407 research outputs found
The inverse hazard law: Blood pressure, sexual harassment, racial discrimination, workplace abuse and occupational exposures in US low-income black, white and Latino workers
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.09.03
Dying To Find Out: The Cost of Time at the Dawn of the Multicancer Early Detection Era
Cancer is a significant burden worldwide that adversely impacts life expectancy, quality of life, health care costs, and workforce productivity. Although currently recommended screening tests for individual cancers reduce mortality, they detect only a minority of all cancers and sacrifice specificity for high sensitivity, resulting in a high cumulative rate of false positives. Blood-based multicancer early detection tests (MCED) based on next-generation sequencing (NGS) and other technologies hold promise for broadening the number of cancer types detected in screened populations and hope for reducing cancer mortality. The promise of this new technology to improve cancer detection rates and make screening more efficient at the population level demands the development of novel trial designs that accelerate clinical adoption. Carefully designed clinical trials are needed to address these issues
Relations between gross motor skills and executive functions, controlling for the role of information processing and lapses of attention in 8-10 year old children
This study aimed to systematically investigate the relation between gross motor skills and aspects of executive functioning (i.e. verbal working memory, visuospatial working memory, response inhibition and interference control) in 8-10 year old children. Additionally, the role of information processing (speed and variability) and lapses of attention in the relation between gross motor skills and executive functions was investigated. Data of 732 Dutch children from grade 3 and 4 were analyzed (50.0% boys, 50.4% grade 3, age = 9.16 ± 0.64 years). Gross motor skills were assessed using three items of the Körper Koordinationstest fü r Kinder and one item of the Bruininks-Oseretsky test of Motor Proficiency, Second Edition. Executive functions were assessed using the Wechsler Digit Span task (verbal working memory), the Visuospatial Memory task (visuospatial working memory), the Stop Signal task (response inhibition) and a modified version of the Flanker task (interference control). Information processing and lapses of attention were obtained by applying an ex-Gaussian analysis on go trials of the Stop Signal task. Multilevel regression analysis showed that gross motor skills were significantly related to verbal working memory, visuospatial working memory and response inhibition, but not to interference control. Lapses of attention was a significant predictor for all executive functions, whereas processing speed was not. Variability in processing speed was only predictive for visuospatial working memory. After controlling for information processing and lapses of attention, gross motor skills were only significantly related to visuospatial working memory and response inhibition. The results suggest that after controlling for information processing and lapses of attention, gross motor skills are related to aspects of executive functions that are most directly involved in, and share common underlying processes with, gross motor skills
Effects of aerobic exercise and cognitively engaging exercise on cardiorespiratory fitness and motor skills in primary school children:A cluster randomized controlled trial
This paper examined effects of two interventions on cardiorespiratory fitness and motor skills, and whether these effects are influenced by baseline levels, and dose of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) during the intervention. A cluster randomized controlled trial was implemented in 22 schools (n = 891; 9.2 ± 07 years). Intervention groups received aerobic or cognitively engaging exercise (14-weeks, four lessons per week). Control groups followed their regular physical education programme. Cardiorespiratory fitness, motor skills and MVPA were assessed. Multilevel analysis showed no main effects on cardiorespiratory fitness and motor skills although the amount of MVPA was higher in the aerobic than in the cognitively engaging and control group. Intervention effects did not depend on baseline cardiorespiratory fitness and motor skills. Children with a higher dose of MVPA within the intervention groups had better cardiorespiratory fitness after both interventions and better motor skills after the cognitively engaging intervention. In conclusion, the interventions were not effective to enhance cardiorespiratory fitness and motor skills at a group level, possibly due to large individual differences and to a total dose of MVPA too low to find effects. However, the amount of MVPA is an important factor that influence the effectiveness of interventions
The definition of low wall shear stress and its effect on plaque progression estimation in human coronary arteries
Wall shear stress (WSS), the frictional force of the blood on the vessel wall, plays a crucial role in atherosclerotic plaque development. Low WSS has been associated with plaque growth, however previous research used different approaches to define low WSS to investigate its effect on plaque progression. In this study, we used four methodologies to allocate low, mid and high WSS in one dataset of human coronary arteries and investigated the predictive power of low WSS for plaque progression. Coronary reconstructions were based on multimodality imaging, using intravascular ultrasound and CT-imaging. Vessel-specific flow was measured using Doppler wire and computational fluid dynamics was performed to calculate WSS. The absolute WSS range varied greatly between the coronary arteries. On the population level, the established pattern of most plaque progression at low WSS was apparent in all methodologies defining the WSS categories. However, for the individual patient, when using measured flow to determine WSS, the absolute WSS values range so widely, that the use of absolute thresholds to determine low WSS was not appropriate to identify regions at high risk for plaque progression
Ultrasonographic and laparoscopic evaluation of the reproductive tract in older captive female cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus)
The study uniquely described the clinical value of transabdominal ultrasonography for
monitoring features characterizing the estrous cycle in female cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus). The
reproductive tracts of 21 female, nulliparous, and relatively aged (median: 11 and interquartile
range: 9.25–14 years) captive cheetahs resident on two sites in Namibia were assessed by
transabdominal ultrasound. Subsequently, the ovarian findings on ultrasound were compared
with direct visualization while performing laparoscopic sterilization. A combination of these
observations supported by concurrent sampling for vaginal cytology and serum progesterone
concentrations defined the estrous status of individual animals. At one site, six cheetahs had
been implanted with the GnRH agonist, deslorelin as a contraceptive at least once within the
preceding 11 years. On ultrasound, 31 uterine horns and 35 ovaries with discernible structures
on 28 (86%) were visualized in the 21 cheetahs. The uterine body was difficult to visualize
because of its intrapelvic location. Eleven of 19 uteri (58%) visualized showed endometrial
edema suggestive of estrogenization. The uteri of four cheetahs (19%) showed evidence of mild
cystic endometrial hyperplasia. Paraovarian cysts were seen on ultrasound (n ¼ 21) and laparoscopy
(n ¼ 26) in 16 (76.2%) and 18 (85.7%) cheetahs, respectively. Ovarian volumes obtained
from ultrasonographically determined dimensions predicted cyclic activity.
Laparoscopy showed that 19 ovaries had discernible follicular structures. In the study population,
10 (47.6%) cheetahswere in proestrus or estrus; none in the luteal phase; and 11 (52.4%)
in anestrus. Transabdominal ultrasound, in combination with serum progesterone concentrations
and vaginal cytology, was used with acceptable accuracy to assess cyclic ovarian activity
in captive cheetahs. A considerable proportion of this aged population showed ovarian
activity and the prevalence of paraovarian cysts was notable. A history of prior deslorelin
treatment was not associated with either reproductive activity or uterine pathology.AfriCat Foundation and CCF in Namibia.http://www.theriojournal.com2016-12-31hb2015ab201
Connection between the Accretion Disk and Jet in the Radio Galaxy 3C 111
We present the results of extensive multi-frequency monitoring of the radio
galaxy 3C 111 between 2004 and 2010 at X-ray (2.4--10 keV), optical (R band),
and radio (14.5, 37, and 230 GHz) wave bands, as well as multi-epoch imaging
with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) at 43 GHz. Over the six years of
observation, significant dips in the X-ray light curve are followed by
ejections of bright superluminal knots in the VLBA images. This shows a clear
connection between the radiative state near the black hole, where the X-rays
are produced, and events in the jet. The X-ray continuum flux and Fe line
intensity are strongly correlated, with a time lag shorter than 90 days and
consistent with zero. This implies that the Fe line is generated within 90
light-days of the source of the X-ray continuum. The power spectral density
function of X-ray variations contains a break, with steeper slope at shorter
timescales. The break timescale of 13 (+12,-6) days is commensurate with
scaling according to the mass of the central black hole based on observations
of Seyfert galaxies and black hole X-ray binaries (BHXRBs). The data are
consistent with the standard paradigm, in which the X-rays are predominantly
produced by inverse Compton scattering of thermal optical/UV seed photons from
the accretion disk by a distribution of hot electrons --- the corona ---
situated near the disk. Most of the optical emission is generated in the
accretion disk due to reprocessing of the X-ray emission. The relationships
that we have uncovered between the accretion disk and the jet in 3C 111, as
well as in the FR I radio galaxy 3C 120 in a previous paper, support the
paradigm that active galactic nuclei and Galactic BHXRBs are fundamentally
similar, with characteristic time and size scales proportional to the mass of
the central black holeComment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 18 pages, 17 figures, 11 tables
(full machine readable data-tables online in ApJ website
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