120 research outputs found

    Educational Level Is Related to Physical Fitness in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes - A Cross-Sectional Study.

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    Low educational level (EL) and low physical fitness are both predictors of increased morbidity and mortality in patients with type 2 diabetes. It is unknown if EL is related to physical fitness. This would have important implication for the treatment approach of patients of low EL. In 2011/12, we invited participants of a new nationwide Swiss physical activity program for patients with type 2 diabetes to participate in this study. EL was defined by self-report and categorized as low (mandatory education), middle (professional education) or high (high school/university). Physical fitness was determined using 5 validated measures that assessed aerobic fitness, functional lower limb muscle strength, walking speed, balance and flexibility. Potential confounder variables such as other socio-cultural factors, physical activity level, body composition, diabetes-related parameters and complications/co-morbidities as well as well-being were assessed. All invited 185 participants (mean age 59.6 ±9.8 yrs, 76 women) agreed to be included. Of all patients, 23.1% had a low, 32.7% a middle and 44.2% a high EL; 41.8% were professionally active. The study population had a mean BMI of 32.4±5.2 kg/m2 and an HbA1c of 7.3±1.3%. The mean diabetes duration was 8.8±7.4 years. In the baseline assessment, higher EL was associated with increased aerobic fitness, increased functional lower limb muscle strength, and increased walking speed using linear regression analysis (values for low, middle and high EL, respectively: 91.8 ± 27.9, 116.4 ± 49.7 and 134.9 ± 60.4 watts for aerobic fitness (p = 0.002), 15 ± 4.7, 13.9 ± 2.7, 12.6 ± 2.9 seconds for strength (p = 0.001) and 8.8 ± 1.6, 8.3 ± 1.4, 7.8 ± 1.4 seconds for walking speed (p = 0.004)). These associations were independent of potential confounders. Overall, aerobic fitness was 46%, functional limb muscle strength 16%, and walking speed 11% higher in patients of high compared to those of low EL. EL was not related to balance or flexibility. A main strength of the present study is that it addresses a population of importance and a factor (EL) whose understanding can influence future interventions. A second strength is its relatively large sample size of a high-risk population. Third, unlike studies that have shown an association between self-reported fitness and educational level we assessed physical fitness measures by a quantitative and validated test battery using assessors blinded to other data. Another novelty is the extensive evaluation of the role of many relevant confounder variables. In conclusion, we show that in patients with type 2 diabetes EL correlates favorably and independently with important health-related physical fitness measures such as aerobic fitness, walking speed, and lower limb strength. Our findings underline that diabetic patients with low EL should be specifically encouraged to participate in physical activity intervention programs to further reduce social disparities in healthcare. Such programs should be structured and integrate the norms, needs and capacities (financial, time, physical capacities and self-efficacy) of this population, and their effectiveness should be tested in future studies. University of Lausanne clinicaltrials.gov NCT01289587

    Tests of electron flavor conservation with the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory

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    We analyze tests of electron flavor conservation that can be performed at the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO). These tests, which utilize 8^8B solar neutrinos interacting with deuterium, measure: 1) the shape of the recoil electron spectrum in charged-current (CC) interactions (the CC spectrum shape); and 2) the ratio of the number of charged current to neutral current (NC) events (the CC/NC ratio). We determine standard model predictions for the CC spectral shape and for the CC/NC ratio, together with realistic estimates of their errors and the correlations between errors. We consider systematic uncertainties in the standard neutrino spectrum and in the charged-current and neutral current cross-sections, the SNO energy resolution and absolute energy scale, and the SNO detection efficiencies. Assuming that either matter-enhanced or vacuum neutrino oscillations solve the solar neutrino problems, we calculate the confidence levels with which electron flavor non-conservation can be detected using either the CC spectrum shape or the CC/NC ratio, or both. If the SNO detector works as expected, the neutrino oscillation solutions that best-fit the results of the four operating solar neutrino experiments can be distinguished unambiguously from the standard predictions of electron flavor conservation.Comment: 31 pages (RevTeX) + 10 figures (postscript). Requires epsfig.sty. Gzipped figures also available at ftp://ftp.sns.ias.edu/pub/lisi/snopaper . To appear in Phys. Rev.

    Short-term performance variations of different photovoltaic system technologies under the humid subtropical climate of Kanpur in India

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    The study discusses the short-term performance variations of grid-connected photovoltaic (PV) systems installed in Kanpur, India. The analysis presents a holistic view of the performance variations of three PV array technologies [multi-crystalline (multi-Si), copper indium gallium diselenide and amorphous silicon] and two inverter types (high-frequency transformer and low-frequency transformer). The analysis considers the DC–AC conversion efficiency of the inverter, system performance through performance ratio (PR) calculations, energy variations between fixed and tracking systems and the comparison between calculated and simulated data for the examined period. The energy output difference between the tracking and fixed systems of the same PV technology show that these are dependent on differences in temperature coefficient, shading and other system related issues. The PR analysis shows the effect of temperature on the multi-Si system. The difference between the simulated and measured values of the systems was mostly attributed to the irradiance differences. Regarding the inverter evaluation, the results showed that both inverter types underperformed in terms of the conversion efficiency compared with nameplate values

    SYNCHRONIZATION FO A Q-SWITCHED Nd-YAG PUMPED DYE LASER AND AN EXCIMER LASER FOR TIME-RESOLVED RAMAN EXPERIMENTS

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    A time resolved resonance Raman experimental set-up is described. It is based on the use of two independent lasers : a Q-switched Nd-YAG pumped dye laser and an excimer laser. A synchronization electronic device has been made to fire the two lasers with variable delays in the range ࢐ 10 ms with a 10 ns step variation. A drift control unit is used to prevent any slow drifts of the excimer laser. The overall jitter between the two laser pulses is 4.5 ns

    Stimulation of hematopoiesis in vivo by recombinant bacterial murine interleukin 3.

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    Mouse interleukin 3 (IL-3) cDNA was cloned into a plasmid construction, allowing the synthesis of very high quantities of IL-3 in Escherichia coli. The recombinant (r) IL-3, purified to homogeneity, was active in vitro on the proliferation and differentiation of various hematopoietic progenitor cells at 1 pM. To maintain detectable blood levels of IL-3, osmotic pumps containing rIL-3 or control solutions were placed under the skin of normal and irradiated C3H/HeJ and (BALB X B10) F1 mice. The effect of IL-3 on hematopoietic progenitor cell numbers in spleen and bone marrow was evaluated 3 and 7 days later by using an in vitro clonal assay. The results demonstrated the following: (i) Doses of IL-3 infused at the rate of 2.5-5 ng per g of body weight per hr were sufficient to increase the numbers of hematopoietic progenitors in normal mice by at least 2-fold within 3 days. (ii) In mice with progenitor cell levels depressed by sublethal irradiation, 7-day treatment with IL-3 resulted in a 10-fold increase to near normal levels. (iii) The erythroid and myeloid lineages appeared to be enhanced to the same extent. (iv) Enhancement of hematopoiesis occurred primarily in spleen, but hematopoietic foci were also evident in the liver; in contrast, total cell and progenitor cell numbers were decreased in the bone marrow
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