78,357 research outputs found
Physiological cost of walking in those with chronic fatigue syndrome
<b>Purpose:</b> To examine the physiological cost of walking in subjects with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and a matched control group, walking at their preferred and at matched walking speeds.
<b>Methods:</b> Seventeen people with CFS and 17 matched-controls participated in this observational study of physiological cost during over-ground gait. Each subject walked for 5 min at their preferred walking speed (PWS). Controls then walked for 5 min at the same pace of their matched CFS subject. Gait speed and oxygen uptake, gross and net were measured and oxygen uptake was expressed per unit distance ambulated. CFS subjects completed the CFS-Activities and Participation Questionnaire (CFS-APQ).
<b>Results:</b> At PWS the CFS group walked at a slower velocity of 0.84 ± 0.21 m s<sup>-1</sup> compared to controls with a velocity of 1.19 ± 0.13 m s<sup>-1</sup> (p < 0.001). At PWS both gross and net oxygen uptake of CFS subjects was significantly less than controls (p = 0.023 and p = 0.025 respectively). At matched-velocity both gross and net physiological cost of gait was greater for CFS subjects than controls (p = 0.048 and p = 0.001, respectively).
<b>Conclusion:</b> The physiological cost of walking was significantly greater for people with CFS compared with healthy subjects. The reasons for these higher energy demands for walking in those with CFS have yet to be fully elucidated
Compatibility analysis for the 1535-1660 MHz band, part 1 Final report, Jan. - Sep. 1969
Electromagnetic compatibility and radio frequency interference of aircraft radio antenna
Solution of a Braneworld Big Crunch/Big Bang Cosmology
We solve for the cosmological perturbations in a five-dimensional background
consisting of two separating or colliding boundary branes, as an expansion in
the collision speed V divided by the speed of light c. Our solution permits a
detailed check of the validity of four-dimensional effective theory in the
vicinity of the event corresponding to the big crunch/big bang singularity. We
show that the four-dimensional description fails at the first nontrivial order
in (V/c)^2. At this order, there is nontrivial mixing of the two relevant
four-dimensional perturbation modes (the growing and decaying modes) as the
boundary branes move from the narrowly-separated limit described by
Kaluza-Klein theory to the well-separated limit where gravity is confined to
the positive-tension brane. We comment on the cosmological significance of the
result and compute other quantities of interest in five-dimensional
cosmological scenarios.Comment: 54 pages, 12 figures, URL updated & 3 references adde
Alternating magnetic anisotropy of Li(Li)N with = Mn, Fe, Co, and Ni
Substantial amounts of the transition metals Mn, Fe, Co, and Ni can be
substituted for Li in single crystalline Li(Li)N. Isothermal and
temperature-dependent magnetization measurements reveal local magnetic moments
with magnitudes significantly exceeding the spin-only value. The additional
contributions stem from unquenched orbital moments that lead to rare-earth-like
behavior of the magnetic properties. Accordingly, extremely large magnetic
anisotropies have been found. Most notably, the magnetic anisotropy alternates
as easy-plane easy-axis easy-plane
easy-axis when progressing from = Mn Fe Co
Ni. This behavior can be understood based on a perturbation
approach in an analytical, single-ion model. The calculated magnetic
anisotropies show a surprisingly good agreement with the experiment and capture
the basic features observed for the different transition metals.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, published as PRB Rapid Communication, Fig. 3
update
A malthusian model for all seasons
An issue often discussed in relation to agricultural development is the effect on agricultural labour productivity of more intensive land-use. Introducing aspects of seasonality into a stylized Malthusian model, we unify two diverging views by showing that labour productivity may go up or down with agricultural intensification, depending on whether technological progress emerges in relation to cultivation or harvesting activities. Our result rests on evidence reported by Boserup (1965) and others, which suggests that harvest seasons in traditional agriculture are characterized by severe labour shortage.Agricultural Intensification, Boserup, Labour Surplus, Malthus, Seasonality
The reionization of the universe: The feedback of galaxy formation on the intergalactic medium
The thermal and ionization evolution of a uniform intergalactic medium (IGM) composed of H and He, undergoing reionization, including the mean effect of gas clumps embedded in a smoothly distributed ambient gas were calculated. The rate equations for ionization and recombination were solved together with the equations of energy conservation, including the effects of cosmological expansion, radiative and Compton cooling, and the diffuse flux emitted by the gas, and radiative transfer. The contribution to the continuum opacity of the universe due to the observed quasar absorption line clouds (QALC'S) were included. A variety of sources of photoionization, including quasars and primeval galaxies, as well as the possibility that hydrodynamical processes deposit thermal energy in the IGM were considered. Applications of these calculations including the evolution of the Ly-alpha forest clouds are described. A self-consistent treatment of the thermal and ionization history of the intergalactic medium (IGM) must take account of the growth of structure in the universe, since the mean density of the IGM corresponds primarily to the time-varying uncollapsed fraction of the baryon-electron component of the matter, and the collapsed fraction, in turn, can have a feedback effect on this uncollapsed fraction by releasing ionizing radiation and thermal energy and by contributing to the opacity of the universe. The coupled evolution of the IGM and the emerging structure with a special focus on the reionization of the IGM, which is believed to have been completed by some redshift z is approximately greater than 4, as inferred from the absence of the Gunn-Peterson effect in the spectra of high z quasars, are studied. The results and implications of detailed, numerical calculations of the thermal and ionization balance and radiative transfer in a uniform IGM of H and He, including the mean effect of an evolving distribution of gas clumps embedded in a smoothly distributed ambient gas is described
Antibiotic Susceptibility of Black-Pigmented \u3cem\u3eBacteroides\u3c/em\u3e Isolates from the Human Oral Cavity
The minimal inhibitory concentrations of penicillin and six other antibiotics were determined for 66 oral black-pigmented Bacteroides isolates by using the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards proposed standard agar dilution technique. These results plus iodometric determination of β-lactamase activity showed that oral isolates of black-pigmented Bacteroides are remaining relatively susceptible to commonly used antibiotics
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