Home About us Contact | |||
First Session (first + session)
Selected AbstractsVastus lateralis surface and single motor unit electromyography during shortening, lengthening and isometric contractions corrected for mode-dependent differences in force-generating capacityACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, Issue 3 2009T. M. Altenburg Abstract Aim:, Knee extensor neuromuscular activity, rectified surface electromyography (rsEMG) and single motor unit EMG was investigated during isometric (60° knee angle), shortening and lengthening contractions (50,70°, 10° s,1) corrected for force,velocity-related differences in force-generating capacity. However, during dynamic contractions additional factors such as shortening-induced force losses and lengthening-induced force gains may also affect force capacity and thereby neuromuscular activity. Therefore, even after correction for force,velocity-related differences in force capacity we expected neuromuscular activity to be higher and lower during shortening and lengthening, respectively, compared to isometric contractions. Methods:, rsEMG of the three superficial muscle heads was obtained in a first session [10 and 50% maximal voluntary contraction (MVC)] and additionally EMG of (46) vastus lateralis motor units was recorded during a second session (4,76% MVC). Using superimposed electrical stimulation, force-generating capacity for shortening and lengthening contractions was found to be 0.96 and 1.16 times isometric (Iso) force capacity respectively. Therefore, neuromuscular activity during submaximal shortening and lengthening was compared with isometric contractions of respectively 1.04Iso (=1/0.96) and 0.86Iso (=1/1.16). rsEMG and discharge rates were normalized to isometric values. Results:, rsEMG behaviour was similar (P > 0.05) during both sessions. Shortening rsEMG (1.30 ± 0.11) and discharge rate (1.22 ± 0.13) were higher (P < 0.05) than 1.04Iso values (1.05 ± 0.05 and 1.03 ± 0.04 respectively), but lengthening rsEMG (1.05 ± 0.12) and discharge rate (0.90 ± 0.08) were not lower (P > 0.05) than 0.86Iso values (0.76 ± 0.04 and 0.91 ± 0.07 respectively). Conclusion:, When force,velocity-related differences in force capacity were taken into account, neuromuscular activity was not lower during lengthening but was still higher during shortening compared with isometric contractions. [source] Lactic Acid Chemical Peels as a New Therapeutic Modality in Melasma in Comparison to Jessner's Solution Chemical PeelsDERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 12 2006KHALIFA E. SHARQUIE MBCHB BACKGROUND Many chemicals have been used in the skin peeling for melasma such as Jessner's solution and glycolic acid. Lactic acid is an ,-hydroxy acid that has not been used before in chemical peeling of melasma. OBJECTIVE The purpose of the present work was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lactic acid in chemical peeling of melasma in comparison to Jessner's solution chemical peels. METHODS This study was conducted at the Department of Dermatology and Venereology, Baghdad Hospital, in the period between April 2001 and August 2002. Thirty patients with melasma were included in this study. They were mostly of skin type IV according to Fitzpatrick's classification, 26 (86.67%) were women, and 4 (13.33%) were men, with an age range from 18 and 50 years (mean±SD, 33.53±6.96 years). Full clinical examination was done to all patients including Wood's light. The severity of melasma was assessed by MASI (Melasma Area Severity Index). Pure lactic acid full strength (92%, pH 3.5) was used as a new peeling agent on the left side of the face while Jessner's solution was applied to the right side of the face. The chemical peeling sessions were done every 3 weeks until the desired response was achieved. Follow-up was carried out for 6 months after the last session. RESULTS Six patients were defaulted from the study after the first session for unknown reasons. Twenty-four patients completed the study. Twenty (83.33%) were women and four were men (16.67%). Wood's light examination showed increased contrast in all patients of mostly epidermal melasma. The number of sessions ranged from 2 to 5. All patients showed marked improvement as calculated by MASI score before and after treatment, and the response was highly statistically significant. No side effect was recorded in all treated patients. CONCLUSION Lactic acid was found to be an effective and safe peeling agent in the treatment of melasma, and it was as effective as Jessner's solution. [source] Change in action: how infants learn to walk down slopesDEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, Issue 6 2009Simone V. Gill A critical aspect of perception,action coupling is the ability to modify ongoing actions in accordance with variations in the environment. Infants' ability to modify their gait patterns to walk down shallow and steep slopes was examined at three nested time scales. Across sessions, a microgenetic training design showed rapid improvements after the first session in infants receiving concentrated practice walking down slopes and in infants in a control group who were tested only at the beginning and end of the study. Within sessions, analyses across easy and challenging slope angles showed that infants used a ,braking strategy' to curb increases in walking speed across increasingly steeper slopes. Within trials, comparisons of infants' gait modifications before and after stepping over the brink of the slopes showed that the braking strategy was planned prospectively. Findings illustrate how observing change in action provides important insights into the process of skill acquisition. [source] Distinct kinds of novelty processing differentially increase extracellular dopamine in different brain regionsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 5 2006Elvira De Leonibus Abstract Behaviourally relevant novel stimuli are known to activate the mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic (DAergic) system. In this study we tested the reactivity of this system in response to distinct kinds of novelty processing. Using the in vivo microdialysis technique, we measured extracellular amounts of dopamine (DA) in different DAergic terminal regions during a social learning task in rats. In the first session (40 min) rats were exposed to two never previously encountered juveniles (i.e. unconditional novelty). Afterwards, the animals were divided into three groups: Control group was not exposed to any other stimulus; Discrimination group was exposed to one familiar and one new juvenile (i.e. novel stimulus discrimination); and Recognition group was re-exposed to the two familiar juveniles (i.e. familiarity recognition). In both the medial prefrontal cortex and the nucleus accumbens shell DA increased in response to the first presentation of the juveniles, showing that both structures are involved in processing unconditional social novelty. During the novel stimulus discrimination, we found no change in the prefrontal cortex, although DA increased in the accumbal shell in comparison with the group exposed to two familiar juveniles, showing that the shell is also involved in processing novel social stimulus discrimination. None of the stimuli presented affected DA in the accumbal core. This study provided the original evidence that DA in the various terminal regions is differentially coupled to distinct aspects of novelty processing. [source] Effects of group work programs on community-dwelling elderly people with age-associated cognitive decline and/or mild depressive moods: A Kahoku Longitudinal Aging StudyGERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2005Kiyohito Okumiya Background: Age-associated cognitive decline (AACD) is a predictor of dementia and highly prevalent among elderly people. Many elderly people with AACD also suffer from depressive moods. We studied, the effect of group work programs on the cognitive function and quality of life (QOL) of community-dwelling elderly people with AACD and/or mild depressive moods. Methods: Thirty-six subjects, with a mean age of 79.8 years, were included in this study. Twenty-one suffered from both AACD and mild depressive moods, nine suffered from mild depressive moods and six from AACD. Subjects were required to participate in a number of group work programs, such as music therapy, handicrafts and so on. They were assigned to one of two groups, and each participated in two 4-month sessions. In the first session, group 1 participated in the group work programs, while group 2 did not (control). In the second session, group 2 participated while group 1 did not. The effect of group work on elderly people with AACD (n = 27) and depressive moods (n = 31), was evaluated separately. Results: Improvement was observed in depressive moods and QOL (visual analogue scale of family relation, friendship and happiness, life satisfaction index) in subjects with cognitive impairment and depressive moods. The effect on cognitive function was shown only in elderly individuals suffering from depressive moods. The improvement in depressive moods and QOL seemed to be accompanied by an improvement in cognitive function but did not continue after completion of the group work program. Conclusion: Group work was shown to improve depressive moods, QOL and cognitive function; however, long-term effects require further examination. [source] The effects of exercise during hemodialysis on adequacyHEMODIALYSIS INTERNATIONAL, Issue 1 2005C. Caner Pedalling during hemodialysis (HD) has been shown to increase solute clearance in a previous study. In the present study, we aimed to test whether an easy to perform exercise program, not requiring a special device, could yield similar outcomes. Fifteen HD patients with the mean age of 48.4 ± 3.8 years were enrolled into the study. Patients with significant access recirculation (>10%), moderate to severe coronary artery disease, moderate to severe heart failure, severe chronic obstructive lung disease, and history of lower extremity surgery during last three month period were excluded. All patients were studied on two consecutive HD sessions with identical prescriptions. At the first session, standard HD was applied without exercise, whereas in the second session lower extremity exercise of 30 minutes duration was added. Reduction rates and rebound for urea, creatinine, and potassium and Kt/V were calculated. Wilcoxon signed rank test was applied in analysis and p < 0.05 was accepted as significance level. All patients completed the study. When both sessions were compared, mean arterial blood pressure (97 ± 3 mmHg vs 120 ± 4 mmHg, p < 0.001) and heart rate (77 ± 1 beats/min vs 92 ± 3 beats/min, p < 0.001) were higher in the exercise group. On the other hand, urea reduction rates, rebound values of urea, creatinine, and potassium were similar in both groups. Conclusion:,In the study, we did not observe any changes in solute rebound and clearance with the exercise. Shorter duration of the exercise may be the explanation of failure to achieve desired outcomes. Increasing patients' tolerance and fitness levels by means of steadily increasing exercise programs may be of help. Additionally, mode of exercise may also be responsible for different outcomes. [source] Extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type, presenting after 5 years of remissionINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 3 2008Tomonobu Ito MD A 76-year-old woman with multiple edematous erythemas, erosions, and ulcers on the breast and abdomen was admitted to our hospital in June 2005. She had developed granulomatous bleeding lesions in the right nostril 6 years prior to her visit to our dermatology unit. She had been observed at the otorhinolaryngology department of our hospital, and a biopsy was taken from the nasal lesion. Computerized tomography and gallium scintigraphy (67Ga single-photon emission computed tomography) did not reveal any lesions corresponding to the diagnosis of malignant lymphoma. The histologic examination of the nasal specimen rendered a diagnosis of natural killer (NK)/T-cell lymphoma, nasal. Because imaging analysis indicated a small-sized tumor without metastases, oral prednisolone at 20 mg/day was administered for 1 month. The tumor decreased in size and disappeared after 19 months of low-dose steroid therapy. ,Five years after the initial treatment, the patient developed a fever of 38 °C with infiltrated erythemas and erosions on her breast. Erysipelas was initially suspected, but the antimicrobial agent did not show any effect and the multiple infiltrated erythemas and ulcers spread throughout her chest and abdomen (Fig. 1). The lymph nodes were not palpable. The right nasal cavity showed no granulomatous lesions or other signs of abnormality. The peripheral white blood cell count (3000/µL), red blood cell count (3.54 × 106/µL), and platelet count (112 × 103/µL) were reduced. Atypical lymphocytes were not observed. The serum lactic dehydrogenase (LDH; 1770 U/L; normal, 224,454 U/L), aspartate aminotransferase (AST; 140 U/L; normal, 10,30 U/L), and alanine aminotransferase (ALT; 57 U/L; normal, 3,29 U/L) levels were elevated. The soluble interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor level was high (25,300 U/mL; normal, 167,497 U/mL). Epstein,Barr virus (EBV) serologic examination showed the immunoglobulin G (IgG) viral capsid antigen (VCA) at 1 : 320 and the EBV nuclear antigen (EBNA) at 1 : 40. IgM VCA and EBV early antigen-diffuse restricted antibody (EA) IgA and IgG were not detectable. Histologic findings from the left chest skin showed a distribution of atypical lymphocytes from the upper dermis to the subcutaneous tissue, and many foamy cells which had phagocytosed the hemocytes (Fig. 2a,b). Immunohistochemical analysis showed that the atypical lymphocytes were sCD3,, CD4,, CD8,, CD20,, CD56+, granzyme B+, and T-cell intracellular antigen (TIA-1) positive. Furthermore, EBV-encoded small RNAs (EBER), detected by in situ hybridization, exhibited a strong signal. The nasal lesions biopsied 6 years previously showed an identical staining pattern with the skin lesions immunohistochemically. Analysis of the T-cell receptor-, (TCR-,), TCR-,, and TCR-, gene did not reveal any clonal rearrangements, but the EBV gene was detected from the skin specimens by Southern blotting. Our patient's condition was diagnosed as a case of extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type, but the patient had concomitantly developed hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS). She was treated with a combination of steroid pulse therapy and chemotherapy (pirarubicin hydrochloride 30 mg/m2, cyclophosphamide 500 mg/m2, vincristine 1 mg/m2, prednisolone 30 mg/m2, etoposide 80 mg/m2). After the first session of chemotherapy, the lesions on the chest and abdomen diminished, but, 2 weeks later, the skin lesions recurred, and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) induced by HPS supervened. The patient died as a result of multiple organ failure induced by HPS. Figure 1. Multiple infiltrated erythemas, erosions, and ulcers on the breast and abdomen Figure 2. Histologic findings of a skin biopsy specimen from the left chest (hematoxylin and eosin staining). (a) Dense infiltration of atypical lymphocytes from the upper dermis to the subcutaneous tissue (×40). (b) Many foamy cells had phagocytosed the hemocytes (×400) [source] Intravenous Ethanol Infusions Can Mimic the Time Course of Breath Alcohol Concentrations Following Oral Alcohol Administration in Healthy VolunteersALCOHOLISM, Issue 5 2009Vijay A. Ramchandani Background:, Our previous studies have used intravenous (IV) clamping methods to demonstrate that family history positive (FHP) subjects exhibit a greater initial response to alcohol than family history negative (FHN) subjects. These results differ from other studies of family history of alcoholism (FHA) influences, most of which have used an oral alcohol challenge, suggesting that the route of administration may influence both the response to alcohol and FHA-related differences in response. To examine this possibility, one approach would be to directly compare responses following oral and IV alcohol administration in the same subjects. There is, however, a 3- to 4-fold variance, between- and within-subjects, in the breath alcohol concentrations (BrACs) following oral alcohol administration. Thus, our objective was to characterize the between-subject variability in the time course of BrACs following oral alcohol administration in healthy volunteers and to develop an IV infusion method to mimic the BrAC-time course attained following oral alcohol in the same subject. Methods:, This was a 2-session study in young adult, healthy, nondependent drinkers. In the first session, subjects ingested an oral dose of alcohol, based on total body water, to achieve a target peak BrAC of 80 mg%. In the second session, subjects received an IV infusion of ethanol designed to achieve the same BrAC time course as that achieved in the first session. The individualized infusion-rate profile was precomputed using a physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model for alcohol with model parameters adjusted to the individual's physiology. The peak BrACs (Cmax), times of peak BrAC (Tmax), and the areas under the BrAC vs. time curve (AUC) were compared between sessions to assess how closely the BrAC exposure during the IV infusion session mimicked the exposure following oral alcohol. Results:, The time course of BrACs following oral alcohol administration showed a high degree of between-subject variability. Mean Cmax, Tmax, and AUC did not differ by gender, indicating that calculation of oral doses based on total body water results in comparable BrAC-time courses, on average, for females and males. The IV infusion driven BrAC-time profiles demonstrated good fidelity to the BrAC-time curves resulting from oral alcohol: the mean %difference in Cmax and AUC were both 11%, while the mean %difference for Tmax was 27%. This degree of variability is less than half that seen across individuals following oral alcohol administration, which was substantial [coefficient of variation (%CV) ranging from 22 to 52%]. Conclusions:, Despite the use of standardized doses and controlled experimental conditions, there was substantial between-subject variability in the BrAC time course following oral administration of alcohol. The PBPK-model-based infusion method can mimic the BrACs attained with oral alcohol for individual subjects. This method provides a platform to evaluate effects attributable to the route of administration on the response to alcohol, as well as the influence of determinants such as family history of alcoholism on the alcohol response. [source] Environmental Cues, Alcohol Seeking, and Consumption in Baboons: Effects of Response Requirement and Duration of Alcohol AbstinenceALCOHOLISM, Issue 12 2006Elise M. Weerts Background: Environmental stimuli (cues) that have been paired with alcohol drinking may evoke classically conditioned states that in turn influence alcohol consumption and relapse to heavy drinking. Animal models using chained schedules of alcohol reinforcement may be useful for examining such complex interactions. Methods: Alcohol drinking was established in 4 baboons. A sequence of lights and tones was presented during daily 3-hour sessions. First, cues were presented alone and no programmed contingencies were in effect. Second, cues were paired with 3 linked components consisting of different behavioral contingencies leading to and concluding with access to alcohol for self-administration in the last component (i.e., a chained schedule of alcohol reinforcement). Third, the effects of withholding alcohol access (i.e., forced abstinence) and increasing the number of lever responses required per drink were evaluated. Results: Cues paired with a chained schedule of alcohol reinforcement engendered behaviors that brought baboons into contact with alcohol-related cues and occasioned operant responding that facilitated access to alcohol (alcohol seeking) during components that preceded alcohol access. Increasing the response requirement for each drink decreased the number of drinks and volume of alcohol consumed, but did not alter alcohol seeking. On the first session after 14 days of alcohol abstinence, latency to complete the operant requirement that produced alcohol access was decreased while both alcohol self-administration and volume of alcohol consumed were increased. Conclusions: Alcohol self-administration and consumption were sensitive to increases in response requirement and duration of alcohol abstinence, while seeking was only enhanced by duration of alcohol abstinence. This animal model may be useful to further examine the interactions between environmental cues and behaviors associated with seeking and consumption of alcohol and to evaluate the efficacy of potential alcohol treatment drugs on these behaviors. [source] APPLICATION OF SENSORY DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS TO COMPLETE THE CURRENT OFFICIAL CARD OF THE GALICIAN ORUJO SPIRITSJOURNAL OF SENSORY STUDIES, Issue 3 2009SANDRA CORTÉS ABSTRACT Ten samples of young Galician Orujo spirits from different grape varieties were evaluated using sensory descriptive analysis by a panel of 12 professional Orujo tasters. The aim of this study was to generate attributes to sensorially describe this kind of drinks in order to complete the current official card and permit their differentiation and varietal characterization. In the first session of analysis, the Orujo tasters identified a high number of descriptors, that they were then reduced after the elimination of hedonic terms and inappropriate attributes by using statistical methods. High significant correlations were found between the new descriptive parameters selected and the original terms employed to qualify the Orujo samples. Herbaceous, floral, ensilage and heads for aroma, spicy,caustic and sweet for taste and fruity for aftertaste were the attributes that showed significant differences between the Orujo samples. These terms may qualitatively be considered as typical descriptors of Orujos from Galicia. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS In the original card employed to qualify Galician Orujo spirits, only hedonic terms are used, all of them with an important subjective influence. The new card, in which descriptive terms generated by the official panel are included, too, permits, besides qualifying of the samples, defining of their profile in the same tasting session. With the new terms, the tasters can justify the total points given to each sample. The final sensory profile obtained for a single Orujo variety will result of a large group of Orujo samples tasted during several sessions. This tool will be very useful for the Regulating Commission to obtain more information about the sensory characteristics of this kind of alcoholic beverage and for the corresponding distillery, in case a sample was rejected, to know which attributes were found as negatives. [source] Psychological features of androgenetic alopecia,JOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY & VENEREOLOGY, Issue 5 2002FM Camacho Abstract Objective To evaluate the psychological features of subjects with male (MAGA) and female androgenetic alopecia (FAGA). Methods We performed a retrospective study of 100 patients with FAGA and the same number of patients with MAGA based on the features registered in the personal history of individuals who attended our Trichology Unit (Hospital Universitario Virgen Macarena, Sevilla, Spain) from January 1993 to January 1995. Results Depression was more frequent in FAGA than in MAGA (55:3), but anxiety (78:41) and aggressiveness or hostility were more frequent in MAGA than in FAGA (22:3), and three men were considered anxious and depressive. Treatment resulted in improvement in 89% of FAGA and 76% of MAGA, and the subjects continued attending with periodic check-ups. There were requests for surgical treatment by 3% of FAGA and 12% of MAGA, and 6% of FAGA and 12% of MAGA did not return for follow-up consultation. All of the MAGA showed aggressiveness and lack of willingness to follow the correct treatment. Conclusions In general, AGA patients tend to have elusive personalities and, although the individuals may go to the trichology centre accompanied they preferred to present alone to the desk or at least to the trichological examination room, except for subjects with depression who would often not agree to the physician removing hairs for the trichogram. Most subjects accepted the prescribed medical or surgical treatment, but several phoned before the second treatment session because the results of the first session were not as good as they had expected. The drop-out rate was higher in men (1 in 2), who were probably subjects showing aggressiveness. [source] Correspondence analysis of square asymmetric matricesJOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY: SERIES C (APPLIED STATISTICS), Issue 3 2000Michael Greenacre The application of correspondence analysis to square asymmetric tables is often unsuccessful because of the strong role played by the diagonal entries of the matrix, obscuring the data off the diagonal. A simple modification of the centring of the matrix, coupled with the corresponding change in row and column masses and row and column metrics, allows the table to be decomposed into symmetric and skew symmetric components, which can then be analysed separately. The symmetric and skew symmetric analyses can be performed by using a simple correspondence analysis program if the data are set up in a special block format. The methodology is demonstrated on a social mobility table from the first democratically elected Parliament in Germany, the Frankfurter Nationalversammlung. The table cross-tabulates the jobs of parliamentarians when first entering the labour market and their jobs in May 1848 when the Parliament started its first session. [source] Effect of Kava and Valerian on human physiological and psychological responses to mental stress assessed under laboratory conditionsPHYTOTHERAPY RESEARCH, Issue 1 2002M. Cropley Abstract This study investigated whether kava or valerian could moderate the effects of psychological stress induced under laboratory conditions in a group of healthy volunteers. Fifty-four participants performed a standardized colour/word mental stress task on two occasions 1 week apart. Blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR) and subjective ratings of pressure were assessed at rest and during the mental stress task. Following the first session (time 1,=,T1), individuals took a standard dose of kava (n,=,18), or valerian (n,=,18) for 7 days, while the remainder acted as controls (n,=,18). Differences in BP and HR from resting levels were calculated as reactions to the stress task at both time points. At the second session (time 2,=,T2) there was a significant decrease in systolic BP responsivity in both the kava and valerian groups relative to T1, but there were no significant reductions in diastolic BP. Between T1 and T2, the HR reaction to mental stress was found to decline in the valerian group but not in the kava group. Individuals taking kava or valerian reported less pressure during the task at T2 relative to T1. There were no significant differences in BP, HR or subjective reports of pressure between T1 and T2 in the controls. Behavioural performance on the colour/word task did not change between the groups over the two time points. The results suggest that kava and valerian may be beneficial to health by reducing physiological reactivity during stressful situations. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The Ecumenical Assembly for Justice, Peace and the Integrity of CreationTHE ECUMENICAL REVIEW, Issue 2 2004Heino Falcke The Vancouver assembly of the World Council of Churches in 1983, in part through the efforts of Heino Falcke and the delegates from the GDR, called on the WCC "to engage member churches in a conciliar process of mutual commitment to justice, peace and the integrity of creation". In the GDR, the high point of this conciliar process was an Ecumenical Assembly of Churches and Christians which met in three sessions in 1988 and 1989, and which, not least because of the involvement of peace, environmental and human rights groups, made unprecedented demands for the reform of the GDR and influenced the citizens' movements and political parties formed at the time of the peaceful revolution of autumn 1989. As envisaged at the Vancouver assembly, the conciliar process was intended to link the issue of peace, a priority at that time for many WCC members in the northern hemisphere, with that of global justice, an overriding concern for churches in the South. In the course of preparations for the Ecumenical Assembly in the GDR, however, the discourse of justice was applied to GDR society itself, something that was reflected in the 10,000 proposals from parishes, groups and individuals for the assembly, and in the "testimonies of concern" with which the assembly opened its first session in February 1988. In this article,1which comes from a conference in Dresden in April 1999 to mark the 10th anniversary of the final session of the Ecumenical Assembly, Falcke reflects on how the assembly changed from being a Christian, church gathering to becoming an emerging opposition within civil society. [source] High prevalence information from different sources affects the development of false beliefsAPPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 2 2010Celine van Golde To examine the effects of high and low false prevalence information from different sources on false beliefs, subjects took part in two sessions. In the first session, subjects rated the plausibility of different childhood events, how confident they were that they had experienced those events and their memories of those events. In the second session, 2,weeks later, subjects received high prevalence information about one target event and low prevalence information about another. Subjects received the information in a third-person description, a newspaper article, or cohort data about previous students' experiences, or they received no information. High prevalence newspaper and cohort information increased subjects' plausibility ratings compared to no information and third-person descriptions. High prevalence newspaper information also increased subjects' belief ratings. Our findings contribute to the growing literature demonstrating the role of false high prevalence information in the development of false beliefs. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Ozonated Autohemotherapy in Patients on Maintenance Hemodialysis: Influence on Lipid Profile and EndotheliumARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 2 2004Leszek Tylicki Abstract:, Ozonated autohemotherapy (O3-AHT) is used in the treatment of atherosclerotic ischemia of lower limbs (AILL). The impact of ozone on serum lipids and endothelium injury is of particular interest since these factors are important in the development of atherosclerotic lesions. To evaluate this issue, a prospective, placebo-controlled study was designed. Twelve hemodialyzed subjects with AILL received autohemotherapy with oxygen as a control followed by O3-AHT with ozone concentration of 50 µg/ml. Serum lipids and plasma activity of von Willebrand factor (vWF) were measured. After O3-AHT, total cholesterol significantly decreased compared to the baseline (,8.34%) [P < 0.01]. LDL cholesterol was also significantly lower than the initial value (,17.71%) [P < 0.001]. No significant changes in the activity of vWF were found after the first session of O3-AHT and after all nine sessions of O3-AHT. The study demonstrated that O3-AHT did not affect deleteriously the endothelium in patients with chronic renal failure on maintenance hemodialysis. It ,may stimulate beneficial changes in serum lipid profile manifesting as,,a, decrease ,in the total- and LDL-cholesterol ,levels. [source] Use of an Embalming Machine to Create a Central Venous Access Model in Human CadaversACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 2009Lee Wilbur Background:, Human cadavers provide an effective model for procedural training; however, inconsistent blood return during central venous cannulation compromises the overall reliability of this procedure. Objective:, To create and quantitatively assess a human cadaver central venous access model using a continuously-run embalming machine. Curriculum:, Emergency medicine (EM) faculty at Indiana University created this model for a procedure lab designed for EM residents. The right femoral artery was identified by superficial dissection and cannulated distally towards the lower leg. This cannula was connected to a Duotronic embalming machine with a solution composed of 16 oz of 24-index fluid and 3 gallons of tap water at a fixed output of 13 pounds per square inch (psi). Next, the left subclavian vein and artery were identified by dissection and each was cannulated with an 18 gauge angiocath connected to a continuous pressure monitor. Pressures (mmHg) in the subclavian vein and artery were measured continuously while study personnel cannulated the left femoral, right subclavian, right supraclavicular, and right internal jugular veins. This model was assessed for dual sessions lasting two hours each with a two hour break in-between. Results:, During the first session, subclavian pressures were measured at 3 mmHg venous and 22 mmHg arterial, increasing to 11 mmHg venous and 27 mmHg arterial during the second session. Residents were able to withdraw at least 5 milliliters at each central venous site in the embalmed cadaver. Conclusions:, We created a reliable and measurable central venous access model in a fresh-frozen human cadaver using a standard embalming machine. [source] |