150 research outputs found
Is Asthma Related to Choroidal Neovascularization?
BACKGROUND: Age-related degeneration (AMD) and asthma are both diseases that are related to the activation of the complement system. The association between AMD and asthma has been debated in previous studies. The authors investigated the relationship between AMD and asthma systemically. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The epidemiological study showed that asthma was related to choroidal neovascularization (CNV) subtype (OR = 1.721, P = 0.023). However, the meta-analysis showed there was no association between AMD and asthma. In an animal model, we found more fluoresce in leakage of CNV lesions by FA analysis and more angiogenesis by histological analysis in rats with asthma. Western blot demonstrated an elevated level of C3α-chain, C3α'-chain and VEGF. After compstatin was intravitreally injected, CNV leakage decreased according to FA analysis, with the level of C3 and VEGF protein decreasing at the same time. SIGNIFICANCE: This study first investigated the relationship between AMD and asthma systematically, and it was found that asthma could be a risk factor for the development of AMD. The study may provide a better understanding of the disease, which may advance the potential for screening asthma patients in clinical practice
Cross-training workers in Dual Resource Constrained systems with heterogeneous processing times
Statistical Coding and Decoding of Heartbeat Intervals
The heart integrates neuroregulatory messages into specific bands of frequency, such that the overall amplitude spectrum of the cardiac output reflects the variations of the autonomic nervous system. This modulatory mechanism seems to be well adjusted to the unpredictability of the cardiac demand, maintaining a proper cardiac regulation. A longstanding theory holds that biological organisms facing an ever-changing environment are likely to evolve adaptive mechanisms to extract essential features in order to adjust their behavior. The key question, however, has been to understand how the neural circuitry self-organizes these feature detectors to select behaviorally relevant information. Previous studies in computational perception suggest that a neural population enhances information that is important for survival by minimizing the statistical redundancy of the stimuli. Herein we investigate whether the cardiac system makes use of a redundancy reduction strategy to regulate the cardiac rhythm. Based on a network of neural filters optimized to code heartbeat intervals, we learn a population code that maximizes the information across the neural ensemble. The emerging population code displays filter tuning proprieties whose characteristics explain diverse aspects of the autonomic cardiac regulation, such as the compromise between fast and slow cardiac responses. We show that the filters yield responses that are quantitatively similar to observed heart rate responses during direct sympathetic or parasympathetic nerve stimulation. Our findings suggest that the heart decodes autonomic stimuli according to information theory principles analogous to how perceptual cues are encoded by sensory systems
The Plant Pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato Is Genetically Monomorphic and under Strong Selection to Evade Tomato Immunity
Recently, genome sequencing of many isolates of genetically monomorphic bacterial human pathogens has given new insights into pathogen microevolution and phylogeography. Here, we report a genome-based micro-evolutionary study of a bacterial plant pathogen, Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato. Only 267 mutations were identified between five sequenced isolates in 3,543,009 nt of analyzed genome sequence, which suggests a recent evolutionary origin of this pathogen. Further analysis with genome-derived markers of 89 world-wide isolates showed that several genotypes exist in North America and in Europe indicating frequent pathogen movement between these world regions. Genome-derived markers and molecular analyses of key pathogen loci important for virulence and motility both suggest ongoing adaptation to the tomato host. A mutational hotspot was found in the type III-secreted effector gene hopM1. These mutations abolish the cell death triggering activity of the full-length protein indicating strong selection for loss of function of this effector, which was previously considered a virulence factor. Two non-synonymous mutations in the flagellin-encoding gene fliC allowed identifying a new microbe associated molecular pattern (MAMP) in a region distinct from the known MAMP flg22. Interestingly, the ancestral allele of this MAMP induces a stronger tomato immune response than the derived alleles. The ancestral allele has largely disappeared from today's Pto populations suggesting that flagellin-triggered immunity limits pathogen fitness even in highly virulent pathogens. An additional non-synonymous mutation was identified in flg22 in South American isolates. Therefore, MAMPs are more variable than expected differing even between otherwise almost identical isolates of the same pathogen strain
Prevalence and causes of vision loss in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2015: magnitude, temporal trends and projections
Objective To estimate the prevalence and causes of blindness and vision impairment for distance and near in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) in 2015 and to forecast trends to 2020.
Methods A meta-analysis from a global systematic review of 283 cross-sectional, population-representative studies from published and unpublished sources from 1980 to 2014 in the Global Vision Database included 17 published and 6 unpublished studies from LAC.
Results In 2015, across LAC, age-standardised prevalence was 0.38% in all ages and 1.56% in those over age 50 for blindness; 2.06% in all ages and 7.86% in those over age 50 for moderate and severe vision impairment (MSVI); 1.89% in all ages and 6.93% in those over age 50 for mild vision impairment and 39.59% in all ages and 45.27% in those over 50 for near vision impairment (NVI). In 2015, 117.86 million persons were vision impaired; of those 2.34 million blind, 12.46 million with MSVI, 11.34 million mildly impaired and 91.72 million had NVI. Cataract is the most common cause of blindness. Undercorrected refractive-error is the most common cause of vision impairment.
Conclusions These prevalence estimates indicate that one in five persons across LAC had some degree of vision loss in 2015. We predict that from 2015 to 2020, the absolute numbers of persons with vision loss will increase by 12% to 132.33 million, while the all-age age-standardised prevalence will decrease for blindness by 15% and for other distance vision impairment by 8%. All countries need epidemiologic research to establish accurate national estimates and trends. Universal eye health services must be included in universal health coverage reforms to address disparities, fragmentation and segmentation of healthcar
A Retrial Queueing System in Which Server Searches to Accumulate Customers for Optimal Bulk Serving
Busy Period Analysis of Multi-Server Retrial Queueing Systems
The literature on the busy period analysis in queueing theory is very limited due to the inherent complexity in its study. Recently, using the simulation approach the busy period for the classical multi-server queueing systems was studied by this author and some interesting observations were reported. In this paper we carry out a similar analysis but on a smaller scale in the case of multi-server retrial queueing systems. It should be pointed out that while the literature on retrial queueing system is vast, the same cannot be said about the busy period analysis in retrial queueing systems. Only a few papers with restricted assumptions are available in the literature. This paper is an attempt to fill the void
Experimental investigation of flame propagation in a meso-combustor
The present work aims to study the quenching of propagating flames in meso-combustors for which dimensions are of the order of quenching distances of hydrocarbon fuels. Combustion of gaseous fuels and subsequent flame propagation in a meso-scale combustor duct of square cross-section is studied experimentally. Premixed mixtures of methane, propane, and ethylene with air are considered. Two different variants of flame propagation states are found to occur in the meso-combustor, viz., one undergoing flame propagation till the combustor entry and quenching at the step and the other undergoing wall quenching. Regime transitions across these flame states are mapped comprehensively over a wide range of operating conditions. The radius of curvature of the flame and the dead space between the flame and the wall are determined for those conditions with the aid of curve fitting and image processing techniques using Matlab software. The spatial and temporal variation of both these parameters show a drastic increase during quenching in the wall-quenched case, while it remains nearly constant in the step quenched case. With increasing duct Reynolds number, the flame propagates slower, and the heat conduction to the wall leads to a decrease in the dead space and flattening of the flame, particularly at equivalence ratios corresponding to lower flame speeds. This flame-wall interaction is found to be low for methane, resulting in more heat loss and thereby wall-quenched flames compared to propane and ethylene. None of the ethylene flames were found to suffer wall quenching thereby making it a suitable fuel for meso-/micro-combustors among the three fuels used in the present work. </jats:p
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