11 research outputs found

    Self-reported sleep bruxism among Finnish symphony orchestra musicians : Associations with perceived sleep-related problems and psychological stress

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    Objective: This study aimed to evaluate whether self-reported sleep bruxism among musicians is associated with sleep-related problems and/or psychological stress. Methods: Eight hundred-thirty-one Finnish orchestra musicians completed a questionnaire that covered, among others, indicators of sleep-related problems, possible sleep bruxism, and stress. Results: In total, 488 questionnaires were completed. The single variable ordinal logistic regression models revealed at least moderate associations between frequency of sleep bruxism and female gender, shorter sleep duration, longer sleep latency, problems in sleeping during concert season, feeling more often tired during the daytime, restless legs, a poor self-rated sleep quality, and more stress experience. The variables that remained in the final model were sleep duration, gender, and stress. Conclusion: Musicians who sleep 7 hours or less per night report more sleep bruxism, as compared to those who sleep 8 hours or more. Female gender and high-stress experience were associated with more sleep bruxism.Peer reviewe

    Self-reported sleep bruxism among Finnish symphony orchestra musicians : Associations with perceived sleep-related problems and psychological stress

    Get PDF
    Objective: This study aimed to evaluate whether self-reported sleep bruxism among musicians is associated with sleep-related problems and/or psychological stress. Methods: Eight hundred-thirty-one Finnish orchestra musicians completed a questionnaire that covered, among others, indicators of sleep-related problems, possible sleep bruxism, and stress. Results: In total, 488 questionnaires were completed. The single variable ordinal logistic regression models revealed at least moderate associations between frequency of sleep bruxism and female gender, shorter sleep duration, longer sleep latency, problems in sleeping during concert season, feeling more often tired during the daytime, restless legs, a poor self-rated sleep quality, and more stress experience. The variables that remained in the final model were sleep duration, gender, and stress. Conclusion: Musicians who sleep 7 hours or less per night report more sleep bruxism, as compared to those who sleep 8 hours or more. Female gender and high-stress experience were associated with more sleep bruxism.Peer reviewe

    A filter for syntactically incomparable parallel sentences

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    Massive automatic comparison of languages in parallel corpora will greatly speed up and enhance comparative syntactic research. Automatically extracting and mining syntactic differences from parallel corpora requires a pre-processing step that filters out sentence pairs that cannot be compared syntactically, for example because they involve “free” translations. In this paper we explore four possible filters: the Damerau-Levenshtein distance between POS-tags, the sentence-length ratio, the graph-edit distance between dependency parses, and a combination of the three in a logistic regression model. Results suggest that the dependency-parse filter is the most stable throughout language pairs, while the combination filter achieves the best result

    ATM phosphorylation of the actin-binding protein drebrin controls oxidation stress-resistance in mammalian neurons and C. elegans

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    Drebrin is an actin-binding protein known to play a role in neuronal dendritic spines but its precise regulation is unclear. Here, the authors report that DBN is activated by oxidative stress in an ATM-kinase dependent manner and increases resistance to oxidative stress in mice and in C. elegans

    Isolated limb infusion for malignant melanoma: Predictors of response and outcome

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    Purpose Isolated limb infusion (ILI) is an alternative to isolated limb perfusion (ILP) for the treatment of unresectable limb melanoma recurrence. The aims of this study were to determine the response rates of unresectable local and/or in-transit melanoma of the upper or lower limb to ILI and to identify factors predictive of survival. Methodology A prospective database identified 74 patients (35 male and 39 female) with local and/or in-transit melanoma recurrence without metastatic disease who underwent hyperthermic ILI with melphalan at a single institution between January 1996 and December 2008. Three patients could not be evaluated for response. Median follow-up was 34 months. Results Of the 74 patients, the majority had N2c disease (57/74, 67%), while 17/74 (33%) patients had N3 disease. Median maximum temperature achieved was 38.1°C and median tourniquet time was 32.5 min. Wieberdink III/IV complications occurred following 7/74 (10%) ILI and were associated with higher limb volumes and higher total melphalan dose. Complete response (CR) was seen following 17/71 (24%) ILI and the partial response rate was 30% (22/71). The median duration of CR was 43 months. Univariable analyses found that limb volume >8.0 l and maximum limb temperature >38.5°C were the only independent factors predictive for a CR following ILI. Multivariate analyses identified CR and positive lymph nodes as the only independent prognostic factors for melanoma-specific survival. Conclusions Patients who obtain CR have significantly improved survival compared with nonresponders. The challenge remains to improve CR rates and prospectively identify responders
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