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Manual Work (manual + work)
Selected AbstractsTowards development of a nonhuman primate model of carpal tunnel syndrome: Performance of a voluntary, repetitive pinching task induces median mononeuropathy in Macaca fascicularisJOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 6 2007Carolyn M. Sommerich Abstract This study investigated changes in median sensory nerve conduction velocity (SNCV) over several weeks of exposure to a voluntary, moderately forceful, repetitive pinching task performed for food rewards by a small sample of young adult female monkeys (Macaca fascicularis). SNCV, derived from peak latency, decreased significantly in the working hands of three of the four subjects. The overall decline in NCV was 25%,31% from baseline. There was no decrease in SNCV in the contralateral, nonworking hands. Several weeks after being removed from the task, SNCV returned to within 87%,100% of baseline. MRI showed enlargement of the affected nerves near the proximal end of the carpal tunnel, at the time of maximal SNCV slowing. This new animal model demonstrates a temporally unambiguous relationship between exposure to a moderately forceful, repetitive manual task and development of median mononeuropathy at the wrist, and recovery of SNCV following termination of task exposure. This study contributes to the pattern of evidence of a causal relationship between manual work, median mononeuropathy, and carpal tunnel syndrome in humans. In the future, this new animal model could be used to characterize dose,response relationships between risk factors and carpal tunnel syndrome. © 2006 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 25: 713,724, 2007 [source] Lack of association of iron metabolism and Dupuytren's diseaseJOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN ACADEMY OF DERMATOLOGY & VENEREOLOGY, Issue 4 2008J Hnanicek Abstract Background,Iron accumulation as seen in genetic haemochromatosis is a major cause of hepatic fibrogenesis. A link between chronic liver disease and Dupuytren's disease (DD) is well established, especially in alcoholics. Aim The aim of the present study was to test the hypothesis that iron accumulation might cause fibrosis of the palmar aponeurosis leading to DD. Patients and methods We examined iron metabolism, mutations of the HFE gene, serum cholesterol, alcohol consumption, presence of chronic liver disease, diabetes and history of severe manual work in a group of 90 patients who had undergone surgery for a severe form of DD. The tissue removed during surgery was histologically examined to confirm the diagnosis of DD. For a control group, we used 33 healthy subjects with similar profiles. Results The DD group consisted of 82 men and 8 women. Chronic liver disease was found in 27% of DD patients, compared with 6.1% of control subjects (P = 0.013). A history of hand traumatization was present in 33% of DD patients vs. 15% of control subjects (P = 0.048). Excessive alcohol consumption was present in 35.5% of DD patients compared with 15.1% of controls (P = 0.029). None of the other tested parameters, including the prevalence of HFE gene mutations, showed a significant difference between the two groups. Conclusions Iron accumulation does not play a major role in the pathogenesis of DD. However, sex, age, manual labour and alcohol consumption are risk factors for progression of DD. We observed a high incidence of chronic liver disease in patients with DD. [source] Dupuytren's disease: Personal factors and occupational exposureAMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE, Issue 1 2008Gérard Lucas Abstract Background The etiology of Dupuytren's disease is unknown, and the role of occupational exposure is still debated. Our objective was to study the association between occupational exposures, personal risk factors and Dupuytren's disease. Methods In this cross-sectional survey, nine occupational physicians performed clinical examinations, focused on Dupuytren's disease, of 2,406 French male civil servants employed at the Equipment Ministry in 1998 and interviewed them about medical history, leisure manual exposure and occupational biomechanical exposure to vibrations and manual work. A cumulative occupational exposure score was defined, with three levels of exposure. Results Dupuytren's disease was diagnosed in 212 men (8.8%). The occupational exposure score was significantly higher in this group of cases than in the rest of the sample (377 (SD280) vs. 223 (SD250), respectively; P,<,0.0001). Occupational exposure was associated with Dupuytren's disease (adjusted Odds Ratio,=,2.20 [1.39,3.45] for the intermediate and 3.10 [1.99,4.84] for the high exposure groups), with adjustment for age, leisure physical activities, alcohol consumption (,5 servings per day), history of diabetes, epilepsy, hand trauma, and familial history of Dupuytren's disease. Conclusion Manual work exposure was associated with Dupuytren's disease after adjustment for personal risk factors. Longitudinal studies are needed to confirm these results. Am. J. Ind. Med. 51:9,15, 2008. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] "We have a little bit more finesse, as a nation": Constructing the Polish Worker in London's Building SitesANTIPODE, Issue 3 2009Ayona Datta Abstract:, This paper examines how male Polish builders in London construct themselves relationally to English builders as they negotiate their place within the labour hierarchies of the building site and in the London labour market. This is based on semi-structured interviews and participant photographs taken by Polish migrants arriving in the aftermath of the European Union expansion in May 2004, and now working in building sites across London. These buildings sites are mundane elements of a global city which employ transnational labour, and where differences between Polish and English builders become significant discursive tools of survival in a competitive labour market. The paper illustrates how Polish workers mark themselves as "superior" to English builders through the versatility of their embodied skills, work ethic, artistic qualities, and finesse in their social interactions on the building site. This paper thus provides new ways of understanding the meanings of work and the complexity of identity politics within the spaces of low-paid manual work in a global city. [source] Periodically Discontinuous Induction of Bone Marrow Stem Cells toward Osteogenic Differentiation in VitroBIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS, Issue 3 2008Zhen Wang This paper reveals that a discontinuous in vitro induction, namely, the periodic presence and absence of foreign induction factors, might be, under a certain condition, more effective to stimulate stem cells' differentiation than a continuous induction. Bone marrow stem cells (BMSCs) derived from Sprague Dawley rats were employed to examine the effects of discontinuous additions of osteogenic supplements with a series of alternate frequency in contrast to those with continuous induction or no induction. The results demonstrated that a suitable discontinuous induction was more able to achieve osteogenesis than not only no induction but also the associated continuous induction. Additionally, the osteogenic supplements were confirmed to enhance cell differentiation but suppress cell proliferation. So, the combination of differentiation extent per cell and cell number accounts for the "unexpected" good osteogenic effect of the discontinuous induction. The induction effect was found to be dependent upon alternate frequency, and the optimum alternate period in our experimental systems was determined to be around 4 days. Since it is very common to change culture medium every 2,4 days, such a strategy of discontinuous induction does not bring any extra manual work but reduces the consumption of foreign induction factors and significantly enhances the global differentiation efficacy. Our work thus affords a convenient and practical approach to achieve differentiation of BMSCs, which might be useful for potential large-scale culture and differentiation of stem cells. Meanwhile, the existence of optimum frequency implies some unknown inherent rhythms of cell proliferation and differentiation. [source] |