55 research outputs found

    The Threshold Bias Model: A Mathematical Model for the Nomothetic Approach of Suicide

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    Comparative and predictive analyses of suicide data from different countries are difficult to perform due to varying approaches and the lack of comparative parameters.A simple model (the Threshold Bias Model) was tested for comparative and predictive analyses of suicide rates by age. The model comprises of a six parameter distribution that was applied to the USA suicide rates by age for the years 2001 and 2002. Posteriorly, linear extrapolations are performed of the parameter values previously obtained for these years in order to estimate the values corresponding to the year 2003. The calculated distributions agreed reasonably well with the aggregate data. The model was also used to determine the age above which suicide rates become statistically observable in USA, Brazil and Sri Lanka.The Threshold Bias Model has considerable potential applications in demographic studies of suicide. Moreover, since the model can be used to predict the evolution of suicide rates based on information extracted from past data, it will be of great interest to suicidologists and other researchers in the field of mental health

    Human Tumor Cell Proliferation Evaluated Using Manganese-Enhanced MRI

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    Tumor cell proliferation can depend on calcium entry across the cell membrane. As a first step toward the development of a non-invasive test of the extent of tumor cell proliferation in vivo, we tested the hypothesis that tumor cell uptake of a calcium surrogate, Mn(2+) [measured with manganese-enhanced MRI (MEMRI)], is linked to proliferation rate in vitro.Proliferation rates were determined in vitro in three different human tumor cell lines: C918 and OCM-1 human uveal melanomas and PC-3 prostate carcinoma. Cells growing at different average proliferation rates were exposed to 1 mM MnCl(2) for one hour and then thoroughly washed. MEMRI R(1) values (longitudinal relaxation rates), which have a positive linear relationship with Mn(2+) concentration, were then determined from cell pellets. Cell cycle distributions were determined using propidium iodide staining and flow cytometry. All three lines showed Mn(2+)-induced increases in R(1) compared to cells not exposed to Mn(2+). C918 and PC-3 cells each showed a significant, positive correlation between MEMRI R(1) values and proliferation rate (p≤0.005), while OCM-1 cells showed no significant correlation. Preliminary, general modeling of these positive relationships suggested that pellet R(1) for the PC-3 cells, but not for the C918 cells, could be adequately described by simply accounting for changes in the distribution of the cell cycle-dependent subpopulations in the pellet.These data clearly demonstrate the tumor-cell dependent nature of the relationship between proliferation and calcium influx, and underscore the usefulness of MEMRI as a non-invasive method for investigating this link. MEMRI is applicable to study tumors in vivo, and the present results raise the possibility of evaluating proliferation parameters of some tumor types in vivo using MEMRI

    Ecosystem Services from Small Forest Patches in Agricultural Landscapes

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    Agroecological management of cucurbit-infesting fruit fly: a review

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    Pressure Assisted Thawing of Potato Cylinders

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    IMPACT OF RENAL TRANSPLANTATION ON BODY COMPOSITION

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    The aim of the study was to analyse the impact of renal transplantation on body composition (Body Cell Mass) in adult kidney transplant recipients.Body Cell Mass (BCM) was calculated from total body potassium (TBK), determined from K-40 in a whole body counter. Patients were measured before transplantation and 3 months, 1 year and 2 years after transplantation. Patients were encouraged to take part in physical exercise, but supervised physical training was not included in the study Out of 50 included patients, 44 have had a kidney transplant (9 F, 35 M). Mean age at transplantation was 49 (23-72) years. Before transplantation, mean BW was 80 (SD 13) kg and mean BMI 25,6 (SD 4) kg/m2. Mean TBK was 3162 (SD 690) mmol, corresponding to 90 % of predicted value. In the 1 year follow up, no significant changes in TBK (n=42) were found, nor in patients examined 2-3 years after transplantation (n=35). To examine whether post transplantation improvement of BCM will appear later, as has been seen in Liver Transplant recipients, patients were invited to a follow up measurement. So far, 11 patients have repeated the measurement 6 (4½-7½) years after transplantation. TBK improvements of >10% were seen in 4 patients, decreases of >10% in 2 patients, and changes of a lower magnitude in remaining patients. In conclusion, no increase in Body Cell Mass was seen in this unselected group of kidney transplant recipients during the first 2-3 years after transplantation. Pro catabolic events and low physical activity may explain this lack ofimprovement

    Life testing

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    Functional spatial scale of community composition change in response to windthrow disturbance in a deciduous temperate forest

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    Community dynamics in local habitats are affected by landscape characteristics such as the area and connectivity of surrounding habitats at a functional spatial scale where the community responds to landscape structure. However, the functional spatial scale at which community composition is affected by landscape structure has never been explored. We assessed the functional spatial scales of composition change in birds and in three types of arthropod communities (canopy, forest-floor and flying ones) with regard to landscape heterogeneity resulting from a large typhoon in a temperate forest of Japan. We examined the effects of tree-fall disturbance on the communities at various spatial scales, with special attention to compositional evenness. The spatial scale of the best-fitting model, which was selected from models fitted to the disturbance area at stepwise spatial scales, was interpreted as the community-specific functional spatial scale. The composition of all communities studied was all significantly dependent on gap area. The functional spatial scale was highest in birds (370 m in radius), intermediate in flying arthropods (90 m) and lowest in canopy and forest-floor arthropods (10 m). This result may reflect typical dispersal ability and the spatial range of resource use in the community. Compositional changes in each community were consistent with theory regarding traits and responses of component taxa, although the enhancement of evenness was observed only in the arthropod communities. These results imply that management and reserve selection based on functional spatial scales can be effective in the conservation of biodiversity and ecosystem services at the community level
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