to the interpatient variability observed in the AUC M1/AUC tramadol ratios
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Information needs after stroke: What to include and how to structure it on a website. A qualitative study using focus groups and card sorting
Background: Use of the Internet to obtain health and other information is increasing. Previous studies have identified the specific information needs of people with stroke but not in relation to the Internet. People with aphasia (PwA) may face barriers in accessing the Internet: Navigating websites requires an ability to categorise information and this ability is often impaired in PwA. The website categorisation preferences of people with stroke and with aphasia have not yet been reported.
Aims: This study aimed: (a) to determine what information people who have had a stroke would like to see on a website about living with stroke; (b) to determine the most effective means of structuring information on the website so that it is accessible to people with stroke; and c) to identify any differences between people with and without aphasia in terms of preferences for structuring information on the website.
Methods & Procedures: Participants were recruited from a hospital's Stroke Database. Focus groups were used to elicit what information participants wanted on a website about living with stroke. The themes raised were depicted on 133 cards. To determine the most effective way of structuring information on the website, and whether there were any differences in preferences between PwA and PwoA, participants used a modified closed card-sorting technique to sort the cards under website categories.
Outcomes & Results: A total of 48 people were invited, and 12 (25%) agreed to take part. We ran three focus groups: one with PwA (n = 5) and two with people without aphasia (PwoA) (n = 3, n = 4). Participants wanted more information about stroke causes and effects (particularly emotional issues), roles of local agencies, and returning to previous activities (driving, going out). All participants completed the card-sorting exercise. Few cards (6%) were categorised identically by everyone. Cards relating to local agencies and groups were not consistently categorised together. Cards relating to emotions were segregated. The categorisation preferences for PwA were more fragmented than those for PwoA: 60% of PwA agreed on the categorisation of 51% of the cards, whereas 60% of PwoA agreed on the categorisation of 76% of the cards.
Conclusions: Information needs covered all stages of the stroke journey. The card sorting was accessible to everyone, and provided evidence of structuring preferences and of some of the categorisation difficulties faced by PwA. More research is needed on what an accessible website looks like for PwA
Ecosystem services
editorial reviewedThe concept of ecosystem services links the conservation of biodiversity and human development. This concept is central to the Man and the Biosphere (MAB) Programme,
which aims to combine conservation of ecosystems and sustainable development through
the zonation of biosphere reserves and other approaches.
Biosphere reserves are excellent learning sites to study the interactions between people
and nature, especially how people benefit from nature (ecosystem services), stakeholders’
perceptions and use of nature, important anthropogenic pressures, etc. The concept of
ecosystem services helps to structure and study all of these interactions
The effect of irradiation on the magnetic properties of rock and synthetic samples: Implications to irradiation of extraterrestrial materials in space
© 2015, Pleiades Publishing, Ltd. We report here the results of laboratory analog experiments to consider the potential effects of solar energetic particles (SEP or solar-flare-associated particles) and galactic cosmic rays (GCR) on the magnetic properties of extraterrestrial materials. We carried out proton bombardment experiments (with irradiation energies E1=400, E2 =850 keV and three irradiation fluences in 1014–1016p/cm2 range) and lead-ion bombardment experiments (E =1 GeV) on (previously demagnetized by 120 mT alternating magnetic field) rock and synthetic samples with the following magnetic carriers: metallic iron and nickel iron, Ti-rich and Ti-free magnetite, pyrrhotite. Irradiation experiments resulted in either further demagnetization or magnetization of irradiated samples depending on the type of magnetic mineralogy and type of ionizing radiation involved. Apart for the formation of radiation-induced remanent magnetization (RIRM), we observed major changes in bulk magnetic properties, i.e., a moderate to dramatic decrease (up to 93%) in the coercivity of remanence Bcr for all iron-bearing phases (iron-in-epoxy and Bensour meteorite samples). Contrary to iron-bearing samples, several magnetite-bearing samples experienced a radiation-induced magnetic hardening (increase in Bcr). Magnetic hardening was also observed for Ar2+ ion-irradiated nickel iron-bearing HED meteorites, measured for comparison with the previously stated results. Therefore, the combined effect of SEP with GCR may magnetically soften iron-bearing materials and harden magnetite-bearing materials. In order to answer the question wether RIRM may account for natural remanent magnetization of meteorites and lunar samples, physical mechanism of RIRM formation and potential dependence of RIRM intensity on the background magnetic field present during irradiation event should be investigated
African Swine Fever at the Wildlife-Livestock Interface: Challenges for Management and Outbreak Response within Invasive Wild Pigs in the United States
African swine fever (ASF) causes significant morbidity and mortality in both domestic and wild suids (Sus scrofa), and disease outbreaks convey profound economic costs to impacted industries due to death loss, the cost of culling exposed/infected animals as the primary disease control measure, and trade restrictions. The co-occurrence of domestic and wild suids significantly complicates ASF management given the potential for wild populations to serve as persistent sources for spillover. We describe the unique threat of African swine fever virus (ASFV) introduction to the United States from epidemiological and ecological perspectives with a specific focus on disease management at the wild-domestic swine interface. The introduction of ASF into domestic herds would require a response focused on containment, culling, and contact tracing. However, detection of ASF among invasive wild pigs would require a far more complex and intensive response given the challenges of detection, containment, and ultimately elimination among wild populations. We describe the state of the science available to inform preparations for an ASF response among invasive wild pigs, describe knowledge gaps and the associated studies needed to fill those gaps, and call for an integrated approach for preparedness that incorporates the best available science and acknowledges sociological attributes and the policy context needed for an integrated disease response
Preparation of amino-substituted indenes and 1,4-dihydronaphthalenes using a one-pot multireaction approach: total synthesis of oxybenzo[c]phenanthridine alkaloids
Allylic trichloroacetimidates bearing a 2-vinyl or 2-allylaryl group have been designed as substrates for a one-pot, two-step multi-bond-forming process leading to the general preparation of aminoindenes and amino-substituted 1,4-dihydronaphthalenes. The synthetic utility of the privileged structures formed from this one-pot process was demonstrated with the total synthesis of four oxybenzo[c]phenanthridine alkaloids, oxychelerythrine, oxysanguinarine, oxynitidine, and oxyavicine. An intramolecular biaryl Heck coupling reaction, catalyzed using the Hermann–Beller palladacycle was used to effect the key step during the synthesis of the natural products
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