5,164 research outputs found
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Comparison of NIRS, laser Doppler flowmetry, photoplethysmography, and pulse oximetry during vascular occlusion challenges
© 2016 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine. Monitoring changes in blood volume, blood flow, and oxygenation in tissues is of vital importance in fields such as reconstructive surgery and trauma medicine. Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), laser Doppler (LDF) flowmetry, photoplethysmography (PPG), and pulse oximetry (PO) contribute to such fields due to their safe and noninvasive nature. However, the techniques have been rarely investigated simultaneously or altogether. The aim of this study was to investigate all the techniques simultaneously on healthy subjects during vascular occlusion challenges. Sensors were attached on the forearm (NIRS and LDF) and fingers (PPG and PO) of 19 healthy volunteers. Different degrees of vascular occlusion were induced by inflating a pressure cuff on the upper arm. The responses of tissue oxygenation index (NIRS), tissue haemoglobin index (NIRS), flux (LDF), perfusion index (PPG), and arterial oxygen saturation (PO) have been recorded and analyzed. Moreover, the optical densities were calculated from slow varying dc PPG, in order to distinguish changes in venous blood volumes. The indexes showed significant changes (p < 0.05) in almost all occlusions, either venous or over-systolic occlusions. However, differentiation between venous and arterial occlusion by LDF may be challenging and the perfusion index (PI) may not be adequate to indicate venous occlusions. Optical densities may be an additional tool to detect venous occlusions by PPG
Evaluation of nipple aspirate fluid as a diagnostic tool for early detection of breast cancer
YesThere has been tremendous progress in detection of breast cancer in postmenopausal women, resulting in two-thirds
of women surviving more than 20 years after treatment. However, breast cancer remains the leading cause of cancerrelated
deaths in premenopausal women. Breast cancer is increasing in younger women due to changes in life-style
as well as those at high risk as carriers of mutations in high-penetrance genes. Premenopausal women with breast
cancer are more likely to be diagnosed with aggressive tumours and therefore have a lower survival rate. Mammography
plays an important role in detecting breast cancer in postmenopausal women, but is considerably less sensitive
in younger women. Imaging techniques, such as contrast-enhanced MRI improve sensitivity, but as with all imaging
approaches, cannot differentiate between benign and malignant growths. Hence, current well-established detection
methods are falling short of providing adequate safety, convenience, sensitivity and specificity for premenopausal
women on a global level, necessitating the exploration of new methods. In order to detect and prevent the disease
in high risk women as early as possible, methods that require more frequent monitoring need to be developed. The
emergence of âomicsâ strategies over the last 20 years, enabling the characterisation and understanding of breast cancer
at the molecular level, are providing the potential for long term, longitudinal monitoring of the disease. Tissue and
serum biomarkers for breast cancer stratification, diagnosis and predictive outcome have emerged, but have not successfully
translated into clinical screening for early detection of the disease. The use of breast-specific liquid biopsies,
such as nipple aspirate fluid (NAF), a natural secretion produced by breast epithelial cells, can be collected non-invasively
for biomarker profiling. As we move towards an age of active surveillance, home-based liquid biopsy collection
kits are increasingly being applied and these could provide a paradigm shift where NAF biomarker profiling is used for
routine breast health monitoring. The current status of established and newly emerging imaging techniques for early
detection of breast cancer and the potential for alternative biomarker screening of liquid biopsies, particularly those
applied to high-risk, premenopausal women, will be reviewed.Proteomics research was supported by Yorkshire Cancer Research projects, BPP047 and B381PA, and co-funded by the European Regional Development Fund and the Republic of Cyprus through the Research Promotion Foundation projects ΄ÎÎÎÎ/ÎÎÎÎŁ/0311(ÎÎÎ/07) and NEKYP/0311/17
Photoperiod-Dependent Expression of MicroRNA in Drosophila.
Like many other insects in temperate regions, Drosophila melanogaster exploits the photoperiod shortening that occurs during the autumn as an important cue to trigger a seasonal response. Flies survive the winter by entering a state of reproductive arrest (diapause), which drives the relocation of resources from reproduction to survival. Here, we profiled the expression of microRNA (miRNA) in long and short photoperiods and identified seven differentially expressed miRNAs (dme-mir-2b, dme-mir-11, dme-mir-34, dme-mir-274, dme-mir-184, dme-mir-184*, and dme-mir-285). Misexpression of dme-mir-2b, dme-mir-184, and dme-mir-274 in pigment-dispersing, factor-expressing neurons largely disrupted the normal photoperiodic response, suggesting that these miRNAs play functional roles in photoperiodic timing. We also analyzed the targets of photoperiodic miRNA by both computational predication and by Argonaute-1-mediated immunoprecipitation of long- and short-day RNA samples. Together with global transcriptome profiling, our results expand existing data on other Drosophila species, identifying genes and pathways that are differentially regulated in different photoperiods and reproductive status. Our data suggest that post-transcriptional regulation by miRNA is an important facet of photoperiodic timing
Dissociation of circadian and circatidal time-keeping in the marine crustacean Eurydice pulchra
BACKGROUND: Tidal (12.4 hr) cycles of behavior and physiology adapt intertidal organisms to temporally complex coastal environments, yet their underlying mechanism is unknown. However, the very existence of an independent âcircatidalâ clock has been disputed, and it has been argued that tidal rhythms arise as a submultiple of a circadian clock, operating in dual oscillators whose outputs are held in antiphase i.e., âŒ12.4 hr apart. RESULTS: We demonstrate that the intertidal crustacean Eurydice pulchra (Leach) exhibits robust tidal cycles of swimming in parallel to circadian (24 hr) rhythms in behavioral, physiological and molecular phenotypes. Importantly, âŒ12.4 hr cycles of swimming are sustained in constant conditions, they can be entrained by suitable stimuli, and they are temperature compensated, thereby meeting the three criteria that define a biological clock. Unexpectedly, tidal rhythms (like circadian rhythms) are sensitive to pharmacological inhibition of Casein kinase 1, suggesting the possibility of shared clock substrates. However, cloning the canonical circadian genes of E. pulchra to provide molecular markers of circadian timing and also reagents to disrupt it by RNAi revealed that environmental and molecular manipulations that confound circadian timing do not affect tidal timing. Thus, competent circadian timing is neither an inevitable nor necessary element of tidal timekeeping. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that tidal rhythms are driven by a dedicated circatidal pacemaker that is distinct from the circadian system of E. pulchra, thereby resolving a long-standing debate regarding the nature of the circatidal mechanism
Stress ocupacional no ensino : um estudo com professores dos 3Âș ciclo e ensino secundĂĄrio
Este trabalho foi realizado com 689 professores portugueses, a leccionarem nos terceiro ciclo e ensino secundĂĄrio. Foram avaliados indicadores de stress, âburnoutâ, saĂșde fĂsica e satisfação profissional. Observaram-se valores significativos de stress ocupacional (perto de 40%), e de âburnoutâ (10% na exaustĂŁo emocional, 3% na baixa realização pessoal e 1% na despersonalização), vĂĄrios problemas de saĂșde fĂsica e valores de insatisfação profissional perto dos 20%. As anĂĄlises de regressĂŁo mĂșltipla apontaram diferentes variĂĄveis preditoras para as trĂȘs dimensĂ”es do âburnoutâ (62% de variĂąncia explicada na exaustĂŁo emocional, 16% na realização pessoal e 13% na despersonalização). As anĂĄlises discriminantes e ât-testâ para amostras independentes demonstraram maior stress ocupacional nas mulheres, nos professores mais velhos, nos profissionais com vĂnculos profissionais mais precĂĄrios, nos professores com mais horas de trabalho e com mais alunos em sala de aula. No final, apresentam-se as limitaçÔes do estudo e as implicaçÔes para a investigação futura.(undefined
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Investigation of oesophageal photoplethysmographic signals and blood oxygen saturation measurements in cardiothoracic surgery patients
Pulse oximeter probes attached to the finger may fail to estimate blood oxygen saturation (SpO2) in patients with compromised peripheral perfusion (e.g. hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass surgery). The measurement of SpO2 from a central organ such as the oesophagus is suggested as an alternative to overcome this problem. A reflectance oesophageal pulse oximeter probe and a processing system implemented in LabVIEW were developed. The system was evaluated in clinical measurements on 50 cardiothoracic surgery patients. Oesophageal photoplethysmographic (PPG) signals with large amplitudes and high signal-to-noise ratios were measured from various depths within the oesophagus from all the cardiothoracic patients. The oesophageal PPG amplitudes from these patients were in good agreement with previous oesophageal PPG amplitude measurements from healthy anaesthetized patients. The oesophageal pulse oximeter SpO2 results agreed well with the estimated arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) values inferred from the oxygen tension obtained by blood gas analysis. The mean (+/- SD) of the differences between the oesophageal pulse oximeter SpO2 readings and those from blood gas analysis was 0.02 +/- 0.88%. Also, the oesophageal pulse oximeter was found to be reliable and accurate in five cases of poor peripheral perfusion when a commercial finger pulse oximeter probe failed to estimate oxygen saturation values for at least 10 min. These results suggest that the arterial blood circulation to the oesophagus is less subject to vasoconstriction and decreased PPG amplitudes than are the peripheral sites used for pulse oximetry such as the finger. It is concluded that oesophageal SPO2 monitoring may be of clinical value
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A pilot clinical study to estimate intracranial pressure utilising cerebral photoplethysmograms in traumatic brain injury patients
Purpose:
In this research, a non-invasive Intracranial Pressure (nICP) optical sensor was developed and evaluated in a clinical pilot study. The technology relied on infrared light to probe brain tissue, using photodetectors to capture backscattered light modulated by vascular pulsations within the brain's vascular tissue. The underlying hypothesis was that changes in extramural arterial pressure could affect the morphology of recorded optical signals (photoplethysmograms, or PPGs), and analyzing these signals with a custom algorithm could enable non-invasive calculation of intracranial pressure (nICP).
Methods:
This pilot study was the first to evaluate the nICP probe alongside invasive ICP monitoring as a gold standard. nICP monitoring occurred in 40 patients undergoing invasive ICP monitoring, with data randomly split for machine learning. Quality PPG signals were extracted and analyzed for time-based features. The study employed Bland Altman analysis and ROC curve calculations to assess nICP accuracy compared to invasive ICP data.
Results:
Successful acquisition of cerebral PPG signals from traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients allowed for the development of a bagging tree model to estimate nICP non-invasively. The nICP estimation exhibited 95% limits of agreement of 3.8 mmHg with minimal bias and a correlation of 0.8254 with invasive ICP monitoring. ROC curve analysis showed strong diagnostic capability with 80% sensitivity and 89% specificity.
Conclusion:
The clinical evaluation of this innovative optical nICP sensor revealed its ability to estimate ICP non-invasively with acceptable and clinically useful accuracy. This breakthrough opens the door to further technological refinement and larger-scale clinical studies in the future.
Trial registration number:
NCT05632302, 11th November 2022, retrospectively registered
'I would rather die': reasons given by 16-year-olds for not continuing their study of mathematics
Improving participation rates in specialist mathematics after the subject ceases to be compulsory at age 16 is part of government policy in England. This article provides independent and recent support for earlier findings concerning reasons for non- participation, based on free response and closed items in a questionnaire with a sample of over 1500 students in 17 schools, close to the moment of choice. The analysis supports findings that perceived difficulty and lack of confidence are important reasons for students not continuing with mathematics, and that perceived dislike and boredom, and lack of relevance, are also factors. There is a close relationship between reasons for non-participation and predicted grade, and a weaker relation to gender. An analysis of the effects of schools, demonstrates that enjoyment is the main factor differentiating schools with high and low participation indices. Building on discussion of these findings, ways of improving participation are briefly suggested
SS28. The Size of Juxtaluminal Black Area in Ultrasonic Images of Asymptomatic Carotid Plaques Predicts the Occurrence of Stroke
A modified agar pad method for mycobacterial live-cell imaging
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Two general approaches to prokaryotic live-cell imaging have been employed to date, growing bacteria on thin agar pads or growing bacteria in micro-channels. The methods using agar pads 'sandwich' the cells between the agar pad on the bottom and a glass cover slip on top, before sealing the cover slip. The advantages of this technique are that it is simple and relatively inexpensive to set up. However, once the cover slip is sealed, the environmental conditions cannot be manipulated. Furthermore, desiccation of the agar pad, and the growth of cells in a sealed environment where the oxygen concentration will be in gradual decline, may not permit longer term studies such as those required for the slower growing mycobacteria.</p> <p>Findings</p> <p>We report here a modified agar pad method where the cells are sandwiched between a cover slip on the bottom and an agar pad on top of the cover slip (rather than the reverse) and the cells viewed from below using an inverted microscope. This critical modification overcomes some of the current limitations with agar pad methods and was used to produce time-lapse images and movies of cell growth for <it>Mycobacterium smegmatis </it>and <it>Mycobacterium bovis </it>BCG.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This method offers improvement on the current agar pad methods in that long term live cell imaging studies can be performed and modification of the media during the experiment is permitted.</p
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