1,681 research outputs found
Rapid Assembly of the Salvileucalin B Norcaradiene Core
Preparation of the polycyclic core of the cytotoxic natural product salvileucalin B is described. The key feature of this synthetic strategy is a copper-catalyzed intramolecular arene cyclopropanation to provide the central norcaradiene. These studies lay the foundation for continued investigations toward an enantioselective total synthesis of 1
Enantioselective Total Synthesis of (+)-Salvileucalin B
An enantioselective total synthesis of the diterpenoid natural product (+)-salvileucalin B is reported. Key findings include a
copper-catalyzed arene cyclopropanation reaction to provide the unusual
norcaradiene core and a reversible retro-Claisen rearrangement of a
highly functionalized norcaradiene intermediate
Soft systems methodology: a context within a 50-year retrospective of OR/MS
Soft systems methodology (SSM) has been used in the practice of operations research and management science OR/MS) since the early 1970s. In the 1990s, it emerged as a viable academic discipline. Unfortunately, its proponents consider SSM and traditional systems thinking to be mutually exclusive. Despite the differences claimed by SSM proponents between the two, they have been complementary. An extensive sampling of the OR/MS literature over its entire lifetime demonstrates the richness with which the non-SSM literature has been addressing the very same issues as does SSM
Observation of Amounts of Movement Practice Provided during Stroke Rehabilitation
Objective
To investigate how much movement practice occurred during stroke rehabilitation, and what factors might influence doses of practice provided.
Design
Observational survey of stroke therapy sessions.
Setting
Seven inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation sites.
Participants
We observed a convenience sample of 312 physical and occupational therapy sessions for people with stroke.
Interventions
Not applicable.
Main Outcome Measures
We recorded numbers of repetitions in specific movement categories and data on potential modifying factors (patient age, side affected, time since stroke, FIM item scores, years of therapist experience). Descriptive statistics were used to characterize amounts of practice. Correlation and regression analyses were used to determine whether potential factors were related to the amount of practice in the 2 important categories of upper extremity functional movements and gait steps.
Results
Practice of task-specific, functional upper extremity movements occurred in 51% of the sessions that addressed upper limb rehabilitation, and the average number of repetitions/session was 32 (95% confidence interval [CI]=20–44). Practice of gait occurred in 84% of sessions that addressed lower limb rehabilitation and the average number of gait steps/session was 357 (95% CI=296–418). None of the potential factors listed accounted for significant variance in the amount of practice in either of these 2 categories.
Conclusions
The amount of practice provided during poststroke rehabilitation is small compared with animal models. It is possible that current doses of task-specific practice during rehabilitation are not adequate to drive the neural reorganization needed to promote function poststroke optimally
A modular approach to prepare enantioenriched cyclobutanes: synthesis of (+)-rumphellaone A
A modular synthesis of enantioenriched polyfunctionalized cyclobutanes was developed that features an 8-aminoquinolinamide directed C–H arylation reaction. The C–H arylation products were derivatized through subsequent decarboxylative coupling processes. This synthetic strategy enabled a 9-step enantioselective total synthesis of the antiproliferative meroterpenoid (+)-rumphellaone A
Cooperative action in eukaryotic gene regulation: physical properties of a viral example
The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infects more than 90% of the human population,
and is the cause of several both serious and mild diseases. It is a
tumorivirus, and has been widely studied as a model system for gene
(de)regulation in human. A central feature of the EBV life cycle is its ability
to persist in human B cells in states denoted latency I, II and III. In latency
III the host cell is driven to cell proliferation and hence expansion of the
viral population, but does not enter the lytic pathway, and no new virions are
produced, while the latency I state is almost completely dormant. In this paper
we study a physico-chemical model of the switch between latency I and latency
III in EBV. We show that the unusually large number of binding sites of two
competing transcription factors, one viral and one from the host, serves to
make the switch sharper (higher Hill coefficient), either by cooperative
binding between molecules of the same species when they bind, or by competition
between the two species if there is sufficient steric hindrance.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
Sensory Electrical Stimulation Improves Foot Placement during Targeted Stepping Post-Stroke
Proper foot placement is vital for maintaining balance during walking, requiring the integration of multiple sensory signals with motor commands. Disruption of brain structures post-stroke likely alters the processing of sensory information by motor centers, interfering with precision control of foot placement and walking function for stroke survivors. In this study, we examined whether somatosensory stimulation, which improves functional movements of the paretic hand, could be used to improve foot placement of the paretic limb. Foot placement was evaluated before, during, and after application of somatosensory electrical stimulation to the paretic foot during a targeted stepping task. Starting from standing, twelve chronic stroke participants initiated movement with the non-paretic limb and stepped to one of five target locations projected onto the floor with distances normalized to the paretic stride length. Targeting error and lower extremity kinematics were used to assess changes in foot placement and limb control due to somatosensory stimulation. Significant reductions in placement error in the medial–lateral direction (p = 0.008) were observed during the stimulation and post-stimulation blocks. Seven participants, presenting with a hip circumduction walking pattern, had reductions (p = 0.008) in the magnitude and duration of hip abduction during swing with somatosensory stimulation. Reductions in circumduction correlated with both functional and clinical measures, with larger improvements observed in participants with greater impairment. The results of this study suggest that somatosensory stimulation of the paretic foot applied during movement can improve the precision control of foot placement
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