56 research outputs found

    Ecological role of an offshore industry artificial structure

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    Decommissioning of oil and gas infrastructure globally has focused attention on its importance as hard substratum on continental shelf and slope habitats. Observational studies are needed to improve understanding of faunal assemblages supported by offshore infrastructure and better predict the effect of removal. Here, we present results from visual inspection and physical sampling of a small oil and gas industry structure decommissioned from an oil field in the North East Atlantic. This is supported by observations of similar structures nearby and by photographs of the surrounding seabed from environmental baseline surveys. The structure supported a reasonably high biomass and diversity of invertebrates (>10 kg and >39 macrofaunal and 17 megafaunal species) and fishes (>20 kg biomass and >4 species). The invertebrate megafaunal species present on the structure were a sub-set of the hard substratum fauna observed on surrounding seabed. Porifera were absent from the structure. Biological succession in the first 2 years occurred as follows. Sparse colonies of the hydroid Obelia sp. stet were early colonisers then subsequent development of thick hydroid turf (Obelia sp. stet. and Halecium sp. stet.) supported an invertebrate assemblage (2654 individuals kg wet massā€“1) dominated by saddle oysters [Pododesmus squama (Gmelin, 1791) and Heteranomia sp. stet.)] and scale worms (Harmothoe spp.). Percentage cover of hydroid turf varied significantly over the structure, with most growth on sections exposed to strongest currents. Commercially important fish species present around the structure included Gadus morhua (Atlantic cod), Pollachius virens (saithe) and Lophius piscatorius (monkfish). Studies of artificial structures such as this provide much needed data to understand their role in the ecology of seafloor habitats and inform environmental decision making on all stages of industry from exploration to decommissioning. We show that the ecological role of the decommissioned three-dimensional structures was to enhance the biomass of a sub-set of epifaunal invertebrates found in the area. This supported diverse associated macrofaunal organisms, providing a food source for motile invertebrates and fishes in an area where background hard substratum can be lost through the impacts of drilling

    Relationships between changes in pain severity and other patient-reported outcomes: an analysis in patients with posttraumatic peripheral neuropathic pain

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The objective of this study is to use the pain numeric rating scale (NRS) to evaluate associations between change in pain severity and changes in sleep, function, and mood assessed via patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in patients with posttraumatic pain.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This is a secondary analysis of a clinical trial evaluating pregabalin in patients with posttraumatic peripheral neuropathic pain (N = 254). Regression models were used to determine associations between changes in pain (0-10 NRS) as the predictor and scores on the following PRO measures as the outcome: Pain Interference Index; Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale anxiety and depression subscales; Medical Outcomes Study-Sleep Scale 9-item Sleep Problems Index and Sleep Disturbance subscale; and Daily Sleep Interference Scale (0-10 NRS).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Change in pain severity showed clear, direct relationships with changes in function, anxiety, depression, and sleep PROs, all of which were statistically significant (<it>P </it><.001). Results from subgroup analyses (ā‰„30% or ā‰„50% pain responders, pregabalin or placebo treatment, age ā‰¤ 51 years or > 51 years) tended to be consistent with results from the overall sample.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Overall, a direct relationship exists between pain and various aspects of patient's well-being and functioning, which can provide a quantitative assessment of how improvements in pain may be expected to relate to other patient outcomes. (<url>http://ClinicalTrials.gov</url> Identifier number NCT00292188; EudraCT #2005-003048-78).</p

    Identifying the coiled-coil triple helix structure of Ī²-peptide nanofibers at atomic resolution

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    Peptide self-assembly represents a powerful bottom-up approach to the fabrication of new nanomaterials. Ī²3-peptides are non-natural peptides composed entirely of Ī²-amino acids, which have an extra methylene in the backbone and we reported the first fibers derived from the self-assembly of Ī²3-peptides that adopt unique 14-helical structures. Ī²3-peptide assemblies represent a class of stable nanomaterials that can be used to generate bio- and magneto-responsive materials with proteolytic stability. However, the three-dimensional structure of many of these materials remains unknown. In order to develop structure-based criteria for the design of new Ī²3-peptide-based biomaterials with tailored function, we investigated the structure of a tri-Ī²3-peptide nanoassembly by molecular dynamics simulations and X-ray fiber diffraction analysis. Diffraction data was collected from aligned fibrils formed by Ac-Ī²3[LIA] in water and used to inform and validate the model structure. Models with threefold radial symmetry resulted in stable fibers with a triple-helical coiled-coil motif and measurable helical pitch and periodicity. The fiber models revealed a hydrophobic core and twist along the fiber axis arising from a maximization of contacts between hydrophobic groups of adjacent tripeptides on the solvent-exposed fiber surface. These atomic structures of macro-scale fibers derived from Ī²3-peptide-based materials provide valuable insight into the effects of the geometric placement of the side-chains and the influence of solvent on the core fiber structure which is perpetuated in the superstructure morphology

    Modular Design of Self-Assembling Peptide-Based Nanotubes.

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    An ability to design peptide-based nanotubes (PNTs) rationally with defined and mutable internal channels would advance understanding of peptide self-assembly, and present new biomaterials for nanotechnology and medicine. PNTs have been made from Fmoc dipeptides, cyclic peptides, and lock-washer helical bundles. Here we show that blunt-ended Ī±-helical barrels, that is, preassembled bundles of Ī±-helices with central channels, can be used as building blocks for PNTs. This approach is general and systematic, and uses a set of de novo helical bundles as standards. One of these bundles, a hexameric Ī±-helical barrel, assembles into highly ordered PNTs, for which we have determined a structure by combining cryo-transmission electron microscopy, X-ray fiber diffraction, and model building. The structure reveals that the overall symmetry of the peptide module plays a critical role in ripening and ordering of the supramolecular assembly. PNTs based on pentameric, hexameric, and heptameric Ī±-helical barrels sequester hydrophobic dye within their lumens.N.C.B. thanks the EPSRC-funded Bristol Centre for Functional Nanomaterials Centre for Doctoral Training for a postgraduate scholarship (EP/G036780/1). F.T. and D.N.W. thank the Leverhulme Trust for funding (RPG-2012-536). D.N.W. holds a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Chemical Society via http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b0397

    Porcupine Abyssal Plain Sustained observatory monitors the atmosphere to the seafloor on multidecadal timescales

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    Through international collaborations and advances in technology, ocean observatories are increasingly capable of monitoring over long time periods. The Porcupine Abyssal Plain Sustained Observatory (PAPā€“SO), located at 4,850 m depth in the Northeast Atlantic, is one of a small number of oceanic sites that has achieved monitoring to full ocean depths over several decades. It has monitored seafloor ecology since 1985, water column particle flux since 1992, and surface ocean and atmosphere parameters since 2003. The observatory is serviced annually, providing the opportunity to carry out conventional ship-based observations, sensor comparison, and sampling

    Understanding Eating Disorders in Elite Gymnastics

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    Eating disorders and disordered eating are more common in high performance sports than the general population, and particularly so in high performance aesthetic sports. This paper presents some of the conceptual difficulties in understanding and diagnosing eating disorders in high performance gymnasts. It presents qualitative and quantitative data from a study designed to ascertain the pattern of eating disorder symptoms, depressive symptoms and levels of self-esteem amongst national and international level gymnasts from the UK in the gymnastic disciplines of sport acrobatics, tumbling and rhythmic gymnastics

    The reception and use of social policy information in the High Court of Australia

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    Social policy information is information that may assist a judge in determining the social or economic consequences of a law. Social policy information is used by judges in developing the law. There are three jurisprudential models that, arguably, could be used to describe the reception and use of social policy information by the High Court of Australia. Under the appropriate model for describing the current law - the Legal Sources Model - social policy information is not treated as a fact in issue, and is not subject to the common law rules of evidence or to section 144 of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth). Under the Legal Sources Model, the reception and use of social policy information is characterised as an integral part of the judicial reasoning process in determining the content of the law and remains within the sole discretion of the judge, subject to various restrictions. These restrictions arise out of the requirements of judicial process (the parties must be given an opportunity to comment on contentious social policy information) and constitutional limitations (court processes must not resemble Parliamentary Inquiries). Case studies demonstrate that social policy information is often widely used without any acknowledgement of the legal basis on which it is used, without the source of information being identified in the written judgment, and without any apparent method for evaluating the reliability of the information. The current system for the reception and use of social policy information fails to satisfy Best Practice Standards in several important respects, including the following. First, there is no legal rule that defines the circumstances in which judges should obtain, through inquiry, social policy information they reasonably need. Secondly, there is no legal rule that facilitates an evaluation of social policy information by judges. Thirdly, the source of social policy information is not always mentioned in judgments. Fourthly, the law regarding the reception and use of social policy information is not certain. Experience in relevant overseas jurisdictions - the United States, Canada and New Zealand - suggests that these problems are not unique to Australia. Various reform proposals are suggested. These are designed to overcome the deficiencies in the current system and to take advantage of useful ideas for reform which have been proposed overseas. The key proposal is that the High Court should develop a protocol to assist judges in using social policy information
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