400 research outputs found
Laser measuring system accurately locates point coordinates on photograph
Laser activated ultraprecision ranging apparatus interfaced with a computer determines point coordinates on a photograph. A helium-neon gas CW laser provides collimated light for a null balancing optical system. This system has no mechanical connection between the ranging apparatus and the photograph
Oral health awareness and care preferences in patients with diabetes : a qualitative study
Background
People with type 2 diabetes have an increased risk of oral health problems; however, oral health is currently not included in structured diabetes reviews and education in the UK.
Aim and Objectives
This study explores the patient experience related to oral health and diabetes, especially in relation to:
• Awareness of the link between oral health and diabetes and oral self care needs
• Interaction with health professionals in dental and general practice
• Preferences for receiving oral health information and education
Methods
This nested qualitative study involved semi-structured telephone interviews with a purposive sample of 20 participants from a questionnaire study on oral health awareness in patients with diabetes. Interview transcripts were analysed using a thematic framework approach.
Results
Participants were mostly unaware of the link between oral health and diabetes. Those that had been made aware by a health professional were not given concrete self care advice. Interactions with dental professionals were often limited to informing the dental practice of their diagnosis and current medication. Most participants were in favour of dentists screening for diabetes, but as their general practice was the hub for diabetes care, they felt GPs or nurses should provide oral health information and discuss oral health with patients.
Conclusions
Written information regarding diabetes and its possible effects on oral health needs to be more readily available to people with diabetes, especially at diagnosis. There may be a place for introducing a structured oral health question in routine diabetes reviews
Effects of depressive symptoms and peripheral DAT methylation on neural reactivity to alcohol cues in alcoholism
In alcohol-dependent (AD) patients, alcohol cues induce strong activations in
brain areas associated with alcohol craving and relapse, such as the nucleus
accumbens (NAc) and amygdala. However, little is known about the influence of
depressive symptoms, which are common in AD patients, on the brain’s
reactivity to alcohol cues. The methylation state of the dopamine transporter
gene (DAT) has been associated with alcohol dependence, craving and
depression, but its influence on neural alcohol cue reactivity has not been
tested. Here, we compared brain reactivity to alcohol cues in 38 AD patients
and 17 healthy controls (HCs) using functional magnetic resonance imaging and
assessed the influence of depressive symptoms and peripheral DAT methylation
in these responses. We show that alcoholics with low Beck’s Depression
Inventory scores (n=29) had higher cue-induced reactivity in NAc and amygdala
than those with mild/moderate depression scores (n=9), though subjective
perception of craving was higher in those with mild/moderate depression
scores. We corroborated a higher DAT methylation in AD patients than HCs, and
showed higher DAT methylation in AD patients with mild/moderate than low
depression scores. Within the AD cohort, higher methylation predicted craving
and, at trend level (P=0.095), relapse 1 year after abstinence. Finally, we
show that amygdala cue reactivity correlated with craving and DAT methylation
only in AD patients with low depression scores. These findings suggest that
depressive symptoms and DAT methylation are associated with alcohol craving
and associated brain processes in alcohol dependence, which may have important
consequences for treatment. Moreover, peripheral DAT methylation may be a
clinically relevant biomarker in AD patients
Macroscopic nucleation phenomena in continuum media with long-range interactions
Nucleation, commonly associated with discontinuous transformations between
metastable and stable phases, is crucial in fields as diverse as atmospheric
science and nanoscale electronics. Traditionally, it is considered a
microscopic process (at most nano-meter), implying the formation of a
microscopic nucleus of the stable phase. Here we show for the first time, that
considering long-range interactions mediated by elastic distortions, nucleation
can be a macroscopic process, with the size of the critical nucleus
proportional to the total system size. This provides a new concept of
"macroscopic barrier-crossing nucleation". We demonstrate the effect in
molecular dynamics simulations of a model spin-crossover system with two
molecular states of different sizes, causing elastic distortions.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary information accompanies this paper
at http://www.nature.com/scientificreport
Measurement of the CMS Magnetic Field
The measurement of the magnetic field in the tracking volume inside the
superconducting coil of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) detector under
construction at CERN is done with a fieldmapper designed and produced at
Fermilab. The fieldmapper uses 10 3-D B-sensors (Hall probes) developed at
NIKHEF and calibrated at CERN to precision 0.05% for a nominal 4 T field. The
precise fieldmapper measurements are done in 33840 points inside a cylinder of
1.724 m radius and 7 m long at central fields of 2, 3, 3.5, 3.8, and 4 T. Three
components of the magnetic flux density at the CMS coil maximum excitation and
the remanent fields on the steel-air interface after discharge of the coil are
measured in check-points with 95 3-D B-sensors located near the magnetic flux
return yoke elements. Voltages induced in 22 flux-loops made of 405-turn
installed on selected segments of the yoke are sampled online during the entire
fast discharge (190 s time-constant) of the CMS coil and integrated offline to
provide a measurement of the initial magnetic flux density in steel at the
maximum field to an accuracy of a few percent. The results of the measurements
made at 4 T are reported and compared with a three-dimensional model of the CMS
magnet system calculated with TOSCA.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, 15 reference
Involving people with diabetes and the wider community in diabetes research: a realist review protocol.
BACKGROUND: Patient and public involvement in diabetes research is now actively encouraged in different countries because it is believed that involving people with experience of the condition will improve the quality and relevance of the research. However, reviews of patient involvement have noted that inadequate resources, patients' and communities' lack of research knowledge, and researchers' lack of skills to involve patients and communities in research may present significant contextual barriers. Little is known about the extent of patient/community involvement in designing or delivering interventions for people with diabetes. A realist review of involvement will contribute to assessing when, how and why involvement works, or does not work, to produce better diabetes interventions. METHODS/DESIGN: This protocol outlines the process for conducting a realist review to map how patients and the public have been involved in diabetes research to date. The review questions ask the following: How have people with diabetes and the wider community been involved in diabetes research? What are the characteristics of the process that appear to explain the relative success or failure of involvement? How has involvement (or lack of involvement) in diabetes research influenced the development and conduct of diabetes research? The degree of support in the surrounding context will be assessed alongside the ways in which people interact in different settings to identify patterns of interaction between context, mechanisms and outcomes in different research projects. The level and extent of the involvement will be described for each stage of the research project. The descriptions will be critically reviewed by the people with diabetes on our review team. In addition, researchers and patients in diabetes research will be asked to comment. Information from researcher-patient experiences and documents will be compared to theories of involvement across a range of disciplines to create a mid-range theory describing how involvement (or lack of involvement) in diabetes research influences the development and conduct of diabetes research
Does Comorbid Anxiety or Depression Moderate Effects of Approach Bias Modification in the Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorders?
Retraining automatic action tendencies changes alcoholic patients’ approach bias for alcohol and improves treatment outcome
'If there were doctors who could understand our problems, I would already be better': Dissatisfactory health care and marginalisation in superdiverse neighbourhoods
How people in community settings describe their experience of disappointing health care, and their responses to such dissatisfaction, sheds light on the role of marginalisation and underlines the need for radically responsive service provision. Making the case for studying unprompted accounts of dissatisfaction with healthcare provision, this is an original analysis of 71 semi-structured interviews with healthcare users in superdiverse neighbourhoods in four European cities. Healthcare users spontaneously express disappointment with services that dismiss their concerns and fail to attend to their priorities. Analysing characteristics of these healthcare users show that no single aspect of marginalisation shapes the expression of disappointment. In response to disappointing health care, users sought out alternative services and to persuade reluctant service providers, and they withdrew from services, in order to access more suitable health care and to achieve personal vindication. Promoting normative quality standards for diverse and diversifying populations that access care from a range of public and private service providers is in tension with prioritising services that are responsive to individual priorities. Without an effort towards radically responsive service provision, the ideal of universal access on the basis of need gives way to normative service provision.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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