894 resultados para circular restricted three-body problem
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Trichoplax adhaerens is the best-known member of the phylum Placozoa, one of the earliest-diverging metazoan phyla. It is a small disk-shaped animal that glides on surfaces in warm oceans to feed on algae. Prior anatomical studies of Trichoplax revealed that it has a simple three-layered organization with four somatic cell types. RESULTS: We reinvestigate the cellular organization of Trichoplax using advanced freezing and microscopy techniques to identify localize and count cells. Six somatic cell types are deployed in stereotyped positions. A thick ventral plate, comprising the majority of the cells, includes ciliated epithelial cells, newly identified lipophil cells packed with large lipid granules, and gland cells. Lipophils project deep into the interior, where they alternate with regularly spaced fiber cells whose branches contact all other cell types, including cells of the dorsal and ventral epithelium. Crystal cells, each containing a birefringent crystal, are arrayed around the rim. Gland cells express several proteins typical of neurosecretory cells, and a subset of them, around the rim, also expresses an FMRFamide-like neuropeptide. CONCLUSIONS: Structural analysis of Trichoplax with significantly improved techniques provides an advance in understanding its cell types and their distributions. We find two previously undetected cell types, lipohil and crystal cells, and an organized body plan in which different cell types are arranged in distinct patterns. The composition of gland cells suggests that they are neurosecretory cells and could control locomotor and feeding behavior.
Resumo:
Abstract
Resumo:
Planning with partial observability can be formulated as a non-deterministic search problem in belief space. The problem is harder than classical planning as keeping track of beliefs is harder than keeping track of states, and searching for action policies is harder than searching for action sequences. In this work, we develop a framework for partial observability that avoids these limitations and leads to a planner that scales up to larger problems. For this, the class of problems is restricted to those in which 1) the non-unary clauses representing the uncertainty about the initial situation are nvariant, and 2) variables that are hidden in the initial situation do not appear in the body of conditional effects, which are all assumed to be deterministic. We show that such problems can be translated in linear time into equivalent fully observable non-deterministic planning problems, and that an slight extension of this translation renders the problem solvable by means of classical planners. The whole approach is sound and complete provided that in addition, the state-space is connected. Experiments are also reported.
Resumo:
Abstract. In this paper we study the relative equilibria and their stability for a system of three point particles moving under the action of a Lennard{Jones potential. A central con guration is a special position of the particles where the position and acceleration vectors of each particle are proportional, and the constant of proportionality is the same for all particles. Since the Lennard{Jones potential depends only on the mutual distances among the particles, it is invariant under rotations. In a rotating frame the orbits coming from central con gurations become equilibrium points, the relative equilibria. Due to the form of the potential, the relative equilibria depend on the size of the system, that is, depend strongly of the momentum of inertia I. In this work we characterize the relative equilibria, we nd the bifurcation values of I for which the number of relative equilibria is changing, we also analyze the stability of the relative equilibria.
Resumo:
Le corps humain est l'objet privilégié d'action de la médecine, mais aussi réalité vécue, image, symbole, représentation et l'objet d'interprétation et de théorisation. Tous ces éléments constitutifs du corps influencent la façon dont la médecine le traite. Dans cette série de trois articles, nous abordons le corps sous différentes perspectives : médicale (1), phénoménologique (2), psychosomatique et socio-anthropologique (3). Nous proposons dans ce deuxième article de faire une différence entre le corps comme objet de connaissance ou de représentation et le corps tel qu'il est vécu (corps propre). Cette distinction, qui trouve son origine dans la psychiatrie phénoménologique, permet une approche du vécu des patients qui ne se limite pas aux catégories somatiques ou psychiques classiques en la matière. The human body is the object upon which medicine is acting, but also lived reality, image, symbol, representation and the object of elaboration and theory. All these elements which constitute the body influence the way medicine is treating it. In this series of three articles, we address the human body from various perspectives: medical (1), phenomenological (2), psychosomatic and socio-anthropological (3). This second article distinguishes between the body as an object of knowledge or representation and the way the body is lived. This distinction which originates in phenomenological psychiatry aims to understand how the patient experiences his body and to surpass the classical somatic and psychiatric classifications.
Resumo:
Objectives: This qualitative study aims at understanding the consequences of body deconstruction through mastectomy on corporality and identity in women with breast cancer. Design: Nineteen women were contacted through the hospital. All had to undergo mastectomy. Some were offered immediate breast reconstruction, others, because of cancer treatments, had no planned reconstruction. A qualitative reflexive methodological background was chosen. Method: Women were invited to participate in three semi-structured interviews, one shortly before or after mastectomy, and the other interviews later in their illness courses, after surgery. All interviews were transcribed verbatim. Thematic analysis was performed. The analysis of the first interview of each woman is presented in this article. Results: Mastectomy provokes a painful experience of body deconstruction. Even when immediate reconstruction is proposed, contrasted feelings and dissonance are expressed when comparing the former healthy body to the present challenged body entity. Body transformations are accompanied with experiences of mutilation, strangeness, and modify the physical, emotional social, symbolic and relational dimensions of the woman's gendered identity. Although the opportunity of breast reconstruction is seen as a possible recovery of a lost physical symmetry and body integrity, grieving the past body and integrating a new corporality leads to a painful identity crisis. Conclusion: With mastectomy, the roots of the woman's identity are challenged, leading to a re-evaluation of her existential values. The consequences of mastectomy transform the woman's corporality and embodiment, and question her identity. Psychological support is discussed in the perspective of our results.
Resumo:
Le corps humain est l'objet privilégié d'action de la médecine, mais aussi réalité vécue, image, symbole, représentation et l'objet d'interprétation et de théorisation. Tous ces éléments constitutifs du corps influencent la façon dont la médecine le traite. Dans cette série de trois articles, nous abordons le corps sous différentes perspectives : médicale (1), phénoménologique (2), psychosomatique et socio-anthropologique (3). Ce premier article traite des représentations du corps en médecine, dont nous décrivons quatre types distincts, qui renvoient à autant de démarches scientifiques spécifiques et de formes de légitimité clinique : le corps-objet de l'anatomie, le corps-machine de la physiologie, le corps cybernétique de la biologie et le corps statistique de l'épidémiologie. The human body is the object upon which medicine is acting, but also lived reality, image, symbol, representation and the object of elaboration and theory. All these elements which constitute the body influence the way medicine is treating it. In this series of three articles, we address the human body from various perspectives: medical (1), phenomenological (2), psychosomatic and socio-anthropological (3). This first article discusses four distinct types of representation of the body within medicine, each related to a specific epistemology and shaping a distinct kind of clinical legitimacy: the body-object of anatomy, the body-machine of physiology, the cybernetic body of biology, the statistical body of epidemiology.
Resumo:
The aim of this work was to evaluate the effect of tannin sources and levels in rations, on the productive performance and body lipid deposition of Nile tilapias (Oreochromis niloticus) during the finishing phase. Three hundred and forty-two fishes were distributed in 18 tanks. Rations were prepared using corn, sorghum varieties, with low and high tannin content, and tannic acid at 0.08, 0.34, and 0.60%. Weight gain, apparent feed conversion and protein efficiency rate were not influenced by the treatments. The highest body lipid deposition was observed for the tannic acid treatment (14.39%), while the diet containing sorghum with high tannin content yielded leaner body (12.01%) than that of sorghum with low tannin content (13.31%). Diets containing sorghum provided lower levels of visceral fat. Rations with tannin contents did not harm the productive performance of Nile tilapia.
Resumo:
PURPOSE: To evaluate gadocoletic acid (B-22956), a gadolinium-based paramagnetic blood pool agent, for contrast-enhanced coronary magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) in a Phase I clinical trial, and to compare the findings with those obtained using a standard noncontrast T2 preparation sequence. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The left coronary system was imaged in 12 healthy volunteers before B-22956 application and 5 (N = 11) and 45 (N = 7) minutes after application of 0.075 mmol/kg of body weight (BW) of B-22956. Additionally, imaging of the right coronary system was performed 23 minutes after B-22956 application (N = 6). A three-dimensional gradient echo sequence with T2 preparation (precontrast) or inversion recovery (IR) pulse (postcontrast) with real-time navigator correction was used. Assessment of the left and right coronary systems was performed qualitatively (a 4-point visual score for image quality) and quantitatively in terms of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), vessel sharpness, visible vessel length, maximal luminal diameter, and the number of visible side branches. RESULTS: Significant (P < 0.01) increases in SNR (+42%) and CNR (+86%) were noted five minutes after B-22956 application, compared to precontrast T2 preparation values. A significant increase in CNR (+40%, P < 0.05) was also noted 45 minutes postcontrast. Vessels (left anterior descending artery (LAD), left coronary circumflex (LCx), and right coronary artery (RCA)) were also significantly (P < 0.05) sharper on postcontrast images. Significant increases in vessel length were noted for the LAD (P < 0.05) and LCx and RCA (both P < 0.01), while significantly more side branches were noted for the LAD and RCA (both P < 0.05) when compared to precontrast T2 preparation values. CONCLUSION: The use of the intravascular contrast agent B-22956 substantially improves both objective and subjective parameters of image quality on high-resolution three-dimensional coronary MRA. The increase in SNR, CNR, and vessel sharpness minimizes current limitations of coronary artery visualization with high-resolution coronary MRA.
Resumo:
Objective: to assess the agreement between different anthropometric markers in defining obesity and the effect on the prevalence of obese subjects. Methods: population-based cross-sectional study including 3213 women and 2912 men aged 35-75 years. Body fat percentage (%BF) was assessed using electric bioimpedance. Obesity was defined using established cut-points for body mass index (BMI) and waist, and three population-defined cut-points for %BF. Between-criteria agreement was assessed by the kappa statistic. Results: in men, agreement between the %BF cut-points was significantly higher (kappa values in the range 0.78 - 0.86) than with BMI or waist (0.47 - 0.62), whereas no such differences were found in women (0.41 - 0.69). In both genders, prevalence of obesity varied considerably according to the criteria used: 17% and 24% according to BMI and waist in men, and 14% and 31%, respectively, in women. For %BF, the prevalence varied between 14% and 17% in men and between 19% and 36% in women according to the cut-point used. In the older age groups, a fourfold difference in the prevalence of obesity was found when different criteria were used. Among subjects with at least one criteria for obesity (increased BMI, waist or %BF), only one third fulfilled all three criteria and one quarter two criteria. Less than half of women and 64% of men were jointly classified as obese by the three population-defined cut-points for %BF. Conclusions: the different anthropometric criteria to define obesity show a relatively poor agreement between them, leading to considerable differences in the prevalence of obesity in the general population.
Resumo:
Differences in efficacy and safety of drugs among patients are a recognized problem in pharmacotherapy. The reasons are multifactorial and, therefore, the choice of a drug and its dosage for a particular patient based on different clinical and genetic factors is suggested to improve the clinical outcome. Four drugs are currently used for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease: three acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (donepezil, galantamine, rivastigmine) and the N-methyl-D-aspartate-antagonist memantine. For these drugs, a high interindividual variability in plasma levels was observed, which might influence the response to treatment. The main objective of this thesis was to provide a better understanding of clinical and genetic factors affecting the plasma levels of antidementia drugs. Furthermore, the relationship between plasma levels, genetic variations and side effects was assessed. For this purpose, a pharmacogenetic study was conducted including 300 patients from a naturalistic clinical setting. Analytical methods for the simultaneous measurement of antidementia drugs in plasma have been developed and validated using liquid chromatography methods coupled with mass spectrometry detection. Presently, these methods are used in the therapeutic drug monitoring service of our laboratory. The routine use of therapeutic drug monitoring for antidementia drugs cannot yet be recommended with the available data, but it may be beneficial for some patients in special clinical cases such as insufficient treatment response, side effects or drug interactions. Donepezil and galantamine are extensively metabolized by the liver enzymes cytochromes P450 (CYP) 2D6 and 3A and are substrates of the drug transporter P-glycoprotein. The relationship of variations in genes affecting the activity of these metabolic enzymes and drug transporter (CYP2D6, CYP3A, POR, NR1I2, ABCB1) with donepezil and galantamine plasma levels was investigated. The CYP2D6 genotype appeared to be the major genetic factor involved in the pharmacokinetics of these two drugs. Thus, CYP2D6 poor metabolizers demonstrated significantly higher drug plasma levels than extensive metabolizers. Additionally, in the donepezil study population, the frequency of side effects was significantly increased in poor metabolizers. Lower donepezil plasma levels were observed in ultra rapid metabolizers, which might expose those patients to the risk of non-response. Memantine is mainly eliminated unchanged by the kidney, with implication of tubular secretion by renal transporters. A population pharmacokinetic model was developed to quantify the effects of clinical factors and genetic variations in renal cation transporters (SLC22A1/2/5, SLC47A1, ABCB1), and nuclear receptors (NR1I2, NR1I3, PPARG) involved in transporter expression, on memantine plasma levels. In addition to the renal function and gender, a genetic variation in the nuclear receptor Pregnane-X-Receptor (NR1I2) significantly affected memantine elimination. These findings suggest that an individualized therapy approach for antidementia drugs, taking into account clinical characteristics and genetic background of a patient, might increase efficacy and safety of the treatment. - Les différences interindividuelles dans l'efficacité et la tolérance des médicaments sont un problème connu en pharmacothérapie. Les raisons sont multiples, et le choix du médicament et de la dose, basé sur des facteurs cliniques et génétiques spécifiques au patient, peut contribuer à améliorer la réponse clinique. Quatre médicaments sont couramment utilisés dans le traitement de la maladie d'Alzheimer : trois inhibiteurs de l'acétylcholinestérase (donépézil, galantamine, rivastigmine) et un antagoniste du récepteur N-méthyl-D-aspartate, la mémantine. Une forte variabilité interindividuelle dans les taux plasmatiques de ces quatre composés a été observée, ce qui pourrait influencer la réponse au traitement. L'objectif principal de ce travail de thèse est de mieux comprendre les facteurs cliniques et génétiques influençant les taux des médicaments pro-cognitifs. En outre, des associations entre les taux, la variabilité génétique et les effets secondaires ont été recherchées. Dans ce but, 300 patients sous traitement avec un médicament pro-cognitif ont été recrutés pour une étude pharmacogénétique. Des méthodes de dosage simultané de médicaments pro-cognitifs par chromatographie liquide couplée à la spectrométrie de masse ont été développées et validées. Ces méthodes sont actuellement utilisées dans le service de suivi thérapeutique de notre unité. Malgré le fait qu'un suivi des taux sanguins des pro-cognitifs ne puisse pas encore être recommandé en routine, un dosage peut être utile dans des cas cliniques spécifiques, comme une réponse insuffisante, une intolérance ou une interaction médicamenteuse. Le donépézil et la galantamine sont fortement métabolisés par les cytochromes P450 (CYP) 2D6 et 3A, et sont également substrats du transporteur P-glycoprotéine. Les associations entre les polymorphismes génétiques de ces enzymes, cofacteur, récepteur nucléaire et transporteur (CYP2D6, CYP3A, POR, NR1I2, ABCB1) et les taux de donépézil et de galantamine ont été étudiées. Le génotype du CYP2D6 a été montré comme le facteur génétique majeur impliqué dans la pharmacocinétique de ces deux médicaments. Ainsi, les métaboliseurs déficients du CYP2D6 ont démontré des taux plasmatiques significativement plus élevés comparé aux bons métaboliseurs. De plus, dans la population traitée avec le donépézil, la fréquence des effets secondaires était plus élevée chez les métaboliseurs déficients. Des taux plasmatiques bas ont été mesurés chez les métaboliseurs ultra-rapides traités avec le donépézil, ce qui pourrait être un facteur de risque à une non-réponse au traitement. La mémantine est principalement éliminée sous forme inchangée par les reins, et partiellement par sécrétion tubulaire grâce à des transporteurs rénaux. Un modèle de cinétique de population a été développé pour quantifier les effets des différents facteurs cliniques et de la variabilité génétique des transporteurs rénaux (SLC22A1/2/5, SLC47A1, ABCB1) et des récepteurs nucléaires (NR1I2, NR1I3, PPARG, impliqués dans l'expression des transporteurs) sur les taux plasmatiques de mémantine. En plus de la fonction rénale et du genre, une variation génétique dans le récepteur nucléaire Pregnane-X-Receptor (NR1I2) a montré une influence significative sur l'élimination de la mémantine. Ces résultats suggèrent qu'une approche thérapeutique individualisée, prenant en compte des facteurs cliniques et génétiques du patient, pourrait améliorer l'efficacité et la sécurité du traitement pro-cognitif.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Preoperative marking is of primary importance in body contouring and when precise simulation of skin excisions is difficult. Because the "cut as you go" principle can be delicate, especially in patients after massive weight loss, a simple and quick method is needed for preoperative planning. We suggest an approach that helps visualize the optimal skin incision lines and simulates the postoperative result by body taping. METHODS: Twelve patients who underwent abdominal contouring, including classic and vertical abdominoplasties as well as dog ear and scar revision, were prospectively analyzed. The skin to be excised was preoperatively folded, taped, and then marked. The area marked was measured and compared with the actual intraoperatively resected area and the postoperative result was evaluated after 1 year by the patients and three surgeons. RESULTS: With body taping, an 83% congruence between the preoperative planning and the surgery was obtained and only two patients had additional skin resected. No wound dehiscence and flap necrosis occurred and patients as well as surgeons scored the final body contour positively. CONCLUSION: Body taping is a simple, quick, and economic method for planning contour surgery with high accuracy as demonstrated by the low rate of intraoperative changes of the planned resection and low complication rate.
Resumo:
The trabecular bone score (TBS) is an index of bone microarchitectural texture calculated from anteroposterior dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans of the lumbar spine (LS) that predicts fracture risk, independent of bone mineral density (BMD). The aim of this study was to compare the effects of yearly intravenous zoledronate (ZOL) versus placebo (PLB) on LS BMD and TBS in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis. Changes in TBS were assessed in the subset of 107 patients recruited at the Department of Osteoporosis of the University Hospital of Berne, Switzerland, who were included in the HORIZON trial. All subjects received adequate calcium and vitamin D3. In these patients randomly assigned to either ZOL (n = 54) or PLB (n = 53) for 3 years, BMD was measured by DXA and TBS assessed by TBS iNsight (v1.9) at baseline and 6, 12, 24, and 36 months after treatment initiation. Baseline characteristics (mean ± SD) were similar between groups in terms of age, 76.8 ± 5.0 years; body mass index (BMI), 24.5 ± 3.6 kg/m(2) ; TBS, 1.178 ± 0.1 but for LS T-score (ZOL-2.9 ± 1.5 versus PLB-2.1 ± 1.5). Changes in LS BMD were significantly greater with ZOL than with PLB at all time points (p < 0.0001 for all), reaching +9.58% versus +1.38% at month 36. Change in TBS was significantly greater with ZOL than with PLB as of month 24, reaching +1.41 versus-0.49% at month 36; p = 0.031, respectively. LS BMD and TBS were weakly correlated (r = 0.20) and there were no correlations between changes in BMD and TBS from baseline at any visit. In postmenopausal women with osteoporosis, once-yearly intravenous ZOL therapy significantly increased LS BMD relative to PLB over 3 years and TBS as of 2 years. © 2013 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
Resumo:
Abstract