225 research outputs found

    As funções terapêuticas da atividade: um estudo comparativo em terapia ocupacional

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    O propósito deste estudo foi verificar as alterações ocorridas em relação a assistência em terapia ocupacional na Unidade Psiquiátrica do Hospital São Paulo, vinculada ao Departamento de Psiquiatria e Psicologia Médica da Universidade Federal de São Paulo, através da análise da aplicação de um instrumento terapêutico da terapia ocupacional, a atividade. Este estudo baseou-se em pesquisa retrospectiva nos prontuários de pacientes internadas na Unidade Psiquiátrica. A pesquisa se propôs sistematizar o registro de procedimentos de terapeutas ocupacionais e de outros profissionais em relação a atividade, no sentido de dar uma contribuição universalização de alguns aspectos do discurso da Terapia Ocupacional, sistematizando-os em categorias. Pretendeu-se verificar a aplicabilidade do instrumento terapêutico pesquisado, através da comparação dos procedimentos encontrados em dois períodos. Os procedimentos metodológicos constaram de: a.- definição dos períodos a serem pesquisados: de 1/1/1988 a 31/12/1988 e de 1/1/1994 a 31/12/1994; b- coleta de dados: foram levantados em 257 prontuários de pacientes internadas na Unidade Psiquiátrica nos períodos acima definidos, os dados sócio demográficos e todos os registros encontrados nos prontuários, sobre uso de atividade e sobre terapia Ocupacional: c- categorização dos dados sobre atividade e terapia ocupacional segundo referências empíricas e funções da atividade e posteriormente em categorias empíricas em terapia ocupacional; d- análise dos dados: através do cotejamento do material encontrados nos dois períodos em relação As categorias criadas e A literatura. A análise dos dados demonstrou que não houve alterações no perfil sócio demográfico da clientela, não se alterando também a pouca atenção da equipe frente a dados relativos a origem, ocupação e perfil econômico. Em relação a idade média das pacientes e tempo de internação a distribuição dos mesmos difere, os indices mais altos encontrados relacionam-se ao segundo período. Quanto ao instrumento terapêutico, a atividade, o estudo comparativo, permitiu identificar modificações em relação a compreensão e uso do mesmo. No primeiro período, o recurso terapêutico, atividade, relaciona-se com a proposta de ambientoterapia, isto 6, toda a utilização da atividade insere-se num movimento mais amplo, grupal, com a participação efetiva de toda a equipe, voltado à experiências sociabilizantes, com raras abordagens especificas de terapeutas ocupacionais. No segundo período a utilização da atividade enquanto instrumento terapêutico, aproxima-se dos recursos teóricos e práticos da terapia ocupacional psicodinâmica, o que permitiu enfoques mais individualizados, introduziu a questão do processo terapêutico, a utilização deste recurso como uma aborgagem eletiva, ampliou o contato das terapeutas ocupacionais com a clientela em grupos específicos de terapia ocupacional e no ambulatório de egressos. Perdeu-se neste segundo período alguns procedimentos relativos a proposta da ambientoterapia e a uniformidade da equipe frente a esta questão. Percebeu-se que, a aplicabilidade deste recurso terapêutico, nos dois períodos, baseia-se nas possíveis funções da atividade, tomadas sempre como recursos estratégicos. Nos dois períodos foi possível verificar que a aplicabilidade deste instrumento terapêutico não se relacionou a categorias diagnósticas, podendo num sentido mais amplo, ter indicação a todos as pacientes.The purpose of this study was to verify the changes occurred within the Occupational Therapy assistance in the Psychiatric Unit of Hospital São Paulo, linked to the Psychiatry and Medical Psychology Department of Universidade Federal de Sao Paulo through the analysis of the use a therapeutic means of Occupational Therapy named the activity. The study was based on retrospective research of inpatients'clinical charts. The research purpose was to sistematyze the procedures of occupational therapists and of other professionals concerning the activity in order to contribute to the generalization of certains aspects of occupational therapy practices by arranging them into categories.Our intention was to verify the applicability of the therapeutic means under analysis through the comparison of procedures found in two distinct periods. The experimental methods consisted of: a. Definition of periods to be researched: from 01/01/1988 to 31/12/1988 and from 01/01/1994 to 31/12/1994. b.Data collection: Data were collected from 257 inpatineclinical charts during the above defined periods, specifically social demographics data and all the information found in charts concerning use of the activity and occupational therapy. c. data categorization about the activity and occupational therapy according to empirical references and functions of the activity and subsequently to empirical categories in occupational therapy d.data analyses: through comparison of the material found in both periods, through created categories and in reference to the existing literature. Data analyses showed that were no changes in patients social demographics profile, as well as in team members'poor charting of data relative to the source, occupation and economical profile of impatient. Concerning the age of the patients and hospitalization period, their distribution differed with higher levels found in the second period. As for the use of the therapeutic instrument, the activity, the comparison allowed the identification of due to its application.changes. In the first period, the activity relates to the millieu therapy proposal, that is, all the activity application inserts itself in a broader movement, with the effective participation of all the members focused on socialization with rare specif interventions of occupational therapists. In the secon period, the use of the activity as a therapeutic instrument follows the theoretical and practical resource of the psychodinamic occupational therapy; that allowed more specific approaches and introduced the subject of the therapeutic process in occupational therapy. The use of this resource as a choice approach enlarged the contact of occupational therapists with patients in Occupational Therapy groups and in the out patient follow-up treatment. During this second period some procedures relating to the millieu therapy project and the unity of the team concerning this subject were lost. We have noticed that the applicability of this therapeutic resource, the activity, during both periods is based on the possible functions of the activity, always taken as strategis resources. It was possible to verify, in both periods, that the applicability of this therapeutic instrument is not related to diagnostic categories, and it that can be beneficial to all the patients.BV UNIFESP: Teses e dissertaçõe

    By hook or by crook? Morphometry, competition and cooperation in rodent sperm

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    Background Sperm design varies enormously across species and sperm competition is thought to be a major factor influencing this variation. However, the functional significance of many sperm traits is still poorly understood. The sperm of most murid rodents are characterised by an apical hook of the sperm head that varies markedly in extent across species. In the European woodmouse Apodemus sylvaticus (Muridae), the highly reflected apical hook of sperm is used to form sperm groups, or “trains,” which exhibited increased swimming velocity and thrusting force compared to individual sperm. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we use a comparative study of murine rodent sperm and demonstrate that the apical hook and sperm cooperation are likely to be general adaptations to sperm competition in rodents. We found that species with relatively larger testes, and therefore more intense sperm competition, have a longer, more reflected apical sperm hook. In addition, we show that sperm groups also occur in rodents other than the European woodmouse. Conclusions Our results suggest that in rodents sperm cooperation is more widespread than assumed so far and highlight the importance of diploid versus haploid selection in the evolution of sperm design and function

    Human Computation and Convergence

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    Humans are the most effective integrators and producers of information, directly and through the use of information-processing inventions. As these inventions become increasingly sophisticated, the substantive role of humans in processing information will tend toward capabilities that derive from our most complex cognitive processes, e.g., abstraction, creativity, and applied world knowledge. Through the advancement of human computation - methods that leverage the respective strengths of humans and machines in distributed information-processing systems - formerly discrete processes will combine synergistically into increasingly integrated and complex information processing systems. These new, collective systems will exhibit an unprecedented degree of predictive accuracy in modeling physical and techno-social processes, and may ultimately coalesce into a single unified predictive organism, with the capacity to address societies most wicked problems and achieve planetary homeostasis.Comment: Pre-publication draft of chapter. 24 pages, 3 figures; added references to page 1 and 3, and corrected typ

    The Potential Energy Surface in Molecular Quantum Mechanics

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    The idea of a Potential Energy Surface (PES) forms the basis of almost all accounts of the mechanisms of chemical reactions, and much of theoretical molecular spectroscopy. It is assumed that, in principle, the PES can be calculated by means of clamped-nuclei electronic structure calculations based upon the Schr\"{o}dinger Coulomb Hamiltonian. This article is devoted to a discussion of the origin of the idea, its development in the context of the Old Quantum Theory, and its present status in the quantum mechanics of molecules. It is argued that its present status must be regarded as uncertain.Comment: 18 pages, Proceedings of QSCP-XVII, Turku, Finland 201

    How Immunocontraception Can Contribute to Elephant Management in Small, Enclosed Reserves: Munyawana Population as a Case Study

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    Immunocontraception has been widely used as a management tool to reduce population growth in captive as well as wild populations of various fauna. We model the use of an individual-based rotational immunocontraception plan on a wild elephant, Loxodonta africana, population and quantify the social and reproductive advantages of this method of implementation using adaptive management. The use of immunocontraception on an individual, rotational basis stretches the inter-calving interval for each individual female elephant to a management-determined interval, preventing exposing females to unlimited long-term immunocontraception use (which may have as yet undocumented negative effects). Such rotational immunocontraception can effectively lower population growth rates, age the population, and alter the age structure. Furthermore, such structured intervention can simulate natural process such as predation or episodic catastrophic events (e.g., drought), which regulates calf recruitment within an abnormally structured population. A rotational immunocontraception plan is a feasible and useful elephant population management tool, especially in a small, enclosed conservation area. Such approaches should be considered for other long-lived, social species in enclosed areas where the long-term consequences of consistent contraception may be unknown

    Physiological Stress and Refuge Behavior by African Elephants

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    Physiological stress responses allow individuals to adapt to changes in their status or surroundings, but chronic exposure to stressors could have detrimental effects. Increased stress hormone secretion leads to short-term escape behavior; however, no studies have assessed the potential of longer-term escape behavior, when individuals are in a chronic physiological state. Such refuge behavior is likely to take two forms, where an individual or population restricts its space use patterns spatially (spatial refuge hypothesis), or alters its use of space temporally (temporal refuge hypothesis). We tested the spatial and temporal refuge hypotheses by comparing space use patterns among three African elephant populations maintaining different fecal glucocorticoid metabolite (FGM) concentrations. In support of the spatial refuge hypothesis, the elephant population that maintained elevated FGM concentrations (iSimangaliso) used 20% less of its reserve than did an elephant population with lower FGM concentrations (Pilanesberg) in a reserve of similar size, and 43% less than elephants in the smaller Phinda reserve. We found mixed support for the temporal refuge hypothesis; home range sizes in the iSimangaliso population did not differ by day compared to nighttime, but elephants used areas within their home ranges differently between day and night. Elephants in all three reserves generally selected forest and woodland habitats over grasslands, but elephants in iSimangaliso selected exotic forest plantations over native habitat types. Our findings suggest that chronic stress is associated with restricted space use and altered habitat preferences that resemble a facultative refuge behavioral response. Elephants can maintain elevated FGM levels for ≥6 years following translocation, during which they exhibit refuge behavior that is likely a result of human disturbance and habitat conditions. Wildlife managers planning to translocate animals, or to initiate other management activities that could result in chronic stress responses, should consider the potential for, and consequences of, refuge behavior

    Vitamins A & D Inhibit the Growth of Mycobacteria in Radiometric Culture

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    The role of vitamins in the combat of disease is usually conceptualized as acting by modulating the immune response of an infected, eukaryotic host. We hypothesized that some vitamins may directly influence the growth of prokaryotes, particularly mycobacteria. complex).Vitamins A and D cause dose-dependent inhibition of all three mycobacterial species studied. Vitamin A is consistently more inhibitory than vitamin D. The vitamin A precursor, β-carotene, is not inhibitory, whereas three vitamin A metabolites cause inhibition. Vitamin K has no effect. Vitamin E causes negligible inhibition in a single strain.We show that vitamin A, its metabolites Retinyl acetate, Retinoic acid and 13-cis Retinoic acid and vitamin D directly inhibit mycobacterial growth in culture. These data are compatible with the hypothesis that complementing the immune response of multicellular organisms, vitamins A and D may have heretofore unproven, unrecognized, independent and probable synergistic, direct antimycobacterial inhibitory activity

    Relevance of Stress and Female Sex Hormones for Emotion and Cognition

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    There are clear sex differences in incidence and onset of stress-related and other psychiatric disorders in humans. Yet, rodent models for psychiatric disorders are predominantly based on male animals. The strongest argument for not using female rodents is their estrous cycle and the fluctuating sex hormones per phase which multiplies the number of animals to be tested. Here, we will discuss studies focused on sex differences in emotionality and cognitive abilities in experimental conditions with and without stress. First, female sex hormones such as estrogens and progesterone affect emotions and cognition, contributing to sex differences in behavior. Second, females respond differently to stress than males which might be related to the phase of the estrous cycle. For example, female rats and mice express less anxiety than males in a novel environment. Proestrus females are less anxious than females in the other estrous phases. Third, males perform in spatial tasks superior to females. However, while stress impairs spatial memory in males, females improve their spatial abilities, depending on the task and kind of stressor. We conclude that the differences in emotion, cognition and responses to stress between males and females over the different phases of the estrous cycle should be used in animal models for stress-related psychiatric disorders

    Neural expression and post-transcriptional dosage compensation of the steroid metabolic enzyme 17β-HSD type 4

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Steroids affect many tissues, including the brain. In the zebra finch, the estrogenic steroid estradiol (E<sub>2</sub>) is especially effective at promoting growth of the neural circuit specialized for song. In this species, only the males sing and they have a much larger and more interconnected song circuit than females. Thus, it was surprising that the gene for 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 4 (HSD17B4), an enzyme that converts E<sub>2 </sub>to a less potent estrogen, had been mapped to the Z sex chromosome. As a consequence, it was likely that HSD17B4 was differentially expressed in males (ZZ) and females (ZW) because dosage compensation of Z chromosome genes is incomplete in birds. If a higher abundance of HSD17B4 mRNA in males than females was translated into functional enzyme in the brain, then contrary to expectation, males could produce less E<sub>2 </sub>in their brains than females.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Here, we used molecular and biochemical techniques to confirm the HSD17B4 Z chromosome location in the zebra finch and to determine that HSD17B4 mRNA and activity were detectable in the early developing and adult brain. As expected, HSD17B4 mRNA expression levels were higher in males compared to females. This provides further evidence of the incomplete Z chromosome inactivation mechanisms in birds. We detected HSD17B4 mRNA in regions that suggested a role for this enzyme in the early organization and adult function of song nuclei. We did not, however, detect significant sex differences in HSD17B4 activity levels in the adult brain.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our results demonstrate that the HSD17B4 gene is expressed and active in the zebra finch brain as an E<sub>2 </sub>metabolizing enzyme, but that dosage compensation of this Z-linked gene may occur via post-transcriptional mechanisms.</p

    The Homeobox Transcription Factor Barx2 Regulates Plasticity of Young Primary Myofibers

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    Adult mammalian muscle retains incredible plasticity. Muscle growth and repair involves the activation of undifferentiated myogenic precursors called satellite cells. In some circumstances, it has been proposed that existing myofibers may also cleave and produce a pool of proliferative cells that can re-differentiate into new fibers. Such myofiber dedifferentiation has been observed in the salamander blastema where it may occur in parallel with satellite cell activation. Moreover, ectopic expression of the homeodomain transcription factor Msx1 in differentiated C2C12 myotubes has been shown to induce their dedifferentiation. While it remains unclear whether dedifferentiation and redifferentiaton occurs endogenously in mammalian muscle, there is considerable interest in induced dedifferentiation as a possible regenerative tool.We previously showed that the homeobox protein Barx2 promotes myoblast differentiation. Here we report that ectopic expression of Barx2 in young immature myotubes derived from cell lines and primary mouse myoblasts, caused cleavage of the syncytium and downregulation of differentiation markers. Microinjection of Barx2 cDNA into immature myotubes derived from primary cells led to cleavage and formation of mononucleated cells that were able to proliferate. However, injection of Barx2 cDNA into mature myotubes did not cause cleavage. Barx2 expression in C2C12 myotubes increased the expression of cyclin D1, which may promote cell cycle re-entry. We also observed differential muscle gene regulation by Barx2 at early and late stages of muscle differentiation which may be due to differential recruitment of transcriptional activator or repressor complexes to muscle specific genes by Barx2.We show that Barx2 regulates plasticity of immature myofibers and might act as a molecular switch controlling cell differentiation and proliferation
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