1,449 research outputs found
Kinetics of catalysis with surface disorder
We study the effects of generalised surface disorder on the monomer-monomer
model of heterogeneous catalysis, where disorder is implemented by allowing
different adsorption rates for each lattice site. By mapping the system in the
reaction-controlled limit onto a kinetic Ising model, we derive the rate
equations for the one and two-spin correlation functions. There is good
agreement between these equations and numerical simulations. We then study the
inclusion of desorption of monomers from the substrate, first by both species
and then by just one, and find exact time-dependent solutions for the one-spin
correlation functions.Comment: LaTex, 19 pages, 1 figure included, requires epsf.st
Transition from electron accumulation to depletion at InGaN surfaces
The composition dependence of the Fermi-level pinning at the oxidized (0001) surfaces of n-type InxGa1−xN films (0<=x<=1) is investigated using x-ray photoemission spectroscopy. The surface Fermi-level position varies from high above the conduction band minimum (CBM) at InN surfaces to significantly below the CBM at GaN surfaces, with the transition from electron accumulation to depletion occurring at approximately x=0.3. The results are consistent with the composition dependence of the band edges with respect to the charge neutrality level
Heterogeneous Catalysis on a Disordered Surface
We introduce a simple model of heterogeneous catalysis on a disordered
surface which consists of two types of randomly distributed sites with
different adsorption rates. Disorder can create a reactive steady state in
situations where the same model on a homogeneous surface exhibits trivial
kinetics with no steady state. A rich variety of kinetic behaviors occur for
the adsorbate concentrations and catalytic reaction rate as a function of model
parameters.Comment: 4 pages, gzipped PostScript fil
Retinopathy predicts progression of fasting plasma glucose: An Early Diabetes Intervention Program (EDIP) analysis
Background
Retinopathy is increasingly recognized in prediabetic populations, and may herald increased risk of metabolic worsening. The Early Diabetes Intervention Program (EDIP) evaluated worsening of glycemia in screen-detected Type 2 diabetes, following participants for up to 5 years. Here we have evaluated whether the presence of retinopathy at the time of detection of diabetes was associated with accelerated progression of glycemia.
Methods
We prospectively studied 194 participants from EDIP with available baseline retinal photographs. Retinopathy was determined at baseline using 7-field fundus photography and defined as an Early Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy Study Scale grading score of ≥ 20.
Results
At baseline, 12% of participants had classical retinal lesions indicating retinopathy. In univariate Cox proportional hazard analysis, the presence of retinopathy at baseline was associated with a doubled risk of progression of fasting plasma glucose (HR 2.02; 95% CI 1.05–3.89). The retinopathy effect was robust to individual adjustment for age and glucose, the most potent determinants of progression in EDIP.
Conclusion
Retinopathy was associated with increased risk of progression of fasting plasma glucose among adults with screen-detected, early diabetes. Early detection of retinopathy may help individualize more aggressive therapy to prevent progressive metabolic worsening in early diabetes
Equilibrium Properties of A Monomer-Monomer Catalytic Reaction on A One-Dimensional Chain
We study the equilibrium properties of a lattice-gas model of an catalytic reaction on a one-dimensional chain in contact with a reservoir
for the particles. The particles of species and are in thermal contact
with their vapor phases acting as reservoirs, i.e., they may adsorb onto empty
lattice sites and may desorb from the lattice. If adsorbed and
particles appear at neighboring lattice sites they instantaneously react and
both desorb. For this model of a catalytic reaction in the
adsorption-controlled limit, we derive analytically the expression of the
pressure and present exact results for the mean densities of particles and for
the compressibilities of the adsorbate as function of the chemical potentials
of the two species.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Reliability and validity of the Wolfram Unified Rating Scale (WURS)
BACKGROUND: Wolfram syndrome (WFS) is a rare, neurodegenerative disease that typically presents with childhood onset insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, followed by optic atrophy, diabetes insipidus, deafness, and neurological and psychiatric dysfunction. There is no cure for the disease, but recent advances in research have improved understanding of the disease course. Measuring disease severity and progression with reliable and validated tools is a prerequisite for clinical trials of any new intervention for neurodegenerative conditions. To this end, we developed the Wolfram Unified Rating Scale (WURS) to measure the severity and individual variability of WFS symptoms. The aim of this study is to develop and test the reliability and validity of the Wolfram Unified Rating Scale (WURS). METHODS: A rating scale of disease severity in WFS was developed by modifying a standardized assessment for another neurodegenerative condition (Batten disease). WFS experts scored the representativeness of WURS items for the disease. The WURS was administered to 13 individuals with WFS (6-25 years of age). Motor, balance, mood and quality of life were also evaluated with standard instruments. Inter-rater reliability, internal consistency reliability, concurrent, predictive and content validity of the WURS were calculated. RESULTS: The WURS had high inter-rater reliability (ICCs>.93), moderate to high internal consistency reliability (Cronbach’s α = 0.78-0.91) and demonstrated good concurrent and predictive validity. There were significant correlations between the WURS Physical Assessment and motor and balance tests (r(s)>.67, p<.03), between the WURS Behavioral Scale and reports of mood and behavior (r(s)>.76, p<.04) and between WURS Total scores and quality of life (r(s)=-.86, p=.001). The WURS demonstrated acceptable content validity (Scale-Content Validity Index=0.83). CONCLUSIONS: These preliminary findings demonstrate that the WURS has acceptable reliability and validity and captures individual differences in disease severity in children and young adults with WFS
Effect of Experimental Change in Children’s Sleep Duration on Television Viewing and Physical Activity
Background
Paediatric observational studies demonstrate associations between sleep, television viewing and potential changes in daytime activity levels.
Objective(s)
To determine whether experimental changes in sleep lead to changes in children's sedentary and physical activities.
Methods
Using a within-subject counterbalanced design, 37 children 8–11 years old completed a 3-week study. Children slept their typical amount during a baseline week and were then randomized to increase or decrease mean time in bed by 1.5 h/night for 1 week; the alternate schedule was completed the final week. Children wore actigraphs on their non-dominant wrist and completed 3-d physical activity recalls each week.
Results
Children reported watching more television (p < 0.001) and demonstrated lower daytime actigraph-measured activity counts per epoch (p = 0.03) when sleep was decreased (compared with increased). However, total actigraph-measured activity counts accrued throughout the entire waking period were higher when sleep was decreased (and children were awake for longer) than when it was increased (p < 0.001).
Conclusion(s)
Short sleep during childhood may lead to increased television viewing and decreased mean activity levels. Although additional time awake may help to counteract negative effects of short sleep, increases in reported sedentary activities could contribute to weight gain over time
Metabolic improvements following Roux-en-Y surgery assessed by solid meal test in subjects with short duration type 2 diabetes
BACKGROUND:
Glucose homeostasis improves within days following Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery. The dynamic metabolic response to caloric intake following RYGB has been assessed using liquid mixed meal tolerance tests (MMTT). Few studies have evaluated the glycemic and hormonal response to a solid mixed meal in subjects with diabetes prior to, and within the first month following RYGB.
METHODS:
Seventeen women with type 2 diabetes of less than 5 years duration participated. Fasting measures of glucose homeostasis, lipids and gut hormones were obtained pre- and post-surgery. MMTT utilizing a solid 4 oz chocolate pudding performed pre-, 2 and 4 weeks post-surgery. Metabolic response to 4 and 2 oz MMTT assessed in five diabetic subjects not undergoing surgery.
RESULTS:
Significant reductions in fasting glucose and insulin at 3 days, and in fasting betatrophin, triglycerides and total cholesterol at 2 weeks post-surgery. Hepatic insulin clearance was greater at 3 days post-surgery. Subjects exhibited less hunger and greater feelings of fullness and satisfaction during the MMTT while consuming 52.9 ± 6.5% and 51.0 ± 6.5% of the meal at 2 and 4 weeks post-surgery respectively. At 2 weeks post-surgery, glucose and insulin response to MMTT were improved, with greater GLP-1 and PYY secretion. Improved response to solid MMTT not replicated by consumption of smaller pudding volume in diabetic non-surgical subjects.
CONCLUSIONS:
With a test meal of size and composition representative of the routine diet of post-RYGB subjects, improved glycemic and gut hormone responses occur which cannot be replicated by reducing the size of the MMTT in diabetic subjects not undergoing surgery
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