498 research outputs found
Fiber-Optic Imaging Probe Developed for Space Used to Detect Diabetes Through the Eye
Approximately 16 million Americans have diabetes mellitus, which can severely impair eyesight by causing cataracts, diabetic retinopathy, and glaucoma. Cataracts are 1.6 times more common in people with diabetes than in those without diabetes, and cataract extraction is the only surgical treatment. In many cases, diabetes-related ocular pathologies go undiagnosed until visual function is compromised. This ongoing pilot project seeks to study the progression of diabetes in a unique animal model by monitoring changes in the lens with a safe, sensitive, dynamic light-scattering probe. Dynamic light scattering (DLS), has the potential to diagnose cataracts at the molecular level. Recently, a new DLS fiber-optic probe was developed at the NASA Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field for noncontact, accurate, and extremely sensitive particle-sizing measurements in fluid dispersions and suspensions (ref. 1). This compact, portable, and rugged probe is free of optical alignment, offers point-and-shoot operation for various online field applications and challenging environments, and yet is extremely flexible in regards to sample container sizes, materials, and shapes. No external vibration isolation and no index matching are required. It can measure particles as small as 1 nm and as large as few micrometers in a wide concentration range from very dilute (waterlike) dispersions to very turbid (milklike) suspensions. It is safe and fast to use, since it only requires very low laser power (10 nW to 3 mW) with very short data acquisition times (2 to 10 sec)
Preoperative radiotherapy combined with 5 days per week capecitabine chemotherapy in locally advanced rectal cancer
There is increasing evidence supporting the use of preoperative chemoradiotherapy in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer in an attempt to facilitate complete surgical resection with clear margins. We describe our experience of using a 5-day per week regime of preoperative capecitabine chemoradiotherapy. Between November 2004 and September 2006, 70 patients with MRI-defined locally advanced rectal cancer were selected for treatment. Capecitabine was given at a dose of 900 mg m−2 for 5 days per week combined with 45 Gy of radiotherapy in 25 doses. This regime was well tolerated with 89% of our patients receiving the full dose of chemotherapy and 96% receiving the full dose of radiotherapy. Ninety-three per cent proceeded to macroscopically complete surgical resection. The pathological complete response rate was 9.2% with a node-negative rate of 66%. A negative circumferential margin was achieved by 79% of the patients who underwent resection. Compared to studies using a 7-day per week capecitabine schedule, our results show increased compliance and less dose reductions with comparable pathological outcome
Climatic and cultural changes in the west Congo Basin forests over the past 5000 years
Central Africa includes the world's second largest rainforest block. The ecology of the region remains poorly understood, as does its vegetation and archaeological history. However, over the past 20 years, multidisciplinary scientific programmes have enhanced knowledge of old human presence and palaeoenvironments in the forestry block of Central Africa. This first regional synthesis documents significant cultural changes over the past five millennia and describes how they are linked to climate. It is now well documented that climatic conditions in the African tropics underwent significant changes throughout this period and here we demonstrate that corresponding shifts in human demography have had a strong influence on the forests. The most influential event was the decline of the strong African monsoon in the Late Holocene, resulting in serious disturbance of the forest block around 3500 BP. During the same period, populations from the north settled in the forest zone; they mastered new technologies such as pottery and fabrication of polished stone tools, and seem to have practised agriculture. The opening up of forests from 2500 BP favoured the arrival of metallurgist populations that impacted the forest. During this long period (2500–1400 BP), a remarkable increase of archaeological sites is an indication of a demographic explosion of metallurgist populations. Paradoxically, we have found evidence of pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) cultivation in the forest around 2200 BP, implying a more arid context. While Early Iron Age sites (prior to 1400 BP) and recent pre-colonial sites (two to eight centuries BP) are abundant, the period between 1600 and 1000 BP is characterized by a sharp decrease in human settlements, with a population crash between 1300 and 1000 BP over a large part of Central Africa. It is only in the eleventh century that new populations of metallurgists settled into the forest block. In this paper, we analyse the spatial and temporal distribution of 328 archaeological sites that have been reliably radiocarbon dated. The results allow us to piece together changes in the relationships between human populations and the environments in which they lived. On this basis, we discuss interactions between humans, climate and vegetation during the past five millennia and the implications of the absence of people from the landscape over three centuries. We go on to discuss modern vegetation patterns and African forest conservation in the light of these events.Peer reviewe
Singular Support of a Vertex Algebra and the Arc Space of Its Associated Scheme
Book Subtitle: In Honour of the 75th Birthday of Tony JosephSeries Title: Progress in Mathematics (vol. 330)Attached to a vertex algebra V are two geometric objects. The associated scheme of V isthespectrum of Zhu's Poisson algebra Rv.Thesingular support of V is the spectrum of the associated graded algebra gr(V) with respect to Li's canonical decreasing filtration. There is a closed embedding from the singular support to the arc space of the associated scheme, which is an isomorphism in many interesting cases. In this note we give an example of a non-quasi-lisse vertex algebra whose associated scheme is reduced, for which the isomorphism is not true as schemes but true as varieties
Comparaison de deux méthodes de segmentation par contours actifs : les snakes et les level sets pour la segmentation d'IRM de hanche
Dans cet article, nous présentons une méthodologie dédiée à la sélection d'une méthode de segmentation d'IRM ostéoarticulaires pédiatriques appliquée à la maladie de Legg-Calve-Perthes. Cette méthodologie repose sur la détermination de critères quantitatifs et qualitatifs basés sur la mesure de surface. Nous nous proposons donc de comparer deux méthodes de segmentation par contours actifs: les snakes et les level sets. Pour ne pas avantager les level sets, les problèmes liés au changement de topologie n'ont pas été pris en compte. De cette étude, il découle que, pour notre application, la méthode des level sets est la plus appropriée puisqu'elle est la plus reproductible, la plus précise et demande moins d'intervention manuelle
Caractérisation 3d d'images IRM pour l'analyse de l'ostéochondrite primitive de la hanche
- L'interface utilisateur développée fournit des indices coxométriques pour caractériser l'état global de l'articulation de la hanche. Le logiciel 3D Slicer sert d'interface pour la visualisation 3D. La technique des ensembles de niveaux est utilisée pour segmenter chaque type de structure. Elle s'adapte à la topologie de la maladie à caractériser (fragmentation) et au type d'examen IRM (T1 ou T2). Un modèle géométrique est ensuite construit. Des indices géométriques tridimensionnels sont calculés automatiquement : excentration de la tête, volume de la tête, volume des cartilages céphalique et acétabulaire, distance tête-cotyle. Ces mesures exploitent l'ensemble des images planes IRM et quantifient les déformations liées à la maladie. Elles peuvent servir à préparer une intervention chirurgicale ou à surveiller l'évolution de la maladie
Patterns and Predictors of Relapse Following Radical Chemoradiation Therapy Delivered Using Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy With a Simultaneous Integrated Boost in Anal Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Purpose:
To describe the patterns and predictors of treatment failure in patients receiving definitive chemoradiotherapy (CRT) for anal squamous cell carcinoma (ASCC), delivered using intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT).
Materials and methods:
A retrospective cohort analysis of consecutive patients treated with curative intent for ASCC using CRT delivered with a standardised IMRT technique in five UK cancer centres. Patients were included from the start of UK IMRT guidance in February 2013 to 31st October 2017. Collected data included baseline demographics, treatment details, tumour control, sites of relapse and overall survival. Statistical analysis to calculate outcomes and predictive factors for outcome measures were performed using SPSS and R.
Results:
The medical records of 385 consecutive patients were analysed. Median follow-up was 24.0 months. 86.7% of patients achieved a complete response (CR) within 6 months of completing chemoradiotherapy. 3yr disease free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) were 75.6% and 85.6% respectively. Of all relapses, 83.4% occurred at the site of primary disease. There were two isolated relapses in regional nodes not involved at outset. Predictive factors for cancer recurrence included male sex, high N-stage and failure to complete radiotherapy as planned.
Conclusions:
The treatment results compare favourably to published outcomes from similar cohorts using 3D conformal CRT. The observed patterns of failure support the current UK IMRT voluming guidelines and dose levels, highlighting our prophylactic nodal dose is sufficient to prevent isolated regional relapse in uninvolved nodes. Further investigation into strategies to optimise CR should remain a priority in ASCC, as the site of primary disease remains the overwhelming site of relapse
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