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1.
J. optom. (Internet) ; 17(3): [100490], jul.-sept2024. ilus, graf, tab
Article in English | IBECS | ID: ibc-231868

ABSTRACT

Purpose: To evaluate the efficacy of anti-suppression exercises in children with small-angle esotropia in achieving binocular vision. Methods: A retrospective review of patients aged 3–8 years who underwent anti-suppression exercises for either monocular or alternate suppression between January 2016 and December 2021 was conducted. Patients with esotropia less than 15 prism diopters (PD) and visual acuity ≥ 6/12 were included. Patients with previous intra-ocular surgery or less than three-month follow-up were excluded. Success was defined as the development of binocular single vision (BSV) for distance, near, or both (measured clinically with either the 4 prism base out test or Worth four dot test) and maintained at two consecutive visits. Qualified success was defined as the presence of diplopia response for both distance and near. Additionally, improvement in near stereo acuity was measured using the Stereo Fly test. Results: Eighteen patients with a mean age of 5.4 ± 1.38 years (range 3–8 years) at the time of initiation of exercises were included in the study. The male female ratio was 10:8. The mean best corrected visual acuity was 0.18 LogMAR unit(s) and the mean spherical equivalent was +3.8 ± 0.14 diopters (D). The etiology of the esotropia was fully accommodative refractive esotropia (8), microtropia (1), post–operative infantile esotropia (4), partially accommodative esotropia (1), and post-operative partially accommodative esotropia (4). Patients received either office-based, home-based, or both modes of treatment for an average duration of 4.8 months (range 3–8). After therapy, BSV was achieved for either distance or near in 66.6 % of patients (95 % CI = 40.03–93.31 %). Binocular single vision for both distance and near was seen in 50 % of children. Qualified success was observed in 38.46% of patients. Persistence of suppression was observed in one patient (5.5 %)... (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Child , Suppression , Vision, Binocular , Esotropia , Visual Acuity , Therapeutics
2.
Stud Hist Philos Sci ; 107: 43-53, 2024 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39137533

ABSTRACT

There has been a lot of discussion about Heisenberg's Umdeutung paper of 1925, which is universally credited as the first formulation of modern quantum mechanics. Much of this discussion has been characterized by puzzlement over the manner in which Heisenberg arrived at his formulation, supposedly through Bohr's atomic theory in conjunction with two philosophical principles, namely the Correspondence Principle and the Observability Principle. I provide textual, contextual, and philosophical evidence that the "prescriptive-dynamical framework" - recently advocated in the literature on independent grounds - is the perfect perspective from which to understand Heisenberg's work and the significance of the two principles he utilized to arrive at it.

3.
J Hist Biol ; 2024 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39134819

ABSTRACT

This study investigates nineteenth century natural history practices through the lens of the Actor-Network Theory, which posits that scientific practice is shaped by an intricate network of interactions between human and non-human actors. At the core of this research is the analysis of correspondence between Charles Darwin and his collaborators during the Cirripedia Project, which unveils a complex landscape of negotiations with illustrators, funders, specimen owners, and translators, among other stakeholders and interested parties. The study goes beyond the final outcomes of scientific research, delving into behind-the-scenes interactions, and hidden constructions, shedding light on the complex dynamics and actors that conventional scientific narratives often overlook. In general, this approach provides a detailed and insightful view of the underlying processes of nineteenth-century scientific practice, underscoring the importance of epistolary correspondence as a central element in producing scientific knowledge at the time, and in particular it reveals to us how much Darwin was himself involved in the production of his famous work on barnacles. By emphasizing the intricacies of research, this study enriches our understanding of Darwin's work as well as natural history practices in the 19th century, highlighting the complexity and diversity of actors and agents involved in shaping scientific knowledge.

5.
Med Phys ; 2024 Jul 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39032078

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Surrogate-based motion compensation in stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) strongly relies on a constant relationship between an external breathing signal and the internal tumor motion over the course of treatment, that is, a stable patient-specific correspondence model. PURPOSE: This study aims to develop methods for analyzing the stability of correspondence models by integrating planning 4DCT and pretreatment 4D cone-beam computed tomography (4DCBCT) data and assessing the relation to patient-specific clinical parameters. METHODS: For correspondence modeling, a regression-based approach is applied, correlating patient-specific internal motion (vector fields computed by deformable image registration) and external breathing signals (recorded by Varian's RPM and RGSC system). To analyze correspondence model stability, two complementary methods are proposed. (1) Target volume-based analysis: 4DCBCT-based correspondence models predict clinical target volumes (GTV and internal target volume [ITV]) within the planning 4DCT, which are evaluated by overlap and distance measures (Dice similarity coefficient [DSC]/average symmetric surface distance [ASSD]). (2) System matrix-based analysis: 4DCBCT-based regression models are compared to 4DCT-based models using mean squared difference (MSD) and principal component analysis of the system matrices. Stability analysis results are correlated with clinical parameters. Both methods are applied to a dataset of 214 pretreatment 4DCBCT scans (Varian TrueBeam) from a cohort of 46 lung tumor patients treated with ITV-based SBRT (planning 4DCTs acquired with Siemens AS Open and SOMATOM go.OPEN Pro CT scanners). RESULTS: Consistent results across the two complementary analysis approaches (Spearman correlation coefficient of 0.6 / 0.7 $0.6/ 0.7$ between system matrix-based MSD and GTV-based DSC/ASSD) were observed. Analysis showed that stability was not predominant, with 114/214 fraction-wise models not surpassing a threshold of D S C > 0.7 $DSC > 0.7$ for the GTV, and only 14/46 patients demonstrating a D S C > 0.7 $DSC > 0.7$ in all fractions. Model stability did not degrade over the course of treatment. The mean GTV-based DSC is 0.59 ± 0.26 $0.59\pm 0.26$ (mean ASSD of 2.83 ± 3.37 $2.83\pm 3.37$ ) and the respective ITV-based DSC is 0.69 ± 0.20 $0.69\pm 0.20$ (mean ASSD of 2.35 ± 1.81 $2.35\pm 1.81$ ). The clinical parameters showed a strong correlation between smaller tumor motion ranges and increased stability. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed methods identify patients with unstable correspondence models prior to each treatment fraction, serving as direct indicators for the necessity of replanning and adaptive treatment approaches to account for internal-external motion variations throughout the course of treatment.

6.
Int J Phytoremediation ; : 1-16, 2024 Jul 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39056555

ABSTRACT

A major data gap in tropical river ecology is the limited documentation of natural water purification of upstream rivers. This study documented the improvement of water quality of downstream Balili River as affected by environmental factors and macrophyte diversity using a mixed-method approach (water quality assessment, plant inventory, field observation, canonical correspondence analysis, community interview). Results showed that the distance from pollution plays a significant role in the self-purification of the river while the floral diversity maintains the riparian from further contaminating the water and at the same time absorbing air pollutants. Generally, the pollution reduction and %change is exponential at 2 and 3 km from point source then taper at 4 and 5 km. At 3 km from the point source, 30% improvement in TDS, BOD and salinity, 25% for EC, 20% in TSS, 35% in WQI, 36% in CPI, and 50% for DO were noted. Key factors that influence the self-purification process in the river were distance from pollution source, elevation, human disturbance (as indicated by %tree canopy) and temperature. These findings highlight the importance of distance from pollution sources and floral diversity in driving water quality improvements, with implications for sustainable water resource management in tropical regions.


This study documented the improvement of water quality of downstream Balili River as affected by environmental factors and macrophyte diversity ­ as contribution to the major data gap in tropical river ecology which currently has limited documentation on natural water purification of upstream rivers. The study also shows the mosaic interplay of water quality, plant diversity, distance from pollution, human disturbance, and air quality in understudied tropical river. Further, this study is unique in documenting the downstream of Balili River since majority of the previous studies were concentrated in the upstream portion of the river.

7.
Insects ; 15(7)2024 Jul 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39057284

ABSTRACT

Understanding the influence of factors responsible for shaping community assemblage is crucial for biodiversity management and conservation. Gansu is one of the richest regions for bumblebee species in the world. We explored the distribution data of 52 bumblebee species collected in Gansu and its surroundings between 2002 and 2022, predicting habitat suitability based on 17 environmental variables using MaxEnt. The factors influencing community assemblage were assessed using canonical correspondence analysis. Net primary productivity, water vapor pressure, temperature seasonality, annual precipitation, and precipitation seasonality were some of the most influential drivers of species distributions. Based on Ward's agglomerative cluster analysis, four biogeographic zones are described: the Southern humid zone, the Western Qilian snow mountain zone, the Eastern Loess plateau zone, and the Western dry mountain zone. In the clusters of grid cells based on beta diversity values, the Southern humid zone comprised 42.5% of the grid cells, followed by the Eastern Loess plateau zone (32.5%), the Western dry mountain zone (20%), and the Western Qilian snow mountain zone (5%). Almost all the environmental factors showed a significant contribution to the assemblages of bumblebees of different groups. Our findings highlight the need for better data to understand species biogeography and diversity patterns, and they provide key baseline data for refining conservation strategies.

8.
Vet Sci ; 11(7)2024 Jul 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39057997

ABSTRACT

Canine vector-borne diseases (CVBDs) comprise a group of infectious diseases caused by a wide range of pathogens transmitted by arthropod vectors. Clinical signs commonly involve symptoms such as fever, anorexia, weight loss, blood disorders, hepatosplenomegaly, and others that can lead to death in dogs with comorbidities. Some pathogens responsible for CVBDs constitute a serious threat to human health due to their zoonotic transmission. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of zoonotic vector-borne diseases (Rickettsia rickettsii, Anaplasma phagocytophilum, Ehrlichia canis, Bartonella henselae, and Leishmania infantum) in domestic Sardinian dogs with and without clinical signs of these pathogens. Blood serum samples were collected from 142 dogs and examined through serological analysis. Clinical signs suggestive of these pathogens were also evaluated. The results obtained showed that 33 (33/140; 23.6%), 22 (22/134; 16.4%), 14 (14/142; 9.9%), 20 (20/66; 30.3%), and 26 (26/108; 24.1%) dogs were seropositive for Rickettsia sp., Anaplasma sp., Ehrlichia sp., Bartonella sp., and Leishmania sp. antibodies, respectively. Among these dogs, 12 dogs presented with at least one clinical sign (8.5%), while 18 (12.7%) showed more than two symptoms at the same time. Furthermore, among the asymptomatic dogs (93/142; 65.5%), 13% (n = 12) tested positive for A. phagocytophilum, 12% (n = 11) tested positive for B. henselae, 9% (n = 8) tested positive for E. canis, 12% (n = 11) tested positive for L. infantum, and 19% (n = 18) tested positive for R. rickettsii. This survey represents the first study assessing different canine vector-borne pathogens in dogs from North Sardinia. Since the pathogens detected here represent emerging zoonotic diseases, these results highlight the need to undertake further studies to increase the knowledge of these under-reported vector-borne pathogens in Sardinia.

9.
BMC Geriatr ; 24(1): 624, 2024 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39034403

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Multi-morbidity is a pervasive and growing issue worldwide. The prevalence of multi-morbidity varies across different populations and settings, but it is particularly common among older adults. It poses substantial physical, psychological, and socio-economic burdens on individuals, caregivers and healthcare systems. In this context, the present study aims to provide an insight on the prevalence and degree of multi-morbidity; and also, on the relationship between level of multi-morbidity and morbid conditions among a group of slum-dwelling older women. METHODS: This community based cross-sectional study was conducted in the slum areas of urban Kolkata, West Bengal, India. It includes total 500 older women, aged 60 years or above. Pre-tested schedules on so-demographic and morbidity profile have canvassed to obtain the information by door-to-door survey. To determine the relationship between the level of multi-morbidity and morbid conditions, correspondence analysis has performed. RESULTS: The study revealed three most prevalent morbid conditions- back and/or joint pain, dental caries/cavity and hypertension. The overall prevalence of multi-morbidity was 95.8% in this group of older women. It was highly over-represented by the oldest-old age group (80 years and above). Majority were found to suffer from five simultaneous morbid conditions that accounted for 15.2% of the total respondents. All of the oldest-old women of this study reported to suffer from more than two medical conditions simultaneously. Three distinct groups were formed based on the inter-relationship between level of multi-morbidity and morbid conditions. The group 1 and 2 represents only 27.8% and 18% of the total sample. Whereas, group 3 comprises the highest level of morbidities (≥ 6) and 52.8% of total sample, and strongly related with general debilities, cardiac problems, asthma/COPD, gastrointestinal, musculoskeletal problems, neurological disorders, hypothyroidism and oral health issues. CONCLUSION: The findings confirmed the assertion that multi-morbidity in slum living older adults is a problem with high prevalence and complexity. This study proposes an easily replicable approach of understanding complex interaction of morbidities that can help further in identifying the healthcare needs of older adults to provide them with healthy and more productive life expectancy.


Subject(s)
Poverty Areas , Humans , India/epidemiology , Female , Cross-Sectional Studies , Prevalence , Aged , Middle Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Multimorbidity/trends
10.
Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi ; 49(13): 3684-3692, 2024 Jul.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39041141

ABSTRACT

Coronary heart disease is a common cardiovascular disease, attacking about 11.4 million patients in China. With increasing prevalence and mortality year by year, coronary heart disease has become a major factor threatening human health and public health. Although primary and secondary prevention, intervention, coronary artery bypass grafting and other interventions have reduced the death rate, there are drug(aspirin) resistance, secondary nitroglycerin failure, post-intervention fatigue, chest tightness, and an-xiety, and complication with a high risk of bleeding, which have become the key clinical and scientific issues needed to be resolved. Coronary heart disease belongs to the category of chest impediment and heart pain in traditional Chinese medicine(TCM). The TCM etiology of this disease includes external contraction of cold, emotional disorders, constitutional insufficiency, physical weakness, and labor injury, which are closely related to sympathetic nerve activity, state of cardiac and psychological diseases, family history, and cardiovascular metabolic disorders in modern medicine. The TCM causes of coronary heart disease include Qi depression, phlegm turbidity, blood stasis, fire-heat, cold congealing, and healthy Qi deficiency, which are associated with emotional factors such as anxiety and depression, abnormal lipid metabolism, abnormalities in blood circulation and coagulation, inflammatory responses, hyperactive immune responses, and heart failure, chronic wasting disease, or aging, respectively. Accordingly, the patients with Qi depression should be treated with Chaihu Longgu Muli Decoction, and those with phlegm turbidity should be treated with Wendan Decoction and Gualou Xiebai Banxia Decoction. Xuefu Zhuyu Decoction and Guizhi Fuling Pills are recommended for blood stasis, Xiaoxianxiong Decoction and Sanhuang Xiexin Decoction for fire-heat, Zhishi Xiebai Guizhi Decoction for cold congealing, and Renshen Decoction for healthy Qi deficiency. Due to the changes in the spectrum of diseases from ancient to modern times as well as the differences in physical constitution, the key cause of coronary heart disease has evolved from the chest Yang deficiency and cold congealing to Qi depression, phlegm turbidity, phlegm combined with stasis, and fire-heat, showing a shift from cold to heat and from deficiency to excess. The combination of classic formulas presents a pattern. That is, the core formula-syndrome correspondence of a disease often fixedly appears with other formula-syndrome correspondence, which may be related to the development of the pathophysiological mechanism of the disease. In the clinical application of modern pharmacological results, the research team has formulated the clinical principle of pathogenesis corresponding to pathological changes and medicinal nature corresponding pharmacological effects. The modern pharmacological research on classic formulas is conducive to targeted treatment. Moreover, classic formulas help to ameliorate aspirin resistance, clopidogrel resistance, post-intervention anxiety, and high risk of bleeding and address the lack of effective blockade of critical lesions in the coronary artery and the progression of post-infarction heart failure. The innovative understanding of the etiology and pathogenesis of co-ronary heart disease helps to improve the clinical efficacy of TCM and the clinical system for treating coronary heart disease with classic formulas.


Subject(s)
Coronary Disease , Drugs, Chinese Herbal , Medicine, Chinese Traditional , Humans , Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use , Coronary Disease/drug therapy
11.
Child Abuse Negl ; 154: 106944, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39053223

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Over the last two decades, several studies have examined the extent and expression of child sexual abuse (CSA) in religious institutions. In 2021, following new Vatican guidelines and under intense public pressure, the Portuguese Episcopal Conference commissioned a study on CSA in Portugal by members of the Portuguese Catholic Church (PCC) and others associated with it (from 1950 to 2022). OBJECTIVE AND METHODS: The study draws on a web-based survey and a respondent driven sample. The questionnaire included categorical questions about victims, abusers, types of abuse, and open-ended questions. We characterized victims and abusers and developed a social cartography of abuse using Correspondence Analysis. Victims' narratives are also part of the model of analysis. RESULTS: We validated 512 of CSA by members of the PCC. Boys were more frequently abused (57.2 % vs. 42.2 %); male abusers predominate (96.7 %); most victims were abused more than once (57 %); the average age of victims when the first abuse occurred was 11.2 years. More invasive forms of abuse predominate (80 % manipulation of sexual organs or penetration; only 20 % had no body touching). There are patterns of abuse, and space plays a pivotal role in understanding the forms that CSA takes within Catholic environments. The richness of individual narratives was an unexpected outcome that enables us to better understand the organisational and symbolical power structures in which abuse takes place. CONCLUSION: Given the characteristics of our sample, these cases are the tip of the iceberg, with CSA within the PCC likely involved thousands of children. Further research should strive to consider victims' narratives.


Subject(s)
Catholicism , Child Abuse, Sexual , Humans , Child Abuse, Sexual/psychology , Child Abuse, Sexual/statistics & numerical data , Portugal , Male , Female , Child , Surveys and Questionnaires , Adolescent , Adult , Child, Preschool , Middle Aged , Narration , Young Adult , Crime Victims/psychology
12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39081136

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: There are no criteria for what type of manuscript and to what extent ChatGPT use is permissible in writing manuscripts. I aimed to determine which, human or ChatGPT, writes more readable letters to the editor and whether ChatGPT writes letters mimicking a certain person. I aimed to provide hints as to what makes the difference between humans and ChatGPT. METHODS: This is a descriptive pilot study. I tasked ChatGPT (version 3.5) with generating a disagreement letter to my previous article (Letter 0). I wrote a letter involving three weaknesses of the addressed article (Letter 1). I provided ChatGPT with these three weaknesses and tasked it with generating a letter (Letter 2). Then, I supplied my authored letters and tasked ChatGPT with emulating my writing style (Letter 3). Eight professors evaluated the letters' readability and ChatGPT assessed which letter was more likely to be accepted. RESULTS: ChatGPT produced coherent letters (Letters 0 and 2). Professors rated the readability of Letters 1 and 2 similarly, finding Letter 3 less readable. ChatGPT determined that the human-authored Letter 1 had a slightly higher acceptance likelihood than the ChatGPT-generated Letter 2. Although ChatGPT identified personal writing styles, its mimicry did not enhance the letter's quality. CONCLUSION: This preliminary experiment indicates that human-written letters are perceived to be as readable as, or no less readable than, ChatGPT-generated ones. It suggests that human touch, with its inherent enthusiasm, is essential for effective letter writing. Further comprehensive investigations are warranted to ascertain the extent to which ChatGPT can be used in this domain.

13.
Traffic Inj Prev ; 25(6): 870-878, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38832922

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Modern transportation amenities and lifestyles have changed people's behavioral patterns while using the road, specifically at nighttime. Pedestrian and driver maneuver behaviors change based on their exposure to the environment. Pedestrians are more vulnerable to fatal injuries at junctions due to increased conflict points with vehicles. Generation of precrash scenarios allows drivers and pedestrians to understand errors on the road during driver maneuvering and pedestrian walking/crossing. This study aims to generate precrash scenarios using comprehensive nighttime fatal pedestrian crashes at junctions in Tamil Nadu, India. METHODS: Though numerous studies were available on identifying pedestrian crash patterns, only some focused on identifying crash patterns at junctions at night. We used cluster correspondence analysis (CCA) to address this research gap to identify the patterns in nighttime pedestrian fatal crashes at junctions. Further, high-risk precrash scenarios were generated based on the positive residual means available in each cluster. This study used crash data from the Road Accident Database Management System of Tamil Nadu State in India from 2009 to 2018. Characteristics of pedestrians, drivers, vehicles, crashes, light, and roads were input to the CCA to find optimal clusters using the average silhouette width, Calinski-Harabasz measure, and objective values. RESULTS: CCA found 4 clusters with 2 dimensions as optimal clusters, with an objective value of 3.3618 and a valence criteria ratio of 80.03%. Results from the analysis distinctly clustered the pedestrian precrash behaviors: Clusters 1 and 2 on pedestrian walking behaviors and clusters 3 and 4 on crossing behaviors. Moreover, a hidden pattern was observed in cluster 4, such as transgender drivers involved in fatal pedestrian crashes at junctions at night. CONCLUSION: The generated precrash scenarios may be used to train drivers (novice and inexperienced for nighttime driving), test scenario creation for developing advanced driver/rider assistance systems, hypothesis creation for researchers, and planning of effective strategic interventions for engineers and policymakers to change pedestrian and driver behaviors toward sustainable safety on Indian roads.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic , Automobile Driving , Pedestrians , Humans , India/epidemiology , Accidents, Traffic/mortality , Male , Adult , Female , Cluster Analysis , Young Adult , Middle Aged , Automobile Driving/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Walking/injuries , Child , Aged , Child, Preschool
14.
J Pharm Pharm Sci ; 27: 12886, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38915418

ABSTRACT

Treatment for diabetes includes anti-diabetic medication in addition to lifestyle improvements through diet and exercise. In Japan, protocol-based pharmacotherapy management allows drug treatment to be provided through cooperation between physicians and pharmacists, based on a protocol that is prepared and agreed upon in advance. However, there are no studies to clarify the relationship between patient characteristics and therapeutic effects after pharmacist intervention in protocol-based pharmacotherapy management for patients with diabetes. Therefore, this study aimed to use protocol-based reports from pharmacies to understand the status of outpatient diabetes medication compliance. We classified patients with diabetes on the basis of patient characteristics that can be collected in pharmacies and investigated the characteristics that impacted diabetes treatment. Patients were prescribed oral anti-diabetic drugs at outpatient clinics of Hitachinaka General Hospital, Hitachi, Ltd., from April 2016 to March 2021. Survey items included patient characteristics (sex, age, number of drugs used, observed number of years of anti-diabetic drug prescription, number of anti-diabetic drug prescription days, and presence or absence of leftover anti-diabetic drugs) and HbA1c levels. Graphical analyses indicated the relationship between each categorised patient characteristic using multiple correspondence analyses. Subsequently, the patients were clustered using K-means cluster analysis based on the coordinates obtained for each patient. Patient characteristics and HbA1c values were compared between the groups for each cluster. A total of 1,910 patients were included and classified into three clusters, with clusters 1, 2, and 3 containing 625, 703, and 582 patients, respectively. Patient characteristics strongly associated with Cluster 1 were ages between 65 and 74 years, use of three or more anti-diabetic drugs, use of 3 years or more of anti-diabetic drugs, and leftover anti-diabetic drugs. Furthermore, Cluster 1 had the highest number of patients with worsening HbA1c levels compared with other clusters. Using the leftover drug adjustment protocol, we clarified the patient characteristics that affected the treatment course. We anticipate that through targeted interventions in patients exhibiting these characteristics, we can identify those who are irresponsibly continuing with drug treatment, are not responding well to therapy, or both. This could substantially improve the efficacy of their anti-diabetic care.


Subject(s)
Hypoglycemic Agents , Humans , Male , Female , Hypoglycemic Agents/therapeutic use , Hypoglycemic Agents/administration & dosage , Aged , Middle Aged , Diabetes Mellitus/drug therapy , Treatment Outcome , Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data , Glycated Hemoglobin/analysis , Pharmacists , Medication Adherence , Japan , Aged, 80 and over , Adult
15.
Tomography ; 10(6): 894-911, 2024 Jun 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38921945

ABSTRACT

In recent years, Artificial Intelligence has been used to assist healthcare professionals in detecting and diagnosing neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we propose a methodology to analyze functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging signals and perform classification between Parkinson's disease patients and healthy participants using Machine Learning algorithms. In addition, the proposed approach provides insights into the brain regions affected by the disease. The functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging from the PPMI and 1000-FCP datasets were pre-processed to extract time series from 200 brain regions per participant, resulting in 11,600 features. Causal Forest and Wrapper Feature Subset Selection algorithms were used for dimensionality reduction, resulting in a subset of features based on their heterogeneity and association with the disease. We utilized Logistic Regression and XGBoost algorithms to perform PD detection, achieving 97.6% accuracy, 97.5% F1 score, 97.9% precision, and 97.7%recall by analyzing sets with fewer than 300 features in a population including men and women. Finally, Multiple Correspondence Analysis was employed to visualize the relationships between brain regions and each group (women with Parkinson, female controls, men with Parkinson, male controls). Associations between the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale questionnaire results and affected brain regions in different groups were also obtained to show another use case of the methodology. This work proposes a methodology to (1) classify patients and controls with Machine Learning and Causal Forest algorithm and (2) visualize associations between brain regions and groups, providing high-accuracy classification and enhanced interpretability of the correlation between specific brain regions and the disease across different groups.


Subject(s)
Machine Learning , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Parkinson Disease , Humans , Parkinson Disease/diagnostic imaging , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Female , Middle Aged , Aged , Algorithms , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/physiopathology
16.
J Basic Microbiol ; 64(8): e2400016, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38922741

ABSTRACT

Taxus contorta (family Taxaceae) is a native plant of temperate region of western Himalaya. The current study investigated the effect of altitude on the phytochemical composition and mycorrhizal diversity, associated with distribution of T. contorta in Shimla district, Himachal Pradesh, India. Quantitative phytochemical analysis of the leaf extracts indicated that alkaloid levels decreased with altitude, with the highest value in Himri's methanol extracts (72.79 ± 1.08 mg/g) while phenol content increased with altitude, peaking in Nankhari's methanol extracts (118.83 ± 5.90 mg/g). Saponin content was higher in methanol extracts (78.13 ± 1.66 mg/g in Nankhari, 68.06 ± 1.92 mg/g in Pabbas, and 56.32 ± 1.93 mg/g in Himri). Flavonoid levels were notably higher in chloroform extracts, particularly in Nankhari (219.97 ± 2.99 mg/g), and positively correlated with altitude. Terpenoids were higher in chloroform extracts at Himri (11.34 ± 0.10 mg/g) and decreased with altitude. Taxol content showed minimal variation between solvents and altitudes (4.53-6.98 ppm), while rutin was only detected in methanol extracts (1.31-1.46 ppm). Mycorrhizal spore counts in T. contorta's rhizosphere varied with altitude: highest at Himri (77.83 ± 2.20 spores/50 g soil), decreasing to Pabbas (68.06 ± 1.96 spores/50 g soil) and lowest at Nankhari (66.00 ± 2.77 spores/50 g soil), with 17 AMF species identified overall, showing significant altitudinal influence on spore density. The rhizosphere of T. contorta was shown to be dominated by the Glomus species. The rhizospheric soil of the plant was found to be slightly acidic. Organic carbon and available potassium content decreased contrasting with increasing available nitrogen and phosphorus with altitude. Correlation data showed strong negative links between organic carbon (-0.83), moderate positive for nitrogen (0.46) and phosphorus (0.414), and moderate negative for potassium (-0.56) with the altitude. This study provides a comprehensive insight into changes in phytochemical constituents, mycorrhizal diversity and soil composition of T. contorta along a range of altitude.


Subject(s)
Altitude , Forests , Mycorrhizae , Phytochemicals , Plant Leaves , Taxus , Taxus/microbiology , Taxus/chemistry , Mycorrhizae/chemistry , Mycorrhizae/classification , Phytochemicals/analysis , Phytochemicals/chemistry , India , Plant Leaves/chemistry , Plant Leaves/microbiology , Biodiversity , Soil Microbiology , Alkaloids/analysis , Alkaloids/chemistry , Flavonoids/analysis , Terpenes/analysis , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Plant Roots/microbiology , Plant Roots/chemistry , Saponins/analysis , Saponins/chemistry
17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38809319

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This work presents the implementation of an RGB-D camera as a surrogate signal for liver respiratory-induced motion estimation. This study aims to validate the feasibility of RGB-D cameras as a surrogate in a human subject experiment and to compare the performance of different correspondence models. METHODS: The proposed approach uses an RGB-D camera to compute an abdominal surface reconstruction and estimate the liver respiratory-induced motion. Two sets of validation experiments were conducted, first, using a robotic liver phantom and, secondly, performing a clinical study with human subjects. In the clinical study, three correspondence models were created changing the conditions of the learning-based model. RESULTS: The motion model for the robotic liver phantom displayed an error below 3 mm with a coefficient of determination above 90% for the different directions of motion. The clinical study presented errors of 4.5, 2.5, and 2.9 mm for the three different motion models with a coefficient of determination above 80% for all three cases. CONCLUSION: RGB-D cameras are a promising method to accurately estimate the liver respiratory-induced motion. The internal motion can be estimated in a non-contact, noninvasive and flexible approach. Additionally, three training conditions for the correspondence model are studied to potentially mitigate intra- and inter-fraction motion.

18.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 36(33)2024 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38729200

ABSTRACT

In this article we demonstrate that dynamical quantum phase transitions (DQPTs) occur for an exemplary higher order topological insulator, the Benalcazar-Bernevig-Hughes model, following quenches across a topological phase boundary. A dynamical bulk boundary correspondence is also seen both in the eigenvalues of the Loschmidt overlap matrix and the boundary return rate. The latter is found from a finite size scaling analysis for which the relative simplicity of the model is crucial. Contrary to the usual two dimensional case the DQPTs in this model show up as cusps in the return rate, as for a one dimensional model, rather than as cusps in its derivative as would be typical for a two dimensional model. We explain the origin of this behaviour.

19.
Front Psychol ; 15: 1384818, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38770254

ABSTRACT

The effect known as the spatial-numerical association of response codes (SNARC) documents fast reaction to small numbers with a response at the left and to large numbers with a response at the right. The common explanation appeals to a hypothetical mental number line of a left-to-right orientation with the numerical magnitudes on the line activated in an automatic fashion. To explore the possibility of emotional involvement in processing, we employed prototypical affective behaviors for responses in lieu of the usual spatial-numerical ones (i.e., of pressing lateralized keys). In the present series of experiments, the participants walked toward a number or walked away from a number (in a physical approach-avoidance setup) or said "good" or "bad" in response to a number. We recorded strong SNARC effects with affective responding. For example, it took participants longer to say "good" than "bad" to small numbers, but it took them longer to say "bad" than "good" to larger numbers. Although each particular outcome can still be accounted for by a spatial interpretation, the cumulative results are suggestive of the possibly of affective involvement in generating the effect.

20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38730187

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Online C-arm calibration with a mobile fiducial cage plays an essential role in various image-guided interventions. However, it is challenging to develop a fully automatic approach, which requires not only an accurate detection of fiducial projections but also a robust 2D-3D correspondence establishment. METHODS: We propose a novel approach for online C-arm calibration with a mobile fiducial cage. Specifically, a novel mobile calibration cage embedded with 16 fiducials is designed, where the fiducials are arranged to form 4 line patterns with different cross-ratios. Then, an auto-context-based detection network (ADNet) is proposed to perform an accurate and robust detection of 2D projections of those fiducials in acquired C-arm images. Subsequently, we present a cross-ratio consistency-based 2D-3D correspondence establishing method to automatically match the detected 2D fiducial projections with those 3D fiducials, allowing for an accurate online C-arm calibration. RESULTS: We designed and conducted comprehensive experiments to evaluate the proposed approach. For automatic detection of 2D fiducial projections, the proposed ADNet achieved a mean point-to-point distance of 0.65 ± 1.33 pixels. Additionally, the proposed C-arm calibration approach achieved a mean re-projection error of 1.01 ± 0.63 pixels and a mean point-to-line distance of 0.22 ± 0.12  mm. When the proposed C-arm calibration approach was applied to downstream tasks involving landmark and surface model reconstruction, sub-millimeter accuracy was achieved. CONCLUSION: In summary, we developed a novel approach for online C-arm calibration. Both qualitative and quantitative results of comprehensive experiments demonstrated the accuracy and robustness of the proposed approach. Our approach holds potentials for various image-guided interventions.

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