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Integrative, three-dimensional \(in\) \(silico\) modeling of gas exchange in the human alveolus
(2024)
The lung plays a vital role by exchanging respiratory gases. At the core of this gas exchange is a simple yet crucial passive diffusion process occurring within the alveoli. These balloon-like structures, connected to the peripheral airways, are surrounded by a dense network
of small capillaries. Here, inhaled air comes into close proximity with deoxygenated blood coming from the heart, enabling the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide across their concentration gradients.
The efficiency of gas exchange can be measured through indicators such as the diffusion capacity of the lung for oxygen and the reaction half-time. A notable discrepancy exists in humans between physiological estimates of diffusion capacity and the theoretical maximum capacity under optimal structural conditions (morphological estimate). This discrepancy is influenced by a range of interrelated factors, including structural elements like the surface area and thickness of the diffusion barrier, as well as physiological factors such as blood flow dynamics. To unravel the different roles of these factors, we investigated how morphological and physiological properties of the human alveolar micro-environment collectively and individually influence the process of gas exchange. To this end, we developed an integrative in silico approach combining 3D morphological modeling and simulation of blood flow and of oxygen transport.
At the core of our approach lies the simulation software Alvin, serving as an interactive platform for the underlying mathematical model of oxygen transport within the alveolus. Developed by integrating and expanding existing mathematical models, our spatio-temporal model produces results in agreement with experimental data. Alvin allows for real-time parameter adjustments and the execution of multiple simultaneous simulation instances and provides detailed quantitative feedback, offering an immersive exploration of the simulated gas exchange process. The morphological and physiological parameters at play were further investigated with a focus on the microvasculature. By compiling a stereological database from the literature and 3D geometric modeling, we created a sheet-flow model as a realistic representation of the morphology of the human alveolar capillary network. Blood flow was simulated using computational fluid dynamics. Our findings were in line with previous estimations and highlighted the crucial role of viscosity models in predicting pressure drop across the microvasculature. Furthermore, we showcased how our approach can be harnessed to explore structural details, such as the connectivity of the alveolar capillary network with the vascular tree, using blood flow indices. It is important to emphasize that
so far we have relied on different data sources and that experimental validation is needed to move forward.
Integration of our findings into Alvin allowed quantification of the simulated gas exchange process through the diffusion capacity for oxygen and reaction half-time. In addition to evaluating the collective influences of the morphological and physiological properties, our interactive software facilitates the assessment of individual parameter value changes. Exploring blood volume and surface area available for gas exchange revealed linear correlations with diffusion capacity. The blood flow velocity had a positive, non-linear effect on diffusion capacity. The reaction half-time confirmed that under normal conditions, the gas exchange process is not diffusion-limited. Collectively, our alveolar model yielded a diffusion capacity value that fell in the middle of previous physiological and morphological estimates, implying that alveolar-level phenomena contribute to 50% of the diffusion capacity limitations that occur in vivo.
In summary, our integrative in silico approach disentangles various structural and functional influences on alveolar gas exchange, complementing traditional investigations in respiratory
research. We further showcase its utility in teaching and the interpretation of published data. To advance our understanding, future work should prioritize obtaining a cohesive experimental data set and identifying an appropriate viscosity model for blood flow simulations.
Die Gesellschaft altert und es erhalten vermehrt geriatrische Patienten radikale urologische Eingriffe. Alte Patienten haben im Rahmen derartiger Operationen ein erhöhtes Risiko sowohl für Komplikation, verschlechtertes funktionelles Outcome und Mortalität. Da alte Patienten dennoch von den Operationen profitieren können und diese auch weitgehend sicher bei diesen durchgeführt werden können, gilt es das geriatrische Patientenklientel in Bezug auf ihre Konstitution präoperativ genauer zu evaluieren.
Die Erlanger Pilotstudie, an die sich vorliegende Arbeit anlehnt, hat dazu einen Index für Patienten ≥ 70 Jahre mit geplanter Prostatektomie, Nephrektomie und Zystektomie entwickelt, der sowohl das postoperative funktionelle Outcome nach 30 bzw. 180 Tagen, wie auch die Mortalität, nicht aber Komplikationen signifikant korrekt vorhersagen konnte. Ziel vorliegender Arbeit war es, die Prädiktivität des Erlangen Index hinsichtlich dieser vier Endpunkte in einer prospektiv angelegten Studie mit n=46 Patienten ≥ 65 Jahre am Universitätsklinikum Würzburg zu validieren. Es sollte dabei im Speziellen die in der Erlanger Pilotstudie erfasste gute Prädiktivität des Erlangen Index für das funktionelle Outcome nach 180 Tagen überprüft werden.
In dieser Arbeit zeigte sich der Erlangen Index prädiktiv für das funktionelle Outcome nach 180 Tagen. Für die anderen Endpunkte konnte keine Prädiktivität des Erlangen Index festgestellt werden. Durch vorliegende Studie konnte die schlechte Prädiktion der Komplikationen durch den EI bestätigt werden. Anders als in der Pilotstudie war der Erlangen Index in vorliegender Studie zur Vorhersage des funktionellen Outcome nach 30 Tagen und der Mortalität nicht geeignet. Bei Betrachtung der Untergruppen nach Art der Operation zeigte der EI starke Korrelationen für die Prädiktion des funktionellen Outcome nach 180 Tagen in den Gruppen der Patienten nach Prostata- und Harnblasenoperation. Die Ergebnisse decken sich somit nur teilweise mit den Ergebnissen aus der Pilotstudie in Erlangen, in der der Erlangen Index bzgl. des funktionellen Outcome nach 180 Tagen die größte Korrelation in der Untergruppe der Patienten nach Nephrektomie zeigte.
Der Index erwies sich als schnell durchführbares Assessment, das wenig Personal erfordert. Es ist weiter zu prüfen, ob sich durch Anwendung dieses Assessment tatsächlich Änderungen im klinischen Therapieregime ergeben bzw. ob sich die Modifizierungen der Therapie auch in einem verbesserten Outcome der Patienten auswirken.
Der kathetergestützte Aortenklappenersatz nimmt auch bei Patienten mit niedrigem OP-Risiko einen zunehmend größeren Stellenwert zur Behandlung der hochgradigen Aortenklappenstenose ein.45 Umso wichtiger ist es, die einzelnen Schritte der Intervention zu optimieren. In einigen Arbeiten wurde bereits die Vordilatation als obsolet bezeichnet, da sie lediglich die OP-Zeit verlängere und Komplikationen wie Schlaganfälle und AV-Blockierungen begünstige.22,52,53,57,59 Ziel dieser Studie war es, die Vor- und Nachteile der Vordilatation zu untersuchen. Hierzu wurden 625 Patienten, die im Zeitraum von 2016-2020 eine TAVI am UKW erhielten, retrospektiv analysiert (323 mit, 302 ohne Vordilatation). Es wurden demographische sowie prä-, peri- und post-interventionelle Daten analysiert. Statistisch signifikante Unterschiede wurden bei den Schlaganfällen beobachtet (p=0,01), die mit 2,2% lediglich bei Patienten mit Vordilatation auftraten, sodass bei einem hohen Schlaganfallrisiko hierauf verzichtet werden sollte. Zusätzlich war in der Gruppe mit Vordilatation die passagere Schrittmacherabhängigkeit signifikant häufiger (p=0,01). Alle anderen Komplikationen waren nicht signifikant. In beiden Gruppen zeigte sich zu >95% ein Device-Success, sodass der Verzicht auf eine Prädilatation nicht mit einem schlechteren Outcome assoziiert und somit sicher ist.53,57,58,59,61
Die Auswertung der TTE-Daten zeigte, dass eine Prädilatation durchgeführt wurde, wenn die Klappe signifikant höhergradig stenosiert war (Pmean 50,17 vs. 46,79mmHG). Ferner wurde bei leichtgradigen Aortenklappeninsuffizienzen signifikant häufiger auf eine Vordilatation verzichtet (p=0,04). Eine Vordilatation kann also bei komplexeren anatomischen Verhältnissen sinnvoll sein, um einen optimalen Klappensitz zu gewährleisten.52,53 Nach TAVI zeigte sich die LV-EF in der Gruppe mit Prädilatation signifikant höher (p=0,002). Höhergradige Aortenklappeninsuffizienzen scheinen nicht durch eine Vordilatation begünstigt zu sein, die AI°II wurde nur bei 4 Patienten ohne Vordilatation beobachtet. In den postinterventionellen EKG-Daten zeigten sich in der Gruppe ohne Vordilatation signifikant häufiger Linksschenkelblöcke sowie ein AVB °II, Typ II, was vermutlich durch die fehlende Vorbereitung der Klappe und den damit assoziierten ungünstigeren Prothesensitz zu erklären ist.53 Die Nachdilatation wurde nicht durch eine vorausgegangene Vordilatation beeinflusst. Bezüglich der implantierten Klappenarten wurde die S3 Ultra signifikant häufiger bei Patienten ohne Vordilatation eingesetzt. Die in vielen Arbeiten beschriebene kürzere OP-Dauer ließ sich in dieser Studie nicht bestätigen.52,53,56 Stattdessen war bei TAVIs ohne Vordilatation die Eingriffsdauer im Schnitt 4min länger (p=0,11). Es bestätigte sich, dass bei einer Prädilatation signifikant mehr Kontrastmittel verwendet wurde (p=0,001) und die Strahlenbelastung höher war. Dies ist insbesondere für Patienten mit einer Niereninsuffizienz von Bedeutung.42 Ob eine Vordilatation durchgeführt wird, sollte also individuell aufgrund der Begleiterkrankungen und Risikofaktoren entschieden werden.
Die vorliegende Arbeit widmet sich den Reaktionsmöglichkeiten, welche die Rechtsordnung der Europäischen Union ihren Organen zur Sicherung der in Artikel 2 EUV kodifizierten Werte zur Verfügung stellt. Die Europäische Union wird hierbei in ihrer Eigenschaft als Wertegemeinschaft, die sich insbesondere auf demokratischen, rechtsstaatlichen und menschenrechtlichen Zielen und Vorstellungen gründet, beleuchtet. Neben der Analyse der Werteklausel nach Artikel 2 EUV setzt sich die Dissertation im Kern sowohl mit den präventiven als auch repressiven Instrumenten des unionalen Primär- und Sekundärrechts zur Sicherung des Wertekanons auseinander. Im Wege eines systematischen Vergleichs erfolgt abschließend eine Bewertung der verschiedenen Handlungsmechanismen.
Eine Dysbalance zwischen regulatorischen und proinflammatorischen T-Helferzellen kann zu Autoimmunerkrankungen führen. In dieser methodischen Arbeit wurde die Polarisierbarkeit von peripheren T-Lymphozyten durch verschiedene Zytokin-Stimuli untersucht. Hauptziel war es, CD4+CD25-CD127- Lymphozyten durch Stimulation mit einem IL-2 und TGFβ-beinhaltenden Zytokin-Cocktail (Treg-Cocktail) zu iTregs zu polarisieren und deren Suppressionsfunktion auf autologe Effektor-Leukozyten zu untersuchen.
Es erfolgte eine Phänotypisierung der PBMCs gesunder Probanden, insbesondere im Hinblick auf die Verteilung der T-Lymphozyten-Subpopulationen, deren Zytokinproduktion und FoxP3-Expression. Zudem wurden aus den PBMCs der Probanden Tregs (CD4+CD25+CD127low/-) sowie CD4+CD25-CD127- Zellen isoliert und deren Funktionsfähigkeit durch die Untersuchung ihrer Suppressionsfunktion auf autologe Effektor-Lymphozyten analysiert. Die Zellen wurden mittels verschiedener Zytokin-Cocktails in Richtung Treg sowie in Richtung Th17-Zellen polarisiert; anschließend wurde die Funktionsfähigkeit der polarisierten Zellen in Suppression-Assays gemessen.
Wir konnten zeigen, dass die CD4+CD25+CD127low/- Zellen Tregs mit der Fähigkeit zur Suppression der Proliferation autologer Effektor-Lymphozyten waren. Bei den CD4+CD25-CD127-Zellen handelte es sich um T-Lymphozyten ohne Suppressionsfunktion. Nach Stimulation der CD4+CD25-CD127-Zellen mit dem Treg-Cocktail zeigten die Zellen eine mit den Tregs vergleichbare Suppressionsfunktion.
Mit dieser Studie haben wir eine aktuelle methodische Quelle für die Untersuchung von Phänotyp und Funktion regulatorischer T-Zellen sowie für die Stimulation peripherer T-Lymphozyten hin zu Tregs geschaffen, die als Basis für Folgeversuche dienen soll, in denen Zellen von Patienten mit Autoimmunkrankheiten untersucht werden sollen. Da sich die Inflammation bei Autoimmunerkrankungen insbesondere in den betroffenen Geweben abspielt, wäre eine Studie anzustreben, in der aus dem Blut isolierte T-Lymphozyten den Zellen aus den entzündeten Geweben gegenübergestellt werden. Ergänzend sollte eine Phänotypisierung der Tregs und der CD4+CD25-CD127- Zellen nach der Zytokin-Stimulation erfolgen.
Zusammenfassend konnte die Plastizität peripherer T-Lymphozyten in Richtung Treg gezeigt werden. Besonders hervorzuheben ist die bislang wenig untersuchte Zellpopulation der CD4+CD25-CD127- Zellen, die eine vielversprechende Zellpopulation für die in vitro Induktion von Tregs darstellt.
Das frühzeitige Erkennen psychoonkologischer Belastungen ist Bestandteil des optimalen therapeutischen Managements von Tumorpatienten. Nur wenige, widersprüchliche Studien untersuchten bisher das psychische Befinden im Verlauf einer PET/CT. Bezogen auf das Prostatakarzinom gibt es bislang keine spezifische Studie, obwohl es die häufigste onkologische Erkrankung des Mannes darstellt. Aufgrund der insgesamt guten Prognose wird von einer geringeren psychischen Belastung ausgegangen. Mithilfe dieser Studie sollte durch Kombination etablierter Fragebögen das psychische Befinden im Verlauf der PET/CT explorativ untersucht werden.
Von Oktober 2018 bis Februar 2020 wurde 531 männlichen Patienten der Nuklearmedizin des Universitätsklinikums Würzburg die Teilnahme angeboten. N = 85 Patienten (n = 38 Patienten mit Prostatakarzinom sowie n = 47 Patienten mit anderen malignen Erkrankungen) stimmten einer vollständigen Teilnahme zu. Es wurden zwei Messzeitpunkte (T1 nach Durchführung der PET/CT; T2 nach Ergebnismitteilung) festgelegt. Als Messinstrumente wurden der PA-F-KF, QUICC, DT, STAI-X1, PANAS und ein Selbsteinschätzungsbogen verwendet.
24 % (T1) bzw. 35 % (T2) der Patienten mit Prostatakarzinom gaben eine dysfunktionale Progredienzangst an, 55 % (T1+T2) eine pathologische psychische Belastung. 53 % (T1) bzw. 50 % (T2) der Patienten zeigten eine relevant erhöhte Zustandsangst.
Die Progredienzangst stieg nach Ergebnismitteilung an (p = 0,048; η² = 0,106), die Ungewissheit über den Stand der Erkrankung (p = 0,014; η² = 0,165) und Bewältigbarkeit des Alltags (p = 0,016; η² = 0,163) reduzierten sich. Allgemeine Ängste wie die Zustandsangst, der Distress und negative Affekte veränderten sich nicht. PSA-Werte ohne bildmorphologisches Korrelat lösten eine größere Unsicherheit bezüglich des aktuellen Krankheitszustandes aus (p = 0,029; η² = 0,128). Jüngere Patienten zeigten vor (p = 0,005; η² = 0,207) und nach (p = 0,001; η² = 0,290) Ergebnismitteilung eine höhere Angst um ihre Berufstätigkeit und gaben eine geringere Erleichterung nach Ergebnismitteilung (p = 0,016; η² = 0,165) an.
Als Limitationen sind die geringe Fallzahl und Teilnahmequote, multiple Testung und fehlende Erfragung psychischer Erkrankungen zu beachten.
Insgesamt zeigen sich eine hohe psychische Belastung und Ängste im Verlauf der PET/CT. Patienten mit Prostatakarzinom sind zu diesem Zeitpunkt nicht weniger belastet als Patienten mit anderen malignen Erkrankungen.
Störungen der Ionen- und Blutgas Homöostase mit Verschiebungen von Na+ und K+ in der regionalen Hypoxie sind ein Kennzeichen der experimentellen zerebralen Ischämie, wurden aber in ihrer Bedeutung für Schlaganfallpatienten noch nicht hinreichend untersucht. Wir berichten über eine prospektive, humane Querschnittsstudie an 366 Schlaganfallpatienten, die mit einer endovaskulären Rekanalisation bei einem akuten LVO der vorderen Zirkulation zwischen dem 18.Dezember 2018 und dem 31.August 2020 behandelt wurden. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Dissertationsarbeit wurden intraprozedural arterielle Blutgasproben (1ml) aus dem lokal ischämischen Kollateralkreislauf und der intraindividuellen systemischen Referenzlokalisation in 51 Patienten gewonnen. Die Probengewinnung mit Hilfe eines Mikrokatheters erfolgte nach einem bereits veröffentlichten Protokoll.
Diese Arbeit weist in der Perakutphase eines Großgefäßverschlusses signifikant nach, dass der lokal ischämische paO2 (-4,29%, paO2ischämisch=185,3 mmHg vs. paO2systemisch=193,6mmHg; p=0,035) und die Konzentration von K+ (-5,49%, K+ischämisch=3,44mmol/L vs. K+systemisch=3,64mmol/L; p=0,0081) signifikant reduziert war. Wir beobachteten, dass der Na+:K+-Quotient in der Kollateralzirkulation (+3,29%; Na+:K+-Quotientischämisch=41,74 vs. Na+:K+-Quotientsystemisch=40,38; p=0,0048) im Vergleich zur systemischen Zirkulation signifikant erhöht war, während die Na+-Konzentration signifikant positiv mit einer Zunahme des Infarktausmaßes assoziiert war (r=0,42, p=0,0033). Wir fanden eine alkaline Tendenz des zerebralen pH (+0,14%, pHischämisch=7,38 vs. pHsystemisch=7,37, p=0,0019), mit einer zeitabhängigen Verschiebung in den azidotischen Bereich (r=-0,36, p=0,0549).
Schlussfolgernd deuten unsere Ergebnisse darauf hin, dass die durch den Schlaganfall verursachten Veränderungen der zerebralen Sauerstoffversorgung, der Ionenzusammensetzung und des Säure-Basen-Gleichgewichts dynamisch auftreten, während der okklusiven Ischämie fortschreiten und mit der akuten Gewebeschädigung im Zusammenhang stehen. Wünschenswert sind weitere prospektive Studien, um die Ergebnisse valide zu reproduzieren.
Background and Objective: Staphylococcus aureus is one of the major pathogens of nosocomial infections as wells as community-acquired (CA) infections worldwide. So far, large-scale comprehensive molecular and epidemiological characterisation of S. aureus from very diverse settings has not been carried out in India. The objective of this study is to evaluate the molecular, epidemiological and virulence characteristics of S. aureus in both community and hospital settings in Chennai, southern India. Methods: S. aureus isolates were obtained from four different groups (a) healthy individuals from closed community settings, (b) inpatients from hospitals, (c) outpatients from hospitals, representing isolates of hospital-community interface and (d) HIV-infected patients to define isolates associated with the immunocompromised. Antibiotic susceptibility testing, multiplex polymerase chain reactions for detection of virulence and resistance determinants, molecular typing including Staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) and agr typing, were carried out. Sequencing-based typing was done using spa and multilocus sequence typing (MLST) methods. Clonal complexes (CC) of hospital and CA methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) were identified and compared for virulence and resistance.
Results and Conclusion: A total of 769 isolates of S. aureus isolates were studied. The prevalence of MRSA was found to be 7.17%, 81.67%, 58.33% and 22.85% for groups a, b, c and d, respectively. Of the four SCCmec types (I, III, IV and V) detected, SCCmec V was found to be predominant. Panton-Valentine leucocidin toxin genes were detected among MRSA isolates harbouring SCCmec IV and V. A total of 78 spa types were detected, t657 being the most prevalent. 13 MLST types belonging to 9 CC were detected. CC1 (ST-772, ST-1) and CC8 (ST238, ST368 and ST1208) were found to be predominant among MRSA. CA-MRSA isolates with SCCmec IV and V were isolated from all study groups including hospitalised patients and were found to be similar by molecular tools. This shows that CA MRSA has probably infiltrated into the hospital settings.
Nearly a quarter of the Alpine area is covered by a dense network of large protected areas (LPAs) of the four categories national park(NP), biosphere reserve (BR), nature park and world natural heritage site (WNHS). From the time of early industrialization, the Alpine area has undergone a mixed and increasingly polarized demographic development between the poles of immigration and emigration. This article investigates the possible mutual impact of population development and the existence of LPAs. The research design includes a quantitative survey of all Alpine LPAs in terms of their population development and the structure of immigration in the first decade of the 21st century. This will be linked with qualitative expert interviews in four selected NPs. The overall results allow an interpretation of the statistical
correlations between type of LPA and migration.
Background
Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is often accompanied by pathomorphological changes to the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). By analyzing orthodontical orthopantomograms of JIA patients the aims of the study were a) classification of condyle changes, b) quantification of bony asymmetries of condylar destruction and c) detection of relationships between disease duration and TMJ-involvement.
Patients/Methods
46 caucasian JIA-patients (28 female; 18 male; < 16.0 years) were enrolled, each joint (n = 92) was morphologically assessed by means of orthopantomogram, quantitatively analysed and compared with duration of general disease. Condyle morphology was assessed using the Billiau scale for severity of destruction [1]. The quantitative analysis was based on ratios of condyle, ramus and mandible height.
Results
Patients were divided into groups (Group I – slightly affected, n = 36; Billiau severity 0–2; condyle findings: X-ray normal, condyle erosions, condylar flattening; Group II – severely affected, N = 10; Billiau severity 3–4; condyle findings: condylar flattenings and erosions, unilateral/bilateral complete loss of condyles), based on morphological analysis of condylar destruction. Duration of disease was significantly longer in Group II (8.9 ± 5.2 years) than in Group I (4.6 ± 4.7 years). Asymmetries of condyle, ramus and mandible height, quantitatively analysed by contralateral comparison, were significantly more marked in patients of Group II than of Group I.
Conclusions
Orthopantomogram imaging can be used in orthodontics clinical routine to detect TMJ-pathologies and is an important reference for monitoring progression of JIA. Classification into severe and slightly affected TMJ is possible by analysis of condylar pathomorphology. An association between degree of destruction, extent of lower jaw asymmetry and disease duration is suggested by the results.
Background
Shotgun metagenomes contain a sample of all the genomic material in an environment, allowing for the characterization of a microbial community. In order to understand these communities, bioinformatics methods are crucial. A common first step in processing metagenomes is to compute abundance estimates of different taxonomic or functional groups from the raw sequencing data.
Given the breadth of the field, computational solutions need to be flexible and extensible, enabling the combination of different tools into a larger pipeline.
Results
We present NGLess and NG-meta-profiler. NGLess is a domain specific language for describing next-generation sequence processing pipelines. It was developed with the goal of enabling user-friendly computational reproducibility. It provides built-in support for many common operations on sequencing data and is extensible with external tools with configuration files.
Using this framework, we developed NG-meta-profiler, a fast profiler for metagenomes which performs sequence preprocessing, mapping to bundled databases, filtering of the mapping results, and profiling (taxonomic and functional). It is significantly faster than either MOCAT2 or htseq-count and (as it builds on NGLess) its results are perfectly reproducible.
Conclusions
NG-meta-profiler is a high-performance solution for metagenomics processing built on NGLess. It can be used as-is to execute standard analyses or serve as the starting point for customization in a perfectly reproducible fashion.
NGLess and NG-meta-profiler are open source software (under the liberal MIT license) and can be downloaded from https://ngless.embl.de or installed through bioconda.
Background
With upcoming therapeutic interventions for patients with primary progressive aphasia (PPA), instruments for the follow-up of patients are needed to describe disease progression and to evaluate potential therapeutic effects. So far, volumetric brain changes have been proposed as clinical endpoints in the literature, but cognitive scores are still lacking. This study followed disease progression predominantly in language-based performance within 1 year and defined a PPA sum score which can be used in therapeutic interventions.
Methods
We assessed 28 patients with nonfluent variant PPA, 17 with semantic variant PPA, 13 with logopenic variant PPA, and 28 healthy controls in detail for 1 year. The most informative neuropsychological assessments were combined to a sum score, and associations between brain atrophy were investigated followed by a sample size calculation for clinical trials.
Results
Significant absolute changes up to 20% in cognitive tests were found after 1 year. Semantic and phonemic word fluency, Boston Naming Test, Digit Span, Token Test, AAT Written language, and Cookie Test were identified as the best markers for disease progression. These tasks provide the basis of a new PPA sum score. Assuming a therapeutic effect of 50% reduction in cognitive decline for sample size calculations, a number of 56 cases is needed to find a significant treatment effect. Correlations between cognitive decline and atrophy showed a correlation up to r = 0.7 between the sum score and frontal structures, namely the superior and inferior frontal gyrus, as well as with left-sided subcortical structures.
Conclusion
Our findings support the high performance of the proposed sum score in the follow-up of PPA and recommend it as an outcome measure in intervention studies.
Background
The intent of this pooled analysis as part of the German society for radiation oncology (DEGRO) stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) initiative was to analyze the patterns of care of SBRT for liver oligometastases and to derive factors influencing treated metastases control and overall survival in a large patient cohort.
Methods
From 17 German and Swiss centers, data on all patients treated for liver oligometastases with SBRT since its introduction in 1997 has been collected and entered into a centralized database. In addition to patient and tumor characteristics, data on immobilization, image guidance and motion management as well as dose prescription and fractionation has been gathered. Besides dose response and survival statistics, time trends of the aforementioned variables have been investigated.
Results
In total, 474 patients with 623 liver oligometastases (median 1 lesion/patient; range 1–4) have been collected from 1997 until 2015. Predominant histologies were colorectal cancer (n = 213 pts.; 300 lesions) and breast cancer (n = 57; 81 lesions). All centers employed an SBRT specific setup. Initially, stereotactic coordinates and CT simulation were used for treatment set-up (55%), but eventually were replaced by CBCT guidance (28%) or more recently robotic tracking (17%). High variance in fraction (fx) number (median 1 fx; range 1–13) and dose per fraction (median: 18.5 Gy; range 3–37.5 Gy) was observed, although median BED remained consistently high after an initial learning curve. Median follow-up time was 15 months; median overall survival after SBRT was 24 months. One- and 2-year treated metastases control rate of treated lesions was 77% and 64%; if maximum isocenter biological equivalent dose (BED) was greater than 150 Gy EQD2Gy, it increased to 83% and 70%, respectively. Besides radiation dose colorectal and breast histology and motion management methods were associated with improved treated metastases control.
Conclusion
After an initial learning curve with regards to total cumulative doses, consistently high biologically effective doses have been employed translating into high local tumor control at 1 and 2 years. The true impact of histology and motion management method on treated metastases control deserve deeper analysis. Overall survival is mainly influenced by histology and metastatic tumor burden.
π-Conjugated organic polymers have attracted tremendous attention in the last decades, and the interest in these materials is mainly driven by their applicability in next-generation electronic and optoelectronic devices (OLEDs, OFETs, photovoltaics). The partial or complete replacement of carbon atoms by main group elements in conjugated polymers can significantly change the characteristics and applications of these macromolecules. In this work, a class of inorganic polymers comprising a backbone of exclusively boron and nitrogen atoms (poly(iminoborane)s, PIBs) and their monodisperse oligomers is described. In addition, novel inorganic–organic hybrid polymers containing BN units in their polymer backbone were synthesized and characterized.
In chapter 2.1, the development of catalytic B–N coupling routes for the controlled synthesis of macromolecular materials is described. While the reaction of an N-silyl-B-chloro-aminoborane with the electrophilic reagent trimethylsilyl triflate led to effective B–N coupling, the reaction with a silver(I) salt resulted in an intramolecular Cl/Me exchange between the boron and silicon centers.
In chapter 2.2-2.4, the study of oligo- and poly(iminoborane)s is discussed. Monodisperse and cyclolinear oligo(iminoborane)s based on diazaborolidines with up to 7 boron and 8 nitrogen atoms were synthesized by successively extending the B-N main chain. However, the use of benzodiazaborolines only led to limited BN catenation. Furthermore, the redistribution processes resulting from the reaction of longer oligomers with non-stoichiometric amounts of (di)halogenated boranes is reported.
In chapter 2.5-2.6, the synthesis of 1,2,5-azadiborolanes as building blocks for the synthesis of poly(iminoborane)s and inorganic-organic hybrid polymers is described. While the attempt to apply an azadiborolane with sterically demanding groups on the boron-bridging ethylene unit for the construction of PIB was unfeasible, it was successfully incorporated in inorganic-organic hybrid polymers. Photophysical studies indicated π-conjugation along the polymer chain. A first attempt to synthesize PIBs based on azadiborolanes with unsubstituted ethylene units showed promising results.
In chapter 2.7-2.8, a comprehensive study of poly(arylene iminoborane)s, which are BN analogs of poly(arylene vinylene)s is described, and the properties of four polymers as well as twelve monodisperse oligomers were investigated. Photophysical investigations of the monomers, dimers and polymers showed a systematic bathochromic shift of the absorption maximum with increasing chain length and thiophene content. Based on TD-DFT calculations of the model oligomers, the lowest-energy absorption band could be assigned to HOMO to LUMO transitions with π-π* character. The oligo- and poly(arylene iminoborane)s showed only very weak to no emission in solution but they were emissive in the solid state. For four oligomers the aggregation induced emission (AIE) in a THF/water mixture was investigated and DLS studies confirmed the formation of nanoaggregates.
In chapter 2.9, oligo- and polymerizations of sulfur-containing building blocks and subsequent pH-triggered degradation of the products is described. While a sulfilimine-containing oligomer could not be isolated, the sulfone-, sulfoximine-, and sulfoxide-containing molecular oligomers and polymers could be successfully synthesized by B=N or B–O bond formation reactions. The sulfur-containing building blocks were successfully released under acidic or basic conditions, which was confirmed by NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry.
Background
Disentangling the etiology of common, complex diseases is a major challenge in genetic research. For bipolar disorder (BD), several genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been performed. Similar to other complex disorders, major breakthroughs in explaining the high heritability of BD through GWAS have remained elusive. To overcome this dilemma, genetic research into BD, has embraced a variety of strategies such as the formation of large consortia to increase sample size and sequencing approaches. Here we advocate a complementary approach making use of already existing GWAS data: a novel data mining procedure to identify yet undetected genotype–phenotype relationships. We adapted association rule mining, a data mining technique traditionally used in retail market research, to identify frequent and characteristic genotype patterns showing strong associations to phenotype clusters. We applied this strategy to three independent GWAS datasets from 2835 phenotypically characterized patients with BD. In a discovery step, 20,882 candidate association rules were extracted.
Results
Two of these rules—one associated with eating disorder and the other with anxiety—remained significant in an independent dataset after robust correction for multiple testing. Both showed considerable effect sizes (odds ratio ~ 3.4 and 3.0, respectively) and support previously reported molecular biological findings.
Conclusion
Our approach detected novel specific genotype–phenotype relationships in BD that were missed by standard analyses like GWAS. While we developed and applied our method within the context of BD gene discovery, it may facilitate identifying highly specific genotype–phenotype relationships in subsets of genome-wide data sets of other complex phenotype with similar epidemiological properties and challenges to gene discovery efforts.
Background
Gut microbes influence their hosts in many ways, in particular by modulating the impact of diet. These effects have been studied most extensively in humans and mice. In this work, we used whole genome metagenomics to investigate the relationship between the gut metagenomes of dogs, humans, mice, and pigs.
Results
We present a dog gut microbiome gene catalog containing 1,247,405 genes (based on 129 metagenomes and a total of 1.9 terabasepairs of sequencing data). Based on this catalog and taxonomic abundance profiling, we show that the dog microbiome is closer to the human microbiome than the microbiome of either pigs or mice. To investigate this similarity in terms of response to dietary changes, we report on a randomized intervention with two diets (high-protein/low-carbohydrate vs. lower protein/higher carbohydrate). We show that diet has a large and reproducible effect on the dog microbiome, independent of breed or sex. Moreover, the responses were in agreement with those observed in previous human studies.
Conclusions
We conclude that findings in dogs may be predictive of human microbiome results. In particular, a novel finding is that overweight or obese dogs experience larger compositional shifts than lean dogs in response to a high-protein diet.
Background
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) with hippocampal sclerosis (HS) is a common pharmaco-resistant epilepsy referred for adult epilepsy surgery. Though associated with prolonged febrile seizures (FS) in childhood, the neurobiological basis for this relationship is not fully understood and currently no preventive or curative therapies are available. DNA methylation, an epigenetic mechanism catalyzed by DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs), potentially plays a pivotal role in epileptogenesis associated with FS. In an attempt to start exploring this notion, the present cross-sectional pilot study investigated whether global DNA methylation levels (5-mC and 5-hmC markers) and DNMT isoforms (DNMT1, DNMT3a1, and DNMT3a2) expression would be different in hippocampal and neocortical tissues between controls and TLE patients with or without a history of FS.
Results
We found that global DNA methylation levels and DNMT3a2 isoform expression were lower in the hippocampus for all TLE groups when compared to control patients, with a more significant decrease amongst the TLE groups with a history of FS. Interestingly, we showed that DNMT3a1 expression was severely diminished in the hippocampus of TLE patients with a history of FS in comparison with control and other TLE groups. In the neocortex, we found a higher expression of DNMT1 and DNMT3a1 as well as increased levels of global DNA methylation for all TLE patients compared to controls.
Conclusion
Together, the findings of this descriptive cross-sectional pilot study demonstrated brain region-specific changes in DNMT1 and DNMT3a isoform expression as well as global DNA methylation levels in human TLE with or without a history of FS. They highlighted a specific implication of DNMT3a isoforms in TLE after FS. Therefore, longitudinal studies that aim at targeting DNMT3a isoforms to evaluate the potential causal relationship between FS and TLE or treatment of FS-induced epileptogenesis seem warranted.
Introduction.
Mobile health (mHealth) integrates mobile devices into healthcare, enabling remote monitoring, data collection, and personalized interventions. Machine Learning (ML), a subfield of Artificial Intelligence (AI), can use mHealth data to confirm or extend domain knowledge by finding associations within the data, i.e., with the goal of improving healthcare decisions. In this work, two data collection techniques were used for mHealth data fed into ML systems: Mobile Crowdsensing (MCS), which is a collaborative data gathering approach, and Ecological Momentary Assessments (EMA), which capture real-time individual experiences within the individual’s common environments using questionnaires and sensors. We collected EMA and MCS data on tinnitus and COVID-19. About 15 % of the world’s population suffers from tinnitus.
Materials & Methods.
This thesis investigates the challenges of ML systems when using MCS and EMA data. It asks: How can ML confirm or broad domain knowledge? Domain knowledge refers to expertise and understanding in a specific field, gained through experience and education. Are ML systems always superior to simple heuristics and if yes, how can one reach explainable AI (XAI) in the presence of mHealth data? An XAI method enables a human to understand why a model makes certain predictions. Finally, which guidelines can be beneficial for the use of ML within the mHealth domain? In tinnitus research, ML discerns gender, temperature, and season-related variations among patients. In the realm of COVID-19, we collaboratively designed a COVID-19 check app for public education, incorporating EMA data to offer informative feedback on COVID-19-related matters. This thesis uses seven EMA datasets with more than 250,000 assessments. Our analyses revealed a set of challenges: App user over-representation, time gaps, identity ambiguity, and operating system specific rounding errors, among others. Our systematic review of 450 medical studies assessed prior utilization of XAI methods.
Results.
ML models predict gender and tinnitus perception, validating gender-linked tinnitus disparities. Using season and temperature to predict tinnitus shows the association of these variables with tinnitus. Multiple assessments of one app user can constitute a group. Neglecting these groups in data sets leads to model overfitting. In select instances, heuristics outperform ML models, highlighting the need for domain expert consultation to unveil hidden groups or find simple heuristics.
Conclusion.
This thesis suggests guidelines for mHealth related data analyses and improves estimates for ML performance. Close communication with medical domain experts to identify latent user subsets and incremental benefits of ML is essential.
Ziel der vorliegenden Studie war es, verschiedene kommerzielle Anbieter für KI-gestützte FRS-Analysen hinsichtlich ihrer Genauigkeit mit einem menschlichen Goldstandard zu vergleichen.
Auf 50 FRS wurden durch zwölf erfahrene Untersucher 15 Landmarken identifiziert, auf deren Basis neun relevante Parameter vermessen wurden. Der Medianwert dieser zwölf Auswertungen wurde für jeden Parameter auf jedem FRS als Goldstandard definiert und als Referenz für die Vergleiche mit vier verschiedenen kommerziellen KI-Anbietern (DentaliQ.ortho, WebCeph, AudaxCeph, CephX) festgelegt. Die statistische Auswertung erfolgte mittels ANOVA mit Messwiederholung, paarweiser Vergleiche mittels Post-hoc-Test und Bland-Altman-Plots.
DentaliQ.ortho zeigte für alle neun untersuchten Parameter keinen statistisch signifikanten Unterschied zum menschlichen Goldstandard und es konnte insgesamt von einer hohen Genauigkeit der Auswertungen ausgegangen werden. Auch für WebCeph war kein statistisch signifikanter Unterschied zum menschlichen Goldstandard zu verzeichnen. Allerdings war die Präzision im Vergleich zu den anderen Anbietern für alle Parameter am geringsten und der proportionale Fehler bei nahezu allen Parametern am höchsten. AudaxCeph wies für sieben Parameter statistisch signifikante Unterschiede zum menschlichen Goldstandard auf. Für CephX wurden für fünf Parameter statistisch signifikante Unterschiede zum menschlichen Goldstandard ermittelt. Insbesondere für die dentale Analyse war für alle untersuchten kommerziellen KI-Anbieter eine vergleichsweise niedrigere Genauigkeit zu verzeichnen.
Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass noch deutliche Qualitätsunterschiede zwischen den kommerziellen KI-Anbietern für die vollständig automatisierte FRS-Analyse bestehen. Vor dem Hintergrund der Zeitersparnis und Qualitätssicherung sind KI zwar vielversprechend, sollten aber zum aktuellen Zeitpunkt nur unter Aufsicht durch menschliche Experten zum Einsatz kommen.
We develop a joint formalism and numerical framework for analyzing the superconducting instability of metals from a weak coupling perspective. This encompasses the Kohn–Luttinger formulation of weak coupling renormalization group for superconductivity as well as the random phase approximation imposed on the diagrammatic expansion of the two-particle Green’s function. The central quantity to resolve is the effective interaction in the Cooper channel, for which we develop an optimized numerical framework. Our code is capable of treating generic multi-orbital models in two as well as three spatial dimensions and, in particular, arbitrary avenues of spin-orbit coupling.
For a connected real Lie group G we consider the canonical standard-ordered star product arising from the canonical global symbol calculus based on the half-commutator connection of G. This star product trivially converges on polynomial functions on T\(^*\)G thanks to its homogeneity. We define a nuclear Fréchet algebra of certain analytic functions on T\(^*\)G, for which the standard-ordered star product is shown to be a well-defined continuous multiplication, depending holomorphically on the deformation parameter \(\hbar\). This nuclear Fréchet algebra is realized as the completed (projective) tensor product of a nuclear Fréchet algebra of entire functions on G with an appropriate nuclear Fréchet algebra of functions on \({\mathfrak {g}}^*\). The passage to the Weyl-ordered star product, i.e. the Gutt star product on T\(^*\)G, is shown to preserve this function space, yielding the continuity of the Gutt star product with holomorphic dependence on \(\hbar\).
Let (ϕ\(_t\))\(_{t≥0}\) be a semigroup of holomorphic functions in the unit disk \(\mathbb {D}\) and K a compact subset of \(\mathbb {D}\). We investigate the conditions under which the backward orbit of K under the semigroup exists. Subsequently, the geometric characteristics, as well as, potential theoretic quantities for the backward orbit of K are examined. More specifically, results are obtained concerning the asymptotic behavior of its hyperbolic area and diameter, the harmonic measure and the capacity of the condenser that K forms with the unit disk.
Es erfolgte eine Evaluierung von Bestrahlungsdaten aus der Strahlentherapie der Universitätsklinik Würzburg von 435 Patienten mit biochemischen oder klinischen Rezidiv des Prostatakarzinoms. Der primäre Endpunkt war das biochemisch rezidivfreie Überleben. Sekundäre Endpunkte waren das Auftreten von Fernmetastasen und das Versterben der Patienten. Zudem wurde der Einfluss patienten-, tumor-, und behandlungsspezifischer Faktoren überprüft.
In this article, I argue for four theses. First, libertarian and compatibilist accounts of moral responsibility agree that the capability of practical reason is the central feature of moral responsibility. Second, this viewpoint leads to a reasons-focused account of human behavior. Examples of human action discussed in debates about moral responsibility suggest that typical human actions are driven primarily by the agent’s subjective reasons and are sufficiently transparent for the agent. Third, this conception of self-transparent action is a questionable idealization. As shown by psychological research on self-assessment, motivated reasoning, and terror management theory, humans oftentimes have only a limited understanding of their conduct. Self-deception is rather the rule than the exception. Fourth, taking the limited self-transparency of practical reason seriously leads to a socially contextualized conception of moral responsibility.
This paper studies differential graded modules and representations up to homotopy of Lie n-algebroids, for general \(n\in {\mathbb {N}}\). The adjoint and coadjoint modules are described, and the corresponding split versions of the adjoint and coadjoint representations up to homotopy are explained. In particular, the case of Lie 2-algebroids is analysed in detail. The compatibility of a Poisson bracket with the homological vector field of a Lie n-algebroid is shown to be equivalent to a morphism from the coadjoint module to the adjoint module, leading to an alternative characterisation of non-degeneracy of higher Poisson structures. Moreover, the Weil algebra of a Lie n-algebroid is computed explicitly in terms of splittings, and representations up to homotopy of Lie n-algebroids are used to encode decomposed VB-Lie n-algebroid structures on double vector bundles.
Posture and mobility are important aspects for spinal health. In the context of low back pain, strategies to alter postural anomalies (e.g., hyper/hypolordosis, hyper/hypokyphosis) and mobility deficits (e.g., bending restrictions) have been of interest to researchers and clinicians. Machine-based isolated lumbar extension resistance exercise (ILEX) has been used successfully for rehabilitation of patients suffering from low back pain. The aim of this study was to analyse the immediate effects of ILEX on spinal posture and mobility. In this interventional cohort study, the posture and mobility measures of 33 healthy individuals (m = 17, f = 16; mean age 30.0 years) were taken using the surface-based Spinal Mouse system (IDIAG M360©, Fehraltdorf, Switzerland). Individuals performed one exercise set to full exhaustion with an ILEX-device (Powerspine, Wuerzburg, Germany) in a standardized setup, including uniform range of motion and time under tension. Scans were made immediately before and after the exercise. There was an immediate significant decrease in standing lumbar lordosis and thoracic kyphosis. No change could be observed in standing pelvic tilt. Mobility measures showed a significant decrease in the lumbar spine and an increase in the sacrum. The results show that ILEX alters spine posture and mobility in the short-term, which may benefit certain patient groups.
We analyze a variety of integration schemes for the momentum space functional renormalization group calculation with the goal of finding an optimized scheme. Using the square lattice t-t' Hubbard model as a testbed we define and benchmark the quality. Most notably we define an error estimate of the solution for the ordinary differential equation circumventing the issues introduced by the divergences at the end of the FRG flow. Using this measure to control for accuracy we find a threefold reduction in number of required integration steps achievable by choice of integrator. We herewith publish a set of recommended choices for the functional renormalization group, shown to decrease the computational cost for FRG calculations and representing a valuable basis for further investigations.
We analyze the mathematical models of two classes of physical phenomena. The first class of phenomena we consider is the interaction between one or more insulating rigid bodies and an electrically conducting fluid, inside of which the bodies are contained, as well as the electromagnetic fields trespassing both of the materials. We take into account both the cases of incompressible and compressible fluids. In both cases our main result yields the existence of weak solutions to the associated system of partial differential equations, respectively. The proofs of these results are built upon hybrid discrete-continuous approximation schemes: Parts of the systems are discretized with respect to time in order to deal with the solution-dependent test functions in the induction equation. The remaining parts are treated as continuous equations on the small intervals between consecutive discrete time points, allowing us to employ techniques which do not transfer to the discretized setting. Moreover, the solution-dependent test functions in the momentum equation are handled via the use of classical penalization methods.
The second class of phenomena we consider is the evolution of a magnetoelastic material. Here too, our main result proves the existence of weak solutions to the corresponding system of partial differential equations. Its proof is based on De Giorgi's minimizing movements method, in which the system is discretized in time and, at each discrete time point, a minimization problem is solved, the associated Euler-Lagrange equations of which constitute a suitable approximation of the original equation of motion and magnetic force balance. The construction of such a minimization problem is made possible by the realization that, already on the continuous level, both of these equations can be written in terms of the same energy and dissipation potentials. The functional for the discrete minimization problem can then be constructed on the basis of these potentials.
Knowledge about ransomware is important for protecting sensitive data and for participating in public debates about suitable regulation regarding its security. However, as of now, this topic has received little to no attention in most school curricula. As such, it is desirable to analyze what citizens can learn about this topic outside of formal education, e.g., from news articles. This analysis is both relevant to analyzing the public discourse about ransomware, as well as to identify what aspects of this topic should be included in the limited time available for this topic in formal education. Thus, this paper was motivated both by educational and media research. The central goal is to explore how the media reports on this topic and, additionally, to identify potential misconceptions that could stem from this reporting. To do so, we conducted an exploratory case study into the reporting of 109 media articles regarding a high-impact ransomware event: the shutdown of the Colonial Pipeline (located in the east of the USA). We analyzed how the articles introduced central terminology, what details were provided, what details were not, and what (mis-)conceptions readers might receive from them. Our results show that an introduction of the terminology and technical concepts of security is insufficient for a complete understanding of the incident. Most importantly, the articles may lead to four misconceptions about ransomware that are likely to lead to misleading conclusions about the responsibility for the incident and possible political and technical options to prevent such attacks in the future.
Whether, and in what sense, research in phenomenology and phenomenological psychopathology has—in addition to its descriptive and hermeneutic value—explanatory power is somewhat controversial. This paper shows why it is legitimate to recognize such explanatory power. To this end, the paper analyzes two central concerns underlying the debate about explanation in phenomenology: (a) the warning against reductionism, which is implicit in a conception of causal explanation exclusively based on models of natural/physical causation; and (b) the warning against top-down generalizations, which neglect the specificity of the individual. While acknowledging that these two caveats express serious concerns regarding the debate on explanatory models, I show that phenomenology has the resources to respond to them. These can be found in analyses of different types of causation relating to different regions of reality and in the structure of explanatory models based on exemplarity. On the basis of these analyses, I defend a pluralist account vis-à-vis explanatory models.
Kef couples the potassium efflux with proton influx in gram-negative bacteria. The resulting acidification of the cytosol efficiently prevents the killing of the bacteria by reactive electrophilic compounds. While other degradation pathways for electrophiles exist, Kef is a short-term response that is crucial for survival. It requires tight regulation since its activation comes with the burden of disturbed homeostasis. Electrophiles, entering the cell, react spontaneously or catalytically with glutathione, which is present at high concentrations in the cytosol. The resulting glutathione conjugates bind to the cytosolic regulatory domain of Kef and trigger activation while the binding of glutathione keeps the system closed. Furthermore, nucleotides can bind to this domain for stabilization or inhibition. The binding of an additional ancillary subunit, called KefF or KefG, to the cytosolic domain is required for full activation. The regulatory domain is termed K+ transport–nucleotide binding (KTN) or regulator of potassium conductance (RCK) domain, and it is also found in potassium uptake systems or channels in other oligomeric arrangements. Bacterial RosB-like transporters and K+ efflux antiporters (KEA) of plants are homologs of Kef but fulfill different functions. In summary, Kef provides an interesting and well-studied example of a highly regulated bacterial transport system.
Neisseria meningitidis (the meningococcus) is one of the major causes of bacterial meningitis, a life-threatening inflammation of the meninges. Traversal of the meningeal blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier (mBCSFB), which is composed of highly specialized brain endothelial cells (BECs), and subsequent interaction with leptomeningeal cells (LMCs) are critical for disease progression. Due to the human-exclusive tropism of N. meningitidis, research on this complex host-pathogen interaction is mostly limited to in vitro studies. Previous studies have primarily used peripheral or immortalized BECs alone, which do not retain relevant barrier phenotypes in culture. To study meningococcal interaction with the mBCSFB in a physiologically more accurate context, BEC-LMC co-culture models were developed in this project using BEC-like cells derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (iBECs) or hCMEC/D3 cells in combination with LMCs derived from tumor biopsies.
Distinct BEC and LMC layers as well as characteristic expression of cellular markers were observed using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and immunofluorescence staining. Clear junctional expression of brain endothelial tight and adherens junction proteins was detected in the iBEC layer. LMC co-culture increased iBEC barrier tightness and stability over a period of seven days, as determined by sodium fluorescein (NaF) permeability and transendothelial electrical resistance (TEER). Infection experiments demonstrated comparable meningococcal adhesion and invasion of the BEC layer in all models tested, consistent with previously published data. While only few bacteria crossed the iBEC-LMC barrier initially, transmigration rates increased substantially over 24 hours, despite constant high TEER. After 24 hours of infection, deterioration of the barrier properties was observed including loss of TEER and altered expression of tight and adherens junction components. Reduced mRNA levels of ZO-1, claudin-5, and VE-cadherin were detected in BECs from all models. qPCR and siRNA knockdown data suggested that transcriptional downregulation of these genes was potentially but not solely mediated by Snail1. Immunofluorescence staining showed reduced junctional coverage of occludin, indicating N. meningitidis-induced post-transcriptional modulation of this protein, as previous studies have suggested. Together, these results suggest a potential combination of transcellular and paracellular meningococcal traversal of the mBCSFB, with the more accessible paracellular route becoming available upon barrier disruption after prolonged N. meningitidis infection. Finally, N. meningitidis induced cellular expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines such as IL-8 in all mBCSFB models. Overall, the work described in this thesis highlights the usefulness of advanced in vitro models of the mBCSFB that mimic native physiology and exhibit relevant barrier properties to study infection with meningeal pathogens such as N. meningitidis.
The fastest growing regional crisis is happening in West Africa today, with over 8 million people considered persons of concern. A culmination of identity politics, climate-driven disasters, and extreme poverty has led to this humanitarian crisis in the region and is exacerbated by a lack of political will and misplaced media attention. The current state of the art does not present sufficient investigations of the thematic and spatial coverage of news media of this crisis in this region. This paper studies the spatial coverage of this crisis as reported in the media, and the themes associated with those locations, based on a curated dataset. For the time frame 12 March to 15 September 2021, 2017 news articles related to the refugee crisis in West Africa were examined and manually coded based on (1) the geographical locations mentioned in each article; (2) the themes found in the articles in reference to a location (e.g., Relocation of people in Abuja). The dataset introduces a thematic dimension, as never achieved before, to the conflict-ridden areas in West Africa. A comparative analysis with UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) data showed that 96.8% of refugee-related locations in West Africa were not covered by news during the considered time frame. Contrastingly, 80.4% of locations mentioned in the news do not appear in the UNHCR repository. Most news articles published during this time frame reported on Development aid or Political statements. Linear multiple regression analysis showed GDP per capita and political stability to be among the most influential determinants of news coverage.
Husserl’s taxonomy of action
(2022)
In the present article I discuss, in confrontation with the most recent studies on Husserl’s phenomenology of acting and willing, the taxonomy of action that is collected in the volume ‘Wille und Handlung’ of the Husserliana edition Studien zur Struktur des Bewussteins. In so doing, I first present Husserl’s universal characterization of action (Handlung) as a volitional process (willentlicher Vorgang). Then, after clarifying what it means for a process to have a character of volitionality (Willentlichkeit), I illustrate the various types of actions, which Husserl distinguishes as ‘straightforward’ (schlicht) or ‘deciding’ (entscheidend), ‘primary’ (primär) or ‘secondary’ (sekundär), ‘inner’ (innere) or ‘outer’ (äußere), ‘immediate’ (unmittelbar) or mediate (mittelbar), ‘simple’ (einfach) or ‘compound’ (zusammengesetzt). Finally, I consider Husserl’s discussion of the direction and foundation of action.
A well-known result for the interference of two single-mode fields is that the degree of coherence and the degree of indistinguishability are the same when we consider the detection of a single photon. In this article, we present the relation between the degree of coherence, path indistinguishability and the fringe visibility considering interference of multiple numbers of single-mode fields while being interested in the detection of a single photon only. We will also mention how Born’s rule of interference for multiple sources is reflected in these results.
Social patterns and roles can develop when users talk to intelligent voice assistants (IVAs) daily. The current study investigates whether users assign different roles to devices and how this affects their usage behavior, user experience, and social perceptions. Since social roles take time to establish, we equipped 106 participants with Alexa or Google assistants and some smart home devices and observed their interactions for nine months. We analyzed diverse subjective (questionnaire) and objective data (interaction data). By combining social science and data science analyses, we identified two distinct clusters—users who assigned a friendship role to IVAs over time and users who did not. Interestingly, these clusters exhibited significant differences in their usage behavior, user experience, and social perceptions of the devices. For example, participants who assigned a role to IVAs attributed more friendship to them used them more frequently, reported more enjoyment during interactions, and perceived more empathy for IVAs. In addition, these users had distinct personal requirements, for example, they reported more loneliness. This study provides valuable insights into the role-specific effects and consequences of voice assistants. Recent developments in conversational language models such as ChatGPT suggest that the findings of this study could make an important contribution to the design of dialogic human–AI interactions.
Unisexual reproduction, which generates clonal offspring, is an alternative strategy to sexual breeding and occurs even in vertebrates. A wide range of non-sexual reproductive modes have been described, and one of the least understood questions is how such pathways emerged and how they mechanistically proceed. The Amazon molly, Poecilia formosa, needs sperm from males of related species to trigger the parthenogenetic development of diploid eggs. However, the mechanism, of how the unreduced female gametes are produced, remains unclear. Cytological analyses revealed that the chromosomes of primary oocytes initiate pachytene but do not proceed to bivalent formation and meiotic crossovers. Comparing ovary transcriptomes of P. formosa and its sexual parental species revealed expression levels of meiosis-specific genes deviating from P. mexicana but not from P. latipinna. Furthermore, several meiosis genes show biased expression towards one of the two alleles from the parental genomes. We infer from our data that in the Amazon molly diploid oocytes are generated by apomixis due to a failure in the synapsis of homologous chromosomes. The fact that this failure is not reflected in the differential expression of known meiosis genes suggests the underlying molecular mechanism may be dysregulation on the protein level or misexpression of a so far unknown meiosis gene, and/or hybrid dysgenesis because of compromised interaction of proteins from diverged genomes.
In dieser Arbeit wurde einerseits retrospektiv untersucht, wie sich supratentorielle und infratentorielle Ependymome bildmorphologisch unterscheiden, ob Lokalrezidive eines Ependymoms dessen Bildeigenschaften teilen und welche Art von Rezidiven im Verlauf auftreten können. Die von uns beschriebenen Bildcharakteristika der Ependymome decken sich zum größten Teil mit bereits veröffentlichten Studien. Supratentorielle Ependymome unterscheiden sich signifikant in ihrer Bildmorphologie im Vergleich zu Ependymome der hintern Schädelgrube. Alle pädiatrischen Ependymompatienten/innen in unserem Kollektiv erkrankten an mindestens einem Rezidiv. Am häufigsten traten Lokalrezidive gefolgt von Meningeosen im ersten Rezidiv auf. Seltener fanden sich transiente postradiogene Läsionen, Diffuse intrinsische Ponsgliome und extraneurale Metastasen. Der bildmorphologische Vergleich, Primarius versus Lokalrezidiv ergab überwiegend ähnliche bildgebende Eigenschaften vor allem im Signalverhalten, Tumorbegrenzung und KM-Aufnahme sowie KM anreichernder Tumoranteil. Die kranielle Meningeose präsentierte sich zum ersten Rezidivzeitpunkt different zum Primärtumor. Die extraneuralen Metastasen hatten bildcharakteristisch Ähnlichkeiten zum Primärtumor. Bei der Bewertung neuer intraparenchymaler Läsionen sollte immer der zeitliche Zusammenhang zur letzten Therapie und damit mögliche vorübergehende postradiologischen Veränderungen berücksichtigt werden.
Letztlich ist das pädiatrische Ependymom und Ependymomrezidiv ein komplexes und immer noch unvollständiges erfasstes Krankheitsbild. Durch umfangreichere Studien und die Zusammenführung dieser Ergebnisse könnte schlussendlich die Komplexität des Krankheitsbildes und somit die Therapieoptionen verbessert werden. Durch unsere Studie gelang einerseits die Beschreibung und der Vergleich des primären Ependymoms bezüglich supra- und infratentorieller Lokalisation und andererseits gelang eine neuroradiologische Beschreibung von Ependymomrezidiven im Vergleich zum primären Ependymom, wodurch in Zukunft die Nachsorge der Ependymomrezidive und die Therapieoptionen optimiert werden könnten.
Red fruit oil (RFO) can be extracted from fruits of Pandanus conoideus, Lam., an endogenous plant of Papua, Indonesia. It is a commonly used essential original traditional medicine. By applying a newly developed quantitative \(^1\)H NMR (qNMR) spectroscopy method for quality assessment, a simultaneous determination of the saponification value (SV), acid value (AV), ester value (EV), and iodine value (IV) in RFO was possible. Dimethyl sulfone (DMSO\(_2\)) was used as an internal standard. Optimization of NMR parameters, such as NMR pulse sequence, relaxation delay time, and receiver gain, finally established the \(^1\)H NMR-based quantification approach. Diagnostic signals of the internal standard at δ = 2.98 ppm, SV at δ = 2.37–2.20 ppm, AV at δ = 2.27–2.20 ppm, EV at δ = 2.37–2.27 ppm, and IV at δ = 5.37–5.27 ppm, respectively, were used for quantitative analysis. The method was validated concerning linearity (R\(^2\) = 0.999), precision (less than 0.83%), and repeatability in the range 99.17–101.17%. Furthermore, this method was successfully applied to crude RFO, crude RFO with palmitic and oleic acid addition, and nine commercial products. The qNMR results for the respective fat values are in accordance with the results of standard methods, as can be seen from the F- and t-test (< 1.65 and < 1.66, respectively). The fundamental advantages of qNMR, such as its rapidity and simplicity, make it a feasible and existing alternative to titration for the quality control of RFO.
Capillary electrophoresis was chosen as cost-effective and robust method to separate ketamine enantiomers. For the method development, first different native and modified cyclodextrins were tested. The most promising chiral selector was α-cyclodextrin. A design of experiments (DoE) was carried out, which started with the screening of relevant factors. Based on these results, the method was optimized according to the significant factors (buffer, cyclodextrin concentration, pH value, voltage, temperature) of the screening based on the response resolution and migration time of the later migrating enantiomer. The optimized conditions consisted of a background electrolyte with 275 mM TRIS, adjusted with 85% phosphoric acid to a pH of 2.50, and 50 mM α-cyclodextrin, at a temperature of 15 °C, an applied voltage of 30 kV and an injection pressure of 1.0 psi for 10 s. A fused-silica capillary with a total length of 70 cm and an effective length to the detector of 60 cm was used. The method was validated according to ICH guideline Q2 R(1). The limit of quantification was 3.51 µg mL\(^{−1}\) for S-ketamine and 3.98 µg mL\(^{−1}\)for R-ketamine. The method showed good linearity for racemic ketamine with R\(^2\) of 0.9995 for S-ketamine and 0.9994 for R-ketamine. The lowest quantifiable content of S-ketamine found in R-ketamine was 0.45%.
The demand for LIB with enhanced energy densities leads to increased utilization of the space within the confinements of the battery housing or to the use of electrode material with increased intrinsic specific energy densities. Both requirements result in more stress on the battery electrodes and separator during cycling or aging. However, the effect of mechanical strain on the cell’s electrochemistry and thus the performance of batteries is rather unexplored compared to the impact of current or temperature, for example. The objective of this thesis was to give a better understanding of the electrochemical and mechanical interplay in current- and next-generation lithium based battery cells. Therefore, the thesis was structured into the investigations on SoA and next-generation LIBs. For SoA LIBs, the investigations of the interplay started at laboratory scale. Here, the expansion of various electrodes and also the impact of mechanical pressure and its distribution on the performance of the cells were
studied. The investigations at laboratory scale was followed by an examination of the electrochemical and mechanical interactions on large format commercial LIBs which are used in BEVs. Accordingly, the effect of bracing and its effect on the performance was studied in an aging and post-mortem study. To gain a deeper understanding of the mechanical changes in LIBs, an ultrasonic study was performed for pouch cells. Here, the mechanical changes were further investigated in dependence of SoC and SoH. The effects of the mechanical stress on the performance for next-generation batteries were studied at laboratory scale. In the beginning, the expansion of next-generation anode materials such as silicon and lithium was compared with today’s anode materials. Furthermore, the effect of mechanical pressure and electrolyte on the irreversible dilation and performance was investigated for lithium metal cells. Overall, it was shown that pressure has a significant effect on the performance of today’s and also future LIBs. The interplay of the electrochemical and mechanical effects inside a LIB has a considerable impact on the lifetime, capacity fading and impedance increase of the batteries.
Efficient spatial orientation in the natural environment is crucial for the survival of most animal species. Cataglyphis desert ants possess excellent navigational skills. After far-ranging foraging excursions, the ants return to their inconspicuous nest entrance using celestial and panoramic cues. This review focuses on the question about how naïve ants acquire the necessary spatial information and adjust their visual compass systems. Naïve ants perform structured learning walks during their transition from the dark nest interior to foraging under bright sunlight. During initial learning walks, the ants perform rotational movements with nest-directed views using the earth’s magnetic field as an earthbound compass reference. Experimental manipulations demonstrate that specific sky compass cues trigger structural neuronal plasticity in visual circuits to integration centers in the central complex and mushroom bodies. During learning walks, rotation of the sky-polarization pattern is required for an increase in volume and synaptic complexes in both integration centers. In contrast, passive light exposure triggers light-spectrum (especially UV light) dependent changes in synaptic complexes upstream of the central complex. We discuss a multisensory circuit model in the ant brain for pathways mediating structural neuroplasticity at different levels following passive light exposure and multisensory experience during the performance of learning walks.
Angesichts aktueller und zurückliegender Migrations- und Fluchtprozesse in Deutschland kommen Jugendliche der Residenzgesellschaft in verschiedenen Bereichen ihres Lebens mit Menschen mit Flucht- oder Migrationserfahrung in Kontakt, woraus sich Chancen und Entwicklungspotenziale, aber auch Herausforderungen ergeben. Beispielsweise kann vermehrter interkultureller Kontakt auf individueller Ebene zur Weiterentwicklung von Toleranz und Empathie führen. Jedoch können Jugendliche der Residenzgesellschaft auf vermehrte Zuwanderung auch mit einem Gefühl der Unsicherheit und einer ablehnenden Haltung gegenüber Menschen mit Flucht- oder Migrationserfahrung reagieren. Diese Reaktionen können durch einseitige oder negative Medienberichte zum Themenkomplex Flucht und Migration verstärkt werden. Um Chancen und Entwicklungspotenziale ausschöpfen sowie Herausforderungen im Kontext von Flucht und Migration bewältigen zu können, müssen Jugendliche in der Entwicklung interkultureller Kompetenz gefördert werden. Interkulturelle Kompetenz ist eine wesentliche Voraussetzung für das Zusammenleben in einer pluralistischen Gesellschaft und daher ein bedeutsames Bildungs- und Erziehungsziel für Schule und Unterricht.
Die Zielstellung der vorliegenden Forschungsarbeit ist demnach die praxis- und theorieorientierte Entwicklung und Evaluation eines Unterrichtskonzepts zur Förderung interkultureller Kompetenz unter Verwendung digitaler Medienangebote und Gestaltung medialer Beiträge.
Hinsichtlich theoretischer Grundlagen zu interkultureller Kompetenz wird vor dem Hintergrund eines an Offenheit, Prozesshaftigkeit und Heterogenität orientierten Kulturbegriffs Interkulturalität als sozialer Prozess verstanden, in dem sich Personen unterschiedlicher kultureller bzw. kollektiver Zugehörigkeiten begegnen, miteinander interagieren und kommunizieren. Interkulturelle Kompetenz setzt sich aus Wissen (kognitive Dimension), Einstellungen (affektive Dimension) sowie Verhaltensweisen (behaviorale Dimension) zusammen und es wird angenommen, dass diese erlernt und gefördert werden kann. Vorgehensweisen zur Entwicklung interkultureller Kompetenz sollten die kognitive, affektive und behaviorale Dimension interkultureller Kompetenz adressieren, die Reflexion authentischer, kritischer Überschneidungssituationen einbeziehen sowie realweltliche, interkulturelle Begegnungen als Lerngelegenheiten aufgreifen.
Bezüglich theoretischer Grundlagen zum Lehren und Lernen mit Medien stellt vor dem Hintergrund verschiedener Ansätze zum Lehren und Lernen mit Medien die handlungs- und entwicklungsorientierte Didaktik eine bedeutsame Grundlage für die vorliegende Forschungsarbeit dar. Sie wird bezüglich der Prinzipien der Situations-, Bedürfnis-, Erfahrungs- und Entwicklungsorientierung, der Bedeutsamkeit komplexer, lernprozessanregender Aufgabenstellungen und einer idealtypischen Strukturierung von Unterricht mit theoretischen Grundlagen interkultureller Kompetenz und Vorgehensweisen zu ihrer Förderung in Beziehung gesetzt.
Hinsichtlich des forschungsmethodischen Vorgehens wird auf Basis einer Gegenüberstellung verschiedener Ansätze der gestaltungsorientierten Bildungsforschung der Ansatz einer praxis- und theorieorientierten Entwicklung und Evaluation von Konzepten unterrichtlichen Handelns für die vorliegende Forschungsarbeit begründet ausgewählt und seine Umsetzung erläutert.
Im Rahmen der ersten Studie wird auf der Basis theoretischer und empirischer Grundlagen interkultureller Kompetenz und didaktischer Zugänge ein pädagogisches Konzept zur Förderung interkultureller Kompetenz von Schülerinnen und Schülern der Sekundarstufe I unter Verwendung digitaler Medien entwickelt und für eine achte Klasse am Gymnasium konkretisiert. Das Konzept wird hinsichtlich seiner Zielerreichung sowie auftretender Nebenwirkungen unter Einsatz von Mixed Methods evaluiert. Die Ergebnisse weisen unter anderem darauf hin, dass das entwickelte Unterrichtskonzept zur Förderung interkultureller Kompetenz der Schülerinnen und Schüler beigetragen hat.
Die zweite Studie stellt eine ergänzende qualitative Studie dar, mit dem Ziel, die gemeinsame Mediengestaltung in Zusammenarbeit von Lernenden mit und ohne Flucht- bzw. Migrationserfahrung als bedeutsame Lernaktivität des Unterrichtskonzepts vertiefend zu untersuchen und Vorgehensweisen des kollaborativen Gestaltungsprozesses, die aus der Perspektive der Schülerinnen und Schüler wichtig sind, zu identifizieren. Hierzu werden die subjektiven Sichtweisen der Gymnasiastinnen und Gymnasiasten auf die Gestaltung medialer Beiträge in interkultureller Begegnung unter Bezugnahme auf interkulturelle Sensibilität in Fokusgruppen erhoben und qualitativ-inhaltsanalytisch ausgewertet. Die Ergebnisse der qualitativen Inhaltsanalyse zeigen, dass im Rahmen der Mediengestaltung verschiedene Komponenten interkultureller Sensibilität angesprochen wurden. Beispielsweise geben einige Gymnasiastinnen und Gymnasiasten an, dass ihnen sowohl die Zusammenarbeit mit den Mittelschülerinnen und -schülern als auch die gemeinsame Mediengestaltung Freude bereitete.
In der dritten Studie werden die von den Schülerinnen und Schülern gestalteten Medienbeiträge aus interkulturell-kommunikativer und medienbezogener Perspektive vertiefend analysiert. Die Auswertung erfolgt durch qualitative Inhaltsanalysen hinsichtlich wesentlicher Aspekte der Kommunikationssituation, der Medienmerkmale sowie Bezugspunkten zur behavioralen Dimension interkultureller Kompetenz. Aus den Ergebnissen der Videoanalysen geht unter anderem hervor, dass die interkulturellen Begegnungssituationen, die im Rahmen der Beiträge dargestellt werden, aus kommunikationstheoretischer Perspektive komplex und vielschichtig sind.
Nach einer abschließenden kritischen Methodenreflexion werden Ergebnisse der Studien zusammengeführt und interpretiert. Beispielsweise geht aus der Zusammenführung der Ergebnisse aus der ersten und der zweiten Studie hervor, dass sich zwischen Pre- und Post-Test eine statistisch signifikante Steigerung des Mittelwertes der Komponente Aufmerksamkeit während der interkulturellen Interaktion ergibt, was unter Berücksichtigung der Resultate aus den Fokusgruppen als gesteigertes Interesse der Probandinnen und Probanden an den Schülerinnen und Schülern der Mittelschulklasse im Laufe der gemeinsamen Videogestaltung gedeutet werden kann. Die vergleichende Betrachtung von Ergebnissen aus der ersten und der dritten Studie zeigt, dass mit einer Steigerung des Summenscores der behavioralen Dimension interkultureller Kompetenz Bezüge zu verschiedenen Komponenten der behavioralen Dimension im Rahmen der gestalteten Videos in Verbindung stehen.
Hinsichtlich der Konsequenzen für zukünftige Forschung wird abschließend auf die Notwendigkeit der Entwicklung von Verfahren zur Erfassung interkultureller Kompetenz von Jugendlichen mit unzureichenden Deutschkenntnissen verwiesen. Bezüglich der Praxis in Schule und Unterricht ist die Förderung interkultureller Kompetenz unter Verwendung und Gestaltung digitaler Medienangebote bzw. -beiträge als schulische Querschnittsaufgabe aller Jahrgangsstufen, Fächer und Schulformen wahrzunehmen. Insgesamt leistet die vorliegende Forschungsarbeit damit einen Beitrag zur Verknüpfung der Förderung interkultureller Kompetenz mit der interkulturell-kooperativen Gestaltung medialer Beiträge.
Higher temperatures can increase metabolic rates and carbon demands of invertebrate herbivores, which may shift leaf-chewing herbivory among plant functional groups differing in C:N (carbon:nitrogen) ratios. Biotic factors influencing herbivore species richness may modulate these temperature effects. Yet, systematic studies comparing leaf-chewing herbivory among plant functional groups in different habitats and landscapes along temperature gradients are lacking. This study was conducted on 80 plots covering large gradients of temperature, plant richness and land use in Bavaria, Germany. We investigated proportional leaf area loss by chewing invertebrates (‘herbivory’) in three plant functional groups on open herbaceous vegetation. As potential drivers, we considered local mean temperature (range 8.4–18.8 °C), multi-annual mean temperature (range 6.5–10.0 °C), local plant richness (species and family level, ranges 10–51 species, 5–25 families), adjacent habitat type (forest, grassland, arable field, settlement), proportion of grassland and landscape diversity (0.2–3 km scale). We observed differential responses of leaf-chewing herbivory among plant functional groups in response to plant richness (family level only) and habitat type, but not to grassland proportion, landscape diversity and temperature—except for multi-annual mean temperature influencing herbivory on grassland plots. Three-way interactions of plant functional group, temperature and predictors of plant richness or land use did not substantially impact herbivory. We conclude that abiotic and biotic factors can assert different effects on leaf-chewing herbivory among plant functional groups. At present, effects of plant richness and habitat type outweigh effects of temperature and landscape-scale land use on herbivory among legumes, forbs and grasses.
Government funding of research beyond biomedicine: challenges and opportunities for neuroethology
(2022)
Curiosity-driven research is fundamental for neuroethology and depends crucially on governmental funding. Here, we highlight similarities and differences in funding of curiosity-driven research across countries by comparing two major funding agencies—the National Science Foundation (NSF) in the United States and the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG). We interviewed representatives from each of the two agencies, focusing on general funding trends, levels of young investigator support, career-life balance, and international collaborations. While our analysis revealed a negative trend in NSF funding of biological research, including curiosity-driven research, German researchers in these areas have benefited from a robust positive trend in DFG funding. The main reason for the decrease in curiosity-driven research in the US is that the NSF has only partially been able to compensate for the funding gap resulting from the National Institutes of Health restricting their support to biomedical research using select model organisms. Notwithstanding some differences in funding programs, particularly those relevant for scientists in the postdoctoral phase, both the NSF and DFG clearly support curiosity-driven research.
Land-use intensification and climate change threaten ecosystem functions. A fundamental, yet often overlooked, function is decomposition of necromass. The direct and indirect anthropogenic effects on decomposition, however, are poorly understood. We measured decomposition of two contrasting types of necromass, rat carrion and bison dung, on 179 study sites in Central Europe across an elevational climate gradient of 168–1122 m a.s.l. and within both local and regional land uses. Local land-use types included forest, grassland, arable fields, and settlements and were embedded in three regional land-use types (near-natural, agricultural, and urban). The effects of insects on decomposition were quantified by experimental exclusion, while controlling for removal by vertebrates. We used generalized additive mixed models to evaluate dung weight loss and carrion decay rate along elevation and across regional and local land-use types. We observed a unimodal relationship of dung decomposition with elevation, where greatest weight loss occurred between 600 and 700 m, but no effects of local temperature, land use, or insects. In contrast to dung, carrion decomposition was continuously faster with both increasing elevation and local temperature. Carrion reached the final decomposition stage six days earlier when insect access was allowed, and this did not depend on land-use effect. Our experiment identified different major drivers of decomposition on each necromass form. The results show that dung and carrion decomposition are rather robust to local and regional land use, but future climate change and decline of insects could alter decomposition processes and the self-regulation of ecosystems.
Erythrocyte ghost formation via hemolysis is a key event in the physiological clearance of senescent red blood cells (RBCs) in the spleen. The turnover rate of millions of RBCs per second necessitates a rapid efflux of hemoglobin (Hb) from RBCs by a not yet identified mechanism. Using high-speed video-microscopy of isolated RBCs, we show that electroporation-induced efflux of cytosolic ATP and other small solutes leads to transient cell shrinkage and echinocytosis, followed by osmotic swelling to the critical hemolytic volume. The onset of hemolysis coincided with a sudden self-propelled cell motion, accompanied by cell contraction and Hb-jet ejection. Our biomechanical model, which relates the Hb-jet-driven cell motion to the cytosolic pressure generation via elastic contraction of the RBC membrane, showed that the contributions of the bilayer and the bilayer-anchored spectrin cytoskeleton to the hemolytic cell motion are negligible. Consistent with the biomechanical analysis, our biochemical experiments, involving extracellular ATP and the myosin inhibitor blebbistatin, identify the low abundant non-muscle myosin 2A (NM2A) as the key contributor to the Hb-jet emission and fast hemolytic cell motion. Thus, our data reveal a rapid myosin-based mechanism of hemolysis, as opposed to a much slower diffusive Hb efflux.
Development Of A Human iPSC-Derived Cortical Neuron Model Of Adaptor- Protein-Complex-4-Deficiency
(2024)
Adaptor-protein-4-deficiency (AP-4-deficiency) is an autosomal-recessive childhood- onset form of complicated hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) caused by bi-allelic loss- of-function mutations in one of the four subunits of the AP-4-complex. These four conditions are named SPG47 (AP4B1, OMIM #614066), SPG50 (AP4M1, OMIM #612936), SPG51 (AP4E1, OMIM #613744) and SPG52 (AP4S1, OMIM #614067), respectively and all present with global developmental delay, progressive spasticity and seizures. Imaging features include a thinning of the corpus callosum, ventriculomegaly and white matter changes. AP-4 is a highly conserved heterotetrameric complex, which is responsible for polarized sorting of transmembrane cargo including the autophagy- related protein 9 A (ATG9A). Loss of any of the four subunits leads to an instable complex and defective sorting of AP-4-cargo. ATG9A is implicated in autophagosome formation and neurite outgrowth. It is missorted in AP-4-deficient cells and CNS-specific knockout of Atg9a in mice results in a phenotype reminiscent of AP-4-deficiency. However, the AP-4-related cellular phenotypes including ATG9A missorting have not been investigated in human neurons.
Thus, the aim of this study is to provide the first human induced pluripotent stem cell- derived (iPSC) cortical neuron model of AP-4-deficiency to explore AP-4-related phenotypes in preparation for a high-content screening. Under the hypothesis that AP-4- deficiency leads to ATG9A missorting, elevated ATG9A levels, impaired autophagy and neurite outgrowth in human iPSC-derived cortical neurons, in vitro biochemical and imaging assays including automated high-content imaging and analysis were applied. First, these phenotypes were investigated in fibroblasts from three patients with compound heterozygous mutations in the AP4B1 gene and their sex-matched parental controls. The same cell lines were used to generate iPSCs and differentiate them into human excitatory cortical neurons.
This work shows that ATG9A is accumulating in the trans-Golgi-network in AP-4- deficient human fibroblasts and that ATG9A levels are increased compared to parental controls and wild type cells suggesting a compensatory mechanism. Protein levels of the AP4E1-subunit were used as a surrogate marker for the AP-4-complex and were decreased in AP-4-deficient fibroblasts with co-immunoprecipitation confirming the instability of the complex. Lentiviral re-expression of the AP4B1-subunit rescues this corroborating the fact that a stable AP-4-complex is needed for ATG9A trafficking. Surprisingly, autophagic flux was present in AP-4-deficient fibroblasts under nutrient- rich and starvation conditions. These phenotypic markers were evaluated in iPSC-derived cortical neurons and here, a robust accumulation of ATG9A in the juxtanuclear area was seen together with elevated ATG9A protein levels. Strikingly, assessment of autophagy markers under nutrient-rich conditions showed alterations in AP-4-deficient iPSC- derived cortical neurons indicating dysfunctional autophagosome formation. These findings point towards a neuron-specific impairment of autophagy and need further investigation. Adding to the range of AP-4-related phenotypes, neurite outgrowth and branching are impaired in AP-4-deficient iPSC-derived cortical neurons as early as 24h after plating and together with recent studies point towards a distinct role of ATG9A in neurodevelopment independent of autophagy.
Together, this work provides the first patient-derived neuron model of AP-4-deficiency and shows that ATG9A is sorted in an AP-4-dependent manner. It establishes ATG9A- related phenotypes and impaired neurite outgrowth as robust markers for a high-content screening. This disease model holds the promise of providing a platform to further study AP-4-deficiency and to search for novel therapeutic targets.
Pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) are secondary plant metabolites, which can be found as contaminant in various foods and herbal products. Several PAs can cause hepatotoxicity and liver cancer via damaging hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells (HSECs) after hepatic metabolization. HSECs themselves do not express the required metabolic enzymes for activation of PAs. Here we applied a co-culture model to mimic the in vivo hepatic environment and to study PA-induced effects on not metabolically active neighbour cells. In this co-culture model, bioactivation of PA was enabled by metabolically capable human hepatoma cells HepG2, which excrete the toxic and mutagenic pyrrole metabolites. The human cervical epithelial HeLa cells tagged with H2B-GFP were utilized as non-metabolically active neighbours because they can be identified easily based on their green fluorescence in the co-culture. The PAs europine, riddelliine and lasiocarpine induced micronuclei in HepG2 cells, and in HeLa H2B-GFP cells co-cultured with HepG2 cells, but not in HeLa H2B-GFP cells cultured alone. Metabolic inhibition of cytochrome P450 enzymes with ketoconazole abrogated micronucleus formation. The efflux transporter inhibitors verapamil and benzbromarone reduced micronucleus formation in the co-culture model. Furthermore, mitotic disturbances as an additional genotoxic mechanism of action were observed in HepG2 cells and in HeLa H2B-GFP cells co-cultured with HepG2 cells, but not in HeLa H2B-GFP cells cultured alone. Overall, we were able to show that PAs were activated by HepG2 cells and the metabolites induced genomic damage in co-cultured HeLa cells.
Recent analyses conducted by German official food control reported detection of the aromatic amides N-(2,4-dimethylphenyl)acetamide (NDPA), N-acetoacetyl-m-xylidine (NAAX) and 3-hydroxy-2-naphthanilide (Naphthol AS) in cold water extracts from certain food contact materials made from paper or cardboard, including paper straws, paper napkins, and cupcake liners. Because aromatic amides may be cleaved to potentially genotoxic primary amines upon oral intake, these findings raise concern that transfer of NDPA, NAAX and Naphthol AS from food contact materials into food may present a risk to human health. The aim of the present work was to assess the stability of NDPA, NAAX and Naphthol AS and potential cleavage to 2,4-dimethylaniline (2,4-DMA) and aniline during simulated passage through the gastrointestinal tract using static in vitro digestion models. Using the digestion model established by the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM, Bilthoven, NL) and a protocol recommended by the European Food Safety Authority, potential hydrolysis of the aromatic amides to the respective aromatic amines was assessed by LC–MS/MS following incubation of the aromatic amides with digestive fluid simulants. Time-dependent hydrolysis of NDPA and NAAX resulting in formation of the primary aromatic amine 2,4-DMA was consistently observed in both models. The highest rate of cleavage of NDPA and NAAX was recorded following 4 h incubation with 0.07 M HCl as gastric-juice simulant, and amounted to 0.21% and 0.053%, respectively. Incubation of Naphthol AS with digestive fluid simulants did not give rise to an increase in the concentration of aniline above the background that resulted from the presence of aniline as an impurity of the test compound. Considering the lack of evidence for aniline formation from Naphthol AS and the extremely low rate of hydrolysis of the amide bonds of NDPA and NAAX during simulated passage through the gastrointestinal tract that gives rise to only very minor amounts of the potentially mutagenic and/or carcinogenic aromatic amine 2,4-DMA, risk assessment based on assumption of 100% cleavage to the primary aromatic amines would appear to overestimate health risks related to the presence of aromatic amides in food contact materials.
The subclassification of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) into germinal center B-cell-like (GCB) and activated B-cell-like (ABC) subtypes has become mandatory in the 2017 update of the WHO classification of lymphoid neoplasms and will continue to be used in the WHO 5\(^{th}\) edition. The RNA-based Lymph2Cx assay has been validated as a reliable surrogate of high-throughput gene expression profiling assays for distinguishing between GCB and ABC DLBCL and provides reliable results from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) material. This test has been previously used in clinical trials, but experience from real-world routine application is rare. We routinely applied the Lymph2Cx assay to day-to-day diagnostics on a series of 147 aggressive B-cell lymphoma cases and correlated our results with the immunohistochemical subclassification using the Hans algorithm and fluorescence in situ hybridization findings using break-apart probes for MYC, BCL2, and BCL6. The routine use of the Lymph2Cx assay had a high technical success rate (94.6%) with a low rate of failure due to poor material and/or RNA quality. The Lymph2Cx assay was discordant with the Hans algorithm in 18% (23 of 128 cases). Discordant cases were mainly classified as GCB by the Hans algorithm and as ABC by Lymph2Cx (n = 11, 8.6%). Only 5 cases (3.9%) were classified as non-GCB by the Hans algorithm and as GCB by Lymph2Cx. Additionally, 5.5% of cases (n = 7) were left unclassified by Lymph2Cx, whereas they were defined as GCB (n = 4) or non-GCB (n = 3) by the Hans algorithm. Our data support the routine applicability of the Lymph2Cx assay.
The pro-inflammatory phase of bone healing, initiated by platelet activation and eventually hematoma formation, impacts bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) in unknown ways. Here, we created platelet-rich plasma (PRP) hydrogels to study how platelet-derived factors modulate functional properties of encapsulated MSCs in comparison to a non-inflammatory fibrin (FBR) hydrogel environment. MSCs were isolated from human bone marrow, while PRP was collected from pooled apheresis thrombocyte concentrates and used for hydrogel preparation. After their encapsulation in hydrogels for 72 h, retrieved MSCs were analyzed for immunomodulatory activities, apoptosis, stem cell properties, senescence, CD9\(^+\), CD63\(^+\) and CD81\(^+\) extracellular vesicle (EV) release, and metabolism-related changes. PRP-hydrogels stimulated immunosuppressive functions of MSCs, along with their upregulated susceptibility to cell death in communication with PBMCs and augmented caspase 3/7 activity. We found impaired clonal growth and cell cycle progression, and more pronounced β-galactosidase activity as well as accumulation of LC3-II-positive vacuoles in PRP-MSCs. Stimuli derived from PRP-hydrogels upregulated AKT and reduced mTOR phosphorylation in MSCs, which suggests an initiation of survival-related processes. Our results showed that PRP-hydrogels might represent a metabolically stressful environment, inducing acidification of MSCs, reducing polarization of the mitochondrial membrane and increasing lipid accumulation. These features were not detected in FBR-MSCs, which showed reduced CD63\(^+\) and CD81\(^+\) EV production and maintained clonogenicity. Our data revealed that PRP-derived hematoma components cause metabolic adaptation of MSCs followed by increased immune regulatory functions. For the first time, we showed that PRP stimuli represent a survival challenge and “apoptotic priming” that are detrimental for stem cell-like growth of MSCs and important for their therapeutic consideration.
Lower limb bone geometry in adult individuals with X-linked hypophosphatemia: an observational study
(2022)
Summary
We assessed lower-limb geometry in adults with X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH) and controls. We found large differences in multiple measures including femoral and tibial torsion, bowing and cross-sectional area and acetabular version and coverage which may contribute to clinical problems such as osteoarthritis, fractures and altered gait common in XLH.
Purpose
Individuals with X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH) are at risk of lower-limb deformities and early onset of osteoarthritis. These two factors may be linked, as altered biomechanics is a risk factor for osteoarthritis. This exploratory evaluation aims at providing clues and concepts for this association to facilitate future larger-scale and longitudinal studies on that aspect.
Methods
For this observational study, 13 patients with XLH, aged 18–65 years (6 female), were compared with sex-, age- and weight-matched healthy individuals at a single German research centre. Femoral and hip joint geometry, including femoral and tibial torsion and femoral and tibial shaft bowing, bone cross-sectional area (CSA) and acetabular version and coverage were measured from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans.
Results
Total femoral torsion was 29° lower in individuals with XLH than in controls (p < 0.001), mainly resulting from lower intertrochanteric torsion (ITT) (p < 0.001). Femoral lateral and frontal bowing, tibial frontal bowing, mechanical axis, femoral mechanical–anatomical angle, acetabular version and acetabular coverage were all greater and tibial torsion lower in individuals with XLH as compared to controls (all p < 0.05). Greater femoral total and marrow cavity CSA, greater tibial marrow cavity CSA and lower cortical CSA were observed in XLH (all p < 0.05).
Discussion
We observed large differences in clinically relevant measures of tibia and particularly femur bone geometry in individuals with XLH compared to controls. These differences may plausibly contribute to clinical manifestations of XLH such as early-onset osteoarthritis, pseudofractures and altered gait and therefore should be considered when planning corrective surgeries.
Purpose of Review
Statins are routinely applied in patients with coronary artery disease, as they allow significantly to reduce blood cholesterol levels. Although those drugs are endorsed by current guidelines and prescribed routinely, a substantial portion of patients are still statin-intolerant and image-piloted strategies may then be helpful to identify patients that need further intensified treatment, e.g., to initiate treatment with proprotein convertase subtilisin / kexin type 9 inhibitors (PCSK9i). In addition, it has also been advocated that statins exhibit nonlipid, cardio-protective effects including improved cardiac nerve integrity, blood flow, and anti-inflammatory effects in congestive heart failure (HF) patients.
Recent Findings
In subjects after myocardial infarction treated with statins, \(^{123}\)I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scintigraphy has already revealed enhanced cardiac nerve function relative to patients without statins. In addition, all of those aforementioned statin-targeted pathways in HF can be visualized and monitored using dedicated cardiac radiotracers, e.g., \(^{123}\)I-MIBG or \(^{18}\)F-AF78 (for cardiac nerve function), \(^{18}\)F-flurpiridaz (to determine coronary flow) or \(^{68}\)Ga-PentixaFor (to detect inflammation).
Summary
Statins exhibit various cardio-beneficial effects, including improvement of cardiac nerve function, blood flow, and reduction of inflammation, which can all be imaged using dedicated nuclear cardiac radiotracers. This may allow for in vivo monitoring of statin-induced cardioprotection beyond lipid profiling in HF patients.
Introduction
In men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) scheduled for prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-targeted radioligand therapy (RLT), biochemical response is assessed based on repeated measurements of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels. We aimed to determine overall survival (OS) in patients experiencing sustained PSA increase, decrease, or fluctuations during therapy.
Materials and methods
In this bicentric study, we included 176 mCRPC patients treated with PSMA-directed RLT. PSA levels were determined using blood samples prior to the first RLT and on the admission days for the following cycles. We calculated relative changes in PSA levels compared to baseline. Kaplan–Meier curves as well as log-rank test were used to compare OS of different subgroups, including patients with sustained PSA increase, decrease, or fluctuations (defined as change after initial decrease or increase after the first cycle).
Results
Sixty-one out of one hundred seventy-six (34.7%) patients showed a sustained increase and 86/176 (48.8%) a sustained decrease in PSA levels. PSA fluctuations were observed in the remaining 29/176 (16.5%). In this subgroup, 22/29 experienced initial PSA decrease followed by an increase (7/29, initial increase followed by a decrease). Median OS of patients with sustained decrease in PSA levels was significantly longer when compared to patients with sustained increase of PSA levels (19 vs. 8 months; HR 0.35, 95% CI 0.22–0.56; P < 0.001). Patients with PSA fluctuations showed a significantly longer median OS compared to patients with sustained increase of PSA levels (18 vs. 8 months; HR 0.49, 95% CI 0.30–0.80; P < 0.01), but no significant difference relative to men with sustained PSA decrease (18 vs. 19 months; HR 1.4, 95% CI 0.78–2.49; P = 0.20). In addition, in men experiencing PSA fluctuations, median OS did not differ significantly between patients with initial decrease or initial increase of tumor marker levels (16 vs. 18 months; HR 1.2, 95% CI 0.38–4.05; P = 0.68).
Conclusion
Initial increase or decrease of PSA levels is sustained in the majority of patients undergoing RLT. Sustained PSA decrease was linked to prolonged survival and men with PSA fluctuations under treatment experienced comparable survival benefits. As such, transient tumor marker oscillations under RLT should rather not lead to treatment discontinuation, especially in the absence of radiological progression.
Purpose
As α-emitters for radiopharmaceutical therapies are administered systemically by intravenous injection, blood will be irradiated by α-particles that induce clustered DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Here, we investigated the induction and repair of DSB damage in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) as a function of the absorbed dose to the blood following internal ex vivo irradiation with [\(^{223}\)Ra]RaCl2.
Methods
Blood samples of ten volunteers were irradiated by adding [\(^{223}\)Ra]RaCl2 solution with different activity concentrations resulting in absorbed doses to the blood of 3 mGy, 25 mGy, 50 mGy and 100 mGy. PBMCs were isolated, divided in three parts and either fixed directly (d-samples) or after 4 h or 24 h culture. After immunostaining, the induced γ-H2AX α-tracks were counted. The time-dependent decrease in α-track frequency was described with a model assuming a repair rate R and a fraction of non-repairable damage Q.
Results
For 25 mGy, 50 mGy and 100 mGy, the numbers of α-tracks were significantly increased compared to baseline at all time points. Compared to the corresponding d-samples, the α-track frequency decreased significantly after 4 h and after 24 h. The repair rates R were (0.24 ± 0.05) h−1 for 25 mGy, (0.16 ± 0.04) h−1 for 50 mGy and (0.13 ± 0.02) h−1 for 100 mGy, suggesting faster repair at lower absorbed doses, while Q-values were similar.
Conclusion
The results obtained suggest that induction and repair of the DSB damage depend on the absorbed dose to the blood. Repair rates were similar to what has been observed for irradiation with low linear energy transfer.
Background
Radioligand therapy (RLT) with \(^{177}\)Lu-labeled prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) ligands is associated with prolonged overall survival (OS) in patients with advanced, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). A substantial number of patients, however, are prone to treatment failure. We aimed to determine clinical baseline characteristics to predict OS in patients receiving [\(^{177}\)Lu]Lu-PSMA I&T RLT in a long-term follow-up.
Materials and methods
Ninety-two mCRPC patients treated with [\(^{177}\)Lu]Lu-PSMA I&T with a follow-up of at least 18 months were retrospectively identified. Multivariable Cox regression analyses were performed for various baseline characteristics, including laboratory values, Gleason score, age, prior therapies, and time interval between initial diagnosis and first treatment cycle (interval\(_{Diagnosis-RLT}\), per 12 months). Cutoff values for significant predictors were determined using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. ROC-derived thresholds were then applied to Kaplan–Meier analyses.
Results
Baseline C-reactive protein (CRP; hazard ratio [HR], 1.10, 95% CI 1.02–1.18; P = 0.01), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH; HR, 1.07, 95% CI 1.01–1.11; P = 0.01), aspartate aminotransferase (AST; HR, 1.16, 95% CI 1.06–1.26; P = 0.001), and interval\(_{Diagnosis-RLT}\) (HR, 0.95, 95% CI 0.91–0.99; P = 0.02) were identified as independent prognostic factors for OS. The following respective ROC-based thresholds were determined: CRP, 0.98 mg/dl (area under the curve [AUC], 0.80); LDH, 276.5 U/l (AUC, 0.83); AST, 26.95 U/l (AUC, 0.73); and interval\(_{Diagnosis-RLT}\), 43.5 months (AUC, 0.68; P < 0.01, respectively). Respective Kaplan–Meier analyses demonstrated a significantly longer median OS of patients with lower CRP, lower LDH, and lower AST, as well as prolonged interval\(_{Diagnosis-RLT}\) (P ≤ 0.01, respectively).
Conclusion
In mCRPC patients treated with [\(^{177}\)Lu]Lu-PSMA I&T, baseline CRP, LDH, AST, and time interval until RLT initiation (thereby reflecting a possible indicator for tumor aggressiveness) are independently associated with survival. Our findings are in line with previous findings on [\(^{177}\)Lu]Lu-PSMA-617, and we believe that these clinical baseline characteristics may support the nuclear medicine specialist to identify long-term survivors.
A growing body of literature reports on the upregulation of C-X-C motif chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4) in a variety of cancer entities, rendering this receptor as suitable target for molecular imaging and endoradiotherapy in a theranostic setting. For instance, the CXCR4-targeting positron emission tomography (PET) agent [\(^{68}\)Ga]PentixaFor has been proven useful for a comprehensive assessment of the current status quo of solid tumors, including adrenocortical carcinoma or small-cell lung cancer. In addition, [\(^{68}\)Ga]PentixaFor has also provided an excellent readout for hematological malignancies, such as multiple myeloma, marginal zone lymphoma, or mantle cell lymphoma. PET-based quantification of the CXCR4 capacities in vivo allows for selecting candidates that would be suitable for treatment using the theranostic equivalent [\(^{177}\)Lu]/[\(^{90}\)Y]PentixaTher. This CXCR4-directed theranostic concept has been used as a conditioning regimen prior to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and to achieve sufficient anti-lymphoma/-tumor activity in particular for malignant tissues that are highly sensitive to radiation, such as the hematological system. Increasing the safety margin, pretherapeutic dosimetry is routinely performed to determine the optimal activity to enhance therapeutic efficacy and to reduce off-target adverse events. The present review will provide an overview of current applications for CXCR4-directed molecular imaging and will introduce the CXCR4-targeted theranostic concept for advanced hematological malignancies.
Psychotropic drugs are frequently prescribed ‘off-label’ to children and adolescents and carry the risk of serious adverse drug reactions (sADR). We examined the frequency of sADRs of psychotropic drugs in pediatric inpatients and explored their potential preventability through following the recommendations of a web-based pediatric drug information system (PDIS). The potential socio-economic impacts of using this online system is also addressed. Routine clinical data from all inpatients treated in a child and adolescent psychiatry department between January 2017 and December 2018 were retrospectively examined for the occurrence of sADRs as defined by the European Medicines Agency. The preventability of the sADRs was assessed based on the information of the PDIS. Furthermore, the expected prolongation of the hospital stay due to sADRs was calculated as well as the associated treatment costs. The study was supported by the Innovation Fund of the Joint Federal Committee, grant number 01NVF16021. In total, 1036 patients were screened of whom 658 (63.5%) received psychopharmacological treatment. In 53 (8.1%) of these patients 54 sADRs were documented, of which 37 sADRs were identified as potentially preventable through PDIS. Mitigating sADR through PDIS would likely have prevented prolonged hospital stays and conferred considerable savings for health insurance companies. PDIS provides systematic and evidence-based information about pediatric psychopharmacotherapy and helps to prevent prescribing errors. Therefore, PDIS is a useful tool to increase drug therapy safety in child and adolescent psychiatry. Further prospective studies are needed to confirm the results.
Valence framing effects refer to inconsistent choice preferences in response to positive versus negative formulation of mathematically equivalent outcomes. Here, we manipulate valence framing in a two-alternative forced choice dictator game using gains and losses as frames to investigate the cognitive mechanisms underlying valence framing. We applied a Drift-Diffusion Model (DDM) to examine whether gain (i.e., “take” money) and loss (i.e., “give” money) frames evoke a cognitive bias as previous research did not consistently reveal framing effects using reaction times and response frequency as dependent variables. DDMs allow decomposing the decision process into separate cognitive mechanisms, whereby a cognitive bias was repeatedly associated with a shift in the starting point of the model. Conducting both a laboratory (N = 62) and an online study (N = 109), female participants allocated money between themselves and another person in a prosocial or selfish way. In each study, one group was instructed to give money (give frame), the other to take money (take frame). Consistent with previous studies, no differences were found in response times and response frequencies. However, in both studies, substantial bias towards the selfish option was found in the take frame groups, captured by the starting point of the DDM. Thus, our results suggest that valence framing induces a cognitive bias in decision processing in women, even when no behavioral differences are present.
Propofol is a widely used general anesthetic in clinical practice, but its use is limited by its water-insoluble nature and associated pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic limitations. Therefore, researchers have been searching for alternative formulations to lipid emulsion to address the remaining side effects. In this study, novel formulations for propofol and its sodium salt Na-propofolat were designed and tested using the amphiphilic cyclodextrin (CD) derivative hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPβCD). The study found that spectroscopic and calorimetric measurements suggested complex formation between propofol/Na-propofolate and HPβCD, which was confirmed by the absence of an evaporation peak and different glass transition temperatures. Moreover, the formulated compounds showed no cytotoxicity and genotoxicity compared to the reference. The molecular modeling simulations based on molecular docking predicted a higher affinity for propofol/HPβCD than for Na-propofolate/HPβCD, as the former complex was more stable. This finding was further confirmed by high-performance liquid chromatography. In conclusion, the CD-based formulations of propofol and its sodium salt may be a promising option and a plausible alternative to conventional lipid emulsions.
An alternative to the time-consuming and error-prone pharmacopoeial gas chromatography method for the analysis of fatty acids (FAs) is urgently needed. The objective was therefore to propose a robust liquid chromatography method with charged aerosol detection for the analysis of polysorbate 80 (PS80) and magnesium stearate. FAs with different numbers of carbon atoms in the chain necessitated the use of a gradient method with a Hypersil Gold C\(_{18}\) column and acetonitrile as organic modifier. The risk-based Analytical Quality by Design approach was applied to define the Method Operable Design Region (MODR). Formic acid concentration, initial and final percentages of acetonitrile, gradient elution time, column temperature, and mobile phase flow rate were identified as critical method parameters (CMPs). The initial and final percentages of acetonitrile were fixed while the remaining CMPs were fine-tuned using response surface methodology. Critical method attributes included the baseline separation of adjacent peaks (α-linolenic and myristic acid, and oleic and petroselinic acid) and the retention factor of the last compound eluted, stearic acid. The MODR was calculated by Monte Carlo simulations with a probability equal or greater than 90%. Finally, the column temperature was set at 33 °C, the flow rate was 0.575 mL/min, and acetonitrile linearly increased from 70 to 80% (v/v) within 14.2 min.
A series of tetracationic bis-triarylborane dyes, differing in the aromatic linker connecting two dicationic triarylborane moieties, showed very high submicromolar affinities toward ds-DNA and ds-RNA. The linker strongly influenced the emissive properties of triarylborane cations and controlled the fluorimetric response of dyes. The fluorene-analog shows the most selective fluorescence response between AT-DNA, GC-DNA, and AU-RNA, the pyrene-analog’s emission is non-selectively enhanced by all DNA/RNA, and the dithienyl-diketopyrrolopyrrole analog’s emission is strongly quenched upon DNA/RNA binding. The emission properties of the biphenyl-analog were not applicable, but the compound showed specific induced circular dichroism (ICD) signals only for AT-sequence-containing ds-DNAs, whereas the pyrene-analog ICD signals were specific for AT-DNA with respect to GC-DNA, and also recognized AU-RNA by giving a different ICD pattern from that observed upon interaction with AT-DNA. The fluorene- and dithienyl-diketopyrrolopyrrole analogs were ICD-signal silent. Thus, fine-tuning of the aromatic linker properties connecting two triarylborane dications can be used for the dual sensing (fluorimetric and CD) of various ds-DNA/RNA secondary structures, depending on the steric properties of the DNA/RNA grooves.
(1) Background: The health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of colorectal cancer (CRC) survivors >10 years post-diagnosis is understudied. We aimed to compare the HRQOL of CRC survivors 14–24 years post-diagnosis to that of age- and sex-matched non-cancer controls, stratified by demographic and clinical factors. (2) Methods: We used data from 506 long-term CRC survivors and 1489 controls recruited from German population-based multi-regional studies. HRQOL was assessed with the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Core-30 (EORTC QLQ-C30) questionnaire. We estimated differences in the HRQOL of CRC survivors and controls with multiple regression, adjusted for age at survey, sex, and education, where appropriate. (3) Results: CRC survivors reported poorer social functioning but better health status/QOL than controls. CRC survivors, in general, had higher levels of symptom burden, and in particular diarrhea and constipation, regardless of demographic or clinical factors. In stratified analyses, HRQOL differed by age, sex, cancer type, and having a permanent stoma. (4) Conclusions: Although CRC survivors may have a comparable health status/QOL to controls 14–24 years after diagnosis, they still live with persistent bowel dysfunction that can negatively impact aspects of functioning. Healthcare providers should provide timely and adapted follow-up care to ameliorate potential long-term suffering.
Risperidone is commonly used to treat different psychiatric disorders worldwide. Knowledge on dose–concentration relationships of risperidone treatment in children and adolescents with schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders is, however, scarce and no age-specific therapeutic ranges have been established yet. Multicenter data of a therapeutic drug monitoring service were analyzed to evaluate the relationship between risperidone dose and serum concentration of the active moiety (risperidone (RIS) plus its main metabolite 9-hydroxyrisperidone (9-OH-RIS)) in children and adolescents with psychotic disorders. Patient characteristics, doses, serum concentrations and therapeutic outcomes were assessed by standardized measures. The study also aimed to evaluate whether the therapeutic reference range for adults (20–60 ng/ml) is applicable for minors. In the 64 patients (aged 11–18 years) included, a positive correlation between daily dose and the active moiety (RIS\(_{am}\)) concentration was found (r\(_s\) = 0.49, p = 0.001) with variation in dose explaining 24% (r\(_s\)\(^2\) = 0.240) of the variability in serum concentrations. While the RIS\(_{am}\) concentration showed no difference, RIS as well 9-OH-RIS concentrations and the parent to metabolite ratio varied significantly in patients with co-medication of a CYP2D6 inhibitor. Patients with extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS) had on average higher RIS\(_{am}\) concentrations than patients without (p = 0.05). Considering EPS, the upper threshold of the therapeutic range of RIS\(_{am}\) was determined to be 33 ng/ml. A rough estimation method also indicated a possibly decreased lower limit of the preliminary therapeutic range in minors compared to adults. These preliminary data may contribute to the definition of a therapeutic window in children and adolescents with schizophrenic disorders treated with risperidone. TDM is recommended in this vulnerable population to prevent concentration-related adverse drug reactions.
Das vorliegende Buch beschäftigt sich anhand einer Sammlung von realen Fällen, die in Aufgabenform formuliert sind, mit dem leider oft gestörten Verhältnis von Theorie und Praxis in der rechtsgeprägten Unternehmensbewertung.
Es weist ähnlich wie „normale“ Fallsammlungen die jeweiligen Aufgabenstellungen und die zugehörigen Lösungen aus. Die eigentlichen Fragestellungen in den Aufgabentexten sind durch kurze Erläuterungen eingerahmt, damit jeder Fall als solcher von einem mit Bewertungsfragen halbwegs Vertrauten relativ leicht verstanden und in seiner Bedeutung eingeordnet werden kann. Dieses Vorgehen ähnelt wiederum Lehrbüchern, die Inhalte über Fälle vermitteln, nur dass hier nicht hypothetische Fälle das jeweils idealtypisch richtige Vorgehen zeigen, sondern Praxisfälle plakative Verstöße contra legem artis.
What is left after an error? Towards a comprehensive account of goal-based binding and retrieval
(2023)
The cognitive system readily detects and corrects erroneous actions by establishing episodic bindings between representations of the acted upon stimuli and the intended correct response. If these stimuli are encountered again, they trigger the retrieval of the correct response. Thus, binding and retrieval efficiently pave the way for future success. The current study set out to define the role of the erroneous response itself and explicit feedback for the error during these processes of goal-based binding and retrieval. Two experiments showed robust and similar binding and retrieval effects with and without feedback and pointed towards sustained activation of the unbound, erroneous response. The third experiment confirmed that the erroneous response is more readily available than a neutral alternative. Together, the results demonstrate that episodic binding biases future actions toward success, guided primarily through internal feedback processes, while the erroneous response still leaves detectable traces in human action control.
These pre-registered studies shed light on the cues that individuals use to identify rich people. In two studies (N = 598), we first developed a factor-analytical model that describes the content and the mental structure of 24 wealth cues. A third within-subject study (N = 89) then assessed the perception of rich subgroups based on this model of wealth cues. Participants evaluated the extent to which the wealth cues applied to two distinct subgroups of rich people. The results show: German and US-American participants think that one can identify rich people based on the same set of cues which can be grouped along the following dimensions: luxury consumption, expensive hobbies, spontaneous spending, greedy behavior, charismatic behavior, self-presentation, and specific possessions. However, Germans and US-Americans relied on these cues to different degrees to diagnose wealth in others. Moreover, we found evidence for subgroup-specific wealth cue profiles insofar as target individuals who acquired their wealth via internal (e.g., hard work) compared to external means (e.g., lottery winners) were evaluated differently on these wealth cues, presumably because of their perceived differences in valence and competence. Together, this research provides new insights in the cognitive representation of the latent construct of wealth. Practical implications for research on the perception of affluence, and implications for political decision makers, are discussed in the last section.
Purpose
To evaluate the technical and clinical outcome of Sinus-XL stent placement in patients with malignant obstruction syndrome of the inferior vena cava.
Methods
Between October 2010 and January 2021, 21 patients with different malignant primary disease causing inferior vena cava obstruction were treated with Sinus-XL stent implantation. Procedural data, technical and clinical outcome parameters were retrospectively analyzed.
Results
Technical success was 100%. Analysis of available manometry data revealed a significant reduction of the mean translesional pressure gradient following the procedure (p = 0.008). Reintervention rate was 4.8% (1/21). The available follow-up imaging studies showed primary and primary-assisted stent patency rates of 93% (13/14) and 100% (14/14), respectively. Major complications did not occur. The clinical success regarding lower extremity edema was 82.4% (14/17) for the first and 85.7% (18/21) for the last follow-up. Longer lengths of IVC obstruction were associated with reduced clinical improvement after the procedure (p = 0.025). Improvement of intraprocedural manometry results and lower extremity edema revealed only minor correlation. Ascites and anasarca were not significantly positively affected by the procedure.
Conclusion
Sinus-XL stent placement in patients with malignant inferior vena cava obstruction showed high technical success and low complication rates. Regarding the clinical outcome, significant symptom improvement could be achieved in lower extremity edema, whereas ascites and anasarca lacked satisfying symptom relief. Based on our results, this procedure should be considered as a suitable therapy in a palliative care setting for patients with advanced malignant disease.
Introduction
In spinal surgery, precise instrumentation is essential. This study aims to evaluate the accuracy of navigated, O-arm-controlled screw positioning in thoracic and lumbar spine instabilities.
Materials and methods
Posterior instrumentation procedures between 2010 and 2015 were retrospectively analyzed. Pedicle screws were placed using 3D rotational fluoroscopy and neuronavigation. Accuracy of screw placement was assessed using a 6-grade scoring system. In addition, screw length was analyzed in relation to the vertebral body diameter. Intra- and postoperative revision rates were recorded.
Results
Thoracic and lumbar spine surgery was performed in 285 patients. Of 1704 pedicle screws, 1621 (95.1%) showed excellent positioning in 3D rotational fluoroscopy imaging. The lateral rim of either pedicle or vertebral body was protruded in 25 (1.5%) and 28 screws (1.6%), while the midline of the vertebral body was crossed in 8 screws (0.5%). Furthermore, 11 screws each (0.6%) fulfilled the criteria of full lateral and medial displacement. The median relative screw length was 92.6%. Intraoperative revision resulted in excellent positioning in 58 of 71 screws. Follow-up surgery due to missed primary malposition had to be performed for two screws in the same patient. Postsurgical symptom relief was reported in 82.1% of patients, whereas neurological deterioration occurred in 8.9% of cases with neurological follow-up.
Conclusions
Combination of neuronavigation and 3D rotational fluoroscopy control ensures excellent accuracy in pedicle screw positioning. As misplaced screws can be detected reliably and revised intraoperatively, repeated surgery for screw malposition is rarely required.
In the last few years, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) receptor sensors have contributed to the understanding of GPCR ligand binding and functional activation. FRET sensors based on muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) have been employed to study dual-steric ligands, allowing for the detection of different kinetics and distinguishing between partial, full, and super agonism. Herein, we report the synthesis of the two series of bitopic ligands, 12-Cn and 13-Cn, and their pharmacological investigation at the M\(_1\), M\(_2\), M\(_4\), and M\(_5\) FRET-based receptor sensors. The hybrids were prepared by merging the pharmacophoric moieties of the M\(_1\)/M\(_4\)-preferring orthosteric agonist Xanomeline 10 and the M\(_1\)-selective positive allosteric modulator 77-LH-28-1 (1-[3-(4-butyl-1-piperidinyl)propyl]-3,4-dihydro-2(1H)-quinolinone) 11. The two pharmacophores were connected through alkylene chains of different lengths (C3, C5, C7, and C9). Analyzing the FRET responses, the tertiary amine compounds 12-C5, 12-C7, and 12-C9 evidenced a selective activation of M\(_1\) mAChRs, while the methyl tetrahydropyridinium salts 13-C5, 13-C7, and 13-C9 showed a degree of selectivity for M\(_1\) and M\(_4\) mAChRs. Moreover, whereas hybrids 12-Cn showed an almost linear response at the M\(_1\) subtype, hybrids 13-Cn evidenced a bell-shaped activation response. This different activation pattern suggests that the positive charge anchoring the compound 13-Cn to the orthosteric site ensues a degree of receptor activation depending on the linker length, which induces a graded conformational interference with the binding pocket closure. These bitopic derivatives represent novel pharmacological tools for a better understanding of ligand-receptor interactions at a molecular level.
Digitization and transcription of historic documents offer new research opportunities for humanists and are the topics of many edition projects. However, manual work is still required for the main phases of layout recognition and the subsequent optical character recognition (OCR) of early printed documents. This paper describes and evaluates how deep learning approaches recognize text lines and can be extended to layout recognition using background knowledge. The evaluation was performed on five corpora of early prints from the 15th and 16th Centuries, representing a variety of layout features. While the main text with standard layouts could be recognized in the correct reading order with a precision and recall of up to 99.9%, also complex layouts were recognized at a rate as high as 90% by using background knowledge, the full potential of which was revealed if many pages of the same source were transcribed.
Purpose
Oncologists are at an increased risk of developing burnout, leading to negative consequences in patient care and in professional satisfaction and quality of life. This study was designed to investigate exhaustion and disengagement among German oncologists and assess the prevalence of burnout among oncologists within different professional settings. Furthermore, we wanted to examine possible relations between sociodemographic factors, the oncological setting, professional experience and different aspects of burnout.
Methods
In a cross-sectional study design, an Internet-based survey was conducted with 121 oncologists between April and July 2020 using the Oldenburg Burnout Inventory, which contains items on exhaustion, disengagement, and burnout. Furthermore, sociodemographic data of the participants were assessed. The participants were members of the Working Group Medical Oncology (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Internistische Onkologie) within the German Cancer Society.
Results
The survey showed a burnout prevalence of 43.8%, which correlated with age and professional experience; that is, the prevalence is particularly high among younger oncologists. Exhaustion is closely related to employment status; that is, it was significantly higher among employed oncologists. There were remarkably low levels of disengagement among oncologists, highlighting the own demand to fulfil job requirements despite imminent or actual overburdening in daily work.
Conclusion
More support is necessary to mitigate the professional stressors in the healthcare system. To ensure quality medical care, employees should be offered preventive mental health services early in their careers.
It’s time to go …
(2022)
Background: The cabbage moth, Mamestra brassicae, is a polyphagous pest that attacks several crops. Here, the sublethal and lethal effects of chlorantraniliprole and indoxacarb were investigated on the developmental stages, detoxification enzymes, reproductive activity, calling behavior, peripheral physiology, and pheromone titer of M. brasssicae. Methods: To assess pesticide effects, the second instar larvae were maintained for 24 h on a semi-artificial diet containing insecticides at their LC\(_{10}\), LC\(_{30}\), and LC\(_{50}\) concentrations. Results: M. brassicae was more susceptible to chlorantraniliprole (LC\(_{50}\) = 0.35 mg/L) than indoxacarb (LC\(_{50}\) = 1.71 mg/L). A significantly increased developmental time was observed with both insecticides at all tested concentrations but decreases in pupation rate, pupal weight, and emergence were limited to the LC50 concentration. Reductions in both the total number of eggs laid per female and the egg viability were observed with both insecticides at their LC\(_{30}\) and LC\(_{50}\) concentrations. Both female calling activity and the sex pheromone (Z11-hexadecenyl acetate and hexadecenyl acetate) titer were significantly reduced by chlorantraniliprole in LC\(_{50}\) concentration. Antennal responses of female antennae to benzaldehyde and 3-octanone were significantly weaker than controls after exposure to the indoxocarb LC\(_{50}\) concentration. Significant reductions in the enzymatic activity of glutathione S-transferases, mixed-function oxidases, and carboxylesterases were observed in response to both insecticides.
Sprachideologien als zugrundeliegende Annahmen über Sprachstrukturen und Sprachgebrauch schlagen sich häufig in metasprachlichen Diskursen und vor allem im laienlinguistischen Austausch über Sprache nieder. Die einschlägige Forschung zu derartigen Metasprachdiskursen hat sich bislang nur vereinzelt dem laienlinguistischen Austausch in den Sozialen Medien gewidmet.
Um Einblicke in laienlinguistische Metasprachdiskurse jüngerer Generationen zu geben, untersucht die vorliegende Studie die Beiträge sowie die dazugehörigen Kommentare zweier Instagram-Profile, die regelmäßig sprachliches Wissen vermitteln, hinsichtlich ihrer sprachideologischen Standpunkte. Hierzu wurde das stancetaking der Nutzenden untersucht, d.h. es wurde nachvollzogen, wie sich Sprachteilnehmende lexikalisch, grammatisch, aber auch im Rahmen multimodaler Möglichkeiten der Plattform (z.B. Farben, Emojis, Likes) zu Sprache und zu anderen Sprachteilnehmenden positionieren.
Es zeigt sich, dass vor allem sprachrichtigkeitsideologische Einstellungen in den untersuchten Beiträgen vorzufinden sind. Varianten werden hier explizit sprachlich als richtig oder falsch oder auch implizit mittels farblicher Markierungen gekennzeichnet. Standardideologische Annahmen kommen in den Beiträgen häufig in der Orientierung an kodifizierenden Institutionen und in der Abgrenzung zu einer Umgangssprache zum Tragen, wobei die Beiträge von einer Thematisierung des Standardbegriffs absehen. Vereinzelt werden die Sprachrichtigkeits- und die Standardideologie in den Kommentaren durch Nutzende in Frage gestellt; insbesondere, wenn diese sich als linguistisch Sachkundige positionieren.
The Internet of Things (IoT) enables a variety of smart applications, including smart home, smart manufacturing, and smart city. By enhancing Business Process Management Systems with IoT capabilities, the execution and monitoring of business processes can be significantly improved. Providing a holistic support for modeling, executing and monitoring IoT-driven processes, however, constitutes a challenge. Existing process modeling and process execution languages, such as BPMN 2.0, are unable to fully meet the IoT characteristics (e.g., asynchronicity and parallelism) of IoT-driven processes. In this article, we present BPMNE4IoT—A holistic framework for modeling, executing and monitoring IoT-driven processes. We introduce various artifacts and events based on the BPMN 2.0 metamodel that allow realizing the desired IoT awareness of business processes. The framework is evaluated along two real-world scenarios from two different domains. Moreover, we present a user study for comparing BPMNE4IoT and BPMN 2.0. In particular, this study has confirmed that the BPMNE4IoT framework facilitates the support of IoT-driven processes.
In total knee arthroplasty (TKA), functional knee phenotypes are of interest regarding surgical alignment strategies. Functional knee phenotypes were introduced in 2019 and consist of limb, femoral, and tibial phenotypes. The hypothesis of this study was that mechanically aligned (MA) TKA changes preoperative functional phenotypes, which decreases the 1-year Forgotten Joint (FJS) and Oxford Knee Score (OKS) and increases the 1-year WOMAC. All patients included in this study had end-stage osteoarthritis and were treated with a primary MA TKA, which was supervised by four academic knee arthroplasty specialists. To determine the limb, femoral, and tibial phenotype, a long-leg radiograph (LLR) was imaged preoperatively and two to three days after TKA. FJS, OKS, and WOMAC were obtained 1 year after TKA. Patients were categorized using the change in functional limb, femoral, and tibial phenotype measured on LLR, and the scores were compared between the different categories. A complete dataset of preoperative and postoperative scores and radiographic images could be obtained for 59 patients. 42% of these patients had a change of limb phenotype, 41% a change of femoral phenotype, and 24% a change of tibial phenotype of more than ±1 relative to the preoperative phenotype. Patients with more than ±1 change of limb phenotype had significantly lower median FJS (27 points) and OKS (31 points) and higher WOMAC scores (30 points) relative to the 59-, 41-, and 4-point scores of those with a 0 ± 1 change (p < 0.0001 to 0.0048). Patients with a more than ±1 change of femoral phenotype had significantly lower median FJS (28 points) and OKS (32 points) and higher WOMAC scores (24 points) relative to the 69-, 40-, and 8-point scores of those with a 0 ± 1 change (p < 0.0001). A change in tibial phenotype had no effect on the FJS, OKS, and WOMAC scores. Surgeons performing MA TKA could consider limiting coronal alignment corrections of the limb and femoral joint line to within one phenotype to reduce the risk of low patient-reported satisfaction and function at 1-year.
Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) in isolated medial or lateral osteoarthritis leads to good clinical results. However, revision rates are higher in comparison to total knee arthroplasty (TKA). One reason is suboptimal fitting of conventional off-the-shelf prostheses, and major overhang of the tibial component over the bone has been reported in up to 20% of cases. In this retrospective study, a total of 537 patient-specific UKAs (507 medial prostheses and 30 lateral prostheses) that had been implanted in 3 centers over a period of 10 years were analyzed for survival, with a minimal follow-up of 1 year (range 12 to 129 months). Furthermore, fitting of the UKAs was analyzed on postoperative X-rays, and tibial overhang was quantified. A total of 512 prostheses were available for follow-up (95.3%). Overall survival rate (medial and lateral) of the prostheses after 5 years was 96%. The 30 lateral UKAs showed a survival rate of 100% at 5 years. The tibial overhang of the prosthesis was smaller than 1 mm in 99% of cases. In comparison to the reported results in the literature, our data suggest that the patient-specific implant design used in this study is associated with an excellent midterm survival rate, particularly in the lateral knee compartment, and confirms excellent fitting.
When telling a lie, humans might engage in stronger monitoring of their behavior than when telling the truth. Initial evidence has indeed pointed towards a stronger recruitment of capacity-limited monitoring processes in dishonest than honest responding, conceivably resulting from the necessity to overcome automatic tendencies to respond honestly. Previous results suggested monitoring to be confined to response execution, however, whereas the current study goes beyond these findings by specifically probing for post-execution monitoring. Participants responded (dis)honestly to simple yes/no questions in a first task and switched to an unrelated second task after a response–stimulus interval of 0 ms or 1000 ms. Dishonest responses did not only prolong response times in Task 1, but also in Task 2 with a short response–stimulus interval. These findings support the assumption that increased monitoring for dishonest responses extends beyond mere response execution, a mechanism that is possibly tuned to assess the successful completion of a dishonest act.
In three experiments, we examined the cognitive underpinnings of self-serving dishonesty by manipulating cognitive load under different incentive structures. Participants could increase a financial bonus by misreporting outcomes of private die rolls without any risk of detection. At the same time, they had to remember letter strings of varying length. If honesty is the automatic response tendency and dishonesty is cognitively demanding, lying behavior should be less evident under high cognitive load. This hypothesis was supported by the outcome of two out of three experiments. We further manipulated whether all trials or only one random trial determined payoff to modulate reward adaptation over time (Experiment 2) and whether payoff was framed as a financial gain or loss (Experiment 3). The payoff scheme of one random or all trials did not affect lying behavior and, discordant to earlier research, facing losses instead of gains did not increase lying behavior. Finally, cognitive load and incentive frame interacted significantly, but contrary to our assumption gains increased lying under low cognitive load. While the impact of cognitive load on dishonesty appears to be comparably robust, motivational influences seem to be more elusive than commonly assumed in current theorizing.
In task-switching studies, performance is typically worse in task-switch trials than in task-repetition trials. These switch costs are often asymmetrical, a phenomenon that has been explained by referring to a dominance of one task over the other. Previous studies also indicated that response modalities associated with two tasks may be considered as integral components for defining a task set. However, a systematic assessment of the role of response modalities in task switching is still lacking: Are some response modalities harder to switch to than others? The present study systematically examined switch costs when combining tasks that differ only with respect to their associated effector systems. In Experiment 1, 16 participants switched (in unpredictable sequence) between oculomotor and vocal tasks. In Experiment 2, 72 participants switched (in pairwise combinations) between oculomotor, vocal, and manual tasks. We observed systematic performance costs when switching between response modalities under otherwise constant task features and could thereby replicate previous observations of response modality switch costs. However, we did not observe any substantial switch-cost asymmetries. As previous studies using temporally overlapping dual-task paradigms found substantial prioritization effects (in terms of asymmetric costs) especially for oculomotor tasks, the present results suggest different underlying processes in sequential task switching than in simultaneous multitasking. While more research is needed to further substantiate a lack of response modality switch-cost asymmetries in a broader range of task switching situations, we suggest that task-set representations related to specific response modalities may exhibit rapid decay.
Evidence from multisensory body illusions suggests that body representations may be malleable, for instance, by embodying external objects. However, adjusting body representations to current task demands also implies that external objects become disembodied from the body representation if they are no longer required. In the current web-based study, we induced the embodiment of a two-dimensional (2D) virtual hand that could be controlled by active movements of a computer mouse or on a touchpad. Following initial embodiment, we probed for disembodiment by comparing two conditions: Participants either continued moving the virtual hand or they stopped moving and kept the hand still. Based on theoretical accounts that conceptualize body representations as a set of multisensory bindings, we expected gradual disembodiment of the virtual hand if the body representations are no longer updated through correlated visuomotor signals. In contrast to our prediction, the virtual hand was instantly disembodied as soon as participants stopped moving it. This result was replicated in two follow-up experiments. The observed instantaneous disembodiment might suggest that humans are sensitive to the rapid changes that characterize action and body in virtual environments, and hence adjust corresponding body representations particularly swiftly.
Previous research has shown that the simultaneous execution of two actions (instead of only one) is not necessarily more difficult but can actually be easier (less error-prone), in particular when executing one action requires the simultaneous inhibition of another action. Corresponding inhibitory demands are particularly challenging when the to-be-inhibited action is highly prepotent (i.e., characterized by a strong urge to be executed). Here, we study a range of important potential sources of such prepotency. Building on a previously established paradigm to elicit dual-action benefits, participants responded to stimuli with single actions (either manual button press or saccade) or dual actions (button press and saccade). Crucially, we compared blocks in which these response demands were randomly intermixed (mixed blocks) with pure blocks involving only one type of response demand. The results highlight the impact of global (action-inherent) sources of action prepotency, as reflected in more pronounced inhibitory failures in saccade vs. manual control, but also more local (transient) sources of influence, as reflected in a greater probability of inhibition failures following trials that required the to-be-inhibited type of action. In addition, sequential analyses revealed that inhibitory control (including its failure) is exerted at the level of response modality representations, not at the level of fully specified response representations. In sum, the study highlights important preconditions and mechanisms underlying the observation of dual-action benefits.
In the last years, it has become general consensus that actions change our time perception. Performing an action to elicit a specific event seems to lead to a systematic underestimation of the interval between action and effect, a phenomenon termed temporal (or previously intentional) binding. Temporal binding has been closely associated with sense of agency, our perceived control over our actions and our environment, and because of its robust behavioral effects has indeed been widely utilized as an implicit correlate of sense of agency. The most robust and clear temporal binding effects are typically found via Libet clock paradigms. In the present study, we investigate a crucial methodological confound in these paradigms that provides an alternative explanation for temporal binding effects: a redirection of attentional resources in two-event sequences (as in classical operant conditions) versus singular events (as in classical baseline conditions). Our results indicate that binding effects in Libet clock paradigms may be based to a large degree on such attentional processes, irrespective of intention or action-effect sequences. Thus, these findings challenge many of the previously drawn conclusions and interpretations with regard to actions and time perception.
Background
Children with different underlying malignant diseases require long-term central venous access. As for port systems in a pectoral position, peripherally implanted port systems in the forearm revealed high levels of technical and clinical success in adult cohorts.
Objective
To investigate the technical and clinical outcomes of percutaneous central venous port implantation in the forearm in adolescents.
Materials and methods
Between April 2010 and August 2020, 32 children ages 9 to 17 years with underlying malignancy received 35 totally implantable venous access ports (TIVAPs) in the forearm. All venous port systems were peripherally inserted under ultrasound guidance. Correct catheter placement was controlled by fluoroscopy. As primary endpoints, the technical success, rate of complications and catheter maintenance were analyzed. Secondary endpoints were the side of implantation, vein of catheter access, laboratory results on the day of the procedure, procedural radiation exposure, amount of contrast agent and reasons for port device removal.
Results
Percutaneous TIVAP placement under sonographic guidance was technically successful in 34 of 35 procedures (97.1%). Procedure-related complications did not occur. During the follow-up, 13,684 catheter days were analyzed, revealing 11 complications (0.8 per 1,000 catheter-duration days), Of these 11 complications, 7 were major and 10 occurred late. In seven cases, the port device had to be removed; removal-related complications did not occur.
Conclusion
Peripheral TIVAP placement in the forearms of children is a feasible, effective and safe technique with good midterm outcome. As results are comparable with standard access routes, this technique may be offered as an alternative when intermittent venous access is required.
In the scope of climate warming and the increase in frequency and intensity of severe heat waves in Central Europe, identification of temperate tree species that are suited to cope with these environmental changes is gaining increasing importance. A number of tree physiological characteristics are associated with drought-stress resistance and survival following severe heat, but recent studies have shown the importance of plant hydraulic and anatomical traits for predicting drought-induced tree mortality, such as vessel diameter, and their potential to predict species distribution in a changing climate.
A compilation of large global datasets is required to determine traits related to drought-induced embolism and test whether embolism resistance can be determined solely by anatomical traits. However, most measurements of plant hydraulic traits are labour-intense and prone to measurement artefacts. A fast, accurate and widely applicable technique is necessary for estimating xylem embolism resistance (e.g., water potential at 50% loss of conductivity, P50), in order to improve forecasts of future forest changes. These traits and their combination must have evolved following the selective pressure of the environmental conditions in which each species occurs. Describing these environmental-trait relationships can be useful to assess potential responses to environmental change and mitigation strategies for tree species, as future warmer temperatures may be compounded by drier conditions.
Objective
Multipartite epicondyles may mimic fractures in the setting of pediatric elbow trauma. This study examines the prevalence of multipartite epicondyles during skeletal development and their association with pediatric elbow fractures.
Materials and methods
In this retrospective analysis, 4282 elbow radiographs of 1265 elbows of 1210 patients aged 0–17 years were reviewed. The radiographs were analyzed by two radiologists in consensus reading, and the number of visible portions of the medial and lateral epicondyles was noted. For elbows in which epicondylar ossification was not yet visible, the epicondyles were already fused with the humerus or could not be sufficiently evaluated due to projection issues or because osteosynthesis material was excluded. In total, 187 elbows were included for the lateral and 715 for the medial epicondyle analyses.
Results
No multipartite medial epicondyles were found in patients without history of elbow fracture, whereas 9% of these patients had multipartite lateral epicondyles (p < 0.01). Current or previous elbow fractures increased the prevalence of multipartite epicondyles, with significant lateral predominance (medial epicondyle + 9% vs. lateral + 24%, p < 0.0001). Including all patients regardless of a history of elbow fracture, multipartite medial epicondyles were observed in 3% and multipartite lateral epicondyles in 18% (p < 0.0001). There was no gender difference in the prevalence of multipartition of either epicondyle, regardless of a trauma history.
Conclusion
Multipartite medial epicondyles occur in patients with current or previous elbow fractures only, whereas multipartite lateral epicondyles may be constitutional. Elbow fractures increase the prevalence of multipartite epicondyles on both sides, with significant lateral predominance.
Key Points
• Multipartite medial epicondyles should be considered of traumatic origin.
• Multipartite lateral epicondyles may be constitutional.
• Elbow fractures increase the prevalence of multipartite epicondyles on both sides with lateral predominance.
RNA viruses rely entirely on the host machinery for their protein synthesis and harbor non-canonical translation mechanisms, such as alternative initiation and programmed –1 ribosomal frameshifting (–1PRF), to suit their specific needs. On the other hand, host cells have developed a variety of defensive strategies to safeguard their translational apparatus and at times transiently shut down global translation. An infection can lead to substantial translational remodeling in cells and translational control is critical during antiviral response. Due to their sheer diversity, this control is likely unique to each RNA virus and the intricacies of post-transcriptional regulation are unclear in certain viral species.
Here, we explored different aspects of translational regulation in virus-infected cells in detail. Using ribosome profiling, we extensively characterized the translational landscape in HIV-1 infected T cells, uncovering novel features of gene regulation in both host and virus. Additionally, we show that substantial pausing occurs prior to the frameshift site indicating complex regulatory mechanisms involving upstream viral RNA elements that can act as cis- regulators of frameshifting.
We also characterized the mechanistic details of trans- modulation of frameshifting by host- and virus-encoded proteins. Host antiviral protein ZAP-S binds to the SARS-CoV-2 frameshift site and destabilizes the stimulatory structure, leading to frameshift inhibition. On the other hand, EMCV 2A protein stabilizes the viral frameshift site, thereby, activating EMCV frameshifting. While both proteins were shown to be antagonistic in their mechanism, they interact with the host translational machinery. Furthermore, we showed that frameshifting can be regulated not just by proteins, but also by small molecules. High-throughput screening of natural and synthetic compounds identified two potent frameshift inhibitors that also impeded viral replication, namely trichangion and compound 25. Together, this work largely enhances our understanding of gene regulation mechanisms in virus-infected cells and further validates the druggability of viral –1 PRF site.
Die tumorbedingte Mangelernährung und Kachexie ist ein Syndrom mit sowohl medizinischer als auch gesundheitsökonomischer Relevanz. In den letzten Jahren wurde ein besseres Verständnis für die komplexe Pathophysiologie, bestehend aus Stoffwechselstörungen, verminderter Energiezufuhr und Entzündungsprozessen, die zum fortschreitenden Muskel- und Fettmassenverlust führen, erreicht. Dieses Verständnis dient bis heute der Entwicklung möglicher präventiver und therapeutischer Ansätze. Geeignete Screening-Tests tragen dazu bei, das Syndrom rechtzeitig zu erkennen und weitere Maßnahmen einzuleiten. Da der Muskel- und Fettmassenverlust nicht immer durch einen reinen Gewichtsverlust gekennzeichnet ist, ist die Erfassung der Körperzusammensetzung ein wesentlicher Bestandteil in der Betreuung onkologisch Erkrankter. Die BIA ist ein hierfür geeignetes Verfahren, welches leicht in den klinischen Alltag zu integrieren ist und besonders zur interindividuellen Verlaufskontrolle herangezogen werden könnte. Ernährungsmedizinische und bewegungstherapeutische Maßnahmen sind bereits fester Bestandteil internationaler Leitlinien. Für pharmakologische Therapiekonzepte besteht noch weiterer Forschungsbedarf, um eine Arzneimittelzulassung zu erreichen. Eine alleinige Intervention ist in der Behandlung der onkologischen Mangelernährung und Kachexie wenig effektiv. Deshalb müssen die Bedeutung und der potentielle Nutzen einer Kombination der einzelnen Behandlungsbausteine näher betrachtet werden, um eine bessere Evidenz zu erhalten. Der nachweisliche Mangel an Ernährungsstrukturen und ernährungsmedizinischer Fachkompetenz, Schwierigkeiten der Definitionsentwicklung und Gestaltung von Studien sowie finanzierungstechnische Fragen stellen ein zentrales Problem in der angemessenen Betreuung der Erkrankten dar. Jedoch bestehen klare Handlungsempfehlungen und Strategien, durch die entsprechende Herausforderungen reduziert oder beseitigt werden könnten. Dadurch profitieren sowohl Erkrankte als auch das Gesundheitssystem. Dies kann durch eine verbesserte Versorgung mittels Prävention, frühzeitiger Erfassung, Diagnose und Einleitung angebrachter Therapiemaßnahmen auf dem Gebiet der tumorbedingten Mangelernährung und Kachexie erreicht werden.
Purpose
For somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT), a standardized framework termed SSTR-reporting and data system (RADS) has been proposed. We aimed to elucidate the impact of a RADS-focused training on reader’s anxiety to report on SSTR-PET/CT, the motivational beliefs in learning such a system, whether it increases reader’s confidence, and its implementation in clinical routine.
Procedures
A 3-day training course focusing on SSTR-RADS was conducted. Self-report questionnaires were handed out prior to the course (Pre) and thereafter (Post). The impact of the training on the following categories was evaluated: (1) test anxiety to report on SSTR-PET/CT, (2) motivational beliefs, (3) increase in reader’s confidence, and (4) clinical implementation. To assess the effect size of the course, Cohen’s d was calculated (small, d = 0.20; large effect, d = 0.80).
Results
Of 22 participants, Pre and Post were returned by 21/22 (95.5%). In total, 14/21 (66.7%) were considered inexperienced (IR, < 1 year experience in reading SSTR-PET/CTs) and 7/21 (33.3%) as experienced readers (ER, > 1 year). Applying SSTR-RADS, a large decrease in anxiety to report on SSTR-PET/CT was noted for IR (d = − 0.74, P = 0.02), but not for ER (d = 0.11, P = 0.78). For the other three categories motivational beliefs, reader’s confidence, and clinical implementation, agreement rates were already high prior to the training and persisted throughout the course (P ≥ 0.21).
Conclusions
A framework-focused reader training can reduce anxiety to report on SSTR-PET/CTs, in particular for inexperienced readers. This may allow for a more widespread adoption of this system, e.g., in multicenter trials for better intra- and interindividual comparison of scan results.
Poor or variable oral bioavailability is of major concern regarding safety and efficacy for the treatment of patients with poorly water-soluble drugs (PWSDs). The problem statement of this work involves a pharmaceutical development perspective, the physicochemical basis of the absorption process and physiological / biopharmaceutical aspects. A methodology was developed aiming at closing the gap between drug liberation and dissolution on the one hand and the appearance of drug in the blood on the other. Considering what is out of control from a formulation development perspective, a clear differentiation between bioavailability and bioaccessibility was necessary. Focusing on the absorption process, bioaccessibility of a model compound, a poorly soluble but well permeable weak base, was characterized by means of flux across artificial biomimetic membranes. Such setups can be considered to reasonably mimic relevant oral absorption resistances in vitro in terms of diffusion through an unstirred water layer (UWL) and a lipidic barrier. Mechanistic understanding of the driving force for permeation was gained by differentiating drug species and subsequently linking them to the observed transfer rates using a bioaccessibility concept. The three key species that need to be differentiated are molecularly dissolved drug, drug associated in solution with other components (liquid reservoir) and undissolved drug (solid reservoir). An innovative approach to differentiate molecularly dissolved drug from the liquid reservoir using ultracentrifugation in combination with dynamic light scattering as control is presented. A guidance for rational formulation development of PWSDs is elaborated based on the employed model compound. It is structured into five guiding questions to help drug formulation scientists in selecting drug form, excipients and eventually the formulation principle. Overall, the relevance but also limitations of characterizing bioaccessibility were outlined with respect to practical application e.g. in early drug formulation development.