1,466 research outputs found
Orthodontic palatal implants: clinical technique
The aim of this paper is to familiarize the readers with some of the clinical considerations necessary to ensure successful use of mid-palatal implants. Both surgical and technical aspects will be discussed along with a description of impression techniques used
Midpalatal implants vs headgear for orthodontic anchorage - a randomized clinical trial: Cephalometric results
OBJECTIVE: To compare the clinical effectiveness of the mid-palatal implant as a method of reinforcing anchorage during orthodontic treatment with that of conventional extra-oral anchorage.
DESIGN: A prospective, randomized, clinical trial
Setting: Chesterfield and North Derbyshire Royal Hospital NHS Trust and the Charles Clifford Dental Hospital, Sheffield.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: 51 orthodontic patients between the ages of 12 and 39, with a class II division 1 malocclusion and ‘absolute anchorage’ requirements were randomly allocated to either receive a mid-palatal implant or headgear to reinforce orthodontic anchorage. The main outcome of the trial was to compare the mesial movement of the molars and incisors of the two treatment groups between T1 (start) and T2 (end of anchorage reinforcement) as measured from cephalometric radiographs.
RESULTS: The reproducibility of the measuring technique was acceptable. There were significant differences between the T1 and T2 measurements within the implant group for the position of the maxillary central incisor (p<0.001), position of the maxillary molar (p=0.009) and position of the mandibular molar (p<0.001). There were significant differences within the headgear group for the position of the mandibular central incisor (p<0.045), position of the maxillary molar (p=<0.001) and position of the mandibular molar (p<0.001). All the skeletal and dental points moved mesially more in the headgear group during treatment than in the implant group. These ranged from an average of 0.5mm more mesial for the mandibular permanent molar to 1.5mm more mesial for the maxillary molar and mandibular base. None of the treatment changes between the implant and headgear groups were statistically significant.
CONCLUSIONS: Mid-palatal implants are an acceptable technique for reinforcing anchorage in the orthodontic patient
Midpalatal implants vs headgear for orthodontic anchorage - a randomized clinical trial: Cephalometric results
OBJECTIVE: To compare the clinical effectiveness of the mid-palatal implant as a method of reinforcing anchorage during orthodontic treatment with that of conventional extra-oral anchorage.
DESIGN: A prospective, randomized, clinical trial
Setting: Chesterfield and North Derbyshire Royal Hospital NHS Trust and the Charles Clifford Dental Hospital, Sheffield.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: 51 orthodontic patients between the ages of 12 and 39, with a class II division 1 malocclusion and ‘absolute anchorage’ requirements were randomly allocated to either receive a mid-palatal implant or headgear to reinforce orthodontic anchorage. The main outcome of the trial was to compare the mesial movement of the molars and incisors of the two treatment groups between T1 (start) and T2 (end of anchorage reinforcement) as measured from cephalometric radiographs.
RESULTS: The reproducibility of the measuring technique was acceptable. There were significant differences between the T1 and T2 measurements within the implant group for the position of the maxillary central incisor (p<0.001), position of the maxillary molar (p=0.009) and position of the mandibular molar (p<0.001). There were significant differences within the headgear group for the position of the mandibular central incisor (p<0.045), position of the maxillary molar (p=<0.001) and position of the mandibular molar (p<0.001). All the skeletal and dental points moved mesially more in the headgear group during treatment than in the implant group. These ranged from an average of 0.5mm more mesial for the mandibular permanent molar to 1.5mm more mesial for the maxillary molar and mandibular base. None of the treatment changes between the implant and headgear groups were statistically significant.
CONCLUSIONS: Mid-palatal implants are an acceptable technique for reinforcing anchorage in the orthodontic patient
Effects of Excess Dietary Selenite on Lead Toxicity in Sheep
The hypothesis that excess dietary selenite ameliorates lead (Pb)
toxicosis in domestic sheep was tested. Twenty 6-8-yr-old ewes fed
alfalfa pellets were assigned to the following treatments: (1) control;
(2) 9.8 mg Pb/kg body weight (b.w.)/d as PbCO3; (3) 3 mg Se/anirnal/d
as Na2SeO3?·5H2O; or (4) a combination of treatments 2 and 3. The
gelatin-encapsulated salts were given orally. The study was terminated
on d 104, by which time three animals in the Pb group and all
five animals in the Pb + Se group had died. All remaining animals
were slaughtered on d 104. Lead and Se concentrations were determined
in six biweekly-collected blood samples and in soft tissues and
bone. Sheep on the control and Se treatments had similar feed intakes,
body weights, and tissue Pb levels. Those in the Pb + Se group
had lower feed intake, but higher blood Pb values compared with the
Pb group. Feeding either element increased (P < 0.05) the concentration
of that element in blood, kidney, liver, spleen, and bone.
Muscle-Pb concentrations were not affected (P < 0.05) by treatment.
Selenium concentrations in kidney, liver, and muscle were greater (P
< 0.05), whereas those in heart were less (P < 0.05) for the Pb + Se
group than for the Se Group. Clinical signs associated with Pb toxicosis
noted in other animals were not observed in the poisoned sheep in
this study. Selenite did not protect sheep against Pb toxicity and
likely served as a synergistic factor
Mining transcriptomic data to study the origins and evolution of a plant allopolyploid complex
Allopolyploidy combines two progenitor genomes in the same nucleus. It is a common speciation process, especially in plants. Deciphering the origins of polyploid species is a complex problem due to, among other things, extinct progenitors, multiple origins, gene flow between different polyploid populations, and loss of parental contributions through gene or chromosome loss. Among the perennial species of Glycine, the plant genus that includes the cultivated soybean (G. max), are eight allopolyploid species, three of which are studied here. Previous crossing studies and molecular systematic results from two nuclear gene sequences led to hypotheses of origin for these species from among extant diploid species. We use several phylogenetic and population genomics approaches to clarify the origins of the genomes of three of these allopolyploid species using single nucleotide polymorphism data and a guided transcriptome assembly. The results support the hypothesis that all three polyploid species are fixed hybrids combining the genomes of the two putative parents hypothesized on the basis of previous work. Based on mapping to the soybean reference genome, there appear to be no large regions for which one homoeologous contribution is missing. Phylogenetic analyses of 27 selected transcripts using a coalescent approach also are consistent with multiple origins for these allopolyploid species, and suggest that origins occurred within the last several hundred thousand years
Expression‐level support for gene dosage sensitivity in three Glycine subgenus Glycine polyploids and their diploid progenitors
Retention or loss of paralogs following duplication correlates strongly with the function of the gene and whether the gene was duplicated by whole\u2010genome duplication (WGD) or by small\u2010scale duplication. Selection on relative gene dosage (to maintain proper stoichiometry among interacting proteins) has been invoked to explain these patterns of duplicate gene retention and loss. In order for gene dosage to be visible to natural selection, there must necessarily be a correlation between gene copy number and gene expression level (transcript abundance), but this has rarely been examined.
We used RNA\u2010Seq data from seven Glycine subgenus Glycine species (three recently formed allotetraploids and their four diploid progenitors) to determine if expression patterns and gene dosage responses at the level of transcription are consistent with selection on relative gene dosage.
As predicted, metabolic pathways and gene ontologies that are putatively dosage\u2010sensitive based on duplication history exhibited reduced expression variance across species, and more coordinated expression responses to recent WGD, relative to putatively dosage\u2010insensitive networks.
We conclude that selection on relative dosage has played an important role in shaping gene networks in Glycine
Atomic Bose Gas with Negative Scattering Length
We derive the equation of state of a dilute atomic Bose gas with an
interatomic interaction that has a negative scattering length and argue that
two continuous phase transitions, occuring in the gas due to quantum degeneracy
effects, are preempted by a first-order gas-liquid or gas-solid transition
depending on the details of the interaction potential. We also discuss the
consequences of this result for future experiments with magnetically trapped
spin-polarized atomic gasses such as lithium and cesium.Comment: 16 PAGES, REVTEX 3.0, ACCEPTED FOR PUBLICATION IN PHYS. REV.
Quantum correlated twin atomic beams via photo-dissociation of a molecular Bose-Einstein condensate
We study the process of photo-dissociation of a molecular Bose-Einstein
condensate as a potential source of strongly correlated twin atomic beams. We
show that the two beams can possess nearly perfect quantum squeezing in their
relative numbers.Comment: Corrected LaTeX file layou
Theoretical study of the absorption spectra of the sodium dimer
Absorption of radiation from the sodium dimer molecular states correlating to
Na(3s)-Na(3s) is investigated theoretically. Vibrational bound and continuum
transitions from the singlet X Sigma-g+ state to the first excited singlet A
Sigma-u+ and singlet B Pi-u states and from the triplet a Sigma-u+ state to the
first excited triplet b Sigma-g+ and triplet c Pi-g states are studied
quantum-mechanically. Theoretical and experimental data are used to
characterize the molecular properties taking advantage of knowledge recently
obtained from ab initio calculations, spectroscopy, and ultra-cold atom
collision studies. The quantum-mechanical calculations are carried out for
temperatures in the range from 500 to 3000 K and are compared with previous
calculations and measurements where available.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, revtex, eps
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