714 research outputs found
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A human factors analysis of the occupational safety and health of public transit bus drivers
The overall goals of this research were to identify the
major human factors problems in the mass transit driver
cockpit, to identify the operational activities, and vehicle
components that are most likely to produce accidents and
injuries and to investigate, through an in-depth study, the
most hazardous human factors problems. A review of related
literature set the stage for investigating potential
hazards. The literature review included articles involving
relevant design aspects of related vehicles such as trucks
and automobiles along with research specifically focusing, on
transit buses. Discussions with transit agency officials
and a one day workshop with several transit related groups
were employed to provide an awareness of the most pressing
problems. Observational research techniques including
driver interviews were then used to clarify the problems,
and workers' compensation files were analyzed to gather
quantitative information on driver injuries. A thorough
analysis of the data collected from driver interviews and
analysis of the data collected from driver interviews and
workers' compensation reports pointed out two major classes
of injuries injuries related to the seat and injuries
related to vehicle steering. The problems involved both the
seat itself - its mechanical strength and durability, and
the relationship of the seat to other vehicle controls-particularly
the steering wheel and foot pedals. An
anthropometric study of three transit bus cockpits indicated
that some driver injuries could be reduced or eliminated by
improving the relationship between the driver's seat and the
vehicle controls. Specifically, the driver's seat. could
have a wider range of adjustments and the pedal controls
could be moved further forward from the steering wheel
Cycloid psychoses: clinical symptomatology, prognosis, and heredity1
The development of the concept of cycloid
psychoses goes back to the problem of âatypical psychosesâ which arose from Kraepelinâs dichotomy of endogenous psychoses1. It concerned those forms of psychoses which could be assigned neither to dementia praecox nor to manic-depressive illness. One strategy for a
solution of this problem was the broadening of the concept of schizophrenia as inaugurated by Bleuler (1911)2. Schizophrenia was then thought to include lots of clinical conditions with entirely
different cross-sectional
symptomatology, long-term
course and outcome, thus
considerably reducing the
heuristic value of the diagnosis.
Furthermore, reliable prognoses became impossible according to Bleulerâs
concepts (table 1).
Inevitably, the idea was generated that there
might be a nosologically independent group
of endogenous psychoses in addition to
schizophrenias and manic-depressive illness.
Based upon the previous work of Wernicke and
Kleist3, Leonhard (1999)4 further established
the concept of cycloid psychoses. Rejecting
nosological hybridisation, the independency of these psychoses was emphasized. Representing one of the three main groups in his subdivision of psychoses with âschizophreniformâ
symptomatology, Leonhard meticulously elaborated on precise clinical diagnostic criteria for cycloid psychoses.
In the current diagnostic manuals, those psychoses spread over various diagnostic entities like bipolar affective disorder, schizoaffective disorder, acute polymorphic psychotic disorder (ICD), brief psychotic disorder (DSM), or even schizophrenia, if 1st-rank symptoms are
observed for more than one month
Pathogen burden, inflammation, proliferation and apoptosis in human in-stent restenosis - Tissue characteristics compared to primary atherosclerosis
Pathogenic events leading to in-stent restenosis (ISR) are still incompletely understood. Among others, inflammation, immune reactions, deregulated cell death and growth have been suggested. Therefore, atherectomy probes from 21 patients with symptomatic ISR were analyzed by immunohistochemistry for pathogen burden and compared to primary target lesions from 20 stable angina patients. While cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus, Epstein-Barr virus and Helicobacter pylori were not found in ISR, acute and/or persistent chlamydial infection were present in 6/21 of these lesions (29%). Expression of human heat shock protein 60 was found in 8/21 of probes (38%). Indicated by distinct signals of CD68, CD40 and CRP, inflammation was present in 5/21 (24%), 3/21 (14%) and 2/21 (10%) of ISR cases. Cell density of ISR was significantly higher than that of primary lesions ( 977 +/- 315 vs. 431 +/- 148 cells/mm(2); p < 0.001). There was no replicating cell as shown by Ki67 or PCNA. TUNEL+ cells indicating apoptosis were seen in 6/21 of ISR specimens (29%). Quantitative analysis revealed lower expression levels for each intimal determinant in ISR compared to primary atheroma (all p < 0.05). In summary, human ISR at the time of clinical presentation is characterized by low frequency of pathogen burden and inflammation, but pronounced hypercellularity, low apoptosis and absence of proliferation. Copyright (C) 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel
impulsivity and the impact of contextual cues on instrumental behavior in alcohol dependence
Alcohol-related cues acquire incentive salience through Pavlovian conditioning
and then can markedly affect instrumental behavior of alcohol-dependent
patients to promote relapse. However, it is unclear whether similar effects
occur with alcohol-unrelated cues. We tested 116 early-abstinent alcohol-
dependent patients and 91 healthy controls who completed a delay discounting
task to assess choice impulsivity, and a Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer
(PIT) paradigm employing both alcohol-unrelated and alcohol-related stimuli.
To modify instrumental choice behavior, we tiled the background of the
computer screen either with conditioned stimuli (CS) previously generated by
pairing abstract pictures with pictures indicating monetary gains or losses,
or with pictures displaying alcohol or water beverages. CS paired to money
gains and losses affected instrumental choices differently. This PIT effect
was significantly more pronounced in patients compared to controls, and the
group difference was mainly driven by highly impulsive patients. The PIT
effect was particularly strong in trials in which the instrumental stimulus
required inhibition of instrumental response behavior and the background CS
was associated to monetary gains. Under that condition, patients performed
inappropriate approach behavior, contrary to their previously formed
behavioral intention. Surprisingly, the effect of alcohol and water pictures
as background stimuli resembled that of aversive and appetitive CS,
respectively. These findings suggest that positively valenced background CS
can provoke dysfunctional instrumental approach behavior in impulsive alcohol-
dependent patients. Consequently, in real life they might be easily seduced by
environmental cues to engage in actions thwarting their long-term goals. Such
behaviors may include, but are not limited to, approaching alcohol
Wernicke-Kleist-Leonhard phenotypes of endogenous psychoses: a review of their validity .
While the ICD-DSM paradigm has been a major advance in clinical psychiatry, its usefulness for biological psychiatry is debated. By defining consensus-based disorders rather than empirically driven phenotypes, consensus classifications were not an implementation of the biomedical paradigm. In the field of endogenous psychoses, the Wernicke-Kleist-Leonhard (WKL) pathway has optimized the descriptions of 35 major phenotypes using common medical heuristics on lifelong diachronic observations. Regarding their construct validity, WKL phenotypes have good reliability and predictive and face validity. WKL phenotypes come with remarkable evidence for differential validity on age of onset, familiality, pregnancy complications, precipitating factors, and treatment response. Most impressive is the replicated separation of high- and low-familiality phenotypes. Created in the purest tradition of the biomedical paradigm, the WKL phenotypes deserve to be contrasted as credible alternatives with other approaches currently under discussion.
Joint testing of genotypic and gene-environment interaction identified novel association for BMP4 with non-syndromic CL/P in an Asian population using data from an International Cleft Consortium
Non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P) is a common disorder with complex etiology. The Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4 gene (BMP4) has been considered a prime candidate gene with evidence accumulated from animal experimental studies, human linkage studies, as well as candidate gene association studies. The aim of the current study is to test for linkage and association between BMP4 and NSCL/P that could be missed in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) when genotypic (G) main effects alone were considered.We performed the analysis considering G and interactions with multiple maternal environmental exposures using additive conditional logistic regression models in 895 Asian and 681 European complete NSCL/P trios. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that passed the quality control criteria among 122 genotyped and 25 imputed single nucleotide variants in and around the gene were used in analysis. Selected maternal environmental exposures during 3 months prior to and through the first trimester of pregnancy included any personal tobacco smoking, any environmental tobacco smoke in home, work place or any nearby places, any alcohol consumption and any use of multivitamin supplements. A novel significant association held for rs7156227 among Asian NSCL/P and non-syndromic cleft lip and palate (NSCLP) trios after Bonferroni correction which was not seen when G main effects alone were considered in either allelic or genotypic transmission disequilibrium tests. Odds ratios for carrying one copy of the minor allele without maternal exposure to any of the four environmental exposures were 0.58 (95%CI = 0.44, 0.75) and 0.54 (95%CIâ=â0.40, 0.73) for Asian NSCL/P and NSCLP trios, respectively. The Bonferroni P values corrected for the total number of 117 tested SNPs were 0.0051 (asymptotic P = 4.39*10(-5)) and 0.0065 (asymptotic P = 5.54*10(-5)), accordingly. In European trios, no significant association was seen for any SNPs after Bonferroni corrections for the total number of 120 tested SNPs.Our findings add evidence from GWAS to support the role of BMP4 in susceptibility to NSCL/P originally identified in linkage and candidate gene association studies
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Optimizing OCT acquisition parameters for assessments of vitreous haze for application in uveitis
Detection and evaluation of inflammatory activity in uveitis is essential to the management of the condition, and yet continues to be largely dependent on subjective clinical measures. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) measurement of vitreous activity is an alternative to clinical vitreous haze scoring and has passed a number of early validation studies. In this study we aimed to evaluate the impact of âoperator factorsâ on the variability of the technique as part of the validation process, and to help evaluate its suitability for âreal worldâ use. Vitreous haze index was calculated as a ratio between the reflectivity of the vitreous and of the outer retina in each scan. Different scanning conditions were tested and their effect on the measurement is reported. Our results show that the âquantitative imagingâ technique of OCT-measured vitreous activity had good reliability in normal subjects under a range of âreal worldâ conditions, such as when the operator changes the averaging value. The technique was however vulnerable to highly inaccurate focussing or abnormal downward displacement of the image. OCT-based quantification of vitreous activity is a promising alternative to current subjective clinical estimates, with sufficient âtoleranceâ to be used in routine clinical practice as well as clinical trials
ZDHHC8 as a candidate gene for schizophrenia: Analysis of a putative functional intronic marker in case-control and family-based association studies
BACKGROUND: The chromosome 22q11 region is proposed as a major candidate locus for susceptibility genes to schizophrenia. Recently, the gene ZDHHC8 encoding a putative palmitoyltransferase at 22q11 was proposed to increase liability to schizophrenia based on both animal models and human association studies by significant over-transmission of allele rs175174A in female, but not male subjects with schizophrenia. METHODS: Given the genetic complexity of schizophrenia and the potential genetic heterogeneity in different populations, we examined rs175174 in 204 German proband-parent triads and in an independent case-control study (schizophrenic cases: n = 433; controls: n = 186). RESULTS: In the triads heterozygous parents transmitted allele G preferentially to females, and allele A to males (heterogeneity Ï(2 )= 4.43; p = 0.035). The case-control sample provided no further evidence for overall or gender-specific effects regarding allele and genotype frequency distributions. CONCLUSION: The findings on rs175174 at ZDHHC8 are still far from being conclusive, but evidence for sexual dimorphism is moderate, and our data do not support a significant genetic contribution of rs175174 to the aetiopathogenesis of schizophrenia
Overall and cancer related mortality among patients with ocular inflammation treated with immunosuppressive drugs: retrospective cohort study
Context Whether immunosuppressive treatment adversely affects survival is unclear
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