283 research outputs found

    The influence of artificially increased hip and trunk stiffness on balance control in man

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    Lightweight corsets were used to produce mid-body stiffening, rendering the hip and trunk joints practically inflexible. To examine the effect of this artificially increased stiffness on balance control, we perturbed the upright stance of young subjects (20-34years of age) while they wore one of two types of corset or no corset at all. One type, the "half-corset”, only increased hip stiffness, and the other, the "full-corset”, increased stiffness of the hips and trunk. The perturbations consisted of combined roll and pitch rotations of the support surface (7.5deg, 60deg/s) in one of six different directions. Outcome measures were biomechanical responses of the legs, trunk, arms and head, and electromyographic (EMG) responses from leg, trunk, and upper arm muscles. With the full-corset, a decrease in forward stabilising trunk pitch rotation compared to the no-corset condition occurred for backward pitch tilts of the support surface. In contrast, the half-corset condition yielded increased forward trunk motion. Trunk backward pitch motion after forwards support-surface perturbations was the same for all corset conditions. Ankle torques and lower leg angle changes in the pitch direction were decreased for both corset conditions for forward pitch tilts of the support-surface but unaltered for backward tilts. Changes in trunk roll motion with increased stiffness were profound. After onset of a roll support-surface perturbation, the trunk rolled in the opposite direction to the support-surface tilt for the no-corset and half-corset conditions, but in the same direction as the tilt for the full-corset condition. Initial head roll angular accelerations (at 100ms) were larger for the full-corset condition but in the same direction (opposite platform tilt) for all conditions. Arm roll movements were initially in the same direction as trunk movements, and were followed by large compensatory arm movements only for the full-corset condition. Leg muscle (soleus, peroneus longus, but not tibialis anterior) balance-correcting responses were reduced for roll and pitch tilts under both corset conditions. Responses in paraspinals were also reduced. These results indicate that young healthy normals cannot rapidly modify movement strategies sufficiently to account for changes in link flexibility following increases in hip and trunk stiffness. The changes in leg and trunk muscle responses failed to achieve a normal roll or pitch trunk end position at 700ms (except for forward tilt rotations), even though head accelerations and trunk joint proprioception seemed to provide information on changed trunk movement profiles over the first 300ms following the perturbation. The major adaptation to stiffness involved increased use of arm movements to regain stability. The major differences in trunk motion for the no-corset, half-corset and full-corset conditions support the concept of a multi-link pendulum with different control dynamics in the pitch and roll planes as a model of human stance. Stiffening of the hip and trunk increases the likelihood of a loss of balance laterally and/or backwards. Thus, these results may have implications for the elderly and others, with and without disease states, who stiffen for a variety of reason

    The role of antibiotics in the treatment of chronic prostatitis: A consensus statement

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    Practical guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of chronic prostatitis are presented. Chronic prostatitis is classified as chronic bacterial prostatitis (culture-positive) and chronic inflammatory prostatitis (culture-negative). If chronic bacterial prostatitis is suspected, based on relevant symptoms or recurrent UTIs, underlying urological conditions should be excluded by the following tests: rectal examination, midstream urine culture and residual urine. The diagnosis should be confirmed by the Meares and Stamey technique. Antibiotic therapy is recommended for acute exacerbations of chronic prostatitis, chronic bacterial prostatitis and chronic inflammatory prostatitis, if there is clinical, bacteriological or supporting immunological evidence of prostate infection. Unless a patient presents with fever, antibiotic treatment should not be initiated immediately except in cases of acute prostatitis or acute episodes in a patient with chronic bacterial prostatitis. The work-up, with the appropriate investigations should be done first, within a reasonable time period which, preferably, should not be longer than 1 week. During this period, nonspecific treatment, such as appropriate analgesia to relieve symptoms, should be given. The minimum duration of antibiotic treatment should be 2-4 weeks. If there is no improvement in symptoms, treatment should be stopped and reconsidered. However, if there is improvement, it should be continued for at least a further 2-4 weeks to achieve clinical cure and, hopefully, eradication of the causative pathogen. Antibiotic treatment should not be given for 6-8 weeks without an appraisal of its effectiveness. Currently used antibiotics are reviewed. Of these, the fluoroquinolones ofloxacin and ciprofloxacin are recommended because of their favourable antibacterial spectrum and pharmacokinetic profile. A number of clinical trials are recommended and a standard study design is proposed to help resolve some outstanding issues

    Exact thermodynamic Casimir forces for an interacting three-dimensional model system in film geometry with free surfaces

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    The limit n to infinity of the classical O(n) phi^4 model on a 3d film with free surfaces is studied. Its exact solution involves a self-consistent 1d Schr\"odinger equation, which is solved numerically for a partially discretized as well as for a fully discrete lattice model. Numerically exact results are obtained for the scaled Casimir force at all temperatures. Obtained via a single framework, they exhibit all relevant qualitative features of the thermodynamic Casimir force known from wetting experiments on Helium-4 and Monte Carlo simulations, including a pronounced minimum below the bulk critical point.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Nutrient-Dense Orange-Fleshed Sweetpotato: Advances in Drought-Tolerance Breeding and Understanding of Management Practices for Sustainable Next-Generation Cropping Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa

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    Almost half of children < 5 years old living in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) suffer from vitamin A deficiency and 60% suffer from iron deficiency. Thus, there has been a strong commitment to breeding for, promoting awareness of, and delivering adapted pro-vitamin A rich orange-fleshed sweetpotato (OFSP) in SSA during the past two decades and for enhanced iron content since 2014. This review article focuses on major breeding efforts in SSA to enhance the drought tolerance of OFSP and reviews integrated crop management practices for improved and sustained sweetpotato production in SSA farming systems. Under climate change, the frequency and severity of droughts is expected to increase. Technical issues are presented in the context of addressing challenges along the entire value chain to ensure adoption. First, the use of an accelerated breeding scheme reduced the breeding cycle from 8–10 to 4–5 years. Since 2010, 19 drought-tolerant OFSP cultivars have been released in Mozambique, 7 in Malawi, and 2 in South Africa. Moreover, research in four breeding populations using the heterosis exploiting breeding scheme (HEBS) demonstrated that within one breeding cycle of 5 years, clones with significantly higher root yield, abiotic tolerance, host plant resistance to pests and diseases, and early maturity can be produced. In the future, HEBS will be combined with greater use of modern genomic tools, new phenotyping tools, and CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene editing. Second, beyond genetic enhancements, evidence is presented that using improved crop management systems, existing sweet potato yields can be increased 2–4 times. Current knowledge is reviewed concerning sweetpotato’s role in diverse farming systems, but integrated crop management is clearly under researched. Third, the outlook for drought tolerance breeding indicates that two distinct classes of nutrient-rich cultivars are emerging: (1) Early maturing cultivars (< 4 month growing period) that escape drought but also serve humid environments with small landholding size per capita; and (2) Medium maturing (4–6 month growing period) cultivars that avoid drought, are drought tolerant and exhibit continuous root formation. Increasing commercialization of the crop and climate change will drive demand, and the willingness of farmers to invest in improved sweetpotato crop management

    Thermodynamic Casimir effects involving interacting field theories with zero modes

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    Systems with an O(n) symmetrical Hamiltonian are considered in a dd-dimensional slab geometry of macroscopic lateral extension and finite thickness LL that undergo a continuous bulk phase transition in the limit LL\to\infty. The effective forces induced by thermal fluctuations at and above the bulk critical temperature Tc,T_{c,\infty} (thermodynamic Casimir effect) are investigated below the upper critical dimension d=4d^*=4 by means of field-theoretic renormalization group methods for the case of periodic and special-special boundary conditions, where the latter correspond to the critical enhancement of the surface interactions on both boundary planes. As shown previously [\textit{Europhys. Lett.} \textbf{75}, 241 (2006)], the zero modes that are present in Landau theory at Tc,T_{c,\infty} make conventional RG-improved perturbation theory in 4ϵ4-\epsilon dimensions ill-defined. The revised expansion introduced there is utilized to compute the scaling functions of the excess free energy and the Casimir force for temperatures T\geqT_{c,\infty} as functions of LL/ξ\mathsf{L}\equiv L/\xi_\infty, where ξ\xi_\infty is the bulk correlation length. Scaling functions of the LL-dependent residual free energy per area are obtained whose L0\mathsf{L}\to0 limits are in conformity with previous results for the Casimir amplitudes ΔC\Delta_C to O(ϵ3/2)O(\epsilon^{3/2}) and display a more reasonable small-L\mathsf{L} behavior inasmuch as they approach the critical value ΔC\Delta_C monotonically as L0\mathsf{L}\to 0.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure

    Excess free energy and Casimir forces in systems with long-range interactions of van-der-Waals type: General considerations and exact spherical-model results

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    We consider systems confined to a dd-dimensional slab of macroscopic lateral extension and finite thickness LL that undergo a continuous bulk phase transition in the limit LL\to\infty and are describable by an O(n) symmetrical Hamiltonian. Periodic boundary conditions are applied across the slab. We study the effects of long-range pair interactions whose potential decays as bx(d+σ)b x^{-(d+\sigma)} as xx\to\infty, with 2<σ<42<\sigma<4 and 2<d+σ62<d+\sigma\leq 6, on the Casimir effect at and near the bulk critical temperature Tc,T_{c,\infty}, for 2<d<42<d<4. For the scaled reduced Casimir force per unit cross-sectional area, we obtain the form L^{d} {\mathcal F}_C/k_BT \approx \Xi_0(L/\xi_\infty) + g_\omega L^{-\omega}\Xi\omega(L/\xi_\infty) + g_\sigma L^{-\omega_\sigm a} \Xi_\sigma(L \xi_\infty). The contribution gσ\propto g_\sigma decays for TTc,T\neq T_{c,\infty} algebraically in LL rather than exponentially, and hence becomes dominant in an appropriate regime of temperatures and LL. We derive exact results for spherical and Gaussian models which confirm these findings. In the case d+σ=6d+\sigma =6, which includes that of nonretarded van-der-Waals interactions in d=3d=3 dimensions, the power laws of the corrections to scaling b\propto b of the spherical model are found to get modified by logarithms. Using general RG ideas, we show that these logarithmic singularities originate from the degeneracy ω=ωσ=4d\omega=\omega_\sigma=4-d that occurs for the spherical model when d+σ=6d+\sigma=6, in conjunction with the bb dependence of gωg_\omega.Comment: 28 RevTeX pages, 12 eps figures, submitted to PR

    Critical Casimir forces and adsorption profiles in the presence of a chemically structured substrate

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    Motivated by recent experiments with confined binary liquid mixtures near demixing, we study the universal critical properties of a system, which belongs to the Ising universality class, in the film geometry. We employ periodic boundary conditions in the two lateral directions and fixed boundary conditions on the two confining surfaces, such that one of them has a spatially homogeneous adsorption preference while the other one exhibits a laterally alternating adsorption preference, resembling locally a single chemical step. By means of Monte Carlo simulations of an improved Hamiltonian, so that the leading scaling corrections are suppressed, numerical integration, and finite-size scaling analysis we determine the critical Casimir force and its universal scaling function for various values of the aspect ratio of the film. In the limit of a vanishing aspect ratio the critical Casimir force of this system reduces to the mean value of the critical Casimir force for laterally homogeneous ++ and +- boundary conditions, corresponding to the surface spins on the two surfaces being fixed to equal and opposite values, respectively. We show that the universal scaling function of the critical Casimir force for small but finite aspect ratios displays a linear dependence on the aspect ratio which is solely due to the presence of the lateral inhomogeneity. We also analyze the order-parameter profiles at criticality and their universal scaling function which allows us to probe theoretical predictions and to compare with experimental data.Comment: revised version, section 5.2 expanded; 53 pages, 12 figures, iopart clas

    Casimir force in O(n) lattice models with a diffuse interface

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    On the example of the spherical model we study, as a function of the temperature TT, the behavior of the Casimir force in O(n) systems with a diffuse interface and slab geometry d1×L\infty^{d-1}\times L, where 2<d<42<d<4 is the dimensionality of the system. We consider a system with nearest-neighbor anisotropic interaction constants JJ_\parallel parallel to the film and JJ_\perp across it. The model represents the nn\to\infty limit of O(n) models with antiperiodic boundary conditions applied across the finite dimension LL of the film. We observe that the Casimir amplitude ΔCasimir(dJ,J)\Delta_{\rm Casimir}(d|J_\perp,J_\parallel) of the anisotropic dd-dimensional system is related to that one of the isotropic system ΔCasimir(d)\Delta_{\rm Casimir}(d) via ΔCasimir(dJ,J)=(J/J)(d1)/2ΔCasimir(d)\Delta_{\rm Casimir}(d|J_\perp,J_\parallel)=(J_\perp/J_\parallel)^{(d-1)/2} \Delta_{\rm Casimir}(d). For d=3d=3 we find the exact Casimir amplitude ΔCasimir=[Cl2(π/3)/3ζ(3)/(6π)](J/J) \Delta_{\rm Casimir}= [ {\rm Cl}_2 (\pi/3)/3-\zeta (3)/(6 \pi)](J_\perp/J_\parallel), as well as the exact scaling functions of the Casimir force and of the helicity modulus Υ(T,L)\Upsilon(T,L). We obtain that βcΥ(Tc,L)=(2/π2)[Cl2(π/3)/3+7ζ(3)/(30π)](J/J)L1\beta_c\Upsilon(T_c,L)=(2/\pi^{2}) [{\rm Cl}_2(\pi/3)/3+7\zeta(3)/(30\pi)] (J_\perp/J_\parallel)L^{-1}, where TcT_c is the critical temperature of the bulk system. We find that the effect of the helicity is thus strong that the Casimir force is repulsive in the whole temperature region.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
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