160 research outputs found

    Daily activities are sufficient to induce dynamic pulmonary hyperinflation and dyspnea in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients

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    OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to measure dynamic lung hyperinflation and its influence on dyspnea perception in moderate and severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients after performing activities of daily living. METHODS: We measured inspiratory capacity, sensation of dyspnea, peripheral oxygen saturation, heart rate and respiratory rate in 19 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients. These measurements were taken at rest and after performing activities of daily living (e.g., going up and down a set of stairs, going up and down a ramp and sweeping and mopping a room). RESULT: The inspiratory capacity of patients at rest was significantly decreased compared to the capacity of patients after performing activities. The change in inspiratory capacity was -0.67 L after going up and down a ramp, -0.46 L after sweeping and mopping a room, and -0.55 L after climbing up and down a set of stairs. Dyspnea perception increased significantly between rest, sweeping and mopping, and going up and down a set of stairs. Dyspnea perception correlated positively with inspiratory capacity variation (r = 0.85) and respiratory rate (r = 0.37) and negatively with peripheral oxygen saturation (r = -0.28). CONCLUSION: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients exhibited reductions in inspiratory capacity and increases in dyspnea perception during commonly performed activities of daily living, which may limit physical performance in these patients

    Daily activities are sufficient to induce dynamic pulmonary hyperinflation and dyspnea in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients

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    OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to measure dynamic lung hyperinflation and its influence on dyspnea perception in moderate and severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients after performing activities of daily living. METHODS: We measured inspiratory capacity, sensation of dyspnea, peripheral oxygen saturation, heart rate and respiratory rate in 19 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients. These measurements were taken at rest and after performing activities of daily living (e.g., going up and down a set of stairs, going up and down a ramp and sweeping and mopping a room). RESULT: The inspiratory capacity of patients at rest was significantly decreased compared to the capacity of patients after performing activities. The change in inspiratory capacity was -0.67 L after going up and down a ramp, -0.46 L after sweeping and mopping a room, and -0.55 L after climbing up and down a set of stairs. Dyspnea perception increased significantly between rest, sweeping and mopping, and going up and down a set of stairs. Dyspnea perception correlated positively with inspiratory capacity variation (r = 0.85) and respiratory rate (r = 0.37) and negatively with peripheral oxygen saturation (r = -0.28). CONCLUSION: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients exhibited reductions in inspiratory capacity and increases in dyspnea perception during commonly performed activities of daily living, which may limit physical performance in these patients

    Fisheries and Prestige. Review and update of studies on the effects of the Prestige oil spill

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    The Prestige oil tanker sank in November 2002 and leaked around 60 000 mt. of heavy oil (type M-100) into the sea. Immediately after the accident, closed areas were established. Among the fleets affected by the closures were four of the most important in ICES Division VIIIc and Sub-division IXa North (bottom trawl, pair trawl, purse seine targeting sardine and hand line targeting mackerel) as they exploit considerable resources, some outside biological safety limits. A fall in effort was observed in all of them, mainly in the first quarter and in sub-divisions VIIIc West and IXa North, although it failed to lead to a very large reduction in the total annual effort of each of the fleets, with the exception of hand line. Pair trawlers can make two types of fishing trip, but differences in specific composition among the three years analysed were not found in either of them. In the case of trawl, five kinds of fishing trips were identified, and changes were only found in the type that targets Norway lobster, hake, megrim and monk (HMMN), with a fall in the presence of Norway lobster

    Atlas de las flotas de pesca españolas de aguas europeas atlánticas

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    The European Commission has acknowledged the value of fleet-based management approaches since the 2001 Green Paper on the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP). In the 2009 Green Paper, this was again recognized as a key area of interest for future development of the CFP, in particular setting the technical basis for the recent Data Collection Framework (DCF), which specifies the standard for national fishery sampling programs within a pan-European context. These policy changes require deeper and up to date knowledge about European fleets and fisheries, thus encouraging Member States to undertake scientific projects in order to obtain appropriate fleet segmentations classifying their fishing activities within a hierarchical structure. The work presented in this book is the first comprehensive analysis of the Spanish fleets operating in Atlantic European waters, taking into account both European and national management requirements. This has been possible due to the availability of official logbooks, which provide the broadest perspective on the activity of Spanish fleets in the study area. The only exception to this is small scale fisheries, pursued mainly by vessels of less than 10 m of length and, therefore, not subject to the requirement of keeping logbooks. In order to match better European and Spanish fleet classifications, a new level (“Management Unit”) is proposed here, which is placed between “modalidad”, used in the Spanish regulations, and “métier”, as is defined by the recent DCF. Spanish national waters comprise four fishing grounds, two of which are in the European Atlantic. Nine Management Units have been identified in the Northern Spanish fishing ground: bottom otter trawl (OTB10), bottom pair trawl (PTB10), purse seine (PSN10), set long line (LLS10), set gillnet targeting hake (GNS11), set gillnet targeting anglerfish (GNS12), trolling (LTL11) and bait-boats (LHP11) targeting albacore, and hand line targeting mackerel (LHP12). Two Management Units have been identified in Southern Spanish waters: bottom otter trawl (OTB20) and purse seine (PSN20). In European waters outside Spain, six Management Units have been identified in non-Iberian waters: bottom otter trawl (OTB50), bottom pair trawl (PTB50), set long line (LLS50) and set gillnet (GNS50) by vessels of more than 100 GRT, and set long line (LLS60) and set gillnet (GNS60) by vessels of less than 100 GRT. Finally, one Management Unit using bottom otter trawl has been found to operate in Portuguese waters (OTB70). Unluckily, the analyses made on the logbooks of the Spanish fleet using drifting long line could not be used to categorize this fleet due to the geographical limitations of the logbooks available. After detailed analyses and categorization of the Management Units, the results obtained were used in an exercise to test the usefulness and feasibility of using logbook information to answer some DCF requirements. This revealed that logbooks are an essential tool to deal with bioeconomic challenges posed by the new CFP.Versión del edito

    Guía práctica para el estudio del crecimiento de especies demersales en el Área ICES

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    Versión revisada 05-02-2015En el documento se presenta una síntesis de los métodos empleados para estudiar el crecimiento y la edad, mediante estructuras calcificadas (otolitos y vértebras), de las especies ícticas de interés comercial para la flota española en el área del ICES. El estudio de estas especies forma parte del requerimiento que la Comisión Europea ha establecido para el Programa Español de Recopilación, Gestión y Uso de Datos Pesqueros (PNDB) en base a los desembarcos nacionales, según establece la normativa vigente de la Unión Europea (UE). En este Programa está involucrado el Instituto Español de Oceanografía (IEO), y entre otros el proyecto BIODEMER, desarrollado en el Centro Oceanográfico de Vigo. Las especies objeto de estudio en este proyecto son: merluza ("Merluccius merluccius"), abadejo ("Pollachius pollachius"), congrio ("Conger conger"), faneca ("Trisopterus luscus"), gallineta ("Helicolenus dactylopterus"), locha ("Phycis blennoides"), maruca ("Molva molva"), maruca española ("Molva macrophthalma"), mendo ("Glyptocephalus cynoglossus"); incluyendo las especies de descarte: arete ("Chelidonichthys cuculus") y goyeta ("Microchirus variegatus"). Para complementar este documento se ha adjuntado el anexo: Fichas técnicas de Biología y crecimiento de 11 especies demersales en el área ICES, en el que se detallan para cada especie los protocolos aplicados en la interpretación de la edad. Para cada caso se incluye una revisión de la bibliografía existente, así como de los talleres e intercambios realizados sobre estudios de crecimiento y edad
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