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Abulencia A, Acosta D, Adelman J, Affolder T, Akimoto T, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amerio S, Amidei D, Anastassov A, Anikeev K, Annovi A, Antos J, Aoki M, Apollinari G, Arguin JF, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Ashmanskas W, Attal A, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Azzurri P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Bartsch V, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Belloni A, Ben Haim E, Benjamin D, Beretvas A, Beringer J, Berry T, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Blair RE, Blocker C, Blumenfeld B, Bocci A, Bodek A, Boisvert V, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Boveia A, Brau B, Bromberg C, Brubaker E, Budagov J, Budd HS, Budd S, Burkett K, Busetto G, Bussey P, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Campanelli M, Campbell M, Canelli F, Canepa A, Carlsmith D, Carosi R, Carron S, Casarsa M, Castro A, Catastini P, Cauz D, Cavalli-Sforza M, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chang SH, Chapman J, Chen YC, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Cho I, Cho K, Chokheli D, Chou JP, Chu PH, Chuang SH, Chung K, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciljak M, Ciobanu CI, Ciocci MA, Clark A, Clark D, Coca M, Compostella G, Convery ME, Conway J, Cooper B, Copic K, Cordelli M, Cortiana G, Cresciolo F, Cruz A, Cuenca Almenar C, Cuevas J, Culbertson R, Cyr D, DaRonco S, D'Auria S, D'Onofrio M, Dagenhart D, de Barbaro P, De Cecco S, Deisher A, De Lentdecker G, Dell'Orso M, Delli Paoli F, Demers S, Demortier L, Deng J, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, DiTuro P, Dörr C, Donati S, Donega M, Dong P, Donini J, Dorigo T, Dube S, Ebina K, Efron J, Ehlers J, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fang HC, Farrington S, Fedorko I, Fedorko WT, Feild RG, Feindt M, Fernandez JP, Field R, Flanagan G, Flores-Castillo LR, Foland A, Forrester S, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman JC, Frisch H, Furic I, Gallinaro M, Galyardt J, Garcia JE, Garcia Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gay C, Gerberich H, Gerdes D, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Gibson A, Gibson K, Ginsburg C, Giokaris N, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Giunta M, Giurgiu G, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Gomez-Ceballos G, Goncharov M, González O, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Gresele A, Griffiths M, Grinstein S, Grosso-Pilcher C, Group RC, Grundler U, Guimaraes da Costa J, Gunay-Unalan Z, Haber C, Hahn SR, Hahn K, Halkiadakis E, Hamilton A, Han BY, Han JY, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hare M, Harper S, Harr RF, Harris RM, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Hays C, Heijboer A, Heinemann B, Heinrich J, Herndon M, Hidas D, Hill CS, Hirschbuehl D, Hocker A, Holloway A, Hou S, Houlden M, Hsu SC, Huffman BT, Hughes RE, Huston J, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ishizawa Y, Ivanov A, Iyutin B, James E, Jang D, Jayatilaka B, Jeans D, Jensen H, Jeon EJ, Jindariani S, Jones M, Joo KK, Jun SY, Junk TR, Kamon T, Kang J, Karchin PE, Kato Y, Kemp Y, Kephart R, Kerzel U, Khotilovich V, Kilminster B, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim JE, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim YK, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Klute M, Knuteson B, Ko BR, Kobayashi H, Kondo K, Kong DJ, Konigsberg J, Korytov A, Kotwal AV, Kovalev A, Kraan A, Kraus J, Kravchenko I, Kreps M, Kroll J, Krumnack N, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kusakabe Y, Kwang S, Laasanen AT, Lai S, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster M, Lander RL, Lannon K, Lath A, Latino G, Lazzizzera I, LeCompte T, Lee J, Lee J, Lee YJ, Lee SW, Lefèvre R, Leonardo N, Leone S, Levy S, Lewis JD, Lin C, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Lipeles E, Liss TM, Lister A, Litvintsev DO, Liu T, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loreti M, Loverre P, Lu RS, Lucchesi D, Lujan P, Lukens P, Lungu G, Lyons L, Lys J, Lysak R, Lytken E, Mack P, MacQueen D, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maki T, Maksimovic P, Malde S, Manca G, Margaroli F, Marginean R, Marino C, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Maruyama T, Mastrandrea P, Matsunaga H, Mattson ME, Mazini R, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, McNulty R, Mehta A, Menzemer S, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Messina A, von der Mey M, Miao T, Miladinovic N, Miles J, Miller R, Miller JS, Mills C, Milnik M, Miquel R, Mitra A, Mitselmakher G, Miyamoto A, Moggi N, Mohr B, Moore R, Morello M, Movilla Fernandez P, Mülmenstädt J, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Mumford R, Murat P, Nachtman J, Naganoma J, Nahn S, Nakano I, Napier A, Naumov D, Necula V, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Nielsen J, Nigmanov T, Nodulman L, Norniella O, Nurse E, Ogawa T, Oh SH, Oh YD, Okusawa T, Oldeman R, Orava R, Osterberg K, Pagliarone C, Palencia E, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Paramonov AA, Parks B, Pashapour S, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Paus C, Pellett DE, Penzo A, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pinera L, Pitts K, Plager C, Pondrom L, Portell X, Poukhov O, Pounder N, Prakoshyn F, Pronko A, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Punzi G, Pursley J, Rademacker J, Rahaman A, Rakitin A, Rappoccio S, Ratnikov F, Reisert B, Rekovic V, van Remortel N, Renton P, Rescigno M, Richter S, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Robertson WJ, Robson A, Rodrigo T, Rogers E, Rolli S, Roser R, Rossi M, Rossin R, Rott C, Ruiz A, Russ J, Rusu V, Saarikko H, Sabik S, Safonov A, Sakumoto WK, Salamanna G, Saltó O, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sartori L, Sato K, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Scheidle T, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Schwarz T, Scodellaro L, Scott AL, Scribano A, Scuri F, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Sexton-Kennedy L, Sfiligoi I, Shapiro MD, Shears T, Shepard PF, Sherman D, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Shon Y, Shreyber I, Sidoti A, Sinervo P, Sisakyan A, Sjolin J, Skiba A, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Smith JR, Snider FD, Snihur R, Soderberg M, Soha A, Somalwar S, Sorin V, Spalding J, Spezziga M, Spinella F, Spreitzer T, Squillacioti P, Stanitzki M, Staveris-Polykalas A, St Denis R, Stelzer B, Stelzer-Chilton O, Stentz D, Strologas J, Stuart D, Suh JS, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Sun H, Suzuki T, Taffard A, Takashima R, Takeuchi Y, Takikawa K, Tanaka M, Tanaka R, Tanimoto N, Tecchio M, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Tipton P, Tiwari V, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tokar S, Tollefson K, Tomura T, Tonelli D, Tönnesmann M, Torre S, Torretta D, Tourneur S, Trischuk W, Tsuchiya R, Tsuno S, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Uozumi S, Usynin D, Vaiciulis A, Vallecorsa S, Varganov A, Vataga E, Velev G, Veramendi G, Veszpremi V, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Vine T, Vollrath I, Volobouev I, Volpi G, Würthwein F, Wagner P, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallny R, Walter T, Wan Z, Wang SM, Warburton A, Waschke S, Waters D, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Whiteson D, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Williams G, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Wittich P, Wolbers S, Wolfe C, Wright T, Wu X, Wynne SM, Yagil A, Yamamoto K, Yamaoka J, Yamashita T, Yang C, Yang UK, Yang YC, Yao WM, Yeh GP, Yoh J, Yorita K, Yoshida T, Yu GB, Yu I, Yu SS, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zaw I, Zetti F, Zhang X, Zhou J, Zucchelli S. Search for new physics in lepton+photon+X events with 305 pb(-1) of pp collisions at [square root of s] = 1.96 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2006; 97:031801. [PMID: 16907493 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.97.031801] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/22/2006] [Indexed: 05/11/2023]
Abstract
We present results of a search for anomalous production of events containing a charged lepton (l, either e or mu) and a photon (gamma), both with high transverse momentum, accompanied by additional signatures X, including missing transverse energy (ET) and additional leptons and photons. We use the same selection criteria as in a previous CDF search but with a substantially larger data set, 305 pb(-1), a pp collision energy of 1.96 TeV, and the CDF II detector. We find 42 lgammaET events versus an expectation of 37.3+/-5.4 events. We observe 31 llgamma+X events versus an expectation of 23.0+/-2.7 events. We find no events similar to the run I eegammagammaET event.
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Abulencia A, Acosta D, Adelman J, Affolder T, Akimoto T, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amerio S, Amidei D, Anastassov A, Anikeev K, Annovi A, Antos J, Aoki M, Apollinari G, Arguin JF, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Ashmanskas W, Attal A, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Azzurri P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Bartsch V, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Belloni A, Ben Haim E, Benjamin D, Beretvas A, Beringer J, Berry T, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Blair RE, Blocker C, Blumenfeld B, Bocci A, Bodek A, Boisvert V, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Boveia A, Brau B, Bromberg C, Brubaker E, Budagov J, Budd HS, Budd S, Burkett K, Busetto G, Bussey P, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Campanelli M, Campbell M, Canelli F, Canepa A, Carlsmith D, Carosi R, Carron S, Casarsa M, Castro A, Catastini P, Cauz D, Cavalli-Sforza M, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chang SH, Chapman J, Chen YC, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Cho I, Cho K, Chokheli D, Chou JP, Chu PH, Chuang SH, Chung K, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciljak M, Ciobanu CI, Ciocci MA, Clark A, Clark D, Coca M, Compostella G, Convery ME, Conway J, Cooper B, Copic K, Cordelli M, Cortiana G, Cresciolo F, Cruz A, Cuenca Almenar C, Cuevas J, Culbertson R, Cyr D, DaRonco S, D'Auria S, D'Onofrio M, Dagenhart D, de Barbaro P, De Cecco S, Deisher A, De Lentdecker G, Dell'Orso M, Delli Paoli F, Demers S, Demortier L, Deng J, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Devlin T, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, DiTuro P, Dörr C, Donati S, Donega M, Dong P, Donini J, Dorigo T, Dube S, Ebina K, Efron J, Ehlers J, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fang HC, Farrington S, Fedorko I, Fedorko WT, Feild RG, Feindt M, Fernandez JP, Field R, Flanagan G, Flores-Castillo LR, Foland A, Forrester S, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman JC, Furic I, Gallinaro M, Galyardt J, Garcia JE, Garcia Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gay C, Gerberich H, Gerdes D, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Gibson A, Gibson K, Ginsburg C, Giokaris N, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Giunta M, Giurgiu G, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Gomez-Ceballos G, Goncharov M, González O, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Gresele A, Griffiths M, Grinstein S, Grosso-Pilcher C, Group RC, Grundler U, Guimaraes da Costa J, Gunay-Unalan Z, Haber C, Hahn SR, Hahn K, Halkiadakis E, Hamilton A, Han BY, Han JY, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hare M, Harper S, Harr RF, Harris RM, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Hays C, Heijboer A, Heinemann B, Heinrich J, Herndon M, Hidas D, Hill CS, Hirschbuehl D, Hocker A, Holloway A, Hou S, Houlden M, Hsu SC, Huffman BT, Hughes RE, Huston J, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ishizawa Y, Ivanov A, Iyutin B, James E, Jang D, Jayatilaka B, Jeans D, Jensen H, Jeon EJ, Jindariani S, Jones M, Joo KK, Jun SY, Junk TR, Kamon T, Kang J, Karchin PE, Kato Y, Kemp Y, Kephart R, Kerzel U, Khotilovich V, Kilminster B, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim JE, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim YK, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Klute M, Knuteson B, Ko BR, Kobayashi H, Kondo K, Kong DJ, Konigsberg J, Korytov A, Kotwal AV, Kovalev A, Kraan A, Kraus J, Kravchenko I, Kreps M, Kroll J, Krumnack N, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kusakabe Y, Kwang S, Laasanen AT, Lai S, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster M, Lander RL, Lannon K, Lath A, Latino G, Lazzizzera I, LeCompte T, Lee J, Lee J, Lee YJ, Lee SW, Lefèvre R, Leonardo N, Leone S, Levy S, Lewis JD, Lin C, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Lipeles E, Liss TM, Lister A, Litvintsev DO, Liu T, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loreti M, Loverre P, Lu RS, Lucchesi D, Lujan P, Lukens P, Lungu G, Lyons L, Lys J, Lysak R, Lytken E, Mack P, MacQueen D, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maki T, Maksimovic P, Malde S, Manca G, Margaroli F, Marginean R, Marino C, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Maruyama T, Matsunaga H, Mattson ME, Mazini R, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, McNulty R, Mehta A, Menzemer S, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Messina A, von der Mey M, Miao T, Miladinovic N, Miles J, Miller R, Miller JS, Mills C, Milnik M, Miquel R, Mitra A, Mitselmakher G, Miyamoto A, Moggi N, Mohr B, Moore R, Morello M, Movilla Fernandez P, Mülmenstädt J, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Mumford R, Murat P, Nachtman J, Naganoma J, Nahn S, Nakano I, Napier A, Naumov D, Necula V, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Nielsen J, Nigmanov T, Nodulman L, Norniella O, Nurse E, Ogawa T, Oh SH, Oh YD, Okusawa T, Oldeman R, Orava R, Osterberg K, Pagliarone C, Palencia E, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Paramonov AA, Parks B, Pashapour S, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Paus C, Pellett DE, Penzo A, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pinera L, Pitts K, Plager C, Pondrom L, Portell X, Poukhov O, Pounder N, Prakoshyn F, Pronko A, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Punzi G, Pursley J, Rademacker J, Rahaman A, Rakitin A, Rappoccio S, Ratnikov F, Reisert B, Rekovic V, van Remortel N, Renton P, Rescigno M, Richter S, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Robertson WJ, Robson A, Rodrigo T, Rogers E, Rolli S, Roser R, Rossi M, Rossin R, Rott C, Ruiz A, Russ J, Rusu V, Saarikko H, Sabik S, Safonov A, Sakumoto WK, Salamanna G, Saltó O, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sartori L, Sato K, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Scheidle T, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Schwarz T, Scodellaro L, Scott AL, Scribano A, Scuri F, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Sexton-Kennedy L, Sfiligoi I, Shapiro MD, Shears T, Shepard PF, Sherman D, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Shon Y, Shreyber I, Sidoti A, Sinervo P, Sisakyan A, Sjolin J, Skiba A, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Smith JR, Snider FD, Snihur R, Soderberg M, Soha A, Somalwar S, Sorin V, Spalding J, Spezziga M, Spinella F, Spreitzer T, Squillacioti P, Stanitzki M, Staveris-Polykalas A, St Denis R, Stelzer B, Stelzer-Chilton O, Stentz D, Strologas J, Stuart D, Suh JS, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Sun H, Suzuki T, Taffard A, Takashima R, Takeuchi Y, Takikawa K, Tanaka M, Tanaka R, Tanimoto N, Tecchio M, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Tipton P, Tiwari V, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tokar S, Tollefson K, Tomura T, Tonelli D, Tönnesmann M, Torre S, Torretta D, Tourneur S, Trischuk W, Tsuchiya R, Tsuno S, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Uozumi S, Usynin D, Vaiciulis A, Vallecorsa S, Varganov A, Vataga E, Velev G, Veramendi G, Veszpremi V, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Vine T, Vollrath I, Volobouev I, Volpi G, Würthwein F, Wagner P, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallny R, Walter T, Wan Z, Wang SM, Warburton A, Waschke S, Waters D, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Whiteson D, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Williams G, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Wittich P, Wolbers S, Wolfe C, Wright T, Wu X, Wynne SM, Yagil A, Yamamoto K, Yamaoka J, Yamashita T, Yang C, Yang UK, Yang YC, Yao WM, Yeh GP, Yoh J, Yorita K, Yoshida T, Yu GB, Yu I, Yu SS, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zaw I, Zetti F, Zhang X, Zhou J, Zucchelli S. Measurement of the Bc+ meson lifetime using the decay mode Bc+ --> J/Psie+nue. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2006; 97:012002. [PMID: 16907366 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.97.012002] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/09/2006] [Indexed: 05/11/2023]
Abstract
We present a measurement of the Bc+ meson lifetime in the decay mode Bc+ --> J/Psie+nue using the Collider Detector at Fermilab II detector at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider. From a sample of about of 360 pb(-1) of pp collisions at square root of s = 1.96 TeV, we reconstruct J/Psie+ pairs with invariant mass in the kinematically allowed range 4< M(J/Psie) < 6 GeV/c2. A fit to the decay-length distribution of 238 signal events yields a measured Bc+ meson lifetime of 0.463(-0.065)(+0.073)(stat) +/- 0.036(syst) ps.
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Abulencia A, Acosta D, Adelman J, Affolder T, Akimoto T, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amerio S, Amidei D, Anastassov A, Anikeev K, Annovi A, Antos J, Aoki M, Apollinari G, Arguin JF, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Ashmanskas W, Attal A, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Azzurri P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Bartsch V, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Belloni A, Haim EB, Benjamin D, Beretvas A, Beringer J, Berry T, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Blair RE, Blocker C, Blumenfeld B, Bocci A, Bodek A, Boisvert V, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Boveia A, Brau B, Bromberg C, Brubaker E, Budagov J, Budd HS, Budd S, Burkett K, Busetto G, Bussey P, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Campanelli M, Campbell M, Canelli F, Canepa A, Carlsmith D, Carosi R, Carron S, Casarsa M, Castro A, Catastini P, Cauz D, Cavalli-Sforza M, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chang SH, Chapman J, Chen YC, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Cho I, Cho K, Chokheli D, Chou JP, Chu PH, Chuang SH, Chung K, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciljak M, Ciobanu CI, Ciocci MA, Clark A, Clark D, Coca M, Compostella G, Convery ME, Conway J, Cooper B, Copic K, Cordelli M, Cortiana G, Cresciolo F, Cruz A, Almenar CC, Cuevas J, Culbertson R, Cyr D, Daronco S, D'Auria S, D'Onofrio M, Dagenhart D, de Barbaro P, De Cecco S, Deisher A, De Lentdecker G, Dell'orso M, Paoli FD, Demers S, Demortier L, Deng J, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, Dituro P, Dörr C, Donati S, Donega M, Dong P, Donini J, Dorigo T, Dube S, Ebina K, Efron J, Ehlers J, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fang HC, Farrington S, Fedorko I, Fedorko WT, Feild RG, Feindt M, Fernandez JP, Field R, Flanagan G, Flores-Castillo LR, Foland A, Forrester S, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman JC, Furic I, Gallinaro M, Galyardt J, Garcia JE, Sciveres MG, Garfinkel AF, Gay C, Gerberich H, Gerdes D, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Gibson A, Gibson K, Ginsburg C, Giokaris N, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Giunta M, Giurgiu G, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Gomez-Ceballos G, Goncharov M, González O, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Gresele A, Griffiths M, Grinstein S, Grosso-Pilcher C, Grundler U, da Costa JG, Gunay-Unalan Z, Haber C, Hahn SR, Hahn K, Halkiadakis E, Hamilton A, Han BY, Han JY, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hare M, Harper S, Harr RF, Harris RM, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Hays C, Heijboer A, Heinemann B, Heinrich J, Herndon M, Hidas D, Hill CS, Hirschbuehl D, Hocker A, Holloway A, Hou S, Houlden M, Hsu SC, Huffman BT, Hughes RE, Huston J, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ishizawa Y, Ivanov A, Iyutin B, James E, Jang D, Jayatilaka B, Jeans D, Jensen H, Jeon EJ, Jindariani S, Jones M, Joo KK, Jun SY, Junk TR, Kamon T, Kang J, Karchin PE, Kato Y, Kemp Y, Kephart R, Kerzel U, Khotilovich V, Kilminster B, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim JE, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim YK, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Klute M, Knuteson B, Ko BR, Kobayashi H, Kondo K, Kong DJ, Konigsberg J, Korytov A, Kotwal AV, Kovalev A, Kraan A, Kraus J, Kravchenko I, Kreps M, Kroll J, Krumnack N, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kusakabe Y, Kwang S, Laasanen AT, Lai S, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster M, Lander RL, Lannon K, Lath A, Latino G, Lazzizzera I, Lecompte T, Lee J, Lee J, Lee YJ, Lee SW, Lefèvre R, Leonardo N, Leone S, Levy S, Lewis JD, Lin C, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Lipeles E, Lister A, Litvintsev DO, Liu T, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loreti M, Loverre P, Lu RS, Lucchesi D, Lujan P, Lukens P, Lungu G, Lyons L, Lys J, Lysak R, Lytken E, Mack P, Macqueen D, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maki T, Maksimovic P, Malde S, Manca G, Margaroli F, Marginean R, Marino C, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Maruyama T, Matsunaga H, Mattson ME, Mazini R, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, McNulty R, Mehta A, Menzemer S, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Messina A, von der Mey M, Miao T, Miladinovic N, Miles J, Miller R, Miller JS, Mills C, Milnik M, Miquel R, Mitra A, Mitselmakher G, Miyamoto A, Moggi N, Mohr B, Moore R, Morello M, Fernandez PM, Mülmenstädt J, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Mumford R, Murat P, Nachtman J, Naganoma J, Nahn S, Nakano I, Napier A, Naumov D, Necula V, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Nielsen J, Nigmanov T, Nodulman L, Norniella O, Nurse E, Ogawa T, Oh SH, Oh YD, Okusawa T, Oldeman R, Orava R, Osterberg K, Pagliarone C, Palencia E, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Paramonov AA, Parks B, Pashapour S, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Paus C, Pellett DE, Penzo A, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pinera L, Pitts K, Plager C, Pondrom L, Portell X, Poukhov O, Pounder N, Prakoshyn F, Pronko A, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Punzi G, Pursley J, Rademacker J, Rahaman A, Rakitin A, Rappoccio S, Ratnikov F, Reisert B, Rekovic V, van Remortel N, Renton P, Rescigno M, Richter S, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Robertson WJ, Robson A, Rodrigo T, Rogers E, Rolli S, Roser R, Rossi M, Rossin R, Rott C, Ruiz A, Russ J, Rusu V, Saarikko H, Sabik S, Safonov A, Sakumoto WK, Salamanna G, Saltó O, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sartori L, Sato K, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Scheidle T, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Schwarz T, Scodellaro L, Scott AL, Scribano A, Scuri F, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Sexton-Kennedy L, Sfiligoi I, Shapiro MD, Shears T, Shepard PF, Sherman D, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Shon Y, Shreyber I, Sidoti A, Sinervo P, Sisakyan A, Sjolin J, Skiba A, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Smith JR, Snider FD, Snihur R, Soderberg M, Soha A, Somalwar S, Sorin V, Spalding J, Spezziga M, Spinella F, Spreitzer T, Squillacioti P, Stanitzki M, Staveris-Polykalas A, Denis RS, Stelzer B, Stelzer-Chilton O, Stentz D, Strologas J, Stuart D, Suh JS, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Sun H, Suzuki T, Taffard A, Takashima R, Takeuchi Y, Takikawa K, Tanaka M, Tanaka R, Tanimoto N, Tecchio M, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Tipton P, Tiwari V, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tokar S, Tollefson K, Tomura T, Tonelli D, Tönnesmann M, Torre S, Torretta D, Tourneur S, Trischuk W, Tsuchiya R, Tsuno S, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Uozumi S, Usynin D, Vaiciulis A, Vallecorsa S, Varganov A, Vataga E, Velev G, Veramendi G, Veszpremi V, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Vine T, Vollrath I, Volobouev I, Volpi G, Würthwein F, Wagner P, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallny R, Walter T, Wan Z, Wang SM, Warburton A, Waschke S, Waters D, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Whiteson D, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Williams G, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Wittich P, Wolbers S, Wolfe C, Wright T, Wu X, Wynne SM, Yagil A, Yamamoto K, Yamaoka J, Yamashita T, Yang C, Yang UK, Yang YC, Yao WM, Yeh GP, Yoh J, Yorita K, Yoshida T, Yu GB, Yu I, Yu SS, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zaw I, Zetti F, Zhang X, Zhou J, Zucchelli S. Observation of B(0)(s)-->Psi(2S)Phi and measurement of the ratio of branching fractions Beta(B(0)(s)-->Psi(2S)Phi)/Beta(B(0)(s)-->J/PsiPhi). PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2006; 96:231801. [PMID: 16803368 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.96.231801] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/03/2006] [Indexed: 05/10/2023]
Abstract
We report the first observation of B(0)(s)-->Psi(2S)Phi decay in p(p_) collisions at square root of 8=1.96 TeV using 360 pb(-1) of data collected by the CDF II detector at the Fermilab Tevatron. We observe 20.2 +/- 5.0 and 12.3 +/- 4.1 B(0)(s)-->Psi(2S)Phi candidates, in Psi(2S)-->mu(+)mu(-) and Phi(2S)-->J/Phipi(+)pi(-) decay modes, respectively. We present a measurement of the relative branching fraction Beta(B(0)(s)-->Psi(2S)Phi)/Beta(B(0)(s)-->J/PsiPhi)=0.52 +/- 0.13(stat) +/- 0.04(syst) +/- 0.06(BR) using the Psi(2S)-->mu(+)mu(-) decay mode.
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Abulencia A, Acosta D, Adelman J, Affolder T, Akimoto T, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amerio S, Amidei D, Anastassov A, Anikeev K, Annovi A, Antos J, Aoki M, Apollinari G, Arguin JF, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Ashmanskas W, Attal A, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Azzurri P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Bartsch V, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Belloni A, Ben Haim E, Benjamin D, Beretvas A, Beringer J, Berry T, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Blair RE, Blocker C, Blumenfeld B, Bocci A, Bodek A, Boisvert V, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Boveia A, Brau B, Bromberg C, Brubaker E, Budagov J, Budd HS, Budd S, Burkett K, Busetto G, Bussey P, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Campanelli M, Campbell M, Canelli F, Canepa A, Carlsmith D, Carosi R, Carron S, Casarsa M, Castro A, Catastini P, Cauz D, Cavalli-Sforza M, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chang SH, Chapman J, Chen YC, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Cho I, Cho K, Chokheli D, Chou JP, Chu PH, Chuang SH, Chung K, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciljak M, Ciobanu CI, Ciocci MA, Clark A, Clark D, Coca M, Compostella G, Convery ME, Conway J, Cooper B, Copic K, Cordelli M, Cortiana G, Cresciolo F, Cruz A, Cuenca Almenar C, Cuevas J, Culbertson R, Cyr D, DaRonco S, D'Auria S, D'Onofrio M, Dagenhart D, de Barbaro P, De Cecco S, Deisher A, De Lentdecker G, Dell'Orso M, Delli Paoli F, Demers S, Demortier L, Deng J, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, DiTuro P, Dörr C, Donati S, Donega M, Dong P, Donini J, Dorigo T, Dube S, Ebina K, Efron J, Ehlers J, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fang HC, Farrington S, Fedorko I, Fedorko WT, Feild RG, Feindt M, Fernandez JP, Field R, Flanagan G, Flores-Castillo LR, Foland A, Forrester S, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman JC, Furic I, Gallinaro M, Galyardt J, Garcia JE, Garcia Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gay C, Gerberich H, Gerdes D, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Gibson A, Gibson K, Ginsburg C, Giokaris N, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Giunta M, Giurgiu G, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Gomez-Ceballos G, Goncharov M, González O, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Gresele A, Griffiths M, Grinstein S, Grosso-Pilcher C, Group RC, Grundler U, Guimaraes da Costa J, Gunay-Unalan Z, Haber C, Hahn SR, Hahn K, Halkiadakis E, Hamilton A, Han BY, Han JY, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hare M, Harper S, Harr RF, Harris RM, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Hays C, Heijboer A, Heinemann B, Heinrich J, Herndon M, Hidas D, Hill CS, Hirschbuehl D, Hocker A, Holloway A, Hou S, Houlden M, Hsu SC, Huffman BT, Hughes RE, Huston J, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ishizawa Y, Ivanov A, Iyutin B, James E, Jang D, Jayatilaka B, Jeans D, Jensen H, Jeon EJ, Jindariani S, Jones M, Joo KK, Jun SY, Junk TR, Kamon T, Kang J, Karchin PE, Kato Y, Kemp Y, Kephart R, Kerzel U, Khotilovich V, Kilminster B, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim JE, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim YK, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Klute M, Knuteson B, Ko BR, Kobayashi H, Kondo K, Kong DJ, Konigsberg J, Korytov A, Kotwal AV, Kovalev A, Kraan A, Kraus J, Kravchenko I, Kreps M, Kroll J, Krumnack N, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kusakabe Y, Kwang S, Laasanen AT, Lai S, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster M, Lander RL, Lannon K, Lath A, Latino G, Lazzizzera I, LeCompte T, Lee J, Lee J, Lee YJ, Lee SW, Lefèvre R, Leonardo N, Leone S, Levy S, Lewis JD, Lin C, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Lipeles E, Liss TM, Lister A, Litvintsev DO, Liu T, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loreti M, Loverre P, Lu RS, Lucchesi D, Lujan P, Lukens P, Lungu G, Lyons L, Lys J, Lysak R, Lytken E, Mack P, MacQueen D, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maki T, Maksimovic P, Malde S, Manca G, Margaroli F, Marginean R, Marino C, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Maruyama T, Matsunaga H, Mattson ME, Mazini R, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, McNulty R, Mehta A, Menzemer S, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Messina A, von der Mey M, Miao T, Miladinovic N, Miles J, Miller R, Miller JS, Mills C, Milnik M, Miquel R, Mitra A, Mitselmakher G, Miyamoto A, Moggi N, Mohr B, Moore R, Morello M, Movilla Fernandez P, Mülmenstädt J, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Mumford R, Murat P, Nachtman J, Naganoma J, Nahn S, Nakano I, Napier A, Naumov D, Necula V, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Nielsen J, Nigmanov T, Nodulman L, Norniella O, Nurse E, Ogawa T, Oh SH, Oh YD, Okusawa T, Oldeman R, Orava R, Osterberg K, Pagliarone C, Palencia E, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Paramonov AA, Parks B, Pashapour S, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Paus C, Pellett DE, Penzo A, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pinera L, Pitts K, Plager C, Pondrom L, Portell X, Poukhov O, Pounder N, Prakoshyn F, Pronko A, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Punzi G, Pursley J, Rademacker J, Rahaman A, Rakitin A, Rappoccio S, Ratnikov F, Reisert B, Rekovic V, van Remortel N, Renton P, Rescigno M, Richter S, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Robertson WJ, Robson A, Rodrigo T, Rogers E, Rolli S, Roser R, Rossi M, Rossin R, Rott C, Ruiz A, Russ J, Rusu V, Saarikko H, Sabik S, Safonov A, Sakumoto WK, Salamanna G, Saltó O, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sartori L, Sato K, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Scheidle T, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Schwarz T, Scodellaro L, Scott AL, Scribano A, Scuri F, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Sexton-Kennedy L, Sfiligoi I, Shapiro MD, Shears T, Shepard PF, Sherman D, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Shon Y, Shreyber I, Sidoti A, Sinervo P, Sisakyan A, Sjolin J, Skiba A, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Smith JR, Snider FD, Snihur R, Soderberg M, Soha A, Somalwar S, Sorin V, Spalding J, Spezziga M, Spinella F, Spreitzer T, Squillacioti P, Stanitzki M, Staveris-Polykalas A, St Denis R, Stelzer B, Stelzer-Chilton O, Stentz D, Strologas J, Stuart D, Suh JS, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Sun H, Suzuki T, Taffard A, Takashima R, Takeuchi Y, Takikawa K, Tanaka M, Tanaka R, Tanimoto N, Tecchio M, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Tipton P, Tiwari V, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tokar S, Tollefson K, Tomura T, Tonelli D, Tönnesmann M, Torre S, Torretta D, Tourneur S, Trischuk W, Tsuchiya R, Tsuno S, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Uozumi S, Usynin D, Vaiciulis A, Vallecorsa S, Varganov A, Vataga E, Velev G, Veramendi G, Veszpremi V, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Vine T, Vollrath I, Volobouev I, Volpi G, Würthwein F, Wagner P, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallny R, Walter T, Wan Z, Wang SM, Warburton A, Waschke S, Waters D, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Whiteson D, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Williams G, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Wittich P, Wolbers S, Wolfe C, Wright T, Wu X, Wynne SM, Yagil A, Yamamoto K, Yamaoka J, Yamashita T, Yang C, Yang UK, Yang YC, Yao WM, Yeh GP, Yoh J, Yorita K, Yoshida T, Yu GB, Yu I, Yu SS, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zaw I, Zetti F, Zhang X, Zhou J, Zucchelli S. Search for Z' --> e+ e- using dielectron mass and angular distribution. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2006; 96:211801. [PMID: 16803227 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.96.211801] [Citation(s) in RCA: 7] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/21/2006] [Indexed: 05/10/2023]
Abstract
We search for Z' bosons in dielectron events produced in pp collisions at square root of s = 1.96 TeV, using 0.45 fb(-1) of data accumulated with the Collider Detector at Fermilab II detector at the Fermilab Tevatron. To identify the Z' --> e+ e- signal, both the dielectron invariant mass distribution and the angular distribution of the electron pair are used. No evidence of a signal is found, and 95% confidence level lower limits are set on the Z' mass for several models. Limits are also placed on the mass and gauge coupling of a generic Z', as well as on the contact-interaction mass scales for different helicity structure scenarios.
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Abulencia A, Acosta D, Adelman J, Affolder T, Akimoto T, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amerio S, Amidei D, Anastassov A, Anikeev K, Annovi A, Antos J, Aoki M, Apollinari G, Arguin JF, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Ashmanskas W, Attal A, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Azzurri P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Bartsch V, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Belloni A, Haim EB, Benjamin D, Beretvas A, Beringer J, Berry T, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Blair RE, Blocker C, Blumenfeld B, Bocci A, Bodek A, Boisvert V, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Boveia A, Brau B, Bromberg C, Brubaker E, Budagov J, Budd HS, Budd S, Burkett K, Busetto G, Bussey P, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Campanelli M, Campbell M, Canelli F, Canepa A, Carlsmith D, Carosi R, Carron S, Casarsa M, Castro A, Catastini P, Cauz D, Cavalli-Sforza M, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chang SH, Chapman J, Chen YC, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Cho I, Cho K, Chokheli D, Chou JP, Chu PH, Chuang SH, Chung K, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciljak M, Ciobanu CI, Ciocci MA, Clark A, Clark D, Coca M, Compostella G, Convery ME, Conway J, Cooper B, Copic K, Cordelli M, Cortiana G, Cresciolo F, Cruz A, Almenar CC, Cuevas J, Culbertson R, Cyr D, DaRonco S, D'Auria S, D'Onofrio M, Dagenhart D, de Barbaro P, De Cecco S, Deisher A, De Lentdecker G, Dell'Orso M, Delli Paoli F, Demers S, Demortier L, Deng J, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Dionisi C, Dittmann JR, DiTuro P, Dörr C, Donati S, Donega M, Dong P, Donini J, Dorigo T, Dube S, Ebina K, Efron J, Ehlers J, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fang HC, Farrington S, Fedorko I, Fedorko WT, Feild RG, Feindt M, Fernandez JP, Field R, Flanagan G, Flores-Castillo LR, Foland A, Forrester S, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman JC, Furic I, Gallinaro M, Galyardt J, Garcia JE, Sciveres MG, Garfinkel AF, Gay C, Gerberich H, Gerdes D, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Gibson A, Gibson K, Ginsburg C, Giokaris N, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giromini P, Giunta M, Giurgiu G, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Gomez-Ceballos G, Goncharov M, González O, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Gresele A, Griffiths M, Grinstein S, Grosso-Pilcher C, Group RC, Grundler U, da Costa JG, Gunay-Unalan Z, Haber C, Hahn SR, Hahn K, Halkiadakis E, Hamilton A, Han BY, Han JY, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hare M, Harper S, Harr RF, Harris RM, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Hays C, Heijboer A, Heinemann B, Heinrich J, Herndon M, Hidas D, Hill CS, Hirschbuehl D, Hocker A, Holloway A, Hou S, Houlden M, Hsu SC, Huffman BT, Hughes RE, Huston J, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ishizawa Y, Ivanov A, Iyutin B, James E, Jang D, Jayatilaka B, Jeans D, Jensen H, Jeon EJ, Jindariani S, Jones M, Joo KK, Jun SY, Junk TR, Kamon T, Kang J, Karchin PE, Kato Y, Kemp Y, Kephart R, Kerzel U, Khotilovich V, Kilminster B, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim JE, Kim MJ, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim YK, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Klute M, Knuteson B, Ko BR, Kobayashi H, Kondo K, Kong DJ, Konigsberg J, Korytov A, Kotwal AV, Kovalev A, Kraan A, Kraus J, Kravchenko I, Kreps M, Kroll J, Krumnack N, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kusakabe Y, Kwang S, Laasanen AT, Lai S, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster M, Lander RL, Lannon K, Lath A, Latino G, Lazzizzera I, LeCompte T, Lee J, Lee J, Lee YJ, Lee SW, Lefèvre R, Leonardo N, Leone S, Levy S, Lewis JD, Lin C, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Lipeles E, Lister A, Litvintsev DO, Liu T, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loreti M, Loverre P, Lu RS, Lucchesi D, Lujan P, Lukens P, Lungu G, Lyons L, Lys J, Lysak R, Lytken E, Mack P, MacQueen D, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maki T, Maksimovic P, Malde S, Manca G, Margaroli F, Marginean R, Marino C, Martin A, Martin V, Martínez M, Maruyama T, Matsunaga H, Mattson ME, Mazini R, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McIntyre P, McNulty R, Mehta A, Menzemer S, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Messina A, von der Mey M, Miao T, Miladinovic N, Miles J, Miller R, Miller JS, Mills C, Milnik M, Miquel R, Mitra A, Mitselmakher G, Miyamoto A, Moggi N, Mohr B, Moore R, Morello M, Fernandez PM, Mülmenstädt J, Mukherjee A, Muller T, Mumford R, Murat P, Nachtman J, Naganoma J, Nahn S, Nakano I, Napier A, Naumov D, Necula V, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Nielsen J, Nigmanov T, Nodulman L, Norniella O, Nurse E, Ogawa T, Oh SH, Oh YD, Okusawa T, Oldeman R, Orava R, Osterberg K, Pagliarone C, Palencia E, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Paramonov AA, Parks B, Pashapour S, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Paus C, Pellett DE, Penzo A, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pinera L, Pitts K, Plager C, Pondrom L, Portell X, Poukhov O, Pounder N, Prakoshyn F, Pronko A, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Punzi G, Pursley J, Rademacker J, Rahaman A, Rakitin A, Rappoccio S, Ratnikov F, Reisert B, Rekovic V, van Remortel N, Renton P, Rescigno M, Richter S, Rimondi F, Ristori L, Robertson WJ, Robson A, Rodrigo T, Rogers E, Rolli S, Roser R, Rossi M, Rossin R, Rott C, Ruiz A, Russ J, Rusu V, Saarikko H, Sabik S, Safonov A, Sakumoto WK, Salamanna G, Saltó O, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sartori L, Sato K, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Scheidle T, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Schwarz T, Scodellaro L, Scott AL, Scribano A, Scuri F, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Sexton-Kennedy L, Sfiligoi I, Shapiro MD, Shears T, Shepard PF, Sherman D, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Shon Y, Shreyber I, Sidoti A, Sinervo P, Sisakyan A, Sjolin J, Skiba A, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Smith JR, Snider FD, Snihur R, Soderberg M, Soha A, Somalwar S, Sorin V, Spalding J, Spezziga M, Spinella F, Spreitzer T, Squillacioti P, Stanitzki M, Staveris-Polykalas A, Denis RS, Stelzer B, Stelzer-Chilton O, Stentz D, Strologas J, Stuart D, Suh JS, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Sun H, Suzuki T, Taffard A, Takashima R, Takeuchi Y, Takikawa K, Tanaka M, Tanaka R, Tanimoto N, Tecchio M, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Tipton P, Tiwari V, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tokar S, Tollefson K, Tomura T, Tonelli D, Tönnesmann M, Torre S, Torretta D, Tourneur S, Trischuk W, Tsuchiya R, Tsuno S, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Uozumi S, Usynin D, Vaiciulis A, Vallecorsa S, Varganov A, Vataga E, Velev G, Veramendi G, Veszpremi V, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Vine T, Vollrath I, Volobouev I, Volpi G, Würthwein F, Wagner P, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallny R, Walter T, Wan Z, Wang SM, Warburton A, Waschke S, Waters D, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Whiteson D, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Williams G, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Wittich P, Wolbers S, Wolfe C, Wright T, Wu X, Wynne SM, Yagil A, Yamamoto K, Yamaoka J, Yamashita T, Yang C, Yang UK, Yang YC, Yao WM, Yeh GP, Yoh J, Yorita K, Yoshida T, Yu GB, Yu I, Yu SS, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zaw I, Zetti F, Zhang X, Zhou J, Zucchelli S. Search for high-mass resonances decaying to emu in pp collisions at square root = 1.69 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2006; 96:211802. [PMID: 16803228 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.96.211802] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/07/2006] [Indexed: 05/10/2023]
Abstract
We describe a general search for resonances decaying to a neutral emu final state in pp collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 1.96 TeV. Using a data sample representing 344 pb(-1) of integrated luminosity recorded by the Collider Detector at Fermilab II experiment, we compare standard model predictions with the number of observed events for invariant masses between 50 and 800 GeV/c2. Finding no significant excess (5 events observed vs 7.7 +/- 0.8 expected for M(emu) > 100 GeV/c2 ), we set limits on sneutrino and Z' masses as functions of lepton family number violating couplings.
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Lee YJ, Yang SK, Byeon JS, Myung SJ, Chang HS, Hong SS, Kim KJ, Lee GH, Jung HY, Hong WS, Kim JH, Min YI, Chang SJ, Yu CS. Analysis of colonoscopic findings in the differential diagnosis between intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn's disease. Endoscopy 2006; 38:592-7. [PMID: 16673312 DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-924996] [Citation(s) in RCA: 149] [Impact Index Per Article: 8.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/08/2023]
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIMS Intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn's disease are chronic inflammatory bowel disorders that are difficult to differentiate from one another. This study aimed to evaluate the diagnostic value of various colonoscopic findings in the differential diagnosis between intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn's disease. PATIENTS AND METHODS Colonoscopic findings on initial work-up were prospectively recorded in patients with an initial diagnosis of either intestinal tuberculosis or Crohn's disease. These findings were analyzed after a final diagnosis of intestinal tuberculosis (n = 44) or Crohn's disease (n = 44) had been made after follow-up. RESULTS Four parameters (anorectal lesions, longitudinal ulcers, aphthous ulcers, and cobblestone appearance) were significantly more common in patients with Crohn's disease than in patients with intestinal tuberculosis. Four other parameters (involvement of fewer than four segments, a patulous ileocecal valve, transverse ulcers, and scars or pseudopolyps) were observed more frequently in patients with intestinal tuberculosis than in patients with Crohn's disease. We hypothesized that a diagnosis of Crohn's disease could be made when the number of parameters characteristic of Crohn's disease was higher than the number of parameters characteristic of intestinal tuberculosis, and vice versa. Making these assumptions, we calculated that the diagnosis of either intestinal tuberculosis or Crohn's disease would have been made made correctly in 77 of our 88 patients (87.5 %), incorrectly in seven patients (8.0 %), and would not have been made in four patients (4.5 %). CONCLUSIONS A systematic analysis of colonoscopic findings is very useful in the differential diagnosis between intestinal tuberculosis and Crohn's disease.
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Wu SM, Jong KJ, Lee YJ. Relationships among metallothionein, cadmium accumulation, and cadmium tolerance in three species of fish. BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY 2006; 76:595-600. [PMID: 16688540 DOI: 10.1007/s00128-006-0961-7] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/25/2005] [Accepted: 02/14/2006] [Indexed: 05/09/2023]
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Kim DJ, Kim DI, Lee SK, Suh SH, Lee YJ, Kim J, Chung TS, Lee JE. Protective effect of agmatine on a reperfusion model after transient cerebral ischemia: Temporal evolution on perfusion MR imaging and histopathologic findings. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 2006; 27:780-5. [PMID: 16611764 PMCID: PMC8134005] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/08/2023]
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The goal of thrombolytic therapy in patients with acute ischemic stroke is early recanalization, but this may result in delayed reperfusion injury. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the neuroprotective effect of agmatine in a transient ischemic cat model by using MR perfusion imaging and histopathologic analyses. METHOD One-hour temporary occlusion of the left middle cerebral artery of cats was performed in the control ischemia group (n = 10), and 100 mg/kg of agmatine was intravenously injected immediately after recanalization in the agmatine-treated group (n = 15). MR imaging was performed at 1, 24, and 48 hours after recanalization, and the perfusion patterns were investigated. Terminal-deoxynucleotidyl transferase mediated nick and end-labeling (TUNEL) and hematoxylin-eosin (H&E) stainings were performed at the corresponding sections. RESULTS In the control ischemia group, the number of TUNEL-positive cells was significantly increased in the areas with reperfusion hyperemia (P < .05). In the agmatine-treated group, no significant increase in the number of TUNEL-positive cells was noted in the areas of reperfusion hyperemia. The difference in the number of TUNEL-positive cells between the control ischemia and agmatine-treated group in the areas of reperfusion hyperemia was significant (P < .05). The total number of TUNEL-positive cells and the area of severe ischemic neuronal damage on H&E stain were also significantly attenuated in the agmatine-treated cats compared with the control ischemia cats (P < .05). CONCLUSION Our results suggest that agmatine has neuroprotective effects against reperfusion injury and ischemia.
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Kim HJ, Zhao ZS, Lee YJ, Shim WS, Kim SK, Ahn CW, Park CW, Lee HC, Cha BS. Tissue-specific regulation of malonyl-CoA decarboxylase activity in OLETF rats. Diabetes Obes Metab 2006; 8:175-83. [PMID: 16448521 DOI: 10.1111/j.1463-1326.2005.00482.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 3] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
Abstract
AIM The intracellular concentration of malonyl-CoA, a key regulator of fatty acid oxidation, is determined both from its synthesis by acetyl-CoA carboxylase and from its degradation by malonyl-CoA decarboxylase (MCD). The aim of our study was to investigate the activity and mRNA expression of MCD under insulin resistance and after treatment with insulin sensitizers in different tissues. METHODS We treated 18-week Otusuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats with pioglitazone (10 mg/kg/day) or metformin (300 mg/kg/day) for 8 weeks and determined the activity and mRNA expression of MCD in diabetic OLETF and non-diabetic Long-Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) rats in myocardial and skeletal muscles, and in liver. RESULTS The MCD activities of myocardial and skeletal muscles were remarkably reduced in OLETF rats compared with LETO rats (995 +/- 114 vs. 2012 +/- 359, 58 +/- 11 vs. 167 +/- 40 pmol/min/mg protein; p = 0.005 and p = 0.010). Surprisingly, after pioglitazone treatment, not after metformin, the MCD activities of myocardial and skeletal muscles (1906 +/- 320 and 259 +/- 44 pmol/min/mg protein) increased up to the levels in LETO rats. MCD mRNA expression in OLETF rats was also reduced in myocardial and skeletal muscles vs. LETO rats (p = 0.049 and p = 0.008) and was unchanged by pioglitazone or metformin treatment. In the liver, MCD activity and mRNA expression were similar in OLETF and LETO rats. CONCLUSION Pioglitazone treatment restored MCD activity to non-diabetic level and improved the restrained fatty acid metabolism in myocardial and skeletal muscles caused by insulin-resistant diabetic status.
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Yu SL, Kim JE, Chung HJ, Jung KC, Lee YJ, Yoon DH, Lee SH, Choi I, Bottema CDK, Sang BC, Lee JH. Molecular cloning and characterization of bovine PRKAG3 gene: structure, expression and single nucleotide polymorphism detection. J Anim Breed Genet 2006; 122:294-301. [PMID: 16191037 DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0388.2005.00545.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
Abstract
The protein kinase adenosine monophosphate-activated gamma3-subunit (PRKAG3) gene encodes a muscle-specific isoform of the regulatory gamma-subunit of adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase, which plays a key role in regulating energy homeostasis in eucaryotes. It is well known that mutations in the PRKAG3 gene affect high glycogen content in the porcine skeletal muscle and, consequently, meat quality. The genomic structure and sequence of the bovine PRKAG3 were analysed from a Korean cattle BAC clone. The bovine PRKAG3 gene comprises 13 exons and spans approximately 6.8 kb on BTA2. From 5' and 3'-rapid amplification of cDNA ends experiments, the full-length cDNA of bovine PRKAG3 has been identified, encoding a deduced protein of 465 amino acids. Two splice isoforms, generated by the alternative splicing of exon 2, were also identified. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that, similar to other species, the bovine PRKAG3 transcript was only expressed in skeletal muscle. Seven single nucleotide polymorphisms, including two previously identified variants, were detected in four Bos taurus cattle breeds. The bovine PRKAG3 gene described in this study may be involved in muscle-related genetic diseases or meat quality traits in cattle.
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Abulencia A, Acosta D, Adelman J, Affolder T, Akimoto T, Albrow MG, Ambrose D, Amerio S, Amidei D, Anastassov A, Anikeev K, Annovi A, Antos J, Aoki M, Apollinari G, Arguin JF, Arisawa T, Artikov A, Ashmanskas W, Attal A, Azfar F, Azzi-Bacchetta P, Azzurri P, Bacchetta N, Bachacou H, Badgett W, Barbaro-Galtieri A, Barnes VE, Barnett BA, Baroiant S, Bartsch V, Bauer G, Bedeschi F, Behari S, Belforte S, Bellettini G, Bellinger J, Belloni A, Ben-Haim E, Benjamin D, Beretvas A, Beringer J, Berry T, Bhatti A, Binkley M, Bisello D, Bishai M, Blair RE, Blocker C, Bloom K, Blumenfeld B, Bocci A, Bodek A, Boisvert V, Bolla G, Bolshov A, Bortoletto D, Boudreau J, Bourov S, Boveia A, Brau B, Bromberg C, Brubaker E, Budagov J, Budd HS, Budd S, Burkett K, Busetto G, Bussey P, Byrum KL, Cabrera S, Campanelli M, Campbell M, Canelli F, Canepa A, Carlsmith D, Carosi R, Carron S, Casarsa M, Castro A, Catastini P, Cauz D, Cavalli-Sforza M, Cerri A, Cerrito L, Chang SH, Chapman J, Chen YC, Chertok M, Chiarelli G, Chlachidze G, Chlebana F, Cho I, Cho K, Chokheli D, Chou JP, Chu PH, Chuang SH, Chung K, Chung WH, Chung YS, Ciljak M, Ciobanu CI, Ciocci MA, Clark A, Clark D, Coca M, Connolly A, Convery ME, Conway J, Cooper B, Copic K, Cordelli M, Cortiana G, Cruz A, Cuevas J, Culbertson R, Currat C, Cyr D, DaRonco S, D'Auria S, D'onofrio M, Dagenhart D, de Barbaro P, De Cecco S, Deisher A, De Lentdecker G, Dell'Orso M, Demers S, Demortier L, Deng J, Deninno M, De Pedis D, Derwent PF, Dionisi C, Dittmann J, DiTuro P, Dörr C, Dominguez A, Donati S, Donega M, Dong P, Donini J, Dorigo T, Dube S, Ebina K, Efron J, Ehlers J, Erbacher R, Errede D, Errede S, Eusebi R, Fang HC, Farrington S, Fedorko I, Fedorko WT, Feild RG, Feindt M, Fernandez JP, Field R, Flanagan G, Flores-Castillo LR, Foland A, Forrester S, Foster GW, Franklin M, Freeman JC, Fujii Y, Furic I, Gajjar A, Gallinaro M, Galyardt J, Garcia JE, Garcia Sciveres M, Garfinkel AF, Gay C, Gerberich H, Gerchtein E, Gerdes D, Giagu S, Giannetti P, Gibson A, Gibson K, Ginsburg C, Giolo K, Giordani M, Giunta M, Giurgiu G, Glagolev V, Glenzinski D, Gold M, Goldschmidt N, Goldstein J, Gomez G, Gomez-Ceballos G, Goncharov M, González O, Gorelov I, Goshaw AT, Gotra Y, Goulianos K, Gresele A, Griffiths M, Grinstein S, Grosso-Pilcher C, Grundler U, da Costa JG, Haber C, Hahn SR, Hahn K, Halkiadakis E, Hamilton A, Han BY, Handler R, Happacher F, Hara K, Hare M, Harper S, Harr RF, Harris RM, Hatakeyama K, Hauser J, Hays C, Hayward H, Heijboer A, Heinemann B, Heinrich J, Hennecke M, Herndon M, Heuser J, Hidas D, Hill CS, Hirschbuehl D, Hocker A, Holloway A, Hou S, Houlden M, Hsu SC, Huffman BT, Hughes RE, Huston J, Ikado K, Incandela J, Introzzi G, Iori M, Ishizawa Y, Ivanov A, Iyutin B, James E, Jang D, Jayatilaka B, Jeans D, Jensen H, Jeon EJ, Jones M, Joo KK, Jun SY, Junk TR, Kamon T, Kang J, Karagoz-Unel M, Karchin PE, Kato Y, Kemp Y, Kephart R, Kerzel U, Khotilovich V, Kilminster B, Kim DH, Kim HS, Kim JE, Kim MJ, Kim MS, Kim SB, Kim SH, Kim YK, Kirby M, Kirsch L, Klimenko S, Klute M, Knuteson B, Ko BR, Kobayashi H, Kondo K, Kong DJ, Konigsberg J, Kordas K, Korytov A, Kotwal AV, Kovalev A, Kraus J, Kravchenko I, Kreps M, Kreymer A, Kroll J, Krumnack N, Kruse M, Krutelyov V, Kuhlmann SE, Kusakabe Y, Kwang S, Laasanen AT, Lai S, Lami S, Lammel S, Lancaster M, Lander RL, Lannon K, Lath A, Latino G, Lazzizzera I, Lecci C, LeCompte T, Lee J, Lee J, Lee SW, Lee YJ, Lefèvre R, Leonardo N, Leone S, Levy S, Lewis JD, Li K, Lin C, Lin CS, Lindgren M, Lipeles E, Liss TM, Lister A, Litvintsev DO, Liu T, Liu Y, Lockyer NS, Loginov A, Loreti M, Loverre P, Lu RS, Lucchesi D, Lujan P, Lukens P, Lungu G, Lyons L, Lys J, Lysak R, Lytken E, Mack P, MacQueen D, Madrak R, Maeshima K, Maksimovic P, Manca G, Margaroli F, Marginean R, Marino C, Martin A, Martin M, Martin V, Martínez M, Maruyama T, Matsunaga H, Mattson ME, Mazini R, Mazzanti P, McFarland KS, McGivern D, McIntyre P, McNamara P, McNulty R, Mehta A, Menzemer S, Menzione A, Merkel P, Mesropian C, Messina A, von der Mey M, Miao T, Miladinovic N, Miles J, Miller R, Miller JS, Mills C, Milnik M, Miquel R, Miscetti S, Mitselmakher G, Miyamoto A, Moggi N, Mohr B, Moore R, Morello M, Movilla Fernandez P, Mülmenstädt J, Mukherjee A, Mulhearn M, Muller T, Mumford R, Murat P, Nachtman J, Nahn S, Nakano I, Napier A, Naumov D, Necula V, Neu C, Neubauer MS, Nielsen J, Nigmanov T, Nodulman L, Norniella O, Ogawa T, Oh SH, Oh YD, Okusawa T, Oldeman R, Orava R, Osterberg K, Pagliarone C, Palencia E, Paoletti R, Papadimitriou V, Papikonomou A, Paramonov AA, Parks B, Pashapour S, Patrick J, Pauletta G, Paulini M, Paus C, Pellett DE, Penzo A, Phillips TJ, Piacentino G, Piedra J, Pitts K, Plager C, Pondrom L, Pope G, Portell X, Poukhov O, Pounder N, Prakoshyn F, Pronko A, Proudfoot J, Ptohos F, Punzi G, Pursley J, Rademacker J, Rahaman A, Rakitin A, Rappoccio S, Ratnikov F, Reisert B, Rekovic V, van Remortel N, Renton P, Rescigno M, Richter S, Rimondi F, Rinnert K, Ristori L, Robertson WJ, Robson A, Rodrigo T, Rogers E, Rolli S, Roser R, Rossi M, Rossin R, Rott C, Ruiz A, Russ J, Rusu V, Ryan D, Saarikko H, Sabik S, Safonov A, Sakumoto WK, Salamanna G, Salto O, Saltzberg D, Sanchez C, Santi L, Sarkar S, Sato K, Savard P, Savoy-Navarro A, Scheidle T, Schlabach P, Schmidt EE, Schmidt MP, Schmitt M, Schwarz T, Scodellaro L, Scott AL, Scribano A, Scuri F, Sedov A, Seidel S, Seiya Y, Semenov A, Semeria F, Sexton-Kennedy L, Sfiligoi I, Shapiro MD, Shears T, Shepard PF, Sherman D, Shimojima M, Shochet M, Shon Y, Shreyber I, Sidoti A, Siegrist J, Sill A, Sinervo P, Sisakyan A, Sjolin J, Skiba A, Slaughter AJ, Sliwa K, Smirnov D, Smith JR, Snider FD, Snihur R, Soderberg M, Soha A, Somalwar S, Sorin V, Spalding J, Spinella F, Squillacioti P, Stanitzki M, Staveris-Polykalas A, St Denis R, Stelzer B, Stelzer-Chilton O, Stentz D, Strologas J, Stuart D, Suh JS, Sukhanov A, Sumorok K, Sun H, Suzuki T, Taffard A, Tafirout R, Takashima R, Takeuchi Y, Takikawa K, Tanaka M, Tanaka R, Tecchio M, Teng PK, Terashi K, Tether S, Thom J, Thompson AS, Thomson E, Tipton P, Tiwari V, Tkaczyk S, Toback D, Tollefson K, Tomura T, Tonelli D, Tönnesmann M, Torre S, Torretta D, Tourneur S, Trischuk W, Tsuchiya R, Tsuno S, Turini N, Ukegawa F, Unverhau T, Uozumi S, Usynin D, Vacavant L, Vaiciulis A, Vallecorsa S, Varganov A, Vataga E, Velev G, Veramendi G, Veszpremi V, Vickey T, Vidal R, Vila I, Vilar R, Vollrath I, Volobouev I, Würthwein F, Wagner P, Wagner RG, Wagner RL, Wagner W, Wallny R, Walter T, Wan Z, Wang MJ, Wang SM, Warburton A, Ward B, Waschke S, Waters D, Watts T, Weber M, Wester WC, Whitehouse B, Whiteson D, Wicklund AB, Wicklund E, Williams HH, Wilson P, Winer BL, Wittich P, Wolbers S, Wolfe C, Worm S, Wright T, Wu X, Wynne SM, Xie S, Yagil A, Yamamoto K, Yamaoka J, Yamashita Y, Yang C, Yang UK, Yao WM, Yeh GP, Yoh J, Yorita K, Yoshida T, Yu I, Yu SS, Yun JC, Zanello L, Zanetti A, Zaw I, Zetti F, Zhang X, Zhou J, Zucchelli S. Precision top-quark mass measurement in the lepton+jets topology in p p collisions at square root s=1.96 TeV. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2006; 96:022004. [PMID: 16486564 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.96.022004] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 10/18/2005] [Indexed: 05/06/2023]
Abstract
We report two measurements of the top-quark mass M(top) using the CDF II detector at the Fermilab Tevatron in a 318 pb(-1) data sample of tt events in the lepton+jets final state. One method uses an event-based likelihood technique resulting in M(top) = 173.2(-2.4)(+2.6)(stat) +/- 3.2(syst) GeV/c2 or 173.2(-4.0)(+4.1) GeV/c2. The second method reconstructs a top-quark mass in each event using the measured invariant mass of the hadronically decaying W boson to constrain the jet energy scale to obtain a value for M(top)of 173.5(-3.6)(+3.7)(stat) +/- 1.3(syst) GeV/c2 or 173.5(-3.8)(+3.9) GeV/c2 . We take the latter, which is more precise, as our result.
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Park S, Lee JK, Kim JI, Lee YJ, Lim YK, Kim CS, Lee C. In vivo organ mass of Korean adults obtained from whole-body magnetic resonance data. RADIATION PROTECTION DOSIMETRY 2006; 118:275-9. [PMID: 16332919 DOI: 10.1093/rpd/nci340] [Citation(s) in RCA: 16] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/05/2023]
Abstract
In vivo organ mass of the Korean adult, male and female were presented for the purpose of radiation protection. A total of 121 healthy volunteers (66 males and 55 females), whose body dimensions were close to that of average Korean adults, were recruited for this study. Whole-body magnetic resonance (MR) images were obtained, and contours of 15 organs (brain, eye, gall bladder, heart, kidney, liver, lung, pancreas, stomach, spleen, testes, thymus, thyroid, urinary bladder and uterus) and 9 bones (femur, tibia + fibula, humerus, radius + ulna, pelvis, cervical spine, thoracic and lumber spine, skull and clavicle) were segmented for organ volume rendering by anatomists using commercial software. Organ and bone masses were calculated by multiplying the Asian reference densities of the corresponding organs and bones by the measured volumes. The resulting organ and bone masses were compared with those of the International Commission of Radiological Protection (ICRP) and the Asian reference data. Significantly large standard deviation was shown in the moving organs of the respiratory and circulatory systems and in the alimentary and urogenital organs that are variable in volume in a single person. Gall bladder and pancreas showed unique Korean organ masses compared with those of ICRP and the Asian reference adults. Different from anatomical data based on autopsy, the in vivo volume and mass in this study can more exactly describe the organ volume of a living human subject for radiation protection. A larger sample size would be required for obtaining statistically more reliable results. It is also needed to establish the reference organ mass of younger age groups for which it is difficult to recruit volunteers and to immobilise the subjects for long-time MR scanning. At present, the data from this study will contribute to the establishment of a Korean reference database.
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Lee YJ, Yu SL, Jung KC, Jung HJ, Kim KS, Park CS, Jin DI, Lee JH. Assignment of cellular retinoic acid-binding protein 1 (CRABP1) and 2 (CRABP2) to porcine chromosome 7q12-->q23 and 4q21-->q23 by somatic cell and radiation hybrid panel mapping. Cytogenet Genome Res 2005; 112:180B. [PMID: 16276655 DOI: 10.1159/000087534] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/19/2022] Open
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Kelly REA, Lee YJ, Kantorovich LN. Homopairing Possibilities of the DNA Bases Cytosine and Guanine: An ab Initio DFT Study. J Phys Chem B 2005; 109:22045-52. [PMID: 16853862 DOI: 10.1021/jp055207z] [Citation(s) in RCA: 43] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/29/2022]
Abstract
All the planar homopairings of cytosine and guanine are reported for the first time in this study. The idea of binding sites suggested for the simple case of adenine homopairs (J. Phys. Chem. B 2005, 109, 11933) is shown to be applicable to more complicated molecules binding to each other via multiple hydrogen bonds and can be considered as a general method for constructing hydrogen bonding structures. As an example we consider homopairs formed by DNA bases cytosine and guanine, suggesting that there may be 13 cytosine and 17 guanine homopairs. However, only 11 cytosine and 15 guanine homopairs remain after atomic relaxation performed using ab initio density functional theory. Most of the homopairs obtained have not been studied before. The homopairs have significant binding energies, varying from -0.19 to -1.12 eV, that are explained by multiple hydrogen bonds formed between monomers in the pairs, up to four hydrogen bonds in most energetically favorable cases. The detailed information on all guanine and cytosine planar homopairs contained in this work can be used to construct various cytosine and guanine superstructures observed on different surfaces.
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Park CH, Chung CW, Lee YJ, Han GB. Feasibility study of nitrogen removal with the mecellulose wasted liquor as an external carbon source in the two-stage denitrification process. ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY 2005; 26:591-600. [PMID: 16035652 DOI: 10.1080/09593330.2001.9619499] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/03/2023]
Abstract
The utilization of mecellulose wasted liquor (MWL) as an external carbon source was investigated to find an alternative for methanol in the two-stage denitrification pilot process. The pilot plant was supplied with the raw water from the J-Municipal Sewage Treatment Plant (J-MSTP) in Korea. The raw water of J-Municipal Sewage Treatment Plant contains low and high concentration of biodegradable organics and nitrogen source, respectively, due to the inflow of industrial wastewater and landfill leachate. Methanol was fed to provide external carbon source for high concentration of nitrogen source removal by denitrification in this J-Municipal Sewage Treatment Plant, and thus this study was performed to test effects to the effluent quality and efficiencies of nitrogen source removal with an alternative carbon source for the cost reduction. The 6.5mg 1(-1) and 5.7mg l(-1) of total nitrogen (TN) concentration in the effluent were achieved with mecellulose and methanol, whereas mecellulose and methanol were fed to give the same ratio of gCODgNO,-N(-1), respectively. The 60% of COD in mecellulose wasted liquor was used as a carbon source for denitrification and the stable denitrification rate was earned when one half of the required total carbon source for denitrification was fed to pre-anoxic tank in the pilot plant. The required gCODgNO,-N(-1) ratio with mecellulose wasted liquor was 1.4 times higher than with methanol. Mecellulose wasted liquor is feasible to be used as external carbon source for organic loading, nitrogen and phosphorus removal. If mecellulose wasted liquor is considered as an alternative external carbon source to substitute methanol 26-28m3 mecellulose wasted liquor per 1 m3 methanol will be required. However, to meet with the effluent standard (10 mg BOD l(-1)) for J-Municipal Sewage Treatment Plant, the feed concentration of mecellulose wasted liquor should be recommended to be lower than 200 mgl(-1).
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Abstract
Using calculations based on the ab initio density functional theory, we for the first time report all possible planar DNA base adenine homodimers. Two density functionals and both localized and plane wave basis sets were used, and the results are compared with previous quantum chemical and semiempirical calculations available for a few pairs. We find that there are 21 possible planar adenine pairs with variable binding energies ranging from -0.03 to -0.86 eV. More stable pairs are associated with two strong hydrogen bonds formed between the monomers, while the least stable pairs are characterized by two or one relatively weak bonds. We find that stable hydrogen bonds can be characterized by the difference charge density that shows well-developed regions of alternating excess and depletion of the electron charge similar to a "kebab" structure. The presented detailed information on all planar adenine pairs can be utilized, for example, in considering possible adenine monolayers seen on various surfaces.
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Moon IS, Kim DG, Lee MD, Hong SK, Park SC, Oh DY, Ahn ST, Lee YJ. A new venous conduit utilizing the recipient portal vein branches for segment V in adult partial liver transplantation. Transplant Proc 2005; 37:1117-8. [PMID: 15848640 DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2004.11.040] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 10/25/2022]
Abstract
Right anterior-medial lobe congestion due to temporary clamping of segment V and/or VIII is common in the operative theater during adult donor right lobe liver transplantation, the most common procedure in our institute. We have used an autogenous saphenous vein conduit to recipient portal vein tributaries in 15 cases, as a "Y-to-I venoplasty" since January 2004. The recipient portal vein is transected 5 mm proximal to its bifurcation and extended to both sides with partial hepatic dissection. The "Y-to-I venoplasty" is made by suture closure of the portal vein transversely to form a tube. The average length is 7.5 cm with a 1.3 cm width. One end of "Y-to-I venoplasty" conduit is anastomosed to the donor segment V branch on the back table. And the other end is anastomosed directly to the IVC via a new window or the middle hepatic vein stump in recipient. The phase distension of the conduit with respiration is noted in the operative field. A 6/15 (40%) patency rate, was observed by CT angiography at the second postoperative week. All-patient conduits showed good flow on serial examinations at the 60th postoperative day. This new venous graft, made of recipient portal vein is a good conduit for segment V decongestion in adult right lobe partial liver transplantation.
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Lee EB, Kim JY, Lee YJ, Song YW. Glucocorticoid receptor polymorphisms in Korean patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Ann Rheum Dis 2005; 64:503-4. [PMID: 15708906 PMCID: PMC1755393 DOI: 10.1136/ard.2004.023432] [Citation(s) in RCA: 15] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/03/2022]
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Kim HH, Kim KH, Kim DH, Kim MC, Kim BS, Kim YW, Kim YI, Kim YH, Kim W, Kim WW, Kim JJ, Kim TB, Ryu SY, Ryu SW, Min YD, Park YC, Park CH, Baik HK, Song KY, Yang HK, Lee KY, Lee BE, Lee BH, Lee YJ, Lee WK, Lee JH, Lee HJ, Jeon HM, Jung SJ, Cho GS, Chin HM, Choi SH, Choi YB, Han SU, Hur KY, Hur YS, Hyung WJ, Hong BH. Nationwide Survey of Laparoscopic Gastric Surgery in Korea, 2004. ACTA ACUST UNITED AC 2005. [DOI: 10.5230/jkgca.2005.5.4.295] [Citation(s) in RCA: 19] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022]
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Chen JR, Lee YJ, Chen T, Wang KL, Dang CW, Chang SC, Liu HF, Yang YC. MHC class I chain-related gene A (MICA) polymorphism and the different histological types of cervical cancer. Neoplasma 2005; 52:369-73. [PMID: 16151576] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/04/2023]
Abstract
Cervical cancer has been one of the most important gynecologic cancer in Taiwan with incidence of 24/100,000 and mortality of 8.7/100,000 annually. About 70-80% are squamous cell carcinoma; the remainder are composed of various types of adenocarcinoma, adenosquamous carcinoma and undifferentiated carcinoma. The Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) class I chain-related gene A (MICA) is expressed by keratinocytes and epithelial cells and interacts with gamma-delta T cells. Although MICA was not associated with cervical cancer in the study of Northern Sweden, there are no further studies about the association of MICA polymorphism and the different histological types of cervical cancer. We analyzed the MICA polymorphism in 110 cervical cancer cases (88 squamous cell carcinoma, 12 adenocarcinoma and 10 adenosquamous carcinoma) and 82 randomly selected unrelated controls from 1994 to 2000 in the Mackay Memorial Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan. DNA was extracted part from leukocytes of peripheral blood, part from tumor tissue and 5 polymorphic microsatellite alleles (A4,A5,A5.1,A6,A9) of MICA were identified by a polymerase chain reaction-based (PCR) technique using ABI Prism 377-18 DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). The phenotypes, alleles and genotypes of MICA gene were calculated. There was no association with cervical cancer patients and non-cervical cancer patients (p=0.337, 0.356 and 0.414). After dividing the cervical cancer patients into 3 major histological types (squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma and adenosquamous carcinoma), the result was still the same (p=0.598, 0.172 and 0.617) in our study. We found no association between MICA gene polymorphism and cervical cancer in Taiwan. Different histological types of cervical cancer also have no significant correlation with MICA gene polymorphism. It demonstrates that polymorphism of MICA gene bears no relation to cervical cancer and the different histological types of cervical cancer in Taiwan. We need further studies for identifying the factors causing the differentiation of cancer cells of the uterine cervix.
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Lee YJ, Shin KS, Kang SW, Lee CK, Yoo B, Cha HS, Koh EM, Yoon SJ, Lee J. Association of the oestrogen receptor alpha gene polymorphisms with disease onset in systemic lupus erythematosus. Ann Rheum Dis 2004; 63:1244-9. [PMID: 15361380 PMCID: PMC1754755 DOI: 10.1136/ard.2003.012583] [Citation(s) in RCA: 43] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/04/2022]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the genetic influence of PvuII and XbaI polymorphisms of oestrogen receptor alpha (ORalpha) in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in Korea. METHODS Genomic DNA from 268 female controls and 137 female SLE patients (41 childhood onset and 96 adult onset) were analysed using PvuII and XbaI restriction fragment length polymorphism. Comparison of the frequencies of alleles and genotypes was made in control and patient groups and in childhood onset and adult onset SLE subgroups. RESULTS Although the Pp genotype occurred more often in SLE patients than in controls (p(c) = 0.017), ORalpha genotype distributions of adult onset SLE did not differ significantly from controls. The PP, Pp, and xx genotypes occurred less often in childhood onset SLE (p(c) = 0.0045, 0.0498, and 0.0255, respectively) than in controls. Additionally, the PP genotype was less common in childhood onset than in adult onset SLE (p(c) = 0.016). SLE patients with the PP genotypes were older at disease onset than those with the other genotypes (p = 0.001). Patients with the Xx genotype had an earlier onset of SLE than those with the xx genotype (p = 0.025). The frequency of the combined ppXx genotype was greater in childhood onset SLE than in controls (p(c) = 0.0009) or adult onset SLE (p(c) = 0.027). The same trend was supported by subgroup analyses according to age at menarche and logistic multivariate analyses. CONCLUSIONS ORalpha polymorphisms are significantly associated with the age at disease onset in Koreans with SLE.
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Baek HJ, Kang SW, Lee YJ, Shin KC, Lee EB, Yoo CD, Song YW. Osteopenia in men with mild and severe ankylosing spondylitis. Rheumatol Int 2004; 26:30-4. [PMID: 15480679 DOI: 10.1007/s00296-004-0516-3] [Citation(s) in RCA: 32] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/20/2004] [Accepted: 07/19/2004] [Indexed: 12/24/2022]
Abstract
We investigated the frequency and distribution of osteopenia according to the clinical severity in ankylosing spondylitis (AS). Bone mass was measured in men with mild (n = 45) and severe AS (n = 31) with dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA). Definition of clinical severity was based on the Schober's test. Osteopenia was commonly detected (48% in mild AS and 39% severe AS) and, in mild disease, more frequently observed at the lumbar spine than any of the proximal femur sites. In severe AS, however, the frequency of osteopenia at the femoral neck and Ward's triangle was as high as at the lumbar spine. Both bone mineral density and T-scores in severe disease were lower than in mild disease at the femur neck, Ward's triangle, and total proximal femur, but not in the lumbar spine. The progression of osteopenia may be reflected more reliably at proximal femur sites than at the lumbar spine.
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Chung JK, Lee YJ, Kim SK, Jeong JM, Lee DS, Lee MC. Comparison of [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose uptake with glucose transporter-1 expression and proliferation rate in human glioma and non-small-cell lung cancer. Nucl Med Commun 2004; 25:11-7. [PMID: 15061260 DOI: 10.1097/00006231-200401000-00003] [Citation(s) in RCA: 58] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/26/2022]
Abstract
To clarify the biological significance of [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) accumulation in patients with cancer, we assessed the relationships between 18F-FDG uptake and glucose transporter-1 (GLUT-1) expression and proliferation rate in human glioma and lung cancer. We obtained FDG PET images and measured standardized uptake values (SUVs) of primary tumours in 13 patients with brain glioma and 25 patients with non-small-cell lung cancer. After surgery, portions of respected tumours were obtained, and the proliferation rate was measured as proliferation index (per cent of (S+G2+M)/(G0+G1+S+G2+M)) using DNA flow cytometry. The expression of GLUT-1 in a tumour was evaluated by using immunostaining. We classified GLUT-1 expression as grade 0 (no positive cell), grade 1 (< 10% cells positive), grade 2 (11-50% cells positive) and grade 3 (51-100% cells positive). Based on the expression of GLUT-1, cases with grades 0, 1, 2 and 3 showed SUVs of 6.1 +/- 2.8, 5.0 +/- 3.2, 8.3 +/- 3.3 and 10.4 +/- 6.6, respectively (P < 0.05). Non-small-cell lung cancer showed higher FDG uptake (SUV, 8.5 +/- 5.1) and higher GLUT-1 expression (grade, 2.0 +/- 1.0) than did brain glioma (SUV, 4.7 +/- 2.5; grade, 0.8 +/- 0.8). Based on the total number of cases, SUVs did not relate to proliferation index (r = 0.19). In non-small-cell lung cancer, SUVs did not correlate with proliferation index, whereas in glioma, SUVs were strongly related to proliferation index (r = 0.79, P < 0.01). In conclusion, FDG uptake generally correlated with GLUT-1 expression in non-small-cell lung cancer and glioma. In the case of glioma, FDG uptake also indicated increased cellular proliferation, which was not demonstrated in non-small-cell lung cancer.
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Chen ZX, Tsan SG, Dang CW, Chu CC, Lin M, Lee YJ. Identification of two new HLA-DRB1 alleles: HLA-DRB1*1350 and DRB1*140502. ACTA ACUST UNITED AC 2004; 64:300-3. [PMID: 15304013 DOI: 10.1111/j.0001-2815.2004.00282.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/27/2022]
Abstract
Two new HLA-DRB1 alleles have been found by using high-resolution sequence-based typing. The two sequences have been officially named DRB1*1350 (HWS10001327-AY048687) and DRB1*140502 (HWS10001790-AY129430). DRB1*1350 differs from DRB1*110101 by two amino acids at positions 37 (Y-->N) and 58 (A-->E). This allele may arise from gene conversion between DRB1*110101 and DRB1*130201 or DRB1*030101, which are commonly found in Taiwan populations. The other allele, DRB1*140502, obtained from a patient with rheumatoid arthritis, differs from DRB1*140501 at codon 58 (GCC-->GCT). However, it causes no change in amino acid sequence and would therefore not have direct clinical implications.
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Baek HJ, Shin KC, Lee YJ, Kang SW, Lee EB, Yoo CD, Song YW. Clinical features of adult-onset ankylosing spondylitis in Korean patients: patients with peripheral joint disease (PJD) have less severe spinal disease course than those without PJD. Rheumatology (Oxford) 2004; 43:1526-31. [PMID: 15316125 DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keh373] [Citation(s) in RCA: 35] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
OBJECTIVE We investigated the clinical features of Korean patients with adult-onset ankylosing spondylitis (AAS) and examined the differences between AAS patients with and without peripheral joint disease (PJD). METHODS We studied 67 consecutive patients with primary AAS who visited the rheumatology clinic of a tertiary referral hospital. All patients experienced joint symptoms after the age of 15 and fulfilled the modified New York criteria for ankylosing spondylitis. Hips and shoulders were not considered as peripheral joints. RESULTS The male-to-female ratio was 8.6:1.0. Mean age at disease onset was 22.3 +/- 5.5 (mean +/- s.d.) yr and disease duration was 10.8 +/- 8.0 yr. Spinal symptoms were the first manifestations in 80.6% of patients. During the disease course, hip, shoulder and peripheral joint involvement were found in about 60% of patients. In patients with PJD, the most commonly affected joints were the knees and ankles. The pattern of PJD, in most cases, was asymmetrical and mono/oligoarticular. AAS patients with PJD had fewer spinal symptoms than those without PJD as a presenting feature (71.8 vs 92.9%, P = 0.035). The modified Schober test showed greater increments in patients with PJD (4.9 +/- 2.4 vs 3.0 +/- 2.4 cm, P = 0.002). Forced vital capacity was better in patients with PJD (79.0 +/- 11.4 vs 70.8 +/- 15.5% of predicted value, P = 0.016). Totally ankylosed sacroiliitis, spinal squaring and syndesmophytes on radiographs were less common in the patients with PJD than in those without PJD (33.3 vs 64.2%, P = 0.012; 20.5 vs 67.9%, P = 0.000; and 38.5 vs 71.4%, P = 0.008, respectively). CONCLUSION Peripheral joints as well as shoulder and hip joints were more frequently involved during the disease course in Korean AAS patients compared with earlier reports in Caucasians. The general joint involvement pattern of PJD was similar to patterns reported previously. Our data suggest that, clinically and radiographically, AAS patients with PJD have a less severe spinal disease course than those without PJD.
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Abe K, Abe K, Abe N, Abe T, Adachi I, Aihara H, Akai K, Akatsu M, Akemoto M, Asano Y, Aso T, Aulchenko V, Aushev T, Bakich AM, Ban Y, Banerjee S, Bay A, Bedny I, Bizjak I, Bondar A, Bozek A, Bracko M, Browder TE, Chao Y, Chen KF, Cheon BG, Chistov R, Choi SK, Choi Y, Chuvikov A, Cole S, Danilov M, Dragic J, Drutskoy A, Eidelman S, Eiges V, Enari Y, Epifanov D, Flanagan J, Furukawa K, Gabyshev N, Garmash A, Gershon T, Golob B, Haba J, Hara K, Hastings NC, Hayashii H, Hazumi M, Hinz L, Hokuue T, Hoshi Y, Hou WS, Hsiung YB, Huang HC, Iijima T, Ikeda H, Inami K, Ishikawa A, Ishino H, Itoh R, Iwasaki H, Iwasaki M, Iwasaki Y, Kakuno H, Kamitani T, Kang JH, Kang JS, Kapusta P, Kataoka SU, Katayama N, Kawai H, Kawasaki T, Kibayashi A, Kichimi H, Kikutani E, Kim HJ, Kim JH, Kim SK, Kinoshita K, Koppenburg P, Korpar S, Krizan P, Krokovny P, Kumar S, Kuzmin A, Kwon YJ, Lange JS, Leder G, Lee SH, Lee YJ, Lesiak T, Li J, Limosani A, Lin SW, Liventsev D, MacNaughton J, Mandl F, Marlow D, Matsumoto H, Matsumoto T, Matyja A, Michizono S, Mimashi T, Mitaroff W, Miyabayashi K, Miyake H, Miyata H, Mohapatra D, Moloney GR, Murakami A, Nagamine T, Nagasaka Y, Nakadaira T, Nakamura TT, Nakano E, Nakao M, Nakazawa H, Natkaniec Z, Neichi K, Nishida S, Nitoh O, Noguchi S, Nozaki T, Ogawa S, Ogawa Y, Ohmi K, Ohshima T, Ohuchi N, Oide K, Okabe T, Okuno S, Olsen SL, Ostrowicz W, Ozaki H, Pakhlov P, Palka H, Park CW, Park H, Parslow N, Piilonen LE, Root N, Rozanska M, Sagawa H, Sakai Y, Schneider O, Schümann J, Schwanda C, Schwartz AJ, Semenov S, Senyo K, Shibuya H, Shidara T, Shwartz B, Sidorov V, Singh JB, Soni N, Stamen R, Stanic S, Staric M, Sugahara R, Sumisawa K, Sumiyoshi T, Suzuki K, Suzuki S, Tajima O, Takasaki F, Tamai K, Tamura N, Tanaka M, Tawada M, Teramoto Y, Tomura T, Tsuboyama T, Tsukamoto T, Uehara S, Uglov T, Ueno K, Unno Y, Uno S, Varner G, Varvell KE, Wang CC, Wang CH, Wang MZ, Watanabe Y, Yabsley BD, Yamada Y, Yamaguchi A, Yamashita Y, Yamauchi M, Yanai H, Yang H, Ying J, Yokoyama M, Yoshida M, Yusa Y, Zhang CC, Zhang ZP, Ziegler T, Zontar D, Zürcher D. Observation of large CP violation and evidence for direct CP violation in B0-->pi(+)pi(-) decays. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2004; 93:021601. [PMID: 15323897 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.93.021601] [Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/18/2004] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We report the first observation of CP violation in B0-->pi(+)pi(-) decays based on 152x10(6) gamma (4S)-->BB decays collected with the Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy e(+)e(-) collider. We reconstruct a B0-->pi(+)pi(-) CP eigenstate and identify the flavor of the accompanying B meson from its decay products. From the distribution of the time intervals between the two B meson decay points, we obtain A(pipi)=+0.58+/-0.15(stat)+/-0.07(syst) and S(pipi)=-1.00+/-0.21(stat)+/-0.07(syst). We rule out the CP-conserving case, A(pipi)=S(pipi)=0, at a level of 5.2 standard deviations. We also find evidence for direct CP violation with a significance at or greater than 3.2 standard deviations for any S(pipi) value.
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Hwang S, Lee SG, Kim KH, Park KM, Lee YJ, Ahn CS, Moon DB, Ha TY, Cho SH, Oh KB. Intraoperative assessment of hepatic venous congestion with direct clamping of the hepatic vein trunk for living donor liver transplantation. Transplant Proc 2004; 36:1462-5. [PMID: 15251358 DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2004.05.018] [Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/15/2022]
Abstract
We devised a hepatic vein clamping method to assess the amount of hepatic venous congestion (HVC) before liver transection. From February 2003 to May 2003, this method was applied to 5 of 58 living donor livers especially to assess donor safety. The left portal vein and proper hepatic artery as well as the middle hepatic vein (MHV)-left hepatic vein (LHV) trunk were clamped simultaneously to assess the HVC in the remnant right lobe before performing extended left lobectomy. As three donors demonstrated the extent of the HVC equivalent to about 40% of the right lobe volume (RLV), their operations proceeded according to the preoperative plan. The territory of HVC after liver transection was the same as that observed with direct clamping of the hepatic vein. However, one donor showed massive HVC more than 50% of RLV and the operative plan was adjusted to harvest only the left lobe without the MHV trunk for donor safety. To assess the HVC in the remnant left lobe, the isolated LHV trunk was occluded after clamping the donor's proper hepatic artery. The whole left lobe except for a small area at the anterior portion of the medial segment became discolored on LHV clamping: the opposite demarcation appeared on MHV clamping. The amount of HVC was so small that we harvested the right lobe with the MHV trunk. All donors and recipients recovered uneventfully. We believe that this direct clamping method makes the assessment of HVC feasible before parenchymal transection of a donor liver.
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Lee EB, Kim JY, Lee YJ, Abdallah A, Lympany P, Song YW. Transforming growth factor-beta1 polymorphisms in Korean patients with systemic sclerosis. ACTA ACUST UNITED AC 2004; 63:491-5. [PMID: 15104684 DOI: 10.1111/j.1399-0039.2004.00185.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) plays an important role in the pathogenesis of systemic sclerosis (SSc). To investigate the role of TGF-beta1 gene polymorphisms in SSc, we genotyped six biallelic polymorphic positions (position -988, -800, and -509; and codons 10, 25, and 263) in 61 Korean SSc patients and in 148 healthy controls, using polymerase chain reaction-sequence-specific primers. Genetic polymorphisms were found at position -509 and codon 10 in Koreans. The allele frequencies of C/T at position -509 were 0.59/0.41 in patients and 0.56/0.44 in controls. The allele frequencies of C/T at codon 10 were 0.40/0.60 in patients and 0.50/0.50 in controls. In conclusion, no skewed distribution of TGF-beta1 gene polymorphisms was found in Korean patients with SSc.
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Shim KN, Yang SK, Myung SJ, Chang HS, Jung SA, Choe JW, Lee YJ, Byeon JS, Lee JH, Jung HY, Hong WS, Kim JH, Min YI, Kim JC, Kim JS. Atypical endoscopic features of rectal carcinoids. Endoscopy 2004; 36:313-6. [PMID: 15057680 DOI: 10.1055/s-2004-814202] [Citation(s) in RCA: 53] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/12/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIMS It is not normally difficult to diagnose carcinoid tumors (well-differentiated endocrine neoplasms) of the rectum endoscopically, as they usually have a characteristic appearance. However, little is known about the atypical endoscopic findings in some rectal carcinoids and the present study was performed to analyze these. PATIENTS AND METHODS The endoscopic findings in 67 consecutive patients with rectal carcinoids (37 men, 30 women; age range 23 - 76) were analyzed retrospectively. RESULTS Tumor size ranged from 2 mm to 30 mm (average 7.4 mm). Of the 67 patients, 52 (78 %) displayed the characteristic endoscopic findings of smooth, round, sessile elevations covered with normal-appearing or yellow-discolored mucosa; in 15 (22 %) there were one or more atypical endoscopic findings. These included a semipedunculated appearance (n = 6), hyperemia (n = 5), a central depression (n = 6), erosion (n = 5), and ulceration (n = 4). Atypical findings were noted in none of 20 carcinoids &lambda< 5 mm in diameter; in six (20 %) of the 30 carcinoids between 5 mm and 9 mm; in six (43 %) of the 14 carcinoids between 10 mm and 19 mm; and in three (100 %) of the three carcinoids >/= 20 mm in diameter ( P < 0.001). Invasion into the muscularis propria or metastasis to the liver or lymph nodes occurred in three of the four patients with ulceration, but it was confirmed in only one of the 63 patients without ulceration ( P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Atypical endoscopic appearances of rectal carcinoids are observed more frequently as the size of the tumor increases and a finding of ulceration may have a prognostic value.
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Fukunaga J, Yamaai T, Yamachika E, Ishiwari Y, Tsujigiwa H, Sawaki K, Lee YJ, Ueno T, Kirino S, Mizukawa N, Takagi S, Nagai N, Sugahara T. Expression of osteoclast differentiation factor and osteoclastogenesis inhibitory factor in rat osteoporosis induced by immunosuppressant FK506. Bone 2004; 34:425-31. [PMID: 15003790 DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2003.05.003] [Citation(s) in RCA: 24] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/13/2001] [Revised: 06/13/2002] [Accepted: 05/29/2003] [Indexed: 10/26/2022]
Abstract
Immunosuppressant drugs are currently required by transplant recipients for the remainder of their lives, despite the many adverse effects associated with these therapies. Acute osteoporosis is one such effect, and a reproducible osteoporosis model has been established through the administration of the immunosuppressant drug FK506 in rats. The cause of this osteoporosis has been shown to be abnormal osteoclast proliferation, altering the process of bone remodeling. However, the reasons why FK506 induces osteoclast proliferation and whether this process is mediated by cytokine changes or an increase in bone resorption factors have been unclear. An investigation was therefore conducted focusing on the recent discoveries of osteoclast differentiation factor (ODF) and osteoclastogenesis inhibitory factor (OCIF). These factors led to elucidation of the osteoclast differentiation-maturation mechanism. An osteoporosis model was produced in rats utilizing intramuscular FK506 injection (1 mg/kg) for 28 consecutive days. Trabecular bone resorption was observed inferior to enchondral ossification in the FK506 group, and tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) staining revealed a clear increase in osteoclasts at the site of enchondral ossification, relative to the control group. Real-time PCR and in situ hybridization (ISH) demonstrated minimal differences in OCIF expression between control and the treatment groups. However, Real-time PCR revealed clearly increased ODF expression in the treatment group. ODF expression was also shown to be increased in the treatment group using ISH. This was histologically consistent with a region of osteoclast proliferation inferior to enchondral ossification. The results of this study support the hypothesis that FK506-mediated osteoporosis occurs by action of the drug on osteoclasts, promoting expression of ODF messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) and thus prompting osteoclast differentiation and maturation.
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Foster AS, Gal AY, Gale JD, Lee YJ, Nieminen RM, Shluger AL. Interaction of silicon dangling bonds with insulating surfaces. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 2004; 92:036101. [PMID: 14753889 DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.92.036101] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/26/2003] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
We use first principles density functional theory calculations to study the interaction of a model dangling bond silicon tip with the surfaces of CaF2, Al2O3, TiO2, and MgO. In each case the strongest interaction is with the highest anions in the surface. We show that this is due to the onset of chemical bonding with the surface anions, which can be controlled by an electric field across the system. Combining our results and previous studies on semiconductor surfaces suggests that using dangling bond Si tips can provide immediate identification of surface species in atomically resolved noncontact atomic force microscopy and facilitate selective measurements of short-range interactions with surface sites.
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232
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Lee YJ, Xiao Z. Children's support for elderly parents in urban and rural China: results from a national survey. J Cross Cult Gerontol 2004; 13:39-62. [PMID: 14617918 DOI: 10.1023/a:1006591608724] [Citation(s) in RCA: 122] [Impact Index Per Article: 6.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/12/2022]
Abstract
This study examines the factors that determine adult children's financial support for elderly parents, using data from the China Survey on Support Systems for the Elderly conducted in 1992. The findings support the hypotheses of need-based transfers. In both urban and rural areas, children's financial transfers to their elderly parents are based on the parents' need, and familial support compensates for inequalities in elderly persons' access to public resources. The data also suggest that elderly support is an outcome of short- and long-term arrangements between generations. Elderly Chinese, especially those in urban areas, have short-term exchanges with their adult children, providing housing or other services and receiving financial support in return. Also, adult children's support for elderly parents may be a repayment of parental investment made in them earlier.
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Seo GT, Ahan HI, Kim JT, Lee YJ, Kim IS. Domestic wastewater reclamation by submerged membrane bioreactor with high concentration powdered activated carbon for stream restoration. WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY : A JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION ON WATER POLLUTION RESEARCH 2004; 50:173-178. [PMID: 15344788] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/24/2023]
Abstract
This study focuses on the practical application of high concentration powdered activated carbon coupled membrane bio-reactor to domestic wastewater reclamation. The study was conducted in three parts, such as analysis of secondary domestic wastewater effluent, design and operation parameter evaluation and reclaimed water quality estimation for stream restoration. The organic concentration was 25.2-80.2 mgCOD(Cr)/L for the effluent of three domestic wastewater treatment plants. Around 50-75% of the COD was low molecular substances less than 1,000 which were quite biodegradable. The sawdust PAC was estimated to be proper adsorbent for the organics in the secondary effluents. Its Freundlich constant, K value was 5.847 and 1/n, 0.36. Using a system consists of single reactor with high concentration PAC (80 g/L) and submerged hollow fiber MF membrane module with nominal pore size of 0.1 microm, design and operation parameters were obtained, such as HRT of the bioreactor (2.5 hr), PAC concentration (80 g/L), the initial flux (less than 0.5 m/day) and intermittent suction cycle (12 min. suction and 3 min. idling). Organic removal by the system was high enough to produce reclaimed water for urban stream restoration The effluent organic concentration was at the level of 2 mg/L in terms of TOC (around 5 mg/L as COD(Cr)). Substances with molecular weight cut off < 1,000 were removed mostly by adsorption and biodegradation. Those above 1,000 were rejected at PAC cake layer on the membrane and gradually degraded by microorganisms during extended contact.
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Lee EM, Hong SH, Lee YJ, Kang YH, Choi KC, Choi SH, Kim IH, Lim SJ. Liposome-complexed adenoviral gene transfer in cancer cells expressing various levels of coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor. J Cancer Res Clin Oncol 2003; 130:169-77. [PMID: 14677059 DOI: 10.1007/s00432-003-0521-z] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/05/2003] [Accepted: 10/14/2003] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
PURPOSE Loss of coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR) is frequently observed in malignant cancer, hampering adenoviral gene therapy approaches. Complexing adenovirus with cationic liposomes can increase adenoviral transgene expression, particularly in cells with CAR-deficiency. We investigated whether other factors such as lipid composition might be involved in determining the efficiency of liposome-complexed adenoviral gene transfer in cancer cells. MATERIAL AND METHODS Human cancer cell lines with different expression levels of CAR were infected with a GFP transgene. The efficiency of transgene expression was assessed by determining GFP expression using FACS analysis. RESULTS The efficiency of liposome-complexed adenoviral gene transfer was dependent on the lipid composition constituting liposomes. Polyethylene glycol (PEG)-containing liposomes were most effective in increasing liposome-complexed adenoviral gene transfer. In CAR-deficient cells, use of PEG-containing liposomes enhanced adenoviral gene transfer, whereas in CAR-expressing cells enhancement varied depending on cell type. In some CAR-expressing cells, the effect of liposome complexing was even comparable to that in CAR-deficient cells. Increased adenoviral transgene expression following complexing with PEG-containing liposomes correlated with liposome uptake in cancer cells. CONCLUSIONS Liposome-complexed adenoviral gene transfer appears to depend on lipid composition and the level of liposome uptake by cancer cells, in addition to CAR levels. Our study suggest that these multiple factors should be considered in designing liposome-complexed adenoviral vectors to improve outcomes of current adenoviral cancer gene therapies.
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Tumpey TM, Suarez DL, Perkins LEL, Senne DA, Lee J, Lee YJ, Mo IP, Sung HW, Swayne DE. Evaluation of a high-pathogenicity H5N1 avian influenza A virus isolated from duck meat. Avian Dis 2003; 47:951-5. [PMID: 14575093 DOI: 10.1637/0005-2086-47.s3.951] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/05/2022]
Abstract
The introduction of an influenza A virus possessing a novel hemagglutinin (HA) into an immunologically naive human population has the potential to cause severe disease and death. Such was the case in 1997 in Hong Kong, where H5N1 influenza was transmitted to humans from infected poultry. Because H5N1 viruses are still isolated from domestic poultry in southern China, there needs to be continued surveillance of poultry and characterization of virus subtypes and variants. This study provides molecular characterization and evaluation of pathogenesis of a recent H5N1 virus isolated from duck meat that had been imported to South Korea from China. The HA gene of A/Duck/Anyang/AVL-1/01 (H5N1) isolate was found to be closely related to the Hong Kong/97 H5N1 viruses. This virus also contained multiple basic amino acids adjacent to the cleavage site between HA1 and HA2, characteristic of high-pathogenicity avian influenza viruses (HPAI). The pathogenesis of this virus was characterized in chickens, ducks, and mice. The DK/Anyang/AVL-1/01 isolate replicated well in all species and resulted in 100% and 22% lethality for chickens and mice, respectively. No clinical signs of disease were observed in DK/Anyang/AVL-1/01-inoculated ducks, but high titers of infectious virus could be detected in multiple tissues and oropharyngeal swabs. The presence of an H5N1 influenza virus in ducks bearing a HA gene that is highly similar to those of the pathogenic 1997 human/poultry H5N1 viruses raises the possibility of reintroduction of HPAI to chickens and humans.
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Lee YJ, Park D, Kim SY, Park WJ. Pathogenic mutations but not polymorphisms in congenital and childhood onset autosomal recessive deafness disrupt the proteolytic activity of TMPRSS3. J Med Genet 2003; 40:629-31. [PMID: 12920079 PMCID: PMC1735556 DOI: 10.1136/jmg.40.8.629] [Citation(s) in RCA: 33] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/04/2022]
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Kang E, Lee DS, Lee JS, Kang H, Hwang CH, Oh SH, Kim CS, Chung JK, Lee MC, Jang MJ, Lee YJ, Morosan P, Zilles K. Developmental hemispheric asymmetry of interregional metabolic correlation of the auditory cortex in deaf subjects. Neuroimage 2003; 19:777-83. [PMID: 12880806 DOI: 10.1016/s1053-8119(03)00118-6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 31] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/21/2022] Open
Abstract
The functional connectivity of the auditory cortex might be altered in deaf subjects due to the loss of auditory input. We studied the developmental changes of functional connectivity of the primary auditory cortex (A1) in deaf children, deaf adults, and normal hearing adults by examining interregional metabolic correlation with (18)F-FDG PET. The mean activity of FDG uptake in the cytoarchitectonically defined A1 region served as a covariate in the interregional and interhemispheric correlation analysis. A1 metabolic rate was correlated with that of the ipsilateral superior temporal lobe in both normal and deaf subjects. This correlated area was larger in deaf children than in deaf or normal hearing adults. Concerning the functional connectivity of A1, a hemispheric asymmetry was found in that the extent of interregional correlation was clearly larger in the right than in the left hemisphere. This asymmetry was particularly pronounced in the younger deaf children. Both extent and asymmetry of the functional connectivity of A1 subsided with age. Contrary to this, a correlation between the left and the right primary auditory cortices was absent in younger deaf children but became apparent as they grew older.
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Lee EB, Shin KC, Lee YJ, Lee YJ, Cheon GJ, Jeong JM, Son MW, Song YW. 188Re-tin-colloid as a new therapeutic agent for rheumatoid arthritis. Nucl Med Commun 2003; 24:689-96. [PMID: 12766606 DOI: 10.1097/00006231-200306000-00012] [Citation(s) in RCA: 30] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/26/2022]
Abstract
Radiation synovectomy is a useful treatment modality in patients with refractory synovitis. We have developed a 188Re-tin-colloid as a new radiopharmaceutical agent and investigated its efficacy and safety in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Radiation synovectomy was performed using 188Re-tin-colloid in 22 knees from 21 rheumatoid arthritis patients refractory to intra-articular corticosteroid injection. The efficacy and safety of administration of 370-1110 MBq of 188Re-tin-colloid were evaluated after 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. Pain intensity on a visual analogue scale decreased significantly 12 months after therapy (mean+/-SD: 68.0+/-26.1 mm vs. 25.1+/-23.4 mm; P=0.0001 by the paired t-test). Pain decreased in 19 cases (86.3%), joint tenderness improved in 14 cases (63.6%) and joint swelling was reduced in all cases (100%). 188Re-tin-colloid was safe. The residual activity of 188Re in the blood was 0.077%+/-0.25% of the injected dose. The radioactivity of 188Re in the urine was 0.14%+/-0.13% of the injected dose. Transient reactive synovitis was observed in 18 cases (81.8%). No clinical side-effects or abnormalities in leucocyte count, platelet count, liver function tests or urine analysis were observed in any patient. In conclusion, in this first study of radiation synovectomy using 188Re-tin-colloid for patients with rheumatoid arthritis, the treatment resulted in the improvement of arthritis and was well tolerated.
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Moon DB, Lee SG, Hwang S, Park KM, Kim KH, Ahn CS, Chu CW, Lee YJ, Na YW, Ha TY, Cho SH, Oh KB. Massive subcapsular hematoma of liver graft after living donor liver transplantation: a case report. Transplant Proc 2003; 35:1469-72. [PMID: 12826195 DOI: 10.1016/s0041-1345(03)00471-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/27/2022]
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Kim SR, Lee JH, Kim YT, Riu DH, Jung SJ, Lee YJ, Chung SC, Kim YH. Synthesis of Si, Mg substituted hydroxyapatites and their sintering behaviors. Biomaterials 2003; 24:1389-98. [PMID: 12527280 DOI: 10.1016/s0142-9612(02)00523-9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 162] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 10/27/2022]
Abstract
Si, Mg-substituted hydroxyapatites, alone and co-substituted, have been prepared to obtain biomaterials having an improved biocompatibility. From FT-IR, XRD and ICP analyses, it was confirmed that single phases of hydroxyapatite substituted by Si alone or co-substituted by Si, Mg. The XRD data indicated the absence of extra phases related to silicon and magnesium oxide or other calcium phosphate species. Si-substituted hydroxyapatite of up to 2 wt% for Si and Si, Mg co-substituted hydroxyapatite of 1 wt% for the each ion keep their original structures intact for the sintering temperatures of up to 1200 degrees C. However, it is observed that ion substitutions by an amount higher than the above ratios for each hydroxyapatite lead to destabilization of original structures of the hydroxyapatite and to the production of tricalcium phosphate and calcium phosphate silicate phases when the samples were sintered at 1100 degrees C or higher.
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241
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Kang YG, Bae CY, Kim S, Kim MJ, Lee YJ, Seo J, Kim YC. Age-related change in serum concentrations of testosterone in middle-aged Korean men. Aging Male 2003; 6:8-12. [PMID: 12809075] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 03/03/2023] Open
Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine whether testosterone and sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) levels are different between healthy men and men with chronic illness, and to evaluate the age-related changes of testosterone and SHBG in healthy men in Korea. enrollment took place between January 2000 and December 2001 at Pundang CHA General Hospital in Korea. All men who came for male climacteric and geriatric health screening examinations were eligible. Of the 762 men recruited, 136 men had at least one present or previous medical illness and 626 men were healthy. Higher serum concentrations of total testosterone (5.31 +/- 1.88 ng/ml vs. 4.96 +/- 1.43 ng/ml; p < 0.05), free androgen index (16.60 +/- 7.36 vs. 14.57 +/- 5.55; p < 0.01) and calculated bioavailable testosterone (8.88 +/- 3.52 nmol/l vs. 7.91 +/- 2.52 nmol/l; p < 0.01) were demonstrated in the healthy compared with the disease group. Total testosterone declined at a rate of 0.2% per year, SHBG increased by 1.74% per year, calculated bioavailable testosterone declined by 0.8% per year, and free androgen index declined by 1.15% per year in healthy subjects aged between 40 and 70. The above results seem to be consistent with previous Western studies, showing higher concentrations of testosterone in healthy men, that decline with increasing age.
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Kim HK, Song KS, Park YS, Kang YH, Lee YJ, Lee KR, Kim HK, Ryu KW, Bae JM, Kim S. Elevated levels of circulating platelet microparticles, VEGF, IL-6 and RANTES in patients with gastric cancer: possible role of a metastasis predictor. Eur J Cancer 2003; 39:184-91. [PMID: 12509950 DOI: 10.1016/s0959-8049(02)00596-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 310] [Impact Index Per Article: 14.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/06/2023]
Abstract
The activation of coagulation, angiogenesis and inflammatory cytokines are considered to be related with tumour growth and metastasis. We investigated the plasma levels of platelet microparticles (PMP), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), IL-6, and the chemokine RANTES in patients with gastric cancer (n=109) and in healthy controls (n=29). The plasma levels of PMP, IL-6 and RANTES were significantly higher in the patients than in the healthy controls, and plasma levels of PMP, VEGF, IL-6 and RANTES were significantly higher in patients with stage IV disease than those in patients with stage I or stage II/III. In terms of predicting distant metastasis, the sensitivities of PMP, VEGF, IL-6 and RANTES were 93.3%, 56.7%, 70.0% and 81.8%, respectively, and the corresponding specificities were 91.1%, 64.6%, 79.7% and 50.0%. Among these parameters, PMP had the highest diagnostic accuracy. Significant correlations were found between PMP, VEGF, IL-6 and RANTES. This study demonstrates that the plasma levels of PMP, VEGF, IL-6 and RANTES were markedly increased in patients with stage IV disease, and that these increased plasma levels of IL-6, RANTES, and especially PMP, might be useful for identifying metastatic gastric patients.
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Hwang S, Lee SG, Kim KH, Park KM, Ahn CS, Moon DB, Chu CW, Lee YJ, Min PC. Correlation of blood-free graft weight and volumetric graft volume by an analysis of blood content in living donor liver grafts. Transplant Proc 2002; 34:3293-4. [PMID: 12493450 DOI: 10.1016/s0041-1345(02)03603-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/01/2022]
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Daly S, Mills JL, Molloy AM, Conley M, McPartlin J, Lee YJ, Young PB, Kirke PN, Weir DG, Scott JM. Low-dose folic acid lowers plasma homocysteine levels in women of child-bearing age. QJM 2002; 95:733-40. [PMID: 12391385 DOI: 10.1093/qjmed/95.11.733] [Citation(s) in RCA: 18] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND Ongoing clinical trials are investigating whether lowering plasma homocysteine reduces the risk of vascular disease. If so, food fortification with folic acid will be the likely result, and sub-optimal amounts are likely to be preferred, for safety reasons. Dose-finding studies are needed before the outcomes of these trials, to establish the benefits and risks of folic acid consumption over the widest intake range likely to be encountered. AIM To find the lowest dose of folic acid that effectively reduces plasma homocysteine in premenopausal women. DESIGN Double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial. METHODS Women of child-bearing age (n=95) were randomly allocated to 0, 100, 200, or 400 microg/day of folic acid. Red-cell folate and plasma homocysteine were measured at baseline and after 10 weeks supplementation. RESULTS Median red cell folate levels increased significantly in the 200 microg(p=0.0001) and 400 microg(p=0.0001) groups; but not in the placebo (0 microg) (p=0.25) or the 100 microg (p=0.5) groups. Only the 200 microg and the 400 microg groups had significant decreases in plasma homocysteine, (p=0.04 and p=0.0008, respectively). However, when subjects whose initial plasma homocysteine was <8 micromol/l (already optimally low) were removed from the analysis, there were significant plasma homocysteine decreases in all three treatment groups, but not the placebo group. DISCUSSION In this sub-population, low doses of folic acid significantly lower plasma homocysteine. This could be achieved safely by fortification.
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Lee SG, Park KM, Hwang S, Lee YJ, Kim KH, Ahn CS, Choi DL, Joo SH, Jeon JY, Chu CW, Moon DB, Min PC, Koh KS, Han SH, Park SH, Choi GT, Hwang KS, Lee EJ, Chung YH, Lee YS, Lee HJ, Kim MH, Lee SK, Suh DJ, Kim JJ, Sung KB. Adult-to-adult living donor liver transplantation at the Asan Medical Center, Korea. Asian J Surg 2002; 25:277-84. [PMID: 12470999 DOI: 10.1016/s1015-9584(09)60192-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 105] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/07/2023] Open
Abstract
Between February 1997 and December 2001, 311 adult-to-adult living donor liver transplants (A-A LDLTs) were performed at the Asan Medical Center for patients above 20 years of age. Indications for A-A LDLT were: chronic hepatitis B (203), chronic hepatitis C (5), hepatocellular carcinoma (64), alcoholic cirrhosis (9), cryptogenic cirrhosis (4), secondary biliary cirrhosis (5), primary biliary cirrhosis (1), Wilson' s disease (2), autoimmune hepatitis (1), hepatic tuberculosis (1), cholangiocarcinoma (1), fulminant hepatic failure (14) and primary non-function of cadaveric liver graft (1). Of 311 A-A LDLTs, 36 were of medical high urgency, 20 were for acute and subacute hepatic failure, 15 were for hepato-renal syndrome and 1 was for primary non-function. Recipient age ranged from 27 to 64 years. Donor age ranged from 16 to 62 years. There was no donor mortality. Implanted liver grafts were categorized into seven types: 175 modified right lobe (MRL), 70 left lobe, 32 right lobe, 20 dual grafts, 10 left lobe plus caudate lobe, three extended right lobe and one posterior segment. In MRL, the tributaries of the middle hepatic vein were reconstructed by interpositioning a vein graft. Indication for dual graft implantation was the same as single graft A-A LDLT, and four of 20 were emergency cases. Of 20 dual grafts, 14 received two left lobes, four received a left lobe and a lateral segment, one received a right lobe and a left lobe and one received a lateral segment and a posterior segment. Graft volume ranged from 28% to 83% of the standard liver volume of the recipients. There were 33 (10.6%) in-hospital mortalities (< 4 months) among the 310 patients after 311 A-A LDLTs. Of the 36 patients receiving emergency transplants, 31 survived. These encouraging results justify the expansion of A-A LDLT in coping with increasing demands, even in urgent situations. We have aimed to introduce the establishment of the efficacy of A-A LDLT in various end-stage chronic and acute liver diseases, as well as new technical advances to overcome small graft-size syndrome by using dual-graft implantation and MRL, both of which were first developed in our department.
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Ahn Y, Song YJ, Lee YJ, Park S. Physicochemical characterization of UASB sludge with different size distributions. ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY 2002; 23:889-897. [PMID: 12211449 DOI: 10.1080/09593332308618356] [Citation(s) in RCA: 7] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
Upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) sludges developed in UASB system are used to treat various wastewaters. Methanogenic microbial consortia in UASB sludges convert organic compounds to methane under anaerobic conditions. Sludge granules are developed by self-granulation of microorganisms and dynamic balance between granule growth and decay results in coexistence of UASB sludges with different sizes in the reactor. In this study, UASB sludges taken from a laboratory-scale UASB reactor were classified into 4 groups based on their diameters and their physicochemical characteristics were investigated. Each group was analyzed for settling ability, specific methanogenic activity (SMA), and elemental content. Settling ability was proportional to diameter of UASB sludges, suggesting effective detainment of larger granular sludges in the reactor. When acetate o r glucose was used as a substrate, a ll groups showed a relatively slight difference in SMA. However SMA with a volatile fatty acid mixture showed a significant increase with sludge diameter, suggesting better establishment of syntrophic relationship in larger granular sludges. Larger granular sludges showed a higher value of SMA upon environmental changes(ie., pH, temperature, or toxicant concentration). Comparative analysis of elemental contents showed that content (dry weight %) of most tested elements (Fe, Ca, P, Zn, Ni, and Mn) decreased with sludge diameter, suggesting that the elements could be important for initial granulation. Taken together, this study verified experimentally that physicochemical properties of UASB sludges are related to UASB sludge size distributions. Overall results of physicochemical characterization supports that larger granular sludges are better applicable to UASB systems.
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Kim HK, Song KS, Lee ES, Lee YJ, Park YS, Lee KR, Lee SN. Optimized flow cytometric assay for the measurement of platelet microparticles in plasma: pre-analytic and analytic considerations. Blood Coagul Fibrinolysis 2002; 13:393-7. [PMID: 12138366 DOI: 10.1097/00001721-200207000-00003] [Citation(s) in RCA: 48] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/26/2022]
Abstract
Platelet microparticles (PMP) are submicroscopic membrane vesicles released by platelets during activation. Flow cytometry is the most widely used method for quantifying PMP, but the optimization of the technical method has not yet been fully evaluated. This study was designed to assess the pre-analytical variables including blood sampling conditions, and to evaluate the analytical variations including effect of the platelet-specific antibodies and quantitative beads, precision, linearity and accuracy in comparison with beta-thromboglobulin, which is one of the platelet activation markers. Numbers of PMP collected into citrate-theophylline-adenosine-dipyridamole (CTAD) tubes were increased with time, but to a lesser extent than when collected into sodium citrate tubes. The precision of the PMP assay was relatively high. Excellent linear correlation was observed for dilution linearity. Regarding the platelet-specific antibodies used, anti-CD41a-labeled samples resulted in higher PMP levels than those labeled with anti-CD61 and anti-CD42a. There was no significant difference of PMP counts according to the quantitative beads. The PMP assay is well correlated with beta-thromboglobulin levels. Our findings suggest that blood samples for the PMP assay should be collected in a CTAD tube and delayed measurement is not allowed to avoid artefactual platelet activation. The PMP assay can be used successfully as a useful marker of the detection of in vivo platelet activation, provided that pre-analytical and technical points are optimally taken into consideration.
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Cho HN, Lee YJ, Cho CK, Lee SJ, Lee YS. Downregulation of ERK2 is essential for the inhibition of radiation-induced cell death in HSP25 overexpressed L929 cells. Cell Death Differ 2002; 9:448-56. [PMID: 11965498 DOI: 10.1038/sj.cdd.4400979] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/25/2001] [Revised: 09/25/2001] [Accepted: 11/01/2001] [Indexed: 01/11/2023] Open
Abstract
We previously reported that overexpression of HSP25 delayed cell growth, increased the level of p21(waf), reduced the levels of cyclin D1, cyclin A and cdc2, and induced radioresistance in L929 cells. In this study, we demonstrated that HSP25 induced-radioresistance was abolished by transfection with plasmids containing antisense hsp25 cDNA. Extracellular regulated kinase (ERK) and MAP kinase/ERK kinase (MEK) expressions as well as their activation (phospho-forms) were inhibited by hsp25 overexpression. Furthermore, when control vector transfected cells were treated with PD98059, MEK inhibitor, they became resistant to radiation, suggesting that inhibition of ERK1/2 activities was essential for radioresistance in L929 cells. To confirm the relationship between ERK1/2 and hsp25-mediated radioresistance, ERK1 or ERK2 cDNA was transiently transfected into the hsp25 overexpressed cells and their radioresistance was examined. HSP25-mediated radioresistance was abolished by overexpression of ERK2, but not by overexpression of ERK1. Alteration of cell cycle distribution and cell cycle related protein expressions (cyclin D, cyclin A and cdc2) by hsp25 overexpression were also recovered by ERK2 cDNA transfection. Increase in Bcl-2 protein by hsp25 gene transfection was also reduced by subsequent ERK2 cDNA-transfection. Taken together, these results suggest that downregulation of ERK2 is essential for the inhibition of radiation-induced cell death in HSP25 overexpressed cells.
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Tsai LH, Lee YJ. NMDA inhibits oxotremorine-induced acid secretion via the NO-dependent cyclic GMP system in rat stomach. CHINESE J PHYSIOL 2001; 44:193-8. [PMID: 11908548] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/24/2023] Open
Abstract
The mechanism of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) inhibits oxotremorine-induced acid secretion was examined in rat stomach, in relation to the cyclic GMP system. NMDA (10(-7) M) did not affect the spontaneous acid secretion from the everted preparations of isolated rat stomach, but inhibited the acid secretion stimulated by oxotremorine, and this effect of NMDA was antagonized by 2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (AP-5), (+/-)3-(2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl)propyl-1-phosphonic acid (CPP) or N(G)-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA). NMDA also elevated the cyclic GMP content of mucosal slices from rat stomach, and this effect of NMDA was antagonized by L-NNA. These results indicate that NMDA receptors are present in the rat stomach and regulate the gastric acid secretion. The mechanism underlying the effect of NMDA inhibits oxotremorine-induced acid secretion may be mediated by the NO-dependent cyclic GMP system.
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Lee YJ, Miyahara T, Noike T. Effect of iron concentration on hydrogen fermentation. BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY 2001; 80:227-231. [PMID: 11601547 DOI: 10.1016/s0960-8524(01)00067-0] [Citation(s) in RCA: 25] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/23/2023]
Abstract
The effect of the iron concentration in the external environment on hydrogen production was studied using sucrose solution and the mixed microorganisms from a soybean-meal silo. The iron concentration ranged from 0 to 4,000 mg FeCl2 l(-1). The temperature was maintained at 37 degrees C. The maximum specific hydrogen production rate was found to be 24.0 ml g(-1) VSS h(-1) at 4,000 mg FeCl2 l(-1). The specific production rate of butyrate increased with increasing iron concentration from 0 to 20 mg FeCl2 l(-1) and decreased with increasing iron concentration from 20 to 4,000 mg FeCl2 l(-1). The maximum specific production rates of ethanol (682 mg g(-1) VSS h(-1)) and butanol (47.0 mg g(-1) VSS h(-1)) were obtained at iron concentrations of 5 and 3 mg FeCl2 l(-1), respectively. The maximum hydrogen production yield of 131.9 ml g(-1) sucrose was obtained at the iron concentration of 800 mg FeCl2 l(-1). The maximum yields of acetate (389.3 mg g(-1) sucrose), propionate (37.8 mg g(-1) sucrose), and butyrate (196.5 mg g(-1) sucros) were obtained at iron concentrations of 3, 200 and 200 mg FeCl2 l(-1), respectively. The sucrose degradation efficiencies were close to 1.0 when iron concentrations were between 200 and 800 mg FeCl2 l(-1). The maximum biomass production yield was 0.283 g VSS g(-1) sucrose at an iron concentration of 3,000 mg FeCl2 l(-1).
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