13,521 research outputs found
Medical use of cannabis: italian and european legislation
This review illustrates some brief
considerations of the medical use of cannabis recently
issued in Italy. History and uses of cannabis
throughout centuries and different countries
are illustrated together with a description of botany
and active phytocannabinoids. Then, medical
use of cannabis anti-pain treatment for patients
resistant to conventional therapies is described
in case of chronic neuropathic pain, spasticity,
for anticinetosic and antiemetic effect in nausea
and vomiting caused by chemotherapy, for appetite
stimulating effect in cachexia, anorexia, loss
of appetite in cancer patients or patients with
AIDS and in anorexia nervosa, hypotensive effect
in glaucoma resistant to conventional therapies
and for reduction of involuntary body and facial
movements in Gilles de la Tourette syndrome.
Italian most recent legislation on medical cannabis
is detailed with some law proposals, also
showing the inconsistent legislation within European
Union. Some final considerations of future
studies are also reported
Selberg integrals in 1D random Euclidean optimization problems
We consider a set of Euclidean optimization problems in one dimension, where
the cost function associated to the couple of points and is the
Euclidean distance between them to an arbitrary power , and the points
are chosen at random with flat measure. We derive the exact average cost for
the random assignment problem, for any number of points, by using Selberg's
integrals. Some variants of these integrals allows to derive also the exact
average cost for the bipartite travelling salesman problem.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Covariant Variational Evolution and Jacobi Brackets: Fields
The analysis of the covariant brackets on the space of functions on the
solutions to a variational problem in the framework of contact geometry
initiated in the companion letter Ref.19 is extended to the case of the
multisymplectic formulation of the free Klein-Gordon theory and of the free
Schr\"{o}dinger equation.Comment: 16 page
Controlled surface initiated polymerization of N-isopropylacrylamide from polycaprolactone substrates for regulating cell attachment and detachment
Poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) substrates were modified with thermoresponsive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) brushes to direct and control cellular attachment and detachment. Prior to brush growth, the surface of PCL was activated by a diamine to allow for initiator coupling. Infrared spectra taken before and after cell culturing demonstrated the covalently attached nature of the PNIPAM brushes. PCL is a biocompatible polymer and to prove that the modifications described above did not change this characteristic property, a cell attachment/detachment study was carried out. The modified substrates showed a lower cell attachment when compared to PCL alone and to PCL films modified with the initiator. The possibility to detach the cells in the form of a sheet was proved using PNIPAM-modified PCL films by lowering the temperature to 25 °C. No relevant detachment was shown by the unmodified or by the initiator modified surfaces. This confirmed that the detachment was temperature dependent and not connected to other factors such as polymer swelling. These functionalized polymeric films can find applications as smart cell culture systems in regenerative medicine applications
Electronic phase separation near the superconductor-insulator transition of Nd1+xBa2−xCu3O7−δ thin films studied by an electric-field-induced doping effect
We report a detailed study of the transport properties of Nd(1+x)Ba(2-x)Cu(3)O(7-delta) thin films with doping changed by field effect. The data cover the whole superconducting to insulating transition and show remarkable Similarities with the effect of chemical doping in high critical temperature superconductors. The results suggest that the add-on of carriers is accompanied by an electronic phase separation, independent on the details of the doping mechanism
Relaxation of spherical systems with long-range interactions: a numerical investigation
The process of relaxation of a system of particles interacting with
long-range forces is relevant to many areas of Physics. For obvious reasons, in
Stellar Dynamics much attention has been paid to the case of 1/r^2 force law.
However, recently the interest in alternative gravities emerged, and
significant differences with respect to Newtonian gravity have been found in
relaxation phenomena. Here we begin to explore this matter further, by using a
numerical model of spherical shells interacting with an 1/r^alpha force law
obeying the superposition principle. We find that the virialization and
phase-mixing times depend on the exponent alpha, with small values of alpha
corresponding to longer relaxation times, similarly to what happens when
comparing for N-body simulations in classical gravity and in Modified Newtonian
Dynamics.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted in the International Journal of
Bifurcation and Chao
Geometry from divergence functions and complex structures
Motivated by the geometrical structures of quantum mechanics, we introduce an
almost-complex structure on the product of any parallelizable
statistical manifold . Then, we use to extract a pre-symplectic form and
a metric-like tensor on from a divergence function. These tensors
may be pulled back to , and we compute them in the case of an N-dimensional
symplex with respect to the Kullback-Leibler relative entropy, and in the case
of (a suitable unfolding space of) the manifold of faithful density operators
with respect to the von Neumann-Umegaki relative entropy.Comment: 19 pages, comments are welcome
Ethical and medico-legal remarks on uterus transplantation: may it solve uterine factor infertility?
Uterus transplantation was firstly tested with animal trials sixty-five years ago. Despite several successful attempts in human subjects, the different procedures still lay at the experimental stage, in need of further studies and investigations before they can be considered as standard clinical practices. Uterus transplant cannot be regarded as a life-saving procedure, but rather a method to restore woman ability to procreate, when lost, thus improving her quality of life. Uterus transplant is a complex surgical procedure and presents significant health threats. Medical staff should therefore always obtain informed consent from patients, emphasizing such risks. Before that, women undergoing uterine transplants should be thoroughly informed about the hazards inherent to the procedure and especially about the dangers of immunosuppressant drugs, administered after the surgery which may injure the fetus, eventually formed in the restored organ and even lead to its death, thus nullifying the purpose of the transplant itself. Therefore, the risk-benefit ratio of uterus transplantation needs to be carefully assessed and described
Design, realization and test of C-band accelerating structures for the SPARC_LAB linac energy upgrade
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