10 research outputs found

    Wearable Sensors in the Evaluation of Gait and Balance in Neurological Disorders

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    The aging population and the increased prevalence of neurological diseases have raised the issue of gait and balance disorders as a major public concern worldwide. Indeed, gait and balance disorders are responsible for a high healthcare and economic burden on society, thus, requiring new solutions to prevent harmful consequences. Recently, wearable sensors have provided new challenges and opportunities to address this issue through innovative diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Accordingly, the book “Wearable Sensors in the Evaluation of Gait and Balance in Neurological Disorders” collects the most up-to-date information about the objective evaluation of gait and balance disorders, by means of wearable biosensors, in patients with various types of neurological diseases, including Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, stroke, traumatic brain injury, and cerebellar ataxia. By adopting wearable technologies, the sixteen original research articles and reviews included in this book offer an updated overview of the most recent approaches for the objective evaluation of gait and balance disorders

    Análisis de los efectos agudos de la competición en judo

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    [Resumen] El judo es un deporte de combate con esfuerzos intermitentes y de alta intensidad, en el que muchos atributos físicos son necesarios para lograr el desarrollo técnico-táctico óptimo y conseguir el éxito competitivo. La fuerza y el mantenimiento de esta en el tiempo son considerados factores predictores del rendimiento en este deporte. En una competición de judo, los deportistas deben participar en varios combates con un período de recuperación que decrece progresivamente entre ellos (i.e. sistema de eliminatoria), y disponiendo de un tiempo de recuperación mínimo de 10 minutos entre las luchas (Art. 10; FIJ, 2014). El esfuerzo de alta intensidad que caracteriza al combate de judo se repite sucesivamente en condiciones fisiológicas y metabólicas desfavorables. El presente trabajo tuvo como objetivo valorar los efectos de la competición de judo en la producción de fuerza y en la estabilidad, y su relación con las variables fisiológicas y metabólicas. Los resultados mostraron una mayor demanda cardiovascular hacia el final del combate y de la competición. También se encontró una participación glucolítica menor, una peor capacidad de remoción, una peor recuperación cardiaca y un impacto mayor en la regulación autonómica del corazón en los últimos combates. Esta situación fisiológica y metabólica se asoció con la pérdida de rendimiento en la capacidad de producir fuerza y la pérdida de estabilidad post-combate. Esta información puede ser de gran ayuda para los entrenadores y fisiólogos en orden de mejorar el diseño de entrenamientos de judo.[Resumo] O judo é un deporte de combate con esforzos intermitentes e de alta intensidade, onde moitos atributos físicos son necesarios para acadar o desenvolvemento técnico e táctico ideal e obter o éxito competitivo. A forza e a capacidade de manter esta no tempo son considerados preditores do rendemento neste deporte. Nunha competición de judo, os deportistas deben participar en varios combates cun período de recuperación que decrece progresivamente entre eles (i.e. sistema knockout), e tendo un tempo mínimo de recuperación de 10 minutos entre as loitas (Art.10; IJF, 2014). O esforzo de alta intensidade que caracteriza ao combate de judo é repetido sucesivamente en condicións fisiolóxicas e metabólicas desfavorables. O presente estudo ten como obxectivo avaliar os efectos da competición de judo na produción de forza e estabilidade, e a súa relación coas variables fisiolóxicas e metabólicas. Os resultados mostraron maior demanda cardiovascular ao final do combate e da competencia. Menor participación glucolítica, menor capacidade de eliminación de lactato sanguíneo, peor recuperación cardíaca e un maior impacto na regulación autonómica do corazón nos últimos combates. Este estado fisiolóxico e metabólico asociouse coa perda de rendemento na capacidade de producir forza e a perda de estabilidade post-combate. Esta información pode ser útil para os adestradores e fisioloxistas, a fin de mellorar o deseño de adetsramentos de judo.[Abstract] Judo is a high-intensity intermittent combat sport, in which many physical attributes are necessary to achieve optimal technical-tactical development and competitive success. Strength and strength endurance are considered potential predictors of judo performance. In a judo competition, athletes should participate in several bouts interspersed with a recovery period that decreases progressively (i.e. knockout system), and having a minimum recovery time of 10 minutes between fights (Art. 10; IJF, 2014). High intensity effort that characterizes the judo bout is repeated successively in unfavourable physiological and metabolic conditions. This study aims to assess the effects of the judo competition in the strength and stability, and its relationship with the physiological and metabolic variables. The results showed greater cardiovascular demand towards the end of combat and competition. Less glycolytic participation, poorer removal capacity, a worse cardiac recovery and a greater impact on the autonomic regulation of the heart in the latest fighting was also found. This physiological and metabolic state associated with yield loss in the ability to produce force and loss of post-combat stability. This information can be helpful to coaches and physiologists in order to improve the design of judo training

    Book of abstracts of the 10th International Chemical and Biological Engineering Conference: CHEMPOR 2008

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    This book contains the extended abstracts presented at the 10th International Chemical and Biological Engineering Conference - CHEMPOR 2008, held in Braga, Portugal, over 3 days, from the 4th to the 6th of September, 2008. Previous editions took place in Lisboa (1975, 1889, 1998), Braga (1978), Póvoa de Varzim (1981), Coimbra (1985, 2005), Porto (1993), and Aveiro (2001). The conference was jointly organized by the University of Minho, “Ordem dos Engenheiros”, and the IBB - Institute for Biotechnology and Bioengineering with the usual support of the “Sociedade Portuguesa de Química” and, by the first time, of the “Sociedade Portuguesa de Biotecnologia”. Thirty years elapsed since CHEMPOR was held at the University of Minho, organized by T.R. Bott, D. Allen, A. Bridgwater, J.J.B. Romero, L.J.S. Soares and J.D.R.S. Pinheiro. We are fortunate to have Profs. Bott, Soares and Pinheiro in the Honor Committee of this 10th edition, under the high Patronage of his Excellency the President of the Portuguese Republic, Prof. Aníbal Cavaco Silva. The opening ceremony will confer Prof. Bott with a “Long Term Achievement” award acknowledging the important contribution Prof. Bott brought along more than 30 years to the development of the Chemical Engineering science, to the launch of CHEMPOR series and specially to the University of Minho. Prof. Bott’s inaugural lecture will address the importance of effective energy management in processing operations, particularly in the effectiveness of heat recovery and the associated reduction in greenhouse gas emission from combustion processes. The CHEMPOR series traditionally brings together both young and established researchers and end users to discuss recent developments in different areas of Chemical Engineering. The scope of this edition is broadening out by including the Biological Engineering research. One of the major core areas of the conference program is life quality, due to the importance that Chemical and Biological Engineering plays in this area. “Integration of Life Sciences & Engineering” and “Sustainable Process-Product Development through Green Chemistry” are two of the leading themes with papers addressing such important issues. This is complemented with additional leading themes including “Advancing the Chemical and Biological Engineering Fundamentals”, “Multi-Scale and/or Multi-Disciplinary Approach to Process-Product Innovation”, “Systematic Methods and Tools for Managing the Complexity”, and “Educating Chemical and Biological Engineers for Coming Challenges” which define the extended abstracts arrangements along this book. A total of 516 extended abstracts are included in the book, consisting of 7 invited lecturers, 15 keynote, 105 short oral presentations given in 5 parallel sessions, along with 6 slots for viewing 389 poster presentations. Full papers are jointly included in the companion Proceedings in CD-ROM. All papers have been reviewed and we are grateful to the members of scientific and organizing committees for their evaluations. It was an intensive task since 610 submitted abstracts from 45 countries were received. It has been an honor for us to contribute to setting up CHEMPOR 2008 during almost two years. We wish to thank the authors who have contributed to yield a high scientific standard to the program. We are thankful to the sponsors who have contributed decisively to this event. We also extend our gratefulness to all those who, through their dedicated efforts, have assisted us in this task. On behalf of the Scientific and Organizing Committees we wish you that together with an interesting reading, the scientific program and the social moments organized will be memorable for all.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT

    A comparison of the CAR and DAGAR spatial random effects models with an application to diabetics rate estimation in Belgium

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    When hierarchically modelling an epidemiological phenomenon on a finite collection of sites in space, one must always take a latent spatial effect into account in order to capture the correlation structure that links the phenomenon to the territory. In this work, we compare two autoregressive spatial models that can be used for this purpose: the classical CAR model and the more recent DAGAR model. Differently from the former, the latter has a desirable property: its ρ parameter can be naturally interpreted as the average neighbor pair correlation and, in addition, this parameter can be directly estimated when the effect is modelled using a DAGAR rather than a CAR structure. As an application, we model the diabetics rate in Belgium in 2014 and show the adequacy of these models in predicting the response variable when no covariates are available

    A Statistical Approach to the Alignment of fMRI Data

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    Multi-subject functional Magnetic Resonance Image studies are critical. The anatomical and functional structure varies across subjects, so the image alignment is necessary. We define a probabilistic model to describe functional alignment. Imposing a prior distribution, as the matrix Fisher Von Mises distribution, of the orthogonal transformation parameter, the anatomical information is embedded in the estimation of the parameters, i.e., penalizing the combination of spatially distant voxels. Real applications show an improvement in the classification and interpretability of the results compared to various functional alignment methods

    Separator fluid volume requirements in multi-infusion settings

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    INTRODUCTION. Intravenous (IV) therapy is a widely used method for the administration of medication in hospitals worldwide. ICU and surgical patients in particular often require multiple IV catheters due to incompatibility of certain drugs and the high complexity of medical therapy. This increases discomfort by painful invasive procedures, the risk of infections and costs of medication and disposable considerably. When different drugs are administered through the same lumen, it is common ICU practice to flush with a neutral fluid between the administration of two incompatible drugs in order to optimally use infusion lumens. An important constraint for delivering multiple incompatible drugs is the volume of separator fluid that is sufficient to safely separate them. OBJECTIVES. In this pilot study we investigated whether the choice of separator fluid, solvent, or administration rate affects the separator volume required in a typical ICU infusion setting. METHODS. A standard ICU IV line (2m, 2ml, 1mm internal diameter) was filled with methylene blue (40 mg/l) solution and flushed using an infusion pump with separator fluid. Independent variables were solvent for methylene blue (NaCl 0.9% vs. glucose 5%), separator fluid (NaCl 0.9% vs. glucose 5%), and administration rate (50, 100, or 200 ml/h). Samples were collected using a fraction collector until <2% of the original drug concentration remained and were analyzed using spectrophotometry. RESULTS. We did not find a significant effect of administration rate on separator fluid volume. However, NaCl/G5% (solvent/separator fluid) required significantly less separator fluid than NaCl/NaCl (3.6 ± 0.1 ml vs. 3.9 ± 0.1 ml, p <0.05). Also, G5%/G5% required significantly less separator fluid than NaCl/NaCl (3.6 ± 0.1 ml vs. 3.9 ± 0.1 ml, p <0.05). The significant decrease in required flushing volume might be due to differences in the viscosity of the solutions. However, mean differences were small and were most likely caused by human interactions with the fluid collection setup. The average required flushing volume is 3.7 ml. CONCLUSIONS. The choice of separator fluid, solvent or administration rate had no impact on the required flushing volume in the experiment. Future research should take IV line length, diameter, volume and also drug solution volumes into account in order to provide a full account of variables affecting the required separator fluid volume

    Safety and Reliability - Safe Societies in a Changing World

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    The contributions cover a wide range of methodologies and application areas for safety and reliability that contribute to safe societies in a changing world. These methodologies and applications include: - foundations of risk and reliability assessment and management - mathematical methods in reliability and safety - risk assessment - risk management - system reliability - uncertainty analysis - digitalization and big data - prognostics and system health management - occupational safety - accident and incident modeling - maintenance modeling and applications - simulation for safety and reliability analysis - dynamic risk and barrier management - organizational factors and safety culture - human factors and human reliability - resilience engineering - structural reliability - natural hazards - security - economic analysis in risk managemen
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