81 research outputs found
Positive airway pressure (PAP) treatment reduces glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels in obstructive sleep apnea patients with concomitant weight loss: Longitudinal data from the ESADA
Patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are at increased risk of developing metabolic disease such as diabetes. The effects of positive airway pressure on glycemic control are contradictory. We therefore evaluated the change in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) in a large cohort of OSA patients after long-term treatment with positive airway pressure. HbA1c levels were assessed in a subsample of the European Sleep Apnea Database [n=1608] at baseline and at long-term follow up with positive airway pressure therapy (mean 378.9±423.0 days). In a regression analysis, treatment response was controlled for important confounders. Overall, HbA1c decreased from 5.98±1.01% to 5.93±0.98% (p=0.001). Patient subgroups with a more pronounced HbA1c response included patients with diabetes (−0.15±1.02, p=0.019), those with severe OSA baseline (−0.10±0.68, p=0.005), those with morbid obesity (−0.20±0.81, p<0.001). The strongest HbA1c reduction was observed in patients with a concomitant weight reduction >5 kilos (−0.38±0.99, p<0.001). In robust regression analysis, severe OSA (p=0.038) and morbid obesity (p=0.005) at baseline, and weight reduction >5 kilos (p<0.001) during follow up were independently associated with a reduction of HbA1c following PAP treatment. In contrast, PAP treatment alone without weight reduction was not associated with significant Hb1Ac reduction. In conclusion, positive airway pressure therapy is associated with HbA1c reduction in patients with severe OSA, in morbidly obese patients. and most obviously in those with significant weight lost during the follow-up. Our study underlines the importance to combine positive airway pressure use with adjustments in lifestyle to substantially modify metabolic complications in OSA
Examining Ecological Constraints on the Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Via Individual Participant Data Meta-analysis
Parents\u2019 attachment representations and child\u2013parent attachment have been shown to be associated, but these associations vary across populations (Verhage et al., 2016). The current study examined whether ecological factors may explain variability in the strength of intergenerational transmission of attachment, using individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis. Analyses on 4,396 parent\u2013child dyads (58 studies, child age 11\u201396 months) revealed a combined effect size of r =.29. IPD meta-analyses revealed that effect sizes for the transmission of autonomous-secure representations to secure attachments were weaker under risk conditions and weaker in adolescent parent\u2013child dyads, whereas transmission was stronger for older children. Findings support the ecological constraints hypothesis on attachment transmission. Implications for attachment theory and the use of IPD meta-analysis are discusse
Sport, War and Democracy in Classical Athens
This article concerns the paradox of athletics in classical Athens. Democracy may have opened up politics to every class of Athenian but it had little impact on sporting participation. The city’s athletes continued to drawn predominantly from the upper class. It comes as a surprise then that lower-class Athenians actually esteemed athletes above every other group in the public eye, honoured them very generously when they won, and directed a great deal of public and private money to sporting competitions and facilities. In addition athletics escaped the otherwise persistent criticism of upper-class activities in the popular culture of the democracy. The research of social scientists on sport and aggression suggests this paradox may have been due to the cultural overlap between athletics and war under the Athenian democracy. The article concludes that the practical and ideological democratization of war by classical Athens legitimized and supported upper-class sport
Adomian decomposition method simulation of Von Kármán swirling bioconvection nanofluid flow
The study reveals analytically on the 3-dimensional viscous time-dependent gyrotactic bioconvection in
swirling nanofluid flow past from a rotating disk. It is known that the deformation of the disk is along the radial
direction. In addition to that Stefan blowing is considered. The Buongiorno nanofluid model is taken care of assuming
the fluid to be dilute and we find Brownian motion and thermophoresis have dominant role on nanoscale unit. The
primitive mass conservation equation, radial, tangential and axial momentum, heat, nano-particle concentration and
micro-organism density function are developed in a cylindrical polar coordinate system with appropriate wall (disk
surface) and free stream boundary conditions. This highly nonlinear, strongly coupled system of unsteady partial
differential equations is normalized with the classical Von Kármán and other transformations to render the boundary
value problem into an ordinary differential system. The emerging 11th order system features an extensive range of
dimensionless flow parameters i.e. disk stretching rate, Brownian motion, thermophoresis, bioconvection Lewis number,
unsteadiness parameter, ordinary Lewis number, Prandtl number, mass convective Biot number, Péclet number and
Stefan blowing parameter. Solutions of the system are obtained with developed semi-analytical technique i.e. Adomian
decomposition method. Validation of the said problem is also conducted with earlier literature computed by
Runge-Kutta shooting technique
Impact of a crushing ice particle onto a dry solid wall
This is a theoretical study about ice particle impact onto a rigid wall. It is motivated by the need to model the process of ice crystal accretion or damage caused by an ice particle impacts. A quasi-one-dimensional model of ice particle impact and deformation is developed. Spherical, cylindrical and conical shapes of the ice crystals are analysed. The model is able to predict particle residual height, the force produced by impact and the collision duration. The theoretical predictions agree well with the available experimental data.</jats:p
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