1,856 research outputs found
Hydromagnetic stability of the magnetosphere boundary
Hydromagnetic stability of magnetosphere-solar wind interfac
Magnetogravitational instability of anisotropic plasma with Hall effect
Magnetogravitational instability of anisotropic plasma with Hall effec
Two-stream instability in gravitating plasmas with magnetic field and rotation
Gas stream instability investigated using moment equations in gravitating plasma clouds with magnetic field and uniform rotation - plasma physic
Studies on the food and feeding relationships of the halfbeak fishes (Hemirhamphidae) from the Gulf of Mannar and Palk Bay
As a part of the investigations of the biology of the hemirhamphids in the
Gulf of Mannar and Palk Bay from 1957-59, the contents of 2221 guts
belonging to four species, viz., Hyporhamphus georgii (C.V.), H. quoyi (C.V.),
Hemirhamphus marginatus (Forsk.) and H. far (Forsk.) were examined. No
detailed information on the food and feeding habits of the half beaks is available
and the accounts given by Schlesinger (1909), Uchida (1930), Smith
(1933), Devanesan (1933), Graham (1938), Suyehiro (1942), Gnanamuthu
(1943), Chacko (1949), Tham Ah Kow (1950), Thompson (1957 and 1959),
Vijayaraghavan (1957) and Kuthalingam (1958) relate mainly to observations
confined to limited periods in a year and do not give a picture of the
variations of the seasonal composition of the gut contents. The present study
deals with the seasonal composition of the food items of four species of halfbeaks
and its relation to the environmental biota and their stages of sexual
maturity
Antifungal activity of essential oils and their volatile constituents against respiratory tract pathogens causing Aspergilloma and Aspergillosis by gaseous contact
Aspergillosis is an acute chronic and rapidly fatal disease which is not contagious. Invasive Aspergillosis is often found in severely immuno-suppressed patients, and is characterized by invasion of blood vessels which can result into dissemination to other organs. Aspergilloma is a fungal ball that develops in previous cavitary lung lesions. Essential oils and their volatile constituents have been used as antifungal, anti-infectious and antimicrobial agents. Inhalation of vapours of the essential oils kill invaders attached to the inner respiratory lining and worksynergistically with the body defences. In this study, 16 essential oils were used against Aspergillus niger and A. fumigatus of which about 14 oils proved to be effective. Results showed that the most effective oils against both Aspergillus species were found to be of Cinnamomum zeylanicum (Cinnamon), Syzygium aromaticum (Clove), Carum carvi (Caraway), Cymbopogon citrates (Lemongrass), Foeniculum vulgare (Fennel) and Myristica fragrans (Nutmeg). Moderately effective oils were of Gaultheria procumbens (Wintergreen), Pinus palustris (Turpentine), Sesamum indicum (Sesame), Trachyspermum ammi (Ajowain) and Origanum vulgare (Oregano). The oils of Lavandula augustifolia (Lavender), Elletaria cardamomum (Cardamon) and Cymbopogon nardus (Citronella) showed minimum activity. Azadirachta indica (Neem) and Linum usitatissimum (Linseed) showed no activity giving no inhibition zones
Oscillating Positive Expiratory Pressure on Respiratory Resistance in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease With a Small Amount of Secretion: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Abstract: This study aims to evaluate the acute effects of an oscillating positive expiratory pressure device (flutter) on airways resistance in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Randomized crossover study: 15 COPD outpatients from Asthma Lab–Royal Brompton Hospital underwent spirometry, impulse oscillometry (IOS) for respiratory resistance (R) and reactance (X), and fraction exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO) measures. Thirty minutes of flutter exercises: a “flutter-sham” procedure was used as a control, and airway responses after a short-acting bronchodilator were also assessed. Respiratory system resistance (R): in COPD patients an increase in X5insp (-0.21 to -0.33 kPa/L/s) and Fres (24.95 to 26.16 Hz) occurred immediately after flutter exercises without bronchodilator. Following 20 min of rest, a decrease in the R5, [DELTA]R5, R20, X5, and Ax was observed, with R5, R20, and X5 values lower than baseline, with a moderate effect size; there were no changes in FeNO levels or spirometry. The use of flutter can decrease the respiratory system resistance and reactance and expiratory flow limitation in stable COPD patients with small amounts of secretions
The effect of the systemic inflammatory response on plasma vitamin 25 (OH) D concentrations adjusted for albumin
<b>Aim</b><p></p>
To examine the relationship between plasma 25(OH)D, CRP and albumin concentrations in two patient cohorts.<p></p>
<b>Methods</b><p></p>
5327 patients referred for nutritional assessment and 117 patients with critical illness were examined. Plasma 25 (OH) D concentrations were measured using standard methods. Intra and between assay imprecision was <10%.<p></p>
<b>Result</b><p></p>
In the large cohort, plasma 25 (OH) D was significantly associated with CRP (rs = −0.113, p<0.001) and albumin (rs = 0.192, p<0.001). 3711 patients had CRP concentrations ≤10 mg/L; with decreasing albumin concentrations ≥35, 25–34 and <25 g/l, median concentrations of 25 (OH) D were significantly lower from 35 to 28 to 14 nmol/l (p<0.001). This decrease was significant when albumin concentrations were reduced between 25–34 g/L (p<0.001) and when albumin <25 g/L (p<0.001). 1271 patients had CRP concentrations between 11–80 mg/L; with decreasing albumin concentrations ≥35, 25–34 and <25 g/l, median concentrations of 25 (OH) D were significantly lower from 31 to 24 to 19 nmol/l (p<0.001). This decrease was significant when albumin concentration were 25–34 g/L (p<0.001) and when albumin <25 g/L (p<0.001). 345 patients had CRP concentrations >80 mg/L; with decreasing albumin concentrations ≥35, 25–34 and <25 g/l, median concentrations of 25 (OH) D were not significantly altered varying from 19 to 23 to 23 nmol/l. Similar relationships were also obtained in the cohort of patients with critical illness.<p></p>
<b>Conclusion</b><p></p>
Plasma concentrations of 25(OH) D were independently associated with both CRP and albumin and consistent with the systemic inflammatory response as a major confounding factor in determining vitamin D status.<p></p>
A dot enzyme immunoassay for detection of IgM antibodies against phenolic glycolipid-1 in sera from leprosy patients
A visual dipstick dot enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for diagnosis
of leprosy is described. The assay is based on detection of IgM antibodies
against phenolic glycolipid (PGL-I) in sera from leprosy patients. The antigen
(PGL-1 or synthetic disaccharide of PGL-I) was dotted on a nitrocellulose pad
stuck on a plastic strip (dipstick). Sera were used at a dilution of 1:200. Peroxidase
coupled mouse anti-human IgM monoclonal antibodies were used as the
conjugate. A positive test gave a blue dot against a white background. The
test was highly specific for leprosy, and was quite sensitive for detection of bacilliferous
(BL/LL) leprosy. The antigen dotted and preblocked dipsticks stored
at room temperature upto 4 months of observation period, were unable in the
assay
Private Incremental Regression
Data is continuously generated by modern data sources, and a recent challenge
in machine learning has been to develop techniques that perform well in an
incremental (streaming) setting. In this paper, we investigate the problem of
private machine learning, where as common in practice, the data is not given at
once, but rather arrives incrementally over time.
We introduce the problems of private incremental ERM and private incremental
regression where the general goal is to always maintain a good empirical risk
minimizer for the history observed under differential privacy. Our first
contribution is a generic transformation of private batch ERM mechanisms into
private incremental ERM mechanisms, based on a simple idea of invoking the
private batch ERM procedure at some regular time intervals. We take this
construction as a baseline for comparison. We then provide two mechanisms for
the private incremental regression problem. Our first mechanism is based on
privately constructing a noisy incremental gradient function, which is then
used in a modified projected gradient procedure at every timestep. This
mechanism has an excess empirical risk of , where is the
dimensionality of the data. While from the results of [Bassily et al. 2014]
this bound is tight in the worst-case, we show that certain geometric
properties of the input and constraint set can be used to derive significantly
better results for certain interesting regression problems.Comment: To appear in PODS 201
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