141 results on '"F. Gabler"'
Search Results
2. Investigating Brain Injury Tolerance in the Sagittal Plane Using a Finite Element Model of the Human Head
- Author
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Lee F. Gabler, Jeff R. Crandall, and Matthew B. Panzer
- Subjects
Motor vehicles. Aeronautics. Astronautics ,TL1-4050 - Abstract
Despite decades of research and regulation, brain injuries remain a leading cause of traffic related death and disability worldwide. In this study, the human tolerance to brain injury was investigated by applying pure angular and linear kinematic loading conditions in the sagittal plane to a finite element model of the head. The relationship between peak acceleration and impact duration was determined at several levels of constant injury risk for two strain-based injury criteria. Results revealed that brain injury tolerance depends on peak acceleration and impact duration, which were found to be inversely related for constant injury risk.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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3. Expression of PD-L1 in renal cancer, prognostic features and clinical utility of its routine staining
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R. Massouh Skorin, P. Escovar la Riva, F. Gabler, M. Kirmayr, T. Khamis, S. Escobar, A. Díaz, and L. Soto
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
4. Head shape analysis of National Football League Players
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Chris Sherwood, Gwansik Park, Nathan Z. Dau, Ann M. Bailey, Jeffrey Richard Crandall, Kristy B. Arbogast, and Lee F. Gabler
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Statistical shape analysis ,0206 medical engineering ,Head injury ,General Engineering ,030229 sport sciences ,02 engineering and technology ,Football ,League ,medicine.disease ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Head shape ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine ,Head (vessel) ,Psychology - Abstract
Understanding the size and shape variations of the head is important to the design of football helmets used to mitigate the risk of head injury. Current guidelines for selecting helmets use only the circumference of the player’s head to determine an appropriate size that may not offer the best fit and protection for every player. The goal of this study was to quantify key measurements of head shape to sufficiently characterize variability among players in the National Football League (NFL), focusing on the shape variation of the cranial region. Statistical shape analysis was performed on three-dimensional head scans of 87 contemporary NFL players to identify key features of head shape variability among the players’ heads. The principal component analysis revealed two factors that explained 87% of the head shape variance: (1) height and length of the head in the sagittal plane and (2) prominent back of the head with an oval shape in the transverse plane versus prominent forehead with a round shape. Four head shape measurements (circumference, length, breadth, and height) were then defined and quantified to describe the first two principal components. This information can facilitate improvements in the design of football helmets.
- Published
- 2021
5. On-Field Performance of an Instrumented Mouthguard for Detecting Head Impacts in American Football
- Author
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Nathan Z. Dau, Jacob E. Resch, Samuel H. Huddleston, Kristy B. Arbogast, Xavier D. Thompson, Lee F. Gabler, Jeffrey Richard Crandall, and David Lessley
- Subjects
business.product_category ,Computer science ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,American football ,Wearable computer ,Poison control ,02 engineering and technology ,Football ,Kinematics ,Accelerometer ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Mouthguard ,Spurious relationship ,business ,Simulation - Abstract
Wearable sensors that accurately record head impacts experienced by athletes during play can enable a wide range of potential applications including equipment improvements, player education, and rule changes. One challenge for wearable systems is their ability to discriminate head impacts from recorded spurious signals. This study describes the development and evaluation of a head impact detection system consisting of a mouthguard sensor and machine learning model for distinguishing head impacts from spurious events in football games. Twenty-one collegiate football athletes participating in 11 games during the 2018 and 2019 seasons wore a custom-fit mouthguard instrumented with linear and angular accelerometers to collect kinematic data. Video was reviewed to classify sensor events, collected from instrumented players that sustained head impacts, as head impacts or spurious events. Data from 2018 games were used to train the ML model to classify head impacts using kinematic data features (127 head impacts; 305 non-head impacts). Performance of the mouthguard sensor and ML model were evaluated using an independent test dataset of 3 games from 2019 (58 head impacts; 74 non-head impacts). Based on the test dataset results, the mouthguard sensor alone detected 81.6% of video-confirmed head impacts while the ML classifier provided 98.3% precision and 100% recall, resulting in an overall head impact detection system that achieved 98.3% precision and 81.6% recall.
- Published
- 2020
6. Development and Evaluation of a Test Method for Assessing the Performance of American Football Helmets
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Jeffrey Richard Crandall, Erin J. Sanchez, Ann M. Bailey, Chris Withnall, Gwansik Park, Lee F. Gabler, Michael Wonnacott, Kristy B. Arbogast, Barry S. Myers, and James R. Funk
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Computer science ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,American football ,02 engineering and technology ,Test method ,Football ,medicine.disease ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Standard deviation ,Test (assessment) ,Data set ,Concussion ,Statistics ,medicine ,Metric (unit) ,human activities - Abstract
As more is learned about injury mechanisms of concussion and scenarios under which injuries are sustained in football games, methods used to evaluate protective equipment must adapt. A combination of video review, videogrammetry, and laboratory reconstructions was used to characterize concussive impacts from National Football League games during the 2015-2017 seasons. Test conditions were generated based upon impact locations and speeds from this data set, and a method for scoring overall helmet performance was created. Head kinematics generated using a linear impactor and sliding table fixture were comparable to those from laboratory reconstructions of concussive impacts at similar impact conditions. Impact tests were performed on 36 football helmet models at two laboratories to evaluate the reproducibility of results from the resulting test protocol. Head acceleration response metric, a head impact severity metric, varied 2.9–5.6% for helmet impacts in the same lab, and 3.8–6.0% for tests performed in a separate lab when averaged by location for the models tested. Overall inter-lab helmet performance varied by 1.1 ± 0.9%, while the standard deviation in helmet performance score was 7.0%. The worst helmet performance score was 33% greater than the score of the best-performing helmet evaluated by this study.
- Published
- 2020
7. Integrating Human and Nonhuman Primate Data to Estimate Human Tolerances for Traumatic Brain Injury
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Taotao Wu, Fusako Sato, Jacobo Antona-Makoshi, Lee F. Gabler, J. Sebastian Giudice, Ahmed Alshareef, Masayuki Yaguchi, Mitsutoshi Masuda, Susan S. Margulies, and Matthew B. Panzer
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Primates ,Brain Injuries ,Physiology (medical) ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,Finite Element Analysis ,Football ,Biomedical Engineering ,Animals ,Brain ,Humans ,Biomechanical Phenomena - Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) contributes to a significant portion of the injuries resulting from motor vehicle crashes, falls, and sports collisions. The development of advanced countermeasures to mitigate these injuries requires a complete understanding of the tolerance of the human brain to injury. In this study, we developed a new method to establish human injury tolerance levels using an integrated database of reconstructed football impacts, subinjurious human volunteer data, and nonhuman primate data. The human tolerance levels were analyzed using tissue-level metrics determined using harmonized species-specific finite element (FE) brain models. Kinematics-based metrics involving complete characterization of angular motion (e.g., diffuse axonal multi-axial general evaluation (DAMAGE)) showed better power of predicting tissue-level deformation in a variety of impact conditions and were subsequently used to characterize injury tolerance. The proposed human brain tolerances for mild and severe TBI were estimated and presented in the form of injury risk curves based on selected tissue-level and kinematics-based injury metrics. The application of the estimated injury tolerances was finally demonstrated using real-world automotive crash data.
- Published
- 2022
8. Brain tissue strains vary with head impact location: A possible explanation for increased concussion risk in struck versus striking football players
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Gunter P. Siegmund, Matthew B. Panzer, Benjamin S. Elkin, and Lee F. Gabler
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Head impact ,Acceleration ,Finite Element Analysis ,Football ,Biophysics ,Brain tissue ,Kinematics ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cerebellum ,Statistics ,Concussion ,medicine ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Cerebrum ,Brain Concussion ,Football players ,Brain model ,Equipment Design ,030229 sport sciences ,Explained variation ,medicine.disease ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Athletes ,Athletic Injuries ,Head Protective Devices ,Head ,human activities ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Brain Stem - Abstract
Background On-field football helmet impacts over a large range of severities have caused concussions in some players but not in other players. One possible explanation for this variability is the struck player's helmet impact location. Methods We examined the effect of impact location on regional brain tissue strain when input energy was held constant. Laboratory impacts were performed at 12 locations distributed over the helmet and the resulting head kinematics were simulated in two finite element models of the brain: the Simulated Injury Monitor and the Global Human Body Model Consortium brain model. Findings Peak kinematics, injury metrics and brain strain varied significantly with impact location. Differences in impact location explained 33 to 37% of the total variance in brain strain for the whole brain and cerebrum, considerably more than the variance explained by impact location for the peak resultant head kinematics (8 to 23%) and slightly more than half of the variance explained by the difference in closing speed (57 to 61%). Both finite element models generated similar strain results, with minor variations for impacts that generated multi-axial rotations, larger variations in brainstem strains for some impact locations and a small bias for the cerebellum. Interpretation Based on this experimental and computational simulation study, impact location on the football helmet has a large effect on regional brain tissue strain. We also found that the lowest strains consistently occurred in impacts to the crown and forehead, helmet locations commonly associated with the striking player.
- Published
- 2019
9. Development of a Second-Order System for Rapid Estimation of Maximum Brain Strain
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Matthew B. Panzer, Jeffrey Richard Crandall, and Lee F. Gabler
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Adult ,Male ,Angular acceleration ,Rotation ,Computer science ,Finite Element Analysis ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Brain ,Stiffness ,Equations of motion ,02 engineering and technology ,Kinematics ,Mechanics ,Models, Biological ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Finite element method ,Effective mass (spring–mass system) ,Brain Injuries ,medicine ,Range (statistics) ,Humans ,Head (vessel) ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
Diffuse brain injuries are assessed with deformation-based criteria that utilize metrics based on rotational head kinematics to estimate brain injury severity. Although numerous metrics have been proposed, many are based on empirically-derived models that use peak kinematics, which often limit their applicability to a narrow range of head impact conditions. However, over a broad range of impact conditions, brain deformation response to rotational head motion behaves similarly to a second-order mechanical system, which utilizes the full kinematic time history of a head impact. This study describes a new brain injury metric called Diffuse Axonal Multi-Axis General Evaluation (DAMAGE). DAMAGE is based on the equations of motion of a three-degree-of-freedom, coupled 2nd-order system, and predicts maximum brain strain using the directionally dependent angular acceleration time-histories from a head impact. Parameters for the effective mass, stiffness, and damping were determined using simplified rotational pulses which were applied multiaxially to a 50th percentile adult human male finite element model. DAMAGE was then validated with a separate database of 1747 head impacts including helmet, crash, and sled tests and human volunteer responses. Relative to existing rotational brain injury metrics that were evaluated in this study, DAMAGE was found to be the best predictor of maximum brain strain.
- Published
- 2018
10. Development of a Low-Power Instrumented Mouthpiece for Directly Measuring Head Acceleration in American Football
- Author
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Lee F, Gabler, Nathan Z, Dau, Gwansik, Park, Alex, Miles, Kristy B, Arbogast, and Jeff R, Crandall
- Subjects
Sports Equipment ,Wearable Electronic Devices ,Acceleration ,Football ,Humans ,Mouth Protectors ,Telemetry ,Equipment Design ,Head ,United States ,Biomechanical Phenomena - Abstract
Instrumented mouthpieces (IM) offer a means of measuring head impacts that occur in sport. Direct measurement of angular head kinematics is preferential for accuracy; however, existing IMs measure angular velocity and differentiate the measurement to calculate angular acceleration, which can limit bandwidth and consume more power. This study presents the development and validation of an IM that uses new, low-power accelerometers for direct measurement of linear and angular acceleration over a broad range of head impact conditions in American football. IM sensor accuracy for measuring six-degree-of-freedom head kinematics was assessed using two helmeted headforms instrumented with a custom-fit IM and reference sensor instrumentation. Head impacts were performed at 10 locations and 6 speeds representative of the on-field conditions associated with injurious and non-injurious impacts in American football. Sensor measurements from the IM were highly correlated with those from the reference instrumentation located at the maxilla and skull center of gravity. Based on pooled data across headform and impact location, R
- Published
- 2021
11. On-Field Performance of an Instrumented Mouthguard for Detecting Head Impacts in American Football
- Author
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Lee F, Gabler, Samuel H, Huddleston, Nathan Z, Dau, David J, Lessley, Kristy B, Arbogast, Xavier, Thompson, Jacob E, Resch, and Jeff R, Crandall
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Wearable Electronic Devices ,Adolescent ,Accelerometry ,Football ,Video Recording ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Humans ,Mouth Protectors ,Head - Abstract
Wearable sensors that accurately record head impacts experienced by athletes during play can enable a wide range of potential applications including equipment improvements, player education, and rule changes. One challenge for wearable systems is their ability to discriminate head impacts from recorded spurious signals. This study describes the development and evaluation of a head impact detection system consisting of a mouthguard sensor and machine learning model for distinguishing head impacts from spurious events in football games. Twenty-one collegiate football athletes participating in 11 games during the 2018 and 2019 seasons wore a custom-fit mouthguard instrumented with linear and angular accelerometers to collect kinematic data. Video was reviewed to classify sensor events, collected from instrumented players that sustained head impacts, as head impacts or spurious events. Data from 2018 games were used to train the ML model to classify head impacts using kinematic data features (127 head impacts; 305 non-head impacts). Performance of the mouthguard sensor and ML model were evaluated using an independent test dataset of 3 games from 2019 (58 head impacts; 74 non-head impacts). Based on the test dataset results, the mouthguard sensor alone detected 81.6% of video-confirmed head impacts while the ML classifier provided 98.3% precision and 100% recall, resulting in an overall head impact detection system that achieved 98.3% precision and 81.6% recall.
- Published
- 2020
12. Development and Evaluation of a Test Method for Assessing the Performance of American Football Helmets
- Author
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Ann M, Bailey, Erin J, Sanchez, Gwansik, Park, Lee F, Gabler, James R, Funk, Jeff R, Crandall, Michael, Wonnacott, Chris, Withnall, Barry S, Myers, and Kristy B, Arbogast
- Subjects
Male ,Rotation ,Acceleration ,Football ,Humans ,Head Protective Devices ,Head ,Models, Biological ,Brain Concussion ,United States - Abstract
As more is learned about injury mechanisms of concussion and scenarios under which injuries are sustained in football games, methods used to evaluate protective equipment must adapt. A combination of video review, videogrammetry, and laboratory reconstructions was used to characterize concussive impacts from National Football League games during the 2015-2017 seasons. Test conditions were generated based upon impact locations and speeds from this data set, and a method for scoring overall helmet performance was created. Head kinematics generated using a linear impactor and sliding table fixture were comparable to those from laboratory reconstructions of concussive impacts at similar impact conditions. Impact tests were performed on 36 football helmet models at two laboratories to evaluate the reproducibility of results from the resulting test protocol. Head acceleration response metric, a head impact severity metric, varied 2.9-5.6% for helmet impacts in the same lab, and 3.8-6.0% for tests performed in a separate lab when averaged by location for the models tested. Overall inter-lab helmet performance varied by 1.1 ± 0.9%, while the standard deviation in helmet performance score was 7.0%. The worst helmet performance score was 33% greater than the score of the best-performing helmet evaluated by this study.
- Published
- 2020
13. A Multibody Model for Predicting Spatial Distribution of Human Brain Deformation Following Impact Loading
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Samantha N. Schumm, David Gabrieli, Lee F. Gabler, Matthew B. Panzer, Rich Scheinfeld, David F. Meaney, Jared A. Rifkin, Taotao Wu, and Nicholas F. Vigilante
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Percentile ,Angular acceleration ,Rotation ,0206 medical engineering ,Finite Element Analysis ,Biomedical Engineering ,Angular velocity ,02 engineering and technology ,Kinematics ,Models, Biological ,03 medical and health sciences ,Acceleration ,0302 clinical medicine ,Approximation error ,Physiology (medical) ,Mathematics ,business.industry ,Brain ,Structural engineering ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Research Papers ,Finite element method ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Dynamic loading ,Brain Injuries ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
With an increasing focus on long-term consequences of concussive brain injuries, there is a new emphasis on developing tools that can accurately predict the mechanical response of the brain to impact loading. Although finite element models (FEM) estimate the brain response under dynamic loading, these models are not capable of delivering rapid (∼seconds) estimates of the brain's mechanical response. In this study, we develop a multibody spring-mass-damper model that estimates the regional motion of the brain to rotational accelerations delivered either about one anatomic axis or across three orthogonal axes simultaneously. In total, we estimated the deformation across 120 locations within a 50th percentile human brain. We found the multibody model (MBM) correlated, but did not precisely predict, the computed finite element response (average relative error: 18.4 ± 13.1%). We used machine learning (ML) to combine the prediction from the MBM and the loading kinematics (peak rotational acceleration, peak rotational velocity) and significantly reduced the discrepancy between the MBM and FEM (average relative error: 9.8 ± 7.7%). Using an independent sports injury testing set, we found the hybrid ML model also correlated well with predictions from a FEM (average relative error: 16.4 ± 10.2%). Finally, we used this hybrid MBM-ML approach to predict strains appearing in different locations throughout the brain, with average relative error estimates ranging from 8.6% to 25.2% for complex, multi-axial acceleration loading. Together, these results show a rapid and reasonably accurate method for predicting the mechanical response of the brain for single and multiplanar inputs, and provide a new tool for quickly assessing the consequences of impact loading throughout the brain.
- Published
- 2019
14. Investigating Brain Injury Tolerance in the Sagittal Plane Using a Finite Element Model of the Human Head
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Jeffrey Richard Crandall, Lee F. Gabler, and Matthew B. Panzer
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,Engineering drawing ,Human head ,business.industry ,Injury tolerance ,0206 medical engineering ,Human Factors and Ergonomics ,02 engineering and technology ,Structural engineering ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Finite element method ,Sagittal plane ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Automotive Engineering ,Medicine ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,business - Published
- 2016
15. Development of a Single-Degree-of-Freedom Mechanical Model for Predicting Strain-Based Brain Injury Responses
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Lee F. Gabler, Hamed Joodaki, Matthew B. Panzer, and Jeffrey Richard Crandall
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Risk ,Angular acceleration ,Finite Element Analysis ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Angular velocity ,02 engineering and technology ,Kinematics ,Displacement (vector) ,Stress (mechanics) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Acceleration ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physiology (medical) ,Range of Motion, Articular ,Physics ,Human head ,Deformation (mechanics) ,business.industry ,Structural engineering ,Mechanics ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Brain Injuries ,Stress, Mechanical ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Linking head kinematics to injury risk has been the focus of numerous brain injury criteria. Although many early forms were developed using mechanics principles, recent criteria have been developed using empirical methods based on subsets of head impact data. In this study, a single-degree-of-freedom (sDOF) mechanical analog was developed to parametrically investigate the link between rotational head kinematics and brain deformation. Model efficacy was assessed by comparing the maximum magnitude of displacement to strain-based brain injury predictors from finite element (FE) human head models. A series of idealized rotational pulses covering a broad range of acceleration and velocity magnitudes (0.1–15 krad/s2 and 1–100 rad/s) with durations between 1 and 3000 ms were applied to the mechanical models about each axis of the head. Results show that brain deformation magnitude is governed by three categories of rotational head motion each distinguished by the duration of the pulse relative to the brain's natural period: for short-duration pulses, maximum brain deformation depended primarily on angular velocity magnitude; for long-duration pulses, brain deformation depended primarily on angular acceleration magnitude; and for pulses relatively close to the natural period, brain deformation depended on both velocity and acceleration magnitudes. These results suggest that brain deformation mechanics can be adequately explained by simple mechanical systems, since FE model responses and experimental brain injury tolerances exhibited similar patterns to the sDOF model. Finally, the sDOF model was the best correlate to strain-based responses and highlighted fundamental limitations with existing rotational-based brain injury metrics.
- Published
- 2018
16. Development of a Metric for Predicting Brain Strain Responses Using Head Kinematics
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Lee F. Gabler, Matthew B. Panzer, and Jeffrey Richard Crandall
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Male ,Head impact ,Movement ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Accidents, Traffic ,Brain ,02 engineering and technology ,Kinematics ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Models, Biological ,Finite element method ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Brain Injuries ,Injury data ,Injury risk ,Humans ,Female ,Fe model ,Biological system ,Head ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Diffuse brain injuries are caused by excessive brain deformation generated primarily by rapid rotational head motion. Metrics that describe the severity of brain injury based on head motion often do not represent the governing physics of brain deformation, rendering them ineffective over a broad range of head impact conditions. This study develops a brain injury metric based on the response of a second-order mechanical system, and relates rotational head kinematics to strain-based brain injury metrics: maximum principal strain (MPS) and cumulative strain damage measure (CSDM). This new metric, universal brain injury criterion (UBrIC), is applicable over a broad range of kinematics encountered in automotive crash and sports. Efficacy of UBrIC was demonstrated by comparing it to MPS and CSDM predicted in 1600 head impacts using two different finite element (FE) brain models. Relative to existing metrics, UBrIC had the highest correlation with the FE models, and performed better in most impact conditions. While UBrIC provides a reliable measurement for brain injury assessment in a broad range of head impact conditions, and can inform helmet and countermeasure design, an injury risk function was not incorporated into its current formulation until validated strain-based risk functions can be developed and verified against human injury data.
- Published
- 2017
17. A reanalysis of football impact reconstructions for head kinematics and finite element modeling
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Lee F. Gabler, Erin J. Sanchez, Matthew B. Panzer, Jeffrey Richard Crandall, Ann B. Good, and James R. Funk
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Male ,Computer science ,Acceleration ,Finite Element Analysis ,Biophysics ,Football ,Angular velocity ,Kinematics ,Accelerometer ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Circular motion ,Consistency (statistics) ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Computer Simulation ,Brain Concussion ,Brain ,030229 sport sciences ,Equipment Design ,Finite element method ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Athletic Injuries ,Head (vessel) ,Head Protective Devices ,Error detection and correction ,Algorithm ,Head ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Algorithms - Abstract
Background Head kinematics generated by laboratory reconstructions of professional football helmet impacts have been applied to computational models to study the biomechanics of concussion. Since the original publication of this data, techniques for evaluating accelerometer consistency and error correction have been developed. This study applies these techniques to the original reconstruction data and reanalyzes the results given the current state of concussion biomechanics. Methods Consistency checks were applied to the sensor data collected in the head of each test dummy. Inconsistent data were corrected using analytical techniques, and head kinematics were recalculated from the corrected data. Reconstruction videos were reviewed to identify artefactual impacts during the reconstruction to establish the region of applicability for simulations. Corrected head kinematics were input into finite element brain models to investigate strain response to the corrected dataset. Findings Multiple reconstruction cases had inconsistent sensor arrays caused by a problematic sensor; corrections to the arrays caused changes in calculated rotational head motion. These corrections increased median peak angular velocity for the concussion cases from 35.6 to 41.5 rad/s. Using the original kinematics resulted in an average error of 20% in maximum principal strain results for each case. Simulations of the reconstructions also demonstrated that simulation lengths less than 40 ms did not capture the entire brain strain response and under-predicted strain. Interpretation This study corrects data that were used to determine concussion risk, and indicates altered head angular motion and brain strain response for many reconstructions. Conclusions based on the original data should be re-examined based on this new study.
- Published
- 2017
18. Evaluation of Head and Brain Injury Risk Functions Using Sub-Injurious Human Volunteer Data
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Ardyn V Olszko, Lee F. Gabler, Erin J. Sanchez, V. Carol Chancey, Jeffrey Richard Crandall, James S. McGhee, and Matthew B. Panzer
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medicine.medical_specialty ,0206 medical engineering ,Poison control ,02 engineering and technology ,Kinematics ,Risk Assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Injury prevention ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,Medicine ,Injury risk ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Humans ,Volunteer ,business.industry ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Healthy Volunteers ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Clinical diagnosis ,Neurology (clinical) ,Human research ,Risk assessment ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Risk assessment models are developed to estimate the probability of brain injury during head impact using mechanical response variables such as head kinematics and brain tissue deformation. Existing injury risk functions have been developed using different datasets based on human volunteer and scaled animal injury responses to impact. However, many of these functions have not been independently evaluated with respect to laboratory-controlled human response data. In this study, the specificity of 14 existing brain injury risk functions was assessed by evaluating their ability to correctly predict non-injurious response using previously conducted sled tests with well-instrumented human research volunteers. Six degrees-of-freedom head kinematics data were obtained for 335 sled tests involving subjects in frontal, lateral, and oblique sled conditions up to 16 Gs peak sled acceleration. A review of the medical reports associated with each individual test indicated no clinical diagnosis of mild or moderate brain injury in any of the cases evaluated. Kinematic-based head and brain injury risk probabilities were calculated directly from the kinematic data, while strain-based risks were determined through finite element model simulation of the 335 tests. Several injury risk functions substantially over predict the likelihood of concussion and diffuse axonal injury; proposed maximum principal strain-based injury risk functions predicted nearly 80 concussions and 14 cases of severe diffuse axonal injury out of the 335 non-injurious cases. This work is an important first step in assessing the efficacy of existing brain risk functions and highlights the need for more predictive injury assessment models.
- Published
- 2017
19. Assessment of Kinematic Brain Injury Metrics for Predicting Strain Responses in Diverse Automotive Impact Conditions
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Jeffrey Richard Crandall, Lee F. Gabler, and Matthew B. Panzer
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Engineering ,business.industry ,0206 medical engineering ,Acceleration ,Biomedical Engineering ,Pendulum ,Accidents, Traffic ,Poison control ,Angular velocity ,02 engineering and technology ,Kinematics ,Structural engineering ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Control theory ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,Range (statistics) ,Head (vessel) ,Humans ,Metric (unit) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Numerous injury criteria have been developed to predict brain injury using the kinematic response of the head during impact. Each criterion utilizes a metric that is some mathematical combination of the velocity and/or acceleration components of translational and/or rotational head motion. Early metrics were based on linear acceleration of the head, but recent injury criteria have shifted towards rotational-based metrics. Currently, there is no universally accepted metric that is suitable for a diverse range of head impacts. In this study, we assessed the capability of fifteen existing kinematic-based metrics for predicting strain-based brain response using four different automotive impact conditions. Tissue-level strains were obtained through finite element model simulation of 660 head impacts including occupant and pedestrian crash tests, and pendulum head impacts. Correlations between head kinematic metrics and predicted brain strain-based metrics were evaluated. Correlations between brain strain and metrics based on angular velocity were highest among those evaluated, while metrics based on linear acceleration were least correlative. BrIC and RVCI were the kinematic metrics with the highest overall correlation; however, each metric had limitations in certain impact conditions. The results of this study suggest that rotational head kinematics are the most important parameters for brain injury criteria.
- Published
- 2016
20. ANDROLOGY
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J. C. Y. Hu, B. K. Seo, Q. V. Neri, Z. Rozenwaks, G. D. Palermo, T. Fields, D. Monahan, Z. Rosenwaks, P. Szkodziak, K. Plewka, S. Wozniak, P. Czuczwar, A. Mroczkowski, C. Lorenzo Leon, J. Hernandez, E. Chinea Mendez, C. Concepcion Lorenzo, V. Sanabria Perez, M. Puopolo, A. Palumbo, B. Toth, C. Franz, M. Montag, A. Boing, T. Strowitzki, R. Nieuwland, G. Griesinger, A. Schultze-Mosgau, T. Cordes, M. Depenbusch, K. Diedrich, V. Vloeberghs, G. Verheyen, M. Camus, H. Van de Velde, A. Goossens, H. Tournaye, G. Coppola, G. Di Caprio, M. Wilding, P. Ferraro, G. Esposito, L. Di Matteo, R. Dale, B. Dale, S. Daoud, J. Auger, J. P. Wolf, E. Dulioust, R. Lafuente, G. Lopez, M. Brassesco, M. Hamad, M. Montenarh, M. Hammadeh, F. Robles, M. C. Magli, A. Crippa, E. Pescatori, A. P. Ferraretti, L. Gianaroli, M. Zahiri, M. Movahedin, S. J. Mowla, M. Noruzinia, A. M. Crivello, N. Sermondade, C. Dupont, E. Hafhouf, I. Cedrin-Durnerin, C. Poncelet, B. Benzacken, R. Levy, C. Sifer, F. Ferfouri, F. Boitrelle, P. Clement, D. Molina Gomes, M. Bailly, J. Selva, F. Vialard, E. Yaprak, M. Basar, E. Guzel, O. Arda, T. Irez, P. Norambuena, P. Krenkova, F. Tuettelmann, S. Kliesch, P. Paulasova, A. Stambergova, M. Macek, R. Rivera, T. Garrido-Gomez, S. Galletero, M. Meseguer, F. Dominguez, N. Garrido, C. Mallidis, V. Sanchez, L. Weigeng, K. Redmann, J. Wistuba, P. Gross, F. Wuebbelling, C. Fallnich, M. Burger, S. Schlatt, M. San Celestino Carchenilla, A. Pacheco Castro, P. Simon Sanjurjo, A. Molinero Ballesteros, S. Rubio Garcia, J. A. Garcia Velasco, B. Macanovic, V. Otasevic, A. Korac, M. Vucetic, E. Garalejic, I. Ivanovic Burmazovic, M. R. Filipovic, B. Buzadzic, A. Stancic, A. Jankovic, K. Velickovic, I. Golic, M. Markelic, B. Korac, J. Gosalvez, M. Ruiz-Jorro, C. Garcia-Ochoa, P. Sachez-Martin, M. Martinez-Moya, P. Caballero, N. Hasegawa, N. Fukunaga, R. Nagai, H. Kitasaka, T. Yoshimura, F. Tamura, M. Kato, K. Nakayama, H. Oono, E. Kojima, K. Yasue, H. Watanabe, E. Asano, Y. Hashiba, Y. Asada, M. Das, N. Al-Hathal, M. San-Gabriel, S. Phillips, I. J. Kadoch, F. Bissonnette, H. Holzer, A. Zini, A. G. Zebitay, P. Ocal, S. Sahmay, S. Karahuseyinoglu, T. Usta, S. Repping, S. Silber, M. Van Wely, A. Datta, K. Nayini, A. Eapen, S. Barlow, G. Lockwood, R. Tavares, M. Baptista, S. J. Publicover, J. Ramalho-Santos, D. Vaamonde, I. Rodriguez, A. Diaz, C. Darr, V. Chow, S. Ma, R. Smith, F. Jeria, J. Rivera, F. Gabler, H. Nicolai, M. Cunha, P. Viana, A. Goncalves, J. Silva, C. Oliveira, J. Teixeira da Silva, L. Ferraz, C. Madureira, S. Doria, M. Sousa, A. Barros, M. B. Herrero, G. Delbes, E. Troueng, P. T. K. Chan, L. Vingris, A. S. Setti, D. P. A. F. Braga, R. C. S. Figueira, A. Iaconelli, E. Borges, A. Sargin Oruc, C. Gulerman, T. Zeyrek, N. Yilmaz, D. Tuzcuoglu, N. Cicek, F. Scarselli, M. Terribile, G. Franco, D. Zavaglia, D. Dente, V. Zazzaro, T. Riccio, M. G. Minasi, E. Greco, A. Cejudo-Roman, C. G. Ravina, L. Candenas, M. Gallardo-Castro, D. Martin-Lozano, M. Fernandez-Sanchez, F. M. Pinto, A. Balasuriya, P. Serhal, A. Doshi, J. Harper, L. Romany, J. L. Fernandez, A. Pellicer, J. Ribas-Maynou, A. Garcia-Peiro, A. Fernandez-Encinas, E. Prada, I. Jorda, P. Cortes, M. Llagostera, J. Navarro, J. Benet, H. Kesici, S. Cayli, F. Erdemir, Z. Karaca, H. Aslan, S. Ocakli, U. Tas, A. A. Ozdemir, R. G. Aktas, O. E. Tok, S. Li, C. Lu, Y. Hwu, R. K. Lee, I. Landaburu, M. C. Gonzalvo, A. Clavero, J. P. Ramirez, S. Pedrinaci, M. Serrano, L. Montero, S. Carrillo, J. Weiss, A. P. Ortiz, J. A. Castilla, O. Sahin, E. Bakircioglu, M. Serdarogullari, A. Bayram, S. Yayla, U. Ulug, S. B. Tosun, M. Bahceci, S. Y. Yoon, D. H. Shin, T. E. Shin, E. A. Park, H. J. Won, Y. S. Kim, W. S. Lee, T. K. Yoon, D. R. Lee, H. Hattori, Y. Nakajo, T. Kyoya, M. Kuchiki, S. Kanto, K. Kyono, M. Park, M. R. Park, E. J. Lim, Y. Choi, A. Mitra, J. Bhattacharya, A. Kundu, D. Mukhopadhaya, M. Pal, M. Enciso, S. Alfarawati, D. Wells, C. Abad, M. J. Amengual, V. Esmaeili, M. Safiri, A. H. Shahverdi, A. R. Alizadeh, B. Ebrahimi, A. M. Brucculeri, G. Ruvolo, L. Giovannelli, R. Schillaci, E. Cittadini, G. Scaravelli, A. Perino, S. Cortes Gallego, A. Gabriel Segovia, R. Nunez Calonge, A. Guijarro Ponce, L. Ortega Lopez, P. Caballero Peregrin, B. Heindryckx, J. Kashir, C. Jones, G. Mounce, W. M. Ramadan, B. Lemmon, P. De Sutter, J. Parrington, K. Turner, T. Child, E. McVeigh, K. Coward, S. Tosun, N. Ciray, S. Saeidi, F. Shapouri, H. Hoseinifar, M. Sabbaghian, A. Pacey, R. Aflatoonian, L. Bosco, L. Carrillo, A. Pane, M. Manno, M. C. Roccheri, E. Selles, S. Garcia-Herrero, J. A. Martinez, M. Munoz, A. Durmaz, N. Dikmen, C. Gunduz, E. Tavmergen Goker, E. Tavmergen, D. Gozuacik, H. S. Vatansever, B. Kara, N. Calimlioglu, P. Yasar, B. Semerci, M. Baka, K. Ozbilgin, A. Karabulut, A. Tekin, B. Sabah, V. Cottin, D. Kottelat, M. Fellmann, S. Halm, E. Rosenthaler, T. Kisida, F. Kojima, T. Sakamoto, V. A. Makutina, S. L. Balezin, O. F. Rosly, T. V. Slishkina, E. Hatzi, L. Lazaros, N. Xita, G. Makrydimas, N. Sofikitis, A. Kaponis, T. Stefos, K. Zikopoulos, I. Georgiou, H. Hibi, T. Ohori, M. Sumitomo, C. Anarte, I. Calvo, A. Domingo, N. Presilla, M. Aleman, R. Bou, F. Guardiola, J. A. Agirregoikoa, J. L. De Pablo, G. Barrenetxea, I. Zhylkova, O. Feskov, I. Feskova, O. Zozulina, O. Somova, A. Nabi, M. A. Khalili, F. Roudbari, L. Parmegiani, G. E. Cognigni, S. Bernardi, S. Taraborrelli, E. Troilo, W. Ciampaglia, P. Pocognoli, F. E. Infante, C. Tabarelli de fatis, A. Arnone, A. M. Maccarini, M. Filicori, L. Silva, J. B. A. Oliveira, C. G. Petersen, A. L. Mauri, F. C. Massaro, M. Cavagna, R. L. R. Baruffi, J. G. Franco, Y. Fujii, Y. Endou, H. Mtoyama, S. Shokri, and R. J. Aitken
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Reproductive Medicine ,Rehabilitation ,Obstetrics and Gynecology - Published
- 2012
21. POSTER VIEWING SESSION - FEMALE (IN) FERTILITY
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M. Engman, B. Bystrom, S. Varghese, P. G. L. Lalitkumar, K. Gemzell-Danielsson, C. Romeu, A. Urries, M. Lierta, J. Sanchez Rubio, B. Sanz, I. Perez, L. Casis, A. Salerno, A. Nazzaro, L. Di Iorio, P. Bonassisa, L. Van Os, C. Q. J. Vink-Ranti, J. H. de Haan-Cramer, P. M. Rijnders, C. A. M. Jansen, S. Marino, C. Granato, E. Pastore, M. Brandes, C. J. C. M. Hamilton, J. P. de Bruin, R. S. G. M. Bots, W. L. D. M. Nelen, J. A. M. Kremer, P. Szkodziak, S. Wozniak, P. Czuczwar, T. Paszkowski, N. Agirregoitia, L. Peralta, R. Mendoza, A. Exposito, R. Matorras, E. Agirregoitia, D. Chuderland, I. Ben-Ami, R. Kaplan-Kraicer, H. Grossman, R. Satchi- Fainaro, A. Eldar-Boock, R. Ron-El, R. Shalgi, I. M. Custers, I. Scholten, L. M. Moolenaar, P. A. Flierman, T. J. H. M. Dessel, M. H. Gerards, T. Cox, C. A. H. Janssen, F. van der Veen, B. W. J. Mol, S. Wathlet, T. Adriaenssens, G. Verheyen, W. Coucke, J. Smitz, E. Feliciani, A. P. Ferraretti, C. Paesano, E. Pellizzaro, M. C. Magli, L. Gianaroli, J. Hernandez, A. Rodriguez-Fuentes, R. Garcia-Guzman, A. Palumbo, N. Radunovic, T. Tosic, S. Djukic, J. C. Lockwood, L. Van Landuyt, R. Karayalcin, S. A. R. P. Ozcan, S. Ozyer, B. Gurlek, I. Kale, O. Moraloglu, S. Batioglu, K. Chaudhury, K. Narendra Babu, V. Mamata Joshi, S. Srivastava, B. N. Chakravarty, V. Viardot-Foucault, E. B. Prasath, B. C. Tai, J. K. Y. Chan, S. F. Loh, I. Cordeiro, F. Leal, A. P. Soares, J. Nunes, S. Sousa, A. Aguiar, M. Carvalho, C. Calhaz-Jorge, A. Karkanaki, A. Piouk, I. Katsikis, T. Mousatat, E. Koiou, G. N. Daskalopoulos, D. Panidis, A. Tolikas, E. Tsakos, S. Gerou, Y. Prapas, A. Loufopoulos, E. Abanto, G. Barrenetxea, J. Agirregoikoa, C. Anarte, J. L. De Pablo, J. Burgos, D. Komarovsky, S. Friedler, Y. Gidoni, I. Ben-ami, D. Strassburger, O. Bern, E. Kasterstein E, A. Komsky, B. Maslansky, A. Raziel, A. Fuentes, F. Argandona, F. Gabler, A. Galleguillos, A. Torres, W. A. Palomino, R. Gonzalez-Fernandez, O. Pena, J. Avila, S. Talebi Chahvar, V. Biondini, S. Battistoni, S. Giannubilo, A. L. Tranquilli, M. H. Stensen, T. Tanbo, R. Storeng, T. Abyholm, P. Fedorcsak, S. R. Johnson, L. Foster, J. Ellis, J. R. Choi, J. K. Joo, J. B. Son, K. S. Lee, L. Helmgaard, B. M. Klein, J. C. Arce, P. Sanhueza, P. Donoso, R. Salinas, R. Enriquez, V. Saez, I. Carrasco, M. Rios, P. Gonzalez, N. Macklon, M. Guo, M. Richardson, P. Wilson, R. C. Chian, A. Eapen, M. Hrehorcak, S. Campbell, G. Nargund, G. Oron, B. Fisch, A. Ao, O. Freidman, X. Y. Zhang, A. Ben-Haroush, R. Abir, S. Hantisteanu, A. Ellenbogen, M. Hallak, M. Michaeli, O. Fainaru, E. Maman, G. Yong, A. Kedem, G. Yeruahlmi, S. Konopnicki, B. Cohen, J. Dor, A. Hourvitz, V. Moshin, M. Croitor, A. Hotineanu, Z. Ciorap, E. Rasohin, A. Aleyasin, M. Agha Hosseini, A. Mahdavi, L. Safdarian, P. Fallahi, M. R. Mohajeri, M. Abbasi, F. Esfahani, A. Elnashar, A. Badawy, M. Totongy, H. Mohamed, F. Mustafa, D. S. Seidman, Y. Tadir, C. Goldchmit, Y. Gilboa, A. Siton, R. Mashiach, J. Rabinovici, G. M. Yerushalmi, O. Inoue, N. Kuji, T. Fukunaga, S. Ogawa, K. Sugawara, M. Yamada, T. Hamatani, H. Hanabusa, Y. Yoshimura, S. Kato, L. Casarini, A. La Marca, M. Lispi, S. Longobardi, E. Pignatti, M. Simoni, G. Halpern, D. P. A. F. Braga, R. C. S. Figueira, A. S. Setti, A. Iaconelli Jr., E. Borges Jr., L. Vingris, F. F. Pasqualotto, E. Collado-Fernandez, S. E. Harris, M. Cotterill, K. Elder, H. M. Picton, V. Serra, N. Garrido, C. Casanova, C. Lara, J. Remohi, J. Bellver, H. P. Steiner, C. H. Kim, R. M. You, H. Y. Nah, H. J. Kang, S. Kim, H. D. Chae, B. M. Kang, R. Reig Viader, M. A. Brieno Enriquez, N. Toran, L. Cabero, E. Giulotto, M. Garcia Caldes, A. Ruiz-Herrera, M. Brieno-Enriquez, R. Reig-Viader, F. Martinez, M. Garcia-Caldes, A. Velthut, M. Zilmer, K. Zilmer, E. Haller T. Kaart, H. Karro, A. Salumets, J. J. Bromfield, I. M. Sheldon, J. Rezacova, J. Madar, L. Cuchalova, A. Fiserova, R. Shao, and H. Billig
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Reproductive Medicine ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Rehabilitation ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Fertility ,Session (computer science) ,Psychology ,media_common ,Developmental psychology - Published
- 2011
22. Nitric oxide induces apoptosis in the human corpus luteum in vitro
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F. Gabler, L R Urrutia, Germán Iñiguez, Margarita Vega, Luigi Devoto, and M C Johnson
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Adult ,endocrine system ,Embryology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II ,Apoptosis ,Ovary ,In Vitro Techniques ,Luteal phase ,Arginine ,Nitric Oxide ,Chorionic Gonadotropin ,Nitric oxide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Aromatase ,Corpus Luteum ,Internal medicine ,In Situ Nick-End Labeling ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Molecular Biology ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,omega-N-Methylarginine ,Estradiol ,biology ,urogenital system ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Radioimmunoassay ,Cell Biology ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,Reproductive Medicine ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Female ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,Gonadotropin ,Corpus luteum ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The present study aimed to investigate the role of nitric oxide (NO) in regression of the human corpus luteum. We therefore examined the effect of both NO and human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) on luteal cell apoptosis, and Bcl-2 production. The effect of NO on oestrogen production during corpus luteum regression was also studied. Slices from corpus luteum collected throughout the luteal phase were incubated for 4 h with the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) substrate, L-arginine (L-Arg, 1 mmol/l), the NOS inhibitor N-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) (1 mmol/l), or with HCG (10 IU/ml). Oestradiol concentrations were determined by radioimmunoassay; Bcl-2 concentrations were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; apoptosis was detected in-situ by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labelling; and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) was assessed by immunohistochemistry. Consistent with our previous findings, L-Arg elicited an inhibitory action on the production of oestradiol (P< 0.05). The number of apoptotic cells increased (P
- Published
- 2000
23. Baryon Stopping and Charged Particle Distributions in CentralPb+PbCollisions at 158 GeV per Nucleon
- Author
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C. Roland, Rainer Arno Ernst Renfordt, S. Margetis, A. Piper, N. Xu, Andrzej Rybicki, Jeffrey G. Reid, H. Ströbele, C. A. Whitten, Rene Brun, C. Bormann, P. Foka, R. Brockmann, R. Ganz, H. Hümmler, Ferenc Sikler, Lee Stuart Barnby, H. L. Caines, Norbert Schmitz, D. D. Weerasundara, Peter Graham Jones, Andreas Petridis, J. Sziklai, T. Ullrich, V. Friese, D. Schmischke, B. Boimska, E. Schäfer, Helena Bialkowska, F. Eckhardt, J. Gál, A. Yu. Semenov, J. Bächler, S. Hegyi, G. L. Melkumov, C. O. Blyth, W. Retyk, S. Schönfelder, Gyorgy Vesztergombi, M. Vassiliou, W. Geist, M. Fuchs, G. Roland, Siegfried Wenig, L. Wood, R. Zybert, A. Sandoval, R.J. Porter, Thomas A. Trainor, Alexander Malakhov, H. Appelshäuser, H. G. Fischer, G. Igo, M. Oldenburg, J. Dunn, D. Irmscher, H. Sann, S. Poziombka, D. Cebra, J. Günther, S. Trentalange, M. I. Ferguson, A. M. Poskanzer, Apostolos Panagiotou, S. J. Bailey, T. Wienold, X. Z. Zhu, A. Billmeier, Peter Levai, J. Zimányi, Christina Markert, G. Odyniec, I. Huang, A. Mock, D. J. Prindle, Torsten Henkel, J. Grebieszkow, B. Lasiuk, P. Freund, Marek Kowalski, H. Rudolph, E. Gladysz, P. Seyboth, J. Bartke, J. W. Harris, H. G. Ritter, V. I. Kolesnikov, P. Jacobs, V. Eckardt, T. A. Yates, F. P. Brady, D. Vranic, R. A. Barton, Fuqiang Wang, L. A. Hill, G. E. Cooper, M. Toy, D. Flierl, J. G. Cramer, E. Skrzypczak, I. Szentpetery, Marek Gaździcki, Zoltan Fodor, F. Pühlhofer, J. M. Nelson, Dieter Røhrich, Jozsef Molnar, R. Bock, G.T.A. Squier, K. Kadija, Predrag Buncic, F. Gabler, Gergely Palla, P. Csato, and R. Stock
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Physics ,Nuclear reaction ,Proton ,Nuclear Theory ,Hadron ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Elementary particle ,Super Proton Synchrotron ,Nuclear physics ,Baryon ,Rapidity ,Atomic physics ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nucleon - Abstract
Net proton and negative hadron spectra for central Pb+Pb collisions at 158thinspthinspGeV per nucleon at the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron were measured and compared to spectra from lighter systems. Net baryon distributions were derived from those of net protons. Stopping (rapidity shift with respect to the beam) and mean transverse momentum {l_angle}p{sub T}{r_angle} of net baryons increase with system size. The rapidity density of negative hadrons scales with the number of participant nucleons for nuclear collisions, whereas their {l_angle}p{sub T}{r_angle} is independent of system size. The {l_angle}p{sub T}{r_angle} dependence upon particle mass and system size is consistent with larger transverse flow velocity at midrapidity for Pb+Pb compared to S+S central collisions. {copyright} {ital 1999} {ital The American Physical Society}
- Published
- 1999
24. Tumeur géante du plancher de la bouche
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M.A. Inostroza, R. Pantoja, F. Gabler, P. Laime, and A. Ortiz
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Otorhinolaryngology ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Surgery ,Oral Surgery ,business - Published
- 2008
25. Ξ and production in 158 GeV/nucleon Pb+Pb collisions
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H. Appelshäuser, J. Bächler, S.J. Bailey, D. Barna, L.S. Barnby, J. Bartke, R.A. Barton, H. Białkowska, A. Billmeier, C.O. Blyth, R. Bock, C. Bormann, F.P. Brady, R. Brockmann, R. Brun, P. Bunčić, H.L. Caines, L.D. Carr, D. Cebra, G.E. Cooper, J.G. Cramer, M. Cristinziani, P. Csato, J. Dunn, V. Eckardt, F. Eckhardt, M.I. Ferguson, H.G. Fischer, D. Flierl, Z. Fodor, P. Foka, P. Freund, V. Friese, M. Fuchs, F. Gabler, R. Ganz, W. Geist, J. Gal, M. Gaździcki, E. Gładysz, J. Grebieszkow, J. Günther, J.W. Harris, S. Hegyi, T. Henkel, L.A. Hill, H. Hümmler, G. Igo, D. Irmscher, P. Jacobs, P.G. Jones, K. Kadija, V.I. Kolesnikov, A. Konashenok, M. Kowalski, B. Lasiuk, P. Lévai, F. Liu, A.I. Malakhov, S. Margetis, C. Markert, G.L. Melkumov, A. Mock, J. Molnár, J.M. Nelson, M. Oldenburg, G. Odyniec, G. Palla, A.D. Panagiotou, A. Petridis, A. Piper, R.J. Porter, A.M. Poskanzer, D.J. Prindle, F. Pühlhofer, W. Rauch, J.G. Reid, R. Renfordt, W. Retyk, H.G. Ritter, D. Röhrich, C. Roland, G. Roland, H. Rudolph, A. Rybicki, A. Sandoval, H. Sann, A.Yu. Semenov, E. Schäfer, D. Schmischke, N. Schmitz, S. Schönfelder, P. Seyboth, J. Seyerlein, F. Sikler, E. Skrzypczak, R. Snellings, G.T.A. Squier, R. Stock, H. Ströbele, Chr. Struck, T. Susa, I. Szentpetery, J. Sziklai, M. Toy, T.A. Trainor, S. Trentalange, T. Ullrich, M. Vassiliou, G. Veres, G. Vesztergombi, D. Vranić, F. Wang, D.D. Weerasundara, S. Wenig, C. Whitten, T. Wienold, L. Wood, N. Xu, T.A. Yates, J. Zimanyi, X.-Z. Zhu, and R. Zybert
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Nuclear physics ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Yield (chemistry) ,Hadron ,Hyperon ,Transverse mass ,Rapidity ,Nucleon ,Spectral line ,Bar (unit) - Abstract
We report measurements of Xi and Xi-bar hyperon absolute yields as a function of rapidity in 158 GeV/c Pb+Pb collisions. At midrapidity, dN/dy = 2.29 +/- 0.12 for Xi, and 0.52 +/- 0.05 for Xi-bar, leading to the ratio of Xi-bar/Xi = 0.23 +/- 0.03. Inverse slope parameters fitted to the measured transverse mass spectra are of the order of 300 MeV near mid-rapidity. The estimated total yield of Xi particles in Pb+Pb central interactions amounts to 7.4 +/- 1.0 per collision. Comparison to Xi production in properly scaled p+p reactions at the same energy reveals a dramatic enhancement (about one order of magnitude) of Xi production in Pb+Pb central collisions over elementary hadron interactions.
- Published
- 1998
26. F emission in central Pb+Pb collisions at 158 GeV/u
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J. Gál, F. Pühlhofer, J. Dunn, Christina Markert, J. M. Nelson, Siegfried Wenig, Andreas Petridis, P. Csato, R. Stock, C. Bormann, Fuqiang Wang, D. D. Weerasundara, R. J. Porter, F. P. Brady, R. A. Barton, D. Schmischke, H. L. Caines, S. Margetis, S. Trentalange, D. J. Prindle, Peter Martin Jacobs, C. A. Whitten, R. Brockmann, V. Friese, E. Schäfer, A. Yu. Semenov, Predrag Buncic, Lee Stuart Barnby, Christof Roland, A. Piper, Marek Kowalski, Rainer Arno Ernst Renfordt, I. Huang, L. Wood, C. O. Blyth, Panagiota Foka, P. Szymanski, T. Ullrich, L. A. Hill, Helena Bialkowska, Jeffrey G. Reid, A. Mock, H. G. Fischer, J. Seyerlein, T. Wienold, F. Gabler, S. Schönfelder, S. Poziombka, Gyorgy Vesztergombi, F. Eckhardt, B. Lasiuk, A. M. Poskanzer, E. Gladysz, E. Skrzypczak, Torsten Henkel, X.-Z. Zhu, D. Flierl, H. Appelshäuser, Ferenc Sikler, N. Schmitz, Gunther Roland, Dieter Røhrich, Falk Pühlhofer, R. Zybert, G. Odyniec, G. Igo, M. Oldenburg, J. Zimányi, Z. Fodor, P. Freund, Jozsef Molnar, G.T.A. Squier, H. Hümmler, Thomas A. Trainor, J. Bächler, J. W. Harris, M. Vassiliou, Peter Graham Jones, G.E. Cooper, M. I. Ferguson, J. Sziklai, A. Billmeier, G. Pálla, W. Retyk, P. Seyboth, S. J. Bailey, D. Cebra, J. Günther, Apostolos Panagiotou, G. L. Melkumov, Kreso Kadija, V. Eckardt, Alexander Malakhov, Andrzej Rybicki, Rene Brun, A. Sandoval, S. Hegyi, M. Fuchs, J. G. Cramer, Marek Gaździcki, V. I. Kolesnikov, T. A. Yates, D. Vranic, H. Rudolph, I. Szentpetery, W. Rauch, M. Toy, J. Grebieszkow, H. Sann, J. Bartke, H. Ströbele, R. K. Bock, H. G. Ritter, Peter Levai, and D. Irmscher
- Subjects
Nuclear physics ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Large Hadron Collider ,Yield (chemistry) ,Strangeness ,Square (algebra) ,NA49 experiment - Abstract
Data on φ -production obtained by the CERN NA49 experiment for central Pb+Pb collisions at 158 GeV/u are presented. Compared with pp interactions the φ -yield shows substantial strangeness enhancement: the φ /π ratio is found to increase by a factor of 2.6 ± 0.6, which is approximately the square of the K/π enhancement.
- Published
- 1998
27. Spectator Nucleons in Pb+Pb Collisions at 158 A·GeV
- Author
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P. Csato, Siegfried Wenig, D. Irmscher, J. W. Harris, P. B. Cramer, F. Gabler, B. Lasiuk, J. Dunn, Christina Markert, I. Sakrejda, Panagiota Foka, C. Bormann, J. Gál, A. M. Poskanzer, V. Eckardt, F. Eckhardt, J. G. Cramer, R. A. Barton, Peter Graham Jones, Marek Gaździcki, S. Poziombka, Jozsef Molnar, A. Mock, P. Freund, G. Odyniec, T. Wienold, Torsten Henkel, A. Sandoval, J. Zimányi, G. Igo, Z. Fodor, V. Friese, M. I. Ferguson, Lee Stuart Barnby, X. Z. Zhu, E. Skrzypczak, Gunther Roland, S. Hegyi, Norbert Schmitz, Christof Roland, A. Piper, J. Grebieszkow, M. Toy, H. Hümmler, E. Schäfer, M. Fuchs, A. Yu. Semenov, S. J. Bailey, F. P. Brady, I. Huang, H. Appelshäuser, Andreas Petridis, L. A. Hill, C. O. Blyth, Rainer Arno Ernst Renfordt, M. Vassiliou, Andrzej Rybicki, T. Ullrich, S. Margetis, W. Rauch, L. Wood, Fuqiang Wang, Jeffrey G. Reid, G. L. Melkumov, N. Buncic, Dieter Røhrich, P. Seyboth, W. Retyk, F. Pühlhofer, S. White, J. Seyerlein, H. Sann, J. Sziklai, H. G. Ritter, R. Stock, G.E. Cooper, P. Chan, J. M. Nelson, Peter Levai, Kreso Kadija, I. Szentpetery, D. Flierl, T. A. Yates, Ferenc Sikler, Alexander Malakhov, D. Vranic, D. D. Weerasundara, Thomas A. Trainor, R. Brockmann, J. Bartke, S. Schönfelder, Gyorgy Vesztergombi, D. Schmischke, H. Rudolph, H. G. Fischer, Peter Martin Jacobs, H. Ströbele, Helena Bialkowska, Predrag Buncic, R. K. Bock, R. J. Porter, G. T. A. Squier, D. J. Prindle, G. Pálla, Marek Kowalski, C. A. Whitten, R. Zybert, E. Gladysz, D. Cebra, J. Günther, S. Trentalange, Apostolos Panagiotou, P. Gorodetsky, H. L. Caines, J. Bächler, and V. I. Kolesnikov
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Range (particle radiation) ,Particle physics ,Large Hadron Collider ,Nuclear Theory ,Hadron ,Nuclear physics ,Deuterium ,Nuclear fusion ,Neutron ,Impact parameter ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nucleon - Abstract
The composition of forward-going projectile spectator matter in fixed-target Pb+Pb collisions at 158 A · GeV at the CERN SPS has been studied as a function of centrality. The data were measured with the NA49 veto calorimeter. We observe that forward-going spectator matter in central collisions consists of 9 neutrons, 7 protons, and half a deuteron on average. At large impact parameters most spectator nucleons are bound in fragments. The relative resolution of the average impact parameter derived from the measurement of spectator neutrons is roughly 19% in the range from zero to half maximum impact parameters.
- Published
- 1998
28. Directed and elliptic flow in 158 GeV/nucleon Pb + Pb collisions
- Author
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J. W. Harris, Jozsef Molnar, F. P. Brady, V. Eckardt, K. Kadija, D. Flierl, D. D. Weerasundara, G.T.A. Squier, M. I. Ferguson, A. Sandoval, D. Irmscher, Siegfried Wenig, D. Schmischke, C. O. Blyth, S. Hegyi, M. Fuchs, C. Bormann, R. J. Porter, S. Margetis, H. G. Fischer, Andrzej Rybicki, H. Appelshäuser, R. A. Barton, J. G. Cramer, S. Schönfelder, Gyorgy Vesztergombi, Helena Bialkowska, D. J. Prindle, Dieter Røhrich, Rene Brun, H. G. Ritter, Marek Gaździcki, Christof Roland, A. Piper, T. Wienold, R. Zybert, S. Voloshin, G.E. Cooper, Rainer Arno Ernst Renfordt, E. Skrzypczak, Marek Kowalski, G. Pálla, Peter Levai, M. Toy, Andreas Petridis, I. Huang, L. Wood, Panagiota Foka, E. Gladysz, F. Eckhardt, P. Freund, J. Sziklai, Ferenc Sikler, F. Pühlhofer, G. L. Melkumov, G. Odyniec, J. Grebieszkow, J. Bächler, M. Vassiliou, V. I. Kolesnikov, G. Igo, M. Oldenburg, E. Schäfer, J. M. Nelson, A. Yu. Semenov, R. Brockmann, P. Csato, R. Stock, J. Seyerlein, Norbert Schmitz, Peter Martin Jacobs, T. A. Yates, D. Vranic, Predrag Buncic, Gunther Roland, P. Seyboth, F. Gabler, H. Rudolph, T. Ullrich, I. Szentpetery, Alexander Malakhov, L. A. Hill, D. Cebra, J. Günther, Peter Graham Jones, S. Trentalange, Apostolos Panagiotou, C. A. Whitten, J. Dunn, Christina Markert, V. Friese, Thomas A. Trainor, S. Poziombka, J. Zimányi, A. Mock, Torsten Henkel, B. Lasiuk, Z. Fodor, H. Hümmler, Jeffrey G. Reid, W. Retyk, W. Rauch, H. Sann, J. Bartke, J. Gál, H. Ströbele, R. K. Bock, Fuqiang Wang, A. M. Poskanzer, Lee Stuart Barnby, H. Caines, and S. J. Bailey
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Nuclear Theory ,Elliptic flow ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Nuclear physics ,Pion ,Flow (mathematics) ,Transverse momentum ,Rapidity ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nucleon ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
The directed and elliptic flow of protons and charged pions has been observed from the semi-central collisions of a 158 GeV/nucleon Pb beam with a Pb target. The rapidity and transverse momentum dependence of the flow has been measured. The directed flow of the pions is opposite to that of the protons at high rapidity but both exhibit negative flow at low p t . The elliptic flow of both is fairly independent of rapidity but rises with p t .
- Published
- 1998
29. LTCC-based three dimensional inductors with nano-ferrite embedded core for one-chip tunable RF systems
- Author
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Thomas Gessner, Shuji Tanaka, Yao Chuan Tsai, Yu-Ching Lin, Masayoshi Esashi, and F. Gabler
- Subjects
Fabrication ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Hardware_PERFORMANCEANDRELIABILITY ,Chip ,Inductor ,Q factor ,visual_art ,Nano ,Hardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITS ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Electronic engineering ,Ferrite (magnet) ,Optoelectronics ,Integrated circuit packaging ,Ceramic ,business - Abstract
In this study, anodically-bondable LTCC (low temperature cofired ceramic) technology is applied for forming inductors to realizes three-dimensional configuration, simplify fabrication process and miniaturize device size. Nano-ferrite is embedded as core material to increase performance of the integrated inductors. Design, simulation, fabrication are described and characterized results indicate the potential of using this approach for future one-chip tunable RF systems.
- Published
- 2013
30. Hadron yields and hadron spectra from the NA49 experiment
- Author
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D. D. Weerasundara, C. Bormann, J. Bächler, D. Schmischke, M. Vassiliou, P. Seyboth, D. Irmscher, Rainer Arno Ernst Renfordt, A. Piper, H. G. Fischer, Ferenc Sikler, C. O. Blyth, Siegfried Wenig, J. Sziklai, Kreso Kadija, F. Pühlhofer, G.E. Cooper, H. G. Ritter, Peter Levai, J. Gál, D. Cebra, J. Günther, J. W. Harris, J. M. Nelson, M. Toy, Apostolos Panagiotou, G. L. Melkumov, I. Huang, L. Wood, J. Grebieszkow, S. Schönfelder, V. Eckardt, P. B. Cramer, X.-Z. Zhu, G. Odyniec, J. G. Cramer, Gyorgy Vesztergombi, Andreas Petridis, F. P. Brady, P. Freund, Lee Stuart Barnby, M. Cyprian, Peter Graham Jones, Marek Gaździcki, N. Bunicic, J. W. Mitchell, Christof Roland, A. M. Poskanzer, H. Appelshäuser, Jozsef Molnar, R. Bock, M. I. Ferguson, Helena Bialkowska, S. Margetis, T. Wienold, E. Skrzypczak, S. Poziombka, R. Zybert, S. Trentalange, J. Zimányi, R. Brockmann, V. I. Kolesnikov, T. A. Yates, D. Vranic, D. J. Prindle, H. Rudolph, D. Flierl, Peter Martin Jacobs, Marek Kowalski, I. Szentpetery, Predrag Buncic, S. Euler, E. Gladysz, A. Mock, Z. Fodor, H. Hümmler, G. Pálla, Andrzej Rybicki, E. Schäfer, A. Yu. Semenov, A. Sandoval, J. Seyerlein, H. L. Caines, S. Hegyi, M. Fuchs, W. Retyk, Alexander Malakhov, P. Csato, R. Stock, F. Gabler, B. Lasiuk, I. Derado, Panagiota Foka, O. Dietz, L. A. Hill, Thomas A. Trainor, P. Chan, H. Sann, J. Dunn, Christina Markert, S. Afanasiev, F. Eckhardt, J. Bartke, G. Igo, H. Ströbele, W. Rauch, N. Schmitz, Dieter Røhrich, Gunther Roland, M. A. Howe, C. A. Whitten, and T. Alber
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear physics ,S system ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Nuclear Theory ,Hadron ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nucleon ,Central region ,NA49 experiment ,Spectral line - Abstract
Preliminary inclusive spectra of negative hadrons, net protons and neutral strange particles are presented, measured by the NA49 experiment in central Pb+Pb collisions at 158 GeV per nucleon. Comparison of their yields with those from the lighter S+S system suggests that the yields scale approximately with the number of participating nucleons.
- Published
- 1996
31. Stopping and collective effects at SPS energies
- Author
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J. Dunn, Christina Markert, Siegfried Wenig, M. A. Howe, S. Poziombka, Serguei Afanasiev, F. Pühlhofer, J. Zimányi, J. G. Cramer, J. Sziklai, C. A. Whitten, C. O. Blyth, M. I. Ferguson, J. M. Nelson, A. M. Poskanzer, T. Alber, Lee Stuart Barnby, F. P. Brady, W. Rauch, S. Schönfelder, Gyorgy Vesztergombi, Andreas Petridis, D. Prindle, Norbert Schmitz, L. A. Hill, C. Bormann, Helena Bialkowska, G. L. Melkumov, M. Vassiliou, Marek Kowalski, R. Zybert, S. Margetis, Peter Martin Jacobs, H. Sann, Marek Gaździcki, R. Brockmann, E. Gladysz, Predrag Buncic, Peter Graham Jones, G. Odyniec, E. Schäfer, Jozsef Molnar, D. Irmscher, R. Bock, J. W. Mitchell, P. Seyboth, A. Yu. Semenov, S. Euler, J. Bartke, M. Toy, T. A. Yates, D. Vranic, F. Eckhardt, M. Cyprian, Gunther Roland, J. Grebieszkow, Christof Roland, P. Chan, J. W. Harris, H. Rudolph, H. G. Ritter, E. Skrzypczak, P. B. Cramer, N. Buncic, Rainer Arno Ernst Renfordt, J. Seyerlein, Peter Levai, A. Piper, H. Ströbele, G. Igo, J. Gál, D. Cebra, J. Günther, V. Eckardt, S. Trentalange, Apostolos Panagiotou, T. A. Trainor, I. Szentpetery, I. Huang, Ferenc Sikler, P. Freund, L. Wood, D. D. Weerasundara, D. Schmischke, D. Flierl, H. G. Fischer, Dieter Røhrich, H. Appelshäuser, G.E. Cooper, G. Pálla, X. Z. Zhu, K. Kadija, A. Sandoval, S. Hegyi, M. Fuchs, J. Bächler, V. I. Kolesnikov, H. L. Caines, Andrzej Rybicki, T. Wienold, P. Csato, R. Stock, Panagiota Foka, O. Dietz, F. Gabler, B. Lasiuk, I. Derado, A. Mock, Z. Fodor, H. Hümmler, W. Retyk, and Alexander Malakhov
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Proton ,Spectrometer ,Nuclear Theory ,Collision ,Projection (linear algebra) ,Nuclear physics ,Time of flight ,Energy flow ,Rapidity ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nucleon - Abstract
We discuss preliminary data on stopping for central Pb + Pb collisions at 158 GeV/nucleon. The (net) proton rapidity density measured by the NA49 Time Projection Chambers, NA49 Time of Flight and the NA44 spectrometer is presented. Slightly higher stopping is observed relative to S + S at 200 GeV/nucleon. The rapidity density exhibits a plateau around mid-rapidity which is qualitatively different from results at the AGS and BEVALAC/SIS energies. The second part of the paper discusses the azimuthal correlation of the energy flow. Preliminary results reveal that the ‘fireball’ preserves the information of the collision geometry even at SPS energies.
- Published
- 1996
32. Decreased phosphorylation of Y¹⁴caveolin-1 in endometrial tissue of polycystic ovary syndrome patients may be related with an insulin resistant state in this tissue
- Author
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P, Ormazabal, C, Romero, F, Gabler, A F G, Quest, and M, Vega
- Subjects
Adult ,Endometrium ,Glucose ,Sweetening Agents ,Caveolin 1 ,Humans ,Female ,Insulin Resistance ,Phosphorylation ,Cells, Cultured ,Polycystic Ovary Syndrome - Abstract
Endometrial tissue of patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) shows an impaired expression of insulin signaling molecules. Tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor (IR) by insulin promotes glucose uptake by activating the PI3K/Akt pathway. IR stability and function depend on the presence of the protein caveolin-1. Activation of IR increases phosphorylation of Y¹⁴caveolin-1. Since the endometrium of PCOS patients is proposed to be insulin resistant, we evaluated the phosphorylation of IR and caveolin-1 in endometria of patients with insulin resistance (PCOSE-IR) compared to controls (CE). To explore the mechanism associated with this condition, cultured endometrial cells (T-HESC) were exposed to high glucose (25 mM, 24 h), an experimental condition that leads to insulin resistance in other cell types. Endometrial protein levels of phospho-Y⁹⁷²IR, phospho-Y¹⁴caveolin-1 and caveolin-1 were determined by Western blotting. In cultured cells, protein levels of caveolin-1, IR, and Akt were evaluated by Western blotting. After acute insulin stimulation, phospho-S⁴⁷³Akt, phospho-Y¹⁴caveolin-1, and 2-deoxyglucose (2-DOG) uptake were determined. PCOSE-IR samples showed high protein levels of caveolin-1, but reduced phospho-Y¹⁴caveolin-1 compared to CE. No differences were observed for phospho-Y⁹⁷²IR between both groups. Cells pretreated with glucose showed a reduction in protein levels of IR and caveolin-1 and were unable to increase 2-DOG uptake, phospho-S⁴⁷³Akt and phospho-Y¹⁴caveolin-1 after insulin stimulation. In conclusion, in PCOSE-IR the impaired phosphorylation of IR downstream molecules such as phospho-Y¹⁴caveolin-1 suggests a diminished insulin sensitivity in endometria, condition that could be supported in vitro by the ability of T-HESCs to become insulin resistant when they are exposed to high glucose.
- Published
- 2012
33. 497: Activation of TRKA receptor by nerve growth factor induces shedding of P75 receptor related with progression of epithelial ovarian cancer
- Author
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F. Gabler, C. Vallejos, Alberto Selman, Carmen Romero, and M. Vega
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biology ,Tropomyosin receptor kinase A ,Nerve growth factor ,Endocrinology ,Oncology ,Nerve growth factor receptor ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor ,Epithelial ovarian cancer ,Receptor ,Insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor - Published
- 2014
34. [Giant tumour of the mouth floor]
- Author
-
A, Ortiz, P, Laime, F, Gabler, M A, Inostroza, and R, Pantoja
- Subjects
Adult ,Humans ,Female ,Mouth Neoplasms ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Mouth Floor ,Dermoid Cyst - Published
- 2007
35. P058 Understaging in patients with prostate cancer who underwent radical prostatectomy, analysis and consequences
- Author
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F. Vargas Delaunoy, H. Nicolai, M. Ebensperger, P. Gálvez, and F. Gabler
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostate cancer ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,In patient ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2013
36. Abnormal pattern of integrin expression at the implantation window in endometrium from fertile women treated with clomiphene citrate and users of intrauterine device
- Author
-
R R, Gonzalez, A, Palomino, D, Vantman, F, Gabler, and L, Devoto
- Subjects
Adult ,Integrins ,Integrin alpha4 ,Integrin alpha1 ,Integrin beta3 ,Fertility Agents, Female ,Platelet Membrane Glycoproteins ,Integrin alphaV ,Middle Aged ,Immunohistochemistry ,Clomiphene ,Endometrium ,Fertility ,Antigens, CD ,Humans ,Female ,Embryo Implantation ,Intrauterine Devices - Abstract
Determine quantitative expression of endometrial integrins that reflect receptivity during implantation window in fertile women treated with clomiphene citrate (CC), and in intrauterine device users (IUD) as compared to fertile controls. Comparative study of the quantitative expression of a1, a4, av and b3 integrins in epithelial and stromal cells in mid-secretory endometrium of CC treated fertile women, IUD users and controls. All subjects included in this study had regular and ovulatory menstrual cycles.Ten women treated with a daily dose of 50 mg of CC. Six women T-Cu device users and nine fertile controls. Age ranges for all groups were similar, 29-41 years old (mean 36.3). Tissue samples were taken at the mid-secretory phase or implantation window. A histological dating of the endometrial biopsies was assessed according to Noyes criteria. Ovulation was assessed by repeated transvaginal ultrasonography. The expression of a1, a4, aV and b3 integrins in dispersions of epithelial (EEC) and stromal (ESC) cells isolated from endometrial biopsies was quantitatively determined by flow cytometry using specific monoclonal antibodies. Immunohistochemistry was also used to detect integrin expression. Biopsies from CC-treated women had a high incidence of out-of-phase endometria. Interestingly, CC-treated women over-expressed a1, aV and b3-ESC integrins and under-expressed b3-EEC subunit (P0.05). IUD users over-expressed the a1-EEC and under-expressed a4-ESC (P0.05) at the time of the implantation window. CC treatment in fertile women provokes a high frequency of out-of-phase endometrium and desynchronises the expression of endometrial integrins at the implantation window. The epithelial b3 integrin was under-expressed in all CC-treated patients. The T-Cu intrauterine device alters endometrial receptivity by a different mechanism independent of the expression of the epithelial b3 integrin. However, both CC and IUD use alter the expression of some epithelial and stromal integrins during the implantation window.
- Published
- 2001
37. The NA49 large acceptance hadron detector
- Author
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N. Schmitz, C. Bormann, H. Hümmler, Miroslav Pikna, H. L. Caines, T Empl, J. W. Harris, M. Ivanov, Tatjana Susa, F. Eckhardt, J. G. Cramer, Gunther Roland, C. O. Blyth, Peter Graham Jones, L. A. Hill, Y. Pestov, U Lynen, Lee Stuart Barnby, I. Huang, A. Billmeier, Christina Markert, M. Toy, L. Wood, V. Eckardt, D. Flierl, F. S. Bieser, P. Seyboth, S. Schönfelder, Marek Gaździcki, Gyorgy Vesztergombi, H. Fessler, G. Igo, M. Oldenburg, P. Freund, Andreas Petridis, D. Cebra, J. Günther, H. Ströbele, Jozsef Molnar, Branislav Sitar, J. Seyboth, G.T.A. Squier, H. G. Ritter, Panagiota Foka, Gabor Istvan Veres, J. Grebieszkow, P. Szymanski, C. A. Whitten, T. Alber, R. K. Bock, G. L. Melkumov, J. Dunn, C. Struck, Imrich Szarka, H. H. Wieman, J. Ftacnik, F. Gabler, F. Pühlhofer, M. I. Ferguson, W. Retyk, Siegfried Wenig, H. G. Fischer, U. Frankenfeld, H. Sann, Lawrence Pinsky, V. Friese, Dieter Røhrich, J. M. Nelson, Ferenc Sikler, T. Ullrich, F. P. Brady, G.E. Cooper, D. Irmscher, P. Csato, Sergei Afanasiev, R. Stock, Peter Strmen, Alexander Malakhov, D. D. Weerasundara, R. Brockmann, R. A. Barton, C. Marks, K. Liebicher, A. M. Poskanzer, L. Betev, D. Schmischke, Thomas A. Trainor, G. Pálla, H. Appelshäuser, B. W. Mayes, S. Margetis, M. Cyprian, Christof Roland, E. Schäfer, Péter Lévai, A. Yu. Semenov, S. Poziombka, Harald Joerg Stelzer, A. Piper, J. Bartke, R. Schmidt, A. Mock, T. Wienold, X. Z. Zhu, E. Skrzypczak, Torsten Henkel, J. Zimányi, B. Lasiuk, Z. Fodor, R. Janik, J. Bracinik, I. Szentpetery, V. I. Kolesnikov, J. Eschke, J. Seyerlein, R. Renfordt, Jeffrey G. Reid, T. A. Yates, D. Vranic, W. Rauch, J. Bächler, H. Rudolph, M. Vassiliou, K. Kadija, V. Hlinka, Peter Martin Jacobs, A. Sandoval, Predrag Buncic, S. Hegyi, M. Fuchs, Andrzej Rybicki, W. Pimpl, Rene Brun, S. Trentalange, Apostolos Panagiotou, G. Odyniec, Helena Bialkowska, R. J. Porter, R. Zybert, D. J. Prindle, Marek Kowalski, T. Sammer, Fuqiang Wang, E. Gladysz, D. Barna, J. Sziklai, J. Gál, and R. Ganz
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Large Hadron Collider ,Spectrometer ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Detector ,NA49 ,heavy ion ,TPC ,TOF ,proportional chamber ,centrality detector ,Scintillator ,Particle detector ,Particle identification ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Spark chamber ,Detectors and Experimental Techniques ,Nuclear Experiment ,Instrumentation ,NA49 experiment - Abstract
The NA49 detector is a wide acceptance spectrometer for the study of hadron production in p+p, p+A, and A+A collisions at the CERN SPS. The main components are 4 large-volume TPCs for tracking and particle identification via dE/dx. TOF scintillator arrays complement particle identification. Calorimeters for transverse energy determination and triggering, a detector for centrality selection in p+A collisions, and beam definition detectors complete the set-up. A description of all detector components is given with emphasis on new technical realizations. Performance and operational experience are discussed in particular with respect to the high track density environment of central Pb+Pb collisions.
- Published
- 1999
38. Directed and Elliptic Flow in 158 GeV/Nucleon Pb + Pb Collisions
- Author
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S. Schönfelder, Gyorgy Vesztergombi, V. I. Kolesnikov, Jozsef Molnar, R. Bock, G.T.A. Squier, J. Sziklai, C. A. Whitten, Siegfried Wenig, J. Zimányi, C. O. Blyth, E. Schäfer, L. Wood, T. A. Yates, D. Vranic, A. Yu. Semenov, R. Stock, J. Gál, Lee Stuart Barnby, Alexander Malakhov, D. D. Weerasundara, R. A. Barton, Norbert Schmitz, Dieter Røhrich, C. Bormann, S. Poziombka, D. Schmischke, Andrzej Rybicki, S. Voloshin, A. Sandoval, D. Irmscher, I. Huang, D. J. Prindle, P. Seyboth, J. Bächler, M. I. Ferguson, A. M. Poskanzer, H. G. Ritter, H. G. Fischer, N. Buncic, F. Eckhardt, P. Jacobs, A. Mock, J. G. Cramer, Christina Markert, G. Odyniec, J. Seyerlein, H. L. Caines, K. Kadija, L. A. Hill, G. E. Cooper, Marek Kowalski, Torsten Henkel, B. Lasiuk, Zoltan Fodor, Fuqiang Wang, M. Fuchs, Rainer Arno Ernst Renfordt, S. Margetis, A. Piper, Peter Graham Jones, H. Rudolph, Helena Bialkowska, M. Vassiliou, V. Friese, R. Zybert, H. Hümmler, D. Flierl, Ferenc Sikler, J. Dunn, H. Appelshäuser, E. Gladysz, P. Freund, W. Retyk, G. Igo, S. J. Bailey, Peter Levai, R. J. Porter, D. Cebra, J. Günther, S. Trentalange, Apostolos Panagiotou, F. Pühlhofer, Thomas A. Trainor, M. Toy, T. Wienold, E. Skrzypczak, J. M. Nelson, Predrag Buncic, J. W. Harris, V. Eckardt, S. Hegyi, G. Roland, W. Rauch, H. Sann, J. Bartke, I. Szentpetery, C. Roland, H. Ströbele, P. Foka, Andreas Petridis, R. Brockmann, G. L. Melkumov, T. Ullrich, J. Grebieszkow, Marek Gazdzicki, Jeffrey G. Reid, F. P. Brady, P. Csato, F. Gabler, and Gergely Palla
- Subjects
Physics ,Particle physics ,Meson ,Hadron ,Elliptic flow ,Nuclear Theory ,General Physics and Astronomy ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Charged particle ,Baryon ,Nuclear physics ,Physics::Fluid Dynamics ,Pion ,Rapidity ,Nuclear Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,Nucleon ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The directed and elliptic flow of protons and charged pions has been observed from the semi-central collisions of a 158 GeV/nucleon Pb beam with a Pb target. The rapidity and transverse momentum dependence of the flow has been measured. The directed flow of the pions is opposite to that of the protons but both exhibit negative flow at low pt. The elliptic flow of both is fairly independent of rapidity but rises with pt., Comment: 12 pages including 3 figures
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Effect of age on apoptosis-related proteins in germ cells of human testes
- Author
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K. Baeza, H. Nicolai, J. Rivera, F. Jeria, F. Gabler, and R. Smith
- Subjects
Reproductive Medicine ,Apoptosis ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Germ ,Germ line development ,Biology ,Germ plasm ,Cell biology - Published
- 2010
40. A validated algorithm for sensitive and cost-effective mutation detection in clinical cancer specimens
- Author
-
Silvia Querings, Danila Seidel, Peter Nuernberg, Janine Altmüller, Sascha Ansén, Thomas Zander, F. Gabler, Juergen Wolf, and Roman K. Thomas
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Tumor shrinkage ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Cancer ,Mutation detection ,Bioinformatics ,Lung cancer ,medicine.disease ,business ,EGFR inhibitors - Abstract
e12009 Background: Patients with EGFR-mutant lung cancer experience tumor shrinkage and prolonged survival when treated with EGFR inhibitors. Furthermore, drugs targeting additional mutational acti...
- Published
- 2010
41. Expression of molecules associated with tissue homeostasis in secretory endometria from untreated women with polycystic ovary syndrome.
- Author
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C. Avellaira, A. Villavicencio, K. Bacallao, F. Gabler, P. Wells, C. Romero, and M. Vega
- Subjects
POLYCYSTIC ovary syndrome ,HOMEOSTASIS ,FEMALE reproductive organ diseases ,MENSTRUAL cycle - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The hormonal alterations observed in women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) may promote implantation failure as well as disruption of their endometrial homeostasis. To evaluate cell survival of mid-secretory endometrium from untreated women with PCOS, we measured the expression of apoptosis and proliferation-related proteins. METHODS: A case–control study of 11 patients with PCOS and 11 fertile women in the Hospital Research Unit was performed. Endometrial samples were obtained from PCOS women (PCOSE) and fertile healthy women (CE) during the mid-secretory phase of the menstrual cycle. Protein expressions for Akt, p-AktSer473 and p-AktThr308, Bad, p-BadSer136, Bcl-2, Bax and pro-caspase-3/caspase-3, were assessed by western blot, and Ki67 and p-histone-3 (p-H3) by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: In CE and PCOSE, a predominance of p-AktThr308 over p-AktSer473 is observed; p-BadSer136 expression is higher in PCOSE than in CE (P < 0.05). Also, Bcl-2 protein is overexpressed in PCOSE (P < 0.05), with no changes in Bax expression among the two groups, resulting in a significantly higher Bcl-2/Bax ratio in PCOSE than in CE (P < 0.05). No changes in the expression of caspase-3 are obtained between both groups of endometria. Furthermore, cell proliferation detected by the expression of Ki67 and p-H3 proteins is higher in the epithelia than the stroma of PCOSE versus CE (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: The abnormal tissue homeostasis exhibited by the secretory endometrium from PCOS patients with spontaneous ovulation may interfere with their endometrial receptivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Der Einfluß der Reflexion auf die Wirkung doppelbrechender Platten
- Author
-
F. Gabler and P. Sokob
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Humanities - Abstract
Die an den Begrenzungsflachen einer doppelbrechenden Platte auftretenden Reflexionen haben, wie gezeigt wird, erheblichen Einflus auf den Polarisationszustand einer diese Platte durchsetzenden Lichtwelle. Es werden die Gleichungen fur die Phasenverschiebung und fur die Intensitat, die von einem auf die Platte folgenden Analysator durchgelassen wird, berechnet und die Ergebnisse fur einen aus k Platten bestehenden Satz verallgemeinert.
- Published
- 1940
43. Ein Beitrag zur Fernsehmikroskopie
- Author
-
F. Gabler
- Subjects
Philosophy ,Humanities ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
Der Verfasser zeigt die Moglichkeiten und den Aufbau einer der wichtigsten Neuentwicklungen der letzten Zeit auf dem Gebiet der Mikroskopie, namlich der Mikrofernseheinrichtung, insbesondere unter Verwendung eines gesturzten Mikroskopes. Die Losung mancher bisher unlosbarer mikroskopischer Probleme bildet zusammen mit nahezu unbeschrankter Moglichkeit der Mikroprojektion einen beachtlichen Fortschritt.
- Published
- 1956
44. Studies of Surface Contaminations, Composition and Formation of Superconducting Layers of V, Nb3Sn and of Tunneling Elements Using High Energetic Protons Combined with Heavy Ions
- Author
-
P. Müller, G. Ischenko, and F. Gabler
- Subjects
Superconductivity ,Elastic scattering ,Materials science ,Analytical chemistry ,Coulomb barrier ,Sample preparation ,Irradiation ,Atomic physics ,Residual-resistance ratio ,Quantum tunnelling ,Ion - Abstract
An introductory short description of the principles of analytic methods is given for the elastic scattering with protons of (5–8) MeV — with energies well above the Coulomb barrier — with large depth information and high sensitivity for the light elements (1H-19F) and Rutherford backscattering with 12C and 160 ions with better depth and mass resolution for the heavier elements. As realistic applications, several topics in sample preparation for superconducting cavities and irradiation experiments on superconductors are presented.
- Published
- 1976
45. A new photomicrography attachment with a semiautomatic exposure meter and control
- Author
-
F, Gabler and K, Kropp
- Subjects
Photomicrography - Published
- 1969
46. [The phase contrast method and its application in microscopy using top illumination]
- Author
-
F, GABLER
- Subjects
Microscopy ,Light ,Humans ,Microscopy, Phase-Contrast ,Lighting - Published
- 1952
47. [A NEW ELECTRONIC FLASH APPARATUS FOR MICROPHOTOGRAPHY]
- Author
-
F, GABLER, K, KROPP, and O, SCHOEDL
- Subjects
Photomicrography ,Equipment and Supplies ,Electronics ,Household Articles - Published
- 1964
48. Positive or Negative Phase Contrast
- Author
-
F, GABLER
- Subjects
Microscopy ,Humans ,Microscopy, Phase-Contrast - Published
- 1955
49. [High power lamps for microscopy]
- Author
-
F, GABLER and O, RUKER
- Subjects
Microscopy ,Light ,Lighting - Published
- 1955
50. [The reflex photometer. A new construction principle for microscopic spectrophotometry]
- Author
-
F, GABLER, W, GUBISCH, W, LIPP, and O, RUKER
- Subjects
Photometry ,Equipment and Supplies ,Spectrophotometry ,Reflex ,Nervous System Physiological Phenomena - Published
- 1960
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