16,241 research outputs found
Compressibility and Creep Behaviour of Hydraulically Placed PFA and Mine Tailings Fills.
Many industrial processes result in the production of silt sized waste materials which may be disposed of by being pumped as a slurry to settling lagoons where the solids settle to form fills which often have a high voids ratio. These are described as hydraulic fills. These processes are commonly found in the coal based power generation and mining and mineral processing industries, amongst others. The geotechnical behaviour of such deposits is of interest with respect to the integrity and safety of the impoundment systems and possible future use and redevelopment of the sites. Such deposits are very difficult to sample and in many cases it is almost impossible to obtain notionally undisturbed samples, and so it is necessary to prepare samples in the laboratory using techniques which simulate field conditions. The paper describes the results of a series of one dimensional compression tests, up to very high stress levels, on pulverised fuel ash (PFA) and fluorspar mine tailings. Sample preparation methods attempting to recreate the in-situ structure and density are described. The results presented consider the initial 1-dimensional loading of the initially loose specimens, their unloading response and their creep behaviour. An attempt is made to define the normal consolidation line for these materials and the importance of the initial voids ratio is discussed. A general conceptual model of one dimensional compression behaviour is presented. The secondary compression, or creep, response is discussed, and creep behaviour may be important in considering their behaviour. The creep behaviour displays a linear relation in e-log(t) space. Contours of equal time of creep (isotaches) are suggested which are parallel to the normal consolidation line
Planar Drawings of Fixed-Mobile Bigraphs
A fixed-mobile bigraph G is a bipartite graph such that the vertices of one
partition set are given with fixed positions in the plane and the mobile
vertices of the other part, together with the edges, must be added to the
drawing. We assume that G is planar and study the problem of finding, for a
given k >= 0, a planar poly-line drawing of G with at most k bends per edge. In
the most general case, we show NP-hardness. For k=0 and under additional
constraints on the positions of the fixed or mobile vertices, we either prove
that the problem is polynomial-time solvable or prove that it belongs to NP.
Finally, we present a polynomial-time testing algorithm for a certain type of
"layered" 1-bend drawings
On Smooth Orthogonal and Octilinear Drawings: Relations, Complexity and Kandinsky Drawings
We study two variants of the well-known orthogonal drawing model: (i) the
smooth orthogonal, and (ii) the octilinear. Both models form an extension of
the orthogonal, by supporting one additional type of edge segments (circular
arcs and diagonal segments, respectively).
For planar graphs of max-degree 4, we analyze relationships between the graph
classes that can be drawn bendless in the two models and we also prove
NP-hardness for a restricted version of the bendless drawing problem for both
models. For planar graphs of higher degree, we present an algorithm that
produces bi-monotone smooth orthogonal drawings with at most two segments per
edge, which also guarantees a linear number of edges with exactly one segment.Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 25th International Symposium on
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2017
Central Nervous System Parasitosis and Neuroinflammation Ameliorated by Systemic IL-10 Administration in Trypanosoma brucei-Infected Mice
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Community perceptions of a malaria vaccine in the Kintampo districts of Ghana.
BACKGROUND: Malaria remains the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in sub-Saharan Africa despite tools currently available for its control. Making malaria vaccine available for routine use will be a major hallmark, but its acceptance by community members and health professionals within the health system could pose considerable challenge as has been found with the introduction of polio vaccinations in parts of West Africa. Some of these challenges may not be expected since decisions people make are many a time driven by a complex myriad of perceptions. This paper reports knowledge and perceptions of community members in the Kintampo area of Ghana where malaria vaccine trials have been ongoing as part of the drive for the first-ever licensed malaria vaccine in the near future. METHODS: Both qualitative and quantitative methods were used in the data collection processes. Women and men whose children were or were not involved in the malaria vaccine trial were invited to participate in focus group discussions (FGDs). Respondents, made up of heads of religious groupings in the study area, health care providers, traditional healers and traditional birth attendants, were also invited to participate in in-depth interviews (IDIs). A cross-sectional survey was conducted in communities where the malaria vaccine trial (Mal 047RTS,S) was carried out. In total, 12 FGDs, 15 IDIs and 466 household head interviews were conducted. RESULTS: Knowledge about vaccines was widespread among participants. Respondents would like their children to be vaccinated against all childhood illnesses including malaria. Knowledge of the long existing routine vaccines was relatively high among respondents compared to hepatitis B and Haemophilus influenza type B vaccines that were introduced more recently in 2002. There was no clear religious belief or sociocultural practice that will serve as a possible barrier to the acceptance of a malaria vaccine. CONCLUSION: With the assumption that a malaria vaccine will be as efficacious as other EPI vaccines, community members in Central Ghana will accept and prefer malaria vaccine to malaria drugs as a malaria control tool. Beliefs and cultural practices as barriers to the acceptance of malaria vaccine were virtually unknown in the communities surveyed
Improved kidney function in patients who switch their protease inhibitor from atazanavir or lopinavir to darunavir
OBJECTIVE: Atazanavir (ATV) and lopinavir (LPV) have been associated with kidney
disease progression in HIV positive patients, with no data reported for darunavir (DRV).
We examined kidney function in patients who switched their protease inhibitor from
ATV or LPV to DRV.
DESIGN: Cohort study.
METHODS: Data were from the UK CHIC study. We compared pre and post switch
estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) slopes (expressed in ml/min per 1.73 m2 per
year) in all switchers and those with rapid eGFR decline (>5 ml/min per 1.73 m2 per
year) on ATV or LPV. Mixed-effects models were adjusted for age, gender, ethnicity,
eGFR at switch and time updated CD4þ cell count, HIV RNA and cumulative tenofovir
(tenofovir disoproxil fumarate) exposure.
RESULTS: Data from 1430 patients were included. At the time of switching to DRV,
median age was 45 years, 79% were men, 76% had an undetectable viral load, and
median eGFR was 93 ml/min per 1.73 m2
. Adjusted mean (95% confidence interval) pre
and post switch eGFR slopes were 0.84 (1.31, 0.36) and 1.23 (0.80, 1.66) for ATV
(P < 0.001), and 0.57 (1.09, 0.05) and 0.62 (0.28, 0.96) for LPV (P < 0.001). Stable
or improved renal function was observed in patients with rapid eGFR decline on ATV or
LPV who switched to DRV [15.27 (19.35, 11.19) and 3.72 (1.78, 5.66), P < 0.001
for ATV, 11.93 (14.60, 9.26) and 0.87 (0.54, 2.27), P < 0.001 for LPV]. Similar
results were obtained if participants who discontinued tenofovir disoproxil fumarate at
the time of switch were excluded.
CONCLUSIONS: We report improved kidney function in patients who switched from ATV
or LPV to DRV, suggesting that DRV may have a more favourable renal safety profile
Carotid artery stenting: a single-centre experience with up to 8 years' follow-up
Carotid artery stenting (CAS) may be an alternative to surgical endoarterectomy not only in high-risk patients. We report results in the endovascular treatment of carotid artery disease with up to 8 years' follow-up. In this retrospective study, we analysed data from 853 consecutive patients (946 arteries) treated for carotid artery stenosis between April 1999 and March 2007; 491 (52%) arteries were symptomatic and 455(48%) were asymptomatic. Preprocedural evaluation of the patients was performed with echo Doppler, magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) or computed tomographic angiography (CTA) and a neurological examination. A cerebral protection device was used in 879 (92.9%) procedures. Anti-platelet therapy was administered before and after the procedure. All patients were included in a follow-up of up to 8 years. Technical success was achieved in 943 (99.6%) lesions. At 30 days, there was a 0.21% (n = 2) death rate, a 0.42% major stroke rate, a 1.69% minor stroke/transient ischaemic attack (TIA) rate and a combined 2.32% TIA/stroke and death rate. During follow-up, echo Doppler evidenced restenosis in 39 (4.85%) cases; of these, only five, presenting restenosis > 80%, were treated with an endovascular reintervention. At the long-term follow-up, two strokes (0.23%) were reported, which both occurred within the first 2 years. In our experience, carotid artery stenting seems to be a safe and effective treatment, providing satisfactory long-term clinical results
Computational modelling of emboli travel trajectories in cerebral arteries: Influence of microembolic particle size and density
This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.Ischaemic stroke is responsible for up to 80 % of stroke cases. Prevention of the reoccurrence of ischaemic attack or stroke for patients who survived the first symptoms is the major treatment target. Accurate diagnosis of the emboli source for a specific infarction lesion is very important for a better treatment for the patient. However, due to the complex blood flow patterns in the cerebral arterial network, little is known so far of the embolic particle flow trajectory and its behaviour in such a complex flow field. The present study aims to study the trajectories of embolic particles released from carotid arteries and basilar artery in a cerebral arterial network and the influence of particle size, mass and release location to the particle distributions, by computational modelling. The cerebral arterial network model, which includes major arteries in the circle of Willis and several generations of branches from them, was generated from MRI images. Particles with diameters of 200, 500 and 800 μ m and densities of 800, 1,030 and 1,300 kg/m 3 were released in the vessel's central and near-wall regions. A fully coupled scheme of particle and blood flow in a computational fluid dynamics software ANASYS CFX 13 was used in the simulations. The results show that heavy particles (density large than blood or a diameter larger than 500 μ m) normally have small travel speeds in arteries; larger or lighter embolic particles are more likely to travel to large branches in cerebral arteries. In certain cases, all large particles go to the middle cerebral arteries; large particles with higher travel speeds in large arteries are likely to travel at more complex and tortuous trajectories; emboli raised from the basilar artery will only exit the model from branches of basilar artery and posterior cerebral arteries. A modified Circle of Willis configuration can have significant influence on particle distributions. The local branch patterns of internal carotid artery to middle cerebral artery and anterior communicating artery can have large impact on such distributions. © 2014 The Author(s)
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