433 research outputs found
Patient Care: The Forefront of Pharmacy Practice
For the past three years, Richart has been a member of APhA–ASP and has actively participated in numerous events. She planned, organized, and executed health fairs, educational presentations, and other direct patient care experiences alongside other members. An interaction as simple as a five-minute discussion with a patient about their blood pressure, antihypertensive medications, and lifestyle modifications can help save their life. Each patient interaction has impacted her by strengthening her communication skills, developing her professionalism, and providing confidence as she applies her knowledge with patients. Whether APhA–ASP’s events focus on a small audience at a local health fair or serve Hoosiers from all parts of the state, the organization’s initiatives make a positive impact and improve patient care
Food Availability, Foraging Behavior, and Diet of Autumn Migrant Landbirds in the Boise Foothills of Southwestern Idaho
Food availability and acquisition are critical components of a stopover site\u27s suitability, but we know relatively little about how changes in food availability affect the stopover ecology of migrating landbirds. We examined fruit and arthropod availability in three habitats, studied foraging behavior and diet, and investigated use versus availability for passerines migrating through southwestern Idaho in autumn. Hemiptera dominated foliage-dwelling arthropod communities in all three habitats, whereas Hymenoptera were most numerous among ground-dwelling arthropods. Mountain shrubland had relatively high biomass of both ground-dwelling and foliage-dwelling arthropods, whereas conifer forest had high biomass of foliage-dwelling arthropods only and shrub steppe had high biomass of ground-dwelling arthropods only. Species\u27 foraging behavior varied, but most species foraged in mountain shrubland more often than expected by chance. Diets of most species included a high proportion of certain Hemiptera and Hymenoptera with smaller proportions of Coleoptera, Diptera, and Heteroptera; Coleoptera and some Hemiptera were consistently preferred by most species. Importantly, all 19 bird species examined consumed some fruit, and this is the first documentation of frugivory for two warbler species. These data point to the importance of several arthropod taxa, especially the Hemiptera and Hymenoptera, and fruits to landbirds migrating in mountain shrubland in autumn. Finally, we found no effect of annual variation of fruit or arthropod abundance on migrants\u27 energetic condition, suggesting that food was sufficient for mass gain in all years of this study and/or that foraging behavior may be plastic enough to allow birds to gain mass despite annual differences in food availability
Anisotropic nonlinear elasticity in a spherical bead pack: influence of the fabric anisotropy
Stress-strain measurements and ultrasound propagation experiments in glass
bead packs have been simultaneously conducted to characterize the
stress-induced anisotropy under uniaxial loading. These measurements, realized
respectively with finite and incremental deformations of the granular assembly,
are analyzed within the framework of the effective medium theory based on the
Hertz-Mindlin contact theory. Our work shows that both compressional and shear
wave velocities and consequently the incremental elastic moduli agree fairly
well with the effective medium model by Johnson et al. [J. Appl. Mech. 65, 380
(1998)], but the anisotropic stress ratio resulting from finite deformation
does not at all. As indicated by numerical simulations, the discrepancy may
arise from the fact that the model doesn't properly allow the grains to relax
from the affine motion approximation. Here we find that the interaction nature
at the grain contact could also play a crucial role for the relevant prediction
by the model; indeed, such discrepancy can be significantly reduced if the
frictional resistance between grains is removed. Another main experimental
finding is the influence of the inherent anisotropy of granular packs, realized
by different protocols of the sample preparation. Our results reveal that
compressional waves are more sensitive to the stress-induced anisotropy,
whereas the shear waves are more sensitive to the fabric anisotropy, not being
accounted in analytical effective medium models.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Produtividade de grãos e componentes de produção da canola de acordo com fontes e doses de nitrogênio.
Avalia a resposta da canola a fontes e doses de nitrogênio aplicadas na semeadura. O experimento foi conduzido em Latossolo Vermelho distroférrico típico, com textura muito argilosa. Utilizou-se delineamento experimental de blocos ao acaso, em arranjo fatorial 7x2, com sete doses de N em superfície na semeadura (0, 20, 40, 60, 80, 100 e 120 kg ha‑1), duas fontes de N (sulfato de amônio e ureia) e quatro repetições. O experimento foi realizado com o híbrido Hyola 61, por dois anos, e foram avaliadas as seguintes variáveis: altura de planta, número de plantas por metro quadrado, massa de matéria seca da parte aérea, massa de síliquas por planta, massa de mil grãos, produtividade de grãos, e teores de proteína e de óleo nos grãos. As variáveis não foram influenciadas pelas fontes de N. A maior produtividade de grãos é alcançada com 88 kg ha‑1 de N. Doses crescentes de N aumentam os teores de proteína e diminuem os de óleo nos grãos de canola
Granular Packings: Nonlinear elasticity, sound propagation and collective relaxation dynamics
Experiments on isotropic compression of a granular assembly of spheres show
that the shear and bulk moduli vary with the confining pressure faster than the
1/3 power law predicted by Hertz-Mindlin effective medium theories (EMT) of
contact elasticity. Moreover, the ratio between the moduli is found to be
larger than the prediction of the elastic theory by a constant value. The
understanding of these discrepancies has been a longstanding question in the
field of granular matter. Here we perform a test of the applicability of
elasticity theory to granular materials. We perform sound propagation
experiments, numerical simulations and theoretical studies to understand the
elastic response of a deforming granular assembly of soft spheres under
isotropic loading. Our results for the behavior of the elastic moduli of the
system agree very well with experiments. We show that the elasticity partially
describes the experimental and numerical results for a system under
compressional loads. However, it drastically fails for systems under shear
perturbations, particularly for packings without tangential forces and
friction. Our work indicates that a correct treatment should include not only
the purely elastic response but also collective relaxation mechanisms related
to structural disorder and nonaffine motion of grains.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figure
Ethnic differences in proximal and distal tubular sodium reabsorption are heritable in black and white populations.
BACKGROUND: Segmental handling of sodium along the proximal and distal nephron might be heritable and different between black and white participants.
METHODS: We randomly recruited 95 nuclear families of black South African ancestry and 103 nuclear families of white Belgian ancestry. We measured the (FENa) and estimated the fractional renal sodium reabsorption in the proximal (RNaprox) and distal (RNadist) tubules from the clearances of endogenous lithium and creatinine. In multivariable analyses, we studied the relation of RNaprox and RNadist with FENa and estimated the heritability (h) of RNaprox and RNadist.
RESULTS: Independent of urinary sodium excretion, South Africans (n = 240) had higher RNaprox (unadjusted median, 93.9% vs. 81.0%; P < 0.001) than Belgians (n = 737), but lower RNadist (91.2% vs. 95.1%; P < 0.001). The slope of RNaprox on FENa was steeper in Belgians than in South Africans (-5.40 +/- 0.58 vs. -0.78 +/- 0.58 units; P < 0.001), whereas the opposite was true for the slope of RNadist on FENa (-3.84 +/- 0.19 vs. -13.71 +/- 1.30 units; P < 0.001). h of RNaprox and RNadist was high and significant (P < 0.001) in both countries. h was higher in South Africans than in Belgians for RNaprox (0.82 vs. 0.56; P < 0.001), but was similar for RNadist (0.68 vs. 0.50; P = 0.17). Of the filtered sodium load, black participants reabsorb more than white participants in the proximal nephron and less postproximally.
CONCLUSION: Segmental sodium reabsorption along the nephron is highly heritable, but the capacity for regulation in the proximal and postproximal tubules differs between whites and blacks
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