68 research outputs found

    Experimental study on circularly towed aerial tethers

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    Understanding the behaviour of towed objects is key in many disciplines. For example, towed underwater equipment for geological survey, or space applications such as “slingshot” deployment of satellites. In the airborne case, the free end of a long, circularly towed cable will become almost stationary below the centre of the tow vehicle circle. This near-stationary state offers promise of a payload delivery and retrieval technique. Many contributions have been made of modelling and analysis methods which have provided solid understanding of the behaviour of an ideal airborne, circularly-towed system. Fewer contributions exist of experimental results. This Thesis responds to that lack by documenting a series of experiments conducted by the author, which specifically explored the behaviour of small scale systems and a single full scale system. In the course of the experimental program, several behaviours, not predicted by analytical work to date, were observed. One was further explored and also analysed, using an existing model. This demonstrated that the model used could yield results consistent with the observed behaviour. Observation of these unpredicted behaviours has identified several areas where further work is required, in order to move closer to a practical realisation of the payload delivery concept. The key contributions of this Thesis are the identification of previously unknown tether behaviours and experimental data which can be used for verification of existing models

    The Love Settle and The Bard’s Rest

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    The output comprises two artefacts commissioned by Shakespeare Birthplace Trust (SBT), on display between 8 March and 19 September 2019 at Anne Hathaway’s Cottage and Hall’s Croft (the home of Shakespeare’s daughter Susanna), Stratford-upon-Avon, UK

    Unravelling the metabolic impact of SBS-associated microbial dysbiosis: Insights from the piglet short bowel syndrome model

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    peer-reviewedLiver disease is a major source of morbidity and mortality in children with short bowel syndrome (SBS). SBS-associated microbial dysbiosis has recently been implicated in the development of SBS-associated liver disease (SBS-ALD), however the pathological implications of this association have not been explored. In this study high-throughput sequencing of colonic content from the well-validated piglet SBS-ALD model was examined to determine alterations in microbial communities, and concurrent metabolic alterations identified in urine samples via targeted mass spectrometry approaches (GC-MS, LC-MS, FIA-MS) further uncovered impacts of microbial disturbance on metabolic outcomes in SBS-ALD. Multi-variate analyses were performed to elucidate contributing SBS-ALD microbe and metabolite panels and to identify microbe-metabolite interactions. A unique SBS-ALD microbe panel was clearest at the genus level, with discriminating bacteria predominantly from the Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes phyla. The SBS-ALD metabolome included important alterations in the microbial metabolism of amino acids and the mitochondrial metabolism of branched chain amino acids. Correlation analysis defined microbe-metabolite clustering patterns unique to SBS-ALD and identified a metabolite panel that correlates with dysbiosis of the gut microbiome in SBS

    Body mass index and dental caries in young people: a systematic review

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    Abstract Background Obesity and caries in young people are issues of public health concern. Even though research into the relationship between the two conditions has been conducted for many years, to date the results remain equivocal. The aim of this paper was to determine the nature of the relationship between Body Mass Index (BMI) and caries in children and adolescents, by conducting a systematic review of the published literature. Methods A systematic search of studies examining the association between BMI and caries in individuals younger than 18 years old was conducted. The electronic bibliographic databases PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, CENTRAL and Google Scholar were searched. References of included studies were checked to identify further potential studies. Internal and external validity as well as reporting quality were assessed using the validated Methodological Evaluation of Observational Research checklist. Results were stratified based on the risk of flaws in 14 domains 10 of which were considered major and four minor. Results Of the 4208 initially identified studies, 84 papers met the inclusion criteria and were included in the review; conclusions were mainly drawn from 7 studies at lower risk of flaws. Three main types of association between BMI and caries were found: 26 studies showed a positive relationship, 19 showed a negative association, and 43 found no association between the variables of interest. Some studies showed more than one pattern of association. Assessment of confounders was the domain most commonly found to be flawed, followed by sampling and research specific bias. Among the seven studies which were found to be at lower risk of being flawed, five found no association between BMI and caries and two showed a positive association between these two variables. Conclusions Evidence of an association between BMI and caries was inconsistent. Based on the studies with a low risk lower risk of being flawed, a positive association between the variables of interest was found mainly in older children. In younger children, the evidence was equivocal. Longitudinal studies examining the association between different indicators of obesity and caries over the life course will help shed light in their complex relationship

    The presence of Aspergillus fumigatus in asthmatic airways is not clearly related to clinical disease severity

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    Background: It is suggested that airway fungi, in particular Aspergillus may impinge on clinical phenotype in asthma. Indeed, the term severe asthma with fungal sensitization (SAFS) has been coined. We aimed to ascertain whether the presence of fungi, in particular Aspergillus fumigatus, in the airway correlated with asthma severity and control. Furthermore, we aimed to determine whether traditional markers of Aspergillus sensitization related to the presence of Aspergillus within the airway. Methods: Sixty‐nine patients characterized by asthma severity (GINA) and level of control (ACQ‐7) underwent bronchoscopy and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). Serum was assessed for A fumigatus‐specific IgE and total IgE. Galactomannan and relevant cytokine levels were assessed in serum, plasma and BAL. BAL was analyzed for the presence of A fumigatus. Results: In BAL, fungi were visible by microscopy in 70% and present by qPCR in 86% of patients, while A fumigatus was detectable by qPCR in 46%. Plasma and BAL IL‐4, IL‐6, IL‐10, IL‐13 and TNF‐α correlated with BAL fungal presence, while plasma IL‐17 correlated with BAL fungal presence. Aspergillus positive BAL correlated with increased plasma and BAL IL‐6 and BAL IL‐13. There was no relationship between fungal airway presence and steroid dose, asthma severity or control. The presence of Aspergillus within the airway did not relate to serum IgE positivity for Aspergillus. Conclusions: Fungi were present in a large proportion of our asthmatic patients’ airways, but their presence was not predicted by traditional markers of sensitization, nor did it appear to be related to measures of disease severity or control

    Obesity and caries in four-to-six year old English children: a cross-sectional study.

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    BACKGROUND: Obesity and caries are common conditions in childhood and can have significant implications on children's wellbeing. Evidence into their association remains conflicting. Furthermore, studies examining the ssociation between obesity and caries commonly focus on individual-level determinants. The present study aimed to examine the association between obesity and caries in young English children and to determine the impact of deprivation and area-level characteristics on the distribution of the two conditions. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional study among children in Plymouth city aged four-to-six years. Anthropometric measurements included weight and height (converted to Body Mass Index centiles and z-scores), and waist circumference. Caries was assessed by using the sum of the number of teeth that were decayed, missing or filled. A questionnaire was used to obtain information on children's demographic characteristics, oral hygiene, and dietary habits. The impact of deprivation on anthropometric variables and caries was determined using Linear and Poisson regression models, respectively. Multiple logistic regression was used to assess the association between different anthropometric measures and caries. Logistic regression models were also used to examine the impact of several demographic characteristics and health behaviours on the presence of obesity and caries. RESULTS: The total sample included 347 children aged 5.10 ± 0.31 (mean ± SD). Deprivation had a significant impact on caries and BMI z-scores (p < 0.05). Neither BMI- nor waist circumference z-scores were shown to be significantly associated with dental caries. Among the neighbourhood characteristics examined, the percentage of people dependent on benefits was found to have a significant impact on caries rates (p < 0.05). Household's total annual income was inversely related to caries risk and parental educational level affected children's tooth brushing frequency. CONCLUSIONS: No associations between any measure of obesity and caries were found. However, deprivation affected both obesity and caries, thus highlighting the need to prioritise disadvantaged children in future prevention programmes

    Microfold (M) cells: important immunosurveillance posts in the intestinal epithelium

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    The transcytosis of antigens across the gut epithelium by microfold cells (M cells) is important for the induction of efficient immune responses to some mucosal antigens in Peyer’s patches. Recently, substantial progress has been made in our understanding of the factors that influence the development and function of M cells. This review highlights these important advances, with particular emphasis on: the host genes which control the functional maturation of M cells; how this knowledge has led to the rapid advance in our understanding of M-cell biology in the steady-state and during aging; molecules expressed on M cells which appear to be used as “immunosurveillance” receptors to sample pathogenic microorganisms in the gut; how certain pathogens appear to exploit M cells to infect the host; and finally how this knowledge has been used to specifically target antigens to M cells to attempt to improve the efficacy of mucosal vaccines
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