2,102 research outputs found
Estudio Electromiográfico del MĂşsculo Masetero tras CirugĂa de Tercer Molar Inferior
Alves, N (Alves, Nilton)Univ Talca, Fac Ciencias Salud, Unidad Anat Normal, Talca, ChileThird molar extraction surgery is one of the most frequently performed procedures in the areas of buccal-maxillofacial traumatology and surgery. The post-surgery evolution was evaluated based on the clinical evidence obtained so far. The objective of this study was to analyze the post-surgery clinical evolution of the masseter muscle by means of surface electromyography, to evaluate muscle activity. Four analyses were performed: one pre-surgery, to register the normal activity, and three in post-surgery: on the 7(th), 14(th) and 21(st) postoperative days, in a sample of 30 patients. On the 21(st) day, there was near normal recovery of the electrical signal of the masseter in women, but in men this activity did not reach normal levels. Surface electromyography is a safe and reliable tool for post-surgery evolution control of masseter function
Attacks by “Anonymous” WikiLeaks Proponents not Anonymous
On November 28, 2010, the world started watching the whistle blower website WikiLeaks to begin publishing part of the 250,000 US Embassy Diplomatic cables. These confidential cables provide an insight on U.S. international affairs from 274 different embassies, covering topics such as analysis of host countries and leaders and even requests for spying out United Nations leaders.\ud
The release of these cables has caused reactions not only in the real world, but also on the Internet. In fact, a cyberwar started just before the initial release. Wikileaks has reported that their servers were experiencing distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDoS). A DDoS attack consists of many computers trying to overload a server by firing a high number of requests, leading ultimately to service disruption. In this case, the goal was to avoid the release of the embassy cables.\ud
After the initial cable release, several companies started severed ties with WikiLeaks. One of the first was Amazon.com, that removed the WikiLeaks web- site from their servers. Next, EveryDNS, a company in which the domain wikileaks.org was registered, dropped the domain entries from its servers. On December 4th, PayPal cancelled the account that WikiLeaks was using to receive on-line donations. On the 6th, Swiss bank PostFinance froze the WikiLeaks assets and Mastercard stopped receiving payments to the WikiLeaks account. Visa followed Mastercard on December 7th.\ud
These reactions caused a group of Internet activists (or “hacktivists”) named Anonymous to start a retaliation against PostFinance, PayPay, MasterCard, Visa, Moneybrookers.com and Amazon.com, named “Operation Payback”. The retaliation was performed as DDoS attacks to the websites of those companies, disrupting their activities (except for the case of Amazon.com) for different periods of time.\ud
The Anonymous group consists of volunteers that use a stress testing tool to perform the attacks. This tool, named LOIC (Low Orbit Ion Cannon), can be found both as a desktop application and as a Web page.\ud
Even though the group behind the attacks claims to be anonymous, the tools they provide do not offer any security services, such as anonymization. As a consequence, a hacktivist that volunteers to take part in such attacks, can be traced back easily. This is the case for both current versions of the LOIC tool. Therefore, the goal of this report is to present an analysis of privacy issues in the context of these attacks, and raise awareness on the risks of taking part in them
Perceived cognitive functioning in breast cancer patients treated with chemotherapy compared to matched healthy women: Evidence from a Portuguese study
Aim: Cognitive concerns are one of the most frequently reported symptoms by breast cancer survivors. This study aimed to evaluate perceived cognitive functioning in Portuguese women with breast cancer treated with chemotherapy.
Methods: A cross-sectional study enrolling 146 women (73 with breast cancer and 73 healthy) was conducted from August to October 2017, invited to participate through online dissemination. Participants completed self-reported questionnaires to collect sociodemographic and clinical data and assess perceived cognitive functioning and psychological adjustment variables (anxiety and depression).
Results: Compared to healthy women, women with breast cancer showed significantly lower scores on the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Cognitive Function (FACT-Cog) subscales and higher levels of depression. Both groups showed
significant negative correlations between perceived cognitive functioning and anxiety
and depression. Health status and depression seem to better explain perceived cognitive
functioning, with health status adding significantly more explained variance
beyond sociodemographic and psychological adjustment variables.
Conclusion: The current findings provide evidence for the existence of more cognitive
complaints among Portuguese women with breast cancer, compared to healthy individuals. Anxiety, depression, age and education also explain perceived cognitive functioning. Considering that health status and psychological adjustment seem to significantly
explain perceived cognitive functioning, special attention should be given by health-care professionals, including nurses, to designing clinical interventions for
breast cancer patients to help manage cognitive impairment
Nonintegrable Interaction of Ion-Acoustic and Electromagnetic Waves in a Plasma
In this paper we re-examine the one-dimensional interaction of
electromagnetic and ion acoustic waves in a plasma. Our model is similar to one
solved by Rao et al. (Phys. Fluids, vol. 26, 2488 (1983)) under a number of
analytical approximations. Here we perform a numerical investigation to examine
the stability of the model. We find that for slightly over dense plasmas, the
propagation of stable solitary modes can occur in an adiabatic regime where the
ion acoustic electric field potential is enslaved to the electromagnetic field
of a laser. But if the laser intensity or plasma density increases or the laser
frequency decreases, the adiabatic regime loses stability via a transition to
chaos. New asymptotic states are attained when the adiabatic regime no longer
exists. In these new states, the plasma becomes rarefied, and the laser field
tends to behave like a vacuum field.Comment: 19 pages, REVTeX, 6 ps figures, accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
The oxygen uptake slow component at submaximal intensities in breaststroke swimming
The present work proposed to study the oxygen uptake slow component (VO2 SC) of breaststroke swimmers at four different intensities of submaximal exercise, via mathematical modeling of a multi-exponential function. The slow component (SC) was also assessed with two different fixed interval methods and the three methods were compared. Twelve male swimmers performed a test comprising four submaximal 300 m bouts at different intensities where all expired gases were collected breath by breath. Multi-exponential modeling showed values above 450 ml·min-1 of the SC in the two last bouts of exercise (those with intensities above the lactate threshold). A significant effect of the method that was used to calculate the VO2 SC was revealed. Higher mean values were observed when using mathematical modeling compared with the fixed interval 3rd min method (F=7.111; p=0.012; η2=0.587); furthermore, differences were detected among the two fixed interval methods. No significant relationship was found between the SC determined by any method and the blood lactate measured at each of the four exercise intensities. In addition, no significant association between the SC and peak oxygen uptake was found. It was concluded that in trained breaststroke swimmers, the presence of the VO2 SC may be observed at intensities above that corresponding to the 3.5 mM-1 threshold. Moreover, mathematical modeling of the oxygen uptake on-kinetics tended to show a higher slow component as compared to fixed interval methods.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
tri-n-butyltin hydride-mediated radical reaction of a 2-iodobenzamide: Formation of an unexpected carbon-tin bond
Leonardo S. Santos. Instituto de QuĂmica de Recursos Naturales, Universidad de Talca, P.O. Box 747, Talca - Chile.The tri-n-butyltin hydride-mediated reaction of methyl 2,3-di-O-benzyl-4-O-trans-cinnamyl -6-deoxy-6-(2-iodobenzoylamino)-a-D-galactopyranoside afforded an unexpected aryltributyltin compound. The structure of this new tetraorganotin(IV) product has been elucidated by 1H, 13C NMR spectroscopy, COSY and HMQC experiments and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). The formation of this new compound via a radical coupling reaction and a radical addition-elimination process is discusse
A simulation toolkit for electroluminescence assessment in rare event experiments
A good understanding of electroluminescence is a prerequisite when optimising
double-phase noble gas detectors for Dark Matter searches and high-pressure
xenon TPCs for neutrinoless double beta decay detection.
A simulation toolkit for calculating the emission of light through electron
impact on neon, argon, krypton and xenon has been developed using the Magboltz
and Garfield programs. Calculated excitation and electroluminescence
efficiencies, electroluminescence yield and associated statistical fluctuations
are presented as a function of electric field. Good agreement with experiment
and with Monte Carlo simulations has been obtained
Multiple inlet sudden expansion flow of power-law fluids
The flow of power-law fluids through two-dimensional planar sudden expansion geometries with multiple inlets was simulated numerically using an in-house finite volume code. The fluids are modelled using the power-law model, and a range of power-law index values (0.4 ≤ n ≤ 1.4) was investigated to cover shear-thinning, Newtonian and shear-thickening inelastic behaviour. The effect of the generalised Reynolds number and the spacing between inlets on the flow behaviour and stability was analysed. The main characteristics of the vortices formed near the wall are similar to those found in single inlet sudden expansions, with symmetric wall vortices forming at low Reynolds numbers, with transitions to steady asymmetric, third eddy flow regimes and time-dependent flow at higher generalised Reynolds numbers. In some cases, the steady asymmetric and third eddy regimes are absent and the flow transitions directly from symmetric flow to time dependent flow (as seen for the geometry with the largest spacing). The stabilising nature of shear-thinning behaviour was observed and the opposite effect was seen for shear-thickening behaviour. In addition, intermediate vortices were seen to form between inlets which grow in size within the symmetric regime as the generalised Reynolds number is increased. New scalings which help collapse the data are introduced and a strong effect of inlet spacing on all flow transitions is shown, with the ratio of the wall distance to inlet height being a determining factor on the corner vortices length when the spacing between inlets is sufficiently large
Flows of Non-Newtonian Fluids in a Sudden Expansion with Multiple Inlets: A Numerical Study
A series of numerical simulations for inelastic and elastic non-Newtonian fluids through a two-dimensional planar sudden expansion is conducted using an in-house finite volume solver1.The geometries investigated are composed by three horizontal inlets of equal widths where the effect of their spacing is investigated. The obtained flow responses are further compared with the equivalent of a single-inlet configuration. Initially, flows of inelastic non-Newtonian fluids described by the power-law model are investigated for the considered multi-inlet configurations, demonstrating the importance of the spacing ratio between inlets and its influence on the resulting flow2. It was found that the spacing ratio between the inlets controls the formation of internal vortices, and leads to vortex interactions which affect the critical conditions causing the flow to become asymmetric and later time dependent. The study is then expanded to consider viscoelastic fluids of constant viscosity described by the upper-convected Maxwell (UCM)model. Creeping flow conditions (i.e Reynolds number (Re) tending to zero) are considered first, to investigate the effects of elasticity in the absence of inertia, where vortex-stabilising effects due to elasticity have been observed. This is in agreement with the observations of other studies employing single-inlet planar sudden expansion configurations3 4. For these conditions, intermediate vortices at the sections between the inlets are not observed, however interesting interactions are reported for varying Weissenberg numbers (Wi). Finally, to account for inertial effects and investigate the influence of vortex interactions, numerical simulations are performed at constant elasticity number (El = Wi/Re), which is representative of realistic experimental conditions
Effective Field Theory for Dilute Fermions with Pairing
Effective field theory (EFT) methods for a uniform system of fermions with
short-range, natural interactions are extended to include pairing correlations,
as part of a program to develop a systematic Kohn-Sham density functional
theory (DFT) for medium and heavy nuclei. An effective action formalism for
local composite operators leads to a free-energy functional that includes
pairing by applying an inversion method order by order in the EFT expansion. A
consistent renormalization scheme is demonstrated for the uniform system
through next-to-leading order, which includes induced-interaction corrections
to pairing.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figures, affiliation updated, paper unchange
- …