Purpose
Patients with metastatic cancer can experience debilitating symptoms, which may influence attitudes towards and engagement in physical activity. This study aimed to examine the attitudes of ...patients living with metastatic prostate cancer towards physical activity.
Materials and methods
Semi-structured interviews were completed with male patients living with metastatic prostate cancer. Interviews included eight questions related to patients’ attitudes towards physical activity. Content analysis was conducted on the transcribed interview data. Twenty men with metastatic prostate cancer (mean age 71 ± 8.5 years; body mass index 30.19 ± 5.37 kg/cm
2
) and associated bone metastases (55% with > 2 regions affected) participated in the study.
Results
Men’s views towards physical activity were coded into the following major themes: (1) barriers to physical activity, (2) benefits of physical activity, (3) a reduction in physical activity levels post diagnosis and (4) social support for physical activity. Symptoms of metastatic prostate cancer and treatment side effects including pain and fatigue negatively influenced activity participation. In addition, many generic barriers to physical activity were described such as bad weather and a lack of suitable facilities for exercising in rural areas.
Conclusion
Men living with metastatic prostate cancer have unique needs regarding physical activity related to symptoms of both their cancer and cancer treatment. There is a need to increase prompts that encourage those with metastatic prostate cancer to maintain/increase physical activity levels post diagnosis. Given the individualised needs of this patient group, referral to a cancer exercise specialist should be considered for prescription of tailored physical activity programmes.
Trial registration
Clinicaltrials.gov
NLM Identifier: NCT02453139
Mosquito‐borne diseases such as malaria, dengue fever and filariasis cause an enormous health burden to people living in tropical and subtropical regions of the world. Despite years of intense effort ...to control them, many of these diseases are increasing in prevalence, geographical distribution and severity, and options to control them are limited. The transinfection of mosquitos with the maternally inherited, endosymbiotic bacteria Wolbachia is a promising new biocontrol approach. Fruit fly Wolbachia strains can invade and sustain themselves in mosquito populations, reduce adult lifespan, affect mosquito reproduction and interfere with pathogen replication. Wolbachia‐infected Aedes aegypti mosquitoes have been released in areas of Australia in which outbreaks of dengue fever occur, as a prelude to the application of this technology in dengue‐endemic areas of south‐east Asia.
Mosquito‐borne diseases are an increasing problem in many regions of the world, and control options are limited. Mosquito infection with the endosymbiotic bacteria Wolbachia—which reduces lifespan, affects mosquito reproduction and interferes with pathogen replication—is a promising new biocontrol strategy.
Microwave spectra of the propiolic acid-formic acid doubly hydrogen bonded complex were measured in the 1 GHz to 21 GHz range using four different Fourier transform spectrometers. Rotational spectra ...for seven isotopologues were obtained. For the parent isotopologue, a total of 138 a-dipole transitions and 28 b-dipole transitions were measured for which the a-dipole transitions exhibited splittings of a few MHz into pairs of lines and the b-type dipole transitions were split by ~580 MHz. The transitions assigned to this complex were fit to obtain rotational and distortion constants for both tunneling levels: A(0+) = 6005.289(8), B(0+) = 930.553(8), C(0+) = 803.9948(6) MHz, Δ(0+)(J) = 0.075(1), Δ(0+)(JK) = 0.71(1), and δ(0+)(j) = -0.010(1) kHz and A(0-) = 6005.275(8), B(0-) = 930.546(8), C(0-) = 803.9907(5) MHz, Δ(0-)(J) = 0.076(1), Δ(0-)(JK) = 0.70(2), and δ(0-)(j) = -0.008(1) kHz. Double resonance experiments were used on some transitions to verify assignments and to obtain splittings for cases when the b-dipole transitions were difficult to measure. The experimental difference in energy between the two tunneling states is 291.428(5) MHz for proton-proton exchange and 3.35(2) MHz for the deuterium-deuterium exchange. The vibration-rotation coupling constant between the two levels, F(ab), is 120.7(2) MHz for the proton-proton exchange. With one deuterium atom substituted in either of the hydrogen-bonding protons, the tunneling splittings were not observed for a-dipole transitions, supporting the assignment of the splitting to the concerted proton tunneling motion. The spectra were obtained using three Flygare-Balle type spectrometers and one chirped-pulse machine at the University of Virginia. Rotational constants and centrifugal distortion constants were obtained for HCOOH···HOOCCCH, H(13)COOH···HOOCCCH, HCOOD···HOOCCCH, HCOOH···DOOCCCH, HCOOD···DOOCCCH, DCOOH···HOOCCCH, and DCOOD···HOOCCCH. High-level ab initio calculations provided initial rotational constants for the complex, structural parameters, and some details of the proton tunneling potential energy surface. A least squares fit to the isotopic data reveals a planar structure that is slightly asymmetric in the OH distances. The formic OH···O propiolic hydrogen bond length is 1.8 Å and the propiolic OH···O formic hydrogen bond length is 1.6 Å, for the equilibrium configuration. The magnitude of the dipole moment was experimentally determined to be 1.95(3) × 10(-30) C m (0.584(8) D) for the 0(+) states and 1.92(5) × 10(-30) C m (0.576(14) D) for the 0(-) states.
Background
Physical activity (PA) levels play an important role in maintaining the quality of life and enhancing the physical function of advanced cancer patients. A brief exercise prompt by ...physicians can increase PA levels of patients diagnosed with cancer.
Aims
This study explores the views of Irish oncology and palliative care physicians towards PA for patients with advanced cancer.
Methods
A web-based survey with closed- and open-ended questions was used to explore physicians’ views. The survey presented a Likert-style questionnaire and open text responses to two patient case studies. Quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics, and qualitative data were analysed using content analysis.
Results
Forty participants completed the study, a response rate of 41%. Responding physicians acknowledged the importance of physical activity for patients with advanced cancer. Twenty-six physicians (67%) agreed that patients look to them for PA recommendations and 30 physicians (77%) indicated a need for more information on providing PA recommendations. Case study responses highlighted concerns relating to PA prescription for patients with bone metastases including the aggravation of symptom control and increased fracture risk.
Conclusions
The results of this study identify a need for physician education on providing PA recommendations for patients with advanced cancer. Concerns over the prescription of PA to patients with bone metastases highlight the need to disseminate the evidence on the benefits of PA for patients with metastatic cancer to healthcare professionals.
Recent advances in the technology of test and measurement equipment driven by the computer and telecommunications industries have made possible the development of a new broadband, Fourier-transform ...microwave spectrometer that operates on principles similar to FTNMR. This technique uses a high sample-rate arbitrary waveform generator to construct a phase-locked chirped microwave pulse that gives a linear frequency sweep over a wide frequency range in 1 μs. The chirped pulse efficiently polarizes the molecular sample at all frequencies lying within this band. The subsequent free induction decay of this polarization is measured with a high-speed digitizer and then fast Fourier-transformed to yield a broadband, frequency-resolved rotational spectrum, spanning up to 11.5 GHz and containing lines that are as narrow as 100 kHz. This new technique is called chirped-pulse Fourier transform microwave (CP-FTMW) spectroscopy. The technique offers the potential to determine the structural and dynamical properties of very large molecules solely from fully resolved pure rotational spectra. FTMW double resonance techniques employing a low-resolution UV laser facilitate an easy assignment of overlapping spectra produced by different conformers in the sample. Of particular interest are the energy landscapes of conformationally flexible molecules of biological importance, including studies of their interaction with solvent and/or other weakly bound molecules. An example is provided from the authors' work on p-methoxyphenethylamine, a neurotransmitter, and its complexes with water.
Chirped-pulse Fourier transform spectroscopy has recently been extended to millimeter wave spectroscopy as a technique for the characterization of room-temperature gas samples. Here we present a ...variation of this technique that significantly reduces the technical requirements on high-speed digital electronics and the data throughput, with no reduction in the broadband spectral coverage and no increase in the time required to reach a given sensitivity level. This method takes advantage of the frequency agility of arbitrary waveform generators by utilizing a series of low-bandwidth chirped excitation pulses paired in time with a series of offset single frequency local oscillators, which are used to detect the molecular free induction decay signals in a heterodyne receiver. A demonstration of this technique is presented in which a 67 GHz bandwidth spectrum of methanol (spanning from 792 to 859 GHz) is acquired in 58 μs.
Molecular Rotational Resonance (MRR) spectroscopy is a uniquely precise tool for the determination of molecular structures of volatile compounds in mixtures, as the characteristic rotational ...transition frequencies of a molecule are extremely sensitive to its 3D structure through the moments of inertia in a three-dimensional coordinate system. This enables identification of the compounds based on just a few parameters that can be calculated, as opposed to, for example, mass spectrometric data, which often require expert analysis of 10–20 different signals and the use of many standards/model compounds. This paper introduces a new sampling technique for MRR, laser-induced acoustic desorption (LIAD), to allow the vaporization of nonvolatile and thermally labile analytes without the need for excessive heating or derivatization. In this proof-of-concept study, LIAD was successfully coupled to an MRR instrument to conduct measurements on seven compounds with differing polarities, molecular weights, and melting and boiling points. Identification of three isomers in a mixture was also successfully performed using LIAD/MRR. Based on these results, LIAD/MRR is demonstrated to provide a powerful approach for the identification of nonvolatile and/or thermally labile analytes with molecular weights up to 600 Da in simple mixtures, which does not require the use of reference compounds. In the future, applications to more complex mixtures, such as those relevant to pharmaceutical research, and quantitative aspects of LIAD/MRR will be reported.
Purification and isolation of SWNTs Gregan, E.; Keogh, S.M.; Maguire, A. ...
Carbon (New York),
2004, 2004-00-00, Letnik:
42, Številka:
5
Journal Article, Conference Proceeding
Recenzirano
This work involves the purification and isolation of arc-discharge and HiPco SWNTs using two different systems. The first involves the use of conjugated polymers such as PmPV to selectively isolate ...certain tubes. The second uses SWNT as templates for organic molecules such as terphenyl and anthracene. Improvements in the solubility of SWNTs are seen in both cases. Spectroscopic analyses indicate a specific interaction between the tubes and the organic species.
Abstract
Background
Atrial arrhythmias represent a major cause of morbidity and hospitalization in patients with atrial septal defects (ASD). Optimum treatment strategies are unknown since the ...mechanisms of arrhythmia are undefined in this cohort.
Purpose
We investigated whether percutaneous ASD closure reduces atrial arrhythmias and subsequently examined the electrical and structural changes underpinning arrhythmogenesis in ASD patients.
Methods
Meta-analysis was used to study the effect of closure on arrhythmias. Bi-atrial electrical dysfunction was assessed through invasive measurement of atrial voltage, refractory periods (ERP) over three drive trains (600, 450 and 300ms) and local conduction velocity (CV) with subsequent assessment of ERP and CV restitution. Structural remodelling was assessed through non-invasive quantification of fibrosis using cardiac MRI (CMR). Origin of ectopy was evaluated invasively using isoprenaline infusion and non-invasively using 24-hour Holter monitoring. Comparison was made to normal heart controls.
Results
Meta-analysis
Meta-analysis of 25 studies found that percutaneous closure was associated with a weak reduction in atrial arrhythmias only in patients >40 years old (OR 0.777, 95% CI 0.616-0.979, P = 0.032).
Electrical Remodelling
On invasive assessment (21 ASDs; 21 controls), proportion of right atrial low voltage (<0.5mV) and scar (<0.05mV) was greater in ASD vs control patients (P = 0.02 and P = 0.039). In ASD patients, these parameters were greater in the right atrium vs the left atrium (P = 0.002 and P = 0.01). Right atrial ERP restitution slopes were steeper in ASD vs control patients (P = 0.016). Maximum right atrial CV and CV restitution slopes were greater in ASD vs control patients (P= 0.005 and P < 0.001 respectively) and CV decrement occurred at longer coupling intervals in the right atrium in ASD patients (P = 0.015).
Structural Remodelling
On CMR assessment (36 ASDs; 36 controls), bi-atrial fibrosis was greater in ASD vs control patients (P < 0.001). In ASD patients right atrial fibrosis was burden greater in patients with vs without atrial arrhythmias (P = 0.034).
Arrhythmia Triggers
On 24-hour Holter monitoring and during invasive isoprenaline infusion right and left atrial ectopy was equally prevalent in ASD vs control patients.
Conclusion
This study highlights the importance of right atrial electrical dysfunction to the occurrence of arrhythmias in ASD patients with extensive right atrial remodelling (fibrosis, low voltage, steeper ERP and CV restitution) seen in ASD patients compared to normal heart controls.
From the results of the meta-analysis it appears that percutaneous closure alone is insufficient to treat arrhythmias in ASD patients. Given the predominance of right atrial remodelling, right-sided ablation as an adjunct to conventional left-sided ablation should be investigated as a strategy to treat atrial arrhythmias in these patients.
Abstract Figure.