Subsequent Recovery (subsequent + recovery)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Sevoflurane: an ideal agent for adult day-case anesthesia?

ACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 8 2003
S. Ghatge
Sevoflurane has several properties which make it potentially useful as a day case anaesthetic. Following induction of anaesthesia with propofol, awakening from sevoflurane is faster compared to isoflurane, faster or similar compared to propofol and comparable (in the majority of studies) to desflurane. Subsequent recovery and discharge is generally similar following all agents. Sevoflurane may also be used to induce anaesthesia, which is generally well-received and causes less hypotension and apnoea compared to propofol. When used as a maintenance anaesthetic, the incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting after sevoflurane is comparable to other inhaled anaesthetics, but this complication appears more common after inhaled inductions. The tolerability and low solubility of sevoflurane facilitate titration of anaesthesia and may reduce the need for opioid analgesia, which in turn may limit the occurrence of nausea and vomiting. [source]


The past, present, and future Aral Sea

LAKES & RESERVOIRS: RESEARCH AND MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2010
Philip Micklin
Abstract The Aral Sea, a once vast brackish terminal lake in the heart of Central Asia, has been rapidly drying since the 1960s. It had separated into four separate waterbodies by September 2009. The maximum water level decline was more than 26 m, whereas the lake surface area decreased 88% and the water volume 92%. The lake salinity increased by more than 20-fold. Prior to the modern recession, the Aral Sea experienced a number of water level declines and subsequent recoveries over the last 10 millennia. The main causative factor until the 1960s was the periodic westward diversion of the Amu Dar'ya, the main influent river, towards the Caspian Sea by both natural and human forces. The post-1960 recession, however, was overwhelmingly the result of unsustainable irrigation development. The lake's modern recession has caused a broad range of severe negative ecological, economic and human welfare problems. To restore the Aral Sea to its 1960s' size and ecological condition would be very difficult, if not impossible, in the foreseeable future. The plight of the Aral Sea, however, is far from hopeless. Partial restoration of portions of the lake is still feasible. A project to raise the Small (northern) Sea was completed in Fall 2005, raising its water level by 2 m, and lowering its salinity to a level not much higher than the early 1960 levels. Its ecological recovery has been dramatic, and a new project to improve further the Small Aral was recently announced. Improving the Large (southern) lake would be much more difficult and expensive. A project to save the deep Western Basin partially is technically feasible, however, and should be given careful evaluation. It is important to repair and preserve what is left of the deltas of the two tributary rivers, Syr Dar'ya and Amu Dar'ya, as these two rivers are of great ecological and economic value, and act as biological refugia for endemic species of the Aral Sea. [source]


Photochemical treatment of a mixed PAH/surfactant solution for surfactant recovery and reuse

ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRESS & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY, Issue 4 2001
Youn-Joo An
Because of their hydrophobic nature, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are generally thought to be unavailable to in situ remediation processes, and solubilization of PAHs by surfactants is usually recommended. However, mixed PAH/surfactant solutions are wastewaters that need a post-treatment after solubilization. In this study, mixed solutions of PAH and perfluorinated surfactant (PFS) were photochemically treated with and without hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and the subsequent recovery and reuse of surfactant solutions were demonstrated. Phenanthrene and pyrene were selected as representative PAHs and lithium perfluorooctanesulfonate (LiFOS) as a PFS. Direct photolysis (UV only) and UV/H2O2 process enhanced the PAH degradation in LiFOS solutions compared to water. Both treatment processes selectively degraded PAHs without damaging PFS, suggesting that PFS withstands photolysis. Overall, it is demonstrated that UV and UV/H2O2 processes of mixed PAH/PFS solutions are effective for surfactant recovery/reuse, as well as PAH degradation. [source]


Targeting ie-1 gene by RNAi induces baculoviral resistance in lepidopteran cell lines and in transgenic silkworms

INSECT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, Issue 5 2007
S. Kanginakudru
Abstract RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated viral inhibition has been used in a few organisms for eliciting viral resistance. In the present study, we report the use of RNAi in preventing baculovirus infection in a lepidopteran. We targeted the baculoviral immediate early-1 (ie-1) gene in both a transformed lepidopteran cell line and in the transgenic silkworm Bombyx mori L. Constitutive expression of double-stranded RNA was achieved by piggyBac -mediated transformation of Sf9 cell line with a transgene encoding double-stranded ie-1 RNA (dsie-1). Strong viral repression was seen at early stages of infection but subsequent recovery of viral proliferation was observed. In contrast, the same transgene inserted into the chromosomes of transgenic silkworms induced long-term inhibition of B. mori nucleopolyhedrovirus infection, with nearly 40% protection compared with nontransgenic animals. Protection was efficient at larval stages after oral infection with occlusion bodies or hemocoel injection of budded viruses. Virus injected pupae also displayed resistance. These results show that heritable RNAi can be used to protect silkworm strains from baculovirus infection. [source]


Pulmonary responses and recovery following single and repeated inhalation exposure of rats to polymeric methylene diphenyl diisocyanate aerosols

JOURNAL OF APPLIED TOXICOLOGY, Issue 6 2002
Joanne D. Kilgour
Abstract Acute and repeated inhalation exposures (for 28 days) to polymeric methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (PMDI) were performed in rats. Investigations were made at the end of exposures and after 3, 10 and 30 days of recovery following single acute exposures and after 30 days of recovery following 28 days of exposure. Acute exposures to 10, 30 or 100 mg m,3 PMDI produced clinical signs in all animals that were consistent with exposure to irritant aerosols. An exposure concentration-related body weight loss and increase in lung weight were seen post-exposure, with complete recovery by day 8. The time course of changes in the lung over the initial days following exposure consisted of a pattern of initial toxicity, rapid and heavy influx of inflammatory cells and soluble markers of inflammation and cell damage, increased lung surfactant, a subsequent recovery and epithelial proliferative phase and, finally, a return to the normal status quo of the lung. During these stages there was evidence for perturbation of lung surfactant homeostasis, demonstrated by increased amounts of crystalline surfactant and increased number and size of lamellar bodies within type II alveolar cells. Repeated exposure over 28 days to the less toxic concentrations of 1, 4 or 10 mg m,3 PMDI produced no clinical signs or body weight changes, but an increase in lung weight was seen in animals exposed to 10 mg m,3, which resolved following the 30-day recovery period. Other effects seen were again consistent with exposure to irritant aerosols, but were less severe than those seen in the acute study. Analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid revealed similar changes to those seen in the acute study. At both 10 and 4 mg m,3 PMDI increased numbers of ,foamy' macrophages in lung lavage cell pellet correlated with the increased phospholipid content of the pellet. Changes in lung lavage parameters and electron microscopic evidence again suggested perturbations in surfactant homeostasis. Histologically, bronchiolitis and thickening of the central acinar regions was seen at 10 and 4 mg m,3, reflecting changes in cell proliferation in the terminal bronchioles and centro-acinar regions. Almost all effects seen had recovered by day 30 post-exposure. Both acute and subacute studies demonstrate rapid recovery of effects in the lung following exposure to PMDI, with no progression of these effects even at concentrations higher than those shown to produce tumours in a chronic study. These findings add weight to the hypothesis that pulmonary tumours seen following chronic exposure to PMDI are most likely due to a combination of the chronic irritant effects of repeated exposure, coupled with the presence of insoluble polyureas formed by polymerization of PMDI (found in studies reported here and previous chronic studies), and therefore acute or short-term exposures to PMDI are likely to be of little concern for long-term pulmonary health. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


PHOTOINHIBITION IN RED ALGAL SPECIES WITH DIFFERENT CAROTENOID PROFILES,

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 6 2008
Nadine Schubert
Members of the Rhodophyta present different carotenoid profiles. In a majority of the species, lutein constitutes >50% of the total carotenoid content, while in other species, it is replaced by zeaxanthin or antheraxanthin. Given that carotenoids have specific roles in photoprotection, different carotenoid profiles of red algae species could be related to their capacity to cope with photoinhibitory stress. Therefore, in the present work, the sensitivity to light stress of red algal species with different carotenoid profiles was investigated. Photoinhibition of photosynthesis induced by high-light stress and the subsequent recovery in dim-light conditions was measured using maximal PSII quantum efficiency (Fv/Fm). The degree of decrease and recovery of Fv/Fm and their respective kinetics were related to the carotenoid profile of the species. Although no relationship between sensitivity to high-light stress and the carotenoid profile was observed, there were clear carotenoid profile-related differences in the decrease and recovery kinetics. In species with zeaxanthin or antheraxanthin as the major carotenoid, Fv/Fm reduction and recovery was principally associated with slowly activated and relaxed processes. In contrast, in species with lutein as the major carotenoid, rapidly activated processes appear to play a major role in the down-regulation of photosynthesis during light-stress conditions. In these species, the repair of D1 is also important during light-stress conditions. This finding could imply differential expression of mechanisms involved in photoprotection in red algae that seems to be related to the carotenoid profile of the species. [source]


UV-B INDUCTION OF UV-B PROTECTION IN ULVA PERTUSA (CHLOROPHYTA),

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 3 2005
Young-Seok Han
The green macroalga Ulva pertusa Kjellman produced UV-B absorbing compounds with a prominent absorption maximum at 294 nm in response only to UV-B, and the amounts induced were proportional to the UV-B doses. Under a 12:12-h light:dark regime, the production of UV-absorbing compounds occurred only during the exposure periods with little turnover in the dark. There was significant reduction in growth in parallel with the production of UV-B absorbing compounds. The polychromatic action spectrum for the induction of UV-B absorbing compounds in U. pertusa exhibits a major peak at 292 nm with a smaller peak at 311.5 nm. No significant induction was detected above 354.5 nm, and radiation below 285 nm caused significant reduction in the levels of UV-B absorbing compounds. After UV-B irradiation at 1.0 W·m,2 for 9 h, the optimal photosynthetic quantum yield of the samples with UV-B absorbing compounds slightly increased relative to the initial value, whereas that of thalli lacking the compounds declined to 30%,34% of the initial followed by subsequent recovery in dim light of up to 84%,85% of the initial value. There was a positive and significant relationship between the amount of UV-B absorbing compounds with antioxidant activity as determined by the ,,,-diphenyl-,-picrylhydrazyl scavenging assay. In addition to mat-forming characteristics and light-driven photorepair, the existence and antioxidant capacity of UV-B absorbing compounds may confer U. pertusa a greater selective advantage over other macroalgae, thereby enabling them to thrive in the presence of intense UV-B radiation. [source]


A remarkable difference in the deprotonation steps of the Friedel,Crafts acylation and alkylation reactions

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 11 2009
Shinichi Yamabe
Abstract Friedel,Crafts acylation and alkylation reactions were investigated using density functional theory calculations. The reaction systems studied were (benzene,+,acetyl chloride,+,Al2Cl6 (or AlCl3)) and (benzene,+,2-chloropropane,+,Al2Cl6). In the acylation reaction, the acylium ion intermediate is reached either via a MeC(Cl)OAl2Cl6 complex or via direct Cl transfer: MeC(O)ClAl2Cl6,,,MeCO,+Al2Cl. The ion adds to benzene electrophilically to form a Wheland intermediate containing a strong CHCl hydrogen bond, which leads to deprotonation and the subsequent formation of acetophenone. The resulting HClAl2Cl6 fragment is subjected to a nucleophilic attack by the carbonyl oxygen of the acetophenone, and recovery of the Al2Cl6 bridge is unlikely. Attack of the Al2Cl6 moiety by MeC(Cl)O gives the complex MeC(Cl)O,AlCl3, whose reactivity toward acylation is similar to that of the MeC(Cl)O,Al2Cl6 complex. In the alkylation reaction, deprotonation does not take place, but rather a [1,2] H-shift from the Wheland intermediate. The resulting , -protonated cumene undergoes deprotonation, with subsequent recovery of the Al2Cl6 bridge. In addition, the Al2Cl6 -catalyzed isomerization of the n -propyl to the isopropyl cation was found to be a dyotropic shift. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Patterns of performance degradation and restoration during sleep restriction and subsequent recovery: a sleep dose-response study

JOURNAL OF SLEEP RESEARCH, Issue 1 2003
Gregory Belenky
SUMMARY Daytime performance changes were examined during chronic sleep restriction or augmentation and following subsequent recovery sleep. Sixty-six normal volunteers spent either 3 (n = 18), 5 (n= 16), 7 (n = 16), or 9 h (n = 16) daily time in bed (TIB) for 7 days (restriction/augmentation) followed by 3 days with 8 h daily TIB (recovery). In the 3-h group, speed (mean and fastest 10% of responses) on the psychomotor vigilance task (PVT) declined, and PVT lapses (reaction times greater than 500 ms) increased steadily across the 7 days of sleep restriction. In the 7- and 5-h groups speed initially declined, then appeared to stabilize at a reduced level; lapses were increased only in the 5-h group. In the 9-h group, speed and lapses remained at baseline levels. During recovery, PVT speed in the 7- and 5-h groups (and lapses in the 5-h group) remained at the stable, but reduced levels seen during the last days of the experimental phase, with no evidence of recovery. Speed and lapses in the 3-h group recovered rapidly following the first night of recovery sleep; however, recovery was incomplete with speed and lapses stabilizing at a level comparable with the 7- and 5-h groups. Performance in the 9-h group remained at baseline levels during the recovery phase. These results suggest that the brain adapts to chronic sleep restriction. In mild to moderate sleep restriction this adaptation is sufficient to stabilize performance, although at a reduced level. These adaptive changes are hypothesized to restrict brain operational capacity and to persist for several days after normal sleep duration is restored, delaying recovery. [source]


Modeling Postfire Response and Recovery using the Hydrologic Engineering Center Hydrologic Modeling System (HEC-HMS),

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, Issue 3 2009
Kristina Cydzik
Abstract:, This paper investigates application of the Army Corps of Engineers' Hydrologic Engineering Center Hydrologic Modeling System (HEC-HMS) to a burned watershed in San Bernardino County, California. We evaluate the HEC-HMS' ability to simulate discharge in prefire and postfire conditions in a semi arid watershed and the necessary parameterizations for modeling hydrologic response during the immediate, and subsequent recovery, period after a wildfire. The model is applied to City Creek watershed, which was 90% burned during the Old Fire of October 2003. An optimal spatial resolution for the HEC-HMS model was chosen based on an initial sensitivity analysis of subbasin configurations and related model performance. Five prefire storms were calibrated for the selected model resolution, defining a set of parameters that reasonably simulate prefire conditions. Six postfire storms, two from each of the following rainy (winter) seasons were then selected to simulate postfire response and evaluate relative changes in parameter values and model behavior. There were clear trends in the postfire parameters [initial abstractions (Ia), curve number (CN), and lag time] that reveal significant (and expected) changes in watershed behavior. CN returns to prefire (baseline) values by the end of Year 2, while Ia approaches baseline by the end of the third rainy season. However, lag time remains significantly lower than prefire values throughout the three-year study period. Our results indicate that recovery of soil conditions and related runoff response is not entirely evidenced by the end of the study period (three rainy seasons postfire). Understanding the evolution of the land surface and related hydrologic properties during the highly dynamic postfire period, and accounting for these changes in model parameterizations, will allow for more accurate and reliable discharge simulations in both the immediate, and subsequent, rainy seasons following fire. [source]


Faith and its fulfillment: agency, exchange, and the Fijian aesthetics of completion

AMERICAN ETHNOLOGIST, Issue 1 2000
Hirokazu Miyazaki
In this article, I develop a theory of what I call the abeyance of agency, drawing upon a comparison between Fijian Christian church and gift-giving rituals. I argue that from religious practitioners' viewpoint, religious faith concerns not so much the intentions of an anthropomorphic God as the limits that are temporarily placed on ritual participants' agency. Such abeyance and subsequent recovery of their agency enables them to experience the intimations of an ultimate response,[agency, form, temporality, gift exchange, Christianity, Fiji] [source]


Interaction of UV Radiation and Inorganic Carbon Supply in the Inhibition of Photosynthesis: Spectral and Temporal Responses of Two Marine Picoplankters,

PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2005
Cristina Sobrino
ABSTRACT The effect of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) on inhibition of photosynthesis was studied in two species of marine picoplankton with different carbon concentration mechanisms: Nannochloropsis gaditana Lubián possesses a bicarbonate uptake system and Nannochloris atomus Butcher a CO2 active transport system. Biological weighting functions (BWFs) for inhibition of photosynthesis by UVR and photosynthesis vs irradiance (PI) curves for photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) were estimated for both species grown with an enriched CO2 supply (high dissolved inorganic carbon [DIC]: 1% CO2 in air) and in atmospheric CO2 levels (low DIC: 0.03% CO2). The response to UVR and PAR exposures was different in each species depending on the DIC treatment. Under PAR exposure, rates of maximum photosynthesis were similar between treatments in N. gaditana. However, the cultures growing in high DIC had lower sensitivity to UVR than the low DIC cultures. In contrast, N. atomus had higher rates of photosynthesis under PAR exposure with high DIC, but the BWFs were not significantly different between treatments. The results suggest that one or more processes in N. gaditana associated with HCO3, transport are target(s) for UV photodamage because there was relatively less UV inhibition of the high DIC-grown cultures in which inorganic carbon fixation is supplied by passive CO2 diffusion. Time courses of photochemical efficiency in PAR, during UV exposure and during subsequent recovery in PAR, were determined using a pulse amplitude modulated fluorometer. The results were consistent with the BWFs. In all time courses, a steady state was obtained after an initial decrease, consistent with a dynamic balance between damage and repair as found for other phytoplankton. However, the relationship of response to exposure showed a steep decline in activity that is consistent with a constant rate of repair. A novel feature of a model developed from a constant repair rate is an explicit threshold for photosynthetic response to UV. [source]


Presidential Address: Asset Price Dynamics with Slow-Moving Capital

THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE, Issue 4 2010
DARRELL DUFFIE
ABSTRACT I describe asset price dynamics caused by the slow movement of investment capital to trading opportunities. The pattern of price responses to supply or demand shocks typically involves a sharp reaction to the shock and a subsequent and more extended reversal. The amplitude of the immediate price impact and the pattern of the subsequent recovery can reflect institutional impediments to immediate trade, such as search costs for trading counterparties or time to raise capital by intermediaries. I discuss special impediments to capital formation during the recent financial crisis that caused asset price distortions, which subsided afterward. After presenting examples of price reactions to supply shocks in normal market settings, I offer a simple illustrative model of price dynamics associated with slow-moving capital due to the presence of inattentive investors. [source]


Early treatment of a quetiapine and sertraline overdose with Intralipid®,

ANAESTHESIA, Issue 2 2009
S. D. H. Finn
Summary We describe the initial management and subsequent recovery of a 61 year-old male patient following attempted suicide by oral ingestion of a potentially fatal overdose of quetiapine and sertraline. Intravenous Intralipid® was given soon after initiation of basic resuscitation. There was a rapid improvement in the patient's level of consciousness. No other clinical signs of drug toxicity were observed. Intralipid may have reversed the deep coma associated with ingestion and prevented other manifestations of drug toxicity occurring, thus expediting this patient's recovery. [source]


Effects of air exposure on the lysosomal membrane stability of haemocytes in blacklip abalone, Haliotis rubra (Leach)

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 3 2007
Liang Song
Abstract The neutral red retention (NRR) assay was used to evaluate the effects of air exposure on lysosomal membrane integrity in the haemolymph of blacklip abalone, Haliotis rubra, and its subsequent recovery in water. After acclimation in 16°C water for 7 days, abalone were exposed to an air temperature of 7, 16 or 23°C for 12 h in the air exposure experiment or to these three air temperatures, e.g., for 12, 24 or 36 h, followed by re-immersion in 16°C water in the lysosomal membrane stability recovery experiment. Statistical analyses of the air exposure experiment showed that when abalone were exposed to different air temperatures (7, 16 or 23°C), the lysosomal membrane stability was significantly affected by the air temperature, the exposure duration and their interaction. Air temperature similar to the acclimation temperature had a significantly lower impact on the lysosomal membrane stability within the initial 4.5 h in comparison with the other two temperatures in the same period. The lysosomal membrane stability recovery experiment showed that after air exposure durations of 12, 24 or 36 h, the re-stabilization of the lysosomal membrane was faster in the animals exposed to lower temperatures than those exposed to higher temperatures. The recovery of the lysosomal membrane stability in abalone exposed to lower 7°C air temperature was not significantly affected (F2, 66=0.251, P=0.779) by the exposure durations (12, 24 and 36 h) used in this study. Alternatively, the lysosomal membrane stability in abalone exposed to higher air temperatures of 16 or 23°C recovered at a faster rate when subjected to shorter durations of air exposure (F2, 66=3.663, P=0.031 and F1, 44=17.057, P<0.001 for 16 and 23°C respectively). [source]


Persistence of rhinovirus RNA after asthma exacerbation in children

CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGY, Issue 5 2005
S. Kling
Summary Background Rhinoviruses (RVs) are believed to cause most asthma exacerbations but their role in the severity of acute asthma and subsequent recovery of airway function is not defined. The importance of atopy in virus-host interactions is also not clear. Objective We postulated that RV infection and atopic skin prick responses influence the severity of asthma exacerbations as measured by peak expiratory flow (PEF). Methods Patients aged 4,12 years admitted with acute severe asthma to a hospital emergency room (ER) were recruited. PEF measurements were obtained and nasal aspirates (NA) were taken. Atopy was diagnosed by skin prick responses to allergen and the presence of RV RNA and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) RNA in NAs was detected using validated PCR assays. Patients were restudied after 6 weeks and after 6 months. Results Fifty children with acute asthma (mean age±SD, 7.4±2.7) were enrolled; atopy was present in 37 (74%). RV RNA was detected in 41 (82%) and RSV RNA in six (12%) subjects. After 6 weeks 41 patients were restudied and RV RNA was again detected in 18 (44%). RV RNA was detected after 6 months in four of 16 patients restudied (25%; P=0.008 vs. ER) and in two of nine children from a control group with stable asthma (22%; P=0.009 vs. ER). Overall PEF measurements were reduced in asthmatics admitted to ER (% predicted, 63.4±16.4%) but did not differ between patients with RV RNA, RSV RNA or neither virus present. In subjects with RV RNA detectable in ER and after 6 weeks, measurements of PEF in ER were significantly lower than in patients in whom RV RNA was present in ER but absent after 6 weeks (P=0.009). Regression analysis linked persistence of RV RNA, but not skin prick responses to allergen, to severity of PEF reductions in ER. Conclusion RV RNA was detectable in >40% of asthmatic children 6 weeks after an acute exacerbation. Asthma exacerbations were more severe in patients with persistence of RV RNA suggesting that the severity of acute asthma may be linked to prolonged and possibly more severe RV infections. [source]