46 results on '"C, Santori"'
Search Results
2. Instant loading with intraoral welding technique and PRAMA implants: a new prosthetic approach
- Author
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R, Celletti, S, Fanali, C U, Laici, C, Santori, P, Pignatelli, and B, Sinjari
- Subjects
Adult ,Dental Implants ,Male ,Titanium ,Treatment Outcome ,Osseointegration ,Maxilla ,Humans ,Welding ,Mandible - Abstract
When splinting multiple implants passive fit of the framework should be achieved to avoid excessive force distribution on the implants. Recently, a protocol was suggested for immediate loading of multiple implants by welding a titanium bar to implant abutments directly in the oral cavity so as to create a customized, precise and passive metal-reinforced provisional restoration. The intraoral welding technique subsequently proves to be a successful option in the full-arch immediate restorations of the mandible and maxilla. The aim of this article is to present a case report in which a new prosthetic approach, using trans-mucosal implants, is described. Dental implants are instantly loaded with a provisional prosthesis supported by an intraoral welded titanium framework to obtain a precise passive fit of the immediate loaded prosthesis.
- Published
- 2017
3. Quantum Control over Single Spins in Diamond
- Author
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Gregory D. Fuchs, David D. Awschalom, V. V. Dobrovitski, C. Santori, and Abram L. Falk
- Subjects
Physics ,Quantum decoherence ,business.industry ,Spin engineering ,Nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Quantum technology ,Open quantum system ,Qubit ,Optoelectronics ,General Materials Science ,Quantum information ,Photonics ,business ,Nitrogen-vacancy center - Abstract
Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond have recently emerged as a unique platform for fundamental studies in quantum information and nanoscience. The special properties of these impurity centers allow robust, room-temperature operation of solid-state qubits and have enabled several remarkable demonstrations in quantum information processing and precision nanoscale sensing. This article reviews the recent advances in magnetic and optical manipulation of the NV center’s quantum spin and their importance for prospective applications. We discuss how quantum control of individual centers can be harnessed for the protection of NV-center spin coherence, for multiqubit quantum operations in the presence of decoherence, and for high-fidelity initialization and readout. We also discuss the progress in resonant optical control, which has led to interfaces between spin and photonic qubits and may lead to spin networks based on diamond photonics. Many of these recently developed diamond-based technologies constitute critical components for the future leap toward practical multiqubit devices.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate and bone resorption rates as reflected by serum levels of C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen: A study in healthy men
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S. De Geronimo, Vincenzo Carnevale, C. Santori, E. Vecci, Salvatore Minisola, F. Paglia, V. Baldini, Elisabetta Romagnoli, Emilio D'Erasmo, Alfredo Scillitani, and Jessica Pepe
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Adult ,Male ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Collagen Type I ,Bone resorption ,Body Mass Index ,Bone remodeling ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate ,N-terminal telopeptide ,Reference Values ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Testosterone ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Estradiol ,Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,C-terminal telopeptide ,chemistry ,Bone Remodeling ,Collagen ,Peptides ,business ,Body mass index ,bone resorption ,dheas ,estradiol ,serum carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type i collagen ,testosterone ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Type I collagen - Abstract
Sex steroid hormones contribute to the physiological regulation of bone turnover in males. To address this issue, we investigated serum estradiol (E2), total testosterone (T), and DHEAS concentrations, along with serum levels of carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (sCTx), in a sample of 76 healthy men aged 23 to 87. The concentration of sCTx declined with age. Both T and DHEAS, at variance with E2, showed a significant age-related decline. T, DHEAS and sCTx significantly (p
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- 2005
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5. ChemInform Abstract: Quantum Control over Single Spins in Diamond
- Author
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Abram L. Falk, C. Santori, Gregory D. Fuchs, David D. Awschalom, and V. V. Dobrovitski
- Subjects
Quantum decoherence ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,Diamond ,General Medicine ,engineering.material ,Qubit ,engineering ,Optoelectronics ,Photonics ,Quantum information ,business ,Spin (physics) ,Quantum ,Coherence (physics) - Abstract
Nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamond have recently emerged as a unique platform for fundamental studies in quantum information and nanoscience. The special properties of these impurity centers allow robust, room-temperature operation of solid-state qubits and have enabled several remarkable demonstrations in quantum information processing and precision nanoscale sensing. This article reviews the recent advances in magnetic and optical manipulation of the NV center’s quantum spin and their importance for prospective applications. We discuss how quantum control of individual centers can be harnessed for the protection of NV-center spin coherence, for multiqubit quantum operations in the presence of decoherence, and for high-fidelity initialization and readout. We also discuss the progress in resonant optical control, which has led to interfaces between spin and photonic qubits and may lead to spin networks based on diamond photonics. Many of these recently developed diamond-based technologies constitute...
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Generation of single photons and correlated photon pairs using InAs quantum dots.
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C. Santori, D. Fattal, J. Vuckovic, G.S. Solomon, and Y. Yamamoto
- Published
- 2004
7. Skeletal turnover, bone mineral density, and fractures in male chronic abusers of alcohol
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C. Santori, L Toppo, Cristiana Cipriani, Salvatore Minisola, Mauro Ceccanti, Maria Lucia Mascia, D. Diacinti, Vincenzo Carnevale, Elisabetta Romagnoli, A. Prastaro, Maria Luisa Attilia, and Emilio D'Erasmo
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musculoskeletal diseases ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bone density ,male alcohol abusers ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Osteoporosis ,Bone remodeling ,Fractures, Bone ,Endocrinology ,N-terminal telopeptide ,Osteoprotegerin ,Bone Density ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Vitamin D and neurology ,Humans ,Bone mineral ,biology ,business.industry ,bone mineral density ,fractures ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Alcoholism ,Osteocalcin ,biology.protein ,Bone Remodeling ,business - Abstract
Background: Chronic alcohol abuse is a risk factor for osteoporosis and fractures, whose pathogenesis is still unclear. We investigated the influence of alcoholism and other risk factors on calcium and skeletal metabolism, bone mineral density (BMD), and fractures. Materials and methods: In 51 chronic male alcoholics without liver failure and 31 healthy controls, serum total and ionised calcium, phosphate, creatinine, 25-hydroxy vitamin D (25OHD), PTH, total (ALP) and bone-specific (BALP) alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin (BGP), carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (β-CTx), osteoprotegerin (OPG) and receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B ligand (RANKL) were assessed. In patients only, we also measured serum testosterone, 17-β estradiol, LH, and IGF-I. BMD was measured by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry at lumbar spine (LS-) and femur [neck (FN-) and total hip (TF-)]. Vertebral fractures were identified by a semiquantitative method on thoraco-lumbar spine x-ray, non-vertebral fractures (as life-style factors) by history. Results: Alcoholics were leaner, had significantly higher ALP and BALP, and lower BGP and 25OHD levels than controls. No significant difference in other calcium and bone metabolism parameters was found. OPG/RANKL ratio was significantly higher in alcoholics. Beta-CTx negatively correlated with abuse duration. OPG positively correlated with daily alcohol assumption and with indexes of liver cytolysis. Though LS-, FN-and TF-BMD of alcoholics and controls did not significantly differ, patients had a much higher prevalence of vertebral fractures. The same was found considering both vertebral and non-vertebral fractures. Conclusions: Ethanol-induced skeletal damage seems mainly dependent on negative effects on bone formation. Lifestyle factors and traumas likely contribute to the high fracture incidence of alcohol abusers, independently of BMD.
8. Scavenging by threatened turtles regulates freshwater ecosystem health during fish kills
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C Santori, RJ Spencer, MB Thompson, CM Whittington, TH Burd, SB Currie, TJ Finter, and Dyke, James Van
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13. Climate action ,14. Life underwater ,15. Life on land ,Uncategorized - Abstract
© 2020, The Author(s). Humans are increasing the frequency of fish kills by degrading freshwater ecosystems. Simultaneously, scavengers like freshwater turtles are declining globally, including in the Australian Murray–Darling Basin. Reduced scavenging may cause water quality problems impacting both ecosystems and humans. We used field and mesocosm experiments to test whether scavenging by turtles regulates water quality during simulated fish kills. In the field, we found that turtles were important scavengers of fish carrion. In mesocosms, turtles rapidly consumed carrion, and water quality in mesocosms with turtles returned to pre-fish kill levels faster than in turtle-free controls. Our experiments have important ecological implications, as they suggest that turtles are critical scavengers that regulate water quality in freshwater ecosystems. Recovery of turtle populations may be necessary to avoid the worsening of ecosystem health, particularly after fish kills, which would have devastating consequences for many freshwater species.
9. La vocazione interdisciplinare della Geografia: un itinerario fra ricerca e didattica
- Author
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FEDERZONI, LAURA, G. CAMPIONE, F. FARINELLI, C. SANTORI LEZZI, and L. Federzoni
- Subjects
INTERDISCIPLINARITÀ ,GEOGRAFIA ,LETTERATURA ,STORIA ,DIDATTICA - Abstract
La Geografia si presta a svolgere una funzione di cerniera fra le diverse discipline scolastiche, essendole per tradizione riconosciuto lo status di scienza delle relazioni o delle interazioni, recepito anche dai programmi ministeriali: i suoi obiettivi di studio, il territorio e il paesaggio, sono per loro natura complessi, dinamici e dialettici. Viene qui esposta l'esperienza maturata durante corsi di Didattica della Geografia svolti nell'ambito dell'indirizzo Linguistico Letterario della SSIS attiva presso l'Università di Bologna, con l'obiettivo di delineare itinerari interdisciplinari che coinvolgano Geografia, Storia e Letteratura.
- Published
- 2006
10. Autofluorescence Virtual Staining System for H&E Histology and Multiplex Immunofluorescence Applied to Immuno-Oncology Biomarkers in Lung Cancer.
- Author
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Loo J, Robbins M, McNeil C, Yoshitake T, Santori C, Shan CJ, Vyawahare S, Patel H, Wang TC, Findlater R, Steiner DF, Rao S, Gutierrez M, Wang Y, Sanchez AC, Yin R, Velez V, Sigman JS, Coutinho de Souza P, Chandrupatla H, Scott L, Weaver SS, Lee CW, Rivlin E, Goldenberg R, Couto SS, Cimermancic P, and Wong PF
- Subjects
- Humans, Staining and Labeling methods, Optical Imaging methods, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Lung Neoplasms immunology, Lung Neoplasms metabolism, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung pathology, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung immunology, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung diagnosis, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung metabolism, Fluorescent Antibody Technique methods
- Abstract
Significance: We extend the capabilities of virtual staining from AF to a different disease and stain modality. Our work includes newly developed virtual stains for H&E and a multiplex immunofluorescence panel (DAPI, PanCK, PD-L1, CD3, and CD8) for non-small cell lung cancer, which reproduce the key features of real stains., (©2024 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2025
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11. Clinical-Grade Validation of an Autofluorescence Virtual Staining System With Human Experts and a Deep Learning System for Prostate Cancer.
- Author
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Wong PF, McNeil C, Wang Y, Paparian J, Santori C, Gutierrez M, Homyk A, Nagpal K, Jaroensri T, Wulczyn E, Yoshitake T, Sigman J, Steiner DF, Rao S, Cameron Chen PH, Restorick L, Roy J, and Cimermancic P
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Staining and Labeling methods, Optical Imaging methods, Adenocarcinoma pathology, Adenocarcinoma diagnosis, Immunohistochemistry methods, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Microscopy, Fluorescence methods, Prostatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia pathology, Prostatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia diagnosis, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms diagnosis, Deep Learning, Neoplasm Grading
- Abstract
The tissue diagnosis of adenocarcinoma and intraductal carcinoma of the prostate includes Gleason grading of tumor morphology on the hematoxylin and eosin stain and immunohistochemistry markers on the prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia-4 stain (CK5/6, P63, and AMACR). In this work, we create an automated system for producing both virtual hematoxylin and eosin and prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia-4 immunohistochemistry stains from unstained prostate tissue using a high-throughput hyperspectral fluorescence microscope and artificial intelligence and machine learning. We demonstrate that the virtual stainer models can produce high-quality images suitable for diagnosis by genitourinary pathologists. Specifically, we validate our system through extensive human review and computational analysis, using a previously validated Gleason scoring model, and an expert panel, on a large data set of test slides. This study extends our previous work on virtual staining from autofluorescence, demonstrates the clinical utility of this technology for prostate cancer, and exemplifies a rigorous standard of qualitative and quantitative evaluation for digital pathology., (Copyright © 2024 United States & Canadian Academy of Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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12. An End-to-End Platform for Digital Pathology Using Hyperspectral Autofluorescence Microscopy and Deep Learning-Based Virtual Histology.
- Author
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McNeil C, Wong PF, Sridhar N, Wang Y, Santori C, Wu CH, Homyk A, Gutierrez M, Behrooz A, Tiniakos D, Burt AD, Pai RK, Tekiela K, Patel H, Cameron Chen PH, Fischer L, Martins EB, Seyedkazemi S, Freedman D, Kim CC, and Cimermancic P
- Subjects
- Humans, Microscopy, Reproducibility of Results, Pathologists, Deep Learning, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
- Abstract
Conventional histopathology involves expensive and labor-intensive processes that often consume tissue samples, rendering them unavailable for other analyses. We present a novel end-to-end workflow for pathology powered by hyperspectral microscopy and deep learning. First, we developed a custom hyperspectral microscope to nondestructively image the autofluorescence of unstained tissue sections. We then trained a deep learning model to use autofluorescence to generate virtual histologic stains, which avoids the cost and variability of chemical staining procedures and conserves tissue samples. We showed that the virtual images reproduce the histologic features present in the real-stained images using a randomized nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) scoring comparison study, where both real and virtual stains are scored by pathologists (D.T., A.D.B., R.K.P.). The test showed moderate-to-good concordance between pathologists' scoring on corresponding real and virtual stains. Finally, we developed deep learning-based models for automated NASH Clinical Research Network score prediction. We showed that the end-to-end automated pathology platform is comparable with an independent panel of pathologists for NASH Clinical Research Network scoring when evaluated against the expert pathologist consensus scores. This study provides proof of concept for this virtual staining strategy, which could improve cost, efficiency, and reliability in pathology and enable novel approaches to spatial biology research., (Copyright © 2023 United States & Canadian Academy of Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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13. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Tapentadol Versus Oxycodone/Naloxone in both Branded and Generic Formulations in Patients with Musculoskeletal Pain.
- Author
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Ruggeri M, Signorini A, Caravaggio S, Santori C, Rosiello F, and Coluzzi F
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- Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Delayed-Action Preparations, Humans, Naloxone therapeutic use, Phenols, State Medicine, Tapentadol, Musculoskeletal Pain drug therapy, Oxycodone
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Current evidence shows that tapentadol hydrochloride prolonged-release is more cost effective than other opioids. However, the introduction into the market of generic formulations of traditional comparators, leading to potential savings due to their lower price, creates space for further research. The objective of this study is to evaluate and compare the efficacy of tapentadol versus oxycodone/naloxone and the economic impact of the two alternatives in both branded and generic formulations., Methods: A cost-effectiveness analysis was performed using the third-payer perspective (TPP), with specific reference to the Italian National Health Service. A Markov model was implemented to simulate transitions between states, comparing two arms: The first arm simulated the administration of tapentadol, while the second simulated the administration of oxycodone/naloxone, both branded and generic. The results were reported in terms of net monetary benefit (NMB). The willingness to pay (WPT) was estimated at €35,000/quality-adjusted life year., Results: Tapentadol was dominant in all scenarios, assuming a population of 1000 individuals over a 1-year time horizon. In all cases, although the prices of oxycodone/naloxone generic formulations were lower, the costs associated with treatment discontinuation were always higher than those associated with tapentadol. The comparison with the branded formulation of oxycodone/naloxone was associated with the highest savings of €431.77 per patient, and with the highest NMB of €1943.77 per patient., Conclusion: The results of this pharmacoeconomic evaluation promote the use of tapentadol in comparison with oxycodone/naloxone, confirming the results obtained in previous studies with reference to the generic formulations., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
- Published
- 2021
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14. Scavenging by threatened turtles regulates freshwater ecosystem health during fish kills.
- Author
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Santori C, Spencer RJ, Thompson MB, Whittington CM, Burd TH, Currie SB, Finter TJ, and Van Dyke JU
- Subjects
- Animal Distribution, Animals, Body Remains, Carps, Male, New South Wales, Rivers, Wetlands, Ecosystem, Feeding Behavior, Fresh Water, Turtles physiology, Water Quality
- Abstract
Humans are increasing the frequency of fish kills by degrading freshwater ecosystems. Simultaneously, scavengers like freshwater turtles are declining globally, including in the Australian Murray-Darling Basin. Reduced scavenging may cause water quality problems impacting both ecosystems and humans. We used field and mesocosm experiments to test whether scavenging by turtles regulates water quality during simulated fish kills. In the field, we found that turtles were important scavengers of fish carrion. In mesocosms, turtles rapidly consumed carrion, and water quality in mesocosms with turtles returned to pre-fish kill levels faster than in turtle-free controls. Our experiments have important ecological implications, as they suggest that turtles are critical scavengers that regulate water quality in freshwater ecosystems. Recovery of turtle populations may be necessary to avoid the worsening of ecosystem health, particularly after fish kills, which would have devastating consequences for many freshwater species.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Economic Evaluation of Treatments for Migraine: An Assessment of the Generalizability Following a Systematic Review.
- Author
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Ruggeri M, Drago C, Rosiello F, Orlando V, and Santori C
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Migraine Disorders prevention & control, Treatment Outcome, Migraine Disorders economics, Migraine Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Background: All health economics reviews on chronic and episodic migraine published to date underline the heterogeneity of results. Currently, the need for the generalizability of economic evaluations across different jurisdictions is considered a key issue to avoid unnecessary overlaps and to minimize the time to reimbursement decisions., Objective: The aim of this study was to review the economic evaluations on the prophylaxis and treatments for migraine published in the previous 10 years (since 2009) and to perform a critical assessment of their generalizability., Methods: We searched PubMed, EMBASE, and EconLit databases. Articles underwent a three-stage selection process. To assess the level of generalizability, we used the checklist implemented by Augustovski et al. Studies were classified as: (1) generalizable; (2) transferable; and (3) context specific., Results: In total, 227 articles were identified after running the search string and 11 studies were included in our review. Overall, none of the studies was judged as generalizable and three were judged transferable according to the established criteria., Conclusions: Our review suggests that no evidence on the economic value of either acute or prophylactic treatments against migraine is generalizable to different jurisdictions. However, the majority of studies reporting results about prophylactic treatments were found to be transferable.
- Published
- 2020
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16. Instant loading with intraoral welding technique and PRAMA implants: a new prosthetic approach.
- Author
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Celletti R, Fanali S, Laici CU, Santori C, Pignatelli P, and Sinjari B
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Osseointegration physiology, Treatment Outcome, Dental Implants, Mandible surgery, Maxilla surgery, Titanium, Welding methods
- Abstract
When splinting multiple implants passive fit of the framework should be achieved to avoid excessive force distribution on the implants. Recently, a protocol was suggested for immediate loading of multiple implants by welding a titanium bar to implant abutments directly in the oral cavity so as to create a customized, precise and passive metal-reinforced provisional restoration. The intraoral welding technique subsequently proves to be a successful option in the full-arch immediate restorations of the mandible and maxilla. The aim of this article is to present a case report in which a new prosthetic approach, using trans-mucosal implants, is described. Dental implants are instantly loaded with a provisional prosthesis supported by an intraoral welded titanium framework to obtain a precise passive fit of the immediate loaded prosthesis.
- Published
- 2017
17. Large color gamut displays with diffraction gratings.
- Author
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Aieta F, Morovič P, Morovič J, Fiorentino M, Santori C, and Fattal D
- Abstract
The ability to display a broad variety of colors has great benefits not only in the context of entertainment but also as a means to streamline design in prototyping and manufacturing processes. Displays that use RGB filters or backlights cannot span all colors that occur in nature. To improve the accuracy of color reproduction, there have been attempts to include additional color primaries in displays. Existing solutions, however, have an impact on cost, scalability, and spatial resolution and are predominantly applicable to projection systems. We propose an approach based on combining diffraction grating extractors and the HANS imaging pipeline initially developed for printing. This combination offers unprecedented potential to attain large color gamuts with the same backlights commercially used today.
- Published
- 2016
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18. Light-triggered, self-immolative nucleic Acid-drug nanostructures.
- Author
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Tan X, Li BB, Lu X, Jia F, Santori C, Menon P, Li H, Zhang B, Zhao JJ, and Zhang K
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- Humans, Light, Models, Molecular, Antineoplastic Agents, Phytogenic administration & dosage, Camptothecin administration & dosage, DNA administration & dosage, Delayed-Action Preparations chemistry, Nanostructures chemistry, Prodrugs administration & dosage
- Abstract
The simultaneous intracellular delivery of multiple types of payloads, such as hydrophobic drugs and nucleic acids, typically requires complex carrier systems. Herein, we demonstrate a self-deliverable form of nucleic acid-drug nanostructure that is composed almost entirely of payload molecules. Upon light activation, the nanostructure sheds the nucleic acid shell, while the core, which consists of prodrug molecules, disintegrates via an irreversible self-immolative process, releasing free drug molecules and small molecule fragments. We demonstrate that the nanostructures exhibit enhanced stability against DNase I compared with free DNA, and that the model drug (camptothecin) released exhibits similar efficacy as free, unmodified drugs toward cancer cells.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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19. Picosecond all-optical switching in hydrogenated amorphous silicon microring resonators.
- Author
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Pelc JS, Rivoire K, Vo S, Santori C, Fattal DA, and Beausoleil RG
- Abstract
We utilize cross-phase modulation to observe all-optical switching in microring resonators fabricated with hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H). Using 2.7-ps pulses from a mode-locked fiber laser in the telecom C-band, we observe optical switching of a cw telecom-band probe with full-width at half-maximum switching times of 14.8 ps, using approximately 720 fJ of energy deposited in the microring. In comparison with telecom-band optical switching in undoped crystalline silicon microrings, a-Si:H exhibits substantially higher switching speeds due to reduced impact of free-carrier processes.
- Published
- 2014
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20. Electromagnetically induced transparency in a diamond spin ensemble enables all-optical electromagnetic field sensing.
- Author
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Acosta VM, Jensen K, Santori C, Budker D, and Beausoleil RG
- Abstract
We use electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) to probe the narrow electron-spin resonance of nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond. Working with a multipass diamond chip at temperatures 6-30 K, the zero-phonon absorption line (637 nm) exhibits an optical depth of 6 and inhomogeneous linewidth of ~30 GHz FWHM. Simultaneous optical excitation at two frequencies separated by the ground-state zero-field splitting (2.88 GHz) reveals EIT resonances with a contrast exceeding 6% and FWHM down to 0.4 MHz. The resonances provide an all-optical probe of external electric and magnetic fields with a projected photon-shot-noise-limited sensitivity of 0.2 V/cm/√[Hz] and 0.1 nT/√[Hz], respectively. Operation of a prototype diamond-EIT magnetometer measures a noise floor of ~/<1 nT/√[Hz] for frequencies above 10 Hz and Allan deviation of 1.3±1.1 nT for 100 s intervals. The results demonstrate the potential of diamond-EIT devices for applications ranging from quantum-optical memory to precision measurement and tests of fundamental physics.
- Published
- 2013
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21. High-sensitivity magnetometry based on quantum beats in diamond nitrogen-vacancy centers.
- Author
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Fang K, Acosta VM, Santori C, Huang Z, Itoh KM, Watanabe H, Shikata S, and Beausoleil RG
- Abstract
We demonstrate an absolute magnetometer based on quantum beats in the ground state of nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond. We show that, by eliminating the dependence of spin evolution on the zero-field splitting D, the magnetometer is immune to temperature fluctuation and strain inhomogeneity. We apply this technique to measure low-frequency magnetic field noise by using a single nitrogen-vacancy center located within 500 nm of the surface of an isotopically pure (99.99% 12C) diamond. The photon-shot-noise limited sensitivity achieves 38 nT/sqrt[Hz] for 4.45 s acquisition time, a factor of sqrt[2] better than the implementation which uses only two spin levels. For long acquisition times (>10 s), we realize up to a factor of 15 improvement in magnetic sensitivity, which demonstrates the robustness of our technique against thermal drifts. Applying our technique to nitrogen-vacancy center ensembles, we eliminate dephasing from longitudinal strain inhomogeneity, resulting in a factor of 2.3 improvement in sensitivity.
- Published
- 2013
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22. Coupling of nitrogen-vacancy centers to photonic crystal cavities in monocrystalline diamond.
- Author
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Faraon A, Santori C, Huang Z, Acosta VM, and Beausoleil RG
- Abstract
The zero-phonon transition rate of a nitrogen-vacancy center is enhanced by a factor of ∼70 by coupling to a photonic crystal resonator fabricated in monocrystalline diamond using standard semiconductor fabrication techniques. Photon correlation measurements on the spectrally filtered zero-phonon line show antibunching, a signature that the collected photoluminescence is emitted primarily by a single nitrogen-vacancy center. The linewidth of the coupled nitrogen-vacancy center and the spectral diffusion are characterized using high-resolution photoluminescence and photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy.
- Published
- 2012
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23. Near-surface spectrally stable nitrogen vacancy centres engineered in single crystal diamond.
- Author
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Stacey A, Simpson DA, Karle TJ, Gibson BC, Acosta VM, Huang Z, Fu KM, Santori C, Beausoleil RG, McGuinness LP, Ganesan K, Tomljenovic-Hanic S, Greentree AD, and Prawer S
- Subjects
- Crystallization, Optics and Photonics instrumentation, Quantum Theory, Surface Properties, Temperature, Diamond chemistry, Nitrogen chemistry
- Abstract
A method for engineering thin (<100 nm) layers of homoepitaxial diamond containing high quality, spectrally stable, isolated nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centres is reported. The photoluminescence excitation linewidth of the engineered NVs are as low as 140 MHz, at temperatures below 12 K, while the spin properties are at a level suitable for quantum memory and spin register applications. This methodology of NV fabrication is an important step toward scalable and practical diamond based photonic devices suitable for quantum information processing., (Copyright © 2012 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2012
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24. Dynamic stabilization of the optical resonances of single nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond.
- Author
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Acosta VM, Santori C, Faraon A, Huang Z, Fu KM, Stacey A, Simpson DA, Ganesan K, Tomljenovic-Hanic S, Greentree AD, Prawer S, and Beausoleil RG
- Abstract
We report electrical tuning by the Stark effect of the excited-state structure of single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers located ≲100 nm from the diamond surface. The zero-phonon line (ZPL) emission frequency is controllably varied over a range of 300 GHz. Using high-resolution emission spectroscopy, we observe electrical tuning of the strengths of both cycling and spin-altering transitions. Under resonant excitation, we apply dynamic feedback to stabilize the ZPL frequency. The transition is locked over several minutes and drifts of the peak position on timescales ≳100 ms are reduced to a fraction of the single-scan linewidth, with standard deviation as low as 16 MHz (obtained for an NV in bulk, ultrapure diamond). These techniques should improve the entanglement success probability in quantum communications protocols.
- Published
- 2012
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25. Optical and spin coherence properties of nitrogen-vacancy centers placed in a 100 nm thick isotopically purified diamond layer.
- Author
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Ishikawa T, Fu KM, Santori C, Acosta VM, Beausoleil RG, Watanabe H, Shikata S, and Itoh KM
- Abstract
We have studied optical and spin properties of near-surface nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers incorporated during chemical vapor phase growth of isotopically purified (12)C single-crystal diamond layers. The spectral diffusion-limited line width of zero-phonon luminescence from the NV centers is 1.2 ± 0.5 GHz, a considerable improvement over that of NV centers formed by ion implantation and annealing. Enhanced spin dephasing times (T(2)* ≈ 90 μs, T(2) ≈ 1.7 ms) due to the reduction of (13)C nuclear spins persist even for NV centers placed within 100 nm of the surface., (© 2012 American Chemical Society)
- Published
- 2012
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26. Nanophotonics for quantum optics using nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond.
- Author
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Santori C, Barclay PE, Fu KM, Beausoleil RG, Spillane S, and Fisch M
- Abstract
Optical microcavities and waveguides coupled to diamond are needed to enable efficient communication between quantum systems such as nitrogen-vacancy centers which are known already to have long electron spin coherence lifetimes. This paper describes recent progress in realizing microcavities with low loss and small mode volume in two hybrid systems: silica microdisks coupled to diamond nanoparticles, and gallium phosphide microdisks coupled to single-crystal diamond. A theoretical proposal for a gallium phosphide nanowire photonic crystal cavity coupled to diamond is also discussed. Comparing the two material systems, silica microdisks are easier to fabricate and test. However, at low temperature, nitrogen-vacancy centers in bulk diamond are spectrally more stable, and we expect that in the long term the bulk diamond approach will be better suited for on-chip integration of a photonic network.
- Published
- 2010
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27. Observation of the dynamic Jahn-Teller effect in the excited states of nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond.
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Fu KM, Santori C, Barclay PE, Rogers LJ, Manson NB, and Beausoleil RG
- Abstract
The optical transition linewidth and emission polarization of single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers are measured from 5 K to room temperature. Interexcited state population relaxation is shown to broaden the zero-phonon line and both the relaxation and linewidth are found to follow a T(5) dependence for T < 100 K. This dependence indicates that the dynamic Jahn-Teller effect is the dominant dephasing mechanism for the NV optical transitions at low temperatures.
- Published
- 2009
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28. Hybrid photonic crystal cavity and waveguide for coupling to diamond NV-centers.
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Barclay PE, Fu KM, Santori C, and Beausoleil RG
- Subjects
- Computer-Aided Design, Crystallization methods, Equipment Design, Equipment Failure Analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Diamond chemistry, Nanostructures chemistry, Nanotechnology instrumentation, Optical Devices, Transducers
- Abstract
A design for an ultra-high Q photonic crystal nanocavity engineered to interact with nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers located near the surface of a single crystal diamond sample is presented. The structure is based upon a nanowire photonic crystal geometry, and consists of a patterned high refractive index thin film, such as gallium phosphide (GaP), supported by a diamond substrate. The nanocavity supports a mode with quality factor Q > 1.5 x 10(6) and mode volume V < 0.52(lambda/nGaP)(3), and promises to allow Purcell enhanced collection of spontaneous emission from an NV located more than 50 nm below the diamond surface. The nanowire photonic crystal waveguide can be used to efficiently couple light into and out of the cavity, or as an efficient broadband collector of NV phonon sideband emission. The proposed structures can be fabricated using existing materials and processing techniques.
- Published
- 2009
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29. Coherent interference effects in a nano-assembled diamond NV center cavity-QED system.
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Barclay PE, Santori C, Fu KM, Beausoleil RG, and Painter O
- Abstract
Diamond nanocrystals containing NV color centers are positioned with 100-nanometer-scale accuracy in the near-field of a high-Q SiO(2) microdisk cavity using a fiber taper. The cavity modified nanocrystal photoluminescence is studied, with Fano-like quantum interference features observed in the far-field emission spectrum. A quantum optical model of the system is proposed and fit to the measured spectra, from which the NV(-) zero phonon line coherent coupling rate to the microdisk is estimated to be 28 MHz for a nearly optimally placed nanocrystal.
- Published
- 2009
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30. High prevalence of epilepsy in a village in the Littoral Province of Cameroon.
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Prischich F, De Rinaldis M, Bruno F, Egeo G, Santori C, Zappaterreno A, Fattouch J, Di Bonaventura C, Bada J, Russo G, Pizzuti A, Cardona F, Sa'a, Vullo V, Giallonardo AT, D'Erasmo E, Pelliccia A, and Vanacore N
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age of Onset, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cameroon epidemiology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Comorbidity, Electroencephalography, Endemic Diseases, Epilepsy ethnology, Epilepsy etiology, Epilepsy genetics, Ethnicity genetics, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Female, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Habits, Health Surveys, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Onchocerciasis epidemiology, Pedigree, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Rural Population, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Epilepsy epidemiology
- Abstract
Purpose: In the Littoral Province of Cameroon, in the Sanaga River Valley, a door-to-door epidemiological study was carried out in order to evaluate the prevalence of epilepsy in a small village located in a geographically isolated area, hyper-endemic for onchocerciasis. It was followed by an electro-clinical evaluation of patients and a case-control study., Methods: The study involved a three-phases design: in phase I, a screening questionnaire was administered, in phase II, the presence of epilepsy was confirmed with electro-clinical evaluation, and in phase III, risk factors for epilepsy, socio-economical factors and life habits were evaluated in patients and two matched controls for the age (+/-1 year) residents in the same village. Endemicity level of onchocerciasis was assessed in the village by measuring the prevalence of nodules in adult males aged >or=20 years (PNAM)., Results: One hundred eighty-one subjects (100 male and 81 female) were examined (91.9% of the overall population). The crude prevalence rate of active epilepsy was 105 per 1000 pop (CI 95% 60-150) while the age-adjusted prevalence rate was 134.5 cases per 1000 pop (CI 95% 90-178). Seizures were classified as generalized in 10 patients (52.6%) and partial in nine (47.4%). In 17 patients EEG was recorded. Afterward the electro-clinical classification this distribution was inverted: generalized seizures occurred in 35.3% of cases and partial seizures in 64.7% of cases. The PNAM was 62.5%. The surveyed village was classified as hyper-endemic for onchocerciasis. Among risk factors, only positive family history for epilepsy was found (p=0.031). A sample pedigree of a family with 10 epileptic cases (4 included in the epidemiological study) was showed., Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the first door-to-door study that produce an adjusted prevalence rate on epilepsy in Cameroon. In according to studies done in Tanzania, Liberia, Uganda, and Ethiopia, our results (i.e., the high prevalence rate in a restricted area, the clinical characteristics of epileptic seizures, the positive family history for epilepsy and the type of pedigree of a family with epileptic patients) may be accounted for by the presence of an strong interaction between environmental and genetic factors in some circumscribed areas.
- Published
- 2008
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31. Skeletal turnover, bone mineral density, and fractures in male chronic abusers of alcohol.
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Santori C, Ceccanti M, Diacinti D, Attilia ML, Toppo L, D'Erasmo E, Romagnoli E, Mascia ML, Cipriani C, Prastaro A, Carnevale V, and Minisola S
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Osteoporosis blood, Osteoporosis etiology, Risk Factors, Alcoholism blood, Alcoholism complications, Bone Density physiology, Bone Remodeling physiology, Fractures, Bone blood, Fractures, Bone etiology
- Abstract
Background: Chronic alcohol abuse is a risk factor for osteoporosis and fractures, whose pathogenesis is still unclear. We investigated the influence of alcoholism and other risk factors on calcium and skeletal metabolism, bone mineral density (BMD), and fractures., Materials and Methods: In 51 chronic male alcoholics without liver failure and 31 healthy controls, serum total and ionised calcium, phosphate, creatinine, 25-hydroxy vitamin D (25OHD), PTH, total (ALP) and bone-specific (BALP) alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin (BGP), carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (beta-CTx), osteoprotegerin (OPG) and receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B ligand (RANKL) were assessed. In patients only, we also measured serum testosterone, 17-beta estradiol, LH, and IGF-I. BMD was measured by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry at lumbar spine (LS-) and femur [neck (FN-) and total hip (TF-)]. Vertebral fractures were identified by a semiquantitative method on thoraco-lumbar spine x-ray, non-vertebral fractures (as life-style factors) by history., Results: Alcoholics were leaner, had significantly higher ALP and BALP, and lower BGP and 25OHD levels than controls. No significant difference in other calcium and bone metabolism parameters was found. OPG/RANKL ratio was significantly higher in alcoholics. Beta-CTx negatively correlated with abuse duration. OPG positively correlated with daily alcohol assumption and with indexes of liver cytolysis. Though LS-, FN- and TF-BMD of alcoholics and controls did not significantly differ, patients had a much higher prevalence of vertebral fractures. The same was found considering both vertebral and non-vertebral fractures., Conclusions: Ethanol-induced skeletal damage seems mainly dependent on negative effects on bone formation. Lifestyle factors and traumas likely contribute to the high fracture incidence of alcohol abusers, independently of BMD.
- Published
- 2008
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32. Coherent population trapping of single spins in diamond under optical excitation.
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Santori C, Tamarat P, Neumann P, Wrachtrup J, Fattal D, Beausoleil RG, Rabeau J, Olivero P, Greentree AD, Prawer S, Jelezko F, and Hemmer P
- Abstract
Coherent population trapping is demonstrated in single nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond under optical excitation. For sufficient excitation power, the fluorescence intensity drops almost to the background level when the laser modulation frequency matches the 2.88 GHz splitting of the ground states. The results are well described theoretically by a four-level model, allowing the relative transition strengths to be determined for individual centers. The results show that all-optical control of single spins is possible in diamond.
- Published
- 2006
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33. A gallium nitride single-photon source operating at 200 K.
- Author
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Kako S, Santori C, Hoshino K, Götzinger S, Yamamoto Y, and Arakawa Y
- Abstract
Fundamentally secure quantum cryptography has still not seen widespread application owing to the difficulty of generating single photons on demand. Semiconductor quantum-dot structures have recently shown great promise as practical single-photon sources, and devices with integrated optical cavities and electrical-carrier injection have already been demonstrated. However, a significant obstacle for the application of commonly used III-V quantum dots to quantum-information-processing schemes is the requirement of liquid-helium cryogenic temperatures. Epitaxially grown gallium nitride quantum dots embedded in aluminium nitride have the potential for operation at much higher temperatures. Here, we report triggered single-photon emission from gallium nitride quantum dots at temperatures up to 200 K, a temperature easily reachable with thermo-electric cooling. Gallium nitride quantum dots also open a new wavelength region in the blue and near-ultraviolet portions of the spectrum for single-photon sources.
- Published
- 2006
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34. Coherent population trapping in diamond N-V centers at zero magnetic field.
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Santori C, Fattal D, Spillane SM, Fiorentino M, Beausoleil RG, Greentree AD, Olivero P, Draganski M, Rabeau JR, Reichart P, Gibson BC, Rubanov S, Jamieson DN, and Prawer S
- Abstract
Coherent population trapping at zero magnetic field was observed for nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond under optical excitation. This was measured as a reduction in photoluminescence when the detuning between two excitation lasers matched the 2.88 GHz crystal-field splitting of the color center ground states. This behavior is highly sensitive to strain, which modifies the excited states, and was unexpected following recent experiments demonstrating optical readout of single nitrogen-vacancy electron spins based on cycling transitions. These results demonstrate for the first time that three-level Lambda configurations suitable for proposed quantum information applications can be realized simultaneously for all four orientations of nitrogen-vacancy centers at zero magnetic field.
- Published
- 2006
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35. Coherent population trapping of electron spins in a high-purity n-type GaAs semiconductor.
- Author
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Fu KM, Santori C, Stanley C, Holland MC, and Yamamoto Y
- Abstract
In high-purity n-type GaAs under a strong magnetic field, we are able to isolate a lambda system composed of two Zeeman states of neutral-donor-bound electrons and the lowest Zeeman state of bound excitons. When the two-photon detuning of this system is zero, we observe a pronounced dip in the excited-state photoluminescence, indicating the creation of the coherent population-trapped state. Our data are consistent with a steady-state three-level density-matrix model. The observation of coherent population trapping in GaAs indicates that this and similar semiconductor systems could be used for various electromagnetically induced transparency type experiments.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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36. [High prevalence of thyroid disfunction in primary hyperaldosteronism].
- Author
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Santori C, Di Veroli C, Di Lazzaro F, Caliumi C, Petramala L, Cotesta D, Iorio M, Serra V, Celi M, D'Erasmo E, and Letizia C
- Subjects
- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Hyperaldosteronism complications, Hyperaldosteronism diagnosis, Hypertension complications, Hypertension diagnosis, Hypertension epidemiology, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Thyroid Diseases complications, Thyroid Diseases diagnosis, Thyroid Function Tests, Thyroid Hormones blood, Hyperaldosteronism epidemiology, Thyroid Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Primary hyperaldosteronism is associated with other endocrinology pathologies, like pheochromocytoma, Cushing's syndrome, hyperprolactinemia, primary hyperparathyroidism and a type of multiple endocrine neoplasia. Furthermore, association between hyperaldosteronism and thyroid diseases were already pointed out. Aim of the study was to value the prevalence of some thyroid diseases in a series of patients with primary hyperaldosteronism. We studied 105 consecutive patients with primary hyperaldosteronism, 43 (40.95%) with adrenal adenoma, 62 (50.05%) with bilateral adrenal hyperplasia and a control group of 223 patients with essential arterial hypertension. In all patients we tested thyroid function (FT3, FT4, TSH), thyroid antibodies (AbTPO, AbTG) and, sometimes, thyroid morphology by ultrasonography (US scan). The results of the study show that thyroid disfunction occur in 28.6% of patients with primary hyperaldosteronism and in 16.6% of patients with essential hypertension, with a statistically significative difference (chi2 = 0.012). At present, the relationship between primary hyperaldosteronism and thyroid diseases is unclear, but it can be hypothesized that there are common pathogenetic mechanisms, like an imbalance between various growth factors. Further studies are necessary to confirm the results of our study.
- Published
- 2005
37. Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate and bone resorption rates as reflected by serum levels of C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen: a study in healthy men.
- Author
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Carnevale V, Scillitani A, Vecci E, D'Erasmo E, Romagnoli E, Paglia F, Pepe J, Baldini V, Santori C, De Geronimo S, and Minisola S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging blood, Body Mass Index, Collagen Type I, Estradiol blood, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reference Values, Testosterone blood, Bone Remodeling, Collagen blood, Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate blood, Peptides blood
- Abstract
Sex steroid hormones contribute to the physiological regulation of bone turnover in males. To address this issue, we investigated serum estradiol (E2), total testosterone (T), and DHEAS concentrations, along with serum levels of carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (sCTx), in a sample of 76 healthy men aged 23 to 87. The concentration of sCTx declined with age. Both T and DHEAS, at variance with E2, showed a significant age-related decline. T, DHEAS and sCTx significantly (p<0.01) correlated with each other. DHEAS and T were significantly associated after correcting for age (r=0.35, p=0.002) or body mass index (r=0.65, p<0.0001). DHEAS, but not T, significantly correlated with sCTx after correcting for age (r=0.26, p=0.026, and r=0.20, p=0.08, respectively). Stepwise multiple regression analysis showed that only DHEAS (but not T or E2) was a significant independent predictor of sCTx (p=0.0001). Our results show that adrenal androgens play a crucial role in regulating bone resorption in aging men.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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38. Entanglement formation and violation of Bell's inequality with a semiconductor single photon source.
- Author
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Fattal D, Inoue K, Vucković J, Santori C, Solomon GS, and Yamamoto Y
- Abstract
We report the generation of polarization-entangled photons, using a quantum dot single photon source, linear optics, and photodetectors. Two photons created independently are observed to violate Bell's inequality. The density matrix describing the polarization state of the postselected photon pairs is reconstructed and agrees well with a simple model predicting the quality of entanglement from the known parameters of the single photon source. Our scheme provides a method to create no more than one entangled photon pair per cycle after postselection, a feature useful to enhance quantum cryptography protocols based on shared entanglement.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Secure communication: quantum cryptography with a photon turnstile.
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Waks E, Inoue K, Santori C, Fattal D, Vuckovic J, Solomon GS, and Yamamoto Y
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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40. Efficient source of single photons: a single quantum dot in a micropost microcavity.
- Author
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Pelton M, Santori C, Vucković J, Zhang B, Solomon GS, Plant J, and Yamamoto Y
- Abstract
We have demonstrated efficient production of triggered single photons by coupling a single semiconductor quantum dot to a three-dimensionally confined optical mode in a micropost microcavity. The efficiency of emitting single photons into a single-mode traveling wave is approximately 38%, which is nearly 2 orders of magnitude higher than for a quantum dot in bulk semiconductor material. At the same time, the probability of having more than one photon in a given pulse is reduced by a factor of 7 as compared to light with Poissonian photon statistics.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Indistinguishable photons from a single-photon device.
- Author
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Santori C, Fattal D, Vucković J, Solomon GS, and Yamamoto Y
- Abstract
Single-photon sources have recently been demonstrated using a variety of devices, including molecules, mesoscopic quantum wells, colour centres, trapped ions and semiconductor quantum dots. Compared with a Poisson-distributed source of the same intensity, these sources rarely emit two or more photons in the same pulse. Numerous applications for single-photon sources have been proposed in the field of quantum information, but most--including linear-optical quantum computation--also require consecutive photons to have identical wave packets. For a source based on a single quantum emitter, the emitter must therefore be excited in a rapid or deterministic way, and interact little with its surrounding environment. Here we test the indistinguishability of photons emitted by a semiconductor quantum dot in a microcavity through a Hong-Ou-Mandel-type two-photon interference experiment. We find that consecutive photons are largely indistinguishable, with a mean wave-packet overlap as large as 0.81, making this source useful in a variety of experiments in quantum optics and quantum information.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Condensation of semiconductor microcavity exciton polaritons.
- Author
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Deng H, Weihs G, Santori C, Bloch J, and Yamamoto Y
- Abstract
A phase transition from a classical thermal mixed state to a quantum-mechanical pure state of exciton polaritons is observed in a GaAs multiple quantum-well microcavity from the decrease of the second-order coherence function. Supporting evidence is obtained from the observation of a nonlinear threshold behavior in the pump-intensity dependence of the emission, a polariton-like dispersion relation above threshold, and a decrease of the relaxation time into the lower polariton state. The condensation of microcavity exciton polaritons is confirmed.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Kangaroo (skin-to-skin) care with a postpartum woman who felt depressed.
- Author
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Dombrowski MA, Anderson GC, Santori C, and Burkhammer M
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Maternal-Child Nursing, Pregnancy, Adaptation, Psychological, Depression, Postpartum nursing, Infant Care methods, Infant, Premature, Mother-Child Relations, Substance-Related Disorders nursing
- Abstract
The mother in this case study had numerous known risk factors for postpartum depression and was in rehabilitation for drug abuse. She was crying at 2 hours postbirth and expressing feelings of sadness as her baby was being unwrapped for her first kangaroo care (KC) experience. Thereafter, during our research protocol, her self-reported depression scores decreased rapidly and had disappeared by 32 hours postbirth. A benefit of KC requiring systematic study is that KC may lessen maternal depression. There is new knowledge that some functions of the maternal HPA axis become dampened during the last trimester of pregnancy as the placenta increases its secretion of corticotrophin-releasing hormone. The sudden loss of the placenta following delivery, accompanied by a suppressed HPA axis, may have an effect on mood during the immediate postpartum period. Perhaps appropriate reactivation of the maternal HPA axis can be triggered following birth by the stimulation inherent in KC, thereby minimizing risk for postpartum depression.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Triggered single photons from a quantum dot.
- Author
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Santori C, Pelton M, Solomon G, Dale Y, and Yamamoto Y
- Abstract
We demonstrate a new method for generating triggered single photons. After a laser pulse generates excitons inside a single quantum dot, electrostatic interactions between them and the resulting spectral shifts allow a single emitted photon to be isolated. Correlation measurements show a reduction of the two-photon probability to 0.12 times the value for Poisson light. Strong antibunching persists when the emission is saturated. The emitted photons are also polarized.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Regulated and entangled photons from a single quantum Dot
- Author
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Benson O, Santori C, Pelton M, and Yamamoto Y
- Abstract
We propose a new method of generating nonclassical optical field states. The method uses a semiconductor device, which consists of a single quantum dot as active medium embedded in a p- i- n junction and surrounded by a microcavity. Resonant tunneling of electrons and holes into the quantum dot ground states, together with the Pauli exclusion principle, produce regulated single photons or regulated pairs of photons. We propose that this device also has the unique potential to generate pairs of entangled photons at a well-defined repetition rate.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Kangaroo skin-to-skin care for premature twins and their adolescent parents.
- Author
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Dombrowski MA, Anderson GC, Santori C, Roller CG, Pagliotti F, and Dowling DA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Infant Care methods, Infant, Premature, Maternal-Child Nursing, Parent-Child Relations, Pregnancy in Adolescence, Twins
- Abstract
Risk factors associated with prematurity and adolescent parenting greatly increase when combined with multiple birth. Kangaroo care (KC) for preterm infants is well documented, although KC with twins or with adolescent parents is mentioned only briefly. In this case study, adolescent parents experience KC with their 32-week twin sons beginning 19 hours postbirth. These young parents interacted with, responded to, and took responsibility for their newborn sons, behaviors that are sometimes difficult for adolescent parents. Thus, KC appeared to be an effective intervention for these adolescent parents. Additionally, three kinds of KC with twins were identified: separate, sequential, and shared.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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