Special Interest (special + interest)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Terms modified by Special Interest

  • special interest group
  • special interest groups

  • Selected Abstracts


    Topics of Special Interest in an Emergency Medicine Course for Dental Practice Teams

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DENTAL EDUCATION, Issue 2 2004
    S. Weber
    Considering increasing life expectancy and population comorbitity, not only dentists but also nursing staff should gain knowledge and skills in treatment of patients in acute life-threatening situations. In cooperation with the State Dental Council, a 1-day course in the management of medical emergencies based on the ERC ALS guidelines was held for primary care dental practice teams. Following a short lecture series (2 hours), a systematic skills-training session (6 hours) was performed in small groups, addressing the following subjects: BLS, airway management and ventilation, intravenous techniques, manual and automated external defibrillation, ALS and resuscitation routine in a typical dental practice setting. For all skills-training sessions, life-like manikins and models were utilized and the emergency scenarios were simulated by the use of a universal patient simulator (SimMan®, MPL/Laerdal). At the end of the course, an evaluation questionnaire was completed by all candidates to find out in which emergency situations the dental practice teams now felt well trained or incompetent. In the first course with 32 participants, 13 were dentists and 19 were dental nurses. In the evaluation results, 53% of both, dentists and nurses, stated to be competent in cardiac arrest situations. 95% of the nurses, but only 69% of the dentists, thought that an automated external defibrillator should be available in the dental practice. 26% of the dentists felt unable to treat patients with anaphylactic reactions adequately, whereas 37% of the nurses felt incompetent in respiratory emergencies. [source]


    Flame structure and NO emissions in gas combustion of low calorific heating value

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENERGY RESEARCH, Issue 15 2003
    Jeong Park
    Abstract Numerical study on addition effects of CO and CO2 in fuel side (H2/Ar) on flame structure and NO emission behaviour in counterflow diffusion flame has been conducted with detailed chemistry to fundamentally understand gas combustion of low calorific heating value. A modified Miller,Bowman reaction scheme including a complementary C2 -reaction subset is adopted. The radiative heat loss term, which is based on an optically thin model and it especially important at low strain rates, is included to cover the importance of the temperature dependence on NO emission. Special interest is taken to estimate the roles of added CO and CO2 in fuel side on flame structure and NO emission characteristics. Increasing CO concentration in fuel side contributes to the enhancement of combustion due to the increase effect of the concentration of reactive species. The increase of added CO2 concentration in fuel side suppresses overall reaction rate due to the high heat capacity. It is seen that chemical effects due to the breakdown of added CO2 in fuel side make C2 -branch chemical species be remarkably formed and the prevailing contribution of prompt NO is a direct outcome of these effects. It is found that in the combined forms of H2/CO/CO2/Ar fuels the effects of added CO and CO2 concentrations in fuel side compete contrarily to each other in NO emission behaviour. Particularly the role of added CO is stressed in the side of restraining prompt NO. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    An audit of ,equivocal' (C3) and ,suspicious' (C4) categories in fine needle aspiration cytology of the breast

    CYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 4 2001
    R. A. Deb
    An audit of ,equivocal' (C3) and ,suspicious' (C4) categories in fine needle aspiration cytology of the breast We have audited the frequency of use and outcome of the ,equivocal/atypia probably benign' (C3) and ,suspicious of malignancy' (C4) category for breast cytology in our Unit. A total of 14 935 cytological specimens were reported by at least one of the three pathologists with a special interest in breast pathology, according to five categories of the NHSBSP guidelines for cytology reporting, 1992; 3.7% (555 cases) and 3.9% (587 cases) of cases were classified as equivocal (C3) and suspicious (C4), respectively, giving a total rate (C3 + C4) of 7.6%. Of the C3 cases, 68% were subsequently benign and 32% were malignant. Of the C4 cases, 19% were subsequently benign and 81% malignant. The commonest benign lesions in both categories were fibroadenomas (7.6% of C3 and 19.8% of C4), fibrocystic change (14.3% of C3 and 12.5% of C4), radial scars (6.2% of C3 and 10.4% of C4) and papillomas (6.2% of C3 and 6.3% of C4). Of the malignant lesions (particularly those classified as C3), a high proportion were low grade or special type cancers. The categories of atypia probably benign (C3) and suspicious of malignancy (C4) in breast cytology provide a strategy for classification of problematic or uncertain cases; this maintains the predictive value of the benign (C2) and malignant (C5) categories, and allows separation of these difficult cases into clinically useful groups with differing probabilities of malignancy. [source]


    A comparative evaluation of digital imaging, retinal photography and optometrist examination in screening for diabetic retinopathy

    DIABETIC MEDICINE, Issue 7 2003
    J. A. Olson
    Abstract Aims To compare the respective performances of digital retinal imaging, fundus photography and slit-lamp biomicroscopy performed by trained optometrists, in screening for diabetic retinopathy. To assess the potential contribution of automated digital image analysis to a screening programme. Methods A group of 586 patients recruited from a diabetic clinic underwent three or four mydriatic screening methods for retinal examination. The respective performances of digital imaging (n = 586; graded manually), colour slides (n = 586; graded manually), and slit-lamp examination by specially trained optometrists (n = 485), were evaluated against a reference standard of slit-lamp biomicroscopy by ophthalmologists with a special interest in medical retina. The performance of automated grading of the digital images by computer was also assessed. Results Slit-lamp examination by optometrists for referable diabetic retinopathy achieved a sensitivity of 73% (52,88) and a specificity of 90% (87,93). Using two-field imaging, manual grading of red-free digital images achieved a sensitivity of 93% (82,98) and a specificity of 87% (84,90), and for colour slides, a sensitivity of 96% (87,100) and a specificity of 89% (86,91). Almost identical results were achieved for both methods with single macular field imaging. Digital imaging had a lower technical failure rate (4.4% of patients) than colour slide photography (11.9%). Applying an automated grading protocol to the digital images detected any retinopathy, with a sensitivity of 83% (77,89) and a specificity of 71% (66,75) and diabetic macular oedema with a sensitivity of 76% (53,92) and a specificity of 85% (82,88). Conclusions Both manual grading methods produced similar results whether using a one- or two-field protocol. Technical failures rates, and hence need for recall, were lower with digital imaging. One-field grading of fundus photographs appeared to be as effective as two-field. The optometrists achieved the lowest sensitivities but reported no technical failures. Automated grading of retinal images can improve efficiency of resource utilization in diabetic retinopathy screening. Diabet. Med. 20, 528,534 (2003) [source]


    Determinants of successful chronic hepatitis C case finding among patients receiving opioid maintenance treatment in a primary care setting

    ADDICTION, Issue 12 2009
    Oliver Senn
    ABSTRACT Aims Injection drug users are at high risk for chronic hepatitis C virus infection (CHC). Opioid maintenance treatment (OMT) offers a unique opportunity to screen for CHC. This study proposed the hypothesis that a general practitioner (GP) with special interest in addiction medicine can achieve CHC screening rates comparable to specialized centres and aimed to investigate determinants for a successful CHC case finding in a primary care setting. Design and participants Retrospective medical record analysis of 387 patients who received opioid maintenance therapy between 1 January 2002 and 31 May 2008 in a general practice in Zurich, Switzerland. Measurements Successful CHC assessment was defined as performance of hepatitis C virus (HCV) serology with consecutive polymerase chain reaction-based RNA and genotype recordings. The association between screening success and patient characteristics was assessed using multiple logistic regression. Findings Median (interquartile range) age and duration of OMT of the 387 (268 males) patients was 38.5 (33.6,44.5) years and 34 (11.3,68.0) months, respectively. Fourteen patients (3.6%) denied HCV testing and informed consent about screening was missing in 13 patients (3.4%). In 327 of 360 patients (90.8%) with informed consent a successful CHC assessment has been performed. Screening for HCV antibodies was positive in 136 cases (41.6%) and in 86 of them (63.2%) a CHC was present. The duration of OMT was an independent determinant of a successful CHC assessment. Conclusions In addicted patients a high CHC assessment rate in a primary care setting in Switzerland is feasible and opioid substitution provides an optimal framework. [source]


    Galvanostatic Polarization of All-Solid-State K+ -Selective Electrodes with Polypyrrole Ion-to-Electron Transducer

    ELECTROANALYSIS, Issue 13-14 2006
    owski
    Abstract Influence of galvanostatic polarizations on potential vs. logarithm of ion activity dependences of all-solid-state ion-selective electrodes with conducting polymer ion-to-electron transducer was studied. As a model system K+ -sensor with polypyrrole solid contact and poly(vinyl chloride) based membrane containing valinomycin was chosen. The influence of the lipophilic salt included to the membrane composition was of special interest. [source]


    Signal denoising and baseline correction by discrete wavelet transform for microchip capillary electrophoresis

    ELECTROPHORESIS, Issue 18 2003
    Bi-Feng Liu
    Abstract Signal denoising and baseline correction using discrete wavelet transform (DWT) are described for microchip capillary electrophoresis (MCE). DWT was performed on an electropherogram describing a separation of nine tetramethylrohodamine-5-isothiocyanate labeled amino acids, following MCE with laser-induced fluorescence detection, using Daubechies 5 wavelet at a decomposition level of 6. The denoising efficiency was compared with, and proved to be superior to, other commonly used denoising techniques such as Fourier transform, Savitzky-Golay smoothing and moving average, in terms of noise removal and peak preservation by directly visual inspection. Novel strategies for baseline correction were proposed, with a special interest in baseline drift that frequently occurred in chromatographic and electrophoretic separations. [source]


    Diversity of bacteriorhodopsins in different hypersaline waters from a single Spanish saltern

    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 11 2003
    R. Thane Papke
    Summary Haloarchaeal rhodopsins are a diverse group of transmembrane proteins that use light energy to drive several different cellular processes. Two rhodopsins, bacteriorhodopsin and halorhodopsins, are H+ and Cl, ion pumps, respectively, and two rhodopsins, sensory rhodopsin I and II, regulate phototaxis. Bacteriorhodopsin is of special interest as it is a non-chlorophyll-based type of phototrophy (i.e. generation of chemical energy from light energy). However, very little is known about the diversity and distribution of rhodopsin genes in hypersaline environments. Here, we have used environmental PCR and cloning techniques to directly retrieve rhodopsin genes from three different salinity ponds located in a sea salt manufacturing facility near Alicante, Spain. Our survey resulted in the discovery of previously concealed variation including what is hypothesized to be bacteriorhodopsin genes from the uncultivated square morphotype that dominates these environments. In some instances, identical genes were discovered in seemingly different habitats suggesting that some haloarchaea are present over widely varying concentrations of salt. [source]


    The social causes of inequality in epilepsy and developing a rehabilitation strategy: A U.K.-based analysis

    EPILEPSIA, Issue 10 2009
    Leone Ridsdale
    Summary A rehabilitation approach has been adopted for many long-term neurologic conditions, but not for epilepsy. The disabilities associated with epilepsy are cognitive, psychological, and social, which are not as readily identified by medical doctors as are physical disabilities. A rehabilitation approach moves the emphasis from a medically driven process to a focus on the personal, social, and physical context of long-term illness. It is suggested that a missed opportunity for education and support for self-management occurs after diagnosis. This results in disadvantage to those whose educational level and knowledge of epilepsy are low. People who do not achieve epilepsy control may then experience higher levels of psychological distress, and a negative cycle of loss of self-efficacy, poor epilepsy control, social disadvantage, and disability. Rehabilitation services have benefited communities surrounding centers of excellence. Not so in epilepsy. Despite centers of excellence, areas with deprivation have higher than national average levels of patients reporting a seizure in the prior year, and higher emergency hospital admissions. Specialists working in partnership with general practitioners (GPs) and practice nurses can do more to increase participation and reduce distress for people with epilepsy. When available, GPs and nurses with special interest in epilepsy promote integrated services. Primary,secondary networks are likely to be more effective in preventing downward drift. This requires evaluation. [source]


    Boredom, "Trouble," and the Realities of Postcolonial Reservation Life

    ETHOS, Issue 1 2003
    Assistant professor Lori L. Jervis
    Perhaps because of its reputation as an inconsequential emotion, the significance of boredom in human social life has often been minimized if not ignored. Boredom has been theoretically linked to modernity, affluence, and the growing problem of filling "leisure time. "It has also been attributed to the expansion of individualism with its heightened expectations of personal gratification. Whether a reaction to the sensation ofunderstimulation or "overload," boredom appears to be, ultimately, a problem of meaning. In this article, we consider the applicability of these notions to the contemporary American Indian reservation context, examining discourse about boredom as expressed in interviews with members of a northern plains tribe. Of special interest is how boredom figures into the phenomenon of "trouble" (e.g., alcohol and drug abuse, violence, and illegal activities). Although boredom is certainly familiar to various strata of contemporary U.S. society,and arguably part of what it means to be human,we propose that the realities of postcolonial reservation life provide an especially fertile and undertheorized breeding ground for this condition, and our examination of the relationship between boredom and trouble suggests that boredom's implications for both individual subjectivity and group sociality are far from trivial. [source]


    Development of three different neoplasias in a patient in an 18-year period of time

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER CARE, Issue 3 2010
    P. HERAS md
    HERAS P., GEORGOPOULOU A.P., HATZOPOULOS A. & KRITIKOS K. (2010) European Journal of Cancer Care 19, 413,416 Development of three different neoplasias in a patient in an 18-year period of time This study presents a rare case of a patient who developed three different types of neoplasia in an 18-year period of time. The case presents a 31-year-old man with a history of treated Hodgkin's lymphoma in the neck region at the age of 13 years. The patient was admitted at the General Hospital of Nafplio for differential diagnosis of pain in the right subcostal region initiated 1 month before his admission and normochromic, normocytic anaemia. The laboratory examinations lead to the diagnosis of a sarcoma in the cardioesophageal junction. The patient was subjected to total gastrectomy. Nine months later he is admitted with a palpable firm lump in the nipple of the right breast, which suggested a malignant neoplasia. The patient was subjected to modified radical mastectomy. The appearance of three different types of neoplasia in three different organ systems in the same patient and the infrequency of the specific neoplasias individually and in combination present a special interest considering the patient's genetic background and the uniqueness of the case in the international literature. [source]


    A narrow deletion of 7q is common to HCL, and SMZL, but not CLL

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2004
    Claus Lindbjerg Andersen
    Abstract: To further characterise the genetic background of the two closely related B-lymphocytic malignancies hairy cell leukaemia (HCL), and splenic marginal zone lymphoma (SMZL) we have identified characteristic copy number imbalances by comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH). Based on these findings, areas of special interest were fine mapped, and relevant probes constructed for use in interphase-fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) investigations. Thus, using the CGH data from 52 HCL and 61 SMZL patients, we identified the characteristic profiles of copy number imbalances for both diseases. These were a gain of 5q13-31 (19%) and loss of 7q22-q35 (6%) for HCL, and gain of 3q25 (28%), loss of 7q31 (16%), and gain of 12q15 (16%) for SMZL. A partial loss of 7q unsual for low-malignant B-cell diseases was found to be common to the two diseases. This loss was therefore fine mapped with BAC/PAC clones. Fine mapping revealed that in SMZL the minimal lost region covers 11.4 Mb spanning from 7q31.33 to 7q33 located between sequence tagged site (STS)-markers SHGC-3275 and D7S725. This area was distinct from the commonly deleted 7q region of myelodysplastic syndrome/acute myeloid leukaemia (MDS/AML). A FISH probe specific for the 7q region was constructed. Using this probe in an interphase-FISH investigation we showed the minimal lost 7q-region of HCL and SMZL to be one and the same. In one HCL case, this investigation furthermore showed the extent of the deleted region to be below the detection limit of CGH, whereas interphase-FISH screening of 36 chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) cases showed no deletion of the 7q area. In conclusion, we have identified characteristic profiles of copy number imbalances in HCL and SMZL and fine mapped the minimal extent of a commonly lost 7q area of special interest. We hypothesise that this region may contain (a) gene(s) important for the pathology of HCL and SMZL. [source]


    Oxidation of CH3NH2 and (CH3)2NH by NiIII(cyclam)(H2O)23+ in Aqueous Solutions

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 20 2004
    Dror Shamir
    Abstract NiII(1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane)2+, NiIIL2+, is a good electrocatalyst for the oxidation of CH3NH2 and (CH3)2NH but not of (CH3)3N. The oxidation kinetics of the amines by NiIIIL(H2O)23+ indicate that the amines are good axial ligands to the tervalent nickel complex. The complexes NiIIIL[N(CH3)iH3,i](H2O)3+ are stronger oxidants than the complexes NiIIIL[N(CH3)iH3,i]23+. The oxidation is base-catalyzed and obeys a second-order rate law in NiIIILX2. It is proposed that the key step is NiIII,L(H2O)[N(CH3)iH2,i]2+ + NiIIILX2 , LNiII,N(=CH2)(CH3)i,1H2,i + NiIIL2+ + H3O+ + 2 X. Naturally, N(CH3)3 is not oxidized by this mechanism. Of special interest is the observation that the axial ligands CH3NH2 and (CH3)2NH are oxidized by the central cation, while the cyclam ligand, which has four secondary amine groups bound to the nickel(III) ion, and axially bound pendant primary amine groups, which are covalently linked to the macrocyclic ligand, are relatively stable. This difference in the behavior of axially bound amine groups is attributed to the free rotation of the axially bound N(CH3)iH3,i ligands that is required for the oxidation to proceed. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2004) [source]


    Serotonin mediates oestrogen stimulation of cell proliferation in the adult dentate gyrus

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 9 2001
    Mounira Banasr
    Abstract Characterizing the mechanisms by which endogenous factors stimulate neurogenesis is of special interest in view of the possible implication of newly generated cells in hippocampal functions or disorders. The aim of this study was to determine whether serotonin (5-HT) and oestradiol (E2) act through a common pathway to increase cell proliferation in the adult dentate gyrus (DG). We also investigated the effects of long-lasting changes in oestrogen levels on cell proliferation. Combining ovariectomy with inhibition of 5-HT synthesis using p -chlorophenylalanine (PCPA) treatment produced approximately the same decreases in the number of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and PSA-NCAM immunolabelled cells in the subgranular layer as ovariectomy alone. Administration of 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) restored cell proliferation primarily decreased by ovariectomy, whereas oestradiol was unable to reverse this change in ovariectomized rats treated with PCPA. These findings demonstrate that 5-HT mediates oestrogen stimulation of cell proliferation in adult dentate gyrus. However, increase in ovarian hormones during pregnancy has no effect on dentate cell proliferation. This finding suggests that concomitant changes in other factors, such as glucocorticoids, may counterbalance the positive regulation of cell proliferation by 5-HT and oestradiol. Finally, oestrogen may regulate structural plasticity by stimulating PSA-NCAM expression independently of neurogenesis, as shown for instance by the increases in the number of PSA-NCAM labelled cells in pregnants. As 5-HT and oestrogen are involved in mood disorders, our data suggest that the positive regulation of cell proliferation and neuroplasticity by these two factors may contribute to restore hippocampal connectivity in depressive patients. [source]


    Nanoindentation of a Pseudoelastic NiTiFe Shape Memory Alloy,

    ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 1-2 2010
    Janine Pfetzing-Micklich
    Nanoindentation is a suitable tool for characterizing the local mechanical properties of shape memory alloys (SMA) and to study their pseudoelastic behavior. There is a special interest in indenting with different indenter tips (as not all tips are associated with strain states that predominantly induce the martensitic transformation) and in indenting at different temperatures, where different phases are present. In this study, we perform nanoindentation on a ternary NiTiFe SMA with different indenter tips and at various testing temperatures. For nanoindentation with spherical tips, load,displacement hystereses clearly indicate pseudoelastic behavior, whereas indentation with Berkovich tips results in more pronounced plastic deformation. Testing at different temperatures is associated with different volume fractions of austenite, martensite, and R-phase. The corresponding nanoindentation responses differ considerably in terms of pseudoelastic behavior. Best pseudoelastic recovery is found at testing temperatures close to the R-phase start temperature, even though this temperature is below the austenite finish temperature, which is a well-known lower temperature bound for full recovery in macroscopic tests. Our results are discussed considering micromechanical aspects and the interaction between stress-induced phase transformation and dislocation plasticity. [source]


    Synthesis and Property Studies of Cyclotrisazobenzenes

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 32 2009
    Raphael Reuter
    Abstract Azobenzenophanes are fascinating macrocycles, which are of special interest due to their unique photochromic behavior. Cyclotrisazobenzenes 2 (R = H, Br, tBu) were prepared to probe how much strain the photoisomerization of the azobenzene motive can tolerate. The macrocycles were synthesized in an overall yield of 10,20,% from ortho -phenylenediamine (6). Solid-state structures of cyclotrisazobenzenes 2a and 2b were obtained. Irradiation under various conditions did not induce any isomerization.(© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2009) [source]


    Macrocyclic Cyclo[n]malonates , Synthetic Aspects and Observation of Columnar Arrangements by X-ray Crystallography

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 10 2006
    Nikos Chronakis
    Abstract A variety of achiral and chiral macrocyclic oligomalonates were synthesised in a one-step procedure through condensation of malonyl dichloride with ,,,-diols. We have investigated the applicability of this method by varying the length and type of the spacers in the diol. Product distribution analysis revealed that the preferential formation of monomeric, dimeric, or trimeric macrocyclic malonates can be controlled by choosing diols with specific spacers connecting the hydroxy groups. Of special interest are the macrocyclic bismalonates, as they show pronounced crystallisability and arrange into columnar motifs in the solid state. They feature distinctive dihedral angles: all ester moieties adopt anti conformations whereas the planes of the carboxy moieties of each malonate residue arrange in an approximately orthogonal fashion. The latter geometry is enforced by the macrocyclic structures, as revealed by a conformational search in the Cambridge Structural Database. The X-ray diffraction data show that C=O···H,C, and C,O···H,C hydrogen bonds stabilise the columnar arrangement of the dimeric rings with formation of tubular assemblies. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2006) [source]


    Comparability of transfer function results

    EUROPEAN TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRICAL POWER, Issue 2 2006
    J. Christian
    Abstract The transfer function (TF) is a comparative method to monitor the mechanical condition of transformer windings. To perform on-site diagnosis a high reproducibility of TF results is required. Consequently, there are certain restrictions for the determination of the TF using time domain records. This paper describes the effect of different signal processing procedures on the results of TF calculations. Window functions, digital filters, length and treatment of pre-trigger samples are aspects of special interest for the application of the TF method. Additionally, condition parameters of the device under test affect the results of TF measurements. The correlation of transformer temperatures and TF characteristics has been investigated as well as the dielectric effect of the insulating oil and the position of the tap changer. Finally, the effect of different test set-up concepts is presented. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Gene expression and digit homology in the chicken embryo wing

    EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 1 2005
    Monique C. M. Welten
    Summary The bird wing is of special interest to students of homology and avian evolution. Fossil and developmental data give conflicting indications of digit homology if a pentadactyl "archetype" is assumed. Morphological signs of a vestigial digit I are seen in bird embryos, but no digit-like structure develops in wild-type embryos. To examine the developmental mechanisms of digit loss, we studied the expression of the high-mobility group box containing Sox9 gene, and bone morphogenetic protein receptor 1b (bmpR-1b),markers for precondensation and prechondrogenic cells, respectively. We find an elongated domain of Sox9 expression, but no bmpR-1b expression, anterior to digit II. We interpret this as a digit I domain that reaches precondensation, but not condensation or precartilage stages. It develops late, when the tissue in which it is lodged is being remodeled. We consider these findings in the light of previous Hoxd-11 misexpression studies. Together, they suggest that there is a digit I vestige in the wing that can be rescued and undergo development if posterior patterning cues are enhanced. We observed Sox9 expression in the elusive "element X" that is sometimes stated to represent a sixth digit. Indeed, incongruity between digit domains and identities in theropods disappears if birds and other archosaurs are considered primitively polydactyl. Our study provides the first gene expression evidence for at least five digital domains in the chick wing. The failure of the first to develop may be plausibly linked to attenuation of posterior signals. [source]


    Vehicle fatigue damage caused by road irregularities

    FATIGUE & FRACTURE OF ENGINEERING MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES, Issue 5 2009
    K. BOGSJÖ
    ABSTRACT Road roughness causes fatigue-inducing loads in travelling vehicles. Road sections with a high degree of roughness are of special interest because these have a significant impact on vehicle's fatigue life. This study is focused on the statistical description and analysis of vehicle damage caused by irregularities. Standard statistical analysis tools are not straightforwardly applicable because of the non-stationary property of the irregularities. However, it is found that the road irregularities' influence on vehicles can be accurately described using a ,local' narrow-band approximation of the fatigue damage intensity. [source]


    Testing a Vapour-fed PBI-based Direct Ethanol Fuel Cell

    FUEL CELLS, Issue 5 2009
    J. Lobato
    Abstract This work is focused on the application and performance of a high temperature PBI-based direct ethanol fuel cell, studying the influence of some operating variables such as the temperature, ethanol concentration and oxygen partial pressure. An increase in the temperature resulted in an improvement of the cell performance due to the enhanced electrodic kinetic and electrolyte conductivity. An ethanol/water weight ratio between 0.25 and 0.5 was found to be suitable for providing both enough water and fuel availability to make the ethanol oxidation possible. Measurements of the ethanol crossover at different temperatures and concentrations were carried out. An intermittent lifetime test showed that the cell, after several hours, was able to reach stability. Moreover, its performance was completely reversible with no perceptible losses for 7,days. Finally, tests using bio-ethanol as fuel were performed, with no significant power losses. This final feature is of special interest from a practical ,green' point of view. [source]


    European College of Gerodontology: undergraduate curriculum guidelines in Gerodontology

    GERODONTOLOGY, Issue 3 2009
    Anastassia Kossioni
    Effective undergraduate teaching of gerodontology to present and future dental students is important if good oral health care of older people is to be assured. A review of the undergraduate curriculum for gerodontology is presented and indicates the need for a knowledge base from which new graduates can develop a special interest in care of older patients. The aim is improved care of older patients, satisfaction for teaching staff involved and improved professional standing for Dentistry. Motivation of students could also be achieved by the positive match between rising patient awareness and ethical responsibility of the profession for those older patients. As it stands, the undergraduate curriculum should include topics on specific care for the elderly and other patient groups, which extend the competences already agreed by the Association for Dental Education in Europe (ADEE). The logistics of teaching these topics will need co-ordination of those staff with appropriate skill and interest, preferably as a development of existing curriculum content. [source]


    Rafts in oligodendrocytes: Evidence and structure,function relationship

    GLIA, Issue 6 2006
    Ellen Gielen
    Abstract The plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells exhibits lateral inhomogeneities, mainly containing cholesterol and sphingomyelin, which provide liquid-ordered microdomains (lipid "rafts") that segregate membrane components. Rafts are thought to modulate the biological functions of molecules that become associated with them, and as such, they appear to be involved in a variety of processes, including signal transduction, membrane sorting, cell adhesion and pathogen entry. Although still a matter of ongoing debate, evidence in favor of the presence of these microdomains is gradually accumulating but a consensus on issues like their size, lifetime, composition, and biological significance has yet to be reached. Here, we provide an overview of the evidence supporting the presence of rafts in oligodendrocytes, the myelin-producing cells of the central nervous system, and discuss their functional significance. The myelin membrane differs fundamentally from the plasma membrane, both in lipid and protein composition. Moreover, since myelin membranes are unusually enriched in glycosphingolipids, questions concerning the biogenesis and functional relevance of microdomains thus appear of special interest in oligodendrocytes. The current picture of rafts in oligodendrocytes is mainly based on detergent methods. The robustness of such data is discussed and alternative methods that may provide complementary data are indicated. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Detection of elafin as a candidate biomarker for ulcerative colitis by whole-genome microarray screening

    INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES, Issue 9 2006
    Carl-Fredrik Flach PhD
    Abstract The cause of ulcerative colitis (UC) is largely unknown. Microarray studies are an efficient way of investigating the various genes involved. Here, we have used whole-genome microarrays to clarify the clinical picture and to identify new biomarkers for improved diagnosis. Rectal biopsies were taken from five UC patients and five matched controls, and RNA transcripts were prepared. After labeling, each sample was individually applied to the microarray chips. All transcripts that were more than 10-fold up-regulated in all five patients were analyzed further in seven additional patients and seven controls using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Of 47,000 transcripts examined, 4 were highly up-regulated in all patients: those encoding elafin, a secreted protease inhibitor, the ion and amino acid transporter B0,+ (SLC6A14), and the metabolic enzyme aldolase B, as well as a recently identified transcript named similar to numb-interacting homolog. The up-regulation of these transcripts appears to follow the progression of the disease because elevated expression was detected in the proximal part of the colon in patients with total colitis but not in patients with left-sided colitis. Immunohistologic examination showed very distinct differences in the expression of elafin. Extensive expression was detected in enterocytes and goblet cells of the affected mucosa, whereas there was no detectable expression in unaffected mucosa and in healthy controls. The results implicate four transcripts and proteins of special interest as possible targets for pharmacologic interference and as biomarkers in UC. Of these, elafin may be of special interest because it is a secreted protein that may be measured in body fluids. [source]


    Low number of Y-chromosome deletions in infertile azoospermic men at a Swedish andrology centre

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ANDROLOGY, Issue 4 2000
    Christina Österlund
    Recent studies have strongly indicated that at least three regions [azoospermia factor (AZF) a,c] on the long arm of the Y-chromosome code for factors involved in spermatogenesis. In order to reveal the prevalence of microdeletions in these regions in a Swedish population, 192 men consecutively referred to our andrology unit due to infertility and showing oligozoospermia (n=53) or azoospermia (n=139) but no obstruction or hormonal disturbances, were investigated. For this study we used a multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method including 13 pairs of primers divided into five different primer mixes. It was found that four men, all with azoospermia, had deletions including part of the AZFb region and probably the entire AZFc region. Testis biopsies showed different morphology ranging from absence of germ cells to hypospermatogenisis. Of special interest was one patient that was first investigated 10 years ago due to primary infertility and oligozoospermia. Today he has developed azoospermia. It is concluded that the number of patients with microdeletions on the Y chromosome is rather low (less than 3% in highly selected azoospermic men) in our study compared to a number of other studies in which a 1,55% incidence have been reported. It is possible that ethnic differences, selection criteria and methodological aspects can contribute to the difference between the present and previous studies. [source]


    HISTALP,historical instrumental climatological surface time series of the Greater Alpine Region

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 1 2007
    Ingeborg Auer
    This paper describes the HISTALP database, consisting of monthly homogenised records of temperature, pressure, precipitation, sunshine and cloudiness for the ,Greater Alpine Region' (GAR, 4,19°E, 43,49°N, 0,3500m asl). The longest temperature and air pressure series extend back to 1760, precipitation to 1800, cloudiness to the 1840s and sunshine to the 1880s. A systematic QC procedure has been applied to the series and a high number of inhomogeneities (more than 2500) and outliers (more than 5000) have been detected and removed. The 557 HISTALP series are kept in different data modes: original and homogenised, gap-filled and outlier corrected station mode series, grid-1 series (anomaly fields at 1° × 1°, lat × long) and Coarse Resolution Subregional (CRS) mean series according to an EOF-based regionalisation. The leading climate variability features within the GAR are discussed through selected examples and a concluding linear trend analysis for 100, 50 and 25-year subperiods for the four horizontal and two altitudinal CRSs. Among the key findings of the trend analysis is the parallel centennial decrease/increase of both temperature and air pressure in the 19th/20th century. The 20th century increase (+1.2 °C/+ 1.1 hPa for annual GAR-means) evolved stepwise with a first peak near 1950 and the second increase (1.3 °C/0.6hPa per 25 years) starting in the 1970s. Centennial and decadal scale temperature trends were identical for all subregions. Air pressure, sunshine and cloudiness show significant differences between low versus high elevations. A long-term increase of the high-elevation series relative to the low-elevation series is given for sunshine and air pressure. Of special interest is the exceptional high correlation near 0.9 between the series on mean temperature and air pressure difference (high-minus low-elevation). This, further developed via some atmospheric statics and thermodynamics, allows the creation of ,barometric temperature series' without use of the measures of temperature. They support the measured temperature trends in the region. Precipitation shows the most significant regional and seasonal differences with, e.g., remarkable opposite 20th century evolution for NW (9% increase) versus SE (9% decrease). Other long- and short-term features are discussed and indicate the promising potential of the new database for further analyses and applications. Copyright © 2006 Royal Meteorological Society. [source]


    Generating indistinguishability operators from prototypes

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS, Issue 12 2002
    E. Hernández
    Given a T -indistinguishability operator E defined between some fuzzy subsets of a universe of discourse X, this paper studies three ways to generate an indistinguishability operator on X compatible with E inspired by the tools used in approximate reasoning and on the duality principle. Of special interest are the cases when the fuzzy subsets determine a partition and a hard-partition of the universe X. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


    Two ,Medical' Cases from Medieval Oslo

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OSTEOARCHAEOLOGY, Issue 3 2002
    Per Holck
    Abstract An Erratum has been published for this article in International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 15(2) 2005, 153,154. More than one century of archaeological excavations in Oslo has brought several thousand medieval skeletons to light. Many of these are silent witnesses of the health conditions in the Norwegian capital during the 12th,16th centuries. This paper presents a description of two cases of special interest. One is a tibia that shows traces of cut marks due to a severe osteomyelitis; the other one has a depression in the bregma area which has perforated the skull roof and led to an inflammation of the bone surface. Both cases are probably proofs of deliberate medical care and skill of a high professional standard at that time. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Karl Barth on the Ascension: An Appreciation and Critique

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, Issue 2 2000
    Douglas Farrow
    This exposition of Barth's doctrine of the ascension in Volume IV of the Church Dogmatics,,one of the major works of ascension theology', begins by highlighting some central themes in representative patristic and modern discussions of the ascension and then provides a close and critical reading of the Dogmatics. Of special interest are questions regarding Barth's understanding of the specificity of the Christ-event, the structure of his doctrine of reconciliation, the relation of ontology and soteriology, and the function of the doctrine of the ascension in a thoroughly a posteriori theology. [source]


    Sindbis viruses and other alphaviruses as cause of human arthritic disease

    JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, Issue 6 2004
    M. Laine
    Abstract. Amongst the arthritis-causing arboviruses, i.e. those spread by insects, the alphavirus group is of special interest. These viruses occasionally cause vast outbreaks, such as O'nyong-nyong in Africa in 1959. In Fennoscandia, Sindbis-related Ockelbo, Pogosta, or Karelian fever viruses have been found to cause significant morbidity. The major symptoms in addition to joint inflammation are fever, fatigue, headache and rash. The joint symptoms may persist for weeks, even months. The diagnosis is based on the clinical picture and serology. The causative viruses are closely related but not identical. It appears that at least in Finland the Pogosta disease is more common than thought, and the symptoms may often be overlooked. Several factors related to the viruses, their hosts, and global environmental changes may affect the spread of these viruses. All over the world arbovirus-caused diseases have increased, because of global changes. [source]