2,155 research outputs found

    Remote ischemic preconditioning in patients with intermittent claudication

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    OBJECTIVE: Remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC) is a phenomenon in which a short period of sub-lethal ischemia in one organ protects against subsequent bouts of ischemia in another organ. We hypothesized that RIPC in patients with intermittent claudication would increase muscle tissue resistance to ischemia, thereby resulting in an increased ability to walk. METHODS: In a claudication clinic, 52 ambulatory patients who presented with complaints of intermittent claudication in the lower limbs associated with an absent or reduced arterial pulse in the symptomatic limb and/or an ankle-brachial index <0.90 were recruited for this study. The patients were randomly divided into three groups (A, B and C). All of the patients underwent two tests on a treadmill according to the Gardener protocol. Group A was tested first without RIPC. Group A was subjected to RIPC prior to the second treadmill test. Group B was subjected to RIPC prior to the first treadmill test and then was subjected to a treadmill test without RIPC. In Group C (control group), both treadmill tests were performed without RIPC. The first and second tests were conducted seven days apart. Brazilian Clinical Trials: RBR-7TF6TM. RESULTS: Group A showed a significant increase in the initial claudication distance in the second test compared to the first test. CONCLUSION: RIPC increased the initial claudication distance in patients with intermittent claudication; however, RIPC did not affect the total walking distance of the patients

    Pigmentos e corantes naturais: entre as Artes e as Ciências

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    NOTA DE APRESENTAÇÃO Na presente colectânea reúnem-se os textos das comunicações apresentadas no «Workshop sobre Pigmentos e Corantes Naturais: Entre as Artes e as Ciências» realizado a 5 de Março de 2005 na Universidade de Évora. Este workshop constituiu a primeira iniciativa pública do Grupo Interdisciplinar de Estudos sobre Pigmentos e Corantes Naturais (GIEPCN) que se encontra sedeado na Universidade de Évora e congrega presentemente investigadores de várias áreas, desde a filosofia, à arte, arquitectura paisagista, história e filosofia das ciências, física, química, biologia e geografia, mantendo como objectivo principal desenvolver e divulgar estudos sobre a compreensão e utilização da cor e dos pigmentos e corantes naturais empregues na sua obtenção. Queremos referir e agradecer mais uma vez o apoio dado à concretização desta iniciativa pela Universidade de Évora, Câmara Municipal de Évora, Fundação Eugénio de Almeida, Delegação Regional da Cultura do Alentejo e Delta Cafés. Neste livro as comunicações são apresentadas pela ordem seguida durante o workshop. As duas primeiras comunicações constituem uma introdução ao mundo dos pigmentos e corantes, nelas encontrará o leitor, uma panorâmica sobre o uso de pigmentos, substâncias inorgânicas de origem natural, e corantes, substâncias orgânicas obtidas a partir de plantas e outros organismos. Apesar dos pigmentos e corantes naturais poderem ter e terem tido outras aplicações é aqui enfatizada a importância dos pigmentos em pintura e dos corantes na tinturaria de fibras têxteis. Nas restantes comunicações abordam-se temas mais específicos. Questões relativas às metodologias utilizadas na identificação de pigmentos e de corantes foram em seguida tratadas, terminando a manhã com uma comunicação sobre o uso de terras ocráceas e argilas coloridas em pintura mural e caiação, prática que ainda persiste nalguns locais do Alentejo. Antes do recomeço dos trabalhos efectuou-se uma visita guiada às Casas Pintadas de Évora, oportunidade que agradecemos à Fundação Eugénio de Almeida. Passamos seguidamente por Goethe e Newton e pelas suas polémicas teorias que buscaram compreender a luz e as cores e destas para apropriação das cores da natureza por artes e ofícios. Somos ainda levados até ao «Chão das Artes», Jardim botânico temático da Casa da Cerca - Centro de Arte Contemporânea de Almada, onde as plantas tintureiras, as artes e as cores se encontram em destaque. Tentamos depois compreender a sinalética das cores da natureza e a estratégia de sedução das flores tendando visualizá-las com os olhos de uma abelha. A relação entre as cores da natureza, nomeadamente das flores e a tinturaria natural é também brevemente abordada. Somos ainda levados numa incursão em que se pode vislumbrar um pouco da importância internacional de tintureiras como o índigo, o pastel e a urzela, as duas últimas com grande importância económica nos Açores dos séculos XVI e XVII. A tinturaria natural da lã no Alentejo e a utilização líquenes e cogumelos em tinturaria natural foram outros temas abordados. Terminámos em beleza com um percurso “Da cor ao sentir – envolvências coloridas” proposto e orientado pela professora Lucília Valente (Departamento de Artes, Universidade de Évora) assistida pela Dr.ª Celeste Alhinho de que se apresentam algumas imagens. Esperamos que a presente compilação possa constituir um instrumento de trabalho e um incentivo para todos os que, em Portugal, nos países de língua portuguesa e onde se leia o português, se dedicam ou interessam pelas fascinantes questões da compreensão da luz e das cores e com a utilização e importância histórica de pigmentos e corantes naturais. Évora, 16 de Agosto de 2006 Alexandra Soveral Dias António Estêvão Candeia

    Cardiorespiratory and Metabolic Changes during Yoga Sessions: The Effects of Respiratory Exercises and Meditation Practices

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    Abstract The novelty of this study was to investigate the changes in cardiorespiratory and metabolic intensity brought about by the practice of pranayamas (breathing exercises of yoga) and meditation during the same hathayoga session. The technique applied was the one advocated by the hatha-yoga system. Nine yoga instructors-five females and four males, mean age of 44 ± 11, 6, were subjected to analysis of the gases expired during three distinct periods of 30 min: rest, respiratory exercises and meditative practice. A metabolic open circuit computerized system was applied (VO2000, MedGraphics-USA). The oxygen uptake (VO 2 ) and the carbon dioxide output (VCO 2 ) were statistically different (P B 0.05) during meditation and pranayama practices when compared with rest. The heart rate also suffered relevant reductions when results at rest were compared with those during meditation. A smaller proportion of lipids was metabolized during meditation practice compared with rest. The results suggest that the meditation used in this study reduces the metabolic rate whereas the specific pranayama technique in this study increases it when compared with the rest state

    Impressões sobre o teste rápido para o HIV entre usuários de drogas injetáveis no Brasil

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    OBJECTIVE: To describe perceptions, experiences, knowledge, beliefs and the willingness of injecting drug users to be HIV tested by using rapid tests. METHODS: A qualitative exploratory study was carried out among injecting drug users from December 2003 to February 2004 in five Brazilian cities, located in four regions of Brazil. A semi-structured interview guide containing both closed and open-ended questions was used to address perceptions about non-conventional testing procedures, and non-traditional ways to provide testing access to injecting drug users. A total of 106 interviews, about 26 per region, were conducted. RESULTS: Characteristics of the population studied, common thoughts about HIV rapid testing, preference for using blood or saliva specimens, and other testing preferences, were presented together with reported advantages and disadvantages of each option. The study findings showed that the use of rapid tests among these users is feasible and that they are willing to be tested using rapid HIV tests, especially if some issues related to privacy and reliability of the test could be addressed. CONCLUSIONS: The study findings showed that rapid tests may be well accepted for this population. These tests can be considered a valuable tool, allowing a more injecting drug users to learn their HIV status and possibly be referred to treatment and should support more effective testing strategies for them.OBJETIVO: Descrever as impressões, experiências, conhecimentos, crenças e a receptividade de usuários de drogas injetáveis para participar das estratégias de testagem rápida para HIV. MÉTODOS: Estudo qualitativo exploratório foi conduzido entre usuários de drogas injetáveis, de dezembro de 2003 a fevereiro de 2004, em cinco cidades brasileiras, localizadas em quatro regiões do País. Um roteiro de entrevista semi-estruturado contendo questões fechadas e abertas foi usado para avaliar percepções desses usuários sobre procedimentos e formas alternativas de acesso e testagem. Foram realizadas 106 entrevistas, aproximadamente 26 por região. RESULTADOS: Características da população estudada, opiniões sobre o teste rápido e preferências por usar amostras de sangue ou saliva foram apresentadas junto com as vantagens e desvantagens associadas a cada opção. Os resultados mostraram a viabilidade do uso de testes rápidos entre usuários de drogas injetáveis e o interesse deles quanto à utilização destes métodos, especialmente se puderem ser equacionadas questões relacionadas à confidencialidade e confiabilidade dos testes. CONCLUSÕES: Os resultados indicam que os testes rápidos para HIV seriam bem recebidos por essa população. Esses testes podem ser considerados uma ferramenta valiosa, ao permitir que mais usuários de drogas injetáveis conheçam sua sorologia para o HIV e possam ser referidos para tratamento, como subsidiar a melhoria das estratégias de testagem entre usuários de drogas injetáveis

    Detection of deletions at 7q11.23 in Williams-Beuren syndrome by polymorphic markers

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    INTRODUCTION: Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS; OMIM 194050) is caused by a hemizygous contiguous gene microdeletion at 7q11.23. Supravalvular aortic stenosis, mental retardation, overfriendliness, and ocular and renal abnormalities comprise typical symptoms in WBS. Although fluorescence in situ hybridization is widely used for diagnostic confirmation, microsatellite DNA markers are considered highly informative and easily manageable. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to test the microsatellite markers for the diagnosis of Williams-Beuren syndrome, to determine the size and parental origin of microdeletion, compare the clinical characteristics between patients with different sizes of the deletion and parental origin. METHODS: We studied 97 patients with clinical diagnosis of Williams-Beuren syndrome using five microsatellite markers: D7S1870, D7S489, D7S613, D7S2476 and D7S489_A. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Using five markers together, the result was informative in all patients. The most informative marker was D7S1870 (78.4%), followed by D7S613 (75.3%), D7S489 (70.1%) and D7S2476 (62.9%). The microdeletion was present in 84 (86.6%) patients and absent in 13 (13.4%) patients. Maternal deletions were found in 52.4% of patients and paternal deletions in 47.6% of patients. The observed size of deletions was 1.55 Mb in 76/ 84 patients (90.5%) and 1.84 Mb in 8/84 patients (9.5%). SVAS as well as ocular and urinary abnormalities were more frequent in the patients with a deletion. There were no clinical differences in relation to either the size or parental origin of the deletion. CONCLUSION: Using these five selected microsatellite markers was informative in all patients, thus can be considered an alternative method for molecular diagnosis in Williams-Beuren syndrome

    New and simple algorithms for stable flow problems

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    Stable flows generalize the well-known concept of stable matchings to markets in which transactions may involve several agents, forwarding flow from one to another. An instance of the problem consists of a capacitated directed network, in which vertices express their preferences over their incident edges. A network flow is stable if there is no group of vertices that all could benefit from rerouting the flow along a walk. Fleiner established that a stable flow always exists by reducing it to the stable allocation problem. We present an augmenting-path algorithm for computing a stable flow, the first algorithm that achieves polynomial running time for this problem without using stable allocation as a black-box subroutine. We further consider the problem of finding a stable flow such that the flow value on every edge is within a given interval. For this problem, we present an elegant graph transformation and based on this, we devise a simple and fast algorithm, which also can be used to find a solution to the stable marriage problem with forced and forbidden edges. Finally, we study the stable multicommodity flow model introduced by Kir\'{a}ly and Pap. The original model is highly involved and allows for commodity-dependent preference lists at the vertices and commodity-specific edge capacities. We present several graph-based reductions that show equivalence to a significantly simpler model. We further show that it is NP-complete to decide whether an integral solution exists

    Mannosylated glycans impair normal T-cell development by reprogramming commitment and repertoire diversity

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    T-cell development ensures the formation of diverse repertoires of T-cell receptors (TCRs) that recognize a variety of antigens. Glycosylation is a major posttranslational modification present in virtually all cells, including T-lymphocytes, that regulates activity/functions. Although these structures are known to be involved in TCR-selection in DP thymocytes, it is unclear how glycans regulate other thymic development processes and how they influence susceptibility to disease. Here, we discovered stage-specific glycome compositions during T-cell development in human and murine thymocytes, as well as dynamic alterations. After restricting the N-glycosylation profile of thymocytes to high-mannose structures, using specific glycoengineered mice (Rag1CreMgat1fl/fl), we showed remarkable defects in key developmental checkpoints, including ß-selection, regulatory T-cell generation and γδT-cell development, associated with increased susceptibility to colon and kidney inflammation and infection. We further demonstrated that a single N-glycan antenna (modeled in Rag1CreMgat2fl/fl mice) is the sine-qua-non condition to ensure normal development. In conclusion, we revealed that mannosylated thymocytes lead to a dysregulation in T-cell development that is associated with inflammation susceptibility.Funded by the “2022 Lupus Research Alliance (LRA) Lupus Innovation Award”. Institutional funding from the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT): projects NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000029, POCI-01/0145-FEDER-016601, POCI-01-0145-FEDER-028772, and PTDC/MEC-REU/28772/2017 (SSP). This study was co-funded by the European Union (ERC Synergy, GlycanSwitch, 101071386). Views and opinions expressed are, however, those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council Executive Agency. The study was also co-funded by the European Union, GlycanTrigger project, Grant Agreement No: 101093997. Views and opinions expressed are, however, those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or European Health and Digital Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them. A grant was received from the Portuguese group of study in autoimmune diseases (NEDAI) to SSP. MMV (PD/BD/135452/2017; COVID/BD/152488/2022) received funding from the FCT

    Effects of exercise intensity and nutrition advice on myocardial function in obese children and adolescents: a multicentre randomised controlled trial study protocol.

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    INTRODUCTION: The prevalence of paediatric obesity is increasing, and with it, lifestyle-related diseases in children and adolescents. High-intensity interval training (HIIT) has recently been explored as an alternate to traditional moderate-intensity continuous training (MICT) in adults with chronic disease and has been shown to induce a rapid reversal of subclinical disease markers in obese children and adolescents. The primary aim of this study is to compare the effects of HIIT with MICT on myocardial function in obese children and adolescents. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Multicentre randomised controlled trial of 100 obese children and adolescents in the cities of Trondheim (Norway) and Brisbane (Australia). The trial will examine the efficacy of HIIT to improve cardiometabolic outcomes in obese children and adolescents. Participants will be randomised to (1) HIIT and nutrition advice, (2) MICT and nutrition advice or (3) nutrition advice. Participants will partake in supervised exercise training and/or nutrition sessions for 3 months. Measurements for study end points will occur at baseline, 3 months (postintervention) and 12 months (follow-up). The primary end point is myocardial function (peak systolic tissue velocity). Secondary end points include vascular function (flow-mediated dilation assessment), quantity of visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissue, myocardial structure and function, body composition, cardiorespiratory fitness, autonomic function, blood biochemistry, physical activity and nutrition. Lean, healthy children and adolescents will complete measurements for all study end points at one time point for comparative cross-sectional analyses. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This randomised controlled trial will generate substantial information regarding the effects of exercise intensity on paediatric obesity, specifically the cardiometabolic health of this at-risk population. It is expected that communication of results will allow for the development of more effective evidence-based exercise prescription guidelines in this population while investigating the benefits of HIIT on subclinical markers of disease. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT01991106
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