75 research outputs found

    Corporate Social Responsibility in European Sport Clubs: Analysis and Classification of Activities/Programs

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    Aim of paper and research questions: This study seeks to understand Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in European sport clubs by analysing and classifying the CSR activities and programs. Specifically, the study had two objectives: (1) To conduct a web-based analysis of documents, articles, and reports of the European sport clubs that already have CSR programs in place and (2) To determine the attributes and the type of those CSR programs

    An investigation on vibration-based damage detection in circular plates

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    This study aims at the development of vibration-based health monitoring (VHM) methodology for thin circular plates. The possibility of using the first several natural frequencies of a circular plate for damage detection purposes is investigated first. The study then suggests a damage detection method, which considers a vibrating plate as a dynamic system and uses its time domain response represented in a new phase (state) space to extract damage sensitive characteristics. The paper introduces the idea of using large amplitude vibrations and nonlinear time series analysis for damage detection purposes. The suggested damage detection approach explores the possibility to use certain characteristics of the distribution of phase space points on the attractor of the system. It studies the histograms of this distribution and attempts to extract damage sensitive features. Three damage features are suggested and they are shown to detect damage at a rather low level using a finite element model of the plate. The method suggested is rather generic and permits development and application to more complex structures and real data

    Damage detections in nonlinear vibrating thermally loaded plates

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    In this work, geometrically nonlinear vibrations of fully clamped rectangular plates subjected to thermal changesare used to study the sensitivity of some vibration response parameters to the presence of damage and elevated temperature. The geometrically nonlinear version of the Mindlin plate theory is used to model the plate behaviour.Damage is represented as a stiffness reduction in a small area of the plate. The plates are subjected to harmonicloading leading to large amplitude vibrations and temperature changes. The plate vibration response is obtained by a pseudo-load mode superposition method. The main results are focussed on establishing the influence of damage on the vibration response of the heated and the unheated plates and the change in the time-history diagrams and the Poincaré maps caused by damage and elevated temperature. The damage criterion formulated earlier for nonheated plates, based on analyzing the points in the Poincaré sections of the damaged and healthy plate, is modified and tested for the case of plates additionally subjected to elevated temperatures. The importance of taking into account the actual temperature in the process of damage detection is shown

    Impact of baseline anemia on the short- and long-term prognosis of patients presenting with non-st-elevation myocardial infraction (NSTEMI)

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    Anaemia at admission is a known predictor of death in patients with myocardial infarction with ST-elevation (STEMI). Data on the effect of anaemia on the prognosis in patients with non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) is less readily available. Purpose: We aimed to evaluate the frequency of anaemia in a Bulgarian tertiary centre NSTEMI patient population, and its effect on the immediate and extended prognosis of the patients. Methods: We performed ambispective analysis of 138 consecutive patients with NSTEMI, and anaemia was defi ned as haemoglobin at admission below 120 g/L for females and below 130 g/L for males. Results: There was no signifi cant difference in the frequencies of standard risk factors between patients with and without anaemia. Anaemic patients tended to be older, with lower body mass index and worse kidney function. Patients with baseline anaemia tended to have higher GRACE risk scores and a larger size of the realised myocardial infarction as judged by maximal reached troponin I. There was no signifi cant difference in interventional treatment in both groups. Median hospital stay was signifi cantly longer in anaemic patients and was marked by more complications. Despite a lack of increase in inhospital bleeding and no difference in treatment with oral antiaggregants, patients with anaemia received haemotransfusion treatment more often. Mortality rate was higher in anaemic patients both during the index hospitalization and during the follow up. Conclusion: Anaemia at admission is associated with an increased risk of both in hospital cardiovascular complications and after dehospitalisation all-cause mortality in patients with NSTEMI and should be considered as an additional risk factor in the global risk assessment of patients

    Balkans' Asteraceae Species as a Source of Biologically Active Compounds for the Pharmaceutical and Food Industry

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    Herbal drugs are a useful source of different bioactive compounds. Asteraceae species, as the most widespread vascular plants, can be used both as food and as medicine due to the great diversity of recorded chemical components - different phenolic compounds, terpenes, carotenoids, vitamins, alkaloids, etc. The Balkan Peninsula is characterized by great diversity of plants from Asteraceae family, including presence of rare and endemic species. In this review, results of the survey of chemical composition and biological activity, mainly focusing on antioxidant, antimicrobial and anticancer effects of selected Balkans' Asteraceae species were provided. In addition, information on edible plants from Asteraceae family is presented, due to growing interest for the so-called 'healthy diet' and possible application of Balkans' Asteraceae species as food of high nutritional value or as a source of functional food ingredients.This is peer-reviewed version of the following article: Kostić, A.; Janacković, P.; Kolasinac, S. M.; Dajić-Stevanović, Z. Balkans’ Asteraceae Species as a Source of Biologically Active Compounds for the Pharmaceutical and Food Industry. Chemistry & Biodiversity 2020, 17 (6). [https://doi.org/10.1002/cbdv.202000097

    Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the incidence and prognosis of acute myocardial infarction - a single-center restrospective analysis

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    Introduction: COVID-19 pandemic has led to a signifi cant change in the incidence and prognosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) by indirect and direct mechanisms. Aim: To assess the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the incidence and prognosis of AMI. Material and methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of consecutive patients with AMI (STEMI and NSTEMI) during two time periods – the complete lockdown in Bulgaria and one of the waves of the pandemic. We compared patients’ risk profi le, index event, investigations and treatment to a control group from the pre-pandemic period. Results: During the fi rst period we included 52 patients with AMI without COVID-19 and compared them to a control group of 66 patients. We found a decrease primarily in the number of patients with STEMI. The scores for assessing diseaseseverity (GRACE, APACHE II, SOFA) were higher in 2020 compared to the pre-pandemic period. More patients presented with acute congestive heart failure, mortality was similar. During the second period we included 83 patients, 21 of them with COVID-19 infection. System delay was increased in all patients. Disease severity scores and baseline troponin were higher especially in the COVID-19 group. In-hospital mortality was substantially higher in patients with COVID-19 compared to controls (23,8% versus 9%, р = 0,0375), probably due to increased incidence of cardiogenic shock and need for mechanical ventilation. Conclusion: During the complete lockdown there was a reduction in the number of patients admitted with AMI, higher incidence of acute congestive heart failure and similar mortality. During one of the waves of the pandemic we found a signifi cant increase in system delay, not exceeding the recommended time frame of 120 minutes, and in disease severity in all patients. Concomitant COVID-19 infection was associated with higher in-hospital mortality due to increased incidence of cardiogenic shock and need for mechanical ventilation

    Immune or Genetic-Mediated Disruption of CASPR2 Causes Pain Hypersensitivity Due to Enhanced Primary Afferent Excitability

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    Human autoantibodies to contactin-associated protein-like 2 (CASPR2) are often associated with neuropathic pain, and CASPR2 mutations have been linked to autism spectrum disorders, in which sensory dysfunction is increasingly recognized. Human CASPR2 autoantibodies, when injected into mice, were peripherally restricted and resulted in mechanical pain-related hypersensitivity in the absence of neural injury. We therefore investigated the mechanism by which CASPR2 modulates nociceptive function. Mice lacking CASPR2 (Cntnap2-/-) demonstrated enhanced pain-related hypersensitivity to noxious mechanical stimuli, heat, and algogens. Both primary afferent excitability and subsequent nociceptive transmission within the dorsal horn were increased in Cntnap2-/-mice. Either immune or genetic-mediated ablation of CASPR2 enhanced the excitability of DRG neurons in a cell-autonomous fashion through regulation of Kv1 channel expression at the soma membrane. This is the first example of passive transfer of an autoimmune peripheral neuropathic pain disorder and demonstrates that CASPR2 has a key role in regulating cell-intrinsic dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neuron excitability

    Immune or genetic-mediated disruption of CASPR2 causes pain hypersensitivity due to enhanced primary afferent excitability

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    Human autoantibodies to contactin-associated protein-like 2 (CASPR2) are often associated with neuropathic pain, and CASPR2 mutations have been linked to autism spectrum disorders, in which sensory dysfunction is increasingly recognized. Human CASPR2 autoantibodies, when injected into mice, were peripherally restricted and resulted in mechanical pain-related hypersensitivity in the absence of neural injury. We therefore investigated the mechanism by which CASPR2 modulates nociceptive function. Mice lacking CASPR2 (Cntnap2(-/-)) demonstrated enhanced pain-related hypersensitivity to noxious mechanical stimuli, heat, and algogens. Both primary afferent excitability and subsequent nociceptive transmission within the dorsal horn were increased in Cntnap2(-/-) mice. Either immune or genetic-mediated ablation of CASPR2 enhanced the excitability of DRG neurons in a cell-autonomous fashion through regulation of Kv1 channel expression at the soma membrane. This is the first example of passive transfer of an autoimmune peripheral neuropathic pain disorder and demonstrates that CASPR2 has a key role in regulating cell-intrinsic dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neuron excitability
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