8 research outputs found
Design of smart garments for sports and rehabilitation
Physical exercise has proved benefits for general health [1] and can reduce the number
of sports injuries to one third [2]. However, an athlete that has been injured during sports practice
may omit this out of fear of discrimination, and worsen the injury in the weight room, during
strength training [5]. Monitoring physiological status of an athlete or rehabilitation patients
during training may thus help the person to get an earlier intervention, preventing injuries from
getting worse. With this in mind, we propose a set of compression garments – shirt and leggings
– with textile sensors to continually monitor heart and muscle activity, breathing rate and
temperature. This paper reports the design of the garments and production of the shirt, which
comprised a 3-lead ECG system, sEMG (Surface Electromiography) electrodes and a breathing
sensor. The ECG (Electrocardiography) system was tested and presented some good results, in
particular for very even movements, but the system still needs to be improved, in order to get a
better signal, when it comes to movements with a considerable amplitude.This work is financed by Project “Deus ex Machina”, NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000026, funded by CCDRN, through Sistema de Apoio à Investigação Cientifica e Tecnológica (Projetos Estruturados I&D&I) of Programa Operacional Regional do Norte, from Portugal 2020 and by FEDER funds through the Competitivity Factors Operational Programme - COMPETE and by national funds through FCT – Foundation for Science and Technology within the scope of the project POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007136.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Improved high-temperature expansion and critical equation of state of three-dimensional Ising-like systems
High-temperature series are computed for a generalized Ising model with
arbitrary potential. Two specific ``improved'' potentials (suppressing leading
scaling corrections) are selected by Monte Carlo computation. Critical
exponents are extracted from high-temperature series specialized to improved
potentials, achieving high accuracy; our best estimates are:
, , , ,
. By the same technique, the coefficients of the small-field
expansion for the effective potential (Helmholtz free energy) are computed.
These results are applied to the construction of parametric representations of
the critical equation of state. A systematic approximation scheme, based on a
global stationarity condition, is introduced (the lowest-order approximation
reproduces the linear parametric model). This scheme is used for an accurate
determination of universal ratios of amplitudes. A comparison with other
theoretical and experimental determinations of universal quantities is
presented.Comment: 65 pages, 1 figure, revtex. New Monte Carlo data by Hasenbusch
enabled us to improve the determination of the critical exponents and of the
equation of state. The discussion of several topics was improved and the
bibliography was update
Surface phenotype analysis of CD16+ monocytes from leukapheresis collections for peripheral blood progenitors
In peripheral blood progenitor cell (PBPC) collections from patients with solid tumour or haematological malignancy, monocytes were separated into two subpopulations. The majority of monocytes expressed CD14 at a high density without CD16 antigen (the CD14+CD16− monocytes). The remaining monocytes co-expressed CD14 and CD16 (the CD14+CD16+ monocytes). These CD14+CD16+ monocytes amounted to 20.6 ± 15.8%, while those in peripheral blood (PB) obtained from healthy volunteers were 7.3 ± 3.1% (P < 0.05). When subdividing the CD14+CD16+ monocytes into CD14brightCD16dim and CD14dimCD16bright cells, both populations were found to be increased in PBPC collections. Since typical CD14+CD16+ monocytes are the CD14dimCD16bright population, we compared the additional surface antigens on CD14dimCD16bright monocytes with those of CD14+CD16−monocytes. In PBPC collections, the CD14dimCD16bright monocytes exhibited lower levels of CD11b, CD15, CD33 and CD38 expression and higher levels of CD4, CD11a, CD11c and MHC class II, and also revealed a higher percentage of CD4+ cells and a lower percentage of CD15+ cells and CD38+ cells, compared with the CD14+CD16− monocytes. When compared with the CD14dimCD16bright monocytes in PB, those in PBPC collections exhibited higher expression of CD4 and lower expression of CD11b, and also showed higher percentages of CD4+ cells and CD38+ cells and a lower percentage of CD11b+ cells. These results suggest that PBPC collections may be rich in the CD14+CD16+ monocytes in which the proportion of the immature population is increased. It is likely that these monocytes participate in the haematological and immune recovery after PBPC transplantation