4,043 research outputs found
Evaluation of the efficacy of animal-assisted therapy based on the reality orientation therapy protocol in Alzheimer's disease patients: a pilot study.
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of animal-assisted therapy (AAT) in elderly patients affected by Alzheimer's disease based on the formal reality orientation therapy (ROT) protocol.
METHODS: Our study was carried out at an Alzheimer's centre for 6 months. A homogeneous sample (age, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), 15-item Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS)) of 50 patients was selected at random and successively. Patients were divided into three groups: (i) 20 patients received a course of AAT (AAT group) based on the ROT protocol; (ii) 20 patients were engaged exclusively in activities based on the ROT group; and (iii) 10 patients (control group) participated in no stimulations. MMSE and GDS were administered at time 0 (T0 ) and time 1 (T1 ) to all three groups. Differences within groups between T0 and T1 for GDS and MMSE scores were analyzed by Student's t-test. Differences between group means were analyzed using an anova test with the Bonferroni-Dunn test for post-hoc comparisons.
RESULTS: Both the AAT group and ROT group had improved GDS scores and showed a slight improvement in terms of mood. On the GDS, the AAT group improved from 11.5 (T0 ) to 9.5 (T1 ), and the ROT group improved from 11.6 (T0 ) to 10.5 (T1 ). At the same time, a slight improvement in cognitive function, as measured by the MMSE, was observed. In the AAT group, mean MMSE was 20.2 at T0 and 21.5 at T1 , and in the ROT group, it was 19.9 at T0 and 20.0 at T1 . In the control group, the average values of both the GDS and MMSE remained unchanged. The Bonferroni-Dunn results showed statistically significant differences between groups, particularly between the AAT group and the other two (P < 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Pet therapy interventions based on the formal ROT protocol were effective and, compared to the ROT, provided encouraging and statistically significant results
Degradation studies of hydrophilic, partially degradable and bioactive cements (HDBCs) incorporating chemically modified starch
The degradation rate in Hydrophilic, Degradable and Bioactive Cements (HDBCs) containing starch/cellulose acetate blends (SCA) is still low. In order to increase degradation, higher amounts of starch are required to exceed the percolation threshold. In this work, gelatinization, acetylation and methacrylation of corn starch were performed and assessed as candidates to replace SCA in HDBCs. Formulations containing methacrylated starch were prepared with different molar ratios of 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate and methyl methacrylate in the liquid component and the amount of residual monomer released into water was evaluated. The concentration of reducing sugars, percentage of weight loss and morphologic analyses after degradation all confirmed increased degradation of HDBC with alpha-amylase, with the appearance of pores and voids from enzymatic action. Methacrylated starch therefore is a better alternative to be used as the solid component of HDBC then SCA, since it leads to the formation of cements with a lower release of toxic monomers and more prone to hydrolytic degradation while keeping the other advantages of HDBCs.The authors acknowledge to Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT), who supported this study through funds from project Concept2Cement (POCTI/CTM/60735/2004)
Co3O4 particles grown over nanocrystalline CeO2: influence of precipitation agents and calcination temperature on the catalytic activity for methane oxidation
Crystalline cobalt oxides were prepared by a precipitation method using three different precipitation
agents, IJNH4)2CO3, Na2CO3 and COIJNH2)2. Cobalt oxide nanoparticles corresponding to a Co3O4 loading
of 30 wt% were also deposited over high-surface area nanocrystalline ceria by the same precipitation
agents. The effect of calcination temperature, 350 or 650 °C, on the morphological and structural properties
was evaluated. Characterization by BET, XRD, SEM, TEM, Raman spectroscopy, H2-TPR, XPS and
NH3-TPD was performed and the catalytic properties were explored in the methane oxidation reaction.
The nature of the precipitation agent strongly influenced the textural properties of Co3O4 and the
Co3O4–CeO2 interface. The best control of the particle size was achieved by using COIJNH2)2 that
produced small and regular crystallites of Co3O4 homogeneously deposited over the CeO2 surface. Such a
Co3O4–CeO2 system precipitated by urea showed enhanced low-temperature reducibility and high surface
Co3+ concentration, which were identified as the key factors for promoting methane oxidation at
low temperature. Moreover, the synergic effect of cobalt oxide and nanocrystalline ceria produced stable
full conversion of methane in the entire range of investigated temperature, up to 700–800 °C, at which
Co3O4 deactivation usually occurs
A Femtosecond Neutron Source
The possibility to use the ultrashort ion bunches produced by circularly
polarized laser pulses to drive a source of fusion neutrons with sub-optical
cycle duration is discussed. A two-side irradiation of a thin foil deuterated
target produces two countermoving ion bunches, whose collision leads to an
ultrashort neutron burst. Using particle-in-cell simulations and analytical
modeling, it is evaluated that, for intensities of a few ,
more than neutrons per Joule may be produced within a time shorter than
one femtosecond. Another scheme based on a layered deuterium-tritium target is
outlined.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
On form factors in N=4 sym
In this paper we study the form factors for the half-BPS operators
and the stress tensor supermultiplet
current up to the second order of perturbation theory and for the
Konishi operator at first order of perturbation theory in
SYM theory at weak coupling. For all the objects we observe the
exponentiation of the IR divergences with two anomalous dimensions: the cusp
anomalous dimension and the collinear anomalous dimension. For the IR finite
parts we obtain a similar situation as for the gluon scattering amplitudes,
namely, apart from the case of and the finite part has
some remainder function which we calculate up to the second order. It involves
the generalized Goncharov polylogarithms of several variables. All the answers
are expressed through the integrals related to the dual conformal invariant
ones which might be a signal of integrable structure standing behind the form
factors.Comment: 35 pages, 7 figures, LATEX2
Bayesian hierarchical clustering for studying cancer gene expression data with unknown statistics
Clustering analysis is an important tool in studying gene expression data. The Bayesian hierarchical clustering (BHC) algorithm can automatically infer the number of clusters and uses Bayesian model selection to improve clustering quality. In this paper, we present an extension of the BHC algorithm. Our Gaussian BHC (GBHC) algorithm represents data as a mixture of Gaussian distributions. It uses normal-gamma distribution as a conjugate prior on the mean and precision of each of the Gaussian components. We tested GBHC over 11 cancer and 3 synthetic datasets. The results on cancer datasets show that in sample clustering, GBHC on average produces a clustering partition that is more concordant with the ground truth than those obtained from other commonly used algorithms. Furthermore, GBHC frequently infers the number of clusters that is often close to the ground truth. In gene clustering, GBHC also produces a clustering partition that is more biologically plausible than several other state-of-the-art methods. This suggests GBHC as an alternative tool for studying gene expression data. The implementation of GBHC is available at https://sites.
google.com/site/gaussianbhc
The ABCDEF's of Matrix Models for Supersymmetric Chern-Simons Theories
We consider N = 3 supersymmetric Chern-Simons gauge theories with product
unitary and orthosymplectic groups and bifundamental and fundamental fields. We
study the partition functions on an S^3 by using the Kapustin-Willett-Yaakov
matrix model. The saddlepoint equations in a large N limit lead to a constraint
that the long range forces between the eigenvalues must cancel; the resulting
quiver theories are of affine Dynkin type. We introduce a folding/unfolding
trick which lets us, at the level of the large N matrix model, (i) map quivers
with orthosymplectic groups to those with unitary groups, and (ii) obtain
non-simply laced quivers from the corresponding simply laced quivers using a
Z_2 outer automorphism. The brane configurations of the quivers are described
in string theory and the folding/unfolding is interpreted as the
addition/subtraction of orientifold and orbifold planes. We also relate the
U(N) quiver theories to the affine ADE quiver matrix models with a
Stieltjes-Wigert type potential, and derive the generalized Seiberg duality in
2 + 1 dimensions from Seiberg duality in 3 + 1 dimensions.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figure
The one-loop six-dimensional hexagon integral and its relation to MHV amplitudes in N=4 SYM
We provide an analytic formula for the (rescaled) one-loop scalar hexagon
integral with all external legs massless, in terms of classical
polylogarithms. We show that this integral is closely connected to two
integrals appearing in one- and two-loop amplitudes in planar
super-Yang-Mills theory, and . The derivative of
with respect to one of the conformal invariants yields
, while another first-order differential operator applied to
yields . We also introduce some kinematic
variables that rationalize the arguments of the polylogarithms, making it easy
to verify the latter differential equation. We also give a further example of a
six-dimensional integral relevant for amplitudes in
super-Yang-Mills.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure
Effects of vessel traffic on relative abundance and behaviour of cetaceans : the case of the bottlenose dolphins in the Archipelago de La Maddalena, north-western Mediterranean sea
Acknowledgements This study was part of the Tursiops Project of the Dolphin Research Centre of Caprera, La Maddalena. Financial and logistical support was provided by the Centro Turistico Studentesco (CTS) and by the National Park of the Archipelago de La Maddalena. We thank the Natural Reserve of Bocche di Bonifacio for the support provided during data collection. The authors thank the numerous volunteers of the Caprera Dolphin Research Centre and especially Marco Ferraro, Mirko Ugo, Angela Pira and Maurizio Piras whose assistance during field observation and skills as a boat driver were invaluable.Peer reviewedPostprin
Osteoinduction in human fat derived stem cells by recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 produced in Escherichia coli
Bioactive recombinant human bone
morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2) was obtained
using Escherichia coli pET-25b expression system:
55 mg purified rhBMP-2 were achieved per g cell dry
wt, with up to 95% purity. In murine C2C12 cell line,
rhBMP-2 induced an increase in the transcription of
Smads and of osteogenic markers Runx2/Cbfa1 and
Osterix, measured by semi-quantitative RT-PCR.
Bioassays performed in human fat-derived stem cells
showed an increased activity of the early osteogenic
marker, alkaline phosphatase, and the absence of
cytotoxicity
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