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Spleen findings in drowning
A retrospective study of spleen findings in 42 victims of drowning and a comparison group of 42 cases of asphyxiation due to other causes (hanging, ligature strangulation and manual strangulation), that were matched for sex, age, body weight and build, was performed. Significantly smaller spleen weights (P < 0.05), spleen weight:body weight ratios (P < 0.01) and spleen weight:liver weight ratios (P < 0.01) were found in the victims of drowning. The difference in weight was 18%. A significant negative correlation between spleen weight and blood alcohol concentration was found in the study group (r = â0.44; P < 0.01), but not in the control group. The possibility that the findings are due to a stress reaction caused by hypoxia in the presence of cooling and an influence of alcohol on reflex mechanisms is discussed
Evidence for an Additional Heat Source in the Warm Ionized Medium of Galaxies
Spatial variations of the [S II]/H-Alpha and [N II]/H-Alpha line intensity
ratios observed in the gaseous halo of the Milky Way and other galaxies are
inconsistent with pure photoionization models. They appear to require a
supplemental heating mechanism that increases the electron temperature at low
densities n_e. This would imply that in addition to photoionization, which has
a heating rate per unit volume proportional to n_e^2, there is another source
of heat with a rate per unit volume proportional to a lower power of n_e. One
possible mechanism is the dissipation of interstellar plasma turbulence, which
according to Minter & Spangler (1997) heats the ionized interstellar medium in
the Milky Way at a rate ~ 1x10^-25 n_e ergs cm^-3 s^-1. If such a source were
present, it would dominate over photoionization heating in regions where n_e <
0.1 cm^-3, producing the observed increases in the [S II]/H-Alpha and [N
II]/H-Alpha intensity ratios at large distances from the galactic midplane, as
well as accounting for the constancy of [S II]/[N II], which is not explained
by pure photoionization. Other supplemental heating sources, such as magnetic
reconnection, cosmic rays, or photoelectric emission from small grains, could
also account for these observations, provided they supply to the warm ionized
medium ~ 10^-5 ergs s^-1 per cm^2 of Galactic disk.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
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