603 research outputs found
Incidents and injuries in foot launched flying extreme sports: a snap shot from the UK
Background. Participation rates in extreme sports have grown exponentially in the last 40 years,often surpassing traditional sporting activities. The purpose of this study was to examine injury rates in foot launched flying sports, i.e. sports in which a pilot foot-launches into flight with a wing already deployed. Method. This paper is based on a retrospective analysis of the reports of incidents that occurred between 2000 and 2014 among the British Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association members. Results. The majority of the 1411 reported injuries were in the lower limb, followed by the upper limb. The most common lower limb injury was to the ankle and included fractures sprains and dislocations. The distribution of injures was different in each discipline. The calculated yearly fatality rate (fatalities /100,000 participants) was 40.4 in hang gliding, 47.1 in paragliding, 61.9 in powered hang gliding and 83.4 in powered paragliding; the overall value for foot launched flight sports was 43.9. Discussion. Significant differences in injury rates and injury patterns were found among different sport disciplines that can be useful to steer research on safety, and adopt specific safety rules about flying, protective clothing and safety systems in each of these sports
The effect of posture on asynchronous chest wall movement in COPD
Priori R, Aliverti A, Albuquerque AL, Quaranta M, Albert P, Calverley PM. the effect of posture on asynchronous chest wall movement in COPD. J Appl Physiol 114: 1066-1075, 2013. First published February 14, 2013; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00414.2012.-Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients often show asynchronous movement of the lower rib cage during spontaneous quiet breathing and exercise. We speculated that varying body position from seated to supine would influence rib cage asynchrony by changing the configuration of the respiratory muscles. Twenty-three severe COPD patients (forced expiratory volume in 1 s = 32.5 +/- 7.0% predicted) and 12 healthy age-matched controls were studied. Measurements of the phase shift between upper and lower rib cage and between upper rib cage and abdomen were performed with opto-electronic plethysmography during quiet breathing in the seated and supine position. Changes in diaphragm zone of apposition were measured by ultrasounds. Control subjects showed no compartmental asynchronous movement, whether seated or supine. in 13 COPD patients, rib cage asynchrony was noticed in the seated posture. This asynchrony disappeared in the supine posture. in COPD, upper rib cage and abdomen were synchronous when seated, but a strong asynchrony was found in supine. the relationships between changes in diaphragm zone of apposition and volume variations of chest wall compartments supported these findings. Rib cage paradox was noticed in approximately one-half of the COPD patients while seated, but was not related to impaired diaphragm motion. in the supine posture, the rib cage paradox disappeared, suggesting that, in this posture, diaphragm mechanics improves. in conclusion, changing body position induces important differences in the chest wall behavior in COPD patients.Politecn Milan, Dipartimento Elettron Informaz & Bioingn, I-20133 Milan, ItalyUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Dept Med, São Paulo, BrazilUniv Liverpool, Univ Hosp Aintree, Ctr Clin Sci, Liverpool L69 3BX, Merseyside, EnglandUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, Dept Med, São Paulo, BrazilWeb of Scienc
Paradoxical movement of the lower ribcage at rest and during exercise in COPD patients
Paradoxical inward displacement of the costal margin during inspiration is observed in many chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients at rest but its importance is unclear.The current authors studied 20 patients (forced expiratory volume in one second 32.6 +/- 11.7, functional residual capacity 186 +/- 32% predicted) and 10 healthy controls at rest and during symptom-limited incremental exercise. With optoelectronic plethysmography, the phase shift between pulmonary and abdominal ribcage volumes and the percentage of inspiratory time the ribcage compartments moved in opposite directions were quantified, using control data to define the normal range of movement.Eight patients showed lower ribcage inspiratory paradox at rest (P+), while 12 patients did not (P-). This was unrelated to resting lung function or exercise tolerance. Total end-expiratory chest wall volume (EEVcw) increased immediately when exercise began in P+ patients, but later in exercise in P- patients. This difference in EEVcw was mainly due to a greater increase of end-expiratory pulmonary ribcage volume in P+ patients. During exercise, dyspnoea increased similarly in the two groups, while leg effort increased more markedly in the patients without paradox.In conclusion, lower ribcage paradox at rest is reproducible and associated with early-onset hyperinflation of the chest wall and predominant dyspnoea at end-exercise. When paradox is absent, the sense of leg effort becomes a more important symptom limiting exercise.British Lung FoundationEuropean Respiratory Society (ERS)ERS COEDPolitecn Milan, TBM Lab, Dipartimento Bioingn, I-20133 Milan, ItalyUniv Liverpool, Ctr Clin Sci, Univ Hosp Aintree, Liverpool L69 3BX, Merseyside, EnglandUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, BrazilUniversidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, BrazilEuropean Respiratory Society (ERS): 69Web of Scienc
ACUTE EFFECTS OF VOLUME-ORIENTED INCENTIVE SPIROMETRY ON CHEST WALL VOLUMES IN PATIENTS AFTER STROKE.
The aim of the present study was to assess how volume-oriented incentive spirometry (IS) applied to patients after stroke modify total and compartmental chest wall volume variations, including right and left hemithorax compared to controls.20 post-stroke patients (stroke group, SG) and 20 age-matched healthy subjects (control group, CG) were studied by optoelectronic plethysmography during spontaneous quiet breathing (QB), IS and in the recovery period after IS.IS determined an increase of chest wall volume and its rib cage and abdominal compartments in both groups (p = 0.0008) and between the three instances (p < 0.0001). Compared to healthy control subjects, tidal volume of patients with stroke was 24.7\%, 18\% and 14.7\% lower during QB, , IS and post-IS, respectively. In all the three conditions the contribution of the abdominal compartment to tidal volume was greater in the stroke patients (54.1, 43.2 and 48.9\%) than controls (43.7, 40.8 and 46.1\%, p = .039). In the vast majority of patients 13/20 and 18/20 during QB and IS, respectively), abdominal expansion led rib cage expansion during inspiration. A greater asymmetry between the right and left hemithoracic expansion occurred in stroke patients compared to controls but it decreased during IS (62.5\% (p = 0.0023) QB; 19.7\% IS; and 67.6\% (p = 0.135) post-IS.IS promotes an increased expansion in all compartments of the chest wall and reduces the asymmetric expansion between right and left pulmonary rib cage and therefore it should be considered as a tool for rehabilitation
ESPRESSO: The next European exoplanet hunter
The acronym ESPRESSO stems for Echelle SPectrograph for Rocky Exoplanets and
Stable Spectroscopic Observations; this instrument will be the next VLT high
resolution spectrograph. The spectrograph will be installed at the
Combined-Coud\'e Laboratory of the VLT and linked to the four 8.2 m Unit
Telescopes (UT) through four optical Coud\'e trains. ESPRESSO will combine
efficiency and extreme spectroscopic precision. ESPRESSO is foreseen to achieve
a gain of two magnitudes with respect to its predecessor HARPS, and to improve
the instrumental radial-velocity precision to reach the 10 cm/s level. It can
be operated either with a single UT or with up to four UTs, enabling an
additional gain in the latter mode. The incoherent combination of four
telescopes and the extreme precision requirements called for many innovative
design solutions while ensuring the technical heritage of the successful HARPS
experience. ESPRESSO will allow to explore new frontiers in most domains of
astrophysics that require precision and sensitivity. The main scientific
drivers are the search and characterization of rocky exoplanets in the
habitable zone of quiet, nearby G to M-dwarfs and the analysis of the
variability of fundamental physical constants. The project passed the final
design review in May 2013 and entered the manufacturing phase. ESPRESSO will be
installed at the Paranal Observatory in 2016 and its operation is planned to
start by the end of the same year.Comment: 12 pages, figures included, accepted for publication in Astron. Nach
From prison to detention: the carceral trajectories of foreign-national prisoners in the United Kingdom
The United Kingdom has taken an increasingly punitive stance towards ‘foreign criminals’ using law and policy to pave the way for their expulsion from the country. Imprisonment, then, becomes the first stage in a complex process intertwining identity, belonging and punishment. We draw here on research data from two projects to understand the carceral trajectories of foreign-national offenders in the UK. We consider the lived experiences of male foreign-nationals in two sites: prison and immigration detention. The narratives presented show how imprisonment and detention coalesce within the deportation regime as a ‘double punishment’, one that is highly racialised and gendered. We argue that the UK’s increasingly punitive response to foreign-national offenders challenges the traditional purposes of punishment by sidestepping prisoners’ rehabilitative efforts and denying ‘second chances’ while enacting permanent exclusion through bans on re-entry
SOXS: a wide band spectrograph to follow up transients
SOXS (Son Of X-Shooter) will be a spectrograph for the ESO NTT telescope
capable to cover the optical and NIR bands, based on the heritage of the
X-Shooter at the ESO-VLT. SOXS will be built and run by an international
consortium, carrying out rapid and longer term Target of Opportunity requests
on a variety of astronomical objects. SOXS will observe all kind of transient
and variable sources from different surveys. These will be a mixture of fast
alerts (e.g. gamma-ray bursts, gravitational waves, neutrino events), mid-term
alerts (e.g. supernovae, X-ray transients), fixed time events (e.g. close-by
passage of minor bodies). While the focus is on transients and variables, still
there is a wide range of other astrophysical targets and science topics that
will benefit from SOXS. The design foresees a spectrograph with a
Resolution-Slit product ~ 4500, capable of simultaneously observing over the
entire band the complete spectral range from the U- to the H-band. The limiting
magnitude of R~20 (1 hr at S/N~10) is suited to study transients identified
from on-going imaging surveys. Light imaging capabilities in the optical band
(grizy) are also envisaged to allow for multi-band photometry of the faintest
transients. This paper outlines the status of the project, now in Final Design
Phase.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, to be published in SPIE Proceedings 1070
A smart tablet application to quantitatively assess the dominant hand dexterity
Background and objective: The Nine-Hole Peg Test (NHPT) is the most used test to assess hand dexterity in clinical practice and is considered the gold standard but only evaluates the time needed to complete the task. The aim of this work is to describe a graphic test on a smart tablet to assess in a quantitative as well qualitative way the dominant hand dexterity and to validate it in a cohort of neurological subjects and healthy controls. Methods: The task consists in asking the subject to connect with a graphic line the start and the end point of a pre-defined path, with two different widths, in the most precise and fastest way possible. The path is constituted by a ‘meander’ and a ‘spiral’ part. The subjects perform the task on a smart tablet with a capacitive pen four times. The three parameters of interest considered at each trial are the execution time, length path, and number of interactions with the border. The app automatically computes these three parameters and stores the completed test files. The results of the digital graphic test are compared to the NHPT results. Healthy and pathological subjects are compared to each other, and performances obtained in different repetitions are compared to assess the learning effect in each population. Results: 53 subjects with a definitive diagnosis of neurodegenerative/genetic neurological disorders (34 men, mean age 59.1 ± 16.1) and 78 healthy controls (33 men, mean age 42.5 ± 16.3) were recruited. Among the pathological subjects, 31 also performed the NHPT. The graphic test clearly distinguish between the two populations for all parameters of interest. Moreover, compared to the gold standard NHPT, time has a moderate positive correlation (r = 0.57, p ≤ 0.001), whereas interactions and length have a strong positive correlation (r = 0.81, p ≤ 0.001) and (r = 0.69, p ≤ 0.001), respectively. Conclusions: The proposed digital test can measure in an accurate, quantitative and qualitative way dominant hand disability and can result more informative with respect to the gold standard NHPT. In homogeneous cohort of subjects (for example affected by multiple sclerosis or Parkinson disease), the digital test can be used as an outcome measure in clinical trials as well as a tool for monitoring disease progression at the dominant hand level
Reactions of Plasmodium falciparum Ferredoxin:NADP(+) Oxidoreductase with Redox Cycling Xenobiotics: A Mechanistic Study
Ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase from Plasmodium falciparum (PfFNR) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of ferredoxin (PfFd), which provides redox equivalents for the biosynthesis of isoprenoids and fatty acids in the apicoplast. Like other flavin-dependent electrontransferases, PfFNR is a potential source of free radicals of quinones and other redox cycling compounds. We report here a kinetic study of the reduction of quinones, nitroaromatic compounds and aromatic N-oxides by PfFNR. We show that all these groups of compounds are reduced in a single-electron pathway, their reactivity increasing with the increase in their single-electron reduction midpoint potential (E17). The reactivity of nitroaromatics is lower than that of quinones and aromatic N-oxides, which is in line with the differences in their electron self-exchange rate constants. Quinone reduction proceeds via a ping-pong mechanism. During the reoxidation of reduced FAD by quinones, the oxidation of FADH. to FAD is the possible rate-limiting step. The calculated electron transfer distances in the reaction of PfFNR with various electron acceptors are similar to those of Anabaena FNR, thus demonstrating their similar "intrinsic" reactivity. Ferredoxin stimulated quinone- and nitro-reductase reactions of PfFNR, evidently providing an additional reduction pathway via reduced PfFd. Based on the available data, PfFNR and possibly PfFd may play a central role in the reductive activation of quinones, nitroaromatics and aromatic N-oxides in P. falciparum, contributing to their antiplasmodial action
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