86 research outputs found
Development of EMFI-sensor based pressure sensitive insole for gait analysis
Abstract- The pressure distribution of the sole includes important information of gait during walking or running. For example, by monitoring the details ofpressure distributions in the sole in normal walking many malpositions of the foot can be easily detected. In this study a simple and versatile EMFI sensor based real-time pressure mapping system was developed for gait analysis purposes. The system consists ofa thin andflexible insole, including 16 tiny EMFI sensor elements, connected via a customized analog amplifier and digital data acquisition card to a PC computer. The PC-software of the measurement system shows the pressure in each small sensor element of the sole in real time, and records the data to a file. The accuracy and reliability of the system was preliminarily evaluated by experimental measurements. The results showed out that the system has capability to measure the pressure distributions of the foot sole reliably. The correlation coefficient between the applied pressure and the sensor output was 0,99. The next phase of the research project is to evaluate applicability of the system for evaluation ofgait with large number oftest subjects
Haematological and biochemical parameters in Churra-da-Terra-Quente ewes from the northeast of Portugal
Hematological and biochemical parameters, including plasma electrolytes and thyroid hormones, were determined in 73 clinically healthy Churra-da-Terra-Quente ewes, a typical breed from the northeast of Portugal. The hemogram values were: erythrocytes 9.8±1.51012/L; haemoglobin 118.1±19.1g/L; haematocrit 40.8±5.9%; leukocytes 5.7±1.8109/L; and platelets 544.3±177.2109/L. The thrombin time was 17.3±1.7 seconds. The values of biochemical parameters were: total protein 76.4±6.1g/L; glucose 2.87±0.60mmol/L; total cholesterol 1.65±0.33mmol/L; aspartate aminotransferase 155.9±49.2U/L; alanine aminotransferase 23.2±9.6U/L; γ-glutamyl transferase 48.0±18.7U/L; total alkaline phosphatase 121.6±76.1U/L; glutamate dehydrogenase 6.4±3.7U/L; urea 7.32±2.22mmol/L; creatinine 123.0±54.1μmol/L; total calcium 2.53±0.25mmol/L; phosphorus 2.10±0.46mmol/L; magnesium 1.01±0.09mmol/L; sodium 152.04±3.65mmol/L; potassium 4.7±0.4mmol/L; ionized calcium 1.32±0.07mmol/L; total thyroxine 111.75±42.29nmol/L; total triiodothyronine 1.01±0.28nmol/L; free T4 11.93±1.78pmol/L; free T3 4.22±1.33pmol/L; and thyroid-stimulating hormone 0.18±0.19μIU/mL. Although differences among the Churra-da-Terra-Quente breed and other breeds may occur, the hematological and biochemical parameters, plasma electrolytes, and thyroid hormones, for this indigenous breed, were generally situated within the reference intervals previously reported for sheep
Effect of atorvastatin on C-reactive protein and benefits for cardiovascular disease in patients with type 2 diabetes: analyses from the Collaborative Atorvastatin Diabetes Trial
CARDS was partially funded by Diabetes UK and the
National Health Service Research and Development Forum (England)
Reproducibility and day time bias correction of optoelectronic leg volumetry: a prospective cohort study
Background
Leg edema is a common manifestation of various underlying pathologies. Reliable measurement tools are required to quantify edema and monitor therapeutic interventions. Aim of the present work was to investigate the reproducibility of optoelectronic leg volumetry over 3 weeks' time period and to eliminate daytime related within-individual variability.
Methods
Optoelectronic leg volumetry was performed in 63 hairdressers (mean age 45 ± 16 years, 85.7% female) in standing position twice within a minute for each leg and repeated after 3 weeks. Both lower leg (legBD) and whole limb (limbBF) volumetry were analysed. Reproducibility was expressed as analytical and within-individual coefficients of variance (CVA, CVW), and as intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC).
Results
A total of 492 leg volume measurements were analysed. Both legBD and limbBF volumetry were highly reproducible with CVA of 0.5% and 0.7%, respectively. Within-individual reproducibility of legBD and limbBF volumetry over a three weeks' period was high (CVW 1.3% for both; ICC 0.99 for both). At both visits, the second measurement revealed a significantly higher volume compared to the first measurement with a mean increase of 7.3 ml ± 14.1 (0.33% ± 0.58%) for legBD and 30.1 ml ± 48.5 ml (0.52% ± 0.79%) for limbBF volume. A significant linear correlation between absolute and relative leg volume differences and the difference of exact day time of measurement between the two study visits was found (P < .001). A therefore determined time-correction formula permitted further improvement of CVW.
Conclusions
Leg volume changes can be reliably assessed by optoelectronic leg volumetry at a single time point and over a 3 weeks' time period. However, volumetry results are biased by orthostatic and daytime-related volume changes. The bias for day-time related volume changes can be minimized by a time-correction formula
Clustering of metabolic syndrome components in a Middle Eastern diabetic and non-diabetic population
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Metabolic syndrome (MetS) encompasses a cluster of coronary heart disease and diabetes mellitus risk factors. In this study, we aimed to elucidate the factors underlying the clustering of MetS components in diabetic and non-diabetic individuals.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Factor analysis was performed on 2978 (1652 non-diabetic and 1326 diabetic) participants. Entering waist circumference, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C) and systolic blood pressure (SBP), we performed exploratory factor analysis in diabetic and non-diabetic individuals separately. The analysis was repeated after replacing triglycerides and HDL-C with triglycerides to HDL-C ratio (triglycerides/HDL-C). MetS was defined by either adult treatment panel III (ATPIII), international diabetes federation (IDF) criteria, or by the modified form of IDF using waist circumference cut-off points for Iranian population.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The selection of triglycerides and HDL-C as two distinct variables led to identifying two factors explaining 61.3% and 55.4% of the total variance in non-diabetic and diabetic participants, respectively. In both diabetic and non-diabetic subjects, waist circumference, HOMA-IR and SBP loaded on factor 1. Factor 2 was mainly determined by triglycerides and HDL-C. Factor 1 and 2 were directly and inversely associated with MetS, respectively. When triglycerides and HDL-C were replaced by triglycerides/HDL-C, one factor was extracted, which explained 47.6% and 38.8% of the total variance in non-diabetic and diabetic participants, respectively.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This study confirms that in both diabetic and non-diabetic participants the concept of a single underlying factor representing MetS is plausible.</p
Implementing statically typed object-oriented programming languages
A paraîtreInternational audienceObject-oriented programming languages represent an original implementation issue due to the mechanism known as late binding, aka message sending. The underlying principle is that the address of the actually called procedure is not statically determined, at compile-time, but depends on the dynamic type of a distinguished parameter known as the receiver. In statically typed languages, the point is that the receiver's dynamic type may be a subtype of its static type. A similar issue arises with attributes, because their position in the object layout may depends on the object's dynamic type. Furthermore, subtyping introduces another original feature, i.e. subtype checks. All three mechanisms need specific implementations, data structures and algorithms. In statically typed languages, late binding is generally implemented with tables, called virtual function tables in C++ jargon. These tables reduce method calls to pointers to functions, through a small fixed number of extra indirections. It follows that object-oriented programming yields some overhead, as compared to usual procedural languages. The different techniques and their resulting overhead depend on several parameters. Firstly, inheritance and subtyping may be single or multiple and a mixing is even possible, as in JAVA, which presents single inheritance for classes and multiple subtyping for interfaces. Multiple inheritance is a well known complication. Secondly, the production of executable programs may involve various schemes, from global compilation frameworks, where the whole program is known at compile time, to separate compilation and dynamic loading, where each program unit---usually a class in an object-oriented context---is compiled and loaded independently of any usage. Global compilation is well known to facilitate optimization. In this paper, we review the various implementation schemes available in the context of static typing and in the three cases of single inheritance, multiple inheritance, and single inheritance but with multiple subtyping, e.g. JAVA. The survey focuses on separate compilation and dynamic loading, as it is the most commonly used framework and the most demanding. However, many works have been recently undertaken in the global compilation framework, mostly for dynamically typed languages but also applied to the EIFFEL language in the SMARTEIFFEL compiler. Hence, we examine global techniques and how they can improve implementation efficiency. Finally, a mixed framework is considered, where separate compilation is followed by a global step, similar to linking, which uses global techniques, as well for implementation, with coloring, as for optimization, with type analysis. An application to dynamic loading is sketched
CD14 Deficiency Impacts Glucose Homeostasis in Mice through Altered Adrenal Tone
The toll-like receptors comprise one of the most conserved components of the innate immune system, signaling the presence of molecules of microbial origin. It has been proposed that signaling through TLR4, which requires CD14 to recognize bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), may generate low-grade inflammation and thereby affect insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism. To examine the long-term influence of partial innate immune signaling disruption on glucose homeostasis, we analyzed knockout mice deficient in CD14 backcrossed into the diabetes-prone C57BL6 background at 6 or 12 months of age. CD14-ko mice, fed either normal or high-fat diets, displayed significant glucose intolerance compared to wild type controls. They also displayed elevated norepinephrine urinary excretion and increased adrenal medullary volume, as well as an enhanced norepinephrine secretory response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. These results point out a previously unappreciated crosstalk between innate immune- and sympathoadrenal- systems, which exerts a major long-term effect on glucose homeostasis
Alexithymia in juvenile primary headache sufferers: a pilot study
Starting in the 1990s, there has been accumulating evidence of alexithymic characteristics in adult patients with primary headache. Little research has been conducted, however, on the relationship between alexithymia and primary headache in developmental age. In their research on alexithymia in the formative years, the authors identified one of the most promising prospects for research, as discussed here. The aim of this study was to verify whether there is: (a) a link between tension-type headache and alexithymia in childhood and early adolescence; and (b) a correlation between alexithymia in children/preadolescents and their mothers. This study was based on an experimental group of 32 patients (26 females and 6 males, aged from 8 to 15 years, mean 11.2 ± 2.0) suffering from tension-type headache and 32 control subjects (26 females and 6 males, aged from 8 to 15 years, mean 11.8 ± 1.6). Tension-type headache was diagnosed by applying the International Headache Classification (ICHD-II, 2004). The alexithymic construct was measured using an Italian version of the Alexithymia Questionnaire for Children in the case of the juvenile patients and the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) for their mothers. Higher rates of alexithymia were observed in the children/preadolescents in the experimental group (EG) than in the control group; in the EG there was no significant correlation between the alexithymia rates in the children/preadolescents and in their mothers
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