56 research outputs found

    Effect of burning alfalfa stubble for insect pest control on seed yield

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    Burning alfalfa (Medicago sativa (L.) stubble in the spring has been shown to be effective in reducing some insect pest populations. A study was conducted to detennine the long-tenn effect of this practice on seed yield. Plots were established at Lethbridge, Alberta, and burned in the spring or fall at various heights of plant growth from 1983 to 1989, with one half of each plot treated annually with insecticides when the pest insects were in their most vulnerable stage. Yields from burned treatments were not significantly different from unburned ones for the years 1983 to 1986, and 1988. In 1987, treatments burned in the fall had significantly higher yields than other treatments. Burning at 15-20 cm of growth significantly reduced yield compared to burning before spring growth. In 1989, yields from plots burned at 15-20 cm of growth were significantly lower than those burned every fall or spring. Insecticide treated plots had significantly higher yields in all years except 1983. Burning in the fall, or in the spring before growth, increased gross economic returns, but insecticide treatment gave the highest returns

    Smoking and its effect on scar healing

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    Scar formation is influenced by several factors such as wound infection, tension, wound depth and anatomical localization. Hypertrophic scarring is often the result of an imbalance in the wound and scar healing process. The exact underlying pathophysiological mechanism remains unclear. Smoking has a higher risk of postoperative complications probably due to a diminished macrophage induction. Following our clinical impression that smokers without postoperative wound infections show esthetically better scars, we evaluated the scars after a reduction mammaplasty in smoking and nonsmoking patients in a prospective clinical trial. Between July 2006 and September 2007, 13 smokers and 30 non smokers with a reduction mammaplasty were included. They were recruited from Viecuri Medical Centre and Atrium Medical Centre in the Netherlands after written consent. Surgical data and data of the patients' condition were collected. Follow-up for erythema values of the scars was done with a colorimeter (The Minolta CR-300, Minolta Camera Co., Ltd., Osaka Japan) at 1, 3, 6 and 9 months postoperatively on four standardized postsurgical sites. ANOVA and Chi-square test were used for statistical analysis. In the smoking group, the scars were significantly less red compared to the nonsmoking group. No significant differences were found in BMI, resection weight and drain production between both groups. Although smoking is certainly not recommended as a preventive therapy to influence scar healing, this study confirms our assumption that smokers tend to have faster and less erythemateous scar healing to nonsmokers. Further research is needed to understand the mechanism of the effect of smoking on scars

    Labile Soil Carbon Inputs Mediate the Soil Microbial Community Composition and Plant Residue Decomposition Rates

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    • Root carbon (C) inputs may regulate decomposition rates in soil, and in this study we ask: how do labile C inputs regulate decomposition of plant residues, and soil microbial communities? • In a 14 d laboratory incubation, we added C compounds often found in root exudates in seven different concentrations (0, 0.7, 1.4, 3.6, 7.2, 14.4 and 21.7 mg C g soil) to soils amended with and without 13C-labeled plant residue. We measured CO2 respiration and shifts in relative fungal and bacterial rRNA gene copy numbers using quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). • Increased labile C input enhanced total C respiration, but only addition of C at low concentrations (0.7 mg C g-1) stimulated plant residue decomposition (+2%). Intermediate concentrations (1.4, 3.6 mg C g-1) had no impact on plant residue decomposition, while greater concentrations of C (\u3e 7.2 mg C g-1) reduced decomposition -50%). Concurrently, high exudate concentrations (\u3e 3.6 mg C g-1) increased fungal and bacterial gene copy numbers, whereas low exudate concentrations (\u3c 3.6 mg C g-1) increased metabolic activity rather than gene copy numbers. • These results underscore that labile soil C inputs can regulate decomposition of more recalcitrant soil C by controlling the activity and relative abundance of fungi and bacteria

    Surgery for velopharyngeal insufficiency: The outcomes of the University Hospitals Leuven

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    We reviewed the outcomes of patients who underwent a velopharyngoplasty and subsequent speech therapy for velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI) to determine possible prognostic variables.publisher: Elsevier articletitle: Surgery for velopharyngeal insufficiency: The outcomes of the University Hospitals Leuven journaltitle: International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology articlelink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijporl.2015.10.007 content_type: article copyright: Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.status: publishe

    Osteoradionecrosis and medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw: similarities and differences

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    The purpose of this study was to compare medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ) with osteoradionecrosis (ORN). Group 1 comprised 74 MRONJ patients (93 lesions) and group 2 comprised 59 ORN patients (69 lesions). Patient characteristics, clinical presentation of the lesions, the presence of complications, and the relationship with previous dental extractions were analyzed for both groups. Significant differences were found between the groups with regard to the characteristics of the patient populations, extraction as the precipitating event, the type of initial complaint, the prevalence of pain, and the location of the lesions. In the ORN group, significantly more patients complained of pain (P=0.0108) compared with the MRONJ group. Furthermore, significantly more pathological fractures (P<0.0001) and skin fistulae (P<0.0001) occurred in the ORN group. The treatment was more often conservative in the MRONJ group than in the ORN group (61.3% vs. 36.2%). Despite similarities in terms of imaging, risk factors, prevention, and treatment, MRONJ and ORN are two distinct pathological entities, as highlighted by the differences in patient characteristics, the initial clinical presentation, course of the disease, and outcome.status: publishe

    Poly Implant Prothèse silicone breast implants: implant dynamics and capsular contracture

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    Background: The Poly Implant Prothèse (PIP) implants were withdrawn from the market in 2010 due to the use of low-grade silicone, causing a high risk for implant rupture. The aim of this study was to investigate the implant dynamics of PIP breast implants, as well as to determine the rate and predictors of implant gel bleeding, rupture, and capsular contracture in PIP implants. Methods: Eighty women with a total of 152 PIP implants who underwent a reoperation in 2012 were enrolled in this study. Physical investigation included assessing the Baker score and demographics were retrospectively traced in medical records. The pre- and post-operative volumes of the implants were calculated and their state was determined intraoperatively by the surgeon. Results: The implants were removed after a mean implant duration of 11 ± 2.1 years. Gel bleed and implant rupture occurred in respectively 42 and 25% of the implants. Intact implants had post-operative volume increase as well as decrease. There was a correlation between gel bleeding and more post-operative implant volume increase (P ≤ 0.05). Capsular contracture had a protective effect against post-operative implant volume increase (P ≤ 0.05), while a post-operative implant volume increase provided a protective influence in developing capsular contracture (P ≤ 0.05). Additionally, implant rupture led to a higher risk of capsular contracture (P ≤ 0.05). Conclusions: We managed to illustrate that PIP implant shells were too permeable and that there is a correlation between gel bleeding and the increase of the post-operative implant volume. Implant rupture led to a higher risk for developing capsular contracture. Level of evidence: Level III, risk / prognostic study

    Facial morphology associated with isolated cleft palate

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    Roosenboom J., Saey I., Verdonck A., Vander Poorten V., Dormaar T., Schoenaers J., Devriendt K., Peeters H., Claes P., Hens G., ''Facial morphology associated with isolated cleft palate'', Genetic counseling, vol. 27, no. 4, pp. 541-542, 2016 (27th European meeting on dysmorphology, September 7-9, 2016, Strasbourg, France).status: publishe
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