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Search: WFRF:(Kudela M)

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1.
  • Abdellaoui, G., et al. (author)
  • Meteor studies in the framework of the JEM-EUSO program
  • 2017
  • In: Planetary and Space Science. - : Elsevier. - 0032-0633 .- 1873-5088. ; 143, s. 245-255
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We summarize the state of the art of a program of UV observations from space of meteor phenomena, a secondary objective of the JEM-EUSO international collaboration. Our preliminary analysis indicates that JEM-EUSO, taking advantage of its large FOV and good sensitivity, should be able to detect meteors down to absolute magnitude close to 7. This means that JEM-EUSO should be able to record a statistically significant flux of meteors, including both sporadic ones, and events produced by different meteor streams. Being unaffected by adverse weather conditions, JEM-EUSO can also be a very important facility for the detection of bright meteors and fireballs, as these events can be detected even in conditions of very high sky background. In the case of bright events, moreover, exhibiting some persistence of the meteor train, preliminary simulations show that it should be possible to exploit the motion of the ISS itself and derive at least a rough 3D reconstruction of the meteor trajectory. Moreover, the observing strategy developed to detect meteors may also be applied to the detection of nuclearites, exotic particles whose existence has been suggested by some theoretical investigations. Nuclearites are expected to move at higher velocities than meteoroids, and to exhibit a wider range of possible trajectories, including particles moving upward after crossing the Earth. Some pilot studies, including the approved Mini-EUSO mission, a precursor of JEM-EUSO, are currently operational or in preparation. We are doing simulations to assess the performance of Mini-EUSO for meteor studies, while a few meteor events have been already detected using the ground-based facility EUSO-TA.
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2.
  • Abdellaoui, G., et al. (author)
  • First observations of speed of light tracks by a fluorescence detector looking down on the atmosphere
  • 2018
  • In: Journal of Instrumentation. - : IOP PUBLISHING LTD. - 1748-0221. ; 13
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • EUSO-Balloon is a pathfinder mission for the Extreme Universe Space Observatory onboard the Japanese Experiment Module (JEM-EUSO). It was launched on the moonless night of the 25(th) of August 2014 from Timmins, Canada. The flight ended successfully after maintaining the target altitude of 38 km for five hours. One part of the mission was a 2.5 hour underflight using a helicopter equipped with three UV light sources (LED, xenon flasher and laser) to perform an inflight calibration and examine the detectors capability to measure tracks moving at the speed of light. We describe the helicopter laser system and details of the underflight as well as how the laser tracks were recorded and found in the data. These are the first recorded laser tracks measured from a fluorescence detector looking down on the atmosphere. Finally, we present a first reconstruction of the direction of the laser tracks relative to the detector.
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3.
  • Mattsson, Lars-Åke, 1945, et al. (author)
  • Efficacy and tolerability of continuous combined hormone replacement therapy in early postmenopausal women
  • 2007
  • In: Menopause Int. ; 13:3, s. 124-131
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • OBJECTIVE: Continuous combined hormone replacement therapy (ccHRT) based on estradiol valerate (E(2)V) and medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) is effective for relief of menopausal symptoms three years or more after the menopause. This study was undertaken to examine the efficacy and tolerability of ccHRT in early postmenopausal women (last menstrual period 1.3 years before study entry). STUDY DESIGN: This was a 52-week, randomized, double-blind, multinational study of ccHRT comprising three different dose combinations of E(2)V/MPA in 459 early postmenopausal non-hysterectomized women experiencing 30 or more moderate to severe hot flushes a week and/or vasomotor symptoms requiring treatment. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES: The primary endpoint was change in frequency and severity of moderate to severe hot flushes at 12 weeks. Secondary outcome measures included number of bleeding days and evaluation of tolerability. RESULTS: The frequency of hot flushes was reduced by >/=70% after one month (P<0.001 for all doses at week 2 onwards), with little evidence of statistically different dose effects. Severity of flushing was also attenuated by ccHRT. Mean number of bleeding days fell to <1 per 28-day cycle at 52 weeks. Rates of amenorrhoea approached 80-90% at the end of the study, but were significantly lower at several time points with the highest-dose regimen (2 mg E(2)V + 5 mg MPA) than with the lower-dose options (1 mg E(2)V + 2.5 mg MPA and 1 mg E(2)V + 5 mg MPA; P<0.05). Adverse events declined in frequency over time with all regimens but throughout the study were more numerous with the highest-dose regimen than with lower doses (P= 0.0002). CONCLUSIONS: Continuous combined HRT was effective for the relief of climacteric symptoms in early postmenopausal women and was well tolerated.
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4.
  • Wells, M. L., et al. (author)
  • Harmful algal blooms and climate change: Learning from the past and present to forecast the future
  • 2015
  • In: Harmful Algae. - : Elsevier BV. - 1568-9883. ; 49, s. 68-93
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Climate change pressures will influence marine planktonic systems globally, and it is conceivable that harmful algal blooms may increase in frequency and severity. These pressures will be manifest as alterations in temperature, stratification, light, ocean acidification, precipitation-induced nutrient inputs, and grazing, but absence of fundamental knowledge of the mechanisms driving harmful algal blooms frustrates most hope of forecasting their future prevalence. Summarized here is the consensus of a recent workshop held to address what currently is known and not known about the environmental conditions that favor initiation and maintenance of harmful algal blooms. There is expectation that harmful algal bloom (HAB) geographical domains should expand in some cases, as will seasonal windows of opportunity for harmful algal blooms at higher latitudes. Nonetheless there is only basic information to speculate upon which regions or habitats HAB species may be the most resilient or susceptible. Moreover, current research strategies are not well suited to inform these fundamental linkages. There is a critical absence of tenable hypotheses for how climate pressures mechanistically affect HAB species, and the lack of uniform experimental protocols limits the quantitative cross-investigation comparisons essential to advancement. A HAB "best practices" manual would help foster more uniform research strategies and protocols, and selection of a small target list of model HAB species or isolates for study would greatly promote the accumulation of knowledge. Despite the need to focus on keystone species, more studies need to address strain variability within species, their responses under multifactorial conditions, and the retrospective analyses of long-term plankton and cyst core data; research topics that are departures from the norm. Examples of some fundamental unknowns include how larger and more frequent extreme weather events may break down natural biogeographic barriers, how stratification may enhance or diminish HAB events, how trace nutrients (metals, vitamins) influence cell toxicity, and how grazing pressures may leverage, or mitigate HAB development. There is an absence of high quality time-series data in most regions currently experiencing HAB outbreaks, and little if any data from regions expected to develop HAB events in the future. A subset of observer sites is recommended to help develop stronger linkages among global, national, and regional climate change and HAB observation programs, providing fundamental datasets for investigating global changes in the prevalence of harmful algal blooms. Forecasting changes in HAB patterns over the next few decades will depend critically upon considering harmful algal blooms within the competitive context of plankton communities, and linking these insights to ecosystem, oceanographic and climate models. From a broader perspective, the nexus of HAB science and the social sciences of harmful algal blooms is inadequate and prevents quantitative assessment of impacts of future HAB changes on human well-being. These and other fundamental changes in HAB research will be necessary if HAB science is to obtain compelling evidence that climate change has caused alterations in HAB distributions, prevalence or character, and to develop the theoretical, experimental, and empirical evidence explaining the mechanisms underpinning these ecological shifts. © 2015 Elsevier B.V.
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6.
  • Valente, André, et al. (author)
  • A compilation of global bio-optical in situ data for ocean-colour satellite applications - version two
  • 2019
  • In: Earth System Science Data. - : Copernicus GmbH. - 1866-3508 .- 1866-3516. ; 11:3, s. 1037-1068
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • A global compilation of in situ data is useful to evaluate the quality of ocean-colour satellite data records. Here we describe the data compiled for the validation of the ocean-colour products from the ESA Ocean Colour Climate Change Initiative (OC-CCI). The data were acquired from several sources (including, inter alia, MOBY, BOUSSOLE, AERONET-OC, SeaBASS, NOMAD, MERMAID, AMT, ICES, HOT and GeP&CO) and span the period from 1997 to 2018. Observations of the following variables were compiled: spectral remote-sensing reflectances, concentrations of chlorophyll a, spectral inherent optical properties, spectral diffuse attenuation coefficients and total suspended matter. The data were from multi-project archives acquired via open internet services or from individual projects, acquired directly from data providers. Methodologies were implemented for homogenization, quality control and merging of all data. No changes were made to the original data, other than averaging of observations that were close in time and space, elimination of some points after quality control and conversion to a standard format. The final result is a merged table designed for validation of satellite-derived ocean-colour products and available in text format. Metadata of each in situ measurement (original source, cruise or experiment, principal investigator) was propagated throughout the work and made available in the final table. By making the metadata available, provenance is better documented, and it is also possible to analyse each set of data separately. This paper also describes the changes that were made to the compilation in relation to the previous version (Valente et al., 2016). The compiled data are available at https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.898188 (Valente et al., 2019).
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7.
  • De Wit, Pierre, 1978, et al. (author)
  • Forensic genomics as a novel tool for identifying the causes of mass mortality events : Forensic genomics
  • 2014
  • In: Nature Communications. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 2041-1723. ; 5:artikel nr 3652, s. 1-8
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Toxic spills, hypoxia, disease outbreaks and toxin-producing algal blooms are all possible causes of mass mortality events, but in many cases it can be difficult to pinpoint the cause of death. Here we present a new approach that we name ‘forensic genomics’, combining field surveys, toxin testing and genomic scans. Forensic genomics queries allele frequencies of surviving animals for signatures of agents causing mass mortality and, where genetic diversity is high, is uniquely suited to identify natural selection in action. As a proof of concept, we use this approach to investigate the causes of an invertebrate mass mortality event, and its genetic effects on an abalone population. Our results support that a harmful algal bloom producing a yessotoxin was a major causative agent to the event.
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8.
  • Kubancak, J., et al. (author)
  • Liulin silicon semiconductor spectrometers as cosmic ray monitors at  the high mountain observatories Jungfraujoch and Lomnický štít
  • 2014
  • In: Journal of Instrumentation. - : Institute of Physics Publishing (IOPP). - 1748-0221. ; 9:P07018
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Currently, most cosmic ray data are obtained by detectors on satellites, aircraft, high-altitude balloons and ground (neutron monitors). In our work, we examined whether Liulin semiconductor spectrometers (simple silicon planar diode detectors with spectrometric properties) located at high mountain observatories could contribute new information to the monitoring of cosmic rays by analyzing data from selected solar events between 2005 and 2013. The decision thresholds and detection limits of these detectors placed at Jungfraujoch (Switzerland; 3475 m a.s.l.; vertical cut-off rigidity 4.5 GV) and Lomnicky. stit (Slovakia; 2633 m a.s.l.; vertical cut-off rigidity 3.84 GV) highmountain observatories were determined. The data showed that only the strongest variations of the cosmic ray flux in this period were detectable. The main limitation in the performance of these detectors is their small sensitive volume and low sensitivity of the PIN photodiode to neutrons.
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10.
  • Pilka, Radovan, et al. (author)
  • Exprese MMP-26 v endometrialnich explantech pod vlivem estradiolu a progesteronu
  • 2004
  • In: Ceska gynekologie / Ceska lekarska spolecnost J. Ev. Purkyne. - 1210-7832. ; 69:6, s. 467-471
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • OBJECTIVE: To examine possible estrogen dependent endometrial expression of MMP-26 in vitro. DESIGN: Experimental study. SETTING: Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the Palacky University Medical School and University Hospital, Olomouc, Czech Republic, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University Hospital, Lund, Sweden. METHODS: We studied MMP-26 mRNA in 14 normal endometrial samples obtained from the proliferative phase of the menstrual cycle. Samples were cultured for five days either with estradiol alone or in combination with progesterone. Samples cultured with ethanol represented control groups. MMP-26 mRNA expression was examined in frozen samples using in situ hybridization. Immunohistochemistry was used to study the presence of estrogen and progesterone receptors in endometrial explants. RESULTS: MMP-26 mRNA expression was highest in fresh (non cultured) samples. Signal intensity decreased during the first two days of culture and was negligable in the following days. Nuclear intensity for estrogen and progesterone receptor was high after five days of culture. CONCLUSION: We did not find MMP-26 mRNA in vitro expression to be directly estrogen dependent.
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11.
  • Pilka, R, et al. (author)
  • MMP-26 mRNA and estrogen receptor alpha co-expression in normal and pathological endometrium
  • 2005
  • In: Ceska gynekologie / Ceska lekarska spolecnost J. Ev. Purkyne. - 1210-7832. ; 70:1, s. 56-56
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • OBJECTIVE: To examine the expression pattern of matrix metalloproteinase-26 (MMP-26) mRNA and estrogen receptor-alpha (ER alpha) in normal, hyperplastic, premalignant and malignant endometrial tissue. DESIGN: Experimental study. SETTING: Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the Palacky University Medical School and University Hospital, Olomouc, Czech Republic, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University Hospital, Lund, Sweden, Atherosclerosis Research Unit, King Gustav V Research Institute, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. METHODS: We studied MMP-26 mRNA and ER alpha in 36 normal, 7 hyperplastic, 6 premalignant and 19 malignant endometrial samples. Based on histological examination, all normal specimens were classified according to an ideal 28 day menstrual cycle as early, mid, and late proliferative phase, early, mid and late secretory phase and menstrual phase. Samples with hyperplasia were classified as simple or complex. Premalignant samples were represented by complex hyperplasia with atypia. Malignant samples were histologically classified as well, intermediately and poorly differentiated, respectively. Specimens were analyzed using in situ hybridization and real time PCR. ER alpha was localized by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: Epithelial MMP-26 mRNA expression was highest in the early secretory phase and in endometrial hyperplasia. Expression levels were low in the late secretory and menstrual phase and in malignant samples decreased gradually with dedifferentiation. Expression pattern of MMP-26 mRNA in normal, hyperplastic, premalignant and malignant endometrial tissue strongly co-variated with that of ER alpha. CONCLUSION: Co-expression of MMP-26 and ER alpha in normal and pathological endometrial tissue suggests possible regulation of MMP-26 gene by estrogen.
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12.
  • Pilka, Radovan, et al. (author)
  • Nove matrix metaloproteinazy v cyklickem endometriu
  • 2004
  • In: Ceska gynekologie / Ceska lekarska spolecnost J. Ev. Purkyne. - 1210-7832. ; 69:4, s. 262-266
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • OBJECTIVE: To examine the expression pattern of some novel matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in cycling endometrium. DESIGN: Experimental study. SETTING: Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the Palacky University Medical School and University Hospital, Olomouc, Czech Republic, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University Hospital, Lund, Sweden. METHODS: We studied MMP-12, -16, -17, -19 and -26 mRNA in 39 normal endometrial samples obtained across the menstrual cycle. Based on histological examination, all specimens were classified according to an ideal 28 day menstrual cycle as early (n=8), mid (n=6) and late (n=7) proliferative phase, early (n=4), mid (n=4) and late (n=8) secretory phase and menstrual (n=3) phase. Cycle variation was examined in frozen samples using in situ hybridization. RESULTS: Three distinct pattern of MMP mRNA expression were detected in cycling endometrium. MMP-12 was expressed predominantly in perimenstrual period, MMP-16, -17 and 19 were expressed throughout the cycle and MMP-26 was found to be maximal in periovulatory period. CONCLUSION: Different endometrial expression patterns of novel MMPs during menstrual cycle may indicate their specific roles for menstruation, endometrial growth and remodelling and implantation.
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13.
  • Pilka, Radovan, et al. (author)
  • Profily endometrialni exprese mRNA u vybranych matrix metaloproteinaz a tkanoveho inhibitoru metaloproteinaz-1
  • 2004
  • In: Ceska gynekologie / Ceska lekarska spolecnost J. Ev. Purkyne. - 1210-7832. ; 69:6, s. 472-476
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • OBJECTIVE: To examine the endometrial expression pattern of messenger RNA (mRNA) for selected matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1 (TIMP-1). DESIGN: Experimental study. SETTING: Department of Obstetrics and gynecology of the Palacky University Medical School and University Hospital, Olomouc, Czech Republic, Department of Obsterics and Gynecology, University Hospital, Luna, Sweden. METHODS: We studied MMP-1, -3, -7, -10, -11, -12, -13, -14, -16, -26 and TIMP-1 mRNA in 39 normal endometrial samples obtained across the menstrual cycle. Based on histological examination, all specimens were classified according to an ideal 28 day menstrual cycle as early (n=8), mid (n=6) and late (n=7) proliferative phase, early (n=4), mid (n=4) and late (n=8) secretory phase and menstrual (n=3) phase. mRNA extracted from frozen tissue samples was quantitated using real time PCR. RESULTS: Four distinct patterns of MMP mRNA expression were detected in cycling endometrium. MMP-1, -3, -10, and -12 were expressed predominantly in perimenstrual period, MMP-7 and -11 had highest levels in proliferative phase, MMP-13, -14 and -16 were expressed throughout the cycle and MMP-26 was found to be maximal in periovulatory period. Levels of TIMP-1 mRNA remained unchanged during the cycle. CONCLUSION: The specific endometrial expression profiles of MMPs during menstrual cycle point to their specific biologic roles during the cycle. MMP-26 exhibits a unique expression pattern.
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