10,596 research outputs found

    The tectonic influence on the last 1500-year infill history of a deep lake located on the North Anatolian Fault: Lake Sapanca (N-W Turkey)

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    Lake Sapanca on the North Anatolian Fault zone (NW Turkey) is a pull-apart basin at the junction between the İzmit-Sapanca fault segment, the Sakarya segment and the westernmost end of the Mudurnu Valley fault. Multiproxy analyses of a 586-cm-long sediment core taken in the lake centre have revealed a complex history of earthquake events. The radiocarbon chronology, affected by reworking of plant remains, suggests that the sediment sequence retrieved from the centre of the lake covers approximately the last 1500 years. The bottom metre of the sequence is a gley soil indicating that at least the eastern half of the lake was a wetland, a prolongation of the floodplain between the lake and River Sakarya, that has collapsed to form the modern deep lake. A series of sedimentological and palynological indicators have been used to highlight four major episodes of mass movements linked to earthquakes. The short existence of the eastern part of the lake highlights the complexity of the morphology of the Sakarya Straight, a possible past connection between the Gulf of İzmit and the Black Sea

    Avaliação Funcional Global da Mão na Criança

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    O estudo da criança com patologia da mão levou a autora a criar um teste baseado numa avaliação funcional da mão do adulto, sob a forma de um jogo infantil. Este teste funcional (TF) global dá uma informação quantitativa e não necessita de aparelhagem sofisticada

    Nova Abordagem ao Diagnóstico da Sindroma de Alport: Pesquisa da Cadeia α5 do Colagénio Tipo IV na Pele

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    Em 2000, os autores iniciaram no Serviço de Nefrologia do Hospital de Curry Cabral, um protocolo de avaliação do papel do estudo imunopatológico da biópsia cutânea no diagnóstico da Sindroma de Alport (SA). A SA é uma doença hereditária, secundária a um defeito do colagénio tipo IV (col. IV), principal componente das membranas basais. O col. IV é constituído por 6 cadeias distintas (α1 a α6). A cadeia α5 está presente nas membranas basais glomerulares e da epiderme (MBE). Em cerca de 85% dos casos de SA (forma de transmissão ligada ao cromossoma X) verifica-se uma alteração da cadeia α5, com consequente ausência ou intermitência desta cadeia, na MBE. O objectivo deste trabalho foi pesquisar a presença da cadeia α5 do col. IV na MBE, e consequentemente avaliar o papel da biópsia cutânea no diagnóstico da SA. Para o efeito estudámos as biópsias cutâneas de dezanove indivíduos pertencentes a seis famílias distintas. Em cada uma das famílias havia pelo menos um indivíduo com história de SA. As biópsias cutâneas foram avaliadas por método de imunofluorescência indirecta, com antisoros dirigidos às cadeias α1, α3 e α5 do col. IV. No padrão normal há a presença das cadeias α5 e α1 e ausência de α3 na MBE.Verificou-se a ausência de α5 na MBE em quatro homens com SA enquanto que um caso de SA apresentou um padrão positivo. Nas mulheres com SA verificámos a intermitência da α5. Nas sintomáticas, mas sem doença, obtivémos um padrão de intermitência da α5 em três casos e um padrão positivo em três casos. Nas três mulheres assintomáticas, os padrões foram igualmente positivos. Em todos os espécimes biópticos verificou-se a presença de α1 (controlo positivo) e a ausência de α3 (controlo negativo). Realçamos o valor da biópsia cutânea no diagnóstico da SA. Este método é particularmente relevante no homem, onde a ausência da α5 na MBE determina o diagnóstico da SA com forma de transmissão ligada ao cromossoma X. Nas mulheres verificam-se dois padrões possíveis, positivo ou intermitente. A intermitência estará relacionada com a presença de SA ou estado portador. Assim consideramos que a biópsia cutânea deverá ser o primeiro passo na marcha diagnóstica para a SA em qualquer doente em que se suspeite desta patologia

    Short-term versus long-term changes in the benthic communities of a small coastal lagoon: implications for ecological status assessment

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    The characteristic high variability and low predictability of coastal lagoons, due to strong changes in marine and freshwater inputs, make these ecosystems an interesting casestudy. The small Melides landlocked coastal lagoon in SW Portugal is a paradigmatic example, with a biological community highly stressed by these phenomena. Benthic macroinvertebrate samples were collected in 1998/99 and 2009 and each year, in different seasons and addressing different environmental conditions influenced by the connection to the sea and rainfall regime. Major spatial and temporal patterns in benthic communities were investigated using some invertebrate attributes (e.g. community composition, density, species richness and diversity). A very low taxonomic species richness and diversity was found in the Melides lagoon and only a much reduced number of species occurred along all sampling periods and in both sampling campaigns. Although the colonization events play a crucial role, the persistence of the observed species was mainly associated to abiotic factors, such as salinity, temperature and dissolved oxygen. Despite the potential reduction in anthropogenic pressure, by the construction of a sewage treatment plant and a reduction of urban occupation, the ecological status did not improve and the high level of natural environmental variably in the lagoon seems to be the dominant stressor influencing benthic invertebrate communitie

    The effect of intervertebral cartilage on neutral posture and range of motion in the necks of sauropod dinosaurs

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    The necks of sauropod dinosaurs were a key factor in their evolution. The habitual posture and range of motion of these necks has been controversial, and computer-aided studies have argued for an obligatory sub-horizontal pose. However, such studies are compromised by their failure to take into account the important role of intervertebral cartilage. This cartilage takes very different forms in different animals. Mammals and crocodilians have intervertebral discs, while birds have synovial joints in their necks. The form and thickness of cartilage varies significantly even among closely related taxa. We cannot yet tell whether the neck joints of sauropods more closely resembled those of birds or mammals. Inspection of CT scans showed cartilage:bone ratios of 4.5% for Sauroposeidon and about 20% and 15% for two juvenile Apatosaurus individuals. In extant animals, this ratio varied from 2.59% for the rhea to 24% for a juvenile giraffe. It is not yet possible to disentangle ontogenetic and taxonomic signals, but mammal cartilage is generally three times as thick as that of birds. Our most detailed work, on a turkey, yielded a cartilage:bone ratio of 4.56%. Articular cartilage also added 11% to the length of the turkey's zygapophyseal facets. Simple image manipulation suggests that incorporating 4.56% of neck cartilage into an intervertebral joint of a turkey raises neutral posture by 15°. If this were also true of sauropods, the true neutral pose of the neck would be much higher than has been depicted. An additional 11% of zygapophyseal facet length translates to 11% more range of motion at each joint. More precise quantitative results must await detailed modelling. In summary, including cartilage in our models of sauropod necks shows that they were longer, more elevated and more flexible than previously recognised

    The specialty choices of graduates from Brighton and Sussex Medical School: a longitudinal cohort study

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    BACKGROUND Since 2007 junior doctors in the UK have had to make major career decisions at a point when previously many had not yet chosen a specialty. This study examined when doctors in this new system make specialty choices, which factors influence choices, and whether doctors who choose a specialty they were interested in at medical school are more confident in their choice than those doctors whose interests change post-graduation. METHODS Two cohorts of students in their penultimate year at one medical school (n = 227/239) were asked which specialty interested them as a career. Two years later, 210/227 were sent a questionnaire measuring actual specialty chosen, confidence, influence of perceptions of the specialty and experiences on choice, satisfaction with medicine, personality, self-efficacy, and demographics. Medical school and post-graduation choices in the same category were deemed 'stable'. Predictors of stability, and of not having chosen a specialty, were calculated using bootstrapped logistic regression. Differences between specialties on questionnaire factors were analysed. RESULTS 50% responded (n = 105/277; 44% of the 239 Year 4 students). 65% specialty choices were 'stable'. Factors univariately associated with stability were specialty chosen, having enjoyed the specialty at medical school or since starting work, having first considered the specialty earlier. A regression found doctors who chose psychiatry were more likely to have changed choice than those who chose general practice. Confidence in the choice was not associated with stability. Those who chose general practice valued lifestyle factors. A psychiatry choice was associated with needing a job and using one's intellect to help others. The decision to choose surgical training tended to be made early. Not having applied for specialty training was associated with being lower on agreeableness and conscientiousness. CONCLUSION Medical school experiences are important in specialty choice but experiences post-graduation remain significant, particularly in some specialties (psychiatry in our sample). Career guidance is important at medical school and should be continued post-graduation, with senior clinicians supported in advising juniors. Careers advice in the first year post-graduation may be particularly important, especially for specialties which have difficulty recruiting or are poorly represented at medical school

    The assessment of researchers' competence in experimental procedures with laboratory animals: A three-step methodology to develop a global rating scale

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    To conduct animal experiments, researchers must be competent to handle and perform interventions on living animals in compliance with regulations. Laboratory animal science training programs and licensing bodies therefore need to be able to reliably ensure and certify the professional competence of researchers and technicians. This requires access to assessment strategies which can verify knowledge as well as capturing performative and behavioral dimensions of assessment. In this paper, we describe the process of developing different global rating scales measuring candidates’ competence in a performative assessment. We set out the following sequence, with three crucial phases, in the process of scale development: (A) Item Development, (B) Scale Development, and (C) Piloting of the Scale. We note each phase’s different sub-steps. Despite the emergent need to ensure the competence of researchers using animals in scientific procedures, to our best knowledge there are very few species and procedure/skill specific assessment tools for this purpose, and the assessment methodology literature in the field is very limited. This paper provides guidance for those who need to develop and assess proficiency in laboratory animal procedures by setting out a method that can be used to create the required tools and illustrating how competence assessment strategies can be implemented.The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: this work is a result of the project funded by Norte01- 0145-FEDER-000008 – Porto Neurosciences and Neurologic Disease Research Initiative at i3S, supported by Norte Portugal Regional Operational Programme (NORTE2020), under the PORTUGAL 2020 Partnership Agreement, through the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER)
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