717 research outputs found

    Sidewall effects on heat transfer in narrow backward facing step in transitional regime

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    In this work, we study numerically with large eddy simulation, the effects induced by the three-dimensional geometry of the channel on the flow topology that exists when the three-dimensional intrinsic instabilities appear in a backward facing step flow with low aspect ratio for Reynolds in the transitional regime (Re = 1,000–1,600), and its impact on the heat flux in the lower wall. Under the transitional regime, the three-dimensional instabilities begin to appear, but they can be masked by the flows due to the presence of the side walls. The study is carried out with two boundary conditions in the sidewalls, slip, and no-slip, to discriminate between the three-dimensionality induced by the geometry and the intrinsic three-dimensional instabilities. The results obtained are compared between the two boundary conditions, establishing what type of flow prevails and its influence on time-averaged mean Nusselt number for all Reynolds.This work was funded by Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades y fondos FEDER - Proyecto Retos-Colaboración RTC-2017-6137-8

    Handgrip strength and work limitations:A prospective cohort study of 70,820 adults aged 50 and older

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    The purpose of the study was to investigate the association between handgrip strength and the incidence of work limitations in European adults aged 50 and older. We conducted a prospective cohort study among adults aged 50 and older from 27 European countries and Israel. Data were collected from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) waves 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, and 7. Handgrip strength was measured using a hand dynamometer (Smedley, S Dynamometer, TTM) and participants replied to questions about work limitations. Cox regression was conducted for statistical analyses. A total of 70,820 older adults (mean age 61 ± 7.7 years; 54.3 % women) were followed during a mean of 3.8 ± 2.9 years. The fully adjusted model showed that participants with low handgrip strength (<16 kg in women and <27 kg in men) had a significantly higher risk of work limitations compared with participants with normal values of handgrip strength (hazard ratio: 1.36; 95 % confidence interval: 1.28–1.44). Kaplan-Meier trajectories revealed that the survival probability to experience work limitations in the normal handgrip category was 20 % lower than in the low handgrip category in most of the follow-up period. We identified low level of handgrip strength as a risk factor for work limitations in adults aged 50 years or older. This could be used as an accessible measure to screen workers at risk of developing work limitations

    Using schedulers to test probabilistic distributed systems

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    This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00165-012-0244-5. Copyright © 2012, British Computer Society.Formal methods are one of the most important approaches to increasing the confidence in the correctness of software systems. A formal specification can be used as an oracle in testing since one can determine whether an observed behaviour is allowed by the specification. This is an important feature of formal testing: behaviours of the system observed in testing are compared with the specification and ideally this comparison is automated. In this paper we study a formal testing framework to deal with systems that interact with their environment at physically distributed interfaces, called ports, and where choices between different possibilities are probabilistically quantified. Building on previous work, we introduce two families of schedulers to resolve nondeterministic choices among different actions of the system. The first type of schedulers, which we call global schedulers, resolves nondeterministic choices by representing the environment as a single global scheduler. The second type, which we call localised schedulers, models the environment as a set of schedulers with there being one scheduler for each port. We formally define the application of schedulers to systems and provide and study different implementation relations in this setting

    Exercise variables and pain threshold reporting for strength training protocols in people with haemophilia: a systematic review of clinical trials

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    Introduction: Although strength exercise is often prescribed for people with haemophilia (PWH), it remains unknown how exercise variables and pain thresholds are used to prescribe strength training in PWH. Aim: To analyse how strength exercise variables and pain thresholds have been used to prescribe strength training in PWH. Methods: A systematic search was conducted in PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, CENTRAL and CINAHL databases from inception to 7 September 2022. Studies whose intervention included strengthening training in adults with haemophilia were included. Two independent reviewers were involved in study selection, data extraction and risk of bias assessment. Results: Eighteen studies were included. The least reported variables among the studies were: prophylactic factor coverage (11.1%), pain threshold/tolerability (5.6%), intensity (50%), total or partial range of motion (27.8%), time under tension (27.8%), attentional focus modality (0%), therapist experience in haemophilia (33.3%) and adherence assessment (50%). In contrast, weekly frequency (94.4%), duration (weeks) (100%), number of sets/repetitions (88.9%), repetitions to failure/not to failure (77.8%), types of contraction (77.8%), rest duration (55.6%), progression (55.6%), supervision (77.8%), exercise equipment (72.2%) and adverse event record (77.8%) had a higher percentage of reported (>50% of studies). Conclusion: Future research on strength training for PWH should improve information on pain threshold and other important variables such as prophylactic factor coverage, intensity, range of motion, time under tension, attentional focus modality, therapist experience in haemophilia and adherence assessment. This could improve clinical practice and comparison of different protocols

    An exploratory, large-scale study of pain and quality of life outcomes in cancer patients with moderate or severe pain, and variables predicting improvement

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    Background There have been few large-scale, real world studies in Spain to assess change in pain and quality of life (QOL) outcomes in cancer patients with moderate to severe pain. This study aimed to assess changes on both outcomes after 3 months of usual care and to investigate factors associated with change in QoL. Patients and methods Large, multi-centre, observational study in patients with lung, head and neck, colorectal or breast cancer experiencing a first episode of moderate to severe pain while attending one of the participating centres. QoL was assessed using the EuroQol-5D questionnaire and pain using the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). Instruments were administered at baseline and after 3 months of follow up. Multivariate analyses were used to assess the impact of treatment factors, demographic and clinical variables, pain and other symptoms on QoL scores. Results 1711 patients were included for analysis. After 3 months of usual care, a significant improvement was observed in pain and QoL in all four cancer groups (p<0.001). Effect sizes were medium to large on the BPI and EQ-5D Index and Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Improvements were seen on the majority of EQ-5D dimensions in all patient groups, though breast cancer patients showed the largest gains. Poorer baseline performance status (ECOG) and the presence of anxiety/depression were associated with significantly poorer QOL outcomes. Improvements in BPI pain scores were associated with improved QoL. Conclusion In the four cancer types studied, pain and QoL outcomes improved considerably after 3 months of usual care. Improvements in pain made a substantial contribution to QoL gains whilst the presence of anxiety and depression and poor baseline performance status significantly constrained improvementFinancial support for this research was provided by Mundipharma Pharmaceuticals S.L

    Alpha band disruption in the AD-continuum starts in the subjective cognitive decline stage: a MEG study

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    The consideration of Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD) as a preclinical stage of AD remains still a matter of debate. Alpha band alterations represent one of the most significant changes in the electrophysiological profile of AD. In particular, AD patients exhibit reduced alpha relative power and frequency. We used alpha band activity measured with MEG to study whether SCD and MCI elders present these electrophysiological changes characteristic of AD, and to determine the evolution of the observed alterations across AD spectrum. The total sample consisted of 131 participants: 39 elders without SCD, 41 elders with SCD and 51 MCI patients. All of them underwent MEG and MRI scans and neuropsychological assessment. SCD and MCI patients exhibited a similar reduction in alpha band activity compared with the no SCD group. However, only MCI patients showed a slowing in their alpha peak frequency compared with both SCD and no SCD. These changes in alpha band were related to worse cognition. Our results suggest that AD-related alterations may start in the SCD stage, with a reduction in alpha relative power. It is later, in the MCI stage, where the slowing of the spectral profile takes place, giving rise to objective deficits in cognitive functioning.This study was supported by two projects from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, PSI2009-14415-C03-01 and PSI2012-38375-C03-01, a predoctoral fellowship from the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness to DLS (PSI2012-38375-C03-01), and three predoctoral fellowships from the Ministry of Education to RB,NS,ICRR (FPU13/06009, FPU14/07164, FPU13/02064)

    Anti‑predatory chemical defences in Antarctic benthic fauna

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    Antarctic benthic communities are largely structured by predation, which leads to the development of mechanisms of repellence. Among those mechanisms, chemical defences are quite extensive, yet poorly understood. To increase knowledge about the role of chemical defences in the Southern Ocean ecosystems, we assessed the incidence of feeding repellents in sessile and vagile invertebrates from nine phyla: Porifera, Cnidaria, Nemertea, Annelida, Mollusca, Bryozoa, Echinodermata, Hemichordata, and Tunicata (Ascidiacea). Samples were collected at depths of 120–789 m in the eastern Weddell Sea and Bouvet Island, and at depths ranging 0–100 m in the South Shetland Islands. When possible, specimens were dissected to study anatomical allocation of repellents. The common, eurybathic sea star Odontaster validus was chosen to perform feeding repellence bioassays, using diethyl ether (lipophilic) and butanol (hydrophilic) extracts from these samples. Among the 75 species tested, 52 % were studied for the first time for anti-predatory properties. Results provide further evidence of the prevalence of defensive metabolites in Antarctic organisms, with 47 % of the species exhibiting significant repellence within their lipophilic extracts. They also suggest a wider use of nonpolar defensive chemicals. Sessile taxa displayed highest repellence activities, with ascidians, cnidarians, and sponges being the most chemically protected. Overall, the present study indicates that natural products by mediating trophic interactions between prey and their potential predators play an important role in structuring Antarctic benthic ecosystems.Versión del editor2,011

    Influencia de la composición de la dieta sobre el perfil de ácidos grasos y la expresión génica en tejidos adiposo, muscular y hepático de cerdos ibéricos

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    La composición de los tejidos animales es determinante en la calidad de los productos y está influida por varios factores como la dieta, el tipo genético, la edad y el sexo. En este trabajo se ha evaluado el efecto de la composición de ácidos grasos (AG) de la dieta de cerdos ibéricos en fase de cebo, sobre la composición de AG de los tejidos y la transcripción de genes codificantes para enzimas clave del metabolismo lipídico (SCD, ME1, FASN, ACACA, LEP, CPT, HADH). Se utilizaron 40 machos Torbiscal que recibieron diferentes dietas: saturada (S), monoinsaturada (M) y poliinsaturada (P). La composición de AG de los tejidos adiposo, hepático y muscular mostró grandes diferencias del grupo P respecto a M y S, que mostraron un perfil similar. La dieta afectó también a la expresión génica en hígado y tejido adiposo, sugiriendo una mayor expresión de enzimas lipogénicas en el grupo M y menor en el P. Estos resultados no explican la mayor capacidad del grupo S para la síntesis endógena de AG, que podría deducirse de los análisis de composición tisular.La composición de los tejidos animales es determinante en la calidad de los productos y está influida por varios factores como la dieta, el tipo genético, la edad y el sexo. En este trabajo se ha evaluado el efecto de la composición de ácidos grasos (AG) de la dieta de cerdos ibéricos en fase de cebo, sobre la composición de AG de los tejidos y la transcripción de genes codificantes para enzimas clave del metabolismo lipídico (SCD, ME1, FASN, ACACA, LEP, CPT, HADH). Se utilizaron 40 machos Torbiscal que recibieron diferentes dietas: saturada (S), monoinsaturada (M) y poliinsaturada (P). La composición de AG de los tejidos adiposo, hepático y muscular mostró grandes diferencias del grupo P respecto a M y S, que mostraron un perfil similar. La dieta afectó también a la expresión génica en hígado y tejido adiposo, sugiriendo una mayor expresión de enzimas lipogénicas en el grupo M y menor en el P. Estos resultados no explican la mayor capacidad del grupo S para la síntesis endógena de AG, que podría deducirse de los análisis de composición tisular
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