24 research outputs found
Physical and ecstatic love in Croatian medieval passion plays on the example of the character of Virgin Mary
Može li i, ako da, kako, postojati samoodrična i samopožrtvovna ljubav prema drugome
koja pojedinca istodobno ispunjava i usavršava? Tako je francuski isusovac Pierre Rousselot
sročio "problem ljubavi u srednjem vijeku" u svojoj istoimenoj studiji iz 1908. On je marljivo
proučavajući oglede srednjovjekovnih crkvenih mislioca o ljubavi razradio dva oprečna koncepta
ljubavi, koje je nazvao fizičkim i ekstatičkim. Ova prva, fizička ili grko-tomistička ljubav, čiji su
zagovornici bili, između ostalih, Aristotel, sv. Augustin i Toma Akvinski, temelji se na sklonosti
prirodnih bića da traže vlastitu dobrobit i pronalaze je u ljubavi prema drugima i prema Bogu, te
uz to podrazumijeva sklad i jedinstvo ljubitelja i ljubljenoga. Nasuprot tome, ekstatička ili
bezinteresna ljubav odlikuje se dvojnošću ljubitelja i ljubljenog, nasilnošću ljubavi,
iracionalnošću i samovoljnošću. Promišljanja o njoj mogu se primjerice naći u spisima Grgura
Velikoga, Aelreda iz Rievaulxa i Abelarda.
U svojoj sam disertaciji analizirao hrvatska srednjovjekovna pasionska prikazanja (15-ak
djela s ukupno oko 15 000 stihova) u kontekstu spomenutih koncepata ljubavi i time potvrdio
svoju polaznu hipotezu koja je predmnijevala da se u navedenim djelima nalaze odjeci fizičkog i
ekstatičkog koncepta ljubavi. Ciljevi su mi bili pronaći i dokazati njihovo postojanje u
pasionskim prikazanjima te ih na osnovi tih koncepata podvrgnuti tematsko-motivskoj analizi,
osobito lik Djevice Marije. Pritom sam ustanovio kako lik Isusa Krista u dotičnim djelima
iskazuje sve bitne odlike koncepta fizičke ljubavi, dočim bolom shrvani Bogorodičin lik
ispoljava kvintesencijalne značajke ekstatičkoga koncepta ljubavi. Štoviše, artikulirani iskazi
spomenutih koncepata protežu se kroz gotovo sva djela hrvatskog pasionskog žanra i prožimaju
ih prelazeći ujedno i na druge likove, poput Ivana i Marije Magdalene. Njihov sukob ne samo da
pridonosi razvoju dramatske napetosti, već kroz izmjenične replike glavnih protagonista tvori
njeno ishodište. Bez toga saznanja hrvatska se srednjovjekovna pasionska prikazanja ne bi moglo
pojmiti u njihovoj čuvstvenoj, duhovnoj i spoznajnoj sveobuhvatnosti.In the first chapter after the "Introduction", titled "Researching Emotions in a
Historical Context", I initially address the definition and etymology of the concept of emotion,
as well as the various paradigms for the mental-emotional dynamics which have shifted with the
passage of time. Afterwards I delve deeper into the distinction between feelings and emotions,
the arguable connection between language and emotions, methodological tools and scientific
terms, the question of appropriate sources, and ultimately the advantages and disadvantages of
word lists. I subsequently outline some doubts and prejudices about emotions, whereby I point
out a controversy as to whether emotions are timeless (a stand taken by universalists) or they
undergo changes throughout history (viewpoint of social constructivists). Namely, during the
course of over a hundred years, the study of emotions in a wide range of disciplines has been
significantly determined by the continuous discussion which had emerged between the
supporters of socially constructed, culturally contingent, relativistic and historical conceptions of
emotions on one side, and the essentialist, culturally universal and transhistorical conceptions on
the other. In that sense, the entire (hi)story of the history of emotions could be written in terms of
nature vs. nurture dichotomy. Having described the main features of the emotional turn, I
proceed with tracing the historical development of the study of emotions from theology to
neuroscience. I conclude the chapter by reaffirming the claim made by Susan Matt and Peter
Stearns who stated that emotions not only have their own history but have in turn shaped history.
I commence the following chapter, under the title "Emotions and Religion – Medieval
Notions of Love", by describing the general connection between emotions and religion, then out
of all religions I focus on Christianity, and thereby among all "Christian" emotions, I expound
upon the concept of love in Middle Ages, starting with the Bible, then patristics, scholastics,
mysticism (also including female mysticism) onwards to romantic love. I thereafter move on to
the modern age and place special emphasis on the most prominent theoreticians of love, such as
Anders Nygren and C. S. Lewis (seraphic love), in order to eventually turn to the French Jesuit
Pierre Rousselot and elaborate the main features of his concepts of physical and ecstatic love,
described in his ground-breaking study from 1908 titled "The Problem of Love in the Middle
Ages: A Historical Contribution", as well as their staunchest advocates. The concept of physical or Greco-Thomist love, whose proponents were, among others, Aristotle, Augustine and Thomas
Aquinas, does not signify the corporeality but naturalness of such love. It is based on the
propensity of natural beings to seek their own well-being and find it in love of others and of God,
also implying harmony and unity of the lover and the beloved. In contrast, ecstatic or
disinterested love is characterized by the duality of the lover and the beloved, the violence of
love, its irrationality, and self-sufficiency. Reflections on it can be found, for example, in the
writings of Gregory the Great, Aelred of Rievaulx and Abelard. Summing up, by placing
Rousselot within the framework of philosophical and theological theorising on love, I clearly
show how my research fits with the existing trends of approaching medieval sources so as to
decode traces and expressions pertaining to emotions.
After that, I set off with the scientific study of the importance of Jesus Christ and the
Virgin Mary through a prism of emotions most commonly associated with them, hence the
chapter's is title: "Christ's Passio and Mary's Compassio". In view of passio, I pay attention to
the theological and art-historical accounts of Christ's torment, death and resurrection, and to the
theodicean questions and answers. I describe in detail the Eucharistic celebration and the Easter
mystery of transubstantiation, expanding upon the symbolism of blood and bread. In addition, I
follow the development of the representation of the cross in art, especially liturgical, as the most
eminent symbol of passion, giving importance to the shift in Christ's appearance in the 13th
century, when his humanity was brought to the fore. At that time the typical Romanesque
representation of the Son of God as a priest, the celebrant of death, the so-called Christus victor
style, had been redirected to a more naturalistic depiction of the suffering Christ, who was from
then on shown dead on the cross, known as the Christus patiens style, resembling Isaiah's "Man
of Sorrows". The entire crucifix symbolizes the Franciscan meditation on the passion, rendering
Christ's passio present in current time and place with the aim to move the viewer to compassio,
that is – affective gratitude for all that Christ had undertook on our behalf, and to the spiritual
sharing of the passio together with Mary. This represents a great step in "humanising" art and
devotion. The first part of this chapter ends by contemplation upon salvation and second coming.
When it comes to compassio, in the process of exploring the connection between Marian
devotion and the development of the emotion of compassion in the Middle Ages, I mention, inter
alia, that the Church Fathers under the influence of ancient philosophy believed that the Virgin under the cross stoically withstood the suffering of her firstborn, while the full flourishing of
Marian compassion was only reached in the 12th and 13th centuries with Anselm of Canterbury,
Bernard of Clairvaux and Francis of Assisi. I investigate liturgical practices of Marian worship,
such as Our Lady of Sorrow, also closely examining prayers, meditations and other passion
narratives. It is interesting to note that Peter Dronke established that Marian laments (planctus
Mariae) drew upon traditional pre-Christian women's mourning, which by inconsolable grief
represents resistance to male social authority and Christian eschatology. I also linked the growth
of Marian devotion to the inception and rise of courtly love. Concerning passion narratives, such
as Ogier's "Quis dabit", I refer to Thomas Bestul who has convincingly demonstrated that Mary's
weeping at the foot of the cross had the potential to break the traditional gender roles and the
prevailing discourse of misogyny. When her character not only wants to perish with Christ but
moreover struggles to acquire her son's body after his demise, her behaviour suggests that female
emotionality may be a paradoxical source of power and thus may have had an emancipatory
effect on the female audience, while at the same time deeply disturbing the male audience by
disrupting the hierarchy of patriarchal family relationships. Such an interpretation is
complemented by Sarah McNamer who, through the study of medieval affective meditations,
had shown that compassion is not only an emotion but also a potential foundation of an ethical
system. The Virgin represents maternal care as a model of compassion which contains a set of
ethical demands (as opposed to loyalty to God, the Father): that she has a duty to preserve her
son's life, that the crucifiers have a duty to spare his life, and that finally he has a duty to live.
My "Analysis of Croatian Medieval Passion Poetry and Plays in the Context of
Physical and Ecstatic Love" comes next, where after a brief introduction into this genre I
subject the respective literary works to a thorough thematic-motivic analysis. It encompasses all
four developmental stages of Croatian medieval passion plays: lyrical-narrative poems (with the
addition of prominent Easter poems, such as Raduj se, vsaki verni – Rejoice, Every Faithful):1
Pisan ot muki Hrstovi – The Poem of Christ's Torment, Cantilena pro sabatho (Jegda čusmo
željne glasi) – Chant for Holy Saturday (Whence We Harkened Sorrowful Voices) and Ja,
Marija, glasom zovu (I Mary, Call Forth); dialogical laments: Prigovaranje blažene Dive Marije
i Križa Isusova – The Reproach of the Blessed Virgin Mary to Jesus's Cross, Splitski ulomak – Split Fragment, along with Picićeva pjesmarica – Picić Chant Book and Rukopis Vrbničkog
plača – Manuscript of the Vrbnik Lament; dramatised laments: Zbornik duhovnoga štiva –
Spiritual Reading Miscellany, Klimantovićev zbornik I. and II. – Klimantović Miscellany I and
II, Osorsko-hvarska pjesmarica – Osor-Hvar Chant Book, Muka Isukrstova iz Klimantovićeva
zbornika II. – The Passion of Jesus Christ from Klimantović Miscellany II, Muka Spasitelja
našega iz Tkonskog zbornika – The Passion of Our Saviour from Tkon Miscellany; passion
plays: Muka Spasitelja našega iz 1556. – The Passion of Our Saviour from 1556, Mišterij vele
lip i slavan od Isusa – The Mighty Beautiful and Glorious Mistery of Jesus and Uskrsnutje
Isusovo – The Resurrection of Jesus.
The diligently conducted analysis of Croatian passion plays has ascertained the
undeniable presence of all relevant characteristics of physical (Greco-Thomist) and ecstatic
(disinterested) concepts of love as described by Pierre Rousselot. By applying them to the
reading of the texts in question, as living tissue cut open with a scalpel, subcutaneous, visceral
motions of dual significance flicker before of our eyes. From the capillary secretive circulation in
certain lyrical-narrative poems, their presence gradually gains momentum, intensity and
frequency, all the way to the tremendous pulsation which echoes through dramatised laments and
passion plays. From this discerning insight we can observe how physical and ecstatic love pair
up but also parry each other by means of dialogues between Christ and the Virgin Mary.
Following the same already established pattern articulated statements of the mentioned concepts
of love extend through almost all the works of the Croatian passion genre and permeate them.
Furthermore, it can be noticed that they have recruited other characters, such as John and Mary
Magdalene, for their, conditionally speaking, rivalry.
In the chapter entitled "The Scenic-Performative Features of Passion Plays" I define
the development of medieval drama and theatre with special reference to the questionable
existence of religious drama in the East. Then I elaborate on the emergence and interrelationship
of liturgical dramas and church plays. Afterwards, I turn my attention to Croatian passion plays
and their place and origins within the classical genre division of medieval drama into mysteries,
miracles and moralities. I proceed by examining their originality in relation to foreign influences.
In the text on poetics, verse and thematic framework, following Nikica Kolumbić, the doyen of
Croatian studies, I describe two fields of realisation (direct addressing the viewers – the faithful, on the one hand, and dramatising or stage adaptation of religious texts on the other) from which
the poetics of Croatian medieval drama will spring forth, from style and composition to the
conception of characters. The same scholar, like Nikola Batušić, argued that skilful and
prominent Croatian Renaissance poets Marko Marulić and Petar Hektorović were among the
authors of Croatian medieval passion plays. Furthermore, I scrutinise the disputed existence of
dramatic tension and the psycho-emotional profiling of the protagonists within the mentioned
works, then the notion of time or timelessness of the represented events, as well as the feeling of
close connectedness of actors and viewers (emotional communities). I continue by presenting
information on late medieval actors (both European and domestic), viewers and topics such as
reception, duration of plays, number of viewers and the city's visage during performances,
whereby I draw on Gustave Cohen's research. Those considerations are followed by highlighting
the features of the medieval theatre: mansion and platea, while I thereafter bring the chapter to
an end by commenting on mise-en-scène, scenography, costumes, masks, music and stage
effects.
From the title of the last chapter before the "Conclusion": "The Notion of Passionism
Manifested in the Paschal Mystery, Liturgy and Popular Piety, the Trident Council, and
Church Plays" it is clear where my focus lies. I thus primarily turn my attention to the
timeframe of medieval passion plays' traditional performances – the bringing about of Lent as a
form of pre-Easter preparation and its actions (fasting, almsgiving, and praying), then on the
rituals of the Holy Week, whereby I conclude this subchapter by commenting on the days of the
Easter Triduum. Besides, I underline a matter worthwhile to pursue: "passionism" as a
convergence of liturgy and popular piety. I further discuss the differing principles of the two, but
also the alignment of extra-liturgical pious practices with liturgy, with special reference to the
development of folk passion devotions in specific parts of Croatia. As an example of official,
liturgical devotion, I consider the Via Crucis, while as a form of public piety, I expand on the
"Following the Cross" procession on the island of Hvar during the Holy Week, citing Bernardin
Škunca's works on this subject. I round off this part of the text by examining literature as a form
of paraliturgy on the example of Croatian medieval literary production. I therewith describe the
significance of the city of Zadar and lay fraternities for the development of our domestic passion
plays. After that I interpret the impact of the Council of Trent’s (1545–1563) provisions on their
performance, in an effort to discover how the inclusion of the scenes of (excessive) torture and (again excessive) laughter in the passion plays had come to cause aversion among certain layers
of society. Finally, I devote myself to the recording of the inevitable course of events: church
bans and clashes of sacral and profane take on plays, professionalisation of acting and the loss of
social cohesion, changes in aesthetic taste in the second half of the 16th century, namely the
beginnings of Croatian Renaissance comedy (Marin Držić), and the passion plays' gradual
descent from the stage.
In my "Conclusion", I point out that Christ's passion and Mary's lament constitute the
fundamental subject matter of Croatian medieval lyrical-narrative poems, dialogical and
dramatised laments, and ultimately passion plays, comprising some 15,000 verses. In those texts
the Nazarene sacrifices himself for humanity, while his mother in turn yearns to sacrifice herself
for him or in his place. They, as main protagonists, engage in a dialogue in which she begs and
beseeches him, threatening to take her own life unless he preserves his earthly existence at the
expense of that in heavens, whereas the Saviour's seeks to comfort his distraught mother,
spiritually nourish her and affectionately explain to her that he receives the cross and bears the
ultimate sacrifice in order to grant the whole human race the redemption of sins and eternal life.
By utilising the concepts of physical and ecstatic love by Pierre Rousselot in the course of a
thematic-motivic analysis of the aforementioned works, it becomes apparent that this verbal
dissension is not merely accidental but forms a regular pattern consistently widespread
throughout the whole genre of Croatian medieval passion poetry and drama. In other words – it
lies at the very heart of it.
Namely, through the act of generous self-sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross for the
salvation of mankind a propensity of human beings to seek their own good, and find it in love of
others and of God, is reflected. In this view, to love the Lord means to "regain one's soul". This
notion is supplemented by the interpretation that all humans in a concordant and harmonious
way by their very nature love God, the common good of the entire universe, more than
themselves. Additionally, if we compare Christ's Passion with three important theories set out by
Thomas Aquinas (of the whole and the part, of the universal appetite of all things for God, and of
the coincidence of the spiritual good with the good in itself), we will come to realise that they are
in perfect correspondence. Hence, from the presently reviewed facts, it clearly follows that the
figure of the Lamb of God in Croatian medieval passion plays exhibits all the essential traits of the concept which Pierre Rousselot had named physical (or Greco-Thomist) love. Along with St.
Thomas, it was championed by Aristotle, Pseudo-Dionysius, Hugh of St. Victor and St. Bernard
in his early writings.
Contrary to this, the grief stricken character of Mary consequentially displays all four
quintessential features of Rousselot's ecstatic (disinterested) concept of love, namely: the duality
(disharmony) of the lover and the beloved, unlike their presupposed harmony and unity within
the physical concept of love (the Virgin offers her life neglecting her own well-being); the selfsufficiency
of love (taking no notice of the prophesies and by openly opposing the Divine Plan,
Our Lady finds her justification, reason, and end in a self-oppressing love directed towards thisworldly,
mortal Christ); its irrationality (advocating egalitarianism, she disregards the difference
between her own and the Saviour’s nature); and ultimately the violence of the Madonna’s love
which both physically and mentally hurts and humiliates her, while it additionally aggravates the
excruciating suffering of the crucified Anointed One. In sheer opposition to physical love, here
to love God means "to lose one's soul". Such love for others only includes the love of friendship
(amor amicitiae) and is free from the love of desire (amor concupiscentiae), or love for oneself,
whereas physical love, embodied in the image of Christ, signifies unity (not duality as in ecstatic
love) as well as continuity of the love of friendship and the love of desire. Among the proponents
of ecstatic love we find Richard of St. Victor, Albert the Great, William of St. Thierry, Aelred of
Rievaulx, Abelard, William of Auvergne, St. Bonaventure, Duns Scotus, and St. Bernard in his
later sermons.
Through this reinterpretation of Croatian passion plays my striving to decode the
discourse of love contained inside their verses has been modelled on Niklas Luhmann's research
("Love as Passion: The Codification of Intimacy"), as well as on plentiful other comprehensive
interdisciplinary studies which had come to pass over the course of the last 15-20 years within
the scope of a relatively new, thriving science – the history of emotions. In the light of the
pivotal position of love in Christian thought, I strongly feel that this type of interdisciplinary
examination provides us with an exquisite insight into the underlying framework of the passion
play genre, hence unravelling a hitherto undetected pattern of dramatic tension, as well as
enhancing our understanding of different religious-didactic expressions of love. What is more, I
hope to have successfully demonstrated within my dissertation how adept utilisation of notions such as emotion script and emotional community can bring us closer to unveiling the
significance, profoundness and authenticity of emotions performed on medieval stage and to
perceiving their potential impact on religious sensibilities.
Besides, is there a more sublime sacrifice than to succumb to love, to lay down one's life
prompted by it and consider that an act of selfl
Love of God as the Averting Power against Seductive Temptations in Kanižlić’s Sveta Rožalija
Cilj ovoga rada jest proučiti svrhu i funkciju alegorijske figure Ljubavi Božje (također zvane Ljubavlju Nebeskom) u epskom religioznom spjevu Antuna Kanižlića Sveta Rožalija, panormitanska djevica napisanom najvjerojatnije 1759., a objavljenom posmrtno 1780. Ona se višestruko ukazuje Rožaliji tijekom svetičina boravka na osami, u pećini, te je krijepi, štiti i odvraća od brojnih napasti (kao što su Paklena Napast, Ispraznost Svijeta te vila Razbluda i njen sin Ljubićak)pomažući joj da ustraje u svom pustinjačkom duhovnom rastu i nadvlada sve poteškoće koje je more. Kojim se retoričkim metodama i uvjeravanjem pritom služi kako bi privoljela Rožaliju da joj se pokori te kakve pjesničke slike priziva crpeći iz bogatog srednjovjekovnog i ranonovovjekovnog kolektivnog kršćanskog imaginarija, kanim utvrditi i razložiti u ovom radu. Ljubav Božju usto analiziram ne samo kao teološki koncept, jamstvo božanski uređenog svijeta i sustava vrijednosti, već – što je možda bilo zanemareno u dosadašnjoj književnoj teoriji i kritici – prvenstveno kao emociju, i to od vrhovnoga značaja (Bog je ljubav, 1 Iv 4, 8; 4, 16).The objective of this paper is to study the purpose and function of the allegorical figure of Love of God (also called Heavenly Love) in the religious long poem Sveta Rožalija, panoramitska djevica by Antun Kanižlić, most probably written in 1759 and published posthumously in 1780. This figure appears on multiple occasions to the saint during her stay in seclusion in the cave, nourishing her, shielding and averting from numerous temptations (such as Infernal Temptation, Vanity of the World, as well as the fairy Lechery and her son Lovey-Boy1). It helps her persevere in her ascetic spiritual growth and overcome all adversities plaguing her. I intend to determine and analyse in this paper which rhetorical methods it puts to use in order to persuade Rožalija to comply with her guidance, and what poetic imagery it invokes by drawing from rich mediaeval and early-modern collective Christian imagination. I thereby analyse the Love of God not only as a theological concept and a guarantee of the divinely ordained world and value system, but primarily – which has so far possibly been neglected in literary theory and criticism – as an emotion of supreme importance (God is love, 1 John 4:8; 4:16)
Alcohol-Related Road Traffic Accidents Before and After the Passing of the Road Traffic Safety Act in Croatia
The aim of this study was to gather enough data in order to formulate theory- and research-based recommendations to policy makers with the intention of decreasing the number of alcohol-related accidents and victims on Croatian roads. The data on the injured traffic participants and the share of participants under the influence of alcohol were collected from the police reports of the Traffic Police Department, Ministry of the Interior, written at the scene of the respective accidents.
This documentation was then processed by descriptive epidemiology and analysed through a four-year period, before and after the passing of the New Road Traffic Safety Act in the Republic of Croatia, on 20 August 2004. In the first six months of 2005, after the passing of the Act, there were 3,275 accidents caused by the motorists under the influence of alcohol (12.5% of all the accidents), with 64 persons killed. Only 5 fatalities (8%) were caused by the drivers with measured blood alcohol concentration of up to 0.5‰. As much as 27 fatalities (42%) were caused by the drivers with measured more than 1.5‰, while half of the fatalities, 32 (50%), were caused by drivers with 0.5 – 1.5‰. In this period, more than 451,000 violations were recorded, whereas in the same period of the previous year, the number of violations was
about 519,000. A reduction of the total number of accidents is the result of the new regulation provision, according to which the incidents without human victims do not have to be reported to the police. The number of traffic accidents caused by drivers under the influence of alcohol had increased by some dozen per cents, namely: 2005 – 6,219 persons, 2006 – 6,590 persons, noting that in 2006 one less person was killed (123) compared to 2005. In 2005, drivers with alcohol
concentration of 0–0.5‰ caused 1,096 accidents, with 14 fatalities, whereas in 2006 there were 1,164 accidents with 9 fatalities. A total of 2,314 accidents were caused by drivers with more than 0.5‰ and up to 1.5‰ in 2005 (in 2006 – 2,582), along with 53 fatalities (1 fewer than in 2006). Drivers with more than 1.5‰ participated in 2,809 accidents (2006 – 2,844), with the number of killed drivers amounting to 57, three fewer than in 2006. In light of these facts, alcohol use still remains a significant factor in road traffic accidents and is an important area for injury prevention efforts
Physical Inactivity Changes in Croatia: the CroHort Study
The aim of this paper was to compare the surveys conducted respectively in 2003 and 2008 within the Croatian Adult Health Cohort Study (CroHort) regarding the physical activity/inactivity of the inhabitants of the Republic of Croatia. The collected data show a significant decline in the intensity of physical activity in 2008 with regards to 2003, regarding the way of getting to work (60.7%), the level of physical strain at work (72.2%), and the frequency of physical activity taken in the subjects’ spare time (55.8%). In order to prevent the risk of cardiovascular diseases and to raise the public
awareness of the potential health threat physical inactivity poses, a number of thoroughly conceived health promotion strategies should be implemented, which would equally encompass all the segments of Croatian society
Carotid Endarterectomy Unexpectedly Resulted in Optimal Blood Pressure Control
Resistant hypertension is defined as hypertension that remains above 140/90 mmHg despite the provision of three or more antihypertensive drugs in a rational combination at full doses and including a diuretic. It is associated with adverse clinical outcome and therefore requires aggressive medical treatment. We present a case of 70-year-old woman who was treated for resistant hypertension with a diuretic, ACE-inhibitor, calcium channel blocker, and with centrally acting antihypertensive, moxonodine. Despite of aggressive medical treatment her blood pressure remained above 160/90 mmHg continuously. Large diagnostic workup excluded common causes of secondary hypertension, but revealed significant carotid stenosis present on left internal carotid artery. Carotid endarterectomy was performed in order to improve cerebrovascular prognosis, but unexpectedly resulted in optimal control of her blood pressure. Two months after operation patient was on only one antihypertensive drug, having blood pressure below 130/85 mmHg. We suggest that in selected patients resistant hypertension could be associated with carotid stenosis and carotid sinus baroreceptor dysfunction. For definite conclusions further studies are warranted
Blunt Trauma of Thorax with Subclavian and Axillary Artery Lesion - Case Report
We report a rare case of blunt trauma of the axillary artery in the 20-year-old man who was injured as a motorcycle rider and received severe body injuries. Injuries included severe trauma of the left lower leg with contusion and extensive soft tissue and bone trauma of these regions with poor general condition and with the presence of clinical signs of traumatic shock. Upon arrival, we found that in addition to earlier clearly visible trauma to the leg, there is a hematoma of the medial side of the left supraclavicular region and the absence of the radial artery pulse with paralysis of the left arm. Given the clinical findings, emergency radiological examination is made to the patient (X-ray, US, CDFI, MSCT - angiography) and we found out that there is trauma of axillary artery with clear signs of thrombosis of extra thoracic part of subclavian artery due to its transition in to the axillary artery. After hemodynamic stabilization, above knee amputation of the left leg is made and emergency exploration of earlier mentioned arteries. Bypass of the damaged arteries with synthetic graft 6mm in diameter was made. Control MSCT angiography showed normal flow in the arterial tree of the whole left hand and the MRI of the cervical spine and shoulder girdle did not found lesions of the brachial plexus. SSEP demonstrate the absence of pulses on the left hand. Patient on regular check-ups showed normal general condition, with adequate passable graft and pronounced paralysis on the left hand. In the process of rehabilitation physiotherapy was also included. Blunt trauma to the axillary artery is an extremely rare example of trauma of blood vessels which makes only 0.03% of all vascular injuries
Maternal Physical Activity in Pregnancy and Newborns` Anthropometry-The Preface From the CRIBS Study
Health benefits of physical activity during pregnancy include reduced risk of excessive gestational weight gain and conditions such as gestational diabetes, preeclampsia and preterm birth. The ongoing CRoatian Islands Birth Cohort Study (CRIBS) is the first cohort study in the South-Eastern Europe with an aim to assess the prevalence of risk factors (biological, environmental and behavioral) for the Metabolic Syndrome in populations from Dalmatian islands of Hvar and Brač and coastal Split city with its surroundings. At the time of writing, Over 350 pregnant women and 220 of their newborns have been involved in the study. Here we present the preliminary results of testing the association of mothers` self-estimated physical activity during pregnancy with newborns` anthropometric characteristics (birth weight, length and head circumference) using the data from questionnaires and obstetric records of 116 mother – newborn pairs. The difference in weight-at-birth was detected between newborn girls whose mothers were from Low vs. Intensive physical activity categories, as well as from Moderate vs. Intensive physical activity categories. In addition to that, the significant difference in weight-at-birth and height/length-at-birth was detected between newborn boys whose mothers were from Moderate vs. Intensive physical activity categories (p<0.01). No association between self-estimated level of physical activity and mothers’ body mass index was found. For women with normal pregnancies, light occupational activities do not cause problems with the fetal growth rate, but the same was not reported for women who maintained high-intensity activities
Sex estimation of the sternum by automatic image processing of multi-slice computed tomography images in a Croatian population sample: a retrospective study
Aim To determine the sexual dimorphism of the sternum
with standard measurements in a contemporary Croatian
population sample using multi-slice computed tomography
(MSCT) and to compare the data obtained by an automatic
with those obtained by a manual approach.
Methods Five sternal measurements were obtained from
MSCT images of 73 men and 55 women and three sternal
indices were calculated. Custom image analysis software
was developed for automatic segmentation and calculation
of sternal measurements. Measurements of sexual dimorphism
were automatically calculated and compared
with manual measurements. Results All of the sternal measurements exhibited significant
differences between men and women. The discrepancies
between manual and automatic measurements
ranged from 2.8% to 3.6% of the mean average values obtained
with the automatic approach. The most accurate
single-variable discriminant function was sternal body
length (82.8%), the most accurate index was sternal area
(89.1%), and the discriminant function using three variables
was manubrium width, sternal body length, and sternal
body width (90.6%).
Conclusion Sternal measurements are a reliable sex indicator
and can be used in forensic casework. Computer-aided
measurement methods can accelerate sex estimation
and improve its precision and accuracy