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Complete Isolation (complete + isolation)
Selected AbstractsA Single Pulmonary Vein as Electrophysiological Substrate of Paroxysmal Atrial FibrillationJOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 11 2006HE HUANG M.D. Introduction: It has been demonstrated that pulmonary veins (PVs) play an important role in initiation and maintenance of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF). However, it is not clearly known whether a single PV acts as electrophysiological substrate for paroxysmal AF. Methods and Results: This study included five patients with paroxysmal AF. All patients underwent complete PV isolation with continuous circular lesions (CCLs) around the ipsilateral PVs guided by a three-dimensional mapping system. Irrigated radiofrequency (RF) delivery was performed during AF on the right-sided CCLs in two patients and on the left-sided CCLs in three patients. The incomplete CCLs resulted in a change from AF to atrial tachycardia (AT), which presented with an identical atrial activation sequence and P wave morphology. Complete CCLs resulted in AF termination with persistent PV tachyarrhythmias within the isolated PV in all five patients. PV tachyarrhythmia within the isolated PV was PV fibrillation from the left common PV (LCPV) in two patients, PV tachycardia from the right superior PV (RSPV) in two patients, and from the left superior PV in one patient. All sustained PV tachyarrhythmias persisted for more than 30 minutes, needed external cardioversion for termination in four patients and a focal ablation in one patient. After the initial procedure, an AT from the RSPV occurred in a patient with PV fibrillation within the LCPV, and was successfully ablated. Conclusion: In patients with paroxysmal AF, sustained PV tachyarrhythmias from a single PV can perpetuate AF. Complete isolation of all PV may provide good clinical outcome during long-term follow-up. [source] Maternal and littermate deprivation disrupts maternal behavior and social-learning of food preference in adulthood: Tactile stimulation, nest odor, and social rearing prevent these effectsDEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2006Angel I. Melo Abstract Maternal and littermate (social) separation, through artificial rearing (AR), disrupts the development of subsequent maternal behavior and social learning in rats. The addition of maternal-licking-like stimulation during AR, partially reverses some of these effects. However, little is know about the role of social stimuli from littermates and nest odors during the preweaning period, in the development of the adult maternal behavior and social learning. The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of peer- and peer-and-odor rearing on the development of maternal behavior and social learning in rats. Female pups were reared with mothers (mother reared,MR) or without mothers (AR) from postnatal day (PND) 3. AR rats received three different treatments: (1) AR-CONTROL group received minimal tactile stimulation, (2) AR-ODOR females received exposure to maternal nest material inside the AR-isolation-cup environment, (3) AR-SOCIAL group was reared in the cup with maternal nest material and a conspecific of the same-age and same-sex and received additional tactile stimulation. MR females were reared by their mothers in the nest and with conspecifics. In adulthood, rats were tested for maternal behavior towards their own pups and in a social learning task. Results confirm our previous report that AR impairs performance of maternal behavior and the development of a social food preference. Furthermore, social cues from a littermate, in combination with tactile stimulation and the nest odor, reversed the negative effects of complete isolation (AR-CONTROL) on some of the above behaviors. Exposure to the odor alone also had effects on some of these olfactory-mediated behaviors. These studies indicate that social stimulation from littermates during the preweaning period, in combination with odor from the nest and tactile stimulation, contributes to the development of affiliative behaviors. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psyshobiol 48: 209,219, 2006. [source] EVOLUTION OF REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION WITHIN A PARASITIC FUNGAL SPECIES COMPLEXEVOLUTION, Issue 7 2007Mickael Le Gac Despite important advances in the last few years, the evolution of reproductive isolation (RI) remains an unresolved and critical gap in our understanding of speciation processes. In this study, we investigated the evolution of RI among species of the parasitic fungal species complex Microbotryum violaceum, which is responsible for anther smut disease of the Caryophyllaceae. We found no evidence for significant positive assortative mating by M. violaceum even over substantial degrees of genetic divergence, suggesting a lack of prezygotic isolation. In contrast, postzygotic isolation increased with the genetic distance between mating partners when measured as hyphal growth. Total RI, measured as the ability of the pathogen to infect and produce a diploid progeny in the host plant, was significantly and positively correlated with genetic distance, remaining below complete isolation for most of the species pairs. The results of this study, the first one on the time course of speciation in a fungus, are therefore consistent with previous works showing that RI generally evolves gradually with genetic distance, and thus presumably with time. Interestingly, prezygotic RI due to gamete recognition did not increase with genetic distance, in contrast to the pattern found in plants and animals. [source] Becoming Undisciplined: Toward the Supradisciplinary Study of SecurityINTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW, Issue 1 2005J. Marshall Beier In recent years we have seen increasing reflection among scholars of security studies regarding the boundaries of their field and the range of its appropriate subject matter. At the same time, scholars elsewhere in the academy have been developing their own approaches to issues of security. These various pockets of work have been undertaken in nearly complete isolation from one another and with little apparent awareness of relevant developments in the other fields. In this essay, we advance the claim that security cannot be satisfactorily theorized within the confines of disciplinary boundaries,any disciplinary boundaries. The challenge thus becomes how to develop what might be termed a "supradisciplinary" approach to the study of security that will allow us to think and engage our subject matter across a range of discourses without giving rise to an interdisciplinary hybrid or sui generis discipline. [source] Irrigated-Tip Catheter Ablation of Pulmonary Veins for Treatment of Atrial FibrillationJOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 11 2002LAURENT MACLE M.D. Irrigated-Tip Catheter Ablation of PVs.Introduction: Catheter ablation of pulmonary veins (PV) for treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF) is limited by the disparate requirements of sufficient energy delivery to achieve PV isolation while avoiding PV stenosis. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of using an irrigated-tip catheter for systematic isolation of PV. Methods and Results: The study population consisted of 136 consecutive patients (109 men, mean age 52 ± 10 years) with symptomatic, drug-refractory paroxysmal (122) or persistent (14) AF. Cavotricuspid isthmus ablation and systematic radiofrequency isolation of all four PVs (guided by a circumferential mapping catheter) was performed in all patients with a protocol using an irrigated-tip catheter. PV diameter was assessed by selective angiography. The electrophysiologic endpoint of PV isolation was achieved in 100% of patients. Bidirectional cavotricuspid isthmus block was achieved in 99% of patients. Moderate PV stenosis (50% narrowing) was observed in one patient (0.7%) without clinical consequence. No other complications were observed. Reablation procedures were required in 67 patients (49%). After a mean follow-up of 8.8 ± 5.3 months, 81% of patients were free of AF clinical recurrence, including 66% not taking any antiarrhythmic drugs. Conclusion: Systematic radiofrequency ablation of PV using an irrigated-tip catheter in patients with atrial fibrillation allows complete isolation of all four PVs with a very low incidence of stenosis. [source] Electrical Connection Between Left Superior and Inferior Pulmonary Veins in a Patient with Paroxysmal Atrial FibrillationJOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 5 2002YOSHIHIDE TAKAHASHI M.D. Electrical Connection Between Pulmonary Veins. We report the case of a patient with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, who underwent pulmonary vein (PV) electrical isolation from the left atrium (LA). Prior to achieving isolation of the left superior PV (LSPV) from the LA, earlier PV potentials were recorded inside the left inferior PV (LIPV) than LA activity during pacing at the distal LSPV. The LSPV finally was isolated by radiofrequency applications at the ostium of the LIPV. The patient had electrical connection between the LSPV and LIPV, and required radiofrequency ablation of the breakthroughs from the LA to LIPV for complete isolation of the LSPV. [source] Population structure in an isolated Arctic fox, Vulpes lagopus, population: the impact of geographical barriersBIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 1 2009KARIN NORÉN The genetic composition of a population reflects several aspects of the organism and its environment. The Icelandic Arctic fox population exceeds 8000 individuals and is comprised of both coastal and inland foxes. Several factors may affect within-population movement and subsequent genetic population structure. A narrow isthmus and sheep-proof fences may prevent movement between the north-western and central part and glacial rivers may reduce movement between the eastern and central part of Iceland. Moreover, population density and habitat characteristics can influence movement behaviour further. Here, we investigate the genetic structure in the Icelandic Arctic fox population (n = 108) using 10 microsatellite loci. Despite large glacial rivers, we found low divergence between the central and eastern part, suggesting extensive movement between these areas. However, both model- and frequency-based analyses suggest that the north-western part is genetically differentiated from the rest of Iceland (FST = 0.04, DS = 0.094), corresponding to 100,200 generations of complete isolation. This suggests that the fences cannot be the sole cause of divergence. Rather, the isthmus causes limited movement between the regions, implying that protection in the Hornstrandir Nature Reserve has a minimal impact on Arctic fox population size in the rest of Iceland. © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 97, 18,26. [source] |