349 research outputs found

    Metabolomics Insights Into Pathophysiological Mechanisms of Interstitial Cystitis

    Get PDF
    Interstitial cystitis (IC), also known as painful bladder syndrome or bladder pain syndrome, is a chronic lower urinary tract syndrome characterized by pelvic pain, urinary urgency, and increased urinary frequency in the absence of bacterial infection or identifiable clinicopathology. IC can lead to long-term adverse effects on the patient's quality of life. Therefore, early diagnosis and better understanding of the mechanisms underlying IC are needed. Metabolomic studies of biofluids have become a powerful method for assessing disease mechanisms and biomarker discovery, which potentially address these important clinical needs. However, limited intensive metabolic profiles have been elucidated in IC. The article is a short review on metabolomic analyses that provide a unique fingerprint of IC with a focus on its use in determining a potential diagnostic biomarker associated with symptoms, a response predictor of therapy, and a prognostic marker

    STaSy: Score-based Tabular data Synthesis

    Full text link
    Tabular data synthesis is a long-standing research topic in machine learning. Many different methods have been proposed over the past decades, ranging from statistical methods to deep generative methods. However, it has not always been successful due to the complicated nature of real-world tabular data. In this paper, we present a new model named Score-based Tabular data Synthesis (STaSy) and its training strategy based on the paradigm of score-based generative modeling. Despite the fact that score-based generative models have resolved many issues in generative models, there still exists room for improvement in tabular data synthesis. Our proposed training strategy includes a self-paced learning technique and a fine-tuning strategy, which further increases the sampling quality and diversity by stabilizing the denoising score matching training. Furthermore, we also conduct rigorous experimental studies in terms of the generative task trilemma: sampling quality, diversity, and time. In our experiments with 15 benchmark tabular datasets and 7 baselines, our method outperforms existing methods in terms of task-dependant evaluations and diversity. Code is available at https://github.com/JayoungKim408/STaSy.Comment: 27 pages, Accepted by ICLR 2023 for spotlight presentation, Official code: https://github.com/JayoungKim408/STaS

    Co-Design, Merchandising, Virtual, Store

    Get PDF
    In today’s technologically advanced, networked world, the popularity and criticality of user participation in various aspects of our lives calls for a redefinition of the boundaries between designers and users, sellers and buyers, and visual merchandisers and shoppers. Co-design is defined in the design discipline as a process that involves consumers in co-creating a product (Piller, Moeslein & Stotko, 2004), thus transforming ordinary consumers into co-designers. Traditionally, retailers primarily rely on their internal expertise for visual merchandising directives and innovations. However, exploitation of internal expertise can result in both decreased output in innovation (Katila and Ahuja, 2002) and less innovative outcomes (Kristensson, Gustafsson, & Archer, 2004)

    Engineering polymeric drug delivery vehicles for enhanced tissue targeting

    Get PDF
    Development of therapeutic drugs, including small molecules, peptides, proteins, and nucleic acids, is centered upon their function through novel molecular targets or enhanced efficacy in comparison to existing drugs. However, one of the major limitations these drugs often suffer from is low drug concentration at the target site due to fast clearance post administration, which leads to overdosing and frequent dosings that can have further complications such as safety and patient compliance. Hence, there has been a strong effort during the past few decades in the field of biomaterials to develop drug delivery vehicles that enhance the localization of drugs at the site of disease while minimizing side effects. In particular, polymeric nanoparticles and microparticles have been utilized as platform technologies to protect, carry, and release the drug cargo in controlled fashion. This thesis presents multiple approaches to engineering polymeric nanoparticles and microparticles based on different targeting modalities with the goal of maximizing the bioavailability of the drug in cancer and ocular disease applications. Two types of polymers, poly(beta-amino ester) (PBAE) and poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA), were utilized to optimize the delivery of a small molecule, peptides, and plasmid DNA. To maximize the delivered dose of the drug cargo of interest, physical size and shape modifications of nanoparticles were investigated for passive targeting. In particular, poly(ethylene glycol)-modified PBAE polymer was used to formulate pDNA-carrying polyplex and small molecule-carrying micelles for enhanced diffusion by size and prolonged circulation by shape, respectively. Next, biochemical modifications of polymers were explored for active targeting of nanoparticles to target tissue. Specifically, polymer structure-dependent tissue targeting was investigated with PBAE-pDNA polyplex nanoparticles, and active tumor targeting with integrin-binding peptide-coated PLGA nanoparticles were studied. Finally, optimization of PBAE nano- and PLGA microparticles delivering nucleic acids and therapeutic peptide, respectively, were studied to enhance patient compliance and long-term therapeutic efficacy following two different local delivery routes to ocular spaces. Taken together, the findings from these polymeric nano- and microparticles with different targeting modalities show their clinical potential as efficient drug delivery systems

    Inactivation of Medial Prefrontal Cortex Impairs Time Interval Discrimination in Rats

    Get PDF
    Several lines of evidence suggest the involvement of prefrontal cortex in time interval estimation. The underlying neural processes are poorly understood, however, in part because of the paucity of physiological studies. The goal of this study was to establish an interval timing task for physiological recordings in rats, and test the requirement of intact medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) for performing the task. We established a temporal bisection procedure using six different time intervals ranging from 3018 to 4784 ms that needed to be discriminated as either long or short. Bilateral infusions of muscimol (GABAA receptor agonist) into the mPFC significantly impaired animal's performance in this task, even when the animals were required to discriminate between only the longest and shortest time intervals. These results show the requirement of intact mPFC in rats for time interval discrimination in the range of a few seconds
    corecore