71 resultados para scopus
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SCOPUS: ar.j
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All antiepileptic medications have potential side-effects. Some are rather specific like diplopia for carbamazepin or lamotrigin, whereas others are not, like fatigue or unsteadiness. Most are dose- related and can therefore be alleviated by dose reduction (e.g. somnolence or tremor) but a few are idiosyncratic (e.g. rash) and require cessation of the causative agent. Some can be detected and followed-up on a clinical basis but others necessitate specific examinations.
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This paper provides an agent-based software exploration of the wellknown free market efficiency/equality trade-off. Our study simulates the interaction of agents producing, trading and consuming goods in the presence of different market structures, and looks at how efficient the producers/consumers mapping turn out to be as well as the resulting distribution of welfare among agents at the end of an arbitrarily large number of iterations. Two market mechanisms are compared: the competitive market (a double auction market in which agents outbid each other in order to buy and sell products) and the random one (in which products are allocated randomly). Our results confirm that the superior efficiency of the competitive market (an effective and never stopping producers/consumers mapping and a superior aggregative welfare) comes at a very high price in terms of inequality (above all when severe budget constraints are in play).
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SCOPUS: le.j
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We prove NP-hardness results for five of Nintendo's largest video game franchises: Mario, Donkey Kong, Legend of Zelda, Metroid, and Pokémon. Our results apply to generalized versions of Super Mario Bros.1-3, The Lost Levels, and Super Mario World; Donkey Kong Country 1-3; all Legend of Zelda games; all Metroid games; and all Pokémon role-playing games. In addition, we prove PSPACE-completeness of the Donkey Kong Country games and several Legend of Zelda games.
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SCOPUS: re.j
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Rett syndrome is one of the most common causes of complex disability in girls. It is characterized by early neurological regression that severely affects motor, cognitive and communication skills, by autonomic dysfunction and often a seizure disorder. It is a monogenic X-linked dominant neurodevelopmental disorder related to mutation in MECP2, which encodes the methyl-CpG-binding protein MeCP2. There are several mouse models either based on conditional knocking out of the Mecp2 gene or on a truncating mutation. We discuss the clinical aspects with special emphasis on the behavioral phenotype and we review current perspectives in clinical management alongside with perspectives in altering gene expression. Copyright © 2012 S. Karger AG, Basel.
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In many instances of holographic correspondences between a d-dimensional boundary theory and a (. d+. 1)-dimensional bulk, a direct argument in the boundary theory implies that there must exist a simple and precise relation between the Euclidean on-shell action of a (. d-. 1)-brane probing the bulk geometry and the Euclidean gravitational bulk action. This relation is crucial for the consistency of holography, yet it is non-trivial from the bulk perspective. In particular, we show that it relies on a nice isoperimetric inequality that must be satisfied in a large class of Poincaré-Einstein spaces. Remarkably, this inequality follows from theorems by Lee and Wang.
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Quality of life has become a very important parameter in benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and one of the major concepts identified by the patients to be important is related to sexuality after BPH therapy. The impact on sexuality resulting from the various treatment modalities of BPH, either medical, surgical or instrumental has been too often neglected in the past and poorly investigated. The present article reviews the influence on sexual function of current therapies for symptomatic BPH.
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SCOPUS: ar.j
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SCOPUS: ar.j
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Breast cancer remains one of the leading causes of cancer morbidity and mortality. Despite significant advances in treatment of breast cancer a substantial proportion of women affected by this disease succumb to it. Survival of patients with advanced disease, chemoresistant tumors or a suboptimal response to endocrine therapy is significantly shortened. Hence, further understanding of disease pathogenesis is required to enhance the arsenal of approaches to cure this deadly ailment. Recent advances in biochemistry, molecular cell biology and cancer research highlighted the importance of dysregulation of protein synthesis, translation, in the development and progression of tumors. This dysregulation appears to take place at an early stage of translation, called translation initiation, that is a highly controlled and rate-limiting step of the protein synthesis. In this chapter we summarize decades of knowledge accumulated in regards to the role of translation and its regulation in the development and progression of breast cancer. We then extensively discuss applications of this knowledge in diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer.
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Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is the most common form of autosomal-recessive ataxia. Common nonmotor features include cardiomyopathy and diabetes mellitus. At present, no effective treatments are available to prevent disease progression. Age of onset varies from infancy to adulthood. In the majority of patients, FRDA is caused by intronic GAA expansions in FXN, which encodes a highly-conserved small mitochondrial matrix protein, frataxin. A mouse model of FRDA has been difficult to generate because complete loss of frataxin causes early embryonic lethality. Although there are some controversies about the function of frataxin, recent biochemical and structural studies have confirmed that it is a component of the multiprotein complex that assembles iron-sulfur clusters in the mitochondrial matrix. The main consequences of frataxin deficiency are energy deficit, altered iron metabolism, and oxidative damage.
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Introduction An overview of media markets shows that rapid growth and the integration of some of the most dynamic market segments are characteristics of this fast-moving industry. The main players are the established incumbents upstream and the delivery segments of media downstream. The presence of incumbents, inheritors of previous public monopolies, has led Member States to use regulation in a complementary role with competition. In these markets, strategies to deliver new products and services and to serve new geographic markets focus less on organic growth than on alliances and mergers in order to create multi-media offshoots, bid for control of content rights, increase the diffusion of products and services, and develop technologies for conditional access and transmission standards to capture advantages through proprietary technology. As a result, vertically integrated dominant positions either upstream or downstream have tended to emerge. There is nothing wrong with vertical integration except when there is market power at one stage of the vertical chain. Indeed, as far as the media industry is concerned, there are some specific challenges at the European level. The new EU regulatory framework grants some specific competition principles which can be integrated into ex ante regulation. EU merger control may also prevent potential distortion of competition resulting from the creation or the strengthening of a single or collective dominant position in the media sector at a horizontal level, or from foreclosure effects at a vertical level.
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SCOPUS: ar.j