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Institution

United States Department of the Army

GovernmentArlington, Virginia, United States
About: United States Department of the Army is a government organization based out in Arlington, Virginia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Poison control & Population. The organization has 32668 authors who have published 42453 publications receiving 947075 citations. The organization is also known as: DA & U.S. Department of the Army.
Topics: Poison control, Population, Laser, Signal, Virus


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In patients with uncomplicated cellulitis, 5 days of therapy with levofloxacin appears to be as effective as 10 days of Therapy.
Abstract: Background:Cellulitisisaconditionroutinelyencountered in the primary care setting. No previous study has compared a short (5 days) vs standard (10 days) course oftherapyofthesameantibioticinpatientswithuncomplicated cellulitis. Methods: We performed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to determine if 5 days of therapy has equal efficacy to 10 days of therapy for patients with cellulitis. Of 121 enrolled subjects evaluated after 5 days of therapy for cellulitis, 43 were randomized to receive 5 more days of levofloxacin therapy (10 days total antibiotic treatment), and 44 subjects to receive 5 more days of placebo therapy (5 days of total antibiotic treatment). Levofloxacin was given at a dose of 500 mg/d. Subjects were not randomized if they had worsening cellulitis, a persistent nidus of infection, a lack of any clinical improvement, or abscess formation within the first 5 days of therapy. The main outcome measure was resolution ofcellulitisat14days,withabsenceofrelapseby28days, after study enrollment. Results:Eighty-sevensubjectswererandomizedandanalyzed by intention to treat. There was no significant difference in clinical outcome between the 2 courses of therapy (success in 42 [98%] of 43 subjects receiving 10 days of antibiotic, and 43 [98%] of 44 subjects receiving 5 days of antibiotic) at both 14 and 28 days of therapy. Conclusion: In patients with uncomplicated cellulitis, 5 days of therapy with levofloxacin appears to be as effective as 10 days of therapy. Arch Intern Med. 2004;164:1669-1674

209 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The systemic metabolic and circulatory alterations following thermal injury are directed to support the healing wound and are directed by alterations in neurohumoral control.

209 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1986-Virology
TL;DR: The data demonstrate that the coding strategy of the Hantaan virus S RNA is different than those reported for other viruses in this family.

208 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The RNA of this virus was successfully amplified with hantavirus genus reactive primer sets by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR), however, PCR‐RFLP analysis of the amplified product was shown to be unique among those of the known hantAViruses, further indicating that Dobrava virus represents a new hantvirus serotype.
Abstract: Small mammals were collected in natural foci of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) in Slovenia, Yugoslavia, and a hantavirus was isolated from the lungs of an Apodemus flavicol lis captured in Dobrava village. This new isolate, Dobrava virus, was compared with representative strains of the Hantavirus genus by serological and polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) methods. It was found by cross immunofluorescent and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays that antigenic properties of Dobrava virus were different from those of other hantaviruses. The RNA of this virus was successfully amplified with hantavirus genus reactive primer sets by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR); however, PCR-RFLP analysis of the amplified product was shown to be unique among those of the known hantaviruses, further indicating that Dobrava virus represents a new hantavirus serotype. Published 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

208 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a simple wire antenna was shown to be a resonator of the external electromagnetic radiation, which is consistent with conventional radio antenna theory and simulations, by demonstrating that its directional radiation characteristics are in an excellent and quantitative agreement with conventional Radio antenna theory.
Abstract: Light scattering from an array of aligned multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) has previously been investigated, and shown to be consistent with that from an array of antennae. Two basic antenna effects have been demonstrated: 1) the polarization effect, which suppresses the response of an antenna when the electric field of the incoming radiation is polarized perpendicular to the dipole antenna axis, and 2) the antenna-length effect, which maximizes the antenna response when the antenna length is a multiple of the radiation half wavelength in the medium surrounding the antenna. In these previous experiments a random nanotube array was chosen to eliminate the intertube diffraction effects. In this communication, we provide compelling evidence of the antenna action of an MWCNT, by demonstrating that its directional radiation characteristics are in an excellent and quantitative agreement with conventional radio antenna theory and simulations. According to conventional radio antenna theory, a simple “thin” wire antenna (a metallic rod of diameter d and length l >> d) maximizes its response to a wavelength k when l = mk/2, where m is a positive integer. Thus, an antenna acts as a resonator of the external electromagnetic radiation. An antenna is a complex boundary value problem; it is a resonator for both the external fields, and the currents at the antenna surface. In a long radiating antenna, a periodic pattern of current distribution is excited along the antenna, synchronized with the pattern of fields outside. The current pattern consists of segments, with the current direction alternating from segment to segment. Thus, a long antenna can be viewed as an antenna array consisting of smaller, coherently driven antennae (segments) in series. Therefore, the resulting radiation pattern, as a function of the angle with respect to the antenna axis, consists of lobes of constructive interference, separated by radiation minima due to destructive interference. Consider a simple antenna as shown in Figure 1a. The radiation pattern produced by this antenna is rotationally symmetric about the z axis. For a center-fed antenna, or one excited by an external wave propagating perpendicular to the antenna axis (i.e., with the glancing angle hi = 90°), the pattern is also symmetric with respect to the x–y plane. For an antenna excited by an incoming wave propagating at an angle (hi < 90°), the relative strengths of the radiation lobes are expected to shift towards the specular direction. This follows from a qualitative argument based on the single-photon scattering picture, and conservation laws for scattered photons from an antenna. Since such scattering is elastic, the energy of each scattering photon x (where is the reduced Planck constant and x is the angular frequency) and its total momentum k = ki= ks (where k is the wave number, ki is the incident wave vector, and ks is the scattered wave vector) must be conserved. Due to the cylindrical symmetry, K, the length of the momentum vector component perpendicular to the antenna, must also be conserved. Thus, the momentum components parallel to the antenna for the incoming, and scattered photons, k (s) and k (i) respectively, satisfy the following condition k (i) = k 2 – K = k (s), or finally k (s) = ±k (i). This immediately leads to a formula for the angle of scattering hs = 180° – hi, since for a “thin” antenna with diameter d << l, the back scattering is suppressed, and therefore the negative sign is unlikely. Thus, scattering is dominated by the specular reflection. We have confirmed this effect, by measuring the scattered microwave radiation from a simple wire antenna; the forward radiation was about one order of magnitude more intense than for the backward scattered wave. To complete the preliminary antenna studies, we performed computer simulations of the detailed antenna response to an external plane wave. Figure 1b shows a polar coordinate plot of the radiation pattern (field intensity versus h), in the y–z plane, from a thin antenna (d = 0.001l) with l = 7k. The incoming wave of fixed wavelength k, struck the antenna at different incidence angles hi = 30°, 45°, and 60°. This produced radiation patterns dominated by lobes at hs = 180 – hi = 150°, 135°, and 120°, respectively: the scattering was dominated by the specular reflection with respect to the 90° line, in agreement with the simple analysis above. Due to cylindrical symmetry in the x–y plane, the response was mirror-image symmetric about the z axis in the x–z plane. The dependence of C O M M U N IC A IO N

208 citations


Authors

Showing all 32680 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David L. Kaplan1771944146082
Russel J. Reiter1691646121010
Donald G. Truhlar1651518157965
Jie Liu131153168891
Martin A. Green127106976807
William J. Kraemer12375554774
Steven J. Jacobsen12366262716
Roger H Unger12149348035
Thomas C. Quinn12082765881
John B. Holcomb12073353760
Stephen Mann12066955008
Bette T. Korber11739249526
Thomas G. Ksiazek11339846108
John R. Anderson11253884725
Stanley I. Rapoport10769645793
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20232
202229
2021914
2020960
2019964
2018911