We present several image reconstruction algorithms for generating three-dimensional (3-D) renderings of bright-field micrographs that are founded on maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) theory. The basic principle of the algorithms is in estimating the values of the optical densities of the specimen. A computer simulation and initial experimental testing of a steepest ascent version of the algorithm is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty-one 6-alkoxypurine 2',3'-dideoxynucleosides were enzymatically synthesized with nucleoside phosphorylases purified from E. coli. Eighteen analogs exhibited anti-HIV-1 activity in MT4 cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile your November 11 news item detailed a Royal College of Nursing survey showing 'broad cuts in the school nurse service', I would like to tell you of the developments in our service.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn a three-dimensional (3-D) image data set obtained through optical sectioning, each two-dimensional (2-D) segment is blurred by out-of-focus information from neighbouring focal planes superimposed on the in-focus segments from that plane. Instead of attempting to remove this redundant information over the full 3-D data set, we have developed a technique for restoring stereoscopic views. In this paper we describe the implementation of a Wiener-type inverse filtering method for generating stereo pairs of bright-field micrographs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Opt Soc Am A
July 1992
Previous research presented by the author and others into maximum-likelihood image restoration for incoherent imagery is extended to consider problems of blind deconvolution in which the impulse response of the system is assumed to be unknown. Potential applications that motivate this study are wide-field and confocal fluorescence microscopy, although applications in astronomy and infrared imaging are foreseen as well. The methodology incorporates the iterative expectation-maximization algorithm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe determined the incidence of neural tube defects (anencephaly, spina bifida, hydrocephalus) in a rural county in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan because several local physicians perceived that the incidence in this area might be high. To assure that all neural tube defects that occurred were noted, data for the study were collected from hospital birth-log books, patient records of all neural tube defect births, all stillbirth records, and from records of babies transferred to other regional hospitals. A reference group consisting of 10% of all nonneural tube defect births during the 20 years of the study was selected at random and used to make comparisons to the case group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn approach to the maximum-likelihood estimation of attenuation coefficients in transmission tomography is presented as an extension of earlier theoretical work by K. Lange and R. Carson (J.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
June 1991
In human, the amplitudes of specific event-related potential (ERP) components can increase or decrease in response to increasing stimulus intensity depending on the location of the recording site. Large increases characterize components presumably generated by modality-specific sites, while smaller increases or even decreases are associated with those originating in associational areas. Comparable data from non-human primates, which would permit invasive studies of the neural substrates underlying these intensity-amplitude differences, are limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
April 1991
Semi-automated optimization of dose distributions is possible using techniques borrowed from imaging science. The ideal distribution of dose is first deconvolved by a convolution kernel yielding an ideal weighting distribution in the patient. The weighting distribution describes the total energy released per unit mass of the irradiated medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the effects of 3,4-DAP on ACh release from rat striatal slices superfused with or without choline, at rest and during electrical stimulation. In a choline-free medium, 3,4-DAP increased basal and stimulated ACh release while lowering the net efflux of choline; thus while the sum of ACh plus choline released remained constant, the ratio of released ACh to that of choline was increased. The drug failed to affect tissue ACh, choline or membrane phospholipid levels (including those of phosphatidylcholine).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
December 1989
To more fully characterize brain-stem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) in non-human primates, BAEPs were recorded from chronically implanted epidural electrodes in 10 squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus). The effects of stimulus intensity, repetition rate, and anesthesia (ketamine 20 mg/kg i.m.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA maximum likelihood based iterative algorithm adapted from nuclear medicine imaging for noncoherent optical imaging was presented in a previous publication with some initial computer-simulation testing. This algorithm is identical in form to that previously derived in a different way by W. H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA system is described by means of which the ambulant subject may be video-filmed over several hours with the electroencephalograph superimposed on the same tape, allowing correlations to be observed in the active state. Our first subjects have been girls with Rett syndrome. Requirements are: one portable video camera/recorder, a conventional e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
August 1988
Monkeys were trained in auditory discrimination tasks resembling human paradigms in which long-latency endogenous components, such as P300, are typically recorded. Morphological, topographical, and functional properties of the monkey event-related potentials (ERPs) were analyzed to determine similarities and differences with human ERPs reported in the literature. ERPs were recorded from epidural electrodes in monkeys trained to produce operant responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Radiation Oncology Center in Sacramento, California, has developed a procedure for establishing an intraoperative radiation therapy facility in a community practice. The logistics pertaining to personnel, equipment, physical measurements, and quality assurance are presented. Particular emphasis is given to the most effective means of acquiring the large quantity of data needed to ensure a program of acceptable quality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 66-year old obese man with asthma was given a hypocaloric (1100 Kcal) and low protein (35 g) diet for nine days. While receiving theophylline (Theodur), 200 mg bid, his morning trough theophylline concentrations rose from 3.40 micrograms/ml to 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA mathematical model and computer simulation, presented in a previous publication, of the optics of differential-interference-contrast (DIC) microscopy (DICM) is extended to consider the effects of stochastic noise. Images resulting from this simulation indicate that, even in the presence of a significant level of noise, the resolution and detail of objects can be much improved with a proposed image-restoration algorithm. Thus the feasibility of superresolution with DICM in the presence of noise is supported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Opt
September 1987
A mathematical model based on the methods of Fourier optics is presented as a description of the signalprocessing characteristics of differential-interference-contrast microscopy. A computerized simulation of this signal processing is described, and some images of abstract objects generated by this simulation are presented. This model and its simulation have implications on the feasibility of image restoration with superresolution by way of differential-interference-contrast microscopy under the classical constraints of finite object size and non-negativity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutosomal recessive inheritance of juvenile cataract is described amongst several related sibships of Lehrerleut Hutterites. The main features of the cataract include onset between three and seven years of age; rapid progression to maturity within one to three months; normal intelligence; no systemic associations, and no urinary reducing substances and normal erythrocyte galactokinase activity. Genetic analysis demonstrates the close relationship between parents of affected sibships with a coefficient of inbreeding of affected sibships of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe chemical syntheses and biological evaluation of several potential irreversible inhibitors for prostaglandin (PGH) synthase are described. These inhibitors were modeled after the nonsteroidal antiinflammatory (NSAI) drug phenylbutazone (4-n-butyl-1,2-diphenyl-3,5-pyrazolidinedione). Electrophilic functionalities such as an alpha-bromoacetamide, an alpha-chloroacetamide, a phenylurethane, a propargyl chloride, and several alpha,beta-unsaturated Michael acceptors were incorporated at the 4-position of the pyrazolidinedione ring structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent reports of serious concern regarding the safe clinical use of phenylbutazone and its hydroxylated metabolite (oxyphenbutazone) as antiinflammatory agents have prompted the further investigation of ring-opened (malonamide) derivatives as potentially preferable therapeutic derivatives. Earlier reports have claimed reduced toxicity among similar derivatives. These studies reveal the relative degree of prostaglandin-H (PGH) synthase inhibitory activity among a series of malonamide derivatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study has evaluated the effect of some newly synthesized triphenylethylene (TPE) analogs on platelet arachidonic acid metabolism and function. All compounds tested inhibited arachidonic acid induced platelet aggregation and several were superior to aspirin in their relative potency. Introduction of a carboxyl function into the alpha-ring, which should enhance binding according to proposed structural models for cyclooxygenase inhibitors, was not found to be beneficial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunopharmacology
October 1986
Rings of intrapulmonary bronchi isolated from rabbits producing anti-horseradish peroxidase IgE antibodies contracted when exposed to antigen. The contractile response had a lag period of about 1 min, reached a peak at 6 min and then subsided. Bronchi from rabbits with detectable levels of specific IgG (in addition to IgE) antibodies did not differ in response from those with undetectable specific IgG levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSegregation of HLA haplotypes and offspring genotype distributions were analyzed in families from an inbred Caucasoid population, the Dariusleut Hutterite Brethren. Both parents and from one to 12 offspring were typed for HLA-A and -B antigens in 108 families. Segregation of paternal haplotypes was analyzed conditional on sibship size in 95 sibships (a total of 547 offspring), and segregation of maternal haplotypes, in 90 sibships (a total of 515 offspring).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA mortality follow-up study was conducted of workers employed at a synthetic rubber manufacturing plant in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Interest in the potential health effects of exposure to methyl chloride, one of the substances used in the manufacturing process, provided the impetus for this study. The study cohort consisted of 852 male process workers who had worked at least 1 month during the period from startup of operations in 1943 through December 31, 1978.
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