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Selected AbstractsFS13.2 Intervention on work-related skin problems among gut cleanersCONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 3 2004Mari-Ann Flyvholm Work-related skin problems are frequent in the food processing industry. A randomised intervention study with a one-year follow up was carried out among gut cleaners in order to prevent work-related skin problems due to wet work. The effects of the intervention were primarily measured by telephone interviews using questionnaires based on a standardized questionnaire for work-related skin diseases and exposure (NOSQ-2002).* The intervention activities included an evidence-based prevention program and an evidence-based method for implementation. Six of the 18 participating departments were randomly assigned to the intervention group and the remaining 12 departments to the comparison group. A total of 644 employees responded in the baseline interview and 622 in the follow-up interview carried out a year later. The participation rates were 87,5% and 71,6% respectively. Among the 495 participants answering in both interviews the frequency of eczema on hands or forearms within the past 3 months was reduced significantly by more than 25% in the intervention departments. A minor increase was observed in the comparison departments. This study has shown that even in jobs without the possibility to reduce high exposure to wet work work-related skin problems can be reduced by proper preventive measures. *) Susitaival P, Flyvholm M-A, Meding B, Kanerva L, Lindberg M, Svensson Å, Ólafsson JH. Contact Dermatitis 2003;49:70,76. [source] Modulation of histamine H3 receptors in the brain of 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned ratsEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 11 2000Oleg V. Anichtchik Abstract Parkinson's disease is a major neurological disorder that primarily affects the nigral dopaminergic cells. Nigral histamine innervation is altered in human postmortem Parkinson's disease brains. However, it is not known if the altered innervation is a consequence of dopamine deficiency. The aim of the present study was to investigate possible changes in the H3 receptor system in a well-characterized model of Parkinson's disease , the 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesioned rats. Histamine immunohistochemistry showed a minor increase of the fibre density index but we did not find any robust increase of histaminergic innervation in the ipsilateral substantia nigra on the lesioned side. In situ hybridization showed equal histidine decarboxylase mRNA expression on both sides in the posterior hypothalamus. H3 receptors were labelled with N-alpha-[3H]-methyl histamine dihydrochloride ([3H] NAMH). Upregulation of binding to H3 receptors was found in the substantia nigra and ventral aspects of striatum on the ipsilateral side. An increase of GTP-,-[35S] binding after H3 agonist activation was found in the striatum and substantia nigra on the lesioned side. In situ hybridization of H3 receptor mRNA demonstrated region-specific mRNA expression and an increase of H3 receptor mRNA in ipsilateral striatum. Thus, the histaminergic system is involved in the pathological process after 6-OHDA lesion of the rat brain at least through H3 receptor. On the later stages of the neurotoxic damage, less H3 receptors became functionally active. Increased H3 receptor mRNA expression and binding may, for example, modulate GABAergic neuronal activity in dopamine-depleted striatum. [source] LEARNING ABILITY AND LONGEVITY: A SYMMETRICAL EVOLUTIONARY TRADE-OFF IN DROSOPHILAEVOLUTION, Issue 6 2008Joep M. S. Burger Learning ability can be substantially improved by artificial selection in animals ranging from Drosophila to rats. Thus these species have not used their evolutionary potential with respect to learning ability, despite intuitively expected and experimentally demonstrated adaptive advantages of learning. This suggests that learning is costly, but this notion has rarely been tested. Here we report correlated responses of life-history traits to selection for improved learning in Drosophila melanogaster. Replicate populations selected for improved learning lived on average 15% shorter than the corresponding unselected control populations. They also showed a minor reduction in fecundity late in life and possibly a minor increase in dry adult mass. Selection for improved learning had no effect on egg-to-adult viability, development rate, or desiccation resistance. Because shortened longevity was the strongest correlated response to selection for improved learning, we also measured learning ability in another set of replicate populations that had been selected for extended longevity. In a classical olfactory conditioning assay, these long-lived flies showed an almost 40% reduction in learning ability early in life. This effect disappeared with age. Our results suggest a symmetrical evolutionary trade-off between learning ability and longevity in Drosophila. [source] The Effect of Thermal Treatment on the Morphology and Charge Carrier Dynamics in a Polythiophene,Fullerene Bulk Heterojunction,ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 8 2005J. Savenije Abstract The influence of various thermal treatment steps on the morphology and the photoconductive properties of a non-contacted, 50,nm thick blend (50:50,wt.-%) of [6,6]-phenyl C61 -butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) and poly(3-hexyl thiophene) (P3HT) spin-coated from chloroform has been studied using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and the electrodeless time-resolved microwave conductivity technique. After annealing the film for 5,min at 80,°C, TEM images show the formation of crystalline fibrils of P3HT due to a more ordered packing of the polymer chains. The thermal treatment results in a large increase of the photoconductivity, due to an enhancement of the hole mobility in these crystalline P3HT domains from 0.0056,cm2,V,1,s,,1 for the non-annealed sample to 0.044,cm2,V,1,s,,1 for the sample annealed at 80,°C. In contrast, the temporal shape of the photoconductivity, with typical decay half-times, ,1/2, of 1,,s for the lowest excitation intensities, is unaffected by the temperature treatment. Further annealing of the sample at 130,°C results in the formation of three different substructures within the heterojunction: a PCBM:P3HT blend with PCBM-rich clusters, a region depleted of PCBM, and large PCBM single crystals. Only a minor increase in the amplitude, but a tenfold rise of the decay time of the photoconductivity, is observed. This is explained by the formation of PCBM-rich clusters and large PCBM single crystals, resulting in an increased diffusional escape probability for mobile charge carriers and hence reduced recombination. [source] Experimental deformation of partially melted granite revisited: implications for the continental crustJOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY, Issue 1 2005C. L. ROSENBERG Abstract A review and reinterpretation of previous experimental data on the deformation of partially melted crustal rocks reveals that the relationship of aggregate strength to melt fraction is non-linear, even if plotted on a linear ordinate and abscissa. At melt fractions, , < 0.07, the dependence of aggregate strength on , is significantly greater than at , > 0.07. This melt fraction (, = 0.07) marks the transition from a significant increase in the proportion of melt-bearing grain boundaries up to this point to a minor increase thereafter. Therefore, we suggest that it is the increase of melt-interconnectivity that causes the dramatic strength drop between the solidus and a melt fraction of 0.07. We term this drop the ,melt connectivity transition' (MCT). A second, less-pronounced strength drop occurs at higher melt fractions and corresponds to the breakdown of the solid (crystal) framework. This is the ,solid-to-liquid transition' (SLT), corresponding to the well known ,rheologically critical melt percentage'. Although the strength drop at the SLT is about four orders of magnitude, the absolute value of this drop is small compared with the absolute strength of the unmelted aggregate, rendering the SLT invisible in a linear aggregate strength v. melt-fraction diagram. On the other hand, the more important MCT has been overlooked in previous work because experimental data usually are plotted in logarithmic strength v. melt-fraction diagrams, obscuring large strength drops at high absolute strength values. We propose that crustal-scale localization of deformation effectively coincides with the onset of melting, pre-empting attainment of the SLT in most geological settings. The SLT may be restricted to controlling flow localization within magmatic bodies, especially where melt accumulates. [source] Echinacea purpurea and P-glycoprotein drug transport in Caco-2 cellsPHYTOTHERAPY RESEARCH, Issue 1 2009Torstein Schrøder Hansen Abstract Echinacea is widely used as a medical herbal product, but its interaction potential with the drug efflux transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp) has not yet been evaluated. The interaction potential of Echinacea purpurea towards P-gp mediated drug transport was studied in human intestinal Caco-2 cells. Digoxin (30 nm) was used as a substrate and verapamil as a control inhibitor. Ethanol, 0.8%, needed for herbal extraction and compatibility with the commercial products, inhibited the net digoxin flux by 18%. E. purpurea influenced to a higher degree the B,A transport of digoxin than the A,B transport. A minor increase in net digoxin flux was observed at low concentrations of E. purpurea, an effect anticipated to be allosteric in nature. At higher concentrations, from 0.4 to 6.36 mg dry weight/mL, a statistically significant linear dose-related decrease was observed in the net digoxin flux, indicating a dose dependent E. purpurea inhibition of P-gp. Both Vmax and Km of the net digoxin flux, calculated to 23.7 nmol/cm2/h and 385 µm, respectively, decreased in the presence of E. purpurea in an uncompetitive fashion. Although the effects of Echinacea purpurea on systemic P-gp mediated drug transport are probably limited, an influence on drug bioavailability can not be excluded. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Effect of plasma treatment and electron beam radiations on the strength of nanofilled adhesive-bonded jointsPOLYMER ENGINEERING & SCIENCE, Issue 8 2010H.M.S. Iqbal This investigation highlights the adhesion performance of carbon fiber- and glass fiber-reinforced polyphenylene sulfide when joined by high-performance neat epoxy adhesive and nanofilled epoxy adhesive. A significant increase in the surface energy of these materials is observed after the surface modification with atmospheric plasma treatment. An increase in surface roughness is observed after exposing the surface to plasma. Lap shear testing of untreated and plasma-treated joints is carried out to correlate the improvement in adhesion properties with the joint strength. A considerable increase in joint strength is observed when the surfaces of these materials are modified by atmospheric pressure plasma. There is a further increase in joint strength when the composites are joined by nanofilled epoxy adhesive, and subsequent exposure to electron beam radiations results in minor increase in the joint strength. Finally, the fractured surfaces of the joints are examined and the analysis is performed. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 50:1505,1511, 2010. © 2010 Society of Plastics Engineers [source] Brief communication: Minimally invasive bone sampling method for DNA analysisAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 4 2009Victoria E. Gibbon Abstract Obtaining a bone sample for DNA analysis has traditionally been a destructive practice, which has resulted in reluctance on behalf of curators for skeletal collections to allow invasive testing. A novel minimally invasive bone sampling method for DNA analysis is presented here. This method uses a conventional hand drill wherein the bone sample is extracted from the intercondylar fossa of the femur; it does not interfere with any known anthropometric landmarks and only leaves a small hole on the surface of the bone. The temperature of the drill is documented and it was established due to the minor increase in temperature, that this should not affect the molecular integrity of the sample. This method is easily replicated and is suitable for both human and other animal skeletal material and can be applied to rare specimens with little risk. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Remedial options for chlorinated volatile organics in a partially anaerobic aquiferREMEDIATION, Issue 4 2004Xiujin Qiu A laboratory study was conducted for the selection of appropriate remedial technologies for a partially anaerobic aquifer contaminated with chlorinated volatile organics (VOCs). Evaluation of in situ bioremediation demonstrated that the addition of electron donors to anaerobic microcosms enhanced biological reductive dechlorination of tetrachloroethene (PCE), trichloroethene (TCE), and 1,1,1-trichloroethane (1,1,1-TCA) with half-lives of 20, 22, and 41 days, respectively. Nearly complete reductions of PCE, TCE, 1,1,1-TCA, and the derivative cis-dichloroethene were accompanied by a corresponding increase in chloride concentrations. Accumulation of vinyl chloride, ethene, and ethane was not observed; however, elevated levels of 14CO2 (from 14C-TCE spiked) were recovered, indicating the occurrence of anaerobic oxidation. In contrast, very little degradation of 1,2-dichloropropane (1,2-DCP) and 1,1-dichlorethane (1,1-DCA) was observed in the anaerobic microcosms, but nutrient addition enhanced their degradation in the aerobic biotic microcosms. The aerobic degradation half-lives for 1,2-DCP and 1,1-DCA were 63 and 56 days, respectively. Evaluation of in situ chemical oxidation (ISCO) demonstrated that chelate-modified Fenton's reagent was effective in degrading aqueous-phase PCE, TCE, 1,1,1-TCA, 1,2-DCP, etc.; however, this approach had minimal effects on solid-phase contaminants. The observed oxidant demand was 16 g-H2O2/L-groundwater. The oxidation reaction rates were not highly sensitive to the molar ratio of H2O2:Fe2+:citrate. A ratio of 60:1:1 resulted in slightly faster removal of chemicals of concern (COCs) than those of 12:1:1 and 300:1:1. This treatment resulted in increases in dissolved metals (Ca, Cr, Mg, K, and Mn) and a minor increase of vinyl chloride. Treatment with zero-valent iron (ZVI) resulted in complete dechlorination of PCE, and TCE to ethene and ethane. ZVI treatment reduced 1,1,1-TCA only to 1,1-DCA and chloroethane (CA) but had little effect on reducing the levels of 1,2-DCP, 1,1-DCA, and CA. The longevity test showed that one gram of 325-mesh iron powder was exhausted in reaction with > 22 mL of groundwater. The short life of ZVI may be a barrier to implementation. The ZVI surface reaction rates (ksa) were 1.2 × 10,2 Lm,2h,1, 2 × 10,3 Lm,2h,1, and 1.2 × 10,3 Lm,2h,1 for 1,1,1-TCA, TCE, and PCE, respectively. Based upon the results of this study, in situ bioremediation appeared to be more suitable than ISCO and ZVI for effectively treating the groundwater contamination at the site. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source] CT analysis after distraction osteogenesis in Pierre Robin SequenceTHE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 2 2009Saswata Roy MD Abstract Objectives/Hypothesis: Early mandibular lengthening by distraction osteogenesis provides an alternative to traditional methods of airway management in infants with Pierre Robin sequence (PRS). Little evidence in the medical literature quantitatively demonstrates the changes in skeletal, soft tissue, and hypopharyngeal spaces with mandibular distraction. Study Design: Prospective analysis of a cohort of three patients with PRS. Methods: We reviewed a series of infants with PRS and severe upper airway obstruction who underwent mandibular distraction. The infants underwent mandibular lengthening with the same internal, unidirectional distraction osteogenesis device. Standardized serial computed tomography (CT) scans were obtained according to established protocol. Computed tomography data were extracted and analyzed with medical image analysis software for mandibulo-maxillary arch harmony, symmetry, hypopharyngeal airway volume, geniohyoid distance, distraction osteogenesis bone volume, and mandibular length. Results: Mandibulo-maxillary alveolar ridge distances were corrected to 0.5 mm after distraction. Clinical examination showed good arch harmony without open-bite or cross-bite deformities. Mandibular ramus was lengthened by 19.5%; the body, 43.4%. After distraction, total mandibular length was increased by 26.2%; hypopharyngeal airway volume, 192%; posterior distance from pharyngeal wall to tongue base, 198.9%; and geniohyoid distance, 14.1%. Conclusions: Unidirectional internal microdistractors can achieve good mandibulo-maxillary arch harmony. Hypopharyngeal airway volume increases substantially, with an even greater increase in distance between tongue base and posterior pharyngeal wall. As the distal mandibular segment is distracted, the hyoid moves anteriorly, with minor increase in geniohyoid relationship. Internal mandibular microdistraction devices represent a substantial advance in airway obstruction management in infants with micrognathia. Laryngoscope, 2009 [source] Evidence that endogenous inosine and adenosine-mediated hyperglycaemia during ischaemia,reperfusion through A3 adenosine receptorsAUTONOMIC & AUTACOID PHARMACOLOGY, Issue 4 2009D. Cortés Summary 1,The molecular mechanism underlying stress-induced hyperglycemia has not been comprehensively clarified. Recently, we demonstrated in ischaemia-reperfusion (I-R) stress-subjected liver that inosine and adenosine are mainly responsible for the hyperglycemia observed. 2,We aimed to advance in the knowledge of the role of inosine plus adenosine as mediators of hepatic-induced hyperglycemia detected after I-R in lower limbs. 3,Acute ischaemia was conducted in anesthetized rats by occluding downstream abdominal aorta and cava vein; then, reperfusion was allowed. Blood samples from hepatic or abdominal cava veins were taken throughout the experiments to measure glucose, inosine and adenosine. Antagonists to adenosine (AdoR) and adrenergic receptors (AdrR) were administered during ischaemia to analyze their effect on hepatic glucose release. 4,Ischaemia up to 60 min produced minor increase of glucose and nucleosides blood values, but 5 min of ischaemia followed by 2- (or 10-) min reperfusion increased glucose 23%, and those of inosine or adenosine by 100%. After 60 min of ischaemia and 10 min of reperfusion, glycemia rose 2-fold and blood inosine and adenosine, 3.3- and 2.7-fold, respectively. A linear positive correlation, r2, as high as 0.839 between glucose and either nucleoside blood values was calculated. The hyperglycemia response to I-R decreased by 0, 25, 33, 45 and 100% after selective inhibition of A2B AdoR, A2A AdoR, a1B AdrR, A1 AdoR, and A3 AdoR, respectively. 5,Inosine-adenosine couple through activation of hepatic A3 AdoR is the main signal for releasing glucose from liver glycogen and for promoting hyperglycemia following experimental injury of I-R from lower limbs. [source] Normovolemia defined according to cardiac stroke volume in healthy supine humansCLINICAL PHYSIOLOGY AND FUNCTIONAL IMAGING, Issue 5 2010Morten Bundgaard-Nielsen Summary Background:, Both hypovolemia and a fluid overload are detrimental for outcome in surgical patients but the effort to establish normovolemia is hampered by the lack of an operational clinical definition. Manipulating the central blood volume on a tilt table demonstrates that the flat part of the Frank-Starling curve is reached when subjects are supine and that finding may be applicable for a clinical definition of normovolemia. However, it is unknown whether stroke volume (SV) responds to an increase in preload induced by fluid administration. Methods:, In 20 healthy subjects (23 ± 2 years, mean ± SD), SV was measured by esophageal Doppler before and after fluid administration to evaluate whether SV increases in healthy, non-fasting, supine subjects. Two hundred millilitres of a synthetic colloid (hydroxyethyl starch, HES 130/0·4) was provided and repeated if a ,10% increment in SV was obtained. Results:, None of the subjects increased SV ,10% following fluid administration but there was a minor increase in mean arterial pressure (92 ± 15 to 93 ± 12 mmHg, P = 0·01), while heart rate (HR) (66 ± 12 beats min,1; P = 0·32), cardiac output (4·8 ± 1·1 l min,1; P = 0·25) and the length of the systole corrected to a HR of 60 beats/min (corrected flow time; 344 ± 24 ms; P = 0·31) did not change. Conclusion:, Supporting the proposed definition of normovolemia, non-fasting, supine, healthy subjects are provided with a preload to the heart that does not limit SV suggesting that the upper flat part of the Frank-Starling relationship is reached. [source] Pulsed electromagnetic fields enhance BMP-2 dependent osteoblastic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cellsJOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 9 2008Z. Schwartz Abstract Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) express an osteoblastic phenotype when treated with BMP-2, and BMP-2 is used clinically to induce bone formation although high doses are required. Pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMF) also promote osteogenesis in vivo, in part through direct action on osteoblasts. We tested the hypothesis that PEMF enhances osteogenesis of MSCs in the presence of an inductive stimulus like BMP-2. Confluent cultures of human MSCs were grown on calcium phosphate disks and were treated with osteogenic media (OM), OM containing 40 ng/mL rhBMP-2, OM,+,PEMF (8 h/day), or OM,+,BMP-2,+,PEMF. MSCs demonstrated minor increases in alkaline phosphatase (ALP) during 24 days in culture and no change in osteocalcin. OM increased ALP and osteocalcin by day 6, but PEMF had no additional effect at any time. BMP-2 was stimulatory over OM, and PEMF,+,BMP-2 synergistically increased ALP and osteocalcin. PEMF also enhanced the effects of BMP-2 on PGE2, latent and active TGF-,1, and osteoprotegerin. Effects of PEMF on BMP-2,treated cells were greatest at days 12 to 20. These results demonstrate that PEMF enhances osteogenic effects of BMP-2 on MSCs cultured on calcium phosphate substrates, suggesting that PEMF will improve MSC response to BMP-2 in vivo in a bone environment. © 2008 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 26:1250,1255, 2008 [source] Assessing ecological changes in and around marine reserves using community perceptions and biological surveysAQUATIC CONSERVATION: MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS, Issue 4 2010M. Yasué Abstract 1. Well-enforced partial or total no-fishing zones (collectively known as marine protected areas, or MPAs) can help restore degraded coral reefs and enhance fish populations. 2. A comparison was made of community perceptions of ecological changes in an MPA with concurrent scientific data on these changes in the same MPA. Such analyses are particularly important in community-based MPAs where local support is a key determinant of ecological success. 3. The no-take MPA in question was initially launched in partnership with the community in 1995 and formalized in 1998. The perceptions data come from interviews with community members in 1999 and 2004, the biological data come from underwater visual censuses of the MPA from 1998 to 2004. 4. Community members perceived more fish within the MPA and slight increases in catch outside the MPA. In contrast, fish censuses showed a high degree of stochastic variation and only minor increases in fish abundance, size and diversity in and around the MPA between 1998 and 2004. 5. Possible explanations for these discrepancies include different temporal, spatial or species frames of reference and/or limitations to the biological survey technique. Other options include wishful thinking, external influences, a desire to please, or confounding with other benefits. 6. This study demonstrates some of the strengths and weaknesses of community perceptions and biological data. In order to improve our understanding about the changes that occur over time in an MPA and engender community support for the long-term viability of MPAs, it is important to develop diverse and efficient monitoring schemes. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] |