1,514 research outputs found
Vagus Nerve Stimulation in Refractory Epilepsy: Effects on Pro- and Anti-Inflammatory Cytokines in Peripheral Blood
Objective: The vagus nerve has important immunological functions that may be relevant for its anticonvulsive action. We postulate that this anticonvulsive action is activated by a shift in the immune system resulting in a reduction of neurotoxic and an increase of neuroprotective tryptophan metabolites. Methods: Eleven patients with refractory epilepsy and 11 controls matched for age and gender were included in this study. The primary outcome measure was a 50% seizure reduction. Other variables were pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and TNF-alpha, anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10, cortisol, and the tryptophan metabolites 3-hydroxykynurenine (3-OH-KYN), kynurenic acid (KYNA), kynurenine, serotonin (5-HT) and 5-hydroxyindol acetic acid (5-HIAA). Blood samples were scheduled during baseline, and in week 28 of add-on treatment. Results: IL-6 levels were higher in the responders than in the control group, and decreased after vagus nerve stimulation (VNS), whereas IL-10 was low and increased after VNS. In nonresponders, VNS resulted in an increase of IL-6 plasma levels and in a decrease of IL-10. Cortisol concentrations are higher in the epilepsy group than in the control group. After VNS, these concentrations decreased. The concentrations of the tryptophan metabolites were lower in the epilepsy group than in the control group. The KYNA ratios are defined as the ratio of neuroprotective KYNA versus neurotoxic 3-OH-KYN and KYNA versus neurotoxic kynurenine: these ratios were lower in epilepsy patients than in controls, and they both moderately increased after VNS. Conclusion: The outcome of this preliminary study indicates that VNS causes a rebalancing of the immune system. This results in: (1) a reduction of neurotoxic and an increase of neuroprotective kynurenine metabolites and (2) in the normalization of cortisol levels. Copyright (C) 2010 S. Karger AG, Base
Hyperonic mixing in five-baryon double-strangeness hypernuclei in a two-channel treatment
Properties of hypernuclei H and He are studied in a two-channel approach with explicit treatment of
coupling of channels ^3\text{Z}+\Lambda+\Lambda and \alpha+\Xi. Diagonal
\Lambda\Lambda and coupling \Lambda\Lambda-\Xi N interactions are derived
within G-matrix procedure from Nijmegen meson-exchange models. Bond energy
\Delta B_{\Lambda\Lambda} in He exceeds significantly
that in H due to the channel coupling. Diagonal \Xi\alpha
attraction amplifies the effect, which is sensitive also to \Lambda-core
interaction. The difference of the \Delta B_{\Lambda\Lambda} values can be an
unambiguous signature of the \Lambda\Lambda-\Xi N coupling in \Lambda\Lambda
hypernuclei. However, improved knowledge of the hyperon-nucleus potentials is
needed for quantitative extraction of the coupling strength from future data on
the \Lambda\Lambda hypernuclear binding energies.Comment: 11 pages with 3 figures; Phys. Rev. C, accepte
Effect of age on the prognostic value of left ventricular function in patients with acute coronary syndrome:a prospective registry study
Objective: This study aims to study the prognostic impact of LV function on mortality and examine the effect of age on the prognostic value of left ventricular function. Methods: We examined the Myocardial Ischaemia National Audit Project (MINAP) registry (2006-2010) data with a mean follow up of 2.1 years. LV function was categorized into good (ejection fraction (EF) ≥50%), moderate (EF 30-49%) and poor (EF <30%) categories. Cox-proportional hazards models were constructed to examine the prognostic significance of LV function in different age groups (<65, 65-74, 75-84 and ≥85 years) on all-cause mortality adjusting for baseline variables. Results: Of 424,848 patients, LV function data available for 123,609. Multiple imputations were used to impute missing values of LV function and the final sample for analyses were drawn from 414,305. After controlling for confounders, 339,887 participants were included in the regression models. For any age group, mortality was higher with worsening degree of LV impairment. Increased age reduced the adverse prognosis associated with reduced LV function (hazard ratios (HRs) of death comparing poor LV function to good LV function were 2.11 95%CI 1.88-2.37 for age <65 years and 1.28 95%CI 1.20-1.36 for age ≥85 years. Older patients had a high mortality risk even in those with good LV function. HRs of mortality for ≥85 compared to <65 years (HR=1.00) within good, moderate and poor ejection fractions groups were 5.89, 4.86 and 3.43, respectively. Conclusions: In patients with ACS, clinicians should interpret the prognostic value of LV function taking into account patient’s age
-- coupling in He with the Nijmegen soft-core potentials
The -- coupling in
He is studied with the [ + +
] + [ + + ] + [ + + ] model,
where the particle is assumed as a frozen core. We use the Nijmegen
soft-core potentials, NSC97e and NSC97f, for the valence baryon-baryon part,
and the phenomenological potentials for the parts (=,
, and ). We find that the calculated of He for NSC97e and NSC97f are,
respectively, 0.6 and 0.4 MeV in the full coupled-channel calculation, the
results of which are about half in comparison with the experimental data,
MeV.
Characteristics of the sector in the NSC97 potentials are discussed in
detail.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Relationship between anemia and mortality outcomes in a national acute coronary syndrome cohort: Insights from the UK Myocardial Ischemia National Audit Project registry
Background: We aim to determine the prevalence of anemia in ACS patients and compared their clinical characteristics, management and clinical outcomes to those without anemia in an unselected national ACS cohort. Methods and Results: The Myocardial Ischemia National Audit Project (MINAP) registry collects data on all adults admitted to hospital trusts in England and Wales with diagnosis of an ACS. We conducted a retrospective cohort study by analyzing patients in this registry between January 2006 and December 2010 and followed them up until August 2011. Multiple logistic regressions were used to determine factors associated with anemia and the adjusted odds of 30-day mortality with 1 g/dl incremental hemoglobin increase and the 30-days and 1-year mortality for anemic compared to non-anemic groups. Analyses were adjusted for covariates. Our analysis of 422,855 patients with ACS showed that 27.7% of patients presenting with ACS are anemic, and that these patients are older, have a greater prevalence renal disease, peripheral vascular disease, diabetes mellitus and previous acute myocardial infarction and are less likely to receive evidence based therapies shown to improve clinical outcomes. Finally our analysis suggests that anemia is independently associated with 30-day (OR 1.28, 95%CI 1.22-1.35) and 1-year mortality (OR 1.31, 95%CI 1.27-1.35) and we observed a reverse J-shaped relationship between hemoglobin levels and mortality outcomes. Conclusion: The prevalence of anemia in a contemporary national ACS cohort is clinically significant. Patients with anemia are older and multi-morbid, and less likely to receive evidence-based therapies shown to improve clinical outcomes with the presence of anemia independently associated mortality outcomes
High Temperature Phase Transition in Two-Scalar Theories
Two-scalar theories at high temperature exhibit a rich spectrum of possible
critical behaviour, with a second or first order phase transition. In the
vicinity of the critical temperature one can observe critical exponents,
tricritical points and crossover behaviour. None of these phenomena are visible
to high temperature perturbation theory.Comment: 39 pages, macro equation.sty included, 11 uuencoded figures
Determinants and outcomes of stroke following percutaneous coronary intervention by indication
Background and Purpose—Stroke after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is a serious complication, but its determinants and outcomes after PCI in different clinical settings are poorly documented.
Methods—The British Cardiovascular Intervention Society (BCIS) database was used to study 560 439 patients who underwent PCI in England and Wales between 2006 and 2013. We examined procedural-type specific determinants of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke and the likelihood of subsequent 30-day mortality and in-hospital major adverse cardiovascular events (a composite of in-hospital mortality, myocardial infarction or reinfarction, and repeat revascularization).
Results—A total of 705 stroke cases were recorded (80% ischemic). Stroke after an elective PCI or PCI for acute coronary syndrome indications was associated with a higher risk of adverse outcomes compared with those without stroke; 30-day mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events outcomes in fully adjusted model were odds ratios 37.90 (21.43–67.05) and 21.05 (13.25–33.44) for elective and 5.00 (3.96–6.31) and 6.25 (5.03–7.77) for acute coronary syndrome, respectively. Comparison of odds of these outcomes between these 2 settings showed no differences; corresponding odds ratios were 1.24 (0.64–2.43) and 0.63 (0.35–1.15), respectively.
Conclusions—Hemorrhagic and ischemic stroke complications are uncommon, but serious complications can occur after PCI and are independently associated with worse mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events outcomes in both the elective and acute coronary syndrome setting irrespective of stroke type. Our study provides a better understanding of the risk factors and prognosis of stroke after PCI by procedure type, allowing physicians to provide more informed advice around stroke risk after PCI and counsel patients and their families around outcomes if such neurological complications occur
Aspects of the electroweak phase transition in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
We study the finite-temperature effective potential of the Minimal
Supersymmetric Standard Model in the full (mA, tan(beta)) parameter space. As
for the features of the electroweak phase transition, we identify two possible
sources of significant differences with respect to the Standard Model: a stop
sector with little supersymmetry breaking makes the phase transition more
strongly first-order, whereas a light CP-odd neutral boson weakens its
first-order nature. After including the leading plasma effects, T=0 radiative
corrections due to top and stop loops, and the most important experimental
constraints, we find that the danger of washing out any baryon asymmetry
created at the electroweak scale is in general no less than in the Standard
Model.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures appended at the end as uuencoded ps-files,
preprint CERN-TH.7057/9
QCD chiral Lagrangian on the lattice, strong coupling expansion and Ward identities with Wilson fermions
We discuss a general strategy to compute the coefficients of the QCD chiral
Lagrangian using lattice QCD with Wilson fermions. This procedure requires the
introduction of a lattice chiral Lagrangian as an intermediate step in the
calculation. The QCD chiral Lagrangian is then obtained by expanding the
lattice effective theory in increasing powers of the lattice spacing and the
external momenta. In order to investigate the consequences of the chiral
symmetry breaking induced by the Wilson term, we study the lattice chiral
Lagrangian at the leading order of the strong coupling and large expansion.
We show that the effects of the Wilson term can be conveniently taken into
account, in the lattice effective theory, by a suitable renormalization
procedure. In particular, we show that, at the leading order of the strong
coupling and large N expansion, the chiral symmetry is exactly recovered on the
lattice provided that the bare quark mass and the lattice operators are
properly renormalized.Comment: 45 pages, no figures. Latex fil
Structural changes in cattle immature oocytes subjected to slow freezing and vitrification.
This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of different cryopreservation methods (slow-freezing and vitrification) on structural changes of bovine immature oocytes. Bovine ovaries were collected from local abattoirs. Cumulus-oocytecomplexes (COCs) were retrieved using aspiration method from 2-6 mm follicles. In Experiment 1, selected oocytes were randomly divided into 4 treatment groups namely freezing solution-exposed, frozen-thawed, vitrification solution-exposed and vitrified-thawed and then oocytes abnormalities were examined under a stereomicroscope. In Experiment 2, oocytes were randomly allocated to the same grouping as experiment 1 plus control group. Following freezing or vitrification, all oocytes were fixed in glutaraldehyde and processed for transmission electron microscopy. In experiment 1, there was a higher incidence of abnormalities in the frozen-thawed and vitrified-warmed oocytes compared to those in freezing solution and vitrification solution-exposed groups (P <0.05). In experiment 2, there were marked alterations in the perivitelline space, microvilli and vesicles of frozenthawed and vitrified-warmed oocytescharacterized by loss of elasticity and integrity of cytoplasmic processes and microvilli following cooling and warming. In conclusion, ethylene glycol-based freezingand vitrification solutions are suitable choices for cryopreservation of immature oocytes and most organelles are able to retain their normal morphology followingcryopreservation and thawing processe
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