761 research outputs found
Effects of musical cadence in the acute physiologic adaptations to head-out aquatic exercises
The purpose of this study was to
analyze the relationships between musical cadence and the
physiologic adaptations to basic head-out aquatic exercises.
Fifteen young and clinically healthy women performed, immersed
to the breast, a cardiovascular aquatic exercise called
the ‘‘rocking horse.’’ The study design included an intermittent
and progressive protocol starting at a 90 b min21 rhythm and
increasing every 6 minutes, by 15 b min21, up to 195 b min21 or
exhaustion. The rating of perceived effort (RPE) at the maximal
heart rate achieved during each bout (HRmax), the percentage
of the maximal theoretical heart rate estimated (%HRmax), and
the blood lactate concentration ([La-]) were evaluated. The
musical cadence was also calculated at 4 mmol L21 of blood
lactate (R4), the RPE at R4 (RPE@R4), the HR at R4 (HR@R4),
and the %HRmax at R4 (%HRmax@R4). Strong relationships
were verified between the musical cadence and the RPE
(R2 = 0.85; p , 0.01), the HRmax (R2 = 0.66; p , 0.01), the
%HRmax (R2 = 0.61; p , 0.01), and the [La-] (R2 = 0.54;
p , 0.01). The R4 was 148.13 6 17.53 b min21, the RPE@R4
was 14.53 6 2.53, the HR@R4 was 169.33 6 12.06 b min21,
and the %HRmax@R4 was 85.53 6 5.72%. The main conclusion
is that increasing musical cadence created an increase
in the physiologic response. Therefore, instructors must choose
musical cadences according to the goals of the session they
are conducting to achieve the desired intensity
The relationship of anthropometrical characteristics and front crawl performance in male age-group swimmers
Swimming performance is affected by several factors including the swimming technique, the swimmer’s functional and metabolic characteristics and the level of training accomplishment. However, performance is also depending on the swimmer’s anthropometrical characteristics. The body shape, body size and body composition can play an important role to achieve higher performances
Agreement between different methods to measure the active drag coefficient in front-crawl swimming
The aim of this study was to analyze the agreement of the active drag coefficient measured through drag and
propulsion methods. The sample was composed of 18 swimmers (nine boys: 15.9 ± 0.9 years; nine girls: 15.3 ± 1.2 years)
recruited from a national swimming team. The velocity perturbation method was used as the drag measurement system
and the Aquanex system as the propulsion system. For both sexes combined, the frontal surface area was 0.1128 ± 0.016
m2, swim velocity 1.54 ± 0.13 m∙s-1, active drag 62.81 ± 11.37 N, propulsion 68.81 ± 12.41 N. The level of the active drag
coefficient agreement was calculated based on the mean values comparison, simple linear regression, and Bland Altman
plots. The mean data comparison revealed non-significant differences (p > 0.05) between methods to measure the active
drag coefficient. Both the linear regression (R2 = 0.82, p < 0.001) and Bland Altman plots revealed a very high agreement.
The active drag coefficient should be the main outcome used in the interpretation of the swimmers’ hydrodynamic profile,
because it is less sensitive to swimming velocity. Coaches and researchers should be aware that the active drag coefficient
can also be calculated based on propulsion methods and not just based on drag methods. Thus, the swimming community
can now use different equipment to measure the hydrodynamics of their swimmersThis work was supported by national funds (FCT - Portuguese Foundation for Science
and Technology) under the project UIDB/DTP/04045/2020info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Effects of starch/polycaprolactone-based blends for spinal cord injury regeneration in neurons/glial cells viability and proliferation
Spinal cord injury (SCI) leads to drastic alterations on the quality of life of afflicted individuals. With the advent of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine where approaches combining biomaterials, cells and growth factors are used, one can envisage novel strategies that can adequately tackle this problem. The objective of this study was to evaluate a blend of starch with poly(ε-caprolactone) (SPCL) aimed to be used for the development of scaffolds spinal cord injury (SCI) repair. SPCL linear parallel filaments were deposited on polystyrene coverslips and assays were carried out using primary cultures of hippocampal neurons and glial cells. Light and fluorescence microscopy observations revealed that both cell populations were not negatively affected by the SPCL-based biomaterial. MTS and total protein quantification indicated that both cell viability and proliferation rates were similar to controls. Both neurons and astrocytes occasionally contacted the surface of SPCL filaments through their dendrites and cytoplasmatic processes, respectively, while microglial cells were unable to do so. Using single cell [Ca2+ ]i imaging, hippocampal neurons were observed growing within the patterned channels and were functional as assessed by the response to a 30 mM KCl stimulus. The present data demonstrated that SPCL-based blends are potentially suitable for the development of scaffolds in SCI regenerative medicine.Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology through funds from POCTI and/or FEDER programs (Funding to ICVS, 3B's Research Group and post doctoral fellowship to A.J. Salgado-SFRH/BPD/17595/2004)
Morphological and Structural Characterization of Cro2/Cr2o3 Films Grown by Laser-CVD
This work reports on the synthesis of chromium (III, IV) oxides films by KrF
laser-assisted CVD. Films were deposited onto sapphire substrates at room
temperature by photodissociation of Cr(CO)6 in dynamic atmospheres containing
oxygen and argon. A study of the processing parameters has shown that partial
pressure ratio of O2 to Cr(CO)6 and laser fluence are the prominent parameters
that have to be accurately controlled in order to co-deposit both crystalline
oxide phases. Films consistent with such a two-phase system were synthesised
for a laser fluence of 75 mJ cm-2 and a partial pressure ratio about 1.
PACS: 81.15.Fg, 81.15.Kk, 81.05.JeComment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Contribution of non-genetic factors to the reproductive performance of mirandesa cows
Characterization of reproductive traits in Mirandesa beef cattle is important for breed improvement and conservation, mainly due to its little genetic diversity. Reduced individual and maternal performance is often associated with inbreeding depression, which could be further aggravate the environmental effects. In this study, 7386 herd records for Mirandesa were used to characterize the main reproductive traits, like age at first calving (AFC), pregnancy length (PL), calving interval (CI), yearly calving distribution (CD) and productive lifespan (PLf). The non-genetic effects were tested using non-parametric methods, as the target variables were not normally distributed. The median for AFC in Mirandesa was close to 32 months; AFC was affected by the production system, farm and by the year and season of birth. The mean for PL was 287±8.9 days, being affected by parity and calf gender. The median CI, of 378 days, was only affected by the breeding program, parity, season and year. Calving season was unevenly distributed over the year, showing different patterns after the production system. The mean productive lifespan of Mirandesa was 6.45 years, though 20% of the cows presented a PLf longer than ten years. The main non-genetic effects suggested that farmer´s decision and nutrition may constrain the expression of the reproductive traits in Mirandesa breed. This aspect needs to be addressed when designing any breeding programs which should prioritise for the increase in the number of calves per year along with a careful selection of reproducers to decrease reported inbreeding.The authors wish to thank ACBRM (Associação de
Criadores de Bovinos de Raça Mirandesa) for providing
access to the Mirandesa cattle Herdbook.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Electric Field Control of Shallow Donor Impurities in Silicon
We present a tight-binding study of donor impurities in Si, demonstrating the
adequacy of this approach for this problem by comparison with effective mass
theory and experimental results. We consider the response of the system to an
applied electric field: donors near a barrier material and in the presence of
an uniform electric field may undergo two different ionization regimes
according to the distance of the impurity to the Si/barrier interface. We show
that for impurities ~ 5 nm below the barrier, adiabatic ionization is possible
within switching times of the order of one picosecond, while for impurities ~
10 nm or more below the barrier, no adiabatic ionization may be carried out by
an external uniform electric field. Our results are discussed in connection
with proposed Si:P quantum computer architectures.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, submitted to PR
Avalanches in the Weakly Driven Frenkel-Kontorova Model
A damped chain of particles with harmonic nearest-neighbor interactions in a
spatially periodic, piecewise harmonic potential (Frenkel-Kontorova model) is
studied numerically. One end of the chain is pulled slowly which acts as a weak
driving mechanism. The numerical study was performed in the limit of infinitely
weak driving. The model exhibits avalanches starting at the pulled end of the
chain. The dynamics of the avalanches and their size and strength distributions
are studied in detail. The behavior depends on the value of the damping
constant. For moderate values a erratic sequence of avalanches of all sizes
occurs. The avalanche distributions are power-laws which is a key feature of
self-organized criticality (SOC). It will be shown that the system selects a
state where perturbations are just able to propagate through the whole system.
For strong damping a regular behavior occurs where a sequence of states
reappears periodically but shifted by an integer multiple of the period of the
external potential. There is a broad transition regime between regular and
irregular behavior, which is characterized by multistability between regular
and irregular behavior. The avalanches are build up by sound waves and shock
waves. Shock waves can turn their direction of propagation, or they can split
into two pulses propagating in opposite directions leading to transient
spatio-temporal chaos. PACS numbers: 05.70.Ln,05.50.+q,46.10.+zComment: 33 pages (RevTex), 15 Figures (available on request), appears in
Phys. Rev.
Geochemical behavior of trace elements in the surroundings of Mina de S. Domingos, Alentejo: Tapada and Telheiro sites
Even thought the mining activity in S Domingos finished more than forty years ago, the mining site is still a source of polluting trace elements for soils and sediments downstream the open pit. The present work aims to evaluate the contamination of these soils and sediments. Therefore two sampling areas were selected: one, assumed as non-contaminated (Tapada), is used to access the reference values of the chemical variables for this region, and the other, downstream from the mining site, is affected by the mining activity (Telheiro). The soils and sediments were characterised on the <2 mm fraction, by pH (H2O), organic carbon and free iron oxides content. A total multi element analysis was done on the same fraction. Univariate and multivariate statistics were performed, as well as geochemical mapping using geostatistical interpolation methods. In Telheiro some samples had high levels of trace elements (mainly As, Pb, Sb, and Hg) and very low pH values (minimum 2.66), this is particularly obvious in the samples collected close to the acid mine drainage. In Tapada no contaminated soils were found. The multivariate analysis showed an association between As, Pb and Sb and between Cu and Z
Geochemistry, mineralogy, solid-phase fractionation and oral bioaccessibility of lead in urban soils of Lisbon
An urban survey of Lisbon, the largest city in Portugal, was carried out to investigate its environmental burden, emphasizing metallic elements and their public health impacts. This paper examines the geochemistry of lead (Pb) and its influence on human health data. A total of 51 soil samples were collected from urban recreational areas used by children to play outdoors. The semi-quantitative analysis of Pb was carried out by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry after an acid digestion. X-ray diffraction was used to characterize the soil mineralogy. The solid-phase distribution of Pb in the urban soils was investigated on a subset of 7 soils, out of a total of 51 samples, using a non-specific sequential extraction method coupled with chemometric analysis. Oral bioaccessibility measurements were obtained using the Unified BARGE Method developed by the Bioaccessibility Research Group of Europe. The objectives of the study are as follows: (1) investigation of Pb solid-phase distribution; (2) interpretation of Pb oral bioaccessibility measurements; (3) integration of metal geochemistry with human health data; and (4) understanding the influence of geochemistry and mineralogy on oral bioaccessibility. The results show that the bioaccessible fraction of Pb is lower when major metal fractions are associated with less soluble soil phases such as Fe oxyhydroxides, and more increased when the metal is in the highly soluble carbonate phase. However, there is some evidence that the proportion of carbonates in the soil environment is also a key control over the oral bioaccessibility of Pb, irrespective of its solid-phase fractionation
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