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Kamioka Observatory, Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, University of Tokyo, Kamioka, Gifu 506-1205, Japan and Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe, University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Chiba 277-8582, Japan.
We present a search for differences in the oscillations of antineutrinos and neutrinos in the Super-Kamiokande-I,-II, and -III atmospheric neutrino sample. Under a two-flavor disappearance model with separate mixing parameters between neutrinos and antineutrinos, we find no evidence for a difference in oscillation parameters. Best-fit antineutrino mixing is found to be at (Δm[over ¯]^{2},sin⁡^{2}2θ[over ¯])=(2.0×10^{-3}  eV^{2},1.0) and is consistent with the overall Super-K measurement.
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[My paper] K Abe, N Abgrall, Y Ajima, H Aihara, J B Albert, C Andreopoulos, B Andrieu, S Aoki, O Araoka, J Argyriades, A Ariga, T Ariga, S Assylbekov, D Autiero, A Badertscher, M Barbi, G J Barker, G Barr, M Bass, F Bay, S Bentham, V Berardi, B E Berger, I Bertram, M Besnier, J Beucher, D Beznosko, S Bhadra, F d M M Blaszczyk, A Blondel, C Bojechko, J Bouchez, S B Boyd, A Bravar, C Bronner, D G Brook-Roberge, N Buchanan, H Budd, D Calvet, S L Cartwright, A Carver, R Castillo, M G Catanesi, A Cazes, A Cervera, C Chavez, S Choi, G Christodoulou, J Coleman, W Coleman, G Collazuol, K Connolly, A Curioni, A Dabrowska, I Danko, R Das, G S Davies, S Davis, M Day, G De Rosa, J P A M de André, P de Perio, A Delbart, C Densham, F Di Lodovico, S Di Luise, P Dinh Tran, J Dobson, U Dore, O Drapier, F Dufour, J Dumarchez, S Dytman, M Dziewiecki, M Dziomba, S Emery, A Ereditato, L Escudero, L S Esposito, M Fechner, A Ferrero, A J Finch, E Frank, Y Fujii, Y Fukuda, V Galymov, F C Gannaway, A Gaudin, A Gendotti, M A George, S Giffin, C Giganti, K Gilje, T Golan, M Goldhaber, J J Gomez-Cadenas, M Gonin, N Grant, A Grant, P Gumplinger, P Guzowski, A Haesler, M D Haigh, K Hamano, C Hansen, D Hansen, T Hara, P F Harrison, B Hartfiel, M Hartz, T Haruyama, T Hasegawa, N C Hastings, S Hastings, A Hatzikoutelis, K Hayashi, Y Hayato, C Hearty, R L Helmer, R Henderson, N Higashi, J Hignight, E Hirose, J Holeczek, S Horikawa, A Hyndman, A K Ichikawa, K Ieki, M Ieva, M Iida, M Ikeda, J Ilic, J Imber, T Ishida, C Ishihara, T Ishii, S J Ives, M Iwasaki, K Iyogi, A Izmaylov, B Jamieson, R A Johnson, K K Joo, G V Jover-Manas, C K Jung, H Kaji, T Kajita, H Kakuno, J Kameda, K Kaneyuki, D Karlen, K Kasami, I Kato, E Kearns, M Khabibullin, F Khanam, A Khotjantsev, D Kielczewska, T Kikawa, J Kim, J Y Kim, S B Kim, N Kimura, B Kirby, J Kisiel, P Kitching, T Kobayashi, G Kogan, S Koike, A Konaka, L L Kormos, A Korzenev, K Koseki, Y Koshio, Y Kouzuma, K Kowalik, V Kravtsov, I Kreslo, W Kropp, H Kubo, Y Kudenko, N Kulkarni, R Kurjata, T Kutter, J Lagoda, K Laihem, M Laveder, K P Lee, P T Le, J M Levy, C Licciardi, I T Lim, T Lindner, R P Litchfield, M Litos, A Longhin, G D Lopez, P F Loverre, L Ludovici, T Lux, M Macaire, K Mahn, Y Makida, M Malek, S Manly, A Marchionni, A D Marino, J Marteau, J F Martin, T Maruyama, T Maryon, J Marzec, P Masliah, E L Mathie, C Matsumura, K Matsuoka, V Matveev, K Mavrokoridis, E Mazzucato, N McCauley, K S McFarland, C McGrew, T McLachlan, M Messina, W Metcalf, C Metelko, M Mezzetto, P Mijakowski, C A Miller, A Minamino, O Mineev, S Mine, A D Missert, G Mituka, M Miura, K Mizouchi, L Monfregola, F Moreau, B Morgan, S Moriyama, A Muir, A Murakami, M Murdoch, S Murphy, J Myslik, T Nakadaira, M Nakahata, T Nakai, K Nakajima, T Nakamoto, K Nakamura, S Nakayama, T Nakaya, D Naples, M L Navin, B Nelson, T C Nicholls, K Nishikawa, H Nishino, J A Nowak, M Noy, Y Obayashi, T Ogitsu, H Ohhata, T Okamura, K Okumura, T Okusawa, S M Oser, M Otani, R A Owen, Y Oyama, T Ozaki, M Y Pac, V Palladino, V Paolone, P Paul, D Payne, G F Pearce, J D Perkin, V Pettinacci, F Pierre, E Poplawska, B Popov, M Posiadala, J-M Poutissou, R Poutissou, P Przewlocki, W Qian, J L Raaf, E Radicioni, P N Ratoff, T M Raufer, M Ravonel, M Raymond, F Retiere, A Robert, P A Rodrigues, E Rondio, J M Roney, B Rossi, S Roth, A Rubbia, D Ruterbories, S Sabouri, R Sacco, K Sakashita, F Sánchez, A Sarrat, K Sasaki, K Scholberg, J Schwehr, M Scott, D I Scully, Y Seiya, T Sekiguchi, H Sekiya, M Shibata, Y Shimizu, M Shiozawa, S Short, M Siyad, R J Smith, M Smy, J T Sobczyk, H Sobel, M Sorel, A Stahl, P Stamoulis, J Steinmann, B Still, J Stone, C Strabel, L R Sulak, R Sulej, P Sutcliffe, A Suzuki, K Suzuki, S Suzuki, S Y Suzuki, Y Suzuki, T Szeglowski, M Szeptycka, R Tacik, M Tada, S Takahashi, A Takeda, Y Takenaga, Y Takeuchi, K Tanaka, H A Tanaka, M Tanaka, M M Tanaka, N Tanimoto, K Tashiro, I Taylor, A Terashima, D Terhorst, R Terri, L F Thompson, A Thorley, W Toki, T Tomaru, Y Totsuka, C Touramanis, T Tsukamoto, M Tzanov, Y Uchida, K Ueno, A Vacheret, M Vagins, G Vasseur, T Wachala, J J Walding, A V Waldron, C W Walter, P J Wanderer, J Wang, M A Ward, G P Ward, D Wark, M O Wascko, A Weber, R Wendell, N West, L H Whitehead, G Wikström, R J Wilkes, M J Wilking, J R Wilson, R J Wilson, T Wongjirad, S Yamada, Y Yamada, A Yamamoto, K Yamamoto, Y Yamanoi, H Yamaoka, C Yanagisawa, T Yano, S Yen, N Yershov, M Yokoyama, A Zalewska, J Zalipska, L Zambelli, K Zaremba, M Ziembicki, E D Zimmerman, M Zito, J Żmuda
University of Tokyo, Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, Kamioka Observatory, Kamioka, Japan.
The T2K experiment observes indications of ν(μ) → ν(e) appearance in data accumulated with 1.43×10(20) protons on target. Six events pass all selection criteria at the far detector. In a three-flavor neutrino oscillation scenario with |Δm(23)(2)|= 2.4×10(-3)  eV(2), sin(2)2θ(23)= 1 and sin(2)2θ(13)= 0, the expected number of such events is 1.5±0.3(syst). Under this hypothesis, the probability to observe six or more candidate events is 7×10(-3), equivalent to 2.5σ significance. At 90% C.L., the data are consistent with 0.03(0.04)< sin(2)2θ(13)< 0.28(0.34) for δ(CP)= 0 and a normal (inverted) hierarchy.
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Research Center for Anti-Infectious Drugs, Kitasato Institute for Life Sciences, Kitasato University, Tokyo, Japan.
Limited use of linezolid for treating methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection was approved in Japan in 2006. We report here the status of linezolid-resistant MRSAs in Japan. Eleven linezolid-resistant clinical isolates from 11 patients at six hospitals were collected from 2006 through 2008. The minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of linezolid in these strains varied from 8 to 64 μg/ml. All strains had at least one G2576T mutation in the chromosomal gene(s) encoding domain V of the 23S ribosomal RNA (rRNA). Chromosomal DNA encoding five copies of the domain V region was analyzed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Strains with the linezolid MICs of 64, 32, 16, and 8 μg/ml had the G2576T mutation(s) in four, three (or four), two, and one copy of the 23S rRNA genes, respectively. These results suggest that the level of linezolid resistance seems to be roughly correlated with the number of mutations in the genes encoding 23S rRNA. DNA samples from all 11 strains were subjected to pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and were classified into seven independent clones having >92% identity. Among the 11 patients, five had been treated with linezolid and the remainder, in two hospitals, had no history of prior linezolid use. The results suggested possible nosocomial infections by linezolid-resistant MRSA.
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Graduate School of Infection Control Sciences, Kitasato University, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
A fraction of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) shows resistance to vancomycin (VCM) in the presence of β-lactam antibiotics (BIVR) at low concentrations. We hypothesized that the BIVR phenomenon might be exerted by a peptidoglycan derivative(s) generated as a consequence of β-lactam antibiotic action. To verify this hypothesis, we isolated the fraction that mimicked the effect of β-lactam antibiotics by the enzymatic treatment of the crude cell wall. The active components were purified by a combination of reverse phase chromatographies, mass spectrum and amino-acid analyses, and were identified to be a muropeptide with the following formula: N-acetyglucosamyl-N-acetylmuramyl--Ala-D-isoGln-L-Lys-(ɛ-NH-4Gly)-D-Ala-2Gly. This is the very first identification of the active component, which induces VCM resistance in MRSA. We found that the BIVR cells are highly sensitive to this compound rendering the cells resistant to VCM compared with non-BIVR MRSA.
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School of Veterinary Medicine, Rakuno Gakuen University, 582 Midorimachi Bunkyodai Ebetsu, Hokkaido 069-8501, Japan.
Recently, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus pseudintermedius (MRSP) have been increasingly isolated from veterinarians and companion animals. With a view to preventing the spread of MRSA and MRSP, we evaluated the occurrence and molecular characteristics of each in a veterinary college. MRSA and MRSP were isolated from nasal samples from veterinarians, staff members, and veterinary students affiliated with a veterinary hospital. Using stepwise logistic regression, we identified two factors associated with MRSA carriage:(i) contact with an identified animal MRSA case (odds ratio [OR], 6.9; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 2.2 to 21.6) and (ii) being an employee (OR, 6.2; 95% CI, 2.0 to 19.4). The majority of MRSA isolates obtained from individuals affiliated with the veterinary hospital and dog patients harbored spa type t002 and a type II staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec), similar to the hospital-acquired MRSA isolates in Japan. MRSA isolates harboring spa type t008 and a type IV SCCmec were obtained from one veterinarian on three different sampling occasions and also from dog patients. MRSA carriers can also be a source of MRSA infection in animals. The majority of MRSP isolates (85.2%) carried hybrid SCCmec type II-III, and almost all the remaining MRSP isolates (11.1%) carried SCCmec type V. MRSA and MRSP were also isolated from environmental samples collected from the veterinary hospital (5.1% and 6.4%, respectively). The application of certain disinfection procedures is important for the prevention of nosocomial infection, and MRSA and MRSP infection control strategies should be adopted in veterinary medical practice.
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Department of Clinical Infectious Diseases, Showa University School of Medicine, 1-5-8 Hatanodai, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo, 142-8555, Japan, koichiro@med.showa-u.ac.jp.
We report a 54-year-old male patient with an infection caused by linezolid-resistant methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), isolated after long-term, repeated use of linezolid. Five MRSA strains isolated from our patient were preserved and submitted to bacteriological analysis. All five of these strains were found to have identical genotypes by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Two strains isolated in the early hospital period were sensitive to linezolid, while three isolated in the late hospital period were resistant. These three strains that had acquired resistance to linezolid were found to have a G2576T point mutation in the 23SrRNA domain V. Linezolid-resistant MRSA is rare, but may occur with the long-term, repeated administration of linezolid.
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Research Center for Anti-Infectious Drugs, Kitasato University, 5-9-1 Shirokane, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 108-8641, Japan.
It was reported that some methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) show resistance to vancomycin (VCM) and beta-lactam antibiotics; thus, they are termed beta-lactam antibiotic-induced VCM-resistant MRSA (BIVR). The VCM resistance of MRSA is induced by the administration of beta-lactam antibiotics, but this phenomenon can be difficult to detect in the clinical laboratory. We detected the BIVR strain in a 64-year-old man who had had a ventilator tube inserted directly into the windpipe during long-term VCM therapy. The patient was diagnosed with MRSA pneumonia and septicemia on July 5, 2007, and sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) was administered for 5 days. However, the fever recurred, and administration of VCM was resumed for 7 days from July 19. Fever developed again, and VCM was administered again for 14 days from September 30. BIVR and VCM-low-sensitive MRSA were isolated from blood on October 18 and 22, although the VCM trough concentration was 10.2 microg/ml. On October 27, we changed to a combination of fosfomycin (FOM) and arbekacin (ABK), and thereafter the fever quickly decreased and the clinical symptoms abated. We isolated five MRSA strains from the blood of the patient, three strains of VCM-sensitive MRSA, one strain of BIVR, and one strain of a VCM-low-sensitive MRSA. The DNA band patterns determined by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis were completely identical except for the VCM-low-sensitive MRSA, which was missing one band. Furthermore, the VCM-low-sensitive MRSA became sensitive to beta-lactam antibiotics. Our results indicate the possibility that long-term VCM therapy is one of the factors that allow BIVR or VCM-low-sensitive MRSA to emerge, and this allows VCM therapy for MRSA to fail.
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Department of Neurology, School of Medicine, Saitama Medical University.
OBJECTIVES: It is known that the risk of cerebral stroke recurrence in post-stroke patients is comparatively higher than in normal subjects, and it is suggested that autonomic nervous system dysfunctions elevate this risk. We investigated the anti-hypertensive effects of cilnidipine, a Ca antagonist which suppresses sympathetic nerve activation, in hypertensives with chronic-stage cerebrovascular disease in a comparison with amlodipine. METHODS: Amlodipine 5-7.5 mg/day, or cilnidipine 5-10 mg/day was administered to 78 hypertensive subjects (greater than 140 mmHg systolic, or 90 mmHg diastolic) undergoing outpatient treatment. Amlodipine or cilnidipine was also administered similarly, to 30 subjects having hypertension associated with a cerebral infarct which occurred more than one month earlier due to cerebral thrombosis or embolism. After 3 months administration, the subjects' blood pressures and pulse rates were recorded with an ambulatory blood pressure monitor over 24 hours. RESULTS: No difference was recognized in patient age, gender, and systolic and diastolic blood pressure before treatment between the groups. In the cilnidipine groups, no difference in average 24-hour or waking systolic blood pressure values was seen between cerebrovascular disease (CVD) subjects and non-CVD subjects, although in the amlodipine groups, CVD subjects had significantly higher blood pressure values than non-CVD subjects. In the cilnidipine group, the coefficient of variation values of pulse rate were significantly higher in CVD subjects than in non-CVD subjects (p<0.05). CONCLUSION: In patients with recent stroke, a Ca antagonist with no sympathetic nerve suppression had weaker blood pressure-lowering effects. Significantly increased pulse rate variability, shown in the CVD subjects administered cilnidipine, suggests that cilnidipine enhanced the parasympathetic function in hypertensive patients with CVD.
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Research Center for Cosmic Neutrinos, Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Chiba 277-8582, Japan.
We have searched for proton decays via p-->e;{+}pi;{0} and p-->mu;{+}pi;{0} using data from a 91.7 kt.yr exposure of Super-Kamiokande-I and a 49.2 kt.yr exposure of Super-Kamiokande-II. No candidate events were observed with expected backgrounds induced by atmospheric neutrinos of 0.3 events for each decay mode. From these results, we set lower limits on the partial lifetime of 8.2x10;{33} and 6.6x10;{33} years at 90% confidence level for p-->e;{+}pi;{0} and p-->mu;{+}pi;{0} modes, respectively.
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Research Center for Anti-infectious Drugs, The Kitasato Institute University, 5-9-1 Shirokane, Minato-Ku, Tokyo, 108-8641, Japan; Graduate School of Infection Control Sciences, The Kitasato Institute University, 5-9-1 Shirokane, Minato-Ku, Tokyo, 108-8641, Japan.
A class of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus shows vancomycin resistance in the presence of ss-lactam antibiotics (BIVR). Two possible explanations may be offered:(i) vancomycin in the culture medium is depleted; and (ii) the D-Ala-D-Ala terminal of the peptidoglycan network is replaced with D-Ala-D-lactate. We tested these hypotheses by quantifying free vancomycin in the medium through the course of cell growth and by PCR-amplification of the van genes. Growth of the BIVR cells to the absorption level of approximately 0.3 at 578 nm required about 24 h in the presence of vancomycin alone at the MIC level (4.0 microg/ml). However, growth was achieved in only about 10 h when 1/1000 to 1/2000 MIC level of ss-lactam antibiotic was added 2 h prior to the addition of vancomycin suggesting that the ss-lactams shortened the time to recovery from vancomycin-mediated growth inhibition. Free vancomycin in the culture medium decreased to 2.3 microg/ml in the first 8 h in the culture containing vancomycin alone, yet cell growth was undetectable. When the vancomycin concentration dropped below approximately 1.5 microg/ml at 24 h, the cells began to grow. In the culture supplemented with the ss-lactam 2 h prior to the addition of vancomycin, the drug concentration continuously dropped from 4 to 0.5 microg/ml in the first 8 h and the cells began to grow at the vancomycin concentration of approximately 1.7 microg/ml or 4 h of incubation. The gene encoding the enzyme involved in the D-Ala-D-lactate synthesis was undetectable. Based on these results, we concluded that BIVR is mainly attributable to a rapid depletion of vancomycin in the medium triggered or promoted by ss-lactam antibiotics.
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