6,410 research outputs found

    Seroprevalence of Hepatitis A in Maltese adults

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    The objective of this study was to determine the seroprevalence of hepatitis A virus (HAV) within the adult population of Malta. Serum from blood coincidentally taken for non-acute investigations in patients aged 20 - 85 visiting St. Luke’s Hospital over a three month period in 1996 (n = 320) was retrieved and tested for anti-HAV antibodies by Enzyme Immunoassay. The results obtained from these tests showed seroprevalence levels of anti-HAV antibody. Maltese adults fall into a pattern normally associated with low to intermediate prevalence countries.peer-reviewe

    Clinical practice guidelines : the way ahead

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    A seminar entitled `Clinical Practice Guidelines - The Way Ahead' was organised jointly by the Office of the Director General and the Department of Medicine on 5th March 2005. The aim of the seminar was to introduce the concept of Clinical Practice Guidelines into the framework of the medical and paramedical professions in Malta. It was well attended by around 80 delegates from most of the healthcare professions. The seminar was co-chaired by Dr Alfred Caruana Galizia, Chairman Department of Medicine and Dr Mariella Borg Buontempo, Consultant in Public Health, Office of the Director General.peer-reviewe

    Production rates of neon xenon isotopes by energetic neutrons

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    As a first step in an experimental program to study the behavior of noble gases produced in situ in minerals, a suite of minerals and pure chemicals were irradiated with 14.5 MeV neutrons at LLNL's Rotating Target Neutron Source (RTNS-II) and production rates for noble gases were determined. While neutron effects in meteorites and lunar samples are dominated by low-energy neutron capture, more energetic cosmic-ray secondary neutrons can provide significant depth-dependent contributions to production of cosmogenic nuclides through endothermic reactions such as (n,2n), (n,np), (n,d) and (n,alpha). Production rates for nuclides produced by cosmic-ray secondary neutrons are therefore useful in interpreting shielding histories from the relative abundances of cosmogenic nuclides. Absolute production cross sections were calculated from isotope dilution analyses of NaCl, Mg, CsCl, and Ba(NO3)2 samples, assuming purity, stoichiometry, and quantitative noble gas retention and extraction. Relative production cross sections determined from neon isotopic ratios in the mineral samples were also considered in evaluating the neon production cross sections. Results are presented

    Endocrine disrupting effects on the nesting behaviour of male three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus L

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    The analysis of patterns of temporal variability in the nesting behaviour of male threespined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) exposed to the synthetic oestrogen, 17β-ethinylestradiol, revealed immediate, but transient, treatment-related effects. Gluing frequency and time spent near nest were significantly reduced in exposed fish at the beginning of the experiment. The expression of these behaviours subsequently recovered and there was no effect of treatment on nest building success. The potential causes and implications of these findings are discussed

    Measurements and Code Comparison of Wave Dispersion and Antenna Radiation Resisitance for Helicon Waves in a High Density Cylindrical Plasma Source

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    Helicon wave dispersion and radiation resistance measurements in a high density (ne ≈ 1019 - 1020m-3) and magnetic field (B < 0.2 T) cylindrical plasma source are compared to the results of a recently developed numerical plasma wave code [I. V. Kamensk

    Investigating the Role of Auditory Feedback in a Multimodal Biking Experience

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    Microstructure from ferroelastic transitions using strain pseudospin clock models in two and three dimensions: a local mean-field analysis

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    We show how microstructure can arise in first-order ferroelastic structural transitions, in two and three spatial dimensions, through a local meanfield approximation of their pseudospin hamiltonians, that include anisotropic elastic interactions. Such transitions have symmetry-selected physical strains as their NOPN_{OP}-component order parameters, with Landau free energies that have a single zero-strain 'austenite' minimum at high temperatures, and spontaneous-strain 'martensite' minima of NVN_V structural variants at low temperatures. In a reduced description, the strains at Landau minima induce temperature-dependent, clock-like ZNV+1\mathbb{Z}_{N_V +1} hamiltonians, with NOPN_{OP}-component strain-pseudospin vectors S⃗{\vec S} pointing to NV+1N_V + 1 discrete values (including zero). We study elastic texturing in five such first-order structural transitions through a local meanfield approximation of their pseudospin hamiltonians, that include the powerlaw interactions. As a prototype, we consider the two-variant square/rectangle transition, with a one-component, pseudospin taking NV+1=3N_V +1 =3 values of S=0,±1S= 0, \pm 1, as in a generalized Blume-Capel model. We then consider transitions with two-component (NOP=2N_{OP} = 2) pseudospins: the equilateral to centred-rectangle (NV=3N_V =3); the square to oblique polygon (NV=4N_V =4); the triangle to oblique (NV=6N_V =6) transitions; and finally the 3D cubic to tetragonal transition (NV=3 N_V =3). The local meanfield solutions in 2D and 3D yield oriented domain-walls patterns as from continuous-variable strain dynamics, showing the discrete-variable models capture the essential ferroelastic texturings. Other related hamiltonians illustrate that structural-transitions in materials science can be the source of interesting spin models in statistical mechanics.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure

    Effect of suspension systems on the physiological and psychological responses to sub-maximal biking on simulated smooth and bumpy tracks

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    The aim of this study was to compare the physiological and psychological responses of cyclists riding on a hard tail bicycle and on a full suspension bicycle. Twenty males participated in two series of tests. A test rig held the front axle of the bicycle steady while the rear wheel rotated against a heavy roller with bumps (or no bumps) on its surface. In the first series of tests, eight participants (age 19 – 27 years, body mass 65 – 82 kg) were tested on both the full suspension and hard tail bicycles with and without bumps fitted to the roller. The second series of test repeated the bump tests with a further six participants (age 22 – 31 years, body mass 74 – 94 kg) and also involved an investigation of familiarization effects with the final six participants (age 21 – 30 years, body mass 64 – 80 kg). Heart rate, oxygen consumption (VO&lt;sub&gt;2&lt;/sub&gt;), rating of perceived exertion (RPE) and comfort were recorded during 10 min sub-maximal tests. Combined data for the bumps tests show that the full suspension bicycle was significantly different (P &#60; 0.001) from the hard tail bicycle on all four measures. Oxygen consumption, heart rate and RPE were lower on average by 8.7 (s &#61; 3.6) ml · kg&lt;sup&gt;-1&lt;/sup&gt; · min&lt;sup&gt;-1&lt;/sup&gt;, 32.1 (s &#61; 12.1) beats · min&lt;sup&gt;-1&lt;/sup&gt; and 2.6 (s &#61; 2.0) units, respectively. Comfort scores were higher (better) on average by 1.9 (s &#61; 0.8) units. For the no bumps tests, the only statistically significant difference (P &#61; 0.008) was in VO&lt;sub&gt;2&lt;/sub&gt;, which was lower for the hard tail bicycle by 2.2 (s &#61; 1.7) ml · kg-1 · min&lt;sup&gt;-1&lt;/sup&gt;. The results indicate that the full suspension bicycle provides a physiological and psychological advantage over the hard tail bicycle during simulated sub-maximal exercise on bumps

    A preliminary survey of marine cave habitats in the Maltese Islands

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    The Mediterranean Sea is a hotspot for marine biodiversity. Past studies of Mediterranean marine caves have revealed the unique biocoenotic and ecological characteristics of these habitats, which are protected by European Union legislation. The Maltese Islands have an abundance of partially and fully submerged marine caves with di fferent geomorphological characteristics, yet there have been no systematic studies on these habitats and their associated species. This study is a firrst synthesis of existing information on the biotic assemblages and physical characteristics of Maltese marine caves. The work combines a review of the available information with a preliminary survey of some marine caves in Gozo, during which several species were recorded for the first time for the Maltese Islands. Characteristic species recorded from local marine caves are highlighted, including several species of red and brown algae, sessile invertebrates including bryozoans, ascidians and sponges, and mobile forms including crustaceans and fi sh. A marked zonation from the cave entrance to the inside of the caves was identifi ed: photophilic algae at the mouth of the cave are progressively replaced by more sciaphilic species, followed by a middle section dominated by sessile invertebrates, and then a completely dark inner section that is mostly devoid of sessile organisms. Several species protected by national and international legislation were found to occur.peer-reviewe
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