1,041 research outputs found

    Prevalence and risk factors for over weight/obesity in Leiria’s 7th graders (2009-2013)

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    Overweight/obesity (Ow/Ob) are well documented risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVDRF), and its prevalence has been increasing even in children and adolescents, over the past decades

    Handedness asymmetries and manual dexterity performances between right and left-handedness children

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    info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Airborne PM Impact on Health, Overview of Variables, and Key Factors to Decision Making in Air Quality

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    This chapter intends to contribute to the understanding of the multiple aspects related to particulate matter (PM) in an air urban environment, in particular, regarding its impact on human health. A general overview of variables and key factors is presented to identify, relate, and understand the diverse and multidisciplinary variables that contribute to PM concentration in urban environments associated with health impacts. This relation is difficult to quantify, given the numerous variables that are interlinked due to the multidisciplinary aspects involved. Our aim is to identify the main multidisciplinary aspects, namely, meteorology, urban geometry, buildings, roads and footpaths, road traffic, industries, air concentration measurements, and health. The main strategic aspects for decision making related to airborne PM impact on health are also discussed

    Application of fractional algorithms in control of a quad rotor flight

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    This paper studies the application of fractional algorithms in the control of a quad-rotor rotorcraft machine. The main contribution of this paper focuses in the development a flight simulator to provide the evaluation model of the quad-rotor. Several basic maneuvers are investigated, namely the elevation and the position control.N/

    Advanced antibacterial wound dressing produced with natural-origin materials

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    Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology for the OsteoGraphy (PTDC/EME- MFE/2008) and MaxBone (PTDC/SAU -ENB/115179/2009) project. This work was partly supported by “RL1 - ABMR - NORTE-01-0124- FEDER-000016” cofinanced by North Portugal Regional Operational Programme (ON.2 – O Novo Norte), under the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF), through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) project.

    Collective transport of droplets through porous media

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    The flow of deformable particles, such as droplets, dragged by a fluid, through a network of narrow pores inside rocks or other porous media is key in a range of applications, from enhanced oil recovery and water filtration to lab on a chip sorting of cells. The collective dynamics and its impact on the flow are poorly understood. Here, using droplets as a prototype, we show that collective transport can occur for conditions under which a single particle would get trapped at a pore channel. When a series of droplets gets trapped, the fluids flow is affected significantly, leading to an increase of the pressure difference across the pore channels, which in turn squeezes the particles through the channels. We analyze the conditions for a single droplet to flow through one pore and derive the corresponding Bond number. We also obtain a rule for the collective flow of droplets in porous media

    Aryl hydrocarbon receptor and cysteine redox dynamics underlie (Mal)adaptive mechanisms to chronic intermittent hypoxia in kidney cortex

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    Funding Information: Funding: This work was supported by Fundação para Ciência e Tecnologia [PTDC/MED-TOX/30418/2017] and iNOVA4Health [UID/Multi/04462/2013]. M.J.C., F.L.-C., N.R.C., C.G.-D. and J.M. are supported by FCT grants [SFRH/BD/131331/2017, PD/BD/128337/2017, PD/BD/114257/2016, and PD/BD/105892/2014, PTDC/MED-TOX/30418/2017 respectively]. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.We hypothesized that an interplay between aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) and cysteine-related thiolome at the kidney cortex underlies the mechanisms of (mal)adaptation to chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH), promoting arterial hypertension (HTN). Using a rat model of CIH-HTN, we investigated the impact of short-term (1 and 7 days), mid-term (14 and 21 days, pre-HTN), and long-term intermittent hypoxia (IH) (up to 60 days, established HTN) on Cyp1a1 protein level (a sensitive hallmark of AhR activation) and cysteine-related thiol pools. We found that acute and chronic IH had opposite effects on Cyp1a1 and the thiolome. While short-term IH decreased Cyp1a1 and increased protein-S-thiolation, long-term IH increased Cyp1a1 and free oxidized cysteine. In addition, an in vitro administration of cystine, but not cysteine, to human endothelial cells increased Cyp1a1 expression, supporting cystine as a putative AhR activator. This study supports Cyp1a1 as a biomarker of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) severity and oxidized pools of cysteine as risk indicator of OSA-HTN. This work contributes to a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying the phenotype of OSA-HTN, mimicked by this model, which is in line with precision medicine challenges in OSA.publishersversionpublishe

    Mineralization of Sialoliths Investigated by Ex Vivo and In Vivo X-ray Computed Tomography

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    The fraction of organic matter present affects the fragmentation behavior of sialoliths; thus, pretherapeutic information on the degree of mineralization is relevant for a correct selection of lithotripsy procedures. This work proposes a methodology for in vivo characterization of salivary calculi in the pretherapeutic context. Sialoliths were characterized in detail by X-ray computed microtomography (μCT) in combination with atomic emission spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. Correlative analysis of the same specimens was performed by in vivo and ex vivo helical computed tomography (HCT) and ex vivo μCT. The mineral matter in the sialoliths consisted essentially of apatite (89 vol%) and whitlockite (11 vol%) with average density of 1.8 g/cm3. In hydrated conditions, the mineral mass prevailed with 53 ± 13 wt%, whereas the organic matter, with a density of 1.2 g/cm3, occupied 65 ± 10% of the sialoliths' volume. A quantitative relation between sialoliths mineral density and X-ray attenuation is proposed for both HCT and μCT.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Comprehensive evaluation of the linear stability of Alfvén eigenmodes driven by alpha particles in an ITER baseline scenario

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    The linear stability of Alfvén eigenmodes in the presence of fusion-born alpha particles is thoroughly assessed for two variants of an ITER baseline scenario, which differ significantly in their core and pedestal temperatures. A systematic approach based on CASTOR-K (Borba and Kerner 1999 J. Comput. Phys. 153 101; Nabais et al 2015 Plasma Sci. Technol. 17 89) is used that considers all possible eigenmodes for a given magnetic equilibrium and determines their growth rates due to alpha-particle drive and Landau damping on fuel ions, helium ashes and electrons. It is found that the fastest growing instabilities in the aforementioned ITER scenario are core-localized, low-shear toroidal Alfvén eigenmodes. The largest growth-rates occur in the scenario variant with higher core temperatures, which has the highest alpha-particle density and density gradient, for eigenmodes with toroidal mode numbers . Although these eigenmodes suffer significant radiative damping, which is also evaluated, their growth rates remain larger than those of the most unstable eigenmodes found in the variant of the ITER baseline scenario with lower core temperatures, which have and are not affected by radiative damping
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