1,565 research outputs found
Dangerous dietary supplements: Garcinia cambogia-associated hepatic failure requiring transplantation.
Commercial dietary supplements are marketed as a panacea for the morbidly obese seeking sustainable weight-loss. Unfortunately, many claims cited by supplements are unsupported and inadequately regulated. Most concerning, however, are the associated harmful side effects, often unrecognized by consumers. Garcinia cambogia extract and Garcinia cambogia containing products are some of the most popular dietary supplements currently marketed for weight loss. Here, we report the first known case of fulminant hepatic failure associated with this dietary supplement. One active ingredient in this supplement is hydroxycitric acid, an active ingredient also found in weight-loss supplements banned by the Food and Drug Administration in 2009 for hepatotoxicity. Heightened awareness of the dangers of dietary supplements such as Garcinia cambogia is imperative to prevent hepatoxicity and potential fulminant hepatic failure in additional patients
The role of electron-hole recombination in organic magnetoresistance
Magneto-electrical measurements were performed on diodes and bulk
heterojunction solar cells (BHSCs) to clarify the role of formation of
coulombically bound electron-hole (e-h) pairs on the magnetoresistance (MR)
response in organic thin film devices. BHSCs are suitable model systems because
they effectively quench excitons but the probability of forming e-h pairs in
them can be tuned over orders of magnitude by the choice of material and
solvent in the blend. We have systematically varied the e-h recombination
coefficients, which are directly proportional to the probability for the charge
carriers to meet in space, and found that a reduced probability of electrons
and holes meeting in space lead to disappearance of the MR. Our results clearly
show that MR is a direct consequence of e-h pair formation. We also found that
the MR line shape follows a power law-dependence of B0.5 at higher fields
Minimal Stability in Maximal Supergravity
Recently, it has been shown that maximal supergravity allows for
non-supersymmetric AdS critical points that are perturbatively stable. We
investigate this phenomenon of stability without supersymmetry from the
sGoldstino point of view. In particular, we calculate the projection of the
mass matrix onto the sGoldstino directions, and derive the necessary conditions
for stability. Indeed we find a narrow window allowing for stable SUSY breaking
points. As a by-product of our analysis, we find that it seems impossible to
perturb supersymmetric critical points into non-supersymmetric ones: there is a
minimal amount of SUSY breaking in maximal supergravity.Comment: 27 pages, 1 figure. v2: two typos corrected, published versio
Effects of heavy modes on vacuum stability in supersymmetric theories
We study the effects induced by heavy fields on the masses of light fields in
supersymmetric theories, under the assumption that the heavy mass scale is much
higher than the supersymmetry breaking scale. We show that the square-masses of
light scalar fields can get two different types of significant corrections when
a heavy multiplet is integrated out. The first is an indirect level-repulsion
effect, which may arise from heavy chiral multiplets and is always negative.
The second is a direct coupling contribution, which may arise from heavy vector
multiplets and can have any sign. We then apply these results to the sGoldstino
mass and study the implications for the vacuum metastability condition. We find
that the correction from heavy chiral multiplets is always negative and tends
to compromise vacuum metastability, whereas the contribution from heavy vector
multiplets is always positive and tends on the contrary to reinforce it. These
two effects are controlled respectively by Yukawa couplings and gauge charges,
which mix one heavy and two light fields respectively in the superpotential and
the Kahler potential. Finally we also comment on similar effects induced in
soft scalar masses when the heavy multiplets couple both to the visible and the
hidden sector.Comment: LaTex, 24 pages, no figures; v2 some comments and references adde
A no-go for no-go theorems prohibiting cosmic acceleration in extra dimensional models
A four-dimensional effective theory that arises as the low-energy limit of
some extra-dimensional model is constrained by the higher dimensional Einstein
equations. Steinhardt & Wesley use this to show that accelerated expansion in
our four large dimensions can only be transient in a large class of
Kaluza-Klein models that satisfy the (higher dimensional) null energy condition
[1]. We point out that these no-go theorems are based on a rather ad-hoc
assumption on the metric, without which no strong statements can be made.Comment: 20 page
Scalar geometry and masses in Calabi-Yau string models
We study the geometry of the scalar manifolds emerging in the no-scale sector
of Kahler moduli and matter fields in generic Calabi-Yau string
compactifications, and describe its implications on scalar masses. We consider
both heterotic and orientifold models and compare their characteristics. We
start from a general formula for the Kahler potential as a function of the
topological compactification data and study the structure of the curvature
tensor. We then determine the conditions for the space to be symmetric and show
that whenever this is the case the heterotic and the orientifold models give
the same scalar manifold. We finally study the structure of scalar masses in
this type of geometries, assuming that a generic superpotential triggers
spontaneous supersymmetry breaking. We show in particular that their behavior
crucially depends on the parameters controlling the departure of the geometry
from the coset situation. We first investigate the average sGoldstino mass in
the hidden sector and its sign, and study the implications on vacuum
metastability and the mass of the lightest scalar. We next examine the soft
scalar masses in the visible sector and their flavor structure, and study the
possibility of realizing a mild form of sequestering relying on a global
symmetry.Comment: 36 pages, no figure
Metastable de Sitter vacua in N=2 to N=1 truncated supergravity
We study the possibility of achieving metastable de Sitter vacua in general
N=2 to N=1 truncated supergravities without vector multiplets, and compare with
the situations arising in N=2 theories with only hypermultiplets and N=1
theories with only chiral multiplets. In N=2 theories based on a quaternionic
manifold and a graviphoton gauging, de Sitter vacua are necessarily unstable,
as a result of the peculiar properties of the geometry. In N=1 theories based
on a Kahler manifold and a superpotential, de Sitter vacua can instead be
metastable provided the geometry satisfies some constraint and the
superpotential can be freely adjusted. In N=2 to N=1 truncations, the crucial
requirement is then that the tachyon of the mother theory be projected out from
the daughter theory, so that the original unstable vacuum is projected to a
metastable vacuum. We study the circumstances under which this may happen and
derive general constraints for metastability on the geometry and the gauging.
We then study in full detail the simplest case of quaternionic manifolds of
dimension four with at least one isometry, for which there exists a general
parametrization, and study two types of truncations defining Kahler
submanifolds of dimension two. As an application, we finally discuss the case
of the universal hypermultiplet of N=2 superstrings and its truncations to the
dilaton chiral multiplet of N=1 superstrings. We argue that de Sitter vacua in
such theories are necessarily unstable in weakly coupled situations, while they
can in principle be metastable in strongly coupled regimes.Comment: 40 pages, no figure
Instantons on Quivers and Orientifolds
We compute the prepotential for gauge theories descending from
SYM via quiver projections and mass deformations.
This accounts for gauge theories with product gauge groups and bifundamental
matter. The case of massive orientifold gauge theories with gauge group SO/Sp
is also described. In the case with no gravitational corrections the results
are shown to be in agreement with Seiberg-Witten analysis and previous results
in the literature.Comment: 28 pages, revised version, references added, some typos correcte
Moduli stabilization with Fayet-Iliopoulos uplift
In the recent years, phenomenological models of moduli stabilization were
proposed, where the dynamics of the stabilization is essentially
supersymmetric, whereas an O'Rafearthaigh supersymmetry breaking sector is
responsible for the "uplift" of the cosmological constant to zero. We
investigate the case where the uplift is provided by a Fayet-Iliopoulos sector.
We find that in this case the modulus contribution to supersymmetry breaking is
larger than in the previous models. A first consequence of this class of
constructions is for gauginos, which are heavier compared to previous models.
In some of our explicit examples, due to a non-standard gauge-mediation type
negative contribution to scalars masses, the whole superpartner spectrum can be
efficiently compressed at low-energy. This provides an original phenomenology
testable at the LHC, in particular sleptons are generically heavier than the
squarks.Comment: 29 pages, 2 figure
Markers of inflammation and bone remodelling associated with improvement in clinical response measures in psoriatic arthritis patients treated with golimumab
<p>Objective To determine serum biomarker associations with clinical response to golimumab treatment in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA).</p>
<p>Methods GO–REVEAL was a randomised, placebo-controlled study of golimumab in patients with active PsA. Samples were collected from 100 patients at baseline, week 4 and week 14, and analysed for serum-based biomarkers and protein profiling (total 92 markers); data were correlated with clinical measures at week 14.</p>
<p>Results Serum levels of a subset of proteins (apolipoprotein C III, ENRAGE, IL-16, myeloperoxidase, vascular endothelial growth factor, pyridinoline, matrix metalloproteinase 3, C-reactive protein (CRP), carcinoembryonic antigen, intercellular adhesion molecule 1 and macrophage inflammatory protein 1α) at baseline or week 4 were strongly associated with American College of Rheumatology 20% improvement (ACR20) response and/or disease activity score in 28 joints (DAS28) at week 14. A smaller subset of proteins was significantly associated with a 75% improvement in the psoriasis area and severity index score (PASI75) at week 14, (adiponectin, apolipoprotein CIII, serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, and tumour necrosis factor α). Subsets of proteins were identified as potentially predictive of clinical response for each of the clinical measures, and the power of these biomarker panels to predict clinical response to golimumab treatment was stronger than for CRP alone.</p>
<p>Conclusions This analysis provides insight into several panels of markers that may have utility in identifying PsA patients likely to have ACR20, DAS28, or PASI75 responses following golimumab treatment.</p>
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