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The role of cross-training in swim-related injuries in master’s swimmers
Orthopedic injuries often interfere with Masters athletes’ pursuit of better performance and might place economic burden on these athletes. PURPOSE: We determined if the incidence of injuries increases with age and the economic burden associated with these injuries and whether the participation in cross-training (running, cycling, dryland resistance training) would reduce swim-related injuries in Masters swimmers. METHODS: An online, comprehensive questionnaire was sent to members of United States Masters Swimming (USMS). Response was received from 499 swimmers (294 females, 20-86 years). Economic burden was determined by total healthcare costs. Binary logistic regression was used to compute the odds ratio (OR) of having an injury, using age as a predictor. Linear regression was used to determine the relationship between injury length and healthcare costs. RESULTS: Participants had been swimming for 13.3±11.5 years, and 47%, 35%, and 40% participated in dryland resistance training, running, and cycling, respectively. For every 1 year increase in age, the odds of having an injury increased by 1.6% (OR=1.016, 95% CI= 1.001-1.030; p<0.05). For every 1 month increase in the length of swim-related injury, healthcare costs increased by 7.4% (p<0.05). The OR for having a swim-related injury were significantly less for individuals who participated in each form of cross-training compared with those who did not (p<0.05 for all). The OR for having a swim-related injury was significantly less for those who reported participating in any number of cross-training activities compared with those who did not participate in any (p<0.05 for all). CONCLUSIONS: Swim-related injuries increased with advancing age; with longer injuries leading to higher healthcare costs. Participating in any form or any number of cross-training activities attenuated the odds of having an injury in Masters swimmersKinesiology and Health Educatio
Approximate solutions for the single soliton in a Skyrmion-type model with a dilaton scalar field
We consider the analytical properties of the single-soliton solution in a
Skyrmion-type Lagrangian that incorporates the scaling properties of quantum
chromodynamics (QCD) through the coupling of the chiral field to a scalar field
interpreted as a bound state of gluons. The model was proposed in previous
works to describe the Goldstone pions in a dense medium, being also useful for
studying the properties of nuclear matter and the in-medium properties of
mesons and nucleons. Guided by an asymptotic analysis of the Euler-Lagrange
equations, we propose approximate analytical representations for the single
soliton solution in terms of rational approximants exponentially localized.
Following the Pad\'e method, we construct a sequence of approximants from the
exact power series solutions near the origin. We find that the convergence of
the approximate representations to the numerical solutions is considerably
improved by taking the expansion coefficients as free parameters and then
minimizing the mass of the Skyrmion using our ans\"atze for the fields. We also
perform an analysis of convergence by computation of physical quantities
showing that the proposed analytical representations are very useful useful for
phenomenological calculations.Comment: 13 pages, 3 eps figures, version to be published in Phys.Rev.
Towards understanding Regge trajectories in holographic QCD
We reassess a work done by Migdal on the spectrum of low-energy vector mesons
in QCD in the light of the AdS-QCD correspondence. Recently, a tantalizing
parallelism was suggested between Migdal's work and a family of holographic
duals of QCD. Despite the intriguing similarities, both approaches face a major
drawback: the spectrum is in conflict with well-tested Regge scaling. However,
it has recently been shown that holographic duals can be modified to accomodate
Regge behavior. Therefore, it is interesting to understand whether Regge
behavior can also be achieved in Migdal's approach. In this paper we
investigate this issue. We find that Migdal's approach, which is based on a
modified Pade approximant, is closely related to the issue of quark-hadron
duality breakdown in QCD.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure. Typos fixed, references added, improved
discussion. Minor changes to match the journal versio
Ignition of binary alloys of uranium
Experiments determine the effect of alloying additives on the ignition of uranium. Data on oxidation rates, ignition temperatures, and burning curves are provided in the report
A Green's function formulation for a nonlinear potential flow solution applicable to transonic flow
Routine determination of inviscid subsonic flow fields about wing-body-tail configurations employing a Green's function approach for numerical solution of the perturbation velocity potential equation is successfully extended into the high subsonic subcritical flow regime and into the shock-free supersonic flow regime. A modified Green's function formulation, valid throughout a range of Mach numbers including transonic, that takes an explicit accounting of the intrinsic nonlinearity in the parent governing partial differential equations is developed. Some considerations pertinent to flow field predictions in the transonic flow regime are discussed
Design of an inert fluid injection system, phase 3 Final report
Research, development, and design of velocity trim system for third stage of Delta launch vehicl
Sirtuin-1: a new potential therapeutic target for rhinosinusitis? Who 'nose'?
Chronic rhinosinusitis is one of the most common upper respiratory tract diseases. In the USA chronic rhinosinusitis has a high prevalence, with around 12% of the population having the disease, and therefore as a consequence the disease has a high health cost burden (1). Chronic rhinosinusitis is classified as an inflammatory nasal disease in which the nasal cavities become inflamed and swollen. The disease can be divided into two distinct disease phenotypes: Chronic rhinosinusitis without nasal polyps (CRSsNP) and Chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) (2). One of the major clinical differences between the two subsets of disease is that CRSwNP patients form nasal polyps within their nasal cavities, with these being described as inflammatory lesions of sinonasal tissue which further narrow this space (3). This leads to symptoms of nasal congestion, rhinorrhoea and facial pressure or pain that is of duration of 12 weeks or longer (3). CRSwNP is believed to be a disease of eosinophilia, with an impaired sinonasal epithelial barrier that causes hypersensitivity to inhaled pathogens and particulates, as well as increased permeability, exacerbating the recruitment of inflammatory cells in response to the stimulus
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