Coexisting

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of Coexisting

  • species coexisting

  • Terms modified by Coexisting

  • coexisting depression
  • coexisting phase
  • coexisting species
  • coexisting substance

  • Selected Abstracts


    Clustering of cardiovascular risk factors with diabetes in Chinese patients: the effects of sex and hyperinsulinaemia

    DIABETES OBESITY & METABOLISM, Issue 3 2001
    Z. -R.
    SUMMARY Objective This study was designed to investigate factors which affect the clustering of cardiovascular risk factors with diabetes in Chinese patients. Research Design and Methods: Six hundred and fifty-four patients with diabetes were assessed comprehensively for diabetes complications and cardiovascular risk factors in a metropolitan hospital in Beijing, China. Insulin resistance and secretion were also evaluated by measurement of glucose and insulin levels before and after a meal tolerance test. Results were analysed according to patient groups stratified by the number of cardiovascular risk factors coexisting with diabetes. Results Cardiovascular risk factors were common in Chinese diabetic patients. The clustering of three or more of these factors with diabetes occurred more often than by chance alone and was associated with postprandial hyperinsulinaemia. Patients with a high number of risk factors were more prone to macrovascular events but did not have higher albuminuria. Using the commonly adopted lower threshold for diagnosing obesity and central obesity in women, there were more women with multiple risk factors. However, this disappeared if the same criteria were used for men and women. Even in the presence of diabetes, cardiovascular risk factors were inadequately controlled in most patients. Conclusions The concurrence of diabetes and other cardiovascular risk factors which constitute the metabolic syndrome is a common phenomenon in urban Chinese diabetic patients. It is associated with hyperinsulinaemia and possibly the female sex. This study emphasises the importance of public health measures to control cardiovascular risk factors in patients with diabetes. [source]


    A prospective study of the diagnostic accuracy of cytological criteria in the FNAB diagnosis of breast papillomas

    DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 8 2007
    Andrew Field M.B., F.R.C.P.A.
    Abstract Seventy-four fine needle aspiration biopsies (FNAB) of breast were selected from the 133 cases with surgical biopsy follow up, from a total of 1,154 consecutive breast FNAB received in a 6-month-period. These 74 cases were reviewed and scored using all relevant cytological criteria for proliferative breast lesions used in our recent retrospective study, without reference to the original cytological and surgical biopsy diagnoses. Of the 42 criteria scored, 13 had a statistically significant association between the cytology score and the presence or absence of a papilloma (PAP), and the sensitivities, specificities and positive predictive values (PPV) of these individual criteria, or a combination of criteria, were derived. It was found that stellate and meshwork tissue fragments and papillary fragments were all highly specific (0.98) for the diagnosis of PAP, with meshwork fragments having the highest PPV (0.93). Stellate fragments (0.41) and papillary fragments (0.24) were less sensitive not only because they occurred less often, but also because they were present in smaller numbers. The presence of a proteinaceous background with macrophages and siderophages or a moderate to marked number of apocrine sheets were useful indicators only when coexisting with at least one of the above three features. Diagn. Cytopathol. 2007;35:465,475. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Characteristic improvement of metal-contaminated sludge using mineralization technology

    ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRESS & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY, Issue 1 2010
    Shao-Hua Hu
    Abstract This study focuses on improving crystalline characteristics of metal-contaminated sludge. The mineralization behavior of Cu/Al or Cu/Fe coexisting in solution is surveyed, and the characteristics of residue and suspension settling are discussed in the context of water content of residue and settling/specific filtration resistance of suspensions. Experimental data show that the hydrate of Cu4SO4(OH)6 forms during mineralization of copper sulfate solution when hydroxide ion concentration, reaction time, and temperature are not controlled appropriately. Mineral characteristics of the residue are usually poor when the Cu4SO4(OH)6 forms in Cu/Al or Cu/Fe solution. However, Cu4SO4(OH)6 can be further transformed into CuO with wet oxidation or ferrite method, respectively (i.e., mineralization treatment). Water reduction of the residue is from 96.8% to 72.8% in the Cu/Al case or 95.6% to 66.6% in the Cu/Fe case, and the mineralized residue volume is only 1/10 of the hydrate sediment. This is particularly beneficial for sludge disposal. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Environ Prog, 2010 [source]


    Clinical and radiological features of symptomatic central nervous system tuberculomas

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 10 2005
    A. Unal
    Tuberculomas may present with meningitis, may lead to meningitis, or may develop during the treatment of TBM. In this study, we report a series of 22 adult cases of symptomatic central nervous system tuberculomas, in eight of them tuberculomas were coexisting with TBM on admission and in 14 of them symptomatic tuberculomas developed during anti-tuberculosis therapy. We also aimed to compare the clinical, laboratory and outcome data of the 14 TBM patients that developed symptomatic tuberculomas, with the data of 41 TBM that did not, under the same treatment regimen. Most of the patients developed symptomatic tuberculomas in the first 6 weeks of treatment. Five patients developed late tuberculomas. The characteristics of tuberculomas and the role of corticosteroids in TBM patients are discussed. In conclusion, although steroids may diminish neurologic symptoms and improve outcome, tuberculomas may appear during the course of anti-tuberculosis and steroid treatment. Because of the possibility of late development of tuberculomas after initial successful treatment, all TBM patients need to be followed-up carefully for a long period. [source]


    CRYPTIC BARRIERS TO DISPERSAL WITHIN A LAKE ALLOW GENETIC DIFFERENTIATION OF EURASIAN PERCH

    EVOLUTION, Issue 8 2007
    S. Bergek
    Gene flow between coexisting or nearby populations normally prevents genetic divergence and local adaptation. Despite this, there are an increasing number of reports of sympatric sister taxa, indicating potential divergence and speciation in the face of gene flow. A large number of such reported cases involve lake-dwelling fish, which are expected to run into few physical barriers to dispersal within their aquatic habitat. However, such cases may not necessarily reflect sympatric speciation if cryptic dispersal barriers are common in lakes and other aquatic systems. In this study, we examined genetic differentiation in perch (Perca fluviatilis L.) from nine locations in a single, small lake (24 km2), using microsatellites. We detected significant genetic differentiation in all but two pairwise comparisons. These patterns were not consistent with divergence by distance or the existence of kin groups. Instead, they suggest that cryptic barriers to dispersal exist within the lake, allowing small-scale genetic divergence. Such an observation suggests that allopatric (or parapatric) divergence may be possible, even in small, apparently homogenous environments such as lakes. This has important consequences for how we currently view evidence from nature for sympatric speciation. [source]


    EVOLUTION OF PREY BEHAVIOR IN RESPONSE TO CHANGES IN PREDATION REGIME: DAMSELFLIES IN FISH AND DRAGONFLY LAKES

    EVOLUTION, Issue 3 2003
    R. Stoks
    Abstract In a large behavioral experiment we reconstructed the evolution of behavioral responses to predators to explore how interactions with predators have shaped the evolution of their prey,behavior. All Enallagma damselfly species reduced both movement and feeding in the presence of coexisting predators. Some Enallagma species inhabit water bodies with both fish and dragonflies, and these species responded to the presence of both predators, whereas other Enallagma species inhabit water bodies that have only large dragonflies as predators, and these species only responded to the presence of dragonflies. Lineages that shifted to live with large dragonflies showed no evolution in behaviors expressed in the presence of dragonflies, but they evolved greater movement in the absence of predators and greater movement and feeding in the presence of fish. These results suggest that Enallagma species have evolutionarily lost the ability to recognize fish as a predator. Because species coexisting with only dragonfly predators have also evolved the ability to escape attacking dragonfly predators by swimming, the decreased predation risk associated with foraging appears to have shifted the balance of the foraging/predation risk trade-off to allow increased activity in the absence of mortality threats to evolve in these lineages. Our results suggest that evolution in response to changes in predation regime may have greater consequences for characters expressed in the absence of mortality threats because of how the balance between the conflicting demands of growth and predation risk are altered. [source]


    A General Approach to First Order Phase Transitions and the Anomalous Behavior of Coexisting Phases in the Magnetic Case

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 6 2009
    Sergio Gama
    Abstract First order phase transitions for materials with exotic properties are usually believed to happen at fixed values of the intensive parameters (such as pressure, temperature, etc.) characterizing their properties. It is also considered that the extensive properties of the phases (such as entropy, volume, etc.) have discontinuities at the transition point, but that for each phase the intensive parameters remain constant during the transition. These features are a hallmark for systems described by two thermodynamic degrees of freedom. In this work it is shown that first order phase transitions must be understood in the broader framework of thermodynamic systems described by three or more degrees of freedom. This means that the transitions occur along intervals of the intensive parameters, that the properties of the phases coexisting during the transition may show peculiar behaviors characteristic of each system, and that a generalized Clausius,Clapeyron equation must be obeyed. These features for the magnetic case are confirmed, and it is shown that experimental calorimetric data agree well with the magnetic Clausius,Clapeyron equation for MnAs. An estimate for the point in the temperature-field plane where the first order magnetic transition turns to a second order one is obtained (the critical parameters) for MnAs and Gd5Ge2Si2 compounds. Anomalous behavior of the volumes of the coexisting phases during the magnetic first order transition is measured, and it is shown that the anomalies for the individual phases are hidden in the behavior of the global properties as the volume. [source]


    Factors determining mammal species richness on habitat islands and isolates: habitat diversity, disturbance, species interactions and guild assembly rules

    GLOBAL ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2000
    Barry J. Fox
    Abstract 1For over three decades the equilibrium theory of island biogeography has galvanized studies in ecological biogeography. Studies of oceanic islands and of natural habitat islands share some similarities to continental studies, particularly in developed regions where habitat fragmentation results from many land uses. Increasingly, remnant habitat is in the form of isolates created by the clearing and destruction of natural areas. Future evolution of a theory to predict patterns of species abundance may well come from the application of island biogeography to habitat fragments or isolates. 2In this paper we consider four factors other than area and isolation that influence the number and type of mammal species coexisting in one place: habitat diversity, habitat disturbance, species interactions and guild assembly rules. In all examples our data derive from mainland habitat, fragmented to differing degrees, with different levels of isolation. 3Habitat diversity is seen to be a good predictor of species richness. Increased levels of disturbance produce a relatively greater decrease in species richness on smaller than on larger isolates. Species interactions in the recolonization of highly disturbed sites, such as regenerating mined sites, is analogous to island colonization. Species replacement sequences in secondary successions indicate not just how many, but which species are included. Lastly, the complement of species established on islands, or in insular habitats, may be governed by guild assembly rules. These contributions may assist in taking a renewed theory into the new millennium. [source]


    Metaplastic carcinoma of the breast arising within complex sclerosing lesion: a report of five cases

    HISTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 3 2000
    Denley
    Aims This study presents a series of five cases in which metaplastic carcinoma, predominantly low-grade adenosquamous carcinoma, of the breast is seen arising within a background of a complex sclerosing lesion. This association has been recognized previously but has not been documented in detail. This study describes the characteristics of the components present in each case and discusses the existing literature. This observation adds further evidence to support an association between some types of invasive breast carcinoma and sclerosing lesions of the breast. Methods and results Four of these cases were received as referral cases for opinion. The fifth was received as part of the routine surgical workload within our own institution. Two patients presented following mammographic screening and three symptomatically; their mean age was 62 years (range 49,68). The mean lesion size was 16 mm (range 7,24). All five lesions showed features of a complex sclerosing lesion/radial scar in the form of central sclerosis with elastosis and radiating benign entrapped tubules. One had associated benign papillary structures and two had focal benign squamous mletaplasia. Four cases showed coexisting but distinct areas of low-grade adenosquamous carcinoma with glandular and squamous epithelial differentiation in a spindle cell background. One case had associated undifferentiated spindle cell carcinoma. Detailed immunophenotypic characteristics of two cases are presented. Conclusions This series illustrates a postulated but previously unconfirmed association between an unusual form of metaplastic breast carcinoma (adenosquamous carcinoma) and complex sclerosing lesions. The mechanisms of induction of breast carcinoma are poorly understood but these observations further emphasize the potential for sclerosing lesion of the breast to be associated with, and possibly give rise to, invasive carcinoma of different types. The precise nature of the interaction between the pathological processes remains unclear. [source]


    Impact of chronic advanced aortic regurgitation on the perioperative outcome of noncardiac surgery

    ACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 5 2010
    H.-C. LAI
    Background: Whether and how chronic advanced aortic regurgitation (AR) impacts the perioperative outcome of noncardiac surgery remains unclear. Methods: From November 1999 to December 2006, all patients undergoing noncardiac operations and ever examined by echocardiography within the last 6 months were screened. Those with chronic moderate,severe or severe AR were enrolled, provided they were not already trachea-intubated or aortic valve operated, and the surgery was not performed under local anesthesia. Case-matched subjects without significant AR served as controls. The perioperative outcomes of these patients were analyzed, and independent prognostic correlates were investigated by multivariate logistic regression analysis. Results: A total of 167 patients (male 131, mean age of 75 years) complying with the enrollment criteria were studied. Compared with the other 167 case-matched control peers, patients with advanced AR risked potential hazards of serious hemodynamic instability (0.6%) and circulatory collapse (1.2%) during surgery despite the similar incidence of overall cardiac adverse events, and were further distressed with more cardiopulmonary complications (16.2% vs. 5.4%, P=0.003) and in-hospital deaths (9% vs. 1.8%, P=0.008) post-operatively. Multivariate regression analysis confirmed the correlation of advanced AR with perioperative mortality, and identified depressed left ventricular function, renal dysfunction, high surgical risk, and lack of cardiac medication as predictors of in-hospital death. Conclusion: Chronic advanced AR complicates the perioperative outcome of noncardiac surgery as reflected by frequent cardiopulmonary morbidities and in-hospital deaths, especially when coexisting with specified high-risk clinical and surgical characteristics. [source]


    SHRIMP U,Pb zircon chronology of ultrahigh-temperature spinel,orthopyroxene,garnet granulite from South Altay orogenic belt, northwestern China

    ISLAND ARC, Issue 3 2010
    Zilong Li
    Abstract Diagnostic mineral assemblages, mineral compositions and zircon SHRIMP U,Pb ages are reported from an ultrahigh-temperature (UHT) spinel,orthopyroxene,garnet granulite (UHT rock) from the South Altay orogenic belt of northwestern China. This Altay orogenic belt defines an accretionary belt between the Siberian and Kazakhstan,Junggar Plates that formed during the Paleozoic. The UHT rock examined in this study preserves both peak and retrograde metamorphic assemblages and microstructures including equilibrium spinel + quartz, and intergrowth of orthopyroxene, spinel, sillimanite, and cordierite formed during decompression. Mineral chemistry shows that the spinel coexisting with quartz has low ZnO contents, and the orthopyroxene is of high alumina type with Al2O3 contents up to 9.3 wt%. The peak temperatures of metamorphism were >950°C, consistent with UHT conditions, and the rocks were exhumed along a clockwise P,T path. The zircons in this UHT rock display a zonal structure with a relict core and metamorphic rim. The cores yield bimodal ages of 499 ± 8 Ma (7 spots), and 855 Ma (2 spots), with the rounded clastic zircons having ages with 490,500 Ma. Since the granulite was metamorphosed at temperatures >900°C, exceeding the closure temperature of U,Pb system in zircon, a possible interpretation is that the 499 ± 8 Ma age obtained from the largest population of zircons in the rock marks the timing of formation of the protolith of the rock, with the zircons sourced from a ,500 Ma magmatic provenance, in a continental margin setting. We correlate the UHT metamorphism with the northward subduction of the Paleo-Asian Ocean and associated accretion-collision tectonics of the Siberian and Kazakhstan,Junggar Plates followed by rapid exhumation leading to decompression. [source]


    Effects of genetic impoverishment on plant community diversity

    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2003
    Rosemary E. Booth
    Summary 1Established individuals removed at random from populations of 11 long-lived herbaceous species coexisting in a local area of ancient limestone pasture at Cressbrookdale in North Derbyshire were subjected to clonal propagation to produce stocks of genetically identical individuals sufficient to create 36 model communities identical in species composition but widely contrasted in genetic diversity. 2Three levels of genetic diversity were imposed. In one treatment, all individuals of each species were genetically unique. The second contained four randomly selected genotypes of each species. In the third, there was no genetic diversity in any of the species but each community contained a unique combination of genotypes. 3Over a period of 5 years the communities were allowed to develop in microcosms containing natural rendzina soil and exposed to a standardized regime of simulated grazing and trampling. The treatments were maintained by the removal of flowers, immature seed-heads and seedlings originating from the seed-bank and seed rain. Point quadrat surveys were used to monitor changes in species composition and diversity in the three experimental treatments. 4During the experiment a distinction rapidly developed between five canopy dominants and five subordinates, a process that caused the vegetation structure to closely resemble that occurring at Cressbrookdale. 5A gradual loss of species diversity occurred in all three treatments but by the end of the fifth growing season species diversity was higher in the most genetically diverse communities. 6Ordination of the 36 communities at intervals over a 5-year period revealed a gradual convergence in the species composition of the 4-genotype and 16-genotype communities and this effect was more strongly developed in the latter. A comparable process was not observed in the 1-genotype communities, suggesting that interaction between particular genotypes of different species in local neighbourhoods may be an essential part of the mechanism that determines the predictable composition of a mature pasture community. 7It is concluded that, under the conditions of this experiment, genetic diversity within component species reduced the rate at which species diversity declined. The relative importance in this effect of factors such as greater disease resistance and moderated competitive interactions remains uncertain. [source]


    Parthenogenetic flatworms have more symbionts than their coexisting, sexual conspecifics, but does this support the Red Queen?

    JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2001
    N. K. Michiels
    The Red Queen hypothesis predicts that sexuality is favoured when virulent parasites adapt quickly to host genotypes. We studied a population of the flatworm Schmidtea polychroa in which obligate sexual and parthenogenetic individuals coexist. Infection rates by an amoeboid protozoan were consistently higher in parthenogens than in sexuals. Allozyme analysis showed that infection was genotype specific, with the second most common clone most infected. A laboratory measurement of fitness components failed to reveal high infection costs as required for the Red Queen. Although fertility was lower in more infected parthenogens, this effect can also be explained by the accumulation of mutations. We discuss these and other characteristics of our model system that may explain how a parasite with low virulence can show this pattern. [source]


    Holding hope and hopelessness: therapeutic engagements with the balance of hope

    JOURNAL OF FAMILY THERAPY, Issue 3 2007
    Carmel Flaskas
    Hope and hopelessness are coexisting and powerful experiences in the human condition. The dynamics of hope and hopelessness within intimate relationships are complex, and individual and family experiences of hope and hopelessness are embedded within historical contexts and wider social processes. This article rests on a relational set of understandings about hope and hopelessness, and offers a dual exploration. It focuses first on the complexities of the patterns of hope and hopelessness within families, and then on the complexities of the therapist's relationship to hope and hopelessness and the family's experience. Orienting to the balance of hope in constellations of hope and hopelessness provides one compass point of therapeutic practice. Reflective practice enables the use of the therapist's involvement in the therapeutic relationship, and helps the therapist to witness the coexistence of hope and hopelessness in a way that nurtures hope and emotionally holds both hope and hopelessness. [source]


    Using estimated thermodynamic properties to model accessory phases: the case of tourmaline

    JOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY, Issue 7 2007
    V. J. VAN HINSBERG
    Abstract Accessory phases and minor components in minerals are commonly ignored in thermodynamic modelling. Such an approach seems unwarranted, as accessory phases can represent a significant element reservoir and minor components can substantially change their host mineral's stability field. However, a lack of thermodynamic data prohibits assessment of these effects. In this contribution, the polyhedron method is used to estimate the thermodynamic properties of tourmaline, a common and widespread accessory phase, stable over a range of P,T,X conditions. The polyhedron method allows ,H, S, V, CP and Vm(T,P) properties to be estimated from a linear stoichiometric summation over the fractional properties of its polyhedron constituents. To allow for estimates of tourmaline, fractional thermodynamic properties for BIII and BIV polyhedra were derived. Mixing contributions to molar volume were evaluated and symmetrical mixing parameters derived for Al-Mg, Al-Fe and Al-Li interaction on tourmaline's Y-site and T-site Al-Si interaction. Evaluation of the estimated properties using experimental and natural equilibria between tourmaline and melts, minerals and hydrothermal fluids, shows that reliable semi-quantitative results are obtained. The boron contents in fluids coexisting with tourmaline are calculated to within an order of magnitude of measured content, and where anchor-points are available, agreement improves to within a factor of 2. Including tourmaline in petrogenetic modelling of metamorphic rocks indicates that its presence leads to disappearance of staurolite and garnet, among others, and modifies the XMg of coexisting phases, in line with observations on natural rocks. [source]


    Progress of actinolite-forming reactions in mafic schists during retrograde metamorphism: an example from the Sanbagawa metamorphic belt in central Shikoku, Japan

    JOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY, Issue 5 2005
    A. OKAMOTO
    Abstract Hydration reactions are direct evidence of fluid,rock interaction during regional metamorphism. In this study, hydration reactions to produce retrograde actinolite in mafic schists are investigated to evaluate the controlling factors on the reaction progress. Mafic schists in the Sanbagawa belt contain amphibole coexisting with epidote, chlorite, plagioclase and quartz. Amphibole typically shows two types of compositional zoning from core to rim: barroisite , hornblende , actinolite in the high-grade zone, and winchite , actinolite in the low-grade zone. Both types indicate that amphibole grew during the exhumation stage of the metamorphic belt. Microstructures of amphibole zoning and mass-balance relations suggest that: (1) the actinolite-forming reactions proceeded at the expense of the preexisting amphibole; and (2) the breakdown reaction of hornblende consumed more H2O fluid than that of winchite, when one mole of preexisting amphibole was reacted. Reaction progress is indicated by the volume fraction of actinolite to total amphibole, Yact, with the following details: (1) reaction proceeded homogeneously in each mafic layer; (2) the extent of the hornblende breakdown reaction is commonly low (Yact < 0.5), but it increases drastically in the high-grade part of the garnet zone (Yact,>,0.7); and (3) the extent of the winchite breakdown reaction is commonly high (Yact,>,0.7). Many microcracks are observed within hornblende, and the extent of hornblende breakdown reaction is correlated with the size reduction of the hornblende core. Brittle fracturing of hornblende may have enhanced retrograde reaction progress by increasing of influx of H2O and the surface area of hornblende. In contrast to high-grade rocks, the winchite breakdown reaction is well advanced in the low-grade rocks, where reaction progress is not associated with brittle fracturing of winchite. The high extent of the reaction in the low-grade rocks may be due to small size of winchite before the reaction. [source]


    High-pressure granulites: formation, recovery of peak conditions and implications for tectonics

    JOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY, Issue 1 2003
    P. J. O'Brien
    Abstract High-pressure granulites are characterised by the key associations garnet-clinopyroxene-plagioclase-quartz (in basic rocks) and kyanite-K-feldspar (metapelites and felsic rocks) and are typically orthopyroxene-free in both basic and felsic bulk compositions. In regional metamorphic areas, two essential varieties exist: a high- to ultrahigh-temperature group and a group representing overprinted eclogites. The high- to ultrahigh-temperature type formerly contained high-temperature ternary feldspar (now mesoperthite) coexisting with kyanite, is associated with garnet peridotites, and formed at conditions above 900 °C and 1.5 GPa. Clinopyroxene in subordinate basic rocks is Al-rich and textural evidence points to a high-pressure,high-temperature melting history. The second variety contains symplectite-like or poikilitic clinopyroxene-plagioclase intergrowths indicating former plagioclase-free, i.e. eclogite facies assemblages. This type of rock formed at conditions straddling the high-pressure amphibolite/high-pressure granulite field at around 700,850 °C, 1.0,1.4 GPa. Importantly, in the majority of high-pressure granulites, orthopyroxene is secondary and is a product of reactions at pressures lower than the peak recorded pressure. In contrast to low- and medium-pressure granulites, which form at conditions attainable in the mid to lower levels of normal continental crust, high-pressure granulites (of nonxenolith origin) mostly represent rocks formed as a result of short-lived tectonic events that led to crustal thickening or subduction of the crust into the mantle. Short times at high-temperature conditions are reflected in the preservation of prograde zoning in garnet and pyroxene. High-pressure granulites of both regional types, although rare, are known from both old and young metamorphic terranes (e.g. c. 45 Ma, Namche Barwa, E Himalaya; 400,340 Ma, European Variscides; 1.8 Ga Hengshan, China; 1.9 Ga, Snowbird, Saskatchewan and 2.5 Ga Jianping, China). This spread of ages supports proposals suggesting that thermal and tectonic processes in the lithosphere have not changed significantly since at least the end of the Archean. [source]


    Triplet pregnancy with partial hydatidiform mole coexisting with two fetuses: A case report

    JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY RESEARCH (ELECTRONIC), Issue 4pt2 2008
    Cheol Hong Kim
    Abstract Hydatidiform mole with a coexistent fetus is rare, but this condition has recently shown an increased incidence because of assisted reproduction technology. Herein, we report on a case of triplet pregnancy with a partial hydatidiform mole coexisting with two fetuses. It was diagnosed by p57kip2 immunohistochemical staining which is helpful in determining histologically equivocal cases. After termination of pregnancy, the patient was diagnosed with persistent gestational trophoblastic disease. Six courses of methotrexate chemotherapy were performed. Her ,-human chorionic gonadotrophin titers then fell to a normal level. [source]


    Thermodynamic and Structural Properties of Sodium Lithium Niobate Solid Solutions

    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY, Issue 2 2002
    Irina Pozdnyakova
    Thermodynamics of the Na1,xLixNbO3 system is investigated by high-temperature drop-solution calorimetry in molten 3Na2O,4MoO3 solvent at 973 K. Standard molar enthalpies of formation are derived. The estimated heats of transition between hypothetical and stable structures, lithium niobate and perovskite for NaNbO3 and vice versa for LiNbO3 are ,6 kJ/mol and ,10 kJ/mol, respectively. X-ray diffraction studies at room temperature showed for 0 ,x, 0.14 there are three phases based on different ordering of the perovskite type lattice: orthorhombic with a quadrupled reduced perovskite cell at 0 ,x, 0.02, orthorhombic with a doubled reduced perovskite cell at 0.015 ,x, 0.14, and rhombohedral at 0.08 ,x, 0.13. There are two two-phase (morphotropic) regions with coexistence of the two orthorhombic phases at 0.015 ,x, 0.02 and with the second orthorhombic phase coexisting with the rhombohedral phase at 0.08 ,x, 0.13. A reproducible anomaly in specific heat at ,600 K, not reported previously, has been observed in pure NaNbO3. Heat-capacity measurements confirm a phase transition at 553 K for 0.07 ,x, 0.09. With increasing lithium concentration, a gradual disappearance of high-temperature phase transitions associated with tilting of oxygen octahedra has been observed. [source]


    Disseminated molluscum contagiosum and pulmonary cryptococcosis coexisting in an HTLV-1 seropositive patient

    JOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY & VENEREOLOGY, Issue 6 2003
    AO Adedayo
    [source]


    Aerial seed bank dynamics and seedling emergence patterns in two annual Mediterranean Asteraceae

    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, Issue 3 2010
    F. Bastida
    Abstract Question: We explored the functional significance of seasonal aerial seed banks in two coexisting, heterocarpic annual Asteraceae with dormant (Chrysanthemum coronarium) and non-dormant (Anacyclus radiatus) achenes. We hypothesised that the plant achene pool is a significant component of total seed reserves, and that within-season seedling emergence timing is shaped by achene release patterns. Location: SW Spain. Methods: In an observational study, we established temporal achene release patterns. We also quantified the aerial and soil achene pools throughout the release season, and assessed seedling emergence timing. Sowing experiments were used to explore the influence of achene release dynamics on emergence timing, and to establish achene morph-specific patterns of between-year distribution of germination. Results: Achene release extended from late spring to late autumn (Chrysanthemum), or from early autumn to early winter (Anacyclus). Within species, achene morphs differed in release timing. Only in Chrysanthemum, a small achene fraction seemed to persist in the soil, and between-year germination distribution differed among morphs. In coexisting populations, the Anacyclus plant achene pool was an order of magnitude higher than the soil pool throughout the release season, whereas in Chrysanthemum both pools were of the same magnitude during autumn. Within-year seedling emergence was significantly staggered beneath parent plants compared with the pattern resulting solely from the germination response in soil, with the exception of Chrysanthemum in one of the two study years. Conclusions: Results suggest that seasonal aerial seed banks are effective within-season, risk-reducing traits in ruderal Mediterranean habitats characteristic of the study species. [source]


    Dogs Canis familiaris as carnivores: their role and function in intraguild competition

    MAMMAL REVIEW, Issue 4 2009
    ABI TAMIM VANAK
    ABSTRACT 1Dogs Canis familiaris are the world's most common carnivore and are known to interact with wildlife as predators, prey, competitors, and disease reservoirs or vectors. 2Despite these varied roles in the community, the interaction of dogs with sympatric wild carnivore species is poorly understood. We review how dogs have been classified in the literature, and illustrate how the location and ranging behaviour of dogs are important factors in predicting their interactions with wild prey and carnivores. 3We detail evidence of dogs as intraguild competitors with sympatric carnivores in the context of exploitative, interference and apparent competition. 4Dogs can have localized impacts on prey populations, but in general they are not exploitative competitors with carnivores. Rather, most dog populations are highly dependent on human-derived food and gain a relatively small proportion of their diet from wild prey. However, because of human-derived food subsidies, dogs can occur at high population densities and thus could potentially outcompete native carnivores, especially when prey is limited. 5Dogs can be effective interference competitors, especially with medium-sized and small carnivores. Dogs may fill the role of an interactive medium-sized canid within the carnivore community, especially in areas where the native large carnivore community is depauperate. 6Dogs can also be reservoirs of pathogens, because most populations around the world are free-ranging and unvaccinated. Diseases such as rabies and canine distemper have resulted in severe population declines in several endangered carnivores coexisting with high-density dog populations. Dogs can therefore be viewed as pathogen-mediated apparent competitors, capable of facilitating large-scale population declines in carnivores. 7Based on this information, we propose conceptual models that use dog population size and ranging patterns to predict the potential for dogs to be intraguild competitors. We discuss how interactions between dogs and carnivores might influence native carnivore communities. [source]


    Ferric iron in SNC meteorites as determined by Mössbauer spectroscopy: Implications for martian landers and martian oxygen fugacity

    METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, Issue 12 2003
    M. Darby DYAR
    Also, considerable current effort is being made to understand the oxygen fugacity of martian magmas because of the effect of fO2 on mineral chemistry and crystallization processes. For these 2 reasons, the present study was conceived to acquire room temperature Mössbauer spectra of mineral separates and whole rock samples of 10 SNC meteorites. The results suggest that mineral identification using remote application of this technique will be most useful when the phases present have distinctive parameters arising from Fe in very different coordination polyhedra; for example, pyroxene coexisting with olivine can be discriminated easily, but opx versus cpx cannot. The MER goal of using Mössbauer spectroscopy to quantify the relative amounts of individual mineral species present will be difficult to satisfy if silicates are present because the lack of constraints on wt% FeO contents of individual silicate phases present will make modal calculations impossible. The remote Mössbauer spectroscopy will be most advantageous if the rocks analyzed are predominantly oxides with known stoichiometries, though these phases are not present in the SNCs. As for the detection of martian oxygen fugacity, no evidence exists in the SNC samples studied of a relationship between Fe3+ content and fO2 as calculated by independent methods. Possibly, all of the Fe3+ observed in olivine is the result of dehydrogenation rather than oxidation, and this process may also be the source of all the Fe3+ observed in pyroxene. The observed Fe3+ in pyroxene also likely records an equilibrium between pyroxene and melt at such low fO2 that little or no Fe3+ would be expected. [source]


    UNSTEADY STATE DISPERSION OF AIR POLLUTANTS UNDER THE EFFECTS OF DELAYED AND NONDELAYED REMOVAL MECHANISMS

    NATURAL RESOURCE MODELING, Issue 4 2009
    MANJU AGARWAL
    Abstract In this paper, we present a two-dimensional time-dependent mathematical model for studying the unsteady state dispersion of air pollutants emitted from an elevated line source in the atmosphere under the simultaneous effects of delayed (slow) and nondelayed (instantaneous) removal mechanisms. The wind speed and coefficient of diffusion are taken as functions of the vertical height above the ground. The deposition of pollutants on the absorptive ground and leakage into the atmosphere at the inversion layer are also included in the model by applying appropriate boundary conditions. The model is solved numerically by the fractional step method. The Lagrangian approach is used to solve the advection part, whereas the Eulerian finite difference scheme is applied to solve the part with the diffusion and removal processes. The solutions are analyzed to observe the effects of coexisting delayed and nondelayed removal mechanisms on overall dispersion. Comparison of delayed and nondelayed removal processes of equal capacity shows that the latter (nondelayed) process is more effective than the former (delayed removal) in the removal of pollutants from the atmosphere. [source]


    T1 relaxation times for viability evaluation of the engrafted and the native liver in a rat model of heterotopic auxiliary liver transplantation: a pilot study

    NMR IN BIOMEDICINE, Issue 6 2001
    Ye-Dong Fan
    Abstract Following a heterotopic auxiliary liver transplantation, commonly used measurements are either invasive or non-indicative of individual viability of the coexisting engrafted and native livers. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was therefore tested for its potential to monitor the post-transplant hepatic viability in a rat model. Thirteen Wistar rats were systematically evaluated with MRI and serum biochemical liver parameters. Post-transplant complications and the causes of animal death were identified by autopsy and histo-pathological examinations. The data of the healthy survivors were compared with those of the rats that developed complications. On MRI, the hepatic complications could be depicted in the individual livers. A specific pattern of signal evolution was found in the livers of the healthy survivors: the mean T1 relaxation times of the engrafted livers increased immediately after transplantation (476,±,64,ms, mean,±,standard deviation, pre-operative; 730,±,48,ms, week 1) and then declined steadily to a 3 month value of 489,±,246,ms, while, following a transient first rise (476,±,64,ms, pre-operative; 589,±,28,ms, week 1), the mean T1 value of the native livers increased again 4 weeks after surgery and reached a 3 month value of 859,±,43,ms. However, in the rats with various complications, the mean T1 relaxation times of the engrafted livers continued to increase throughout the first post-operative month (760,±,48,ms, week 1; 922,±,76,ms, week 4), while that of the native liver only varied mildly (546,±,25,ms, week 1; 473,±,25,ms, week 4). After the first post-transplant week, the healthy engrafted livers could already be distinguished from those with complications by a significant decrease in T1 relaxation times. These data suggest that, besides demonstrating major complications, MRI may allow one to monitor the viability of each liver by analysing the relative signal intensity and T1 relaxation times after a heterotopic auxiliary liver transplantation. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Aphid-mediated coexistence of ladybirds (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) and the wood ant Formica rufa: seasonal effects, interspecific variability and the evolution of a coccinellid myrmecophile.

    OIKOS, Issue 2 2000
    John J. Sloggett
    It is generally believed that most homopteran-eating insects avoid ant-tended colonies of Homoptera, due to the ant aggression they encounter there. However, because homopteran colonies which are ant-tended often persist for longer than untended colonies, some homopteran-eaters may utilise ant-tended Homoptera when untended colonies are scarce. Furthermore, a few homopteran-eaters are myrmecophilous, habitually coexisting with ants. To investigate these phenomena, a study was made of aphids and aphidophagous coccinellids (ladybirds) on Scots pine, Pinus sylvestris, growing in areas foraged and unforaged by the wood ant Formica rufa. The non-tended aphid Schizolachnus pineti exhibited a marked population decline in late summer but persisted in both areas at very low density. Facultatively tended Cinara aphids exhibited higher population densities when associated with F. rufa, and remaining colonies of these aphids were only found associated with ants in late summer. Coccinellids exhibited considerable interspecific variability in their level of association with F. rufa, and there was some evidence of an increase in certain species' frequencies of occurrence with the ant when Cinara aphids were all ant-tended, in late summer. Coexistence with ants appears to be associated with either an intolerance of low aphid densities, in Coccinella septempunctata and Harmonia quadripunctata, or with extreme dietary specialisation, in Myzia oblongoguttata. Similar factors to those which bring C. septempunctata into contact with ants were probably of importance in the initial stages of the evolution of myrmecophily of its congener, Coccinella magnifica. [source]


    Biclonal low grade B-cell lymphoma confirmed by both flow cytometry and karyotypic analysis, in spite of a normal kappa/lambda Ig light chain ratio

    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2007
    J.P. Delville
    Abstract Composite low grade lymphoma with two subpopulations in a same site is uncommon. We herewith report the case of an 80-year-old woman who presented with isolated bilateral dacryoadenomegaly. Pathological examination of an incisional biopsy of her right lacrimal gland was consistent with a marginal zone lymphoma. Flow cytometry immunophenotyping showed two distinct clonal B-cell populations expressing sIg D lambda or sIg M kappa restriction in the lacrimal gland, blood, and bone marrow. Both B-cells populations were sorted from peripheral blood for molecular biology investigations and comparison with molecular data performed on tumor and bone marrow cells. IgH PCR performed on purified blood populations disclosed two monoclonal peaks: 98 bp-sized peak in the sIg M kappa and a 107 bp in the sIg D lambda clones, respectively. The lacrimal gland tumor expressed mainly sIg M kappa population, and showed a major 98 bp-sized peak coexisting with a very minor 107 bp peak. Cytogenetic studies showed a 46, XX,del (7) (q22q32) karyotype. Bone marrow examination at diagnosis revealed the same B-cell clones distribution than the one observed in blood with a dominant sIg D lambda population, a Genescan profile showing a major peak of 107 bp and a minor peak of 98 bp. Chromosomal analysis disclosed a 46,XX,del (10) (?p14) karyotype without detectable 7q deletion. To our knowledge, this observation represents the first reported case of biclonal low grade lymphoma hidden behind a normal classical kappa/lambda Ig light chain ratio in blood, but clearly demonstrated by the combination of three ancillary techniques (flow cytometry both analytical and cell sorting, molecular biology, and cytogenetics) and analysis of different tissues (i.e., in this case, lacrimal gland biopsy, blood, and bone marrow. Am. J. Hematol., 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Self-organization and finite size effects in epitaxial ferromagnetic MnAs films on GaAs

    PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI (B) BASIC SOLID STATE PHYSICS, Issue 8 2007
    L. Däweritz
    Abstract The self-organized striped structure of coexisting ,-MnAs and ,-MnAs, characteristic for MnAs films grown on GaAs(001) by molecular beam epitaxy under As-rich conditions at low temperature, has been studied in samples prepared under conditions closer to the equilibrium. Whereas the period of the stripe pattern is independent on the preparation procedure, the width of the ferromagnetic ,-MnAs stripes increases. Thus, the aspect ratio p between the stripe width L and the stripe thickness t can be varied over a wide range. The magnetic properties of the finite-size magnetic system are investigated as a function of the ratio p at room temperature. The transition from type-I domains with meander-like contrast in the magnetic force microscopy (MFM) image to type-II domains with a line-shaped contrast due to the division of the stripe into N subdomains across the stripe occurs at p ratios expected from a model based on the shape anisotropy. Besides the well-known N = 3 type-II domains also type-II domains with N = 4, 5 were detected. When the stripe width approaches the period of the self-organized structure, the boundary between two neighboring stripes is imaged as chessboard-like contrast in the MFM pattern. The shape of the magnetic hysteresis loops changes with the p ratio or, in other words, with the predominance of in-plane or out-of plane magnetic moments in the demagnetized state. (© 2007 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source]


    Discovery of male sterile plants and their contrasting occurrence between self-compatible and self-incompatible populations of the hermaphroditic perennial Trillium camschatcense

    PLANT SPECIES BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2009
    SHOSEI KUBOTA
    Abstract The sex type of Trillium camschatcense has been considered to be strictly monomorphic, composed of only hermaphroditic individuals. However, field observations have detected anther-degenerated (AD) plants coexisting with hermaphrodites. The present study aimed to elucidate whether AD plants could be regarded as females and, if so, how their loss of male function is compensated. Because T. camschatcense retains both self-compatible (SC) and self-incompatible (SI) populations, the frequencies of AD plants in multiple populations (22 SC and eight SI) were examined to predict the fate of these individuals under contrasting breeding systems. Morphological and genetic analyses in a SC population demonstrated that AD plants were completely male sterile, but female fertile. Although the quantity of seed produced was similar, hermaphrodites produced seeds predominantly via selfing, whereas seeds of AD plants were entirely outcrossed. Because inbreeding depression was severe, AD plants achieved a fitness advantage through inbreeding avoidance. However, the frequency of AD plants varied among SC populations (0,42%), suggesting that environmental variance can modify the relative fitness. Conversely, the frequency was suppressed among SI populations (0,2%). Because SI hermaphrodites are free from inbreeding, AD plants would not benefit from inbreeding avoidance and would find it difficult to invade a SI population. [source]


    Cover Picture: Plasma Process.

    PLASMA PROCESSES AND POLYMERS, Issue 8 2006
    Polym.
    Cover: The picture shows different discharges in an atmospheric pressure plasma jet (APPJ), operated at 13.56 MHz in a gap of 2 mm. The discharges shown are from top to bottom: ,-mode in helium, ,-mode in helium, ,-mode in argon and coexisting ,- and ,-mode in argon. Further details can be found in the article by J. Laimer* and H. Störi on page 573. [source]