47 research outputs found

    Quantitative assessment of the stops walking while talking test in the elderly.

    No full text
    OBJECTIVE: To examine whether trunk sway and walking speed differ between elderly "stoppers" and "nonstoppers" during a shorter version of the stops walking while talking (SWWT) test-an observational assessment of impaired dual-task performance-and during a normal walking trial. DESIGN: The original SWWT test was administered on the way to the test room (over a distance of 150m). Then, subjects were asked to walk 2 trials of 8m while wearing a trunk sway measuring device strapped firmly to their lower back. For the first 8-m trial, no questions were asked (control trial). During the second 8-m trial, subjects were asked an easy question (What is your age?) after walking 2m. SETTING: Long-stay geriatric care unit in Switzerland. PARTICIPANTS: Seventeen institutionalized elderly (16 women, 1 man; mean age, 86.3y; range, 79-93y). Subjects had to be able to walk at least 150m and to understand simple questions. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The amplitude of trunk sway angle and angular velocity in the forward-backward (pitch) and side-to-side (roll) directions and the duration of each trial were compared between the two 8-m walking trials with and without a question among subjects who did and did not come to a complete stop. RESULTS: In the original SWWT test, 4 persons stopped walking while talking, compared with 8 persons who stopped in the short (8-m) walking trial when a question was asked. Persons who stopped during the 8-m trial when a question was asked had significantly longer walking durations (by 19s) and larger trunk roll angular displacements (by 5.5 degrees ) during trials, both with and without a question. For both stoppers and nonstoppers, duration was longer during the trial when a question was asked. CONCLUSION: A fixed and brief walking distance, coupled with a single sudden question, provided an effective method of identifying subjects who stop walking while talking. These subjects are those who have slower walking speeds and more unstable trunk control in the roll plane even under normal walking conditions. Our findings support the predictive capabilities of a brief SWWT test for the unstable and fall-prone elderly, as well as the usefulness of objective trunk sway measures to identify gait instabilities

    Fatores de risco para óbito pós-transplante de fígado em crianças

    No full text
    Photograph of water flooded street intersection of West bound Reno Avenue and South Byers Street in Oklahoma City, OK

    Expression of active recombinant human alpha 1-antitrypsin in transgenic rabbits

    No full text
    A DNA construct containing the human alpha 1-antitrypsin gene including 1.5 and 4 kb of 5' and 3' flanking sequences, was microinjected into the pronucleus of rabbit embryos. The recombinant human protein was (a) expressed in the blood circulation of F0 and F1 transgenic rabbits at an average concentration of 1 mg ml-1, (b) shown to be fully active and (c) shown to be separable from its rabbit counterpart. Transgenic rabbits might represent a novel source of human proteins of therapeutic interes

    [Production of human proteins in the blood of transgenic animals]

    No full text
    The human alpha 1-antitrypsin gene has been microinjected into rabbit embryos. A line of transgenic rabbits has thus been established. Human alpha 1-antitrypsin was found in the blood of transgenic animals at the concentration of 1 mg/ml plasma. The human protein was active and separable from its rabbit counterpart. This experiment demonstrates that it is possible to use blood from transgenic animals as a source of recombinant protein

    Nuclear export of proteins in plants: AtXPO1 is the export receptor for leucine-rich nuclear export signals in Arabidopsis thaliana

    No full text
    Haasen D, Köhler C, Neuhaus G, Merkle T. Nuclear export of proteins in plants: AtXPO1 is the export receptor for leucine-rich nuclear export signals in Arabidopsis thaliana. The Plant Journal. 1999;20(6):695-705
    corecore