408 research outputs found

    Recharge assessment in the context of expanding agricultural activity: Urucuia Aquifer System, western State of Bahia, Brazil

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    Groundwater recharge rate estimation is crucial to sustainable development of aquifers in intensely pumped regions, such as the Urucuia Aquifer System (UAS). A sedimentary aquifer in Western Bahia, Brazil, that underlies one of the major agricultural areas of the country where there has been major growth of irrigated areas. This study seeks to evaluate the recharge component of the water budget in the UAS area, based on three complementary techniques. The double-ring infiltrometer test was used to evaluate surface infiltration capacity, an important control on recharge. Water level data from wells (2011–2019 period, 19 wells) in the Brazilian Geological Survey’s Integrated Groundwater Monitoring Network (RIMAS-CPRM) was used to estimate the aquifer recharge using the water table fluctuation (WTF) method. Additionally, this study used the Soil Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model in two selected sub-basins to estimate deep recharge from the surface hydrological data. The results of the infiltrometer tests show a notable difference in the infiltration rates between the natural vegetation zones and cropped areas. The WTF and SWAT simulations results suggest similar ranges of recharge rate (an average of 24% of precipitation, in both methods). Results of the study indicate equivalence of these methods to estimate the recharge in sedimentary unconfined aquifers as UAS

    Clinical And Laboratory Profile Of Pediatric And Adolescent Patients With Type 1 Diabetes

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    Objective: To evaluate clinical and laboratory profiles of patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus in three public hospitals in São Paulo, Brazil, since type 1 diabetes mellitus is a chronic illness that occurs mainly in the pediatric age group in the Brazilian population. Methods: Cross-sectional study with patients followed up in reference centers in São José do Rio Preto (FAMERP), Campinas (UNICAMP) and São Paulo (Conjunto Hospitalar do Mandaqui). Data about gender, age, diabetes duration, daily insulin dose, number of daily insulin injections, and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) were analyzed. Results: Two hundred and thirty-nine patients (131 females) were evaluated; mean age was 13.1±4.7 years and mean diabetes duration was 6.6±4.2 years. Daily insulin doses ranged from 0.1 to 1.78 units/kg/day (0.88±0.28), and 180 (74.7%) patients had two daily injections. HbA 1c ranged from 4.6 to 17.9% (10.0±2.3%). Conclusions: Although the hospitals included in this study are excellence centers for the follow-up of patients with diabetes in three municipalities in the state of São Paulo, one of the most developed states in Brazil, blood glucose control evaluated according to HbA1c was not adequate. Findings confirm that, despite the efforts of all the professionals involved, great challenges still lie ahead. Copyright © 2009 by Sociedade Brasileira de Pediatria.856490494Karvonen, M., Viik-Kajander, M., Moltchanova, E., Libman, I., LaPorte, R., Tuomilehto, J., Incidence of childhood type 1 diabetes worldwide. Diabetes Mondiale (DiaMond) Project Group (2000) Diabetes Care, 23, pp. 1516-1526Hoey, H., Aanstoot, H.J., Chiarelli, F., Daneman, D., Danne, T., Dorchy, H., Good metabolic control is associated with better quality of life in 2,101 adolescents with type 1 diabetes (2001) Diabetes Care, 24, pp. 1923-1928Danne, T., Mortensen, H.B., Hougaard, P., Lynggaard, H., Aanstoot, H.J., Chiarelli, F., Persistent differences among centers over 3 years in glycemic control and hypoglycemia in a study of 3,805 children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes from the Hvidøre Study Group (2001) Diabetes Care, 24, pp. 1342-1347The effect of intensive treatment of diabetes on the development and progression of long-term complications in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group. N Engl J Med. 1993;329:977-86Schmid, H., New options in insulin therapy (2007) J Pediatr (Rio J), 83, pp. S146-S154Effect of intensive diabetes treatment on the development and progression of long-term complications in adolescents with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: Diabetes Control and Complications Trial. Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group. Group. J Pediatr. 1994;125:177-88Epidemiology of severe hypoglycemia in the diabetes control and complications trial. The DCCT Research Group (1991) Am J Med, 90, pp. 450-459Hypoglycemia in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial. The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group (1997) Diabetes, 46, pp. 271-286Malerbi, D., Damiani, D., Rassi, N., Chacra, A.R., Niclewicz, E.D., Silva Filho, R., Posição de consenso da Sociedade Brasileira de Diabetes - Insulinoterapia intensiva e terapêutica com bombas de insulina. (2006) Arq Bras Endocrinol Metab, 50, pp. 125-135Rewers, M., Pihoker, C., Donaghue, K., Hanas, R., Swift, P., Klingensmith, G.J., Assessment and monitoring of glycemic control in children and adolescents with diabetes (2007) Pediatr Diabetes, 8, pp. 408-418Nathan, D.M., Cleary, P.A., Backlund, J.Y., Genuth, S.M., Lachin, J.M., Orchard, T.J., Intensive diabetes treatment and cardiovascular disease in patients with type 1 diabetes (2005) N Engl J Med, 353, pp. 2643-2653Mortensen, H.B., Robertson, K.J., Aanstoot, H.J., Danne, T., Holl, R.W., Hougaard, P., Insulin management and metabolic control of type 1 diabetes mellitus in childhood and adolescence in 18 countries. Hvidøre Study Group on Childhood Diabetes (1998) Diabet Med, 15, pp. 752-759Mendes, A.B., Fittipaldi, J.A., Neves, R.C., Chacra, A.R., Moreira Jr., E.D., Prevalence and correlates of inadequate glycaemic control: Results from a nationwide survey in 6,671 adults with diabetes in Brazil (2009) Acta Diabetol, , In pressEliaschewitz, F.G., Franco, D.R., Does brittle diabetes exist as a clinical entity? Arq Bras Endocrinol (2009) Metabol, 53, pp. 466-469Akbaş, S., Karabekiroǧlu, K., Ozgen, T., Tasdemir, G., Karakurt, M., Senses, A., Association between emotional and behavioral problems and metabolic control in children and adolescents with Type 1 diabetes (2009) J Endocrinol Invest, 32, pp. 325-329Grossi, S.A., Lottenberg, S.A., Lottenberg, A.M., Della Manna, T., Kuperman, H., Home blood glucose monitoring in type 1 diabetes mellitus (2009) Rev Lat Am Enfermagem, 17, pp. 194-200Crasto, W., Jarvis, J., Khunti, K., Davies, M.J., New insulins and new insulin regimens: A review of their role in improving glycaemic control in patients with diabetes (2009) Postgrad Med J, 85, pp. 257-26

    Análise físico-química do óleo-resina e variabilidade genética de copaíba na Floresta Nacional do Tapajós

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    O objetivo deste trabalho foi caracterizar o óleo-resina da copaíba (Copaifera reticulata) e estimar, por meio de marcadores microssatélites, a variabilidade genética da espécie na Floresta Nacional do Tapajós, PA. A amostragem foi realizada em duas áreas, distanciadas de 5 km, em 136 árvores. A diversidade genética foi avaliada com seis marcadores microssatélites derivados de C. langsdorffii, e o óleo obtido de 30 árvores (15 de cada área) foi caracterizado em termos físicos e químicos. O óleo C. reticulata apresenta aspecto líquido, fino, odor fraco e de coloração amarelo-dourada (73,3% das plantas), com viscosidade muito variável (18 a 187 Pa-s) e densidade média de 0,975±0,049 g cm-3. O índice de acidez variou de 9,62 a 10,17 mg g-1 de KOH e o de saponificação de 100,63 a 109,84 mg g-1. A análise molecular identificou 78 alelos, com média de 13 por loco. A heterozigosidade esperada variou 0,59 a 0,85 (média de 0,75), com nível de endogamia de 0,375 a 0,419. Houve pouca diferenciação genética entre as populações das diferentes áreas de coleta (F ST = 0,030), mas a variabilidade foi maior entre os grupos genéticos detectados pelo programa Structure (F ST = 0,070). Essa maior variabilidade indica que não há ameaças à conservação genética da copaíba, em médio prazo
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