199 research outputs found
Adiabatic creation of coherent superposition states via multiple intermediate states
We consider an adiabatic population transfer process that resembles the well
established stimulated Raman adiabatic passage (STIRAP). In our system, the
states have nonzero angular momentums , therefore, the coupling laser fields
induce transitions among the magnetic sublevels of the states. In particular,
we discuss the possibility of creating coherent superposition states in a
system with coupling pattern and . Initially, the system is in the J=0 state. We show that by two delayed,
overlapping laser pulses it is possible to create any final superposition state
of the magnetic sublevels , , . Moreover, we find that
the relative phases of the applied pulses influence not only the phases of the
final superposition state but the probability amplitudes as well. We show that
if we fix the shape and the time-delay between the pulses, the final state
space can be entirely covered by varying the polarizations and relative phases
of the two pulses. Performing numerical simulations we find that our transfer
process is nearly adiabatic for the whole parameter set.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figure
Stimulated Raman adiabatic passage in a multi-level atom
We present a general formalism for describing stimulated Raman adiabatic
passage in a multi-level atom. The atom is assumed to have two ground state
manifolds a and b and an excited state manifold e, and the adiabatic passage is
carried out by resonantly driving the a-e and b-e transitions with
time-dependent fields. Our formalism gives a complete description of the
adiabatic passage process, and can be applied to systems with arbitrary numbers
of degenerate states in each manifold and arbitrary couplings of the a-e and
b-e transitions. We illustrate the formalism by applying it to both a simple
toy model and to adiabatic passage in the Cesium atom.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
Flare coupled metal parallel-plate waveguides for high resolution terahertz time-domain spectroscopy
We report on a new coupling scheme for high resolution terahertz spectroscopy of microcrystalline films using parallel-plate waveguides. Metal flares are used to couple the terahertz radiation into and out of the waveguide. Very good coupling ratios as high as 35% at 1 THz from a collimated free-space beam into a subwavelength gap are obtained. This microwave approach is compared in terms of coupling ratio and spectral characteristics to the established technique of quasioptic coupling to parallel-plate waveguides using silicon lenses. Various samples at room and cryogenic temperatures are measured to show the capabilities of flare coupling for high resolution terahertz spectroscopy.Peer reviewedElectrical and Computer Engineerin
Highly sensitive terahertz measurement of layer thickness using a two-cylinder waveguide sensor
We report on the layer thickness determination on dielectrically coated metal cylinders using terahertz (THz) time-domain spectroscopy. A considerable sensitivity increase of up to a factor of 150 is obtained for layers down to 2.5 um thickness by introducing an experimental geometry based on a two-cylinder waveguide sensor. The layer attached on one metal cylinder is guided in contact with the second metal cylinder in the THz beam waist. This approach uses concepts of adiabatic THz wave compression and the advantages of THz waveguides. The results are compared to measurements on free-standing layers.Peer reviewedElectrical and Computer Engineerin
Angiotensin II induced inflammation in the kidney and in the heart of double transgenic rats
BACKGROUND: We are investigating a double transgenic rat (dTGR) model, in which rats transgenic for the human angiotensinogen and renin genes are crossed. These rats develop moderately severe hypertension but die of end-organ cardiac and renal damage by week 7. The heart shows necrosis and fibrosis, whereas the kidneys resemble the hemolytic-uremic syndrome vasculopathy. Surface adhesion molecules (ICAM-1 and VCAM-1) are expressed early on the endothelium, while the corresponding ligands are found on circulating leukocytes. Leukocyte infiltration in the vascular wall accompanies PAI-1, MCP-1, iNOS and Tissue Factor expression. Furthermore we show evidence that Ang II causes the upregulation of NF-{kappa}B in our model. METHODS: We started PDTC-treatment on four weeks old dTGR (200 mg/kg sc) and age-matched SD rats. Blood-pressure- and albuminuria- measurements were monitored during the treatment period (four weeks). The seven weeks old animals were killed, hearts and kidneys were isolated and used for immunohistochemical-and electromobility shift assay analysis. RESULTS: Chronic treatment with the antioxidant PDTC decreased blood pressure (162 plus minus 8 vs. 190 plus minus 7 mm Hg, p = 0.02). Cardiac hypertrophy index was significantly reduced (4.90 plus minus 0.1 vs. 5.77 plus minus 0.1 mg/g, p < 0.001) compared to dTGR. PDTC reduced 24 h albuminuria by 85 % (2.7 plus minus 0.5 vs. 18.0 plus minus 3.4 mg/d, p < 0.001) and prevented death significantly. Vascular injury was ameliorated in small renal and cardiac vessels. PDTC inhibited NF-{kappa}B binding activity in heart and kidney. Immunohistochemical analysis shows increased expression of the p65 NF-{kappa}B subunit in the endothelium, smooth muscles cells of damaged small vessels, infiltrated cells, glomeruli, tubuli and collecting ducts of dTGR. PDTC markedly reduced the immunoreactivity of p65. CONCLUSION: Our data show that inhibition of NF-{kappa}B by PDTC markedly reduces inflammation, iNOS expression in the dTGR most likely leading to decreased cytotoxicity, and cell proliferation. Thus, NF-{kappa}B activation plays an important role in ANG II-induced end-organ damage
Terahertz two-cylinder waveguide coupler for transverse-magnetic and transverse-electric mode operation
We report the coupling and guiding of broadband terahertz radiation using a two-cylinder waveguide coupler. For the transverse electromagnetic TEM (TM0) geometry, the two opposing metal cylinders exhibit an amplitude transmission comparable to that of the cylindrical silicon lens coupled parallel-plate waveguide, but in the transverse-electric orientation the two-cylinder coupler shows much better amplitude transmission.Peer reviewedElectrical and Computer Engineerin
The SoftHand Pro: Functional evaluation of a novel, flexible, and robust myoelectric prosthesis
Roughly one quarter of active upper limb prosthetic technology is rejected by the user, and user surveys have identified key areas requiring improvement: function, comfort, cost, durability, and appearance. Here we present the first systematic, clinical assessment of a novel prosthetic hand, the SoftHand Pro (SHP), in participants with transradial amputation and age-matched, limb-intact participants. The SHP is a robust and functional prosthetic hand that minimizes cost and weight using an underactuated design with a single motor. Participants with limb loss were evaluated on functional clinical measures before and after a 6-8 hour training period with the SHP as well as with their own prosthesis; limb-intact participants were tested only before and after SHP training. Participants with limb loss also evaluated their own prosthesis and the SHP (following training) using subjective questionnaires. Both objective and subjective results were positive and illuminated the strengths and weaknesses of the SHP. In particular, results pre-training show the SHP is easy to use, and significant improvement in the Activities Measure for Upper Limb Amputees in both groups following a 6-8 hour training highlights the ease of learning the unique features of the SHP (median improvement: 4.71 and 3.26 and p = 0.009 and 0.036 for limb loss and limb-intact groups, respectively). Further, we found no difference in performance compared to participant's own commercial devices in several clinical measures and found performance surpassing these devices on two functional tasks, buttoning a shirt and using a cell phone, suggesting a functional prosthetic design. Finally, improvements are needed in the SHP design and/or training in light of poor results in small object manipulation. Taken together, these results show the promise of the SHP, a flexible and adaptive prosthetic hand, and pave a path forward to ensuring higher functionality in future
A Phase 1 Study of TRC102, An Inhibitor of Base Excision Repair, and Pemetrexed in Patients with Advanced Solid Tumors
Introduction TRC102 potentiates the activity of cancer therapies that induce base excision repair (BER) including antimetabolite and alkylating agents. TRC102 rapidly and covalently binds to apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites generated during BER, and TRC102-bound DNA causes topoisomerase II-dependent irreversible strand breaks and apoptosis. This study assessed the safety, maximum-tolerated dose (MTD), pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of TRC102 alone and in combination with pemetrexed. Purpose Patients with advanced solid tumors received oral TRC102 daily for 4 days. Two weeks later, patients began standard-dose pemetrexed on day 1 in combination with oral TRC102 on days 1 to 4. The pemetrexed-TRC102 combination was repeated every 3 weeks until disease progression. Methods Twenty-eight patients were treated with TRC102 at 15, 30, 60 or 100 mg/m2/d. The MTD was exceeded at 100 mg/m2/d due to grade 3 anemia in 50 % of patients. TRC102 exposure increased in proportion to dose with a mean t1/2 of 28 h. A pharmacodynamic assay confirmed that TRC102 binds to pemetrexed-induced AP sites at all doses studied. Stable disease or better was achieved in 15 of 25 patients evaluable for response (60 %), including one patient with recurrent metastatic oropharyngeal carcinoma that expressed high levels of thymidylate synthase, who achieved a partial response and was progression free for 14 months. Conclusions When administered with pemetrexed, the maximum tolerated dose of oral TRC102 is 60 mg/m2/d for 4 days. Randomized controlled studies are planned to evaluate the clinical benefit of adding TRC102 to pemetrexed and other agents that induce BER. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
Um Estado novo-desenvolvimentista na América Latina?
A América Latina foi, provavelmente, a região que mais sofreu nos anos neoliberais, porque era inclusive onde as reformas e políticas respectivas foram levadas mais adiante. Por essa razão, foi também a região em que os anos neoliberais primeiro chegaram ao fim. Desde a década de 1990, líderes políticos de esquerda e economicamente nacionalistas começaram a ganhar as eleições. Por sua vez, uma nova escola de pensamento econômico baseada em uma nova "macroeconomia estruturalista do desenvolvimento" está em discussão e as "Dez Teses sobre o Novo Desenvolvimentismo" são hoje uma alternativa ao consenso de Washington. Significa que o Estado Desenvolvimentista está de volta? É muito cedo para afirmar isso, não só porque ideias e políticas raramente coincidem, mas também porque o aumento nos preços das commodities está ameaçando a industrialização na região
Intracellular Trafficking Considerations in the Development of Natural Ligand-Drug Molecular Conjugates for Cancer
Overexpressed receptors, characteristic of many cancers, have been targeted by various researchers to achieve a more specific treatment for cancer. A common approach is to use the natural ligand for the overexpressed receptor as a cancer-targeting agent which can deliver a chemically or genetically conjugated toxic molecule. However, it has been found that the therapeutic efficacy of such ligand-drug molecular conjugates can be limited, since they naturally follow the intracellular trafficking pathways of the endogenous ligands. Therefore, a thorough understanding of the intracellular trafficking properties of these ligands can lead to novel design criteria for engineering ligands to be more effective drug carriers. This review presents a few commonly used ligand/receptor systems where intracellular trafficking considerations can potentially improve the therapeutic efficacy of the ligand-drug molecular conjugates
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