414 research outputs found

    Reading comprehension level and development in native and language minority adolescent low achievers:Roles of linguistic and metacognitive knowledge and fluency

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    In a longitudinal design, we measured 50 low-achieving adolescents’ reading comprehension development from Grades 7 to 9. There were 24 native Dutch and 26 language minority students. In addition, we assessed the roles of (a) linguistic knowledge, (b) metacognitive knowledge, and (c) reading fluency in predicting both the level and growth of reading comprehension. Students improved in reading comprehension, the language minority students more so than the native Dutch students. We can explain the level of reading comprehension by linguistic and metacognitive knowledge, whereas most fluency-related predictors appeared to be of minor importance. We can hardly explain the growth in reading comprehension by the predictors. Nevertheless, we found a significant interaction indicating that growth in vocabulary explained growth in reading comprehension for the language minority students. This finding seems to suggest that language minority students profit from gains in vocabulary, more so than native students

    Writing proficiency level and writing development of low-achieving adolescents: The roles of linguistic knowledge, fluency, and metacognitive knowledge

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    In a longitudinal design, 51 low-achieving adolescents' development in writing proficiency from Grades 7 to 9 was measured. There were 25 native-Dutch and 26 language-minority students. In addition, the roles of (i) linguistic knowledge, (ii) metacognitive knowledge, and (iii) linguistic fluency in predicting both the level and development of writing proficiency were assessed. Low-achieving students improved in writing proficiency, the language-minority students more so than the native-Dutch students. Regarding the level of writing proficiency, individual differences between low-achieving adolescents could be accounted for by receptive vocabulary, grammatical knowledge, and speed of sentence verification, suggesting that these are important components in low-achieving adolescents' writing. Regarding development in writing proficiency, grammatical knowledge predicted variation between lowachieving students. Explanations and educational implications of these findings are discussed

    Cervical length at 23 weeks' gestation - relation to demographic characteristics and previous obstetric history in South African women

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    Objectives. To determine the distribution of cervical length in a routine population of singleton  pregnancies; to examine the relationship between cervical length, demographic characteristics, and previous obstetric history; and to compare these data with data from a similar study undertaken in the UK.Patients and methods. The study was conducted among women attending routine antenatal clinics at  Coronation, Johannesburg General and Chris Hani Baragwanath hospitals. Cervical length was measured by means of transvaginal ultrasound at 23 weeks' gestation in women with singleton pregnancies attending these clinics, as part of a multicentre randomised trial investigating the value of cerclage in a short cervix. The distribution of cervical length was determined and the significance of differences in median cervical lengths between subgroups was calculated according to maternal age, ethnic origin, maternal body mass index (BMI), cigarette smoking, alcohol intake, and previous obstetric history.Results. Cervical screening was offered to women (N = 2 173) attending clinics for a 23-week scan during the study period (July 1999- September 2002). Most women (N = 1 920) accepted, while 253 declined. Complete outcomes (date and mode of delivery; gestation at delivery, birth weight, Apgar scores,  maternal blood loss, whether the patient was cerclaged or not, and any complications) were obtained for 1 603 women who accepted screening. Cervical length was measured successfully in all cases. Median cervical length was 33.7 mm and in 64 cases (3.3%) the length was 15 mm or less. Significantly shorter cervical lengths were found in those with a history of previous miscarriage, preterm delivery, those aged less than 20 years and those with an abnormal BMI. Cervical length was not significantly shorter in black women than in coloured and white women.Conclusions. At 23 weeks' gestation the median cervical length in a South African population was 33.2 mm. In 3.3% of the population the length was 15 mm. There was an association between cervical length, demographic characteristics and previous obstetric history

    NG-nitro L-arginine methyl ester: systemic and pulmonary haemodynamics, tissue blood flow and arteriovenous shunting in the pig

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    The effects of NG-nitro-Lrarginine methyl ester (L-NAME), an inhibitor of the endothelial nitric oxide (NO) biosynthesis, on systemic and pulmonary haemodynamics, and tissue as well as arteriovenous anastomotic blood flows were investigated in the anaesthetized pig, using simultaneous injections of radioactive microspheres of two different sizes (diameter: 15 and 50μm). L-NAME (1, 3 and 10 mg·kg-1) reduced systemic and pulmonary artery conductance and cardiac output, but heart rate and mean arterial blood pressure remained unchanged. L-arginine reversed the systemic and pulmonary haemodynamic changes induced by L-NAME. As detected with 15 μm microspheres, L-NAME (1 and 3 mg·kg-1) decreased tissue blood flow to and vascular conductance in the eyes, lungs, atria, kidneys, adrenals and liver. Furthermore, the difference between blood flows simultaneously measured with 15 and 50 μm microspheres, which can be equated to blood flow through arteriovenous anastomoses with a diameter between about 28 and 90 μm, was reduced by L-NAME (3 mg · kg-1) in the skin of head and gluteal regions and, as indicated by the microsphere content of the lungs, in the total systemic circulation. These results suggest that in the anaesthetized pig (i) NO is involved in the regulation of both systemic and pulmonary vascular conductance, (ii) the decrease in systemic vascular conductance is in part due to constriction of systemic arteriovenous anastomoses, and (iii) the decrease in pulmonary vascular conductance, leading to reduction of cardiac output, seems to negate the expected rise in arterial blood pressure observed, for example, in rats and rabbits following inhibition of NO-synthesis

    Nuchal translucency as a method of first-trimester screening for aneuploidy

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    Objective. To determine the effectiveness of nuchal translucency (NT) screening in predicting aneuploidy and structural abnormalities in a South African population. Study design. Descriptive study. Setting. Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital fetal medicine unit. Outcome measures. An adjusted risk was derived from the combination of maternal age-related risk and the risk derived from NT screening. A positive screen was denoted by an adjusted risk of more than 1/300 and a negative screen by an adjusted risk of less than 1/300. In order to determine the number of undiagnosed abnormalities in the group, all babies were examined by a paediatrician at birth to detect and describe dysmorphic features. Results. A total of 428 patients underwent first-trimester screening between July 2003 and July 2005. Three per cent were lost to follow-up. Of the 415 patients analysed, 59 screened positive and 356 screened negative. The mean age for both groups of patients was 30.1 years. Of the 57 patients who screened positive, 24 elected to have chorionic villus sampling (CVS). This resulted in the detection of 6 chromosomal abnormalities and 2 structural abnormalities. Among the remaining 356 patients, who had screened negative, 2 had an increase in the adjusted risk when the risk was compared with the background risk, and 1 chromosomal abnormality was detected in this group; 8 elected to have CVS because of a previous history of a chromosomal abnormality, and there were no abnormalities among them. Conclusions. The use of these screening methods has enabled prenatal karyotyping to become cost effective, and allows concentration on pregnancies at highest risk for chromosomal abnormalities, regardless of age.South African Medical Journal Vol. 98 (4) 2008: pp. 295-29

    Carotid blood flow distribution, haemodynamics and inotropic responses following calcitonin gene-related peptide in the pig

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    The sensory neuropeptide, calcitonin gene-related peptide (α-CGRP), has been implicated in the pathogenesis of migraine headache. The present study aimed to evaluate the effects of intracarotid infusions of human α-CGRP (10, 30 and 100 pmol/kg · min; n = 8), as compared to that of saline (4 times; n = 8) on haemodynamics and blood flow distribution within the carotid circulation of the anaesthetized pig, using the radioactive microsphere method. Furthermore, the effects of antimigraine drugs, dihydroergotamine (100 μg/kg i.v; n = 4) or sumatriptan (300 μg/kg i.v.; n = 4), on these parameters were studied in the presence of the infusion of the highest concentration of human α-CGRP. Additionally, putative positive inotropic responses to human α-CGRP (10−9–10−7 M) were investigated in porcine isolated atrial and ventricular trabeculae. Human α-CGRP increased carotid artery blood flow and conductance dose-dependently, together with an enhancement in vascular pulsations. These effects were associated with a fall in systemic blood pressure with concomitant increases in heart rate and cardiac output. The increase in carotid blood flow was reflected by an increase in total capillary blood flow, predominantly to extracerebral tissues including the dura, whereas blood flow through arteriovenous anastomoses remained stable. Both dihydroerogtamine and sumatriptan reduced carotid blood flow and its capillary fraction without affecting systemic vascular conductance. In tissues, these drugs reversed blood flow increases due to human α-CGRP in most extracerebral tissues, but failed to reduce dural blood flow. In porcine isolated atrial and ventricular trabeculae, noradrenaline (10−8–10−5 M) increased force of contraction in a concentration-dependent manner. In contrast, human α-CGRP (10−9–10−7 M) failed to increase force of contraction in atrial trabeculae (n = 6) and exerted only a moderate concentration-dependent positive inotropic effect in ventricular trabeculae (∼ 25% of the response to 10−5 M noradrenaline, n = 10). These data indicate that human α-CGRP caused arteriolar dilatation together with a fall in blood pressure in the pig. The tachycardia may be reflex-mediated, but the peptide also exerts a moderate positive inotropic action on ventricular trabeculae. The fall in systemic arterial blood pressure and the marked increase in capillary blood flow most likely prevented the opening of arteriovenous anastomoses. Furthermore, the antimigraine drugs, dihydroergotamine and sumatriptan, were able to reverse blood flow changes induced by human α-CGRP in the porcine carotid circulation
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