327 research outputs found

    Napping after complex motor learning enhances juggling performance

    Get PDF
    AbstractThe present study examined whether a nap after complex motor learning enhanced the following day's physical performance. Eighteen volunteers met the inclusion criteria and were assigned to either a nap (n=9; men=5; mean age=21.0±1.5) or no-nap group (n=9; men=5; mean age=21.9±0.3). Participants practiced juggling in the morning and were tested immediately afterwards. Participants of the nap group were given a 70-minute nap opportunity after juggling practice, while the no-nap group stayed awake. Juggling performance was then tested in the evening (retest-1) and the next morning (retest-2). Two-way analysis of variance (group: nap, no-nap×time: test, retest-1, retest-2) found there was a significant effect of test time and a significant group×time interaction. The juggling performance of both groups improved from test to retest-1, respectively. However, the juggling performance level of the nap group was higher than that of the no-nap group at the retest-1. As predicted, a nap promptly after learning motor skills was associated with subsequently improved performance. Moreover, the juggling performance of the nap group showed additional significant improvements in the retest-2. In the no-nap group, however, there were no significant improvements in the juggling performance after nocturnal sleep. These results demonstrate that the benefits of a nap following learning were further enhanced after nocturnal sleep. The present results may provide justification for introducing nap periods into daily athletic training as an active method to improve performance

    Intraluminal (Intra-alveolar) Diffuse Fibrosis of the Lung

    Get PDF
    The present communication describes the morphology, etiology and mechanisms of intraluminal (or intra-alveolar) diffuse fibrosis of the lungs. Pulmonary fibrosis is the end-stage of tissue injury in the lungs and is usually non-specific. The determination of its original cause is difficult, but intraluminal diffuse fibrosis with loose stroma is quite unique and characteristic. In addition to paraquat lungs, we herein show that radiation pneumonitis, infarction, and some forms of bronchiolitis obliterans may cause this type of fibrosis. It is speculated that intraluminal diffuse fibrosis is the result of severe alveolar epithelial damage occurring diffusely and continuously, followed by edema and organization of the alveoli

    Efficacy of Oral Care Provided by Interprofessional Collaboration for a Patient with Esophageal Cancer Associated with Post-polio Syndrome during Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy

    Get PDF
    Preoperative oral care is helpful to prevent postoperative complications in patients who are undergoing esophagectomy. Here, we report the case of an 81-year-old Japanese man with an upper limb disability caused by post-polio syndrome who was receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy for esophageal cancer. He had poor oral health status and developed oral complications as a side effect of chemotherapy. He could not brush his teeth by himself. However, infection control by oral care provided by an interprofessional collaboration successfully improved his oral hygiene, and his follow-up involved no severe complications. Interprofessional collaboration is useful especially for patients with upper limb disability

    Optical and radiographical characterization of silica aerogel for Cherenkov radiator

    Full text link
    We present optical and X-ray radiographical characterization of silica aerogels with refractive index from 1.05 to 1.07 for a Cherenkov radiator. A novel pin-drying method enables us to produce highly transparent hydrophobic aerogels with high refractive index by shrinking wet-gels. In order to investigate the uniformity in the density (i.e., refractive index) of an individual aerogel monolith, we use the laser Fraunhofer method, an X-ray absorption technique, and Cherenkov imaging by a ring imaging Cherenkov detector in a beam test. We observed an increase in density at the edge of the aerogel tiles, produced by pin-drying.Comment: To be published in IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci., 7 pages, 9 figures, 1 tabl

    A model-free method for extracting interaction potential between protein molecules using small-angle X-ray

    Get PDF
    A small-angle X-ray scattering has been used to probe protein–protein interaction in solution. Conventional methods need to input modeled potentials with variable/invariable parameters to reproduce the experimental structure factor. In the present study, a model-free method for extracting the excess part of effective interaction potential between protein molecules in solutions over an introduced hard-sphere potential by using experimental data of small-angle X-ray scattering is presented on the basis of liquid-state integral equation theory. The reliability of the model-free method is tested by the application to experimentally derived structure factors for dense lysozyme solutions with different solution conditions [Javid et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 028101 (2007), Schroer et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 178102 (2011)]. The structure factors calculated from the model-free method agree well with the experimental ones. The model-free method provides the following picture of the lysozyme solution: these are the stabilization of contact-pair configurations, large activation barrier against their formations, and screened Coulomb repulsion between the charged proteins. In addition, the model-free method will be useful to verify whether or not a model for colloidal system is acceptable to describing protein–protein interaction

    A Young Man with Anti-NMDAR Encephalitis following Guillain-Barré Syndrome

    Get PDF
    A 19-year-old man developed rapidly progressive muscle weakness and dysesthesia in the extremities, and dyspnea after a flu-like episode. Nerve conduction studies showed reduced motor nerve conduction velocities with conduction block, and sensory nerve action potentials could not be evoked. The patient was diagnosed as having Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), and was treated with 2 cycles of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) therapy and was assisted by mechanical ventilation. During the recovery course of the illness, he experienced several attacks of psychomotor agitation from the 37th hospital day, and generalized tonic convulsive seizures suddenly developed on the 42nd hospital day. Brain MRI showed high-intensity lesions in the bilateral thalamus and medial temporal lobes. The convulsions were controlled by continuous thiopental infusion (until the 50th hospital day) and mechanical ventilation (until the 84th hospital day). Intravenous methylprednisolone pulse therapy (1,000 mg/day) for 3 days followed by dexamethasone (16 mg/day) was added. After relief of convulsive seizures, prominent orolingual dyskinesia appeared, and on MRI marked atrophy of the bilateral medial temporal lobes was seen. Anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) antibodies in serum and cerebrospinal fluid were positive on the 92nd hospital day. Anti-NMDAR encephalitis usually affects young females but a small number of male cases with this disease have been reported. Our male patient was unique in having GBS, a post-infectious autoimmune disease, as a preceding disease, suggesting that anti-NMDAR encephalitis itself is caused by a parainfectious autoimmune mechanism

    Model-potential-free analysis of small angle scattering of proteins in solution: insights into solvent effects on protein-protein interaction

    Get PDF
    To extract protein-protein interaction from experimental small-angle scattering of proteins in solutions using liquid state theory, a model potential consisting of a hard-sphere repulsive potential and the excess interaction potential has been introduced. In the present study, we propose a model-potential-free integral equation method that extracts the excess interaction potential by using the experimental small-angle scattering data without specific model potential such as the Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO)-type model. Our analysis of experimental small-angle X-ray scattering data for lysozyme solution shows both the stabilization of contact configurations of protein molecules and a large activation barrier against the formation of the contact configurations in addition to the screened Coulomb repulsion. These characteristic features, which are not well-described by the DLVO-type model, are interpreted as solvent effects
    corecore