994 results on '"M Petri"'
Search Results
2. S15.2 Severe non-adherence to hydroxychloroquine is associated with flares, early damage, and mortality in systemic lupus erythematosus: data from 660 patients from the slicc inception cohort
- Author
-
C Gordon, A Rahman, M Inanc, M Petri, DA Isenberg, S Jacobsen, S Bae, RF van Vollenhoven, S Lin, S Manzi, R Ramsey-Goldman, N Costedoat-Chalumeau, S Bernatsky, J Sanchez-Guerrero, C Aranow, G Ruiz-Irastorza, M MacKay, EM Ginzler, DD Gladman, MA Dooley, A Askanase, Y Nguyen, A Jönsen, IN Bruce, DJ Wallace, JG Hanly, J Buyon, JT Merrill, B Blanchet, MB Urowitz, J Romero-Dia, AE Clarke, PR Fortin, GS Alarcón, V Le Gurn, KC Kalunian, CA Peschken, and DL Kamen more...
- Subjects
Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
3. Computation-aided designs enable developing auxotrophic metabolic sensors for wide-range glyoxylate and glycolate detection
- Author
-
Enrico Orsi, Helena Schulz-Mirbach, Charles A. R. Cotton, Ari Satanowski, Henrik M. Petri, Susanne L. Arnold, Natalia Grabarczyk, Rutger Verbakel, Karsten S. Jensen, Stefano Donati, Nicole Paczia, Timo Glatter, Andreas M. Küffner, Tanguy Chotel, Farah Schillmüller, Alberto De Maria, Hai He, Steffen N. Lindner, Elad Noor, Arren Bar-Even, Tobias J. Erb, and Pablo I. Nikel more...
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Abstract Auxotrophic metabolic sensors (AMS) are microbial strains modified so that biomass formation correlates with the availability of specific metabolites. These sensors are essential for bioengineering (e.g., in growth-coupled designs) but creating them is often a time-consuming and low-throughput process that can be streamlined by in silico analysis. Here, we present a systematic workflow for designing, implementing, and testing versatile AMS based on Escherichia coli. Glyoxylate, a key metabolite in (synthetic) CO2 fixation and carbon-conserving pathways, served as the test analyte. Through iterative screening of a compact metabolic model, we identify non-trivial growth-coupled designs that result in six AMS with a wide sensitivity range for glyoxylate, spanning three orders of magnitude in the detected analyte concentration. We further adapt these E. coli AMS for sensing glycolate and demonstrate their utility in both pathway engineering (testing a key metabolic module for carbon assimilation via glyoxylate) and environmental monitoring (quantifying glycolate produced by photosynthetic microalgae). Adapting this workflow to the sensing of different metabolites could facilitate the design and implementation of AMS for diverse biotechnological applications. more...
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Toll-like receptor 2/6-dependent stimulation of mesenchymal stem cells promotes angiogenesis by paracrine factors
- Author
-
H Kokemüller, M Luchtefeld, S Spalthoff, P Jehn, C Liu, M Petri, K Grote, T Tschernig, C Krettek, C Haasper, and M Jagodzinski
- Subjects
Tissue engineering ,angiogenesis ,Toll-like receptors ,mesenchymal stem cells ,growth factors ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 ,Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Reconstruction of critical size bone defects represents a major challenge in orthopaedic surgery. Insufficient angiogenesis is a limiting factor for engraftment of large-scale tissue transplants. Transplantation or stimulation of local mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) represents a potential solution to enhance angiogenesis. We recently identified angiogenic properties for the Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2/6 agonist MALP-2 and now investigated if MALP-2 could be used to stimulate MSCs in order to promote angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo.Human MSCs from the bone marrow of healthy subjects were isolated, cultured and expanded in vitro and were shown to be positive for mesenchymal stem cells markers as well as for the MALP-2 receptors TLR2 and TLR6. MALP-2 directly enhanced migration but not proliferation of human MSCs. Conditioned medium from MALP-2 stimulated MSCs significantly increased proliferation, migration and tube formation of endothelial cells. Analysis of the conditioned medium from MSCs revealed that MALP-2 stimulation enhanced the secretion of several chemokines and growth factors including vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGF) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Finally, we studied MALP-2 effects on MSCs in a sheep model of tissue engineering in vivo. Therefore, MSCs were isolated from the iliac crest of black head sheep and co-cultivated with MALP-2 ex vivo. Implantation of autologous MSCs within a scaffold cylinder into the M. latissimus dorsi significantly enhanced vessel density of these constructs after 6 months.We here present the first evidence that TLR2/6-dependent stimulation of MSCs promotes angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo offering a novel strategy for therapeutic angiogenesis, e.g., for tissue engineering of bone. more...
- Published
- 2013
5. Health–Economic Impact Attributable to Occurrence of Pleurisy and Pneumonia Lesions in Finishing Pigs
- Author
-
Clarisse S. Malcher, Fernando A. M. Petri, Laiza P. Arruda, Gabriel A. de Aguiar, Gabriel Y. Storino, Karina Sonalio, Leonardo T. Toledo, Flávio Hirose, and Luís Guilherme de Oliveira
- Subjects
Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae ,ADG ,intensive pig farming ,Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae ,Pasteurella multocida ,PRDC ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
Respiratory diseases, such as pleurisy and pneumonia, cause significant health and economic losses in pig production. This study evaluated 867 finishing pigs from a farm with a history of respiratory issues, using macroscopic lesion scoring (SPES and CVPC), histopathological analysis, qPCR diagnostics, and economic modeling. Severe pleurisy (scores 3 and 4) was observed in 42.1% of carcasses and was strongly correlated with higher bacterial loads of Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae, Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, and Pasteurella multocida. Severe lesions reduced the average daily gain (ADG) and carcass weight, leading to increased production costs and lower profitability. Economic analysis revealed that pigs with higher pleurisy scores incurred an additional cost per kg (USD 1.29 vs. USD 1.32 for milder cases), reduced total revenue by 1.36%, and decreased return on investment (ROI) from 5.33% to 3.90%. These findings emphasize the critical impact of respiratory diseases on profitability and the necessity of robust health management strategies, including vaccination and enhanced biosecurity, to minimize economic losses in swine farming. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Oral vaccination of piglets against Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae using silica SBA-15 as an adjuvant effectively reduced consolidation lung lesions at slaughter
- Author
-
Marina L. Mechler-Dreibi, Henrique M. S. Almeida, Karina Sonalio, Mariela A. C. Martines, Fernando A. M. Petri, Beatriz B. Zambotti, Marcela M. Ferreira, Gabriel Y. Storino, Tereza S. Martins, Hélio J. Montassier, Osvaldo A. Sant’Anna, Márcia C. A. Fantini, and Luís Guilherme de Oliveira more...
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Mycoplasma (M.) hyopneumoniae is the main pathogen of porcine enzootic pneumonia (PEP). Its controlling is challenging, and requires alternative strategies. This study aimed to develop an oral vaccine against M. hyopneumoniae using a nanostructured mesoporous silica (SBA-15) as an adjuvant, and compare its effect with an intramuscular (IM) commercial vaccine (CV). Fifty 24 day-old M. hyopneumoniae-free piglets composed five equal groups for different immunization protocols, consisting of a CV and/or oral immunization (OI). Control piglets did not receive any form of immunization. All piglets were challenged with M. hyopneumoniae strain 232 on D49 by tracheal route. IgA antibody response in the respiratory tract, bacterial shedding and serum IgG were evaluated. The piglets were euthanized on 28 (D77) and 56 (D105) days post-infection. Lung lesions were macroscopically evaluated; lung fragments and bronchoalveolar fluid (BALF) were collected for estimation of bacterial loads by qPCR and/or histopathology examination. All immunization protocols induced reduction on Mycoplasma-like macroscopic lung lesions. IgA Ab responses anti-M. hyopneumoniae, the expression of IL-4 cytokine and a lower expression of IL-8 were induced by CV and OI vaccines, while IgG was induced only by CV. Oral immunization using silica as a carrier-adjuvant can be viable in controlling M. hyopneumoniae infection. more...
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. The Cardiac Care Bridge transitional care program for the management of older high-risk cardiac patients: An economic evaluation alongside a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
-
Lotte Verweij, Adrianne C M Petri, Janet L MacNeil-Vroomen, Patricia Jepma, Corine H M Latour, Ron J G Peters, Wilma J M Scholte Op Reimer, Bianca M Buurman, and Judith E Bosmans
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the Cardiac Care Bridge (CCB) nurse-led transitional care program in older (≥70 years) cardiac patients compared to usual care.MethodsThe intervention group (n = 153) received the CCB program consisting of case management, disease management and home-based cardiac rehabilitation in the transition from hospital to home on top of usual care and was compared with the usual care group (n = 153). Outcomes included a composite measure of first all-cause unplanned hospital readmission or mortality, Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) and societal costs within six months follow-up. Missing data were imputed using multiple imputation. Statistical uncertainty surrounding Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratios (ICERs) was estimated by using bootstrapped seemingly unrelated regression.ResultsNo significant between group differences in the composite outcome of readmission or mortality nor in societal costs were observed. QALYs were statistically significantly lower in the intervention group, mean difference -0.03 (95% CI: -0.07; -0.02). Cost-effectiveness acceptability curves showed that the maximum probability of the intervention being cost-effective was 0.31 at a Willingness To Pay (WTP) of €0,00 and 0.14 at a WTP of €50,000 per composite outcome prevented and 0.32 and 0.21, respectively per QALY gained.ConclusionThe CCB program was on average more expensive and less effective compared to usual care, indicating that the CCB program is dominated by usual care. Therefore, the CCB program cannot be considered cost-effective compared to usual care. more...
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Electromagnetic properties of 21O for benchmarking nuclear Hamiltonians
- Author
-
S. Heil, M. Petri, K. Vobig, D. Bazin, J. Belarge, P. Bender, B.A. Brown, R. Elder, B. Elman, A. Gade, T. Haylett, J.D. Holt, T. Hüther, A. Hufnagel, H. Iwasaki, N. Kobayashi, C. Loelius, B. Longfellow, E. Lunderberg, M. Mathy, J. Menéndez, S. Paschalis, R. Roth, A. Schwenk, J. Simonis, I. Syndikus, D. Weisshaar, and K. Whitmore more...
- Subjects
Lifetime measurement ,Exotic nuclei ,Ab initio calculations ,Effective charges ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
The structure of exotic nuclei provides valuable tests for state-of-the-art nuclear theory. In particular electromagnetic transition rates are more sensitive to aspects of nuclear forces and many-body physics than excitation energies alone. We report the first lifetime measurement of excited states in 21O, finding τ1/2+=420−32+35(stat)−12+34(sys) ps. This result together with the deduced level scheme and branching ratio of several γ-ray decays are compared to both phenomenological shell-model and ab initio calculations based on two- and three-nucleon forces derived from chiral effective field theory. We find that the electric quadrupole reduced transition probability of B(E2;1/2+→5/2g.s.+)=0.71−0.06−0.06+0.07+0.02 e2fm4, derived from the lifetime of the 1/2+ state, is smaller than the phenomenological result where standard effective charges are employed, suggesting the need for modifications of the latter in neutron-rich oxygen isotopes. We compare this result to both large-space and valence-space ab initio calculations, and by using multiple input interactions we explore the sensitivity of this observable to underlying details of nuclear forces. more...
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Re-examining the transition into the N=20 island of inversion: Structure of 30Mg
- Author
-
B. Fernández-Domínguez, B. Pietras, W.N. Catford, N.A. Orr, M. Petri, M. Chartier, S. Paschalis, N. Patterson, J.S. Thomas, M. Caamaño, T. Otsuka, A. Poves, N. Tsunoda, N.L. Achouri, J.-C. Angélique, N.I. Ashwood, A. Banu, B. Bastin, R. Borcea, J. Brown, F. Delaunay, S. Franchoo, M. Freer, L. Gaudefroy, S. Heil, M. Labiche, B. Laurent, R.C. Lemmon, A.O. Macchiavelli, F. Negoita, E.S. Paul, C. Rodríguez-Tajes, P. Roussel-Chomaz, M. Staniou, M.J. Taylor, L. Trache, and G.L. Wilson more...
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Intermediate energy single-neutron removal from 31Mg has been employed to investigate the transition into the N=20 island of inversion. Levels up to 5 MeV excitation energy in 30Mg were populated and spin-parity assignments were inferred from the corresponding longitudinal momentum distributions and γ-ray decay scheme. Comparison with eikonal-model calculations also permitted spectroscopic factors to be deduced. Surprisingly, the 02+ level in 30Mg was found to have a strength much weaker than expected in the conventional picture of a predominantly 2p−2h intruder configuration having a large overlap with the deformed 31Mg ground state. In addition, negative parity levels were identified for the first time in 30Mg, one of which is located at low excitation energy. The results are discussed in the light of shell-model calculations employing two newly developed approaches with markedly different descriptions of the structure of 30Mg. It is concluded that the cross-shell effects in the region of the island of inversion at Z=12 are considerably more complex than previously thought and that np−nh configurations play a major role in the structure of 30Mg. more...
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Nucleon-nucleon correlations and the single-particle strength in atomic nuclei
- Author
-
S. Paschalis, M. Petri, A.O. Macchiavelli, O. Hen, and E. Piasetzky
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
We propose a phenomenological approach to examine the role of short- and long-range nucleon-nucleon correlations in the quenching of single-particle strength in atomic nuclei and their evolution in asymmetric nuclei and neutron matter. These correlations are thought to be the reason for the quenching of spectroscopic factors observed in (e,e′p), (p,2p) and transfer reactions. We show that the recently observed increase of the high-momentum component of the protons in neutron-rich nuclei is consistent with the reduced proton spectroscopic factors. Our approach connects recent results on short-range correlations from high-energy electron scattering experiments with the quenching of spectroscopic factors and addresses for the first time quantitatively this intriguing question in nuclear physics, in particular regarding its isospin dependence. We also speculate about the nature of a quasi-proton (nuclear polaron) in neutron matter and its kinetic energy, an important quantity for the properties of neutron stars. Keywords: Spectroscopic factors, Single-particle strength, Asymmetric nuclei, Neutron matter more...
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Feed Restriction Modifies Intestinal Microbiota-Host Mucosal Networking in Chickens Divergent in Residual Feed Intake
- Author
-
Barbara U. Metzler-Zebeli, Sina-Catherine Siegerstetter, Elizabeth Magowan, Peadar G. Lawlor, Renée M. Petri, Niamh E. O´Connell, and Qendrim Zebeli
- Subjects
chicken ,feed intake level ,intestinal barrier function ,intestinal microbiota ,intestinal physiology ,residual feed intake ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Differences in chickens’ feed intake may be the underlying factor influencing feed-efficiency (FE)-associated variation in intestinal microbiota and physiology. In chickens eating the same amount of feed, quantitative feed restriction may create similar intestinal conditions and help clarify this cause-and-effect relationship. This study investigated the effect of ad libitum versus restrictive feeding (85% of ad libitum) on ileal and cecal microbiota, concentrations of short-chain fatty acids, visceral organ size, intestinal morphology, permeability, and expression of genes related to nutrient uptake, barrier function, and innate immune response in broiler chickens with divergent residual feed intake (RFI; metric for FE). On day 30 posthatch, 28 low-RFI (good FE) and 29 high-RFI (poor FE) chickens across both feeding-level groups (n = 112) were selected. Supervised multigroup data integration and relevance network analyses showed that especially Lactobacillus (negative) in ileal digesta, Turicibacter (positive) in cecal digesta, and Enterobacteriaceae (positive) in both intestinal segments depended on chicken’s feed intake, whereas the level of Anaerotruncus in cecal digesta was most discriminative for high RFI. Moreover, shallower crypts and fewer goblet cells in ceca indicated host-related energy-saving mechanisms with low RFI, whereas greater tissue resistance suggested a stronger jejunal barrier function in low-RFI chickens. Values corresponding to feed intake level × RFI interactions indicated larger pancreas and lower levels of ileal and cecal short-chain fatty acids in restrictively fed high-RFI chickens than in the other 3 groups, suggesting host physiological adaptations to support greater energy and nutrient needs of high-RFI chickens compensating for the restricted feeding. IMPORTANCE The impact of the FE-associated differences in feed intake on intestinal bacterial and host physiological parameters has so far not been clarified. Understanding the underlying principles is essential for the development of cost-effective strategies to improve FE in chicken production. Under conditions of quantitative feed restriction, low- and high-RFI chickens ate the same amount of feed. Therefore, this research helps in distinguishing intestinal bacterial taxa and functions that were highly reliant on feed intake from those that were associated with physiological adaptations to RFI-associated differences in host nutritional needs and intestinal nutrient availability. This work provides a background for further research to assess manipulation of the intestinal microbiota, host physiology, and FE in chickens by dietary intervention. more...
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Feed Restriction Modulates the Fecal Microbiota Composition, Nutrient Retention, and Feed Efficiency in Chickens Divergent in Residual Feed Intake
- Author
-
Sina-Catherine Siegerstetter, Renée M. Petri, Elizabeth Magowan, Peadar G. Lawlor, Qendrim Zebeli, Niamh E. O'Connell, and Barbara U. Metzler-Zebeli
- Subjects
broiler chicken ,fecal microbiota ,feed intake level ,nutrient retention ,residual feed intake ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
There is a great interest to understand the impact of the gut microbiota on host's nutrient use and FE in chicken production. Both chicken's feed intake and gut bacterial microbiota differ between high and low-feed efficient chickens. To evaluate the impact of the feed intake level on the feed efficiency (FE)-associated variation in the chicken intestinal microbiota, differently feed efficient chickens need to eat the same amount of feed, which can be achieved by feeding chickens restrictively. Therefore, we investigated the effect of restrictive vs. ad libitum feeding on the fecal microbiome at 16 and 29 days posthatch (dph), FE and nutrient retention in chickens of low and high residual feed intake (RFI; metric for FE). Restrictively fed chickens were provided the same amount of feed which corresponded to 85% of the ad libitum fed group from 9 dph. FE was determined for the period between 9 and 30 dph and feces for nutrient retention were collected on 31 to 32 dph. From the 112 chickens (n = 56 fed ad libitum, and n = 56 fed restrictively), 14 low RFI and 15 high RFI ad libitum fed chickens, and 14 low RFI (n = 7 per sex) and 14 high RFI restrictively fed chickens were selected as the extremes in RFI and were retrospectively chosen for data analysis. Bray-Curtis dissimilarity matrices showed significant separation between time points, and feeding level groups at 29 dph for the fecal bacterial communities. Relevance networking indicated positive associations between Acinetobacter and feed intake at 16 dph, whereas at 29 dph Escherichia/Shigella and Turicibacter positively and Lactobacillus negatively correlated to chicken's feed intake. Enterobacteriaceae was indicative for low RFI at 16 dph, whereas Acinetobacter was linked to high RFI across time points. However, restrictive feeding-associated changes in the fecal microbiota were not similar in low and high RFI chickens, which may have been related to the higher nutrient retention and thus lower fecal nutrient availability in restrictively fed high RFI chickens. This may also explain the decreased RFI value in restrictively fed high RFI chickens indicating improved FE, with a stronger effect in females. more...
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Exclusive measurements of quasi-free proton scattering reactions in inverse and complete kinematics
- Author
-
V. Panin, J.T. Taylor, S. Paschalis, F. Wamers, Y. Aksyutina, H. Alvarez-Pol, T. Aumann, C.A. Bertulani, K. Boretzky, C. Caesar, M. Chartier, L.V. Chulkov, D. Cortina-Gil, J. Enders, O. Ershova, H. Geissel, R. Gernhäuser, M. Heil, H.T. Johansson, B. Jonson, A. Kelić-Heil, C. Langer, T. Le Bleis, R. Lemmon, T. Nilsson, M. Petri, R. Plag, R. Reifarth, D. Rossi, H. Scheit, H. Simon, H. Weick, and C. Wimmer more...
- Subjects
Quasi-free scattering ,Inverse kinematics ,Single-particle states ,Spectroscopic factors ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Quasi-free scattering reactions of the type (p,2p) were measured for the first time exclusively in complete and inverse kinematics, using a 12C beam at an energy of ∼400 MeV/u as a benchmark. This new technique has been developed to study the single-particle structure of exotic nuclei in experiments with radioactive-ion beams. The outgoing pair of protons and the fragments were measured simultaneously, enabling an unambiguous identification of the reaction channels and a redundant measurement of the kinematic observables. Both valence and deeply-bound nucleon orbits are probed, including those leading to unbound states of the daughter nucleus. Exclusive (p,2p) cross sections of 15.8(18) mb, 1.9(2) mb and 1.5(2) mb to the low-lying 0p-hole states overlapping with the ground state (3/2−) and with the bound excited states of 11B at 2.125 MeV (1/2−) and 5.02 MeV (3/2−), respectively, were determined via γ-ray spectroscopy. Particle-unstable deep-hole states, corresponding to proton removal from the 0s-orbital, were studied via the invariant-mass technique. Cross sections and momentum distributions were extracted and compared to theoretical calculations employing the eikonal formalism. The obtained results are in a good agreement with this theory and with direct-kinematics experiments. The dependence of the proton–proton scattering kinematics on the internal momentum of the struck proton and on its separation energy was investigated for the first time in inverse kinematics employing a large-acceptance measurement. more...
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Correction: Temporal dynamics of in-situ fiber-adherent bacterial community under ruminal acidotic conditions determined by 16S rRNA gene profiling.
- Author
-
Renee M Petri, Poulad Pourazad, Ratchaneewan Khiaosa-Ard, Fenja Klevenhusen, Barbara U Metzler-Zebeli, and Qendrim Zebeli
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0182271.].
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Temporal dynamics of in-situ fiber-adherent bacterial community under ruminal acidotic conditions determined by 16S rRNA gene profiling.
- Author
-
Renee M Petri, Poulad Pourazad, Ratchaneewan Khiaosa-Ard, Fenja Klevenhusen, Barbara U Metzler-Zebeli, and Qendrim Zebeli
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Subacute rumen acidotic (SARA) conditions are a consequence of high grain feeding. Recent work has shown that the pattern of grain feeding can significantly impact the rumen epimural microbiota. In a continuation of these works, the objective of this study was to determine the role of grain feeding patterns on the colonization and associated changes in predicted functional properties of the fiber-adherent microbial community over a 48 h period. Eight rumen-cannulated Holstein cows were randomly assigned to interrupted or continuous 60%-grain challenge model (n = 4 per model) to induce SARA conditions. Cows in the continuous model were challenged for 4 weeks, whereas cows of interrupted model had a 1-wk break in between challenges. To determine dynamics of rumen fiber-adherent microbial community we incubated the same hay from the diet samples for 24 and 48 h in situ during the baseline (no grain fed), week 1 and 4 of the continuous grain feeding model as well as during the week 1 following the break in the interrupted model. Microbial DNA was extracted and 16SrRNA amplicon (V3-V5 region) sequencing was done with the Illumina MiSeq platform. A significant decrease (P < 0.001) in fiber-adherent rumen bacterial species richness and diversity was observed at the end of a 4 week continuous SARA challenge in comparison to the baseline. A total of 159 operational taxonominc units (OTUs) were identified from the microbial population representing > 0.1% relative abundance in the rumen, 18 of which were significantly impacted by the feeding challenge model. Correlation analysis of the significant OTUs to rumen pH as an indicator of SARA showed genus Succiniclasticum had a positive correlation to SARA conditions regardless of treatment. Predictive analysis of functional microbial properties suggested that the glyoxylate/dicarboxylate pathway was increased in response to SARA conditions, decreased between 24h to 48h of incubation, negatively correlated with propanoate metabolism and positively correlated to members of the Veillonellaceae family including Succiniclasticum spp. This may indicate an adaptive response in bacterial metabolism under SARA conditions. This research clearly indicates that changes to the colonizing fiber-adherent rumen microbial population and their predicted functional genes occur in both the short (48 h) and long term (4 wk) under both continuous and interrupted SARA challenge models. more...
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Syntheses of thiophene and thiazole-based building blocks and their utilization in the syntheses of A-D-A type organic semiconducting materials with dithienosilolo central unit
- Author
-
Parviainen, T. A. (Tomi A. O.), Salmela, P. M. (Petri M.), Sippola, R. J. (Roosa J.), and Heiskanen, J. P. (Juha P.)
- Subjects
Aromatic compounds ,Catalysts ,Cross coupling reaction ,Mixtures ,Hydrocarbons - Abstract
Dithienosilole moiety is an electron donating unit, and it has been applied, for example, as a part of small molecular and polymeric electron donors in high performance organic photovoltaic cells. Herein, we report efficient synthetic routes to two symmetrical, dithienosilolo-central-unit-based A-D-A type organic semiconducting materials DTS(Th₂FBTTh)₂ and DTS(ThFBTTh)₂. Fine-tuned conditions in Suzuki–Miyaura couplings were tested and utilized. The effect of inserting additional hexylthiophene structures symmetrically into the material backbone was investigated, and it was noted that contrary to commonly accepted fact, the distance between electron donor and acceptor seems to play a bigger role in lowering the Egap value of the molecule than just extending the length of the conjugated backbone. We searched for precedent cases from the literature, and these are compared to our findings. The optical properties of the materials were characterized with UV–vis spectroscopy. Majority of the intermediate compounds along the way to final products were produced with excellent yields. Our results offer highly efficient routes to many heterocyclic structures but also give new insights into the design of organic semiconducting materials. more...
- Published
- 2022
17. Iodine and bromine speciation in snow and the effect of orographically induced precipitation
- Author
-
H. Biester, M. Petri, and B. S. Gilfedder
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Iodine is an essential trace element for all mammals and may also influence climate through new aerosol formation. Atmospheric bromine cycling is also important due to its well-known ozone depletion capabilities. Despite precipitation being the ultimate source of iodine in the terrestrial environment, the processes effecting its distribution, speciation and transport are relatively unknown. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of orographically induced precipitation on iodine concentrations in snow and also to quantify the inorganic and organic iodine and bromine species. Snow samples were collected over an altitude profile (~840 m) from the northern Black Forest and were analysed by ion-chromatography - inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (IC-ICP-MS) for iodine and bromine species and trace metals (ICP-MS). All elements and species concentrations in snow showed significant (r2>0.65) exponential decrease relationships with altitude despite the short (5 km) horizontal distance of the transect. In fact, total iodine more than halved (38 to 13 nmol/l) over the 840 m height change. The results suggest that orographic lifting and subsequent precipitation has a major influence on iodine concentrations in snow. This orographically induced removal effect may be more important than lateral distance from the ocean in determining iodine concentrations in terrestrial precipitation. The microphysical removal process was common to all elements indicating that the iodine and bromine are internally mixed within the snow crystals. We also show that organically bound iodine is the dominant iodine species in snow (61–75%), followed by iodide. Iodate was only found in two samples despite a detection limit of 0.3 nmol/l. Two unknown but most likely anionic organo-I species were also identified in IC-ICP-MS chromatograms and comprised 2–10% of the total iodine. The majority of the bromine was inorganic bromide with a max. of 32% organo-Br. more...
- Published
- 2007
18. Halogens in pore water of peat bogs – the role of peat decomposition and dissolved organic matter
- Author
-
H. Biester, D. Selimović, S. Hemmerich, and M. Petri
- Subjects
Ecology ,QH540-549.5 ,Life ,QH501-531 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Halogens are strongly enriched in peat and peatlands and such they are one of their largest active terrestrial reservoir. The enrichment of halogens in peat is mainly attributed to the formation of organohalogens and climatically controlled humification processes. However, little is known about release of halogens from the peat substrate and the distribution of halogens in the peat pore water. In this study we have investigated the distribution of chlorine, bromine and iodine in pore water of three pristine peat bogs located in the Magellanic Moorlands, southern Chile. Peat pore waters were collected using a sipping technique, which allows in situ sampling down to a depth greater than 6m. Halogens and halogen species in pore water were determined by ion-chromatography (IC) (chlorine) and IC-ICP-MS (bromine and iodine). Results show that halogen concentrations in pore water are 15–30 times higher than in rainwater. Mean concentrations of chlorine, bromine and iodine in pore water were 7–15 mg l−1, 56–123 μg l−1, and 10–20 μg l−1, which correspond to mean proportions of 10–15%, 1–2.3% and 0.5–2.2% of total concentrations in peat, respectively. Organobromine and organoiodine were the predominant species in pore waters, whereas chlorine in pore water was mostly chloride. Advection and diffusion of halogens were found to be generally low and halogen concentrations appear to reflect release from the peat substrate. Release of bromine and iodine from peat depend on the degree of peat degradation, whereas this relationship is weak for chlorine. Relatively higher release of bromine and iodine was observed in less degraded peat sections, where the release of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) was also the most intensive. It has been concluded that the release of halogenated dissolved organic matter (DOM) is the predominant mechanism of iodine and bromine release from peat. more...
- Published
- 2006
19. Supplementation With Phytogenic Compounds Modulates Salivation and Salivary Physico-Chemical Composition in Cattle Fed a High-Concentrate Diet
- Author
-
Sara Ricci, Raul Rivera-Chacon, Renee M. Petri, Arife Sener-Aydemir, Suchitra Sharma, Nicole Reisinger, Qendrim Zebeli, and Ezequias Castillo-Lopez
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Saliva ,Physiology ,Garlic Oil ,high-concentrate ,Total mixed ration ,phytogenic compound ,03 medical and health sciences ,Rumen ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Physiology (medical) ,QP1-981 ,Dry matter ,Thymol ,Original Research ,Meal ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040201 dairy & animal science ,salivation ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,cattle ,saliva composition ,Bolus (digestion) - Abstract
Saliva facilitates feed ingestion, nutrient circulation, and represents an important pH buffer for ruminants, especially for cattle fed high-concentrate diets that promote rumen acidification. This experiment evaluated the short-term effects of nine phytogenic compounds on salivation, saliva physico-chemical composition as well as ingested feed boli characteristics in cattle. A total of nine ruminally cannulated Holstein cows were used. Each compound was tested in four of these cows as part of a high-concentrate meal (2.5 kg of total mixed ration in dry matter basis for 4 h) in low or high dose, and was compared to a control meal without compound. Saliva was sampled orally (unstimulated saliva) for physico-chemical composition analysis. Composition of the ingested saliva (stimulated saliva), salivation and feed boli characteristics were assessed from ingesta collected at the cardia during the first 30 min of the meal. Analysis of unstimulated saliva showed that supplementation with capsaicin and thyme oil increased buffer capacity, while supplementation with thymol, L-menthol and gentian root decreased saliva pH. In addition, supplementing angelica root decreased saliva osmolality. Regression analysis on unstimulated saliva showed negative associations between mucins and bicarbonate as well as with phosphate when garlic oil, thyme oil or angelica root was supplemented. Analysis of stimulated saliva demonstrated that supplementation with garlic oil increased phosphate concentration, thyme oil tended to increase osmolality, capsaicin and thymol increased buffer capacity, and ginger increased phosphate content. Furthermore, salivation rate increased with ginger and thymol, and tended to increase with garlic oil, capsaicin, L-menthol and mint oil. Feed ensalivation increased with capsaicin. A positive association was found between feed bolus size and salivation rate when any of the phytogenic compounds was supplemented. Overall, our results demonstrate positive short-term effects of several phytogenic compounds on unstimulated and stimulated saliva physico-chemical properties, salivation or feed boli characteristics. Thus, the phytogenic compounds enhancing salivary physico-chemical composition have the potential to contribute to maintain or improve ruminal health in cattle fed concentrate-rich rations. more...
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Subcutaneous adipose fatty acid profiles and related rumen bacterial populations of steers fed red clover or grass hay diets containing flax or sunflower-seed.
- Author
-
Renee M Petri, Cletos Mapiye, Mike E R Dugan, and Tim A McAllister
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Steers were fed 70∶30 forage∶concentrate diets for 205 days, with either grass hay (GH) or red clover silage (RC), and either sunflower-seed (SS) or flaxseed (FS), providing 5.4% oil in the diets. Compared to diets containing SS, FS diets had elevated (P more...
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. PSIV-23 Variations in chewing behavior and rumino-reticular pH in dairy cows during gradual adaptation to a high-grain diet
- Author
-
Qendrim Zebeli, Renee M. Petri, Raul Rivera-Chacon, Ezequias Castillo-Lopez, Sara Ricci, and Nicole Reisinger
- Subjects
Abstracts ,Animal science ,Reticular connective tissue ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Adaptation ,Food Science - Abstract
Physical effective fiber in the diet promotes chewing, contributing to the regulation of ruminal pH through saliva production, which leads to rumen health. However, lower dietary fiber content in high-grain diets may reduce rumination time and compromise ruminal pH regulation. The objective of this experiment was to evaluate rumination behavior and rumino-reticular pH variations during an 8-day adaptation to a 65% concentrate diet. For this study nine ruminally cannulated non-lactating Holstein cows were used. Prior to the initiation of the adaptation, cows were transitioned from a forage-only grass silage diet to a 65% DM concentrate diet over eight days. Rumination was monitored using RumiWatch halters (RumiWacthSystem ITIN+HOCH). Rumino-reticular pH was measured using eCow indwelling pH systems in five of nine cows recording data every 15 minutes. Data were analysed with SAS, the statistical model included day as fixed effect and cow was considered as random effect. Adaptation days had an effect (P < 0.01) on rumination time, number of rumination chews per minute, and mean daily (rumino-reticular) pH. Especially, rumination time decreased from 439 to 327±62.8 minutes per day from day 1 to 8, respectively. Concomitantly, rumination chews per minute decreased from 68.8 to 65.6±2.06, and mean daily pH decreased from 6.54 and 6.26±0.07, respectively. Nevertheless, daily dry matter intake (P = 0.23) and eating time (P = 0.37) were not affected during the adaptation period. In conclusion, adaptation to a high-grain diet and the associated decrease in physically effective fiber gradually reduced chewing activity and ruminal/reticular pH. However, compared to the forage-only diet, significant reduction in rumination time was only noted at the 65% concentrate level. more...
- Published
- 2020
22. 197 Effect of a SARA challenge diet on chewing behavior and rumino-reticular short chain fatty acid concentrations in dairy cows
- Author
-
Nicole Reisinger, Renee M. Petri, Raul Rivera-Chacon, Ezequias Castillo-Lopez, Qendrim Zebeli, and Sara Ricci
- Subjects
Abstracts ,Chemistry ,Short-chain fatty acid ,Reticular connective tissue ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Genetics ,food and beverages ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food science ,Food Science - Abstract
Intensive dairy production systems encourage feeding of high-concentrate diets to increase milk production efficiency. However, there is limited information regarding the effect of a SARA challenge diet on chewing behavior and rumino-reticular short chain fatty acid (SCFA) concentration. The objective of this study was to evaluate chewing activity and SCFA production in the rumen and reticulum, using nine ruminally cannulated non-lactating Holstein cows. Preceding the trial, cows were transitioned from 100% forage to 65% DM concentrate over eight days. Trial day 1 began once cows reached 65% DM concentrate and monitoring during 23 days. RumiWatch halters were used to monitor chewing activity. SCFA analysis was conducted on rumen and reticulum fluid collected 4 hours after feeding using gas chromatography. Data were analyzed with SAS, with the fixed effect of days and cow as random effect. There was an increase in DM intake during the first four hours after feeding: 1.97 and 2.25 ± 0.12 kg for day 1 and 23, respectively (P < 0.05). There was no difference in rumination time (P = 0.16) with 29 ± 8.5 minutes during the first four hours of feeding. However, chewing index (P = 0.08) tended to decrease from 36.7 to 29.4 ± 4.4 minutes of chewing/kg of DM for day 1 and 23, respectively. Moreover, on day 1, propionate increased from 19.9 ± 1.02 to 20.1 ± 1.02% and from 24.04 ± 0.93 to 25.4 ± 1.02% compared to day 23 for rumen and reticulum, respectively (P < 0.05). In addition, from day 1 to day 23, the rumen and reticulum acetate/propionate ratio declined from 3.2 ± 0.15 and 3.1 ± 0.1, to 2.5 ± 0.15, respectively, and reticulum SCFA decreased from 87 to 67 µmol/g, respectively. Overall, there was no effect of the 23-day SARA challenge diet on chewing activity. However, there was a reduction of SCFA concentration in reticulum, which may be due to enhanced SCFA absorption or increased feed bolus neutralizing capacity. more...
- Published
- 2020
23. Synergistic effect of Ni–Ag–rutile TiO₂ ternary nanocomposite for efficient visible-light-driven photocatalytic activity
- Author
-
Leukkunen, P. M. (Petri M.), Rani, E. (Ekta), Sasikala Devi, A. A. (Assa Aravindh), Singh, H. (Harishchandra), King, G. (Graham), Alatalo, M. (Matti), Cao, W. (Wei), and Huttula, M. (Marko)
- Abstract
P25 comprising of mixed anatase and rutile phases is known to be highly photocatalytically active compared to the individual phases. Using a facile wet chemical method, we demonstrate a ternary nanocomposite consisting of Ni and Ag nanoparticles, decorated on the surface of XTiO₂ (X: P25, rutile (R)) as an efficient visible-light-driven photocatalyst. Contrary to the current perspective, RTiO₂-based Ni–Ag–RTiO₂ shows the highest activity with the H₂ evolution rate of ∼86 μmol g⁻¹ W⁻¹ h⁻¹@535 nm. Together with quantitative assessment of active Ni, Ag and XTiO₂ in these ternary systems using high energy synchrotron X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy coupled energy dispersive spectroscopy mapping evidences the metal to semiconductor contact via Ag. The robust photocatalytic activity is attributed to the improved visible light absorption, as noted by the observed band edge of ∼2.67 eV corroborating well with the occurrence of Ti³⁺ in Ti 2p XPS. The effective charge separation due to intimate contact between Ni and RTiO₂ via Ag is further evidenced by the plasmon loss peak in Ag 3d XPS. Moreover, density functional theory calculations revealed enhanced adsorption of H₂ on Ti₈O₁₆ clusters when both Ag and Ni are simultaneously present, owing to the hybridization of the metal atoms with d orbitals of Ti and p orbitals of O leading to enhanced bonding characteristics, as substantiated by the density of states. Additionally, the variation in the electronegativity in Bader charge analysis indicates the possibility of hydrogen evolution at the Ni sites, in agreement with the experimental observations. more...
- Published
- 2020
24. Effect of live yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae supplementation on the performance and cecum microbial profile of suckling piglets
- Author
-
Paolo Trevisi, Romain D’Inca, Hooman Derakhshani, Renee M. Petri, Tadele G. Kiros, Eric Auclair, Diana Luise, Andrew G. Van Kessel, Kiros, Tadele G., Luise, Diana, Derakhshani, Hooman, Petri, Renee, Trevisi, Paolo, D’Inca, Romain, Auclair, Eric, and van Kessel, Andrew G. more...
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Swine ,Physiology ,Prevotella ,Yeast and Fungal Models ,CULTURE SUPPLEMENTATION ,Gut flora ,Weight Gain ,GROWTH-PERFORMANCE ,Cecum ,fluids and secretions ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,IMMUNE-RESPONSE ,Eubacterium ,Food science ,Phylogeny ,Animal Management ,Mammals ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,GUT MICROBIOTA ,Discriminant Analysis ,Eukaryota ,Agriculture ,Biodiversity ,Genomics ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Animals, Suckling ,MILK-COMPOSITION ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Experimental Organism Systems ,Physiological Parameters ,Medical Microbiology ,Vertebrates ,Medicine ,Anatomy ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article ,LACTATION DIETS ,Science ,Veillonella ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Microbial Genomics ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Microbiology ,Saccharomyces ,03 medical and health sciences ,Model Organisms ,Species Specificity ,NUTRIENT DIGESTIBILITY ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Weaning ,Least-Squares Analysis ,REPRODUCTIVE-PERFORMANCE ,WEANLING PIGS ,Animal Performance ,FEED SUPPLEMENTATION ,Bacteria ,Body Weight ,Organisms ,Fungi ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Biology and Life Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Yeast ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,030104 developmental biology ,Amniotes ,Animal Studies ,Microbiome ,Digestive System ,Weight gain - Abstract
One mechanism through which S. cerevisiae may improve the performance of pigs is by altering the composition of the gut microbiota, a response that may be enhanced by early postnatal supplementation of probiotics. To test this hypothesis, newborn piglets (16 piglets/ group) were treated with either S. cerevisiae yeast (5 x 109 cfu/pig: Low) or (2.5 x 1010 cfu/ piglet: High) or equivalent volume of sterile water (Control) by oral gavage every other day starting from day 1 of age until weaning (28±1 days of age). Piglet body weight was recorded on days 1, 3, 7, 10, 17, 24 and 28 and average daily gain (ADG) calculated for the total period. At weaning, piglets were euthanized to collect cecum content for microbial profiling by sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. ADG was higher in both Low and High yeast groups than in Control group (P more...
- Published
- 2019
25. Feed Restriction Modifies Intestinal Microbiota-Host Mucosal Networking in Chickens Divergent in Residual Feed Intake
- Author
-
Elizabeth Magowan, Qendrim Zebeli, Renee M. Petri, Barbara U. Metzler-Zebeli, Sina-Catherine Siegerstetter, Peadar G. Lawlor, and Niamh E O' Connell
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,intestinal microbiota ,animal structures ,Physiology ,chicken ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,Biochemistry ,Microbiology ,lcsh:Microbiology ,intestinal barrier function ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animal science ,Nutrient ,Lactobacillus ,Genetics ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Barrier function ,2. Zero hunger ,Innate immune system ,biology ,visceral organs ,Host (biology) ,Applied and Environmental Science ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Broiler ,intestinal physiology ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,feed intake level ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Enterobacteriaceae ,QR1-502 ,Computer Science Applications ,030104 developmental biology ,residual feed intake ,Modeling and Simulation ,Residual feed intake ,Research Article - Abstract
The impact of the FE-associated differences in feed intake on intestinal bacterial and host physiological parameters has so far not been clarified. Understanding the underlying principles is essential for the development of cost-effective strategies to improve FE in chicken production. Under conditions of quantitative feed restriction, low- and high-RFI chickens ate the same amount of feed. Therefore, this research helps in distinguishing intestinal bacterial taxa and functions that were highly reliant on feed intake from those that were associated with physiological adaptations to RFI-associated differences in host nutritional needs and intestinal nutrient availability. This work provides a background for further research to assess manipulation of the intestinal microbiota, host physiology, and FE in chickens by dietary intervention., Differences in chickens’ feed intake may be the underlying factor influencing feed-efficiency (FE)-associated variation in intestinal microbiota and physiology. In chickens eating the same amount of feed, quantitative feed restriction may create similar intestinal conditions and help clarify this cause-and-effect relationship. This study investigated the effect of ad libitum versus restrictive feeding (85% of ad libitum) on ileal and cecal microbiota, concentrations of short-chain fatty acids, visceral organ size, intestinal morphology, permeability, and expression of genes related to nutrient uptake, barrier function, and innate immune response in broiler chickens with divergent residual feed intake (RFI; metric for FE). On day 30 posthatch, 28 low-RFI (good FE) and 29 high-RFI (poor FE) chickens across both feeding-level groups (n = 112) were selected. Supervised multigroup data integration and relevance network analyses showed that especially Lactobacillus (negative) in ileal digesta, Turicibacter (positive) in cecal digesta, and Enterobacteriaceae (positive) in both intestinal segments depended on chicken’s feed intake, whereas the level of Anaerotruncus in cecal digesta was most discriminative for high RFI. Moreover, shallower crypts and fewer goblet cells in ceca indicated host-related energy-saving mechanisms with low RFI, whereas greater tissue resistance suggested a stronger jejunal barrier function in low-RFI chickens. Values corresponding to feed intake level × RFI interactions indicated larger pancreas and lower levels of ileal and cecal short-chain fatty acids in restrictively fed high-RFI chickens than in the other 3 groups, suggesting host physiological adaptations to support greater energy and nutrient needs of high-RFI chickens compensating for the restricted feeding. IMPORTANCE The impact of the FE-associated differences in feed intake on intestinal bacterial and host physiological parameters has so far not been clarified. Understanding the underlying principles is essential for the development of cost-effective strategies to improve FE in chicken production. Under conditions of quantitative feed restriction, low- and high-RFI chickens ate the same amount of feed. Therefore, this research helps in distinguishing intestinal bacterial taxa and functions that were highly reliant on feed intake from those that were associated with physiological adaptations to RFI-associated differences in host nutritional needs and intestinal nutrient availability. This work provides a background for further research to assess manipulation of the intestinal microbiota, host physiology, and FE in chickens by dietary intervention. more...
- Published
- 2019
26. Halogens in pore water of peat bogs – the role of peat decomposition and dissolved organic matter
- Author
-
D. Selimović, S. Hemmerich, Harald Biester, M. Petri, and EGU, Publication
- Subjects
inorganic chemicals ,Peat ,Inorganic chemistry ,lcsh:Life ,chemistry.chemical_element ,[SDU.ASTR] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,Chloride ,Pore water pressure ,lcsh:QH540-549.5 ,Dissolved organic carbon ,medicine ,Chlorine ,Substrate (aquarium) ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Bromine ,Chemistry ,[SDU.OCEAN] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean, Atmosphere ,lcsh:QE1-996.5 ,[SDU.ENVI] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Continental interfaces, environment ,lcsh:Geology ,lcsh:QH501-531 ,[PHYS.ASTR.CO] Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph]/Cosmology and Extra-Galactic Astrophysics [astro-ph.CO] ,Environmental chemistry ,Halogen ,[SDU.STU] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences ,lcsh:Ecology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Halogens are strongly enriched in peat and peatlands and such they are one of their largest active terrestrial reservoir. The enrichment of halogens in peat is mainly attributed to the formation of organohalogens and climatically controlled humification processes. However, little is known about release of halogens from the peat substrate and the distribution of halogens in the peat pore water. In this study we have investigated the distribution of chlorine, bromine and iodine in pore water of three pristine peat bogs located in the Magellanic Moorlands, southern Chile. Peat pore waters were collected using a sipping technique, which allows in situ sampling down to a depth greater than 6m. Halogens and halogen species in pore water were determined by ion-chromatography (IC) (chlorine) and IC-ICP-MS (bromine and iodine). Results show that halogen concentrations in pore water are 15–30 times higher than in rainwater. Mean concentrations of chlorine, bromine and iodine in pore water were 7–15 mg l−1, 56–123 μg l−1, and 10–20 μg l−1, which correspond to mean proportions of 10–15%, 1–2.3% and 0.5–2.2% of total concentrations in peat, respectively. Organobromine and organoiodine were the predominant species in pore waters, whereas chlorine in pore water was mostly chloride. Advection and diffusion of halogens were found to be generally low and halogen concentrations appear to reflect release from the peat substrate. Release of bromine and iodine from peat depend on the degree of peat degradation, whereas this relationship is weak for chlorine. Relatively higher release of bromine and iodine was observed in less degraded peat sections, where the release of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) was also the most intensive. It has been concluded that the release of halogenated dissolved organic matter (DOM) is the predominant mechanism of iodine and bromine release from peat. more...
- Published
- 2018
27. Changes in Rumen Microbial Profiles and Subcutaneous Fat Composition When Feeding Extruded Flaxseed Mixed With or Before Hay
- Author
-
Payam Vahmani, Michael E R Dugan, Tim A. McAllister, Hee Eun Yang, and Renee M. Petri
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Linolenic acid ,Environmental Science and Management ,Linoleic acid ,030106 microbiology ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,Vaccenic acid ,Total mixed ration ,Microbiology ,lcsh:Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Rumen ,flaxseed ,Food science ,16S rRNA ,bacteria ,Nutrition ,Original Research ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,rumen ,Rumenic acid ,Fatty acid ,DNA ,CLA ,chemistry ,Soil Sciences ,Hay ,biohydrogenation ,vaccenic acid - Abstract
Extruded flaxseed (25%) and ground hay (75%) were each fed (DM basis) either together in a total mixed ration (TMR) or as flaxseed first followed by hay (non-TMR) to three pens of eight crossbred steers (n = 24 per diet) for 240 days. Compared to TMR, feeding non-TMR enriched subcutaneous fat with α-linolenic acid (ALA, 18:3n-3) and its biohydrogenation intermediates including vaccenic acid [trans(t)11-18:1], rumenic acid [cis(c)9,t11-conjugated linoleic acid] and conjugated linolenic acid (CLnA). Rumen microbial analysis using QIIME indicated that 14 genera differed (P ≤ 0.05) between TMR and the non-TMR. Azoarcus and Streptococcus were the only genera which increased in relative abundance in the TMR fed steers, whereas Methanimicrococcus, Moryella, Prevotella, Succiniclasticum, Succinivibrio, Suttenella, and TG5 decreased as compared to steers fed the non-TMR. Among these, Moryella, Succiniclasticum, and Succinivibrio, spp. were correlated with fatty acid profiles, specifically intermediates believed to be components of the major biohydrogenation pathway for ALA (i.e., t11, c15-18:2, c9, t11, c15-18:3, and total CLnA). In addition, negative correlations were found between the less abundant Ruminoccocus-like OTU60 and major ALA biohydrogenation intermediates, as well as positive correlations with several intermediates from alternative pathways that did not involve the formation of trans 11 double bonds. The present results suggest a number of pathways for ALA biohydrogenation are operating concurrently in the rumen, with their balance being influenced by diet and driven by less abundant species rather than members of the core bacterial population. more...
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Transglycosylated Starch Modulates the Gut Microbiome and Expression of Genes Related to Lipid Synthesis in Liver and Adipose Tissue of Pigs
- Author
-
Monica A. Newman, Barbara U. Metzler-Zebeli, Dietmar Grüll, Qendrim Zebeli, and Renee M. Petri
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,pig ,medicine.medical_specialty ,microbial metabolites ,satiety ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,Adipose tissue ,Gut flora ,Microbiology ,lcsh:Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cecum ,Adipocyte ,Internal medicine ,lipid metabolism ,medicine ,Original Research ,ACACA ,biology ,resistant starch type 4 ,gut microbiota ,Ruminococcus ,Hindgut ,Lipid metabolism ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,gene expression ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,incretins - Abstract
Dietary inclusion of resistant starches can promote host health through modulation of the gastrointestinal microbiota, short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) profiles, and lipid metabolism. This study investigated the impact of a transglycosylated cornstarch (TGS) on gastric, ileal, cecal, proximal-colonic, and mid-colonic bacterial community profiles and fermentation metabolites using a growing pig model. It additionally evaluated the effect of TGS on the expression of host genes related to glucose and SCFA absorption, incretins, and satiety in the gut as well as host genes related to lipid metabolism in hepatic and adipose tissue. Sixteen growing pigs (4 months of age) were fed either a TGS or control (CON) diet for 11 days. Bacterial profiles were determined via Illumina MiSeq sequencing of the V3–5 region of the 16S rRNA gene, whereas SCFA and gene expression were measured using gas chromatography and reverse transcription-quantitative PCR. Megasphaera, which was increased at all gut sites, began to benefit from TGS feeding in gastric digesta, likely through cross-feeding with other microbes, such as Lactobacillus. Shifts in the bacterial profiles from dietary TGS consumption in the cecum, proximal colon, and mid colon were similar. Relative abundances of Ruminococcus and unclassified Ruminococcaceae genus were lower, whereas that of unclassified Veillonellaceae genus was higher in TGS- compared to CON-fed pigs (p < 0.05). TGS consumption also increased (p < 0.05) concentrations of SCFA, especially propionate, and lactate in the distal hindgut compared to the CON diet which might have up-regulated GLP1 expression in the cecum (p < 0.05) and mid colon compared to the control diet (p < 0.10). TGS-fed pigs showed increased hepatic and decreased adipocyte expression of genes for lipid synthesis (FASN, SREBP1, and ACACA) compared to CON-fed pigs, which may be related to postprandial portal nutrient flow and reduced systemic insulin signaling. Overall, our data show that TGS consumption may affect gastrointestinal bacterial signaling, caused by changes in gut bacterial profiles and the action of propionate, and host lipid metabolism. more...
- Published
- 2018
29. Study of Flare Assessment in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Based on Paper Patients
- Author
-
Anca Askanase, Dafna D. Gladman, J. Romero-Diaz, Munther A. Khamashta, Asad Zoma, Diane L. Kamen, Susan Manzi, R. van Vollenhoven, Caroline Gordon, Murray B. Urowitz, Kristjan Steinsson, Jill P. Buyon, Ricard Cervera, Murat Inanc, Mary Anne Dooley, Jorge Sanchez-Guerrero, J. Sturgess, Christine A. Peschken, Guillermo Ruiz-Irastorza, Ellen M. Ginzler, Gunnar Sturfelt, J G Hanly, Ola Nived, Ann E. Clarke, David A. Isenberg, Joan T. Merrill, Anisur Rahman, Cynthia Aranow, Rosalind Ramsey-Goldman, Kenneth C. Kalunian, Daniel J. Wallace, B. Sang-Cheol, S. Sam Lim, Paul R. Fortin, Ian N. Bruce, Elizabeth Allen, Sasha Bernatsky, Søren Jacobsen, M. Petri, AII - Inflammatory diseases, Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, Rheumatology, and CCA - Cancer immunology more...
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Severity of Illness Index ,Systemic Lupus Erythematosus ,Medical Records ,law.invention ,Decision Support Techniques ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Case mix index ,Rheumatology ,law ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Observer Variation ,Systemic lupus erythematosus ,Lupus erythematosus ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,030104 developmental biology ,Predictive value of tests ,Disease Progression ,Original Article ,Clinical Competence ,business ,Kappa ,Flare - Abstract
Objective: To determine the level of agreement of disease flare severity (distinguishing severe, moderate, and mild flare and persistent disease activity) in a large paper-patient exercise involving 988 individual cases of systemic lupus erythematosus. Methods: A total of 988 individual lupus case histories were assessed by 3 individual physicians. Complete agreement about the degree of flare (or persistent disease activity) was obtained in 451 cases (46%), and these provided the reference standard for the second part of the study. This component used 3 flare activity instruments (the British Isles Lupus Assessment Group [BILAG] 2004, Safety of Estrogens in Lupus Erythematosus National Assessment [SELENA] flare index [SFI] and the revised SELENA flare index [rSFI]). The 451 patient case histories were distributed to 18 pairs of physicians, carefully randomized in a manner designed to ensure a fair case mix and equal distribution of flare according to severity. Results: The 3-physician assessment of flare matched the level of flare using the 3 indices, with 67% for BILAG 2004, 72% for SFI, and 70% for rSFI. The corresponding weighted kappa coefficients for each instrument were 0.82, 0.59, and 0.74, respectively. We undertook a detailed analysis of the discrepant cases and several factors emerged, including a tendency to score moderate flares as severe and persistent activity as flare, especially when the SFI and rSFI instruments were used. Overscoring was also driven by scoring treatment change as flare, even if there were no new or worsening clinical features. Conclusion: Given the complexity of assessing lupus flare, we were encouraged by the overall results reported. However, the problem of capturing lupus flare accurately is not completely solved. more...
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Oral abstracts 1: SpondyloarthropathiesO1. Detecting axial spondyloarthritis amongst primary care back pain referrals
- Author
-
C. Harris, D. Remedios, T. Aptowitzer, A. Keat, L. Hamilton, G. Guile, A. Belkhiri, D. Newman, A. Toms, A. Macgregor, K. Gaffney, L. Morton, G. T. Jones, A. G. MacDonald, C. Downham, G. J. Macfarlane, W. Tillett, D. Jadon, D. Wallis, L. Costa, N. Waldron, N. Griffith, C. Cavill, E. Korendowych, C. de Vries, N. McHugh, O. Iaremenko, D. Fedkov, P. Emery, D. Baeten, J. Sieper, J. Braun, D. van der Heijde, I. McInnes, J. Van Laar, R. Landewe, B. P. Wordsworth, J. Wollenhaupt, H. Kellner, I. Paramarta, A. Bertolino, A. M. Wright, W. Hueber, N. Sofat, C. Smee, M. Hermansson, J. Wajed, K. Sanyal, P. Kiely, M. Howard, F. A. Howe, T. R. Barrick, A. M. Abraham, M. S. Pearce, K. D. Mann, R. M. Francis, F. Birrell, A. Carr, I. Macleod, W.-F. Ng, A. Kavanaugh, C. Chattopadhyay, D. Gladman, P. Mease, G. Krueger, W. Xu, N. Goldstein, A. Beutler, X. Baraliakos, D. D. Laurent, S. Gsteiger, P. G. Conaghan, C. G. Peterfy, J. DiCarlo, E. Olech, A. R. Alberts, J. A. Alper, J. Devenport, A. M. Anisfeld, O. M. Troum, P. Cooper, M. Gimpel, G. Deakin, K. Jameson, M. Godtschailk, S. Gadola, M. Stokes, C. Cooper, C. Gordon, K. Kalunian, M. Petri, V. Strand, B. Kilgallen, A. Barry, D. Wallace, C. A. Flurey, M. Morris, J. Pollock, R. Hughes, P. Richards, and S. Hewlett more...
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ankylosing spondylitis ,Rheumatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,medicine.disease ,business - Abstract
Background: Inflammatory back pain (IBP) is an early feature of ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and its detection offers the prospect of early diagnosis of AS. However, since back pain is very common but only a very small minority of back pain sufferers have ASpA or AS, screening of back pain sufferers for AS is problematic. In early disease radiographs are often normal so that fulfilment of diagnostic criteria for AS is impossible though a diagnosis of axial SpA can be made if MRI evidence of sacroiliitis is present. This pilot study was designed to indicate whether a cost-effective pick up rate for ASpA/early AS could be achieved by identifying adults with IBP stratified on the basis of age. Methods: Patients aged between 18 and 45 years who were referred to a hospital physiotherapy service with back pain of more than 3 months duration were assessed for IBP. All were asked to complete a questionnaire based on the Berlin IBP criteria. Those who fulfilled IBP criteria were also asked to complete a second short questionnaire enquiring about SpA comorbidities, to have a blood test for HLA-B27 and CRP level and to undergo an MRI scan of the sacroiliac joints. This was a limited scan, using STIR, diffusion-weighted, T1 and T2 sequences of the sacroiliac joints to minimize time in the scanner and cost. The study was funded by a research grant from Abbott Laboratories Ltd. Results: 50 sequential patients agreed to participate in the study and completed the IBP questionnaire. Of these 27 (54%) fulfilled criteria for IBP. Of these, 2 patients reported a history of an SpA comorbidity - 1 psoriasis; 1 ulcerative colitis - and 3 reported a family history of an SpA comorbidity - 2 psoriasis; 1 Crohn's disease. 4 were HLA-B27 positive, though results were not available for 7. Two patients had marginally raised CRP levels (6, 10 -NR ≤ 5). 19 agreed to undergo MRI scanning of the sacroiliac joints and lumbar spine; 4 scans were abnormal, showing evidence of bilateral sacroiliitis on STIR sequences. In all cases the changes met ASAS criteria but were limited. Of these 4 patients 3 were HLA-B27 positive but none gave a personal or family history of an SpA-associated comorbidity and all had normal CRP levels. Conclusions: This was a pilot study yielding only limited conclusions. However, it is clear that: Screening of patients referred for physiotherapy for IBP is straightforward, inexpensive and quick. It appears that IBP is more prevalent in young adults than overall population data suggest so that targeting this population may be efficient. IBP questionnaires could be administered routinely during a physiotherapy assessment. HLA-B27 testing in this group of patients with IBP is a suitable screening tool. The sacroiliac joint changes identified were mild and their prognostic significance is not yet clear so that the value of early screening needs further evaluation. Disclosure statement: C.H. received research funding for this study from Abbott. A.K. received research funding for this study, and speaker and consultancy fees, from Abbott. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest more...
- Published
- 2017
31. The prevalence and determinants of anti-DFS70 autoantibodies in an international inception cohort of systemic lupus erythematosus patients
- Author
-
Jill P. Buyon, Daniel J. Wallace, Marvin J. Fritzler, Murray B. Urowitz, Paul R. Fortin, Munther A. Khamashta, Ian N. Bruce, Sasha Bernatsky, M. Petri, Diane L. Kamen, Anca Askanase, Søren Jacobsen, Sang Cheol Bae, Y. St. Pierre, Mary Anne Dooley, Cynthia Aranow, Kristjan Steinsson, May Y. Choi, Anisur Rahman, John G. Hanly, Jorge Sanchez-Guerrero, Christine A. Peschken, Graciela S. Alarcón, Michael Mahler, S. Sam Lim, J. Romero-Diaz, Murat Inanc, Asad Zoma, R. van Vollenhoven, Caroline Gordon, Dafna D. Gladman, Ellen M. Ginzler, Guillermo Ruiz-Irastorza, Ola Nived, Susan Manzi, Rosalind Ramsey-Goldman, Ann E. Clarke, David A. Isenberg, Joan T. Merrill, Kenneth C. Kalunian, Manuel Ramos-Casals, AII - Inflammatory diseases, Rheumatology, Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, AMS - Amsterdam Movement Sciences, and AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity more...
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/MICRA ,Anti-nuclear antibody ,autoantibodies ,SLE ,Logistic regression ,DFS70 ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rheumatology ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,Medicine ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Autoantibodies ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,biology ,business.industry ,Autoantibody ,Odds ratio ,Antinuclear antibodies ,Logistic Models ,030104 developmental biology ,Manchester Institute for Collaborative Research on Ageing ,beta 2-Glycoprotein I ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cohort ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Female ,Antibody ,business ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Autoantibodies to dense fine speckles 70 (DFS70) are purported to rule out the diagnosis of SLE when they occur in the absence of other SLE-related autoantibodies. This study is the first to report the prevalence of anti-DFS70 in an early, multinational inception SLE cohort and examine demographic, clinical, and autoantibody associations. Patients were enrolled in the Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics (SLICC) inception cohort within 15 months of diagnosis. The association between anti-DFS70 and multiple parameters in 1137 patients was assessed using univariate and multivariate logistic regression. The frequency of anti-DFS70 was 7.1% (95% CI: 5.7–8.8%), while only 1.1% (95% CI: 0.6–1.9%) were monospecific for anti-DFS70. In multivariate analysis, patients with musculoskeletal activity (Odds Ratio (OR) 1.24 [95% CI: 1.10, 1.41]) or with anti-β2 glycoprotein 1 (OR 2.17 [95% CI: 1.22, 3.87]) were more likely and patients with anti-dsDNA (OR 0.53 [95% CI: 0.31, 0.92]) or anti-SSB/La (OR 0.25 [95% CI: 0.08, 0.81]) were less likely to have anti-DFS70. In this study, the prevalence of anti-DFS70 was higher than the range previously published for adult SLE (7.1 versus 0–2.8%) and was associated with musculoskeletal activity and anti-β2 glycoprotein 1 autoantibodies. However, ‘monospecific’ anti-DFS70 autoantibodies were rare (1.1%) and therefore may be helpful to discriminate between ANA-positive healthy individuals and SLE. more...
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. A framework for remission in SLE: Consensus findings from a large international task force on definitions of remission in SLE (DORIS)
- Author
-
Van Vollenhoven, R. Voskuyl, A. Bertsias, G. Aranow, C. Aringer, M. Arnaud, L. Askanase, A. Balážová, P. Bonfa, E. Bootsma, H. Boumpas, D. Bruce, I. Cervera, R. Clarke, A. Coney, C. Costedoat-Chalumeau, N. Czirják, L. Derksen, R. Doria, A. Dörner, T. Fischer-Betz, R. Fritsch-Stork, R. Gordon, C. Graninger, W. Györi, N. Houssiau, F. Isenberg, D. Jacobsen, S. Jayne, D. Kuhn, A. Le Guern, V. Lerstrøm, K. Levy, R. MacHado-Ribeiro, F. Mariette, X. Missaykeh, J. Morand, E. Mosca, M. Inanc, M. Navarra, S. Neumann, I. Olesinska, M. Petri, M. Rahman, A. Rekvig, O.P. Rovensky, J. Shoenfeld, Y. Smolen, J. Tincani, A. Urowitz, M. Van Leeuw, B. Vasconcelos, C. Voss, A. Werth, V.P. Zakharova, H. Zoma, A. Schneider, M. Ward, M. more...
- Subjects
skin and connective tissue diseases - Abstract
Objectives Treat-to-target recommendations have identified 'remission' as a target in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), but recognise that there is no universally accepted definition for this. Therefore, we initiated a process to achieve consensus on potential definitions for remission in SLE. Methods An international task force of 60 specialists and patient representatives participated in preparatory exercises, a face-to-face meeting and follow-up electronic voting. The level for agreement was set at 90%. Results The task force agreed on eight key statements regarding remission in SLE and three principles to guide the further development of remission definitions: 1. Definitions of remission will be worded as follows: remission in SLE is a durable state characterised by ...................... (reference to symptoms, signs, routine labs). 2. For defining remission, a validated index must be used, for example, clinical systemic lupus erythematosus disease activity index (SLEDAI)=0, British Isles lupus assessment group (BILAG) 2004 D/E only, clinical European consensus lupus outcome measure (ECLAM)=0; with routine laboratory assessments included, and supplemented with physician's global assessment. 3. Distinction is made between remission off and on therapy: remission off therapy requires the patient to be on no other treatment for SLE than maintenance antimalarials; and remission on therapy allows patients to be on stable maintenance antimalarials, low-dose corticosteroids (prednisone ≤5 mg/day), maintenance immunosuppressives and/or maintenance biologics. The task force also agreed that the most appropriate outcomes (dependent variables) for testing the prognostic value (construct validity) of potential remission definitions are: death, damage, flares and measures of health-related quality of life. Conclusions The work of this international task force provides a framework for testing different definitions of remission against long-term outcomes. © Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. more...
- Published
- 2017
33. Challenges in QCD matter physics --The scientific programme of the Compressed Baryonic Matter experiment at FAIR
- Author
-
V. Jakovlev, R. Talukdar, Alberica Toia, V.M. Golovatyuk, P. Ivanov, Abhijit Bhattacharyya, M. Kohn, Yu. Onishchuk, M. Tanha, Suman Sau, E. Friske, L. Kumar, A. Roy, Valerica Baban, Yaping Wang, V. Blinov, D. Svirida, Pradip Kumar Sahu, D. Dementiev, A. Gomez Ramirez, M. Petris, Ming Shao, D. Blau, Yu. P. Tsyupa, A. Rost, D. P. Mahapatra, Y. F. Ryabov, D. Wielanek, Anju Bhasin, C. Lara, Saikat Biswas, Shusu Shi, E. P. Akishina, F. Seck, V. Jain, Hongfang Chen, O. Malyatina, B. Komkov, I. Carevic, V. Baublis, Raghunath Sahoo, D. Normanov, Tetyana Galatyuk, S. Amar-Youcef, Cristian Andrei, Yu. I. Bocharov, A. Vorobiev, M. Strikhanov, Y. Leifels, O. Petukhov, A. Petrovici, Dezso Varga, Oana Ristea, W. Verhoeven, J. Sánchez Rosado, Victor Golovtsov, S. Belogurov, E. Kryshen, M. Dey, Johannes Lehrbach, Y. P. Viyogi, A. V. Kazantsev, A. Himmi, M. Anđelić, Oleg Bezshyyko, Cheng Li, A. Raportirenko, Xu Cai, C. Kreidl, Daniela Bartos, T. Balog, Volker Lindenstruth, A. Chaus, M. Mohisin Khan, Mate Csanad, J. Pluta, A. Senger, Matthias Balzer, Christoph Blume, H. Appelshäuser, Di Jiang, B. Kämpfer, A. Lymanets, I. Berceanu, S. Gorbunov, S. Sarangi, V. Pospíšil, N. Heine, A. Veshikov, Yuanjing Li, V. Kushpil, Ch. Klein-Bösing, I. Selyuzhenkov, S. Razin, Guofeng Song, D. Belyakov, G. Berezin, V. Kyva, Andrei Ionut Herghelegiu, Heiko Engel, K. Schmidt, V. Klochkov, Alla Maevskaya, P.-A. Loizeau, L. Golinka-Bezshyyko, V.A. Karnaukhov, J. Bendarouach, C. Xiang, A.D. Sheremetiev, V. F. Chepurnov, Hr Schmidt, Zbigniew Sosin, M. Singla, I. Momot, O. Andreeva, I. Alexandrov, R. N. Singaraju, S. Avdeev, Evgeny Alexandrov, R. Płaneta, Gennady Ososkov, D. Hutter, A. Reinefeld, C.J. Schmidt, Andrei Dorokhov, Vikram Patel, K.-H. Becker, N. Kurepin, E. Lebedeva, C. P. Singh, Y. K. Sun, K. Jaaskelainen, Andras Szabo, J. Rożynek, Sanjeev Singh Sambyal, V. S. Negi, Krzysztof Piasecki, W. F. J. Müller, M. Baznat, N. Miftakhov, Feng Liu, N. Ahmad, L. Skoda, G. D. Kekelidze, Vladimir Ivanov, Krzysztof Kasinski, Xi-Wei Wang, D. Miskowiec, Serguei Volkov, Sudhir Raniwala, I. Tsakov, A. Nedosekin, Peter Senger, T. Barczyk, S. Dubnichka, C. Ristea, N.G. Tuturas, E. V. Atkin, D. Karmanov, W. Zabolotny, Tatiana Karavicheva, Subhasis Samanta, Yu.V. Zanevsky, S. Bähr, O. Batenkov, M. Petrovici, B. Milanovic, Muhammad Farooq, R. Karabowicz, I. Vassiliev, P. Staszel, Sheng Dong, Udo Wolfgang Kebschull, P. Koczon, Goutam Gangopadhyay, P. Zumbruch, Vladimir Plujko, Y. Berdnikov, Shue He, Volodymyr Vovchenko, V. Mialkovski, W. Zipper, T. Bus, O. Tarassenkova, S. K. Sahu, V. Militsija, Yu. Zaitsev, C. Müntz, S. K. Ghosh, Sushanta Tripathy, E. Rostchin, V. Shumikhin, I. Fröhlich, I. Panasenko, A. Laso Garcia, L. Dutka, Yu.S. Anisimov, B. Linnik, T. Tischler, A. Ivashkin, R. Kotte, Calin Besliu, T. Akishina, Rashmi Raniwala, Sheng Zheng, K. Koch, J. Kunkel, A. Shabunov, E. Lobanova, Wojciech Kucewicz, T. Breitner, M. Al-Turany, R. P. Adak, Claudiu Cornel Schiaua, S. Masciocchi, Zhongbao Yin, Xinjie Huang, Jens Wiechula, Nu Xu, I. Kisel, Christian Sturm, T. Mahmoud, V. Kalinin, A. Abuhoza, Mohd Danish Azmi, P. Zrelov, Jing Zhou, M. Dželalija, C. Deveaux, M. Goffe, Ke-Jun Wu, S. Strohauer, S. Bashir, D. Argintaru, B. Heß, A. Turowiecki, M. B. Golubeva, F. Ahmad, S. Gläßel, V. Plotnikov, Manuel Penschuck, Supriya Das, Grzegorz Kasprowicz, Vladislav Manko, O. Vasylyev, D. Kresan, L. Kudin, Yu. V. Gusakov, Dongdong Hu, Vladimir Nikulin, M. Ivanov, D. Gottschalk, Karl-Heinz Kampert, A. Kolosova, G. Caragheorgheopol, K. Dey, K. Mikhailov, Anand Kumar Dubey, J. Scholten, S. P. D. Figuli, T. Blank, Ajit Kumar, Vladimir Peshekhonov, Igor Pshenichnov, E. Badura, Michael Deveaux, I. Rostovtseva, M. Kiš, Jürgen Becker, Evgeny Karpechev, B. W. Kolb, Valery Pugatch, Xiaofeng Luo, I. Som, E. Ovcharenko, F.F. Guber, H. Büsching, H. Cherif, N. R. Panda, Zubayer Ahammed, R. Najman, Fouad Rami, M. Gumiński, J. Pieper, Jerzy Gajda, G. Kozlov, H. Jahan, A. Drozd, V. Butuzov, Joachim Stroth, I. K. Yoo, Thomas Janson, M. Petri, R. Holzmann, D. Finogeev, S. Golovnya, Ping Cao, E. Malankin, Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, L. Meder, Junfeng Yang, Lei Zhao, C. Simon, S. Kuznetsov, I. Valin, M. Zyzak, H. Hartmann, T. Satława, Yi Wang, Anton Andronic, Daicui Zhou, Zebo Tang, M. Prokudin, V. Saveliev, Qiyan Li, I. M. Deppner, Mahitosh Mandal, F. Uhlig, J. A. Lucio Martínez, J. Book, L. Mik, S. Schatral, S. K. Pal, A. Petrovskiy, J. Pietraszko, B. Debnath, E. Usenko, O. Svoboda, Gy. Wolf, V.V. Elsha, J. Lehnert, Pengfei Lyu, S. Seddiki, Peter Fischer, Huanhuan Fan, D. Doering, J. Frühauf, C. Wendisch, Yu Zhang, V. Kozlov, P. Tlustý, Piotr Otfinowski, N. Baranova, Sergey Kiselev, J. Rautenberg, Dmitry Mal'kevich, I. Kadenko, I. Lobanov, Mikhail Zhalov, A. Rodriguez Rodriguez, D. Emschermann, Vikas Singhal, Pavel Akishin, M. Bach, P. Kravtsov, X. Zhu, C. Nandi, I. Korolko, Rongxing Yang, E. Nandy, D. Ivanischev, Anil Prakash, A. Semennikov, I. E. Yushmanov, S. Parzhitskiy, M. Vznuzdaev, A. Khvorostukhin, A. Kiryakov, Soma Mukherjee, LuYao Chen, M. Pugach, Piotr Kmon, J. Gebelein, V. Kleipa, C. Bergmann, Kai Schweda, S. Rabtsun, Victor Ivanov, Tivadar Kiss, M. Dreschmann, I. G. Alekseev, A. K. Kurilkin, A. Volochniuk, E. Krebs, A. Lebedev, V. Kramarenko, N. Topil'skaya, S. Das, S. Lebedev, S. Querchfeld, Madan M. Aggarwal, N.I. Zamiatin, Amrendra K. Singh, Swagata Mandal, A. Khanzadeev, C. Simons, Gilles Claus, U. Frankenfeld, V.V. Ivanov, A. Chernogorov, Pascal Dillenseger, V. Dobyrn, Z. Dubnichkova, S. Löchner, Bhartendu K. Singh, S. Ahmad, Rishat Sultanov, J. Kallunkathariyil, A. Wieloch, T. Matulewicz, R. Berendes, A. Shabanov, Saniya Khan, V. Friese, Anik Gupta, L. Kochenda, M. Kirejczyk, Pavel Kisel, Amlan Chakrabarti, Ashwini Kumar, Michal Koziel, A. Berdnikov, A. Sadovsky, T. O. Ablyazimov, S. Mahajan, M. Merkin, Robert Szczygiel, C. Pauly, Krzysztof Poźniak, F. Roether, Alexey Kurepin, Alexander Voronin, A. Bubak, Nikolai Shumeiko, Nicolas Winckler, A. V. Kryanev, Andrey Reshetin, A. Simakov, Sukalyan Chattopadhyay, E. M. Ilgenfritz, B. Sikora, Jihye Song, J. Hehner, Zhi Deng, M. Irfan, J. Saini, S. A. Lone, L. Naumann, D. Eschweiler, A. M. Marin Garcia, P. Kähler, O. Derenovskaya, A.P. Ierusalimov, Alexandru Jipa, K. Agarwal, T. Tolyhi, H. Malygina, Xingming Fan, Amalia Pop, Dmitry Golubkov, E. M. Verbitskaya, L. Radulescu, Ryszard S. Romaniuk, D. Pfeifer, Yifei Zhang, Rajarshi Ray, V. Zryuev, M. Teklishyn, M. Träger, S. Morozov, H. Flemming, A. Oancea, A. Wilms, P. Ghosh, A. Grzeszczuk, V. Mikhaylov, Patrick Simon Reichelt, Ankhi Roy, Sanguk Won, Vladimir Samsonov, T. Esanu, V. Akishina, D.V. Peshekhonov, A.I. Zinchenko, M. Żoładź, Xin Li, I. Sibiryak, J. Wüstenfeld, Aleksey Voronin, M. Korolev, Guangming Huang, A. Kugler, E. Kaptur, J. Michel, J. Tarasiuk, Manjit Kaur, A. Bychkov, F. Lemke, Bekhzod S Yuldashev, T. K. Bhattacharyya, S. Gorokhov, F. Schintke, P. Klaus, Adrian Byszuk, Ionel Lazanu, Dong Wang, Michael Dürr, M. Krieger, H. Deppe, Sibaji Raha, O. Sander, S. Kowalski, K. Wiśniewski, Alexander Malakhov, I. Filozova, Shengqin Feng, M. Calin, S. Reinecke, V. Kucher, M. Weber, A. Kovalchuk, V. Petráček, M. Adamczyk, K.K. Gudima, Johannes Peter Wessels, P. Sitzmann, J. Markert, V. K. Eremin, Alexandru Bercuci, Marc Winter, Mateusz Baszczyk, M.I. Ciobanu, E. Bao, M. Kuc, U. Brüning, O. V. Fateev, Piotr Maj, J. de Cuveland, M. G. Târzilă, Pavel Larionov, R. Averbeck, Jianping Cheng, Jacek Rauza, C. E. Muñoz Castillo, N. D'Ascenzo, O. Bertini, Wendi Deng, G. Kretschmar, I. Skwira-Chalot, W. Niebur, K. Oh, V. P. Ladygin, T. Morhardt, C. Höhne, M. G. Wiebusch, Partha Pratim Bhaduri, Dong Han, Oleg Karavichev, N. Herrmann, R. Visinka, F. Constantin, C. García Chávez, J. Brzychczyk, Sidharth Kumar Prasad, D. Soyk, V. V. Kirakosyan, W. Koenig, D. Bertini, Z. Majka, F. Khasanov, J. Eschke, P. Gryboś, E. Lavrik, V. Cătănescu, K. Siwek-Wilczyńska, P. K. Kurilkin, J.M. Heuser, Adeel Akram, Yu. Murin, Alexander Akindinov, A. K. Bhati, I. Kres, J. Förtsch, Rafal Kleczek, Jiajun Zheng, S. Manz, T. K. Nayak, Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien (IPHC), Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), CBM, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA), and Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) more...
- Subjects
J/psi(3100) ,Phase transition ,matter: interaction ,Hadron ,Nuclear Theory ,hypernucleus ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,Critical point (thermodynamics) ,transport theory ,hadron: gas ,Nuclear Experiment ,neutron star ,QCD matter ,Brookhaven RHIC Coll ,quark gluon: plasma ,Physics ,Large Hadron Collider ,fireball ,elliptic flow ,strong interaction ,Observable ,heavy ion ,CERN LHC Coll ,QCD matter, Quark-Gluon-Plasma (QGP), QCD phase diagram, strong interaction, hadronic matter, partonic matte, heavy-ion ,2-4.9 GeV/nucleon ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,CBM ,charmonium ,[PHYS.NUCL]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Theory [nucl-th] ,Strong interaction ,review ,nonperturbative ,[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex] ,symmetry: chiral ,quantum chromodynamics: critical phenomena ,strangeness ,0103 physical sciences ,density: high ,Darmstadt GSI FAIR ,structure ,010306 general physics ,equation of state ,quantum chromodynamics: matter ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,nucleus ,temperature: high ,baryon ,Neutron star ,Automatic Keywords ,HADES ,charm - Abstract
International audience; Substantial experimental and theoretical efforts worldwide are devoted to explore the phase diagram of strongly interacting matter. At LHC and top RHIC energies, QCD matter is studied at very high temperatures and nearly vanishing net-baryon densities. There is evidence that a Quark-Gluon-Plasma (QGP) was created at experiments at RHIC and LHC. The transition from the QGP back to the hadron gas is found to be a smooth cross over. For larger net-baryon densities and lower temperatures, it is expected that the QCD phase diagram exhibits a rich structure, such as a first-order phase transition between hadronic and partonic matter which terminates in a critical point, or exotic phases like quarkyonic matter. The discovery of these landmarks would be a breakthrough in our understanding of the strong interaction and is therefore in the focus of various high-energy heavy-ion research programs. The Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment at FAIR will play a unique role in the exploration of the QCD phase diagram in the region of high net-baryon densities, because it is designed to run at unprecedented interaction rates. High-rate operation is the key prerequisite for high-precision measurements of multi-differential observables and of rare diagnostic probes which are sensitive to the dense phase of the nuclear fireball. The goal of the CBM experiment at SIS100 ( $\sqrt{s_{NN}}=$ 2.7--4.9 GeV) is to discover fundamental properties of QCD matter: the phase structure at large baryon-chemical potentials ( $\mu_B > 500$ MeV), effects of chiral symmetry, and the equation of state at high density as it is expected to occur in the core of neutron stars. In this article, we review the motivation for and the physics programme of CBM, including activities before the start of data taking in 2024, in the context of the worldwide efforts to explore high-density QCD matter. more...
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Nuclear astrophysics with radioactive ions at FAIR
- Author
-
R Reifarth, S Altstadt, K Göbel, T Heftrich, M Heil, A Koloczek, C Langer, R Plag, M Pohl, K Sonnabend, M Weigand, T Adachi, F Aksouh, J Al-Khalili, M AlGarawi, S AlGhamdi, G Alkhazov, N Alkhomashi, H Alvarez-Pol, R Alvarez-Rodriguez, V Andreev, B Andrei, L Atar, T Aumann, V Avdeichikov, C Bacri, S Bagchi, C Barbieri, S Beceiro, C Beck, C Beinrucker, G Belier, D Bemmerer, M Bendel, J Benlliure, G Benzoni, R Berjillos, D Bertini, C Bertulani, S Bishop, N Blasi, T Bloch, Y Blumenfeld, A Bonaccorso, K Boretzky, A Botvina, A Boudard, P Boutachkov, I Boztosun, A Bracco, S Brambilla, J Briz Monago, M Caamano, C Caesar, F Camera, E Casarejos, W Catford, J Cederkall, B Cederwall, M Chartier, A Chatillon, M Cherciu, L Chulkov, P Coleman-Smith, D Cortina-Gil, F Crespi, R Crespo, J Cresswell, M Csatlós, F Déchery, B Davids, T Davinson, V Derya, P Detistov, P Diaz Fernandez, D DiJulio, S Dmitry, D Doré, J Dueñas, E Dupont, P Egelhof, I Egorova, Z Elekes, J Enders, J Endres, S Ershov, O Ershova, B Fernandez-Dominguez, A Fetisov, E Fiori, A Fomichev, M Fonseca, L Fraile, M Freer, J Friese, M G. Borge, D Galaviz Redondo, S Gannon, U Garg, I Gasparic, L Gasques, B Gastineau, H Geissel, R Gernhäuser, T Ghosh, M Gilbert, J Glorius, P Golubev, A Gorshkov, A Gourishetty, L Grigorenko, J Gulyas, M Haiduc, F Hammache, M Harakeh, M Hass, M Heine, A Hennig, A Henriques, R Herzberg, M Holl, A Ignatov, A Ignatyuk, S Ilieva, M Ivanov, N Iwasa, B Jakobsson, H Johansson, B Jonson, P Joshi, A Junghans, B Jurado, G Körner, N Kalantar, R Kanungo, A Kelic-Heil, K Kezzar, E Khan, A Khanzadeev, O Kiselev, M Kogimtzis, D Körper, S Kräckmann, T Kröll, R Krücken, A Krasznahorkay, J Kratz, D Kresan, T Krings, A Krumbholz, S Krupko, R Kulessa, S Kumar, N Kurz, E Kuzmin, M Labiche, K Langanke, I Lazarus, T Le Bleis, C Lederer, A Lemasson, R Lemmon, V Liberati, Y Litvinov, B Löher, J Lopez Herraiz, G Münzenberg, J Machado, E Maev, K Mahata, D Mancusi, J Marganiec, M Martinez Perez, V Marusov, D Mengoni, B Million, V Morcelle, O Moreno, A Movsesyan, E Nacher, M Najafi, T Nakamura, F Naqvi, E Nikolski, T Nilsson, C Nociforo, P Nolan, B Novatsky, G Nyman, A Ornelas, R Palit, S Pandit, V Panin, C Paradela, V Parkar, S Paschalis, P Pawłowski, A Perea, J Pereira, C Petrache, M Petri, S Pickstone, N Pietralla, S Pietri, Y Pivovarov, P Potlog, A Prokofiev, G Rastrepina, T Rauscher, G Ribeiro, M Ricciardi, A Richter, C Rigollet, K Riisager, A Rios, C Ritter, T Rodriguez Frutos, J Rodriguez Vignote, M Röder, C Romig, D Rossi, P Roussel-Chomaz, P Rout, S Roy, P Söderström, M Saha Sarkar, S Sakuta, M Salsac, J Sampson, J Sanchez, del Rio Saez, J Sanchez Rosado, S Sanjari, P Sarriguren, A Sauerwein, D Savran, C Scheidenberger, H Scheit, S Schmidt, C Schmitt, L Schnorrenberger, P Schrock, R Schwengner, D Seddon, B Sherrill, A Shrivastava, S Sidorchuk, J Silva, H Simon, E Simpson, P Singh, D Slobodan, D Sohler, M Spieker, D Stach, E Stan, M Stanoiu, S Stepantsov, P Stevenson, F Strieder, L Stuhl, T Suda, K Sümmerer, B Streicher, J Taieb, M Takechi, I Tanihata, J Taylor, O Tengblad, G Ter-Akopian, S Terashima, P Teubig, R Thies, M Thoennessen, T Thomas, J Thornhill, G Thungstrom, J Timar, Y Togano, U Tomohiro, T Tornyi, J Tostevin, C Townsley, W Trautmann, T Trivedi, S Typel, E Uberseder, J Udias, T Uesaka, L Uvarov, Z Vajta, P Velho, V Vikhrov, M Volknandt, V Volkov, P von Neumann-Cosel, M von Schmid, A Wagner, F Wamers, H Weick, D Wells, L Westerberg, O Wieland, M Wiescher, C Wimmer, K Wimmer, J S Winfield, M Winkel, P Woods, R Wyss, D Yakorev, M Yavor, J Zamora Cardona, I Zartova, T Zerguerras, M Zgura, A Zhdanov, M Zhukov, M Zieblinski, A Zilges, K Zuber, Institut de Physique Nucléaire d'Orsay (IPNO), Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien (IPHC), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), DAM Île-de-France (DAM/DIF), Direction des Applications Militaires (DAM), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA), Centre d'Etudes Nucléaires de Bordeaux Gradignan (CENBG), Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux 1-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre de Sciences Nucléaires et de Sciences de la Matière (CSNSM), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), Grand Accélérateur National d'Ions Lourds (GANIL), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), Helmholtz International Center for FAIR, German Research Foundation, Helmholtz Association, SCOAP, Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Université de Haute-Alsace (UHA) Mulhouse - Colmar (Université de Haute-Alsace (UHA))-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux 1 (UB)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) more...
- Subjects
History ,Astrophysics and Astronomy ,FOS: Physical sciences ,[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex] ,nucl-ex ,01 natural sciences ,Education ,Nuclear physics ,Subatomär fysik ,Nucleosynthesis ,0103 physical sciences ,Subatomic Physics ,Nuclear astrophysics ,Fysik ,Neutron ,Nuclear Physics - Experiment ,ddc:530 ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,010306 general physics ,Nuclear Experiment ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Physics ,Radionuclide ,Isotope ,rp-process ,Computer Science Applications ,FAIR nuclear astrophysics radioactive ion beams ,Valley of stability ,r-process nucleosynthesis ,weak-interaction rates ,s-process ,stars ,supernovae ,light ,Physical Sciences ,Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research ,Física nuclear ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,[PHYS.ASTR]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,astro-ph.IM - Abstract
R. Reifarth et al: ; 12 págs.; 9 figs.; Open Access funded by Creative Commons Atribution Licence 3.0 ; Nuclear Physics in Astrophysics VI (NPA6), The nucleosynthesis of elements beyond iron is dominated by neutron captures in the s and r processes. However, 32 stable, proton-rich isotopes cannot be formed during those processes, because they are shielded from the s-process ow and r-process -decay chains. These nuclei are attributed to the p and rp process. For all those processes, current research in nuclear astrophysics addresses the need for more precise reaction data involving radioactive isotopes. Depending on the particular reaction, direct or inverse kinematics, forward or time-reversed direction are investigated to determine or at least to constrain the desired reaction cross sections. The Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) will oer unique, unprecedented opportunities to investigate many of the important reactions. The high yield of radioactive isotopes, even far away from the valley of stability, allows the investigation of isotopes involved in processes as exotic as the r or rp processes., This project was supported by the HGF Young Investigators Project VH-NG-327, EMMI, H4F, HGS-HIRe, JINA, NAVI, DFG and ATHENA. more...
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Theoretical tissue compartment inert gas pressures during a deep dive with and without deep decompression stops: a case analysis
- Author
-
Nadan M. Petri, Adrian Baddeley, Peter Buzzacott, Virginie Papadopoulou, and Folke Lind
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,Adult ,Decompression ,Male ,Nitrox ,Diving ,General Medicine ,Dive computer ,medicine.disease ,Decompression Sickness ,Noble Gases ,Trimix ,Decompression sickness ,Technical diving ,Deep diving ,medicine ,Environmental science ,Humans ,Maximum operating depth ,human activities ,Simulation ,Marine engineering - Abstract
Background: Deep decompression stops are increasingly common in recreational technical diving. Con-cerns exist that they shift decompression stress back into slower tissues. A diver recorded an exceptional exposure dive, with deeps stops, on a commercially available dive computer. Material and methods: Using the R package SCUBA tissue inert gas pressures in 17 Buhlmann (ZH-L16A) compartments were estimated from the dive computer recorded profile. The RGBM dive plan generated by the diver’s software was similarly interrogated, as was a third profile with reduced deep stops generated using the VPM-B/E model. Results: In this dive the combination of 5 gas switches appeared to ameliorate the effect of deep stops from 76 m depth. Conclusions: A higher-than-anticipated inert gas content in a decompression mixture, coupled with climbing 200 stairs post-decompression, appear possible risk factors for decompression sickness. Nonetheless, the physiological effect of deep decompression stops during exceptional exposure, even when diving with gas switches, remains urgently to be determined to improve safe decompression following exceptional exposures. Until algorithms utilising deep decompression stops are validated with human data, dive profiles incorporating deep decompression stops should be considered experimental.(Int Marit Health 2015; 66, 1: 1–7) more...
- Published
- 2015
36. The use of EXOGAM for in-beam spectroscopy of proton drip-line nuclei with radioactive ion beams
- Author
-
M. Petri, E.S. Paul, P.J. Nolan, A.J. Boston, H.C. Boston, R.J. Cooper, M.R. Dimmock, S. Gros, B.M. McGuirk, G. Turk, D. Guinet, Ph. Lautesse, M. Meyer, N. Redon, B. Rossé, Ch. Schmitt, O. Stézowski, S. Bhattacharyya, G. De France, G. Mukherjee, F. Rejmund, H. Savajols, J.N. Scheurer, J. Gál, J. Molnár, B.M. Nyakó, J. Timár, L. Zolnai, K. Juhász, A. Astier, I. Deloncle, M.G. Porquet, A. Prévost, V.F.E. Pucknell, R. Wadsworth, P. Joshi, G. La Rana, R. Moro, M. Trotta, E. Vardaci, G. Hackman, G.C. Ball, Oliver Lodge Laboratory, University of Liverpool, Institut de Physique Nucléaire de Lyon (IPNL), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), Grand Accélérateur National d'Ions Lourds (GANIL), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), Centre d'Etudes Nucléaires de Bordeaux Gradignan (CENBG), Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux 1-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institute for Nuclear Research and Nuclear Energy, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (BAS), Department of Information Technology, University of Debrecen, Centre de Spectrométrie Nucléaire et de Spectrométrie de Masse (CSNSM), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), STFC Daresbury Laboratory, Daresbury Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of York [York, UK], Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Sezione di Napoli (INFN, Sezione di Napoli), Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN), TRIUMF [Vancouver], EXOGAM, M., Petri, E. S., Paul, P. J., Nolan, A. J., Boston, H. C., Boston, R. J., Cooper, M. R., Dimmock, S., Gro, B. M., Mcguirk, G., Turk, D., Guinet, Lautesse, P. h., M., Meyer, N., Redon, B., Rossé, Schmitt, C. h., O., Stézowski, S., Bhattacharyya, G., De France, G., Mukherjee, F., Rejmund, H., Savajol, J. N., Scheurer, J., Gál, J., Molnár, B. M., Nyakó, J., Timár, L., Zolnai, K., Juhász, A., Astier, I., Deloncle, M. G., Porquet, A., Prévost, V. F. E., Pucknell, R., Wadsworth, P., Joshi, LA RANA, Giovanni, Moro, RENATA EMILIA MARIA, M., Trotta, Vardaci, Emanuele, G., Hackman, G. C. B. a. l., L., Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux 1 (UB)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), University of Debrecen Egyetem [Debrecen], and Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) more...
- Subjects
Radioactive ion beams ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Proton ,Fizikai tudományok ,[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex] ,01 natural sciences ,DIAMANT ,Nuclear physics ,EXOGAM ,Recoil ,Természettudományok ,0103 physical sciences ,proton drip-line nuclei ,010306 general physics ,Spectroscopy ,Nuclear Experiment ,Instrumentation ,Line (formation) ,Physics ,in-beam spectroscopy ,Spectrometer ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,DIAMANT array of CsI charged-particle detectors ,VAMOS ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,Segmented Clover germanium detector ,Linear polarisation ,Atomic physics ,Radioactive ion beam ,EXOGAM array of HPGe detectors ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
International audience; One of the first fusion–evaporation experiments using radioactive ion beams was performed at GANIL in order to study proton-rich nuclei of the light rare-earth region. The low production cross-section of the exotic species of interest, in combination with the low intensity of the beam and its induced background, demanded the use of a highly efficient experimental setup. This consisted of the EXOGAM γ-ray spectrometer coupled for the first time with both the DIAMANT charged-particle array and the VAMOS recoil spectrometer. In this report the experimental challenges of such studies will be discussed and the experimental achievements of the in-beam spectroscopy of proton drip-line nuclei using EXOGAM will be presented. more...
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. γ‐Spectroscopy and Radioactive Beams : How To Perform Channel Selection ?
- Author
-
B. Rossé, N. Redon, O. Stézowski, C.h. Schmitt, D. Guinet, M. Meyer, P.h. Lautesse, P. J. Nolan, A. J. Boston, R. Cooper, M. Dimmock, S. Gros, B. McGuirck, E. S. Paul, M. Petri, H. Scraggs, G. Turk, G. De France, S. Bhattachasyya, G. Mukherjee, F. Rejmund, M. Rejmund, H. Savajols, J. N. Scheurer, A. Astier, I. Deloncle, M. G. Porquet, A. Prévost, B. M. Nyakó, J. Gál, J. Molnár, J. Timár, L. Zolnai, K. Juhasz, R. Wadsworth, P. Joshi, LA RANA, GIOVANNI, MORO, RENATA EMILIA MARIA, M. Trotta, VARDACI, EMANUELE, G. Hackman, G. Ball, B., Rossé, N., Redon, O., Stézowski, Schmitt, C. h., D., Guinet, M., Meyer, Lautesse, P. h., P. J., Nolan, A. J., Boston, R., Cooper, M., Dimmock, S., Gro, B., Mcguirck, E. S., Paul, M., Petri, H., Scragg, G., Turk, G., De France, S., Bhattachasyya, G., Mukherjee, F., Rejmund, M., Rejmund, H., Savajol, J. N., Scheurer, A., Astier, I., Deloncle, M. G., Porquet, A., Prévost, B. M., Nyakó, J., Gál, J., Molnár, J., Timár, L., Zolnai, K., Juhasz, R., Wadsworth, P., Joshi, LA RANA, Giovanni, Moro, RENATA EMILIA MARIA, M., Trotta, Vardaci, Emanuele, G., Hackman, G., Ball, Institut de Physique Nucléaire de Lyon (IPNL), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), Grand Accélérateur National d'Ions Lourds (GANIL), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), Centre d'Etudes Nucléaires de Bordeaux Gradignan (CENBG), Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux 1-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre de Spectrométrie Nucléaire et de Spectrométrie de Masse (CSNSM), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), S.V. Harissopulos, P. Demetriou, E. Julin, SPIRAL, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université Sciences et Technologies - Bordeaux 1 (UB)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) more...
- Subjects
Physics ,29.30.Kv, 29.25.Rm ,radioactive ion beam ,Proton ,Spectrometer ,Channel (digital image) ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Detector ,Nuclear Theory ,Particle accelerator ,[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex] ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,Nuclear physics ,gamma-ray spectroscopy ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,Gamma spectroscopy ,sources of radioactive nuclei ,010306 general physics ,Spectroscopy ,Nuclear Experiment ,radioactive ion beams ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
International audience; An experiment has been performed using a SPIRAL $^{76}$Kr radioactive beam at GANIL to investigate rare-earth nuclei near the proton drip-line. The EXOGAM gamma array was coupled with the DIAMANT light charged-particle detector and the VAMOS spectrometer. We report here on the powerful of this setup to extract fusion-evaporation $\gamma$-rays from a large beam contamination. more...
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Characterization of the Core Rumen Microbiome in Cattle during Transition from Forage to Concentrate as Well as during and after an Acidotic Challenge
- Author
-
G. B. Penner, Renee M. Petri, John J McKinnon, Tim A. McAllister, Robert J. Forster, Tyler Schwaiger, and Karen A. Beauchemin
- Subjects
Rumen ,Animal Nutrition ,Firmicutes ,Animal feed ,Science ,Agricultural Biotechnology ,Animal Types ,Veterinary Microbiology ,Cattle Diseases ,Large Animals ,Microbiology ,Microbial Ecology ,Animal science ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Proteobacteria ,Prevotella ,Acetitomaculum ,Animals ,Microbiome ,Biology ,Phylogeny ,Animal Management ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Ecology ,Bacteria ,Bacteroidetes ,Microbiota ,Agriculture ,Genes, rRNA ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,biology.organism_classification ,Streptococcus bovis ,Veterinary Bacteriology ,Animal Feed ,RNA, Bacterial ,Veterinary Diseases ,Genes, Bacterial ,Fermentation ,Medicine ,Veterinary Science ,Cattle ,Female ,Acidosis ,Research Article - Abstract
This study investigated the effect of diet and host on the rumen bacterial microbiome and the impact of an acidotic challenge on its composition. Using parallel pyrosequencing of the V3 hypervariable region of 16S rRNA gene, solid and liquid associated bacterial communities of 8 heifers were profiled. Heifers were exclusively fed forage, before being transitioned to a concentrate diet, subjected to an acidotic challenge and allowed to recover. Samples of rumen digesta were collected when heifers were fed forage, mixed forage, high grain, during challenge (4 h and 12 h) and recovery. A total of 560,994 high-quality bacterial sequences were obtained from the solid and liquid digesta. Using cluster analysis, prominent bacterial populations differed (P≤0.10) in solid and liquid fractions between forage and grain diets. Differences among hosts and diets were not revealed by DGGE, but real time qPCR showed that several bacteria taxon were impacted by changes in diet, with the exception of Streptococcus bovis. Analysis of the core rumen microbiome identified 32 OTU's representing 10 distinct bacterial taxa including Bacteroidetes (32.8%), Firmicutes (43.2%) and Proteobacteria (14.3%). Diversity of OTUs was highest with forage with 38 unique OTUs identified as compared to only 11 with the high grain diet. Comparison of the microbial profiles of clincial vs. subclinical acidotic heifers found a increases in the relative abundances of Acetitomaculum, Lactobacillus, Prevotella, and Streptococcus. Increases in Streptococcus and Lactobacillus likely reflect the tolerance of these species to low pH and their ability to proliferate on surplus fermentable carbohydrate. The acetogen, Acetitomaculum may thereforeplay a role in the conversion of lactate to acetate in acidotic animals. Further profiling of the bacterial populations associated with subclinical and clinical acidosis could establish a microbial fingerprint for these disorders and provide insight into whether there are causative microbial populations that could potentially be therapeutically manipulated. more...
- Published
- 2013
39. Structure of ^{16}C: Testing shell model and ab initio approaches
- Author
-
M. Petri, S. Paschalis, R. M. Clark, P. Fallon, A. O. Macchiavelli, K. Starosta, T. Baugher, D. Bazin, L. Cartegni, H. L. Crawford, M. Cromaz, U. Datta Pramanik, G. de Angelis, A. Dewald, A. Gade, G. F. Grinyer, S. Gros, M. Hackstein, H. B. Jeppesen, I. Y. Lee, S. McDaniel, D. Miller, M. M. Rajabali, A. Ratkiewicz, W. Rother, P. Voss, K. A. Walsh, D. Weisshaar, M. Wiedeking, B. A. Brown, C. Forssxfdn, P. Navrxfdtil, and R. Roth more...
- Published
- 2012
40. Excited-state transition-rate measurements in ^{18}C
- Author
-
P. Voss, T. Baugher, D. Bazin, R. M. Clark, H. L. Crawford, A. Dewald, P. Fallon, A. Gade, G. F. Grinyer, H. Iwasaki, A. O. Macchiavelli, S. McDaniel, D. Miller, M. Petri, A. Ratkiewicz, W. Rother, K. Starosta, K. A. Walsh, D. Weisshaar, C. Forssxfdn, R. Roth, and P. Navrxfdtil more...
- Published
- 2012
41. Search for CP violating charge asymmetry in B^+ -> J/psi K^+ decays
- Author
-
Sakai, K., Kawasaki, T., Aihara, H., Arinstein, K., Aushev, T., Bakich, A. M., Balagura, V., Barberio, E., Belous, K., Bhardwaj, V., Bhuyan, B., Bischofberger, M., Bondar, A., Bozek, A., Bračko, M., Browder, T. E., Chang, M. -C., Chao, Y., Chen, A., Chen, K. -F., Chen, P., Cheon, B. G., Chiang, C. -C., Cho, K., Choi, Y., Dalseno, J., Doležal, Z., Drásal, Z., Dungel, W., Eidelman, S., Feindt, M., Golob, B., Ha, H., Haba, J., Hayasaka, K., Hayashii, H., Horii, Y., Hoshi, Y., Hou, W. -S., Hyun, H. J., Inami, K., Itoh, R., Iwabuchi, M., Iwasaki, Y., Kang, J. H., Kawai, H., Kichimi, H., Kiesling, C., Kim, H. J., Kim, J. H., Kim, Y. J., Ko, B. R., Korpar, S., Križan, P., Krokovny, P., Kuhr, T., Kumita, T., Kuzmin, A., Kwon, Y. -J., Kyeong, S. -H., Lange, J. S., Lee, M. J., Li, J., Limosani, A., Liu, C., Liventsev, D., Louvot, R., Matyja, A., McOnie, S., Miyabayashi, K., Miyata, H., Miyazaki, Y., Mohanty, G. B., Mohapatra, D., Nakano, E., Nakao, M., Natkaniec, Z., Neubauer, S., Nishida, S., Nitoh, O., Ogawa, S., Ohshima, T., Okuno, S., Olsen, S. L., Pakhlova, G., Palka, H., Park, C. W., Park, H., Park, H. K., Pestotnik, R., c, M. Petri., Piilonen, L. E., Prim, M., Rohrken, M., Ryu, S., Sahoo, H., Sakai, Y., Schneider, O., Schwartz, A. J., Senyo, K., Seon, O., Sevior, M. E., Shapkin, M., Shen, C. P., Shiu, J. -G., Shwartz, B., Simon, F., Smerkol, P., Sokolov, A., Solovieva, E., c, S. Stani., c, M. Stari., Sumisawa, K., Sumiyoshi, T., Taylor, G. N., Teramoto, Y., Trabelsi, K., Tsuboyama, T., Uehara, S., Uglov, T., Unno, Y., Uno, S., Varner, G., Varvell, K. E., Vervink, K., Wang, C. H., Wang, M. -Z., Wang, P., Watanabe, M., Watanabe, Y., Wedd, R., Won, E., Yamashita, Y., Zhang, C. C., Zhang, Z. P., Zhou, P., Zivko, T., Zupanc, A., and Zyukova, O. more...
- Subjects
High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Model ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We present the result of a search for charge asymmetry in B^+ -> J/psi K^+ decays. The CP-violating charge asymmetry is measured to be A_CP(B^+ -> J/psi K^+) = [-0.76 +/- 0.50 (stat) +/- 0.22 (syst)]%., Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables more...
- Published
- 2010
42. Atherosclerotic Vascular Events in a Multinational Inception Cohort of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
- Author
-
Daniel J. Wallace, Sang Cheol Bae, Graciela S. Alarcón, Munther A. Khamashta, Rosalind Ramsey-Goldman, Sasha Bernatsky, M. Ramos, Jorge Sanchez-Guerrero, John G. Hanly, Murray B. Urowitz, Ellen M. Ginzler, Cynthia Aranow, Mary Anne Dooley, Kenneth C. Kalunian, Thomas Stoll, Ola Nived, Peter J. Maddison, Dafna D. Gladman, Gunnar Sturfelt, Susan Manzi, M. Petri, Paul R. Fortin, David A. Isenberg, Asad Zoma, R. van Vollenhoven, Joan T. Merrill, Caroline Gordon, Ian N. Bruce, Ann E. Clarke, Anisur Rahman, Dominique Ibañez, and Kristjan Steinsson more...
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Internationality ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Coronary artery disease ,Angina ,Young Adult ,Rheumatology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,Registries ,Myocardial infarction ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Aged ,Systemic lupus erythematosus ,Lupus erythematosus ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Middle Aged ,Atherosclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Cohort study - Abstract
To describe vascular events during an 8-year followup in a multicenter systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) inception cohort and their attribution to atherosclerosis.Clinical data, including comorbidities, were recorded yearly. Vascular events were recorded and attributed to atherosclerosis or not. All of the events met standard clinical criteria. Factors associated with atherosclerotic vascular events were analyzed using descriptive statistics, t-tests, and chi-square tests. Stepwise multivariate logistic regression was used to assess the association of factors with vascular events attributed to atherosclerosis.Since 2000, 1,249 patients have been entered into the cohort. There have been 97 vascular events in 72 patients, including: myocardial infarction (n = 13), angina (n = 15), congestive heart failure (n = 24), peripheral vascular disease (n = 8), transient ischemic attack (n = 13), stroke (n = 23), and pacemaker insertion (n = 1). Fifty of the events were attributed to active lupus, 31 events in 22 patients were attributed to atherosclerosis, and 16 events were attributed to other causes. The mean +/- SD time from diagnosis to the first atherosclerotic event was 2.0 +/- 1.5 years. Compared with patients followed for 2 years without atherosclerotic events (n = 615), at enrollment, patients with atherosclerotic vascular events were more frequently white, men, older at diagnosis of SLE, obese, smokers, hypertensive, and had a family history of coronary artery disease. On multivariate analysis, only male sex and older age at diagnosis were associated factors.In an inception cohort with SLE followed for up to 8 years, there were 97 vascular events, but only 31 were attributable to atherosclerosis. Patients with atherosclerotic events were more likely to be men and to be older at diagnosis of SLE. more...
- Published
- 2010
43. Aerobic exercise before diving reduces venous gas bubble formation in humans
- Author
-
Zeljko, Dujic, Darko, Duplancic, Ivana, Marinovic-Terzic, Darija, Bakovic, Vladimir, Ivancev, Zoran, Valic, Davor, Eterovic, Nadan M, Petri, Ulrik, Wisløff, and Alf O, Brubakk
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Diving ,Pulmonary Artery ,Decompression Sickness ,Microspheres ,Veins ,decompression sickness ,echocardiography ,aerobic exercise ,Humans ,Seawater ,Rapid Reports ,Gases ,human activities ,Exercise ,Ultrasonography ,Perspectives - Abstract
We have previously shown in a rat model that a single bout of high intensity aerobic exercise 20 hours before a simulated dive reduces bubble formation and after dive protects from lethal decompression sickness. The present study investigates the importance of these findings in man. Twelve healthy, male divers were compressed in a hyperbaric chamber to 280 kPa at a rate of 100 kPa · ; min-1 breathing air, remaining at pressure for 80 minutes. The ascent rate was 9 m · ; min-1 with a seven minutes stop at 130 kPa. Each diver underwent two randomly assigned simulated dives, with and without preceding exercise. A single interval exercise performed 24 hours before the dive consisted of treadmill running at 90% of maximum heart rate for three minutes followed by exercise at 50% of maximum heart rate for two minutes ; this was repeated eight times for a total exercise period of 40 minutes. Venous gas bubbles were monitored with an ultrasonic scanner every 20 minutes for 80 minutes after reaching surface pressure. The study demonstrated that a single bout of strenuous exercise 24 hours before a dive to 18 meters of seawater significantly reduced the average number of bubbles in the pulmonary artery from 0.98 to 0.22 bubbles/cm2 (p = 0.006) compared to dives without preceding exercise. The maximum bubble grade decreased from 3 to 1.5 (p = 0.002) by pre-dive exercise, thereby increasing safety. This is the first report to indicate that pre dive exercise may form the basis for a novel approach to prevent serious decompression sickness. more...
- Published
- 2004
44. Particle identification at HADES
- Author
-
N. Yahlali, B. Ka¨mpfer, B. Genolini, D. Magestro, M. Jaskula, M. Roy-Stephan, I. Duran, S. Winkler, P. Tlusty, R. Holzmann, J. Markert, F. Dohrmann, J. Mousa, A. B. Kurepin, M. Mu¨nch, M. Dahlinger, R. Kulessa, R. W. Novotny, R.S. Simon, S. Spataro, W. Ku¨hn, L. Smykov, O. V. Fateev, C. Agodi, A. Taranenko, W. Pryzgoda, H. Stelzer, D. Gonzales, E. Grosse, G. Bellia, A. Kugler, C. Schroeder, N. Rabin, H. Alvarez-Pol, L. Kidon, Paul Kienle, V. Wagner, P. Senger, J. Homolka, H. Goringer, A.P. Ierusalimov, A. Nekhaev, E. Badura, S. Hlavac, J. Wu¨stenfeld, K.A. Shileev, Piotr Salabura, Paolo Piattelli, V. Pechenov, E. Lins, A. I. Reshetin, H.-J. Ko¨rner, J. A. Garzón, F. Guber, J. Boyard, C. Boiano, W. Ott, C. Fernandez, M. Alvarez-Pardo, R. Gernha¨user, I. Fro¨hlich, M. Ploskon, C. Sturm, U. Kopf, A. Rustamov, C. Maiolino, L. Naumann, R. Bassini, D. Vassiliev, D. Zovinec, Alberica Toia, H. Bokemeyer, Yu.V. Zanevsky, C. Mu¨ntz, I. Iori, J. Sabin, R. Diaz, H. Tsertos, Laura Fabbietti, Karl Zeitelhack, J. Pietraszko, M. Sánchez, Peter Braun-Munzinger, H. W. Daues, A. Bassi, A. Sadovski, B. Fuentes, J. Ritman, P. Maier-Komor, M. Petri, D. Kirschner, J. Lehnert, W. Walus, P. Sapienza, V. Smoliankin, Yu. A. Panebratsev, S. P. Chernenko, A. Vazquez, M. B. Golubeva, S. Brambilla, T. Karavicheva, A. Balanda, B. W. Kolb, J. Otwinowski, M. Traxler, Kalliopi Kanaki, J. Hehner, H. Stro¨bele, I. Turzo, H. Agakichiev, B. Ramstein, P. Zumbruch, J. Friese, T. Wojcik, T. Eberl, M. Bo¨hmer, Paolo Finocchiaro, I. Koenig, D. Bertini, R. Kru¨cken, Facundo Ballester, V. Metag, J. Hoffmann, R. Pleskac, M. Sudol, W. Koenig, P. Shishov, Jaroslav Bielcik, M. Wis´niowski, Joachim Stroth, P. Rosier, T. Kurtukian, B. Sailer, T. Hennino, R. Coniglione, R. Kotte, W. Niebur, Institut de Physique Nucléaire d'Orsay (IPNO), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), and HADES more...
- Subjects
DILEPTON ,Physics ,Nuclear physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,RING RECOGNITION ,SPECTROMETER ,Spectrometer ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,Particle identification - Abstract
A.KUGLER’, H.AGAKICHIEV’, C.AG~DI~, MALVAREZ-PARDON, HALVAREZ-PoL’, E.BADIJRA’, A.BALANDA’, F.BALLESTER~, A.BAssI*, R.BASSINI~, G.BELLIA~~‘~, D.BERTINI’, J.BIELCIK’, M.B~HMER”, C.BO~ANO*, H.BOKEMEYER’, J.L.BoYARD”, SBRAMBILLA~, P.BRAUN-MUNZJNGER’, S.CHERNENKO’~, R.CONIGLIONE~, M.DAHLINGER’, H.DAuEs~, R.Dm4, F.DOHRMANN’~, I.DuRAN’, TH.EBERL”, L.FABBIE~I”, O.FATEEV”, CFERNANDEZ’, P.FINOCCHIARO~, JFRIESE”, IFR~HLICH’~, B.FUENTES’, J.A.GAR~oN’, BGENOLJNI”, RGERNHAUSER”, M.GOLUBEVA”, D.GONZALE?, H.GORINGER’, E.GRossE’~, F.GLJBER”, J.HEHNER’, TH.HENNINO”, S.HLAVAC~, J.HOFFMANN’, R.HOL~MANN’, J.HOMOLKA”, A.~ERUSALIMOV”, I.IoRI~,~~, M.JASKULA’, B.K.&MPFER’~, KKANAKI”, T. KARAVICHEVA’~, D. KIRSCHNER’~, L.KID~N’, PKIENLE”, I.KOENIG’, W.KOENIG’, H-J.K~RNER”, B.W.KOLB’, U.Kop$, R.KoTTE’~, W.K~HN”, T.KURTUKL~N’, RKROCKEN’~, R.KUIESSA’, A.KUREPIN”, J.LEHNERT’~, E.LINs’~, D.MAGESTRO’, P.MAIER-KOMOR”, CMAIOLINO~, J.MARKERT’~, V.METAG’~, J.MousA”, M.MONCH”, C.MONTZ’~, L.NAUMANN’~, A.NEKH&‘, W.NIE~UR~, W.OT?, R.NOVOTNY’~, J.O~wwows~~~, YU.PANEBRATSEV”, V.PECHENOV”, M.PETRI’~, P.PL~~ELLI~, J.~IETRASZKO’, R.PLESKAC’, M.PLOSKON’, ~.PRZYCXIDA’, NRABIN”, BRAMSTEIN”, A&~HETIN”, JRITMAN’~, P.ROSIER”, M.RoY-STEPHAN”, A.RUSTAMOV’, J.SABIN~, A.SAD~VSKI’~, B.SAILER”, PSALABURA’, M.SANCHEZ~, PSAPIENZA~, PSENGER’, CSCHROEDER’, K.SHILEEV”, PSHISHOV”, RSIMON’, V.SMOLIANKIN”, LSMYKOV”, S. SPATARO~, H.STELZER’, H.STR~BELE’~, J.STROTH’~, C.STURM’, M.SUDOL’ ,A.TARANENKO’, P.TLUSTY’, A.ToL&‘~, M.TRAXLER’~, H.TSERTOS’~, I.Tu~zo~, D.~ASSILIEV”, A.VA~QUEZ’, V.WAGNER’, W.WALUS’, S.WINKLER”, M.WISNIOWSKI’, T.WOJCIK~, J.WOSTI?NFELD’~, N.YAHLALI~, YU.?!ANEVSKY’~, K.~EITELHACK”, D.ZOVINEC~, P.~UMBRUCH’ more...
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Diving-related fatalities caused by underwater explosions: a report of two cases
- Author
-
Marija Definis-Gojanovic, Lena Vranjković-Petri, Drazen Cuculic, Nadan M. Petri, and Josip Dujella
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fatal outcome ,water blast ,diving ,business.industry ,Diving ,General surgery ,Explosions ,Middle Aged ,Criminal investigation ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Surgery ,Fatal Outcome ,medicine ,Humans ,Wounds and Injuries ,Underwater ,business - Abstract
The authors report two cases of diving-related water blast with fatal outcome resulting from nearby underwater explosions. Water blast with fatal outcome almost exclusively occurs in wars at sea. Underwater explosions are extremely rare in diving because of the limited exposure. Forensic findings in both cases reported included expected injuries to gas-filled organs such as the middle ear, lungs, and intestine ; some rarely described injuries such as rupture of the liver, spleen, and kidneys ; and also some lesions that were not found in a search of the literature: rupture of the heart and contusion of the hypophysis. Injuries caused by fatal underwater explosions should be carefully evaluated in forensic medicine to provide data that may support a criminal investigation. more...
- Published
- 2001
46. Neuropsychiatric events at the time of diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosus: An international inception cohort study.
- Author
-
J. G. Hanly, M. B. Urowitz, J. Sanchez‐Guerrero, S. C. Bae, C. Gordon, D. J. Wallace, D. Isenberg, G. S. Alarcón, A. Clarke, S. Bernatsky, J. T. Merrill, M. Petri, M. A. Dooley, D. Gladman, P. R. Fortin, K. Steinsson, I. Bruce, S. Manzi, M. Khamashta, and A. Zoma more...
- Subjects
SYSTEMIC lupus erythematosus ,NEUROPSYCHIATRY ,AUTOIMMUNE diseases ,DISEASES ,PATIENTS - Abstract
To describe the prevalence, characteristics, attribution, and clinical significance of neuropsychiatric (NP) events in an international inception cohort of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients.The study was conducted by the Systemic Lupus International Collaborating Clinics (SLICC). Patients were enrolled within 15 months of fulfilling the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) SLE classification criteria. All NP events within a predefined enrollment window were identified using the ACR case definitions of 19 NP syndromes. Decision rules were derived to determine the proportion of NP disease attributable to SLE. Clinical significance was determined using the Short Form 36 (SF‐36) Health Survey and the SLICC/ACR Damage Index (SDI).A total of 572 patients (88% female) were recruited, with a mean ± SD age of 35 ± 14 years. The mean ± SD disease duration was 5.2 ± 4.2 months. Within the enrollment window, 158 of 572 patients (28%) had at least 1 NP event. In total, there were 242 NP events that encompassed 15 of 19 NP syndromes. The proportion of NP events attributed to SLE varied from 19% to 38% using alternate attribution models and occurred in 6.1–11.7% of patients. Those with NP events, regardless of attribution, had lower scores on the SF‐36 and higher SDI scores compared with patients with no NP events.Twenty‐eight percent of SLE patients experienced at least 1 NP event around the time of diagnosis of SLE, of which only a minority were attributed to SLE. Regardless of attribution, the occurrence of NP events was associated with reduced quality of life and increased organ damage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2007
47. The systemic lupus erythematosus tri-nation study: longitudinal changes in physical and mental well-being.
- Author
-
P. Panopalis, M. Petri, S. Manzi, D. A. Isenberg, C. Gordon, J.-L. Senecal, J. R. Penrod, L. Joseph, Y. St. Pierre, C. Pineau, P. R. Fortin, N. Sutcliffe, J.-R. Goulet, D. Choquette, T. Grodzicky, J. M. Esdaile, and A. E. Clarke more...
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. An international cohort study of cancer in systemic lupus erythematosus.
- Author
-
S. Bernatsky, J. F. Boivin, L. Joseph, R. Rajan, A. Zoma, S. Manzi, E. Ginzler, M. Urowitz, D. Gladman, P. R. Fortin, M. Petri, S. Edworthy, S. Barr, C. Gordon, S. C. Bae, J. Sibley, D. Isenberg, A. Rahman, C. Aranow, and M. A. Dooley more...
- Subjects
AUTOIMMUNE diseases ,SYSTEMIC lupus erythematosus ,COLLAGEN diseases ,CANCER ,LUNG cancer - Abstract
There is increasing evidence in support of an association between systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and malignancy, but in earlier studies the association could not be quantified precisely. The present study was undertaken to ascertain the incidence of cancer in SLE patients, compared with that in the general population. We assembled a multisite (23 centers) international cohort of patients diagnosed as having SLE. Patients at each center were linked to regional tumor registries to determine cancer occurrence. Standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) were calculated as the ratio of observed to expected cancers. Cancers expected were determined by multiplying person‐years in the cohort by the geographically matched age, sex, and calendar year–specific cancer rates, and summing over all person‐years.The 9,547 patients from 23 centers were observed for a total of 76,948 patient‐years, with an average followup of 8 years. Within the observation interval, 431 cancers occurred. The data confirmed an increased risk of cancer among patients with SLE. For all cancers combined, the SIR estimate was 1.15 (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.05–1.27), for all hematologic malignancies, it was 2.75 (95% CI 2.13–3.49), and for non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma, it was 3.64 (95% CI 2.63–4.93). The data also suggested an increased risk of lung cancer (SIR 1.37; 95% CI 1.05–1.76), and hepatobiliary cancer (SIR 2.60; 95% CI 1.25, 4.78).These results support the notion of an association between SLE and cancer and more precisely define the risk of non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma in SLE. It is not yet known whether this association is mediated by genetic factors or exogenous exposures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Purpura Fulminans Successfully Treated With Hyperbaric Oxygen-A Report of 2 Cases.
- Author
-
Vjekoslav Krzelj, Nadan M Petri, Julije Mestrovic, Dejan Andric, and Mihovil Biocic
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The systemic lupus erythematosus Tri-nation Study: absence of a link between health resource use and health outcome.
- Author
-
A. E. Clarke, M. Petri, S. Manzi, D. A. Isenberg, C. Gordon, J.-L. Senécal, J. Penrod, L. Joseph, Y. St Pierre, P. R. Fortin, N. Sutcliffe, J. Richard Goulet, D. Choquette, T. Grodzicky, and J. M. Esdaile more...
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.