4,104 research outputs found

    The effect of milk feeding method on calves' behavioural sleep

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    Our aim was to study how calves' sleep could be affected by the milk feeding and housing methods. We concluded that possibility to suck milk increased the amount of calves' behavioural quiet sleep and sleepiness after feeding, possibly due to suck-induced hormonal effects

    Maturation of oral feeding skills in preterm infants.

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    AIM: Safe and successful oral feeding requires proper maturation of sucking, swallowing and respiration. We hypothesized that oral feeding difficulties result from different temporal development of the musculatures implicated in these functions. METHODS: Sixteen medically stable preterm infants (26 to 29 weeks gestation, GA) were recruited. Specific feeding skills were monitored as indirect markers for the maturational process of oral feeding musculatures: rate of milk intake (mL/min); percent milk leakage (lip seal); sucking stage, rate (#/s) and suction/expression ratio; suction amplitude (mmHg), rate and slope (mmHg/s); sucking/swallowing ratio; percent occurrence of swallows at specific phases of respiration. Coefficients of variation (COV) were used as indices of functional stability. Infants, born at 26/27- and 28/29-week GA, were at similar postmenstrual ages (PMA) when taking 1-2 and 6-8 oral feedings per day. RESULTS: Over time, feeding efficiency and several skills improved, some decreased and others remained unchanged. Differences in COVs between the two GA groups demonstrated that, despite similar oral feeding outcomes, maturation levels of certain skills differed. CONCLUSIONS: Components of sucking, swallowing, respiration and their coordinated activity matured at different times and rates. Differences in functional stability of particular outcomes confirm that maturation levels depend on infants\u27 gestational rather than PMA

    Milk, Blood and Gall: Witches’ Bodily Fluids from the Treatise to the English Stage

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    The relationship between humoralism and literature has been broached by many critics, often in the lovesickness or in the melancholic‐as‐genius aspect. Yet, barring a few individual cases, there has been no general study linking witches with humours in the seventeenth century English dramatical corpus. The present study attempts to fill this gap by identifying the medical or demonological treatises that influenced playwrights’ representations of witches. Witches bodies are better understood by taking into account Thomas Laqueur’s theory of the one‐sex body, following the transformation of fluids into one another which is characteristic of their fundamental imbalance. Firstly, milk turns into gall inside witches‐mothers rejecting their motherhood, then into blood inside witches feeding familiars in a distorted image of motherhood. The absence of blood in amenorrhoeic witches is shown as a reccurent cause for their melancholy which has physiological and psychological consequences, in particular a licentiousness that makes witches seek blood in its semen form. Black bile is thought to be the devil’s humour, yet in the Weyer‐Bodin controversy theoreticians do not agree on whether witches are melancholic women suffering from hallucinations or real agents of the devil. On the other hand, plays ascribe either physical or emotional causes as well as symptoms coherent with a melancholy disease to witches, and playwrights use symbolical representations of melancholy on stage. In conclusion, it is difficult to establish a typology of such representations, given that each witch is uniquely composed with a particular playwright’s understanding of humoralism, often conflating several distinct ideas

    Definitive Anagrams: J-L

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    Continued from the November 2004 Word Ways. Because of the large number of new pre-J catch-up words this article rightly should be called A-L . But no, tradition prevails over logic yet again, the three previous articles being A-C, D-F, and G-I

    Sample Testing with Vitalab Flexor

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    The Vitalab Flexor is a high-tech medical instrument designed to perform a large number of simultaneous measurements on samples of blood and urine. For future purposes it is desired to increase the throughput, i.e. the number of tests per hour, of the instrument. The analysis in this report gives upper bounds on the throughput if the Vitalab Flexor is operated in modes which are standard in the present situation. It is shown that a desired throughput of at least 266 tests per hour can not be realized on the basis of these standard operation modes. Possible improvements are suggested via so-called parallel or on-line operation modes, or a combination of these two modes. These possible improvements however require a number of changes in the technical design of the Vitalab Flexor

    Pure extravagance

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    Mark 14:1-9

    Happy Orchard: Hummingbird Moth Coloring Book Page

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    Beitragserhöhungen der Krankenkassen. Allgemeine Orts-Krankenkasse fĂŒr den Kreis Schleiden. Bekanntmachung. Zufolge des Kriegs Notgesetzes vom 4. August d[ie]s[en] J[ahre]s sind die BeitrĂ€ge zu unserer Kasse von 3 % auf 4 Âœ % zu erhöhen und nur die Regelleistungen – das sind laut § 14 unserer Statuten Krankenhilfe und Zahlung von Kranken-, Wochen- und Sterbegeld – seitens der Kasse zu gewĂ€hren. Das Gesetz tritt fĂŒr unsere Kasse mit RĂŒckwirkung vom 1. September d[iesen] J[ahre]s ab in Kraft...

    First record of Xenopsylla gratiosa Jordan & Rothschild, 1923 from the Maltese Islands (Siphonaptera: Pulicidae)

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    Xenopsylla gratiosa is reported for the first time from the Maltese Islands. The species was found in an abandoned nest of a Cory’s Shearwater, Calonectris diomedea on the island of Filfla. Brief notes are included on previous records of fleas from the Maltese Islands and taxonomic, distributional and ecological notes are provided for Xenopsylla gratiosapeer-reviewe
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