373 research outputs found
Do Three Different Passive Assessments of Quadriceps Spasticity Relate to the Functional Activity of Walking for Children Diagnosed with Cerebral Palsy?
A stiff-knee gait pattern is frequently associated with several impairments including quadriceps spasticity in children diagnosed with cerebral palsy (CP). The relationship of clinical measures of quadriceps spasticity and the stiff-knee gait pattern in children diagnosed with CP has not been well established. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the ability of clinical measures of quadriceps spasticity (modified Ashworth scale [MAS], Ely tests, and pendulum test) to categorize a stiff-knee gait pattern in children with CP. Children were categorized as having a stiff-knee gait pattern based on kinematic and EMG gait data. Results of a logistic regression model revealed that the only significant measure was A1 of the pendulum test. Discriminant analysis functions were used to predict group membership (stiff-knee, not stiff-knee gait pattern) for each measure. The A1 of the pendulum test demonstrated the highest classification accuracy and the highest sensitivity compared to the other measures. Therefore, a negative pendulum test (indicated by an A1 value of 45 degrees or more) is more useful for ruling out a stiff-knee gait pattern compared to the other clinical measures
Intracranial Stents Being Modeled as a Porous Medium: Flow Simulation in Stented Cerebral Aneurysms
Intracranial aneurysms may be treated by flow diverters, alternatively to stents and coils combination. Numerical simulation allows the assessment of the complex nature of aneurismal flow. Endovascular devices present a rather dense and fine strut network, increasing the complexity of the meshing. We propose an alternative strategy, which is based on the modeling of the device as a porous medium. Two patient-specific aneurysm data sets were reconstructed using conventional clinical setups. The aneurysms selection was done so that intra-aneurismal flow was shear driven in one and inertia driven in the other. Stents and their porous medium analog were positioned at the aneurysm neck. Physiological flow and standard boundary conditions were applied. The comparison between both approaches was done by analyzing the velocity, vorticity, and shear rate magnitudes inside the aneurysm as well as the wall shear stress (WSS) at the aneurysm surface. Simulations without device were also computed. The average flow reduction reaches 76 and 41% for the shear and inertia driven flow models, respectively. When comparing the two approaches, results show a remarkable similarity in the flow patterns and magnitude. WSS, iso-velocity surfaces and velocity on a trans-sectional plane are in fairly good agreement. The root mean squared error on the investigated parameters reaches 20% for aneurysm velocity, 30.6% for aneurysm shear rate, and 47.4% for aneurysm vorticity. It reaches 20.6% for WSS computed on the aneurysm surface. The advantages of this approach reside in its facility to implement and in the gain in computational time. Results predicted by the porous medium approach compare well with the real stent geometry model and allow predicting the main effects of the device on intra-aneurismal flow, facilitating thus the analysi
CONDOR: Long endurance high altitude vehicle, volume 5
The results of a design study resulting in the proposed CONDOR aircraft are presented. The basic requirements are for the aircraft to maintain continuous altitude at or above 45,000 feet for at least a 3-day mission, be able to comfortably support a two-man crew during this period with their field of vision not obstructed to a significant degree, carry a payload of 200 pounds, and provide a power supply to the payload of 2000 watts. The take-off and landing distances must be below 5000. feet, and time to reach cruise altitude must not exceed 3 hours. The subjects discussed are configuration selection, structural analysis, stability and control, crew and payload accomodations, and economic estimates
A phenomenological analysis of antiproton interactions at low energies
We present an optical potential analysis of the antiproton-proton
interactions at low energies. Our optical potential is purely phenomenological,
and has been parametrized on data recently obtained by the Obelix Collaboration
at momenta below 180 MeV/c. It reasonably fits annihilation and elastic data
below 600 MeV/c, and allows us for an evaluation of the elastic cross section
and rho-parameter down to zero kinetic energy. Moreover we show that the
mechanism that depresses antiproton-nucleus annihilation cross sections at low
energies is present in antiproton-proton interactions too.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Do Three Different Passive Assessments of Quadriceps Spasticity Relate to the Functional Activity of Walking for Children Diagnosed with Cerebral Palsy?
A stiff-knee gait pattern is frequently associated with several impairments including quadriceps spasticity in children diagnosed with cerebral palsy (CP). The relationship of clinical measures of quadriceps spasticity and the stiff-knee gait pattern in children diagnosed with CP has not been well established. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the ability of clinical measures of quadriceps spasticity (modified Ashworth scale [MAS], Ely tests, and pendulum test) to categorize a stiff-knee gait pattern in children with CP. Children were categorized as having a stiff-knee gait pattern based on kinematic and EMG gait data. Results of a logistic regression model revealed that the only significant measure was A1 of the pendulum test. Discriminant analysis functions were used to predict group membership (stiff-knee, not stiff-knee gait pattern) for each measure. The A1 of the pendulum test demonstrated the highest classification accuracy and the highest sensitivity compared to the other measures. Therefore, a negative pendulum test (indicated by an A1 value of 45 degrees or more) is more useful for ruling out a stiff-knee gait pattern compared to the other clinical measures
2C-B: A New Psychoactive Phenylethylamine Recently Discovered in Ecstasy Tablets Sold on the Swiss Black Market
This study sought to identify, by means of several analytical methods (GC-MS, HPLC-DAD, CE-DAD, FTIR, and NMR), 4-bromo-2,5-dimethoxyphenethylamine (2C-B), which was found in two sets of tablets obtained from the Swiss black market. Unequivocal identification of 2C-B was only achieved by a combination of mass spectrometric and NMR analysis. Quantitation of 2C-B was performed by HPLC-DAD and CE-DAD. The amounts of 2C-B found in the tablets (3-8 mg) were in the range of the minimum quantity required to induce the effects characteristic of this dru
Intracranial Stents Being Modeled as a Porous Medium: Flow Simulation in Stented Cerebral Aneurysms
Intracranial aneurysms may be treated by flow diverters, alternatively to stents and coils combination. Numerical simulation allows the assessment of the complex nature of aneurismal flow. Endovascular devices present a rather dense and fine strut network, increasing the complexity of the meshing. We propose an alternative strategy, which is based on the modeling of the device as a porous medium. Two patient-specific aneurysm data sets were reconstructed using conventional clinical setups. The aneurysms selection was done so that intra-aneurismal flow was shear driven in one and inertia driven in the other. Stents and their porous medium analog were positioned at the aneurysm neck. Physiological flow and standard boundary conditions were applied. The comparison between both approaches was done by analyzing the velocity, vorticity, and shear rate magnitudes inside the aneurysm as well as the wall shear stress (WSS) at the aneurysm surface. Simulations without device were also computed. The average flow reduction reaches 76 and 41% for the shear and inertia driven flow models, respectively. When comparing the two approaches, results show a remarkable similarity in the flow patterns and magnitude. WSS, iso-velocity surfaces and velocity on a trans-sectional plane are in fairly good agreement. The root mean squared error on the investigated parameters reaches 20% for aneurysm velocity, 30.6% for aneurysm shear rate, and 47.4% for aneurysm vorticity. It reaches 20.6% for WSS computed on the aneurysm surface. The advantages of this approach reside in its facility to implement and in the gain in computational time. Results predicted by the porous medium approach compare well with the real stent geometry model and allow predicting the main effects of the device on intra-aneurismal flow, facilitating thus the analysis
Chronic and Postprandial Metabolic Responses to a Ketogenic Diet Compared to High-Carbohydrate and Habitual Diets in Trained Competitive Cyclists and Triathletes: A Randomized Crossover Trial
Extreme carbohydrate deficits during a ketogenic diet (KD) may result in metabolic adaptations reflective of low energy availability; however, the manifestation of these adaptations outside of exercise have yet to be elucidated in cyclists and triathletes. The purpose of this study is to investigate the chronic and postprandial metabolic responses to a KD compared to a high-carbohydrate diet (HCD) and habitual diet (HD) in trained competitive cyclists and triathletes. For this randomized crossover trial, six trained competitive cyclist and triathletes (F: 4, M: 2) followed an ad libitum KD and HCD for 14 d each after their HD. Fasting energy expenditure (EE), respiratory exchange ratio (RER), and fat and carbohydrate oxidation (FatOx and CarbOx, respectively) were collected during their HD and after 14 d on each randomly assigned KD and HCD. Postprandial measurements were collected on day 14 of each diet following the ingestion of a corresponding test meal. There were no significant differences in fasting EE, RER, FatOx, or CarbOx among diet conditions (all p \u3e 0.050). Although postprandial RER and CarbOx were consistently lower following the KD meal, there were no differences in peak postprandial RER (p = 0.452), RER incremental area under the curve (iAUC; p = 0.416) postprandial FatOx (p = 0.122), peak FatOx (p = 0.381), or FatOx iAUC (p = 0.164) between the KD and HD meals. An ad libitum KD does not significantly alter chronic EE or substrate utilization compared to a HCD or HD; postprandial FatOx appears similar between a KD and HD; this is potentially due to the high metabolic flexibility of cyclists and triathletes and the metabolic adaptations made to habitual high-fat Western diets in practice. Cyclists and triathletes should consider these metabolic similarities prior to a KD given the potential health and performance impairments from severe carbohydrate restriction
Appetite Alterations in Endurance Athletes Following the Ketogenic Diet
Recently, endurance athletes have utilized a very low-carbohydrate diet, the ketogenic diet (KD), to improve performance in competition. The KD may be associated with diminished appetite, but this has not been explored in endurance athletes. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of a KD compared to a high-carbohydrate diet (HCD) and habitual diet (HD) on both subjective and objective measures of appetite in highly-trained cyclists and triathletes. METHODS: Following their HD, six highly-trained (≥80th percentile for V02max based on age and sex) cyclists and triathletes (male = 2, female = 4; age: 37.2 ± 12.2) consumed a KD and HCD, for two weeks each, in a random order. At the end of each diet, perceptions of fasting hunger, desire to eat (DTE), prospective consumption of food (PCF) and fullness, and serum total ghrelin (GHR) and glucagon-like-peptide-1 (GLP-1) were assessed. Immediately after collection of the fasting measures, a test meal containing an energy content that was 60% of measured resting metabolic rate was administered. The test meal composition corresponded with the participants diets (ketogenic meal after the KD, high-carbohydrate meal after the HCD, and a standard American meal after their HD). After ingestion of the test meal, postprandial appetite measures were collected for 3 h at 30, 60, 120, and 180 min. RESULTS: Repeated measures analysis showed that fasting GHR was significantly lower following the KD than the HD (p=0.001) and HCD (p=0.031) and fasting GLP-1 was significantly higher following the KD than the HD (p=0.041) and HCD (p=0.033). Fasting hunger was also significantly higher following the KD compared with the HD (p=0.042) and HCD (p=0.004) and PCF was higher for the KD versus HD (p=0.020). There were no differences between diets for fasting DTE and fullness. Postprandial GHR was significantly lower following consumption of the ketogenic test meal than the standard meal (p=0.007) and high-carbohydrate meal (p=0.031). Peak concentrations of postprandial GHR and incremental area under the curve (iAUC) for GHR were also significantly lower following the ketogenic meal than the standard meal (p=0.025; p=0.016, respectively) and the high-carbohydrate meal (p=0.044; p=0.045, respectively). Postprandial GLP-1 was significantly higher following consumption of the ketogenic test meal than the standard meal (p=0.006) and high-carbohydrate meal (p=0.003). Peak concentrations of postprandial GLP-1 and GLP-1 iAUC were also significantly higher following the ketogenic meal than the standard meal (p=0.009; p=0.004, respectively) and the high-carbohydrate meal (p=0.008; p=0.002, respectively). There were no differences in postprandial ratings of appetite between diets. CONCLUSIONS: Both fasting and postprandial concentrations of GHR were lower and GLP-1 were higher following the KD than the HC and HD in endurance athletes. Subjective ratings of appetite did not correspond with the objective measures of appetite, however. More research is needed to confirm our findings, and to understand the relationship between subjective and objective measures of appetite in endurance athletes
- …