1,115 research outputs found
Viabilidade do exame ultrassonográfico pelas vias transretal, transabdominal e transvaginal para diagnosticar prenhez em cabras e ovelhas
Neste trabalho objetivou-se verificar a viabilidade do exame ultrassonográfico pelas vias transretal, transabdominal e transvaginal para diagnosticar a gestação de cabras (n = 240) e ovelhas (n = 320) no 30o, 45o, 60o e 75o dia. Foi utilizando um aparelho de ultrassom equipado com um transdutor linear utilizado pelas vias transretal e transabdominal e outro microconvexo endocavitário utilizado por via transvaginal. Nas cabras e ovelhas, o exame ultrassonográfico pela via transretal foi mais rápido (P < 0,05) no 30o e no 45o dia da gestação, mas, pela via transabdominal foi mais rápido no 60o e no 75o dia. Em ambas as espécies, a duração do diagnóstico de gestação foi maior (P < 0,05) no 30o dia do que nos demais, enquanto que a duração do diagnóstico no 75o dia foi menor (P < 0,05) do que no 45o e 60o. Independentemente da via de exame e do dia da gestação, o tempo médio para diagnosticar a gestação foi menor (P < 0,05) nas cabras do que nas ovelhas. Independentemente da espécie e do dia da gestação, o tempo médio para diagnosticar a gestação pela via transretal foi menor (P < 0,05) do que as demais e o da transvaginal foi menor (P < 0,05) do que o da via transabdominal. Os resultados permitem concluir que o diagnóstico de gestação é mais rápido pela via transretal, que o tempo de diagnóstico é menor na gestação avançada e na espécie caprina. 
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Preventable fractions of colon and breast cancers by increasing physical activity in Brazil: perspectives from plausible counterfactual scenarios
Background: Physical activity is associated with lower risk of colon and breast cancers. Herein we estimated preventable fractions of colon and breast cancers in Brazil by increasing population-wide physical activity to different counterfactual scenarios.
Methods: We used data from a representative national survey in Brazil and corresponding relative risks of colon and postmenopausal breast cancers from a meta-analysis. Estimated cancer incidence was retrieved from GLOBOCAN and Brazilian National Cancer Institute. Five counterfactual scenarios for physical activity were considered: (i) theoretical minimum risk exposure level (≥8,000 metabolic equivalent of tasks-minute/week – MET-min/week); (ii) physical activity recommendation (≥600 MET-min/week); (iii) a 10% reduction in prevalence of insufficient physical inactivity (<600 MET-min/week); (iv) physical activity level in each state equals the most active state in Brazil; (v) closing the gender differences in physical activity.
Results: About 19% (3,630 cases) of colon cancers and 12% (6,712 cases) of postmenopausal breast cancers could be prevented by increasing physical activity to ≥8,000 MET-min/week. Plausible counterfactual scenarios suggested the following impact on cancer prevention: reaching physical activity recommendation: 1.3% (1,113 cases) of breast and 6% (1,137 cases) of colon; 10% reduction in physical inactivity prevalence: 0.2% (111 cases) of breast and 0.6% (114 cases) of colon; most active state scenario: 0.3% (168 cases) of breast and 1% (189 cases) of colon; reducing gender differences in physical activity: 1.1% (384 cases) of breast and 0.6% (122 cases) of colon.
Conclusions: High levels of physical activity are required to achieve sizable impact on breast and colon cancer prevention in Brazil
Gate-controlled Guiding of Electrons in Graphene
Ballistic semiconductor structures have allowed the realization of
optics-like phenomena in electronics, including magnetic focusing and lensing.
An extension that appears unique to graphene is to use both n and p carrier
types to create electronic analogs of optical devices having both positive and
negative indices of refraction. Here, we use gate-controlled density with both
p and n carrier types to demonstrate the analog of the fiber-optic guiding in
graphene. Two basic effects are investigated: (1) bipolar p-n junction guiding,
based on the principle of angle-selective transmission though the graphene p-n
interface, and (2) unipolar fiber-optic guiding, using total internal
reflection controlled by carrier density. Modulation of guiding efficiency
through gating is demonstrated and compared to numerical simulations, which
indicates that interface roughness limits guiding performance, with
few-nanometer effective roughness extracted. The development of p-n and
fiber-optic guiding in graphene may lead to electrically reconfigurable wiring
in high-mobility devices.Comment: supplementary materal at
http://marcuslab.harvard.edu/papers/OG_SI.pd
STM Spectroscopy of ultra-flat graphene on hexagonal boron nitride
Graphene has demonstrated great promise for future electronics technology as
well as fundamental physics applications because of its linear energy-momentum
dispersion relations which cross at the Dirac point. However, accessing the
physics of the low density region at the Dirac point has been difficult because
of the presence of disorder which leaves the graphene with local microscopic
electron and hole puddles, resulting in a finite density of carriers even at
the charge neutrality point. Efforts have been made to reduce the disorder by
suspending graphene, leading to fabrication challenges and delicate devices
which make local spectroscopic measurements difficult. Recently, it has been
shown that placing graphene on hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) yields improved
device performance. In this letter, we use scanning tunneling microscopy to
show that graphene conforms to hBN, as evidenced by the presence of Moire
patterns in the topographic images. However, contrary to recent predictions,
this conformation does not lead to a sizable band gap due to the misalignment
of the lattices. Moreover, local spectroscopy measurements demonstrate that the
electron-hole charge fluctuations are reduced by two orders of magnitude as
compared to those on silicon oxide. This leads to charge fluctuations which are
as small as in suspended graphene, opening up Dirac point physics to more
diverse experiments than are possible on freestanding devices.Comment: Nature Materials advance online publication 13/02/201
A molecular method for the detection of sally lightfoot crab larvae (Grapsus grapsus, Brachyura, Grapsidae) in plankton samples
The decapod Grapsus grapsus is commonly found on oceanic islands of the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of the Americas. In this study, a simple, quick and reliable method for detecting its larvae in plankton samples is described, which makes it ideal for large-scale studies of larval dispersal patterns in the species
Laser-induced etching of few-layer graphene synthesized by Rapid-Chemical Vapour Deposition on Cu thin films
The outstanding electrical and mechanical properties of graphene make it very
attractive for several applications, Nanoelectronics above all. However a
reproducible and non destructive way to produce high quality, large-scale area,
single layer graphene sheets is still lacking. Chemical Vapour Deposition of
graphene on Cu catalytic thin films represents a promising method to reach this
goal, because of the low temperatures (T < 900 Celsius degrees) involved during
the process and of the theoretically expected monolayer self-limiting growth.
On the contrary such self-limiting growth is not commonly observed in
experiments, thus making the development of techniques allowing for a better
control of graphene growth highly desirable. Here we report about the local
ablation effect, arising in Raman analysis, due to the heat transfer induced by
the laser incident beam onto the graphene sample.Comment: v1:9 pages, 8 figures, submitted to SpringerPlus; v2: 11 pages,
PDFLaTeX, 9 figures, revised peer-reviewed version resubmitted to
SpringerPlus; 1 figure added, figure 1 and 4 replaced,typos corrected,
"Results and discussion" section significantly extended to better explain
etching mechanism and features of Raman spectra, references adde
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