34 research outputs found

    Equitable representation in councils: theory and an application to the United Nations Security Council

    Get PDF
    We analyze democratic equity in council voting games (CVGs). In a CVG, a voting body containing all members delegates decision-making to a (time-varying) subset of its members, as describes, e.g., the relationship between the United Nations General Assembly and the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). We develop a theoretical framework for analyzing democratic equitability in CVGs at both the country and region levels, and for different assumptions regarding preference correlation. We apply the framework to evaluate the equitability of the UNSC, and the claims of those who seek to reform it. We find that the individual permanent members are overrepresented by between 21.3 times (United Kingdom) and 3.8 times (China) from a country-level perspective, while from a region perspective Eastern Europe is the most heavily overrepresented region with more than twice its equitable representation, and Africa the most heavily underrepresented. Our equity measures do not preclude some UNSC members from exercising veto rights, however

    Plasma cortisol concentration following breakfasts of different composition in healthy subjects

    No full text
    We measured plasma cortisol concentrations following breakfasts of different fat:carbohydrate ratio in 23 healthy subjects. A meal-related peak of plasma cortisol concentration was not found, as well as any difference in plasma cortisol levels following the two meals. Since the two meals elicited plasma glucose and plasma insulin levels which were significantly different, it is suggested that plasma cortisol is not acutely affected by ambient glucose and insulin concentrations. The same results were found when the study group was subdivided in nonobese (n = 13) and obese (Body Mass Index greater than n = 10), thus confirming the previous statement in the presence of different body weights

    Lacidipine restores endothelium-dependent vasodilation in essential hypertensive patients

    No full text
    Essential hypertension is characterized by impaired endothelium-dependent vasodilation. The present study was designed to test whether antihypertensive treatment with the calcium antagonist lacidipine can improve endothelium-dependent vasodilation in essential hypertensive patients. In 12 normotensive subjects (mean age, 47.8+/-8.6 years; blood pressure, 118.6+/-4.2/76.7+/-3.9 mm Hg) and 19 hypertensive patients (mean age, 49.4+/-10.2 years; blood pressure; 153.5+/-13.3/101.3+/-6.4 mm Hg), we studied forearm blood flow modifications (strain-gauge plethysmography) induced by intrabrachial infusion of acetylcholine (0.15, 0.45, 1.5, 4.5, and 15 microg/100 mL per minute) and bradykinin (5, 15, and 50 ng/100 mL per minute), two endothelium-dependent vasodilators that act through different receptors and signal transduction pathways, and sodium nitroprusside (1, 2, and 4 microg/100 mL per minute), an endothelium-independent vasodilator. In essential hypertensive patients, vascular reactivity was repeated during prolonged (8 weeks of oral treatment at 6 mg/d) lacidipine administration and 2 weeks after withdrawal of chronic (32-week) treatment. Hypertensive patients showed significantly (P<.01) blunted vasodilation in response to acetylcholine (vascular resistance, 31.5+/-4.9 to 7.6+/-2.4 SU) and bradykinin (vascular resistance, 32.3+/-5.8 to 8.5+/-3.0 SU) compared with control subjects (vascular resistance: acetylcholine, 24.3+/-3.9 to 3.7+/-1.2 SU; bradykinin, 24.7+/-0.4 to 4.1+/-1.3 SU), whereas the response to sodium nitroprusside was similar. After either 8 or 32 weeks of lacidipine treatment, the vasodilation in response to acetylcholine (30.6+/-7.7 to 5.7+/-1.5 and 34.3+/-6.6 to 5.9+/-1.9 SU, respectively) and bradykinin (31.3+/-7.2 to 6.4+/-1.6 and 33.7+/-5.4 to 6.1+/-1.5 SU, respectively), but not to sodium nitroprusside, proved to be significantly (P<.05) increased compared with baseline. In essential hypertensive patients, oral treatment with lacidipine increased forearm vasodilation in response to acetylcholine and bradykinin, suggesting that this drug can improve endothelial function in patients with essential hypertensio

    Effect of chronic treatment with lacidipine or lisinopril on intracellular partitioning of glucose metabolism in type 2 diabetes mellitus

    No full text
    Antihypertensive treatment is frequently needed in type 2 diabetes. In this study we measured the rates of total, oxidative, and nonoxidative glucose disposal, glycogen synthesis, glycolysis, endogenous glucose production, and lipid oxidation using a 4-h euglycemic (approximately 5 mmol/L) hyperinsulinemic (approximately 300 pmol/L) clamp in combination with a dual glucose tracer infusion ([3-(3)H]- and [U-14C] D-glucose) and indirect calorimetry in 40 nonobese subjects with type 2 diabetes. Subjects were studied twice: after a 4-week run-in period and after a 16-week period of double blind, randomized treatment with 4-6 mg/day lacidipine, a calcium channel blocker (n = 19), or 10-20 mg/day lisinopril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (n = 21). Antihypertensive treatment resulted in a significant increase in total glucose disposal during insulin clamp as well as in basal and insulin-stimulated nonoxidative glucose disposal rates. On the contrary, oxidative glucose disposal was significantly decreased by antihypertensive treatment, mainly in the basal state. The changes in glucose disposal rates were not significantly different in subjects treated with lacidipine and in those treated with lisinopril. The suppression of endogenous glucose production during insulin clamp was significantly greater after lacidipine than after lisinopril. These results suggest that treatment of subjects with type 2 diabetes with either lacidipine or lisinopril has no adverse effect on glucose metabolism. Conversely, both drugs seem to improve insulin sensitivity

    Effect of chronic treatment with lacidipine or lisinopril on intracellular partitioning of glucose metabolism in type 2 diabetes mellitus

    No full text
    Antihypertensive treatment is frequently needed in type 2 diabetes. In this study we measured the rates of total, oxidative, and nonoxidative glucose disposal, glycogen synthesis, glycolysis, endogenous glucose production, and lipid oxidation using a 4-h euglycemic (approximately 5 mmol/L) hyperinsulinemic (approximately 300 pmol/L) clamp in combination with a dual glucose tracer infusion ([3-(3)H]- and [U-14C] D-glucose) and indirect calorimetry in 40 nonobese subjects with type 2 diabetes. Subjects were studied twice: after a 4-week run-in period and after a 16-week period of double blind, randomized treatment with 4-6 mg/day lacidipine, a calcium channel blocker (n = 19), or 10-20 mg/day lisinopril, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (n = 21). Antihypertensive treatment resulted in a significant increase in total glucose disposal during insulin clamp as well as in basal and insulin-stimulated nonoxidative glucose disposal rates. On the contrary, oxidative glucose disposal was significantly decreased by antihypertensive treatment, mainly in the basal state. The changes in glucose disposal rates were not significantly different in subjects treated with lacidipine and in those treated with lisinopril. The suppression of endogenous glucose production during insulin clamp was significantly greater after lacidipine than after lisinopril. These results suggest that treatment of subjects with type 2 diabetes with either lacidipine or lisinopril has no adverse effect on glucose metabolism. Conversely, both drugs seem to improve insulin sensitivity

    Consenso informato in chirurgia : ricerca percettiva tra operatore e utente.

    No full text
    Relaz XXI Congresso Nazionale della Societ\ue0 Italiana di Chirurgia Geriatrica \u2013 Terni 4-6 dicembre 200

    MSRV-type mRNA expression by PBMC from IM patients and healthy donors (HD).

    No full text
    <p>The amounts of MSRV-type HERV-Wenv transcripts were evaluated by discriminatory real time RT-PCR, and normalized by the 2<sup>−ΔCt</sup> method (see Methods for details). Data are expressed as medians (line), with maximum and minimum values (whiskers); boxes represent interquartile range of the samples. Statistical significance was evaluated by the Mann-Whitney U-test for comparison of two groups, and by the Kruskal-Wallis test for three or four groups. (<b>A</b>) Comparison of IM patients (N = 17) and all healthy donors (HD, N = 24). (<b>B</b>) Comparison of IM patients (N = 17) and HD donors stratified according to plasmatic anti-EBNA-1 IgG titers, as EBV-negative (EBV−, N = 9), <600 IU/ml (N = 7), and >600 IU/ml (N = 8). Kruskall-Wallis test gave p = 0.0005 for all four groups, and p = 0.014 for the three HD groups.</p

    Bringing the policy in: a new typology of national referendums

    Get PDF
    Scholarship has categorized referendums predominantly along their procedural and institutional features. This paper moves beyond these formal dimensions, argues that the policy subjected to a popular vote is the missing link and proposes a complementary typology based on the policy areas. This typology fosters comparisons across countries, political systems and over time within one policy area, thus serving as a powerful analytical tool for further analyses. At the same time, the typology maps out the history of referendum use showing the chronology of salient issues in different societies. The empirical evidence draws on an original dataset of 630 nationwide referendums in Europe between 1793 and 2019
    corecore