7,002 research outputs found
National income inequality predicts women's preferences for masculinized faces better than health does
This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright @ 2010 The Royal Society
The importance of serological assays in diagnosing acute pulmonary histoplasmosis
Histoplasmosis is a systemic mycosis caused by inhalation of Histoplasma capsulatum microconidia. The disease does not normally affect immunocompetent individuals after a single, transient inhalation exposure. However, longer exposure may cause chronic or disseminated acute pulmonary infection. Herein, we report the case of a 24-year-old immunocompetent patient, who presented fever, cough and dyspnea for one month. The chest radiography revealed interstitial infiltrate and diffuse micronodules. The patient reported having had close and prolonged contact with bats. Diagnosis was confirmed by positive double immunodifusion and immunoblotting assays. She was treated with ketoconazole (400 mg) and there was complete resolution of the disease
Predicting the visco-elastic properties of polystyrene/SIS composite blends using simple analytical micromechanics models
This paper is concerned with the prediction of the viscoelastic properties of rubber filled polymer blends. The question asked was as follows. Can the temperature dependent viscoelastic properties of phase separated polymer blends be adequately predicted using only a rational two phase micromechanics based analytical model with no empirical fitting parameters? In particular using only a knowledge of the individual bulk phase properties and the blend microstructure, but without any further detailed polymer physics knowledge such as the presence of an interphase region or any additional nanoscale structures within the separated rubber phase with the properties different from those of the two bulk phases? Blends of a polystyrene matrix and phase separated rubber inclusions (a polystyrene-polyisoprene-polystyrene triblock polymer (SIS)) were manufactured in a range of blend fractions (up to 20 vol % of the triblock co-polymer). Experimental measurements, for the storage modulus G′ and the loss tangent tanδ, of both the individual phases and the blends, were made using dynamic mechanical tests over a range of temperatures from −50 to +70 °C. Numerical predictions, of the same parameters, were first obtained using the generalised self-consistent Christensen and Lo model which uses a simple representative volume element (RVE) of an isolated sphere of the minority rubber component in a surrounding sheath of polystyrene matrix embedded in a homogeneous effective medium. The agreement between the Christensen and Lo model and the experimental measurements, for G′ and tanδ, was found to be excellent for rubber contents up to 10%. For a 20% rubber content, an improved prediction was obtained by altering the RVE to include the observed effect of having a polystyrene central core in a number of the dispersed rubber zones at this rubber fraction, using the Herve and Zaoui generalization of the Christensen and Lo model. Although conjoined (and therefore non-spherical) zones became more prevalent at the highest rubber content, use of the Tandon and Weng model showed that this shape anisotropy would not be expected to affect the viscoelastic properties
An observational prospective study of topical acidified nitrite for killing methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in contaminated wounds
Background Endogenous nitric oxide (NO) kills bacteria and other organisms as part of the innate immune response. When nitrite is exposed to low pH, NO is generated and has been used as an NO delivery system to treat skin infections. We demonstrated eradication of MRSA carriage from wounds using a topical formulation of citric acid (4.5%) and sodium nitrite (3%) creams co-applied for 5 days to 15 wounds in an observational prospective pilot study of 8 patients. Findings Following treatment with topical citric acid and sodium nitrite, 9 of 15 wounds (60%) and 3 of 8 patients (37%) were cleared of infection. MRSA isolates from these patients were all sensitive to acidified nitrite in vitro compared to methicillin-sensitive S. aureus and a reference strain of MRSA. Conclusions Nitric oxide and acidified nitrite offer a novel therapy for control of MRSA in wounds. Wounds that were not cleared of infection may have been re-contaminated or the bioavailability of acidified nitrite impaired by local factors in the tissue
Human preferences for sexually dimorphic faces may be evolutionarily novel
This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.A large literature proposes that preferences for exaggerated sex typicality in human faces (masculinity/femininity) reflect a long evolutionary history of sexual and social selection. This proposal implies that dimorphism was important to judgments of attractiveness and personality in ancestral environments. It is difficult to evaluate, however, because most available data come from largescale, industrialized, urban populations. Here, we report the results for 12 populations with very diverse levels of economic development. Surprisingly, preferences for exaggerated sex-specific traits are only found in the novel, highly developed environments. Similarly, perceptions that masculine males look aggressive increase strongly with development, specifically, urbanization. These data challenge the hypothesis that facial dimorphism was an important ancestral signal of heritable mate value. One possibility is that highly developed environments provide novel opportunities to discern relationships between facial traits and behavior by exposing individuals to large numbers of unfamiliar faces, revealing patterns too subtle to detect with smaller samples
High Energy Neutrinos from Quasars
We review and clarify the assumptions of our basic model for neutrino
production in the cores of quasars, as well as those modifications to the model
subsequently made by other workers. We also present a revised estimate of the
neutrino background flux and spectrum obtained using more recent empirical
studies of quasars and their evolution. We compare our results with other
thoeretical calculations and experimental upper limits on the AGN neutrino
background flux. We also estimate possible neutrino fluxes from the jets of
blazars detected recently by the EGRET experiment on the Compton Gamma Ray
Observatory. We discuss the theoretical implications of these estimates.Comment: 14 pg., ps file (includes figures), To be published in Space Science
Review
Femtosecond control of electric currents at the interfaces of metallic ferromagnetic heterostructures
The idea to utilize not only the charge but also the spin of electrons in the
operation of electronic devices has led to the development of spintronics,
causing a revolution in how information is stored and processed. A novel
advancement would be to develop ultrafast spintronics using femtosecond laser
pulses. Employing terahertz (10 Hz) emission spectroscopy, we
demonstrate optical generation of spin-polarized electric currents at the
interfaces of metallic ferromagnetic heterostructures at the femtosecond
timescale. The direction of the photocurrent is controlled by the helicity of
the circularly polarized light. These results open up new opportunities for
realizing spintronics in the unprecedented terahertz regime and provide new
insights in all-optical control of magnetism.Comment: 3 figures and 2 tables in the main tex
Spin Calogero Particles and Bispectral Solutions of the Matrix KP Hierarchy
Pairs of matrices whose commutator differ from the identity by a
matrix of rank are used to construct bispectral differential operators with
matrix coefficients satisfying the Lax equations of the Matrix KP
hierarchy. Moreover, the bispectral involution on these operators has dynamical
significance for the spin Calogero particles system whose phase space such
pairs represent. In the case , this reproduces well-known results of
Wilson and others from the 1990's relating (spinless) Calogero-Moser systems to
the bispectrality of (scalar) differential operators. This new class of pairs
of bispectral matrix differential operators is different than
those previously studied in that acts from the left, but from the
right on a common eigenmatrix.Comment: 16 page
HIV Prevention in Care and Treatment Settings: Baseline Risk Behaviors among HIV Patients in Kenya, Namibia, and Tanzania.
HIV care and treatment settings provide an opportunity to reach people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHIV) with prevention messages and services. Population-based surveys in sub-Saharan Africa have identified HIV risk behaviors among PLHIV, yet data are limited regarding HIV risk behaviors of PLHIV in clinical care. This paper describes the baseline sociodemographic, HIV transmission risk behaviors, and clinical data of a study evaluating an HIV prevention intervention package for HIV care and treatment clinics in Africa. The study was a longitudinal group-randomized trial in 9 intervention clinics and 9 comparison clinics in Kenya, Namibia, and Tanzania (N = 3538). Baseline participants were mostly female, married, had less than a primary education, and were relatively recently diagnosed with HIV. Fifty-two percent of participants had a partner of negative or unknown status, 24% were not using condoms consistently, and 11% reported STI symptoms in the last 6 months. There were differences in demographic and HIV transmission risk variables by country, indicating the need to consider local context in designing studies and using caution when generalizing findings across African countries. Baseline data from this study indicate that participants were often engaging in HIV transmission risk behaviors, which supports the need for prevention with PLHIV (PwP). TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01256463
Sensitivity and Specificity of Multiple Kato-Katz Thick Smears and a Circulating Cathodic Antigen Test for Schistosoma mansoni Diagnosis Pre- and Post-repeated-Praziquantel Treatment
Two Kato-Katz thick smears (Kato-Katzs) from a single stool are currently recommended for diagnosing Schistosoma mansoni infections to map areas for intervention. This ‘gold standard’ has low sensitivity at low infection intensities. The urine point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen test (POC-CCA) is potentially more sensitive but how accurately they detect S. mansoni after repeated praziquantel treatments, their suitability for measuring drug efficacy and their correlation with egg counts remain to be fully understood. We compared the accuracies of one to six Kato-Katzs and one POC-CCA for the diagnosis of S. mansoni in primary-school children who have received zero to ten praziquantel treatments. We determined the impact each diagnostic approach may have on monitoring and evaluation (M&E) and drug-efficacy findings
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