14 research outputs found

    Homiletics

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    Homiletics

    The Metabolism of an Exogenous Lipid Source during Septic Shock in the Puppy

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142302/1/jpen0652.pd

    The effect of pyloromyotomy on serum and luminal gastrin in infants with hypertrophic pyloric stenosis

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    Previous studies of the pathogenesis of congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (CHPS) have implicated immunoreactive gastrin, although no consistent relationship has been demonstrated. In this study we have examined the effect which pyloromyotomy has on serum and luminal gastrin concentration after a mechanical and protein stimulus. Seventeen infants were examined preoperatively, and 1 week after pyloromyotomy. On each occasion, samples of serum and gastric contents were collected from fasting infants. Sixty cubic centimeters of water was placed into the stomach and further samples collected 20 min later. The water was then aspirated and replaced by 60 cc of 10% peptone broth and a third set of samples collected after 20 min. All samples from each patient were analyzed for immunoreactive gastrin in the same assay. Pyloromyotomy did not alter fasting serum gastrin (119.3 pg +/- 11.9 preop vs 164.7 +/- 29.9 postop) nor did it alter the gastrin response to water. Pyloromyotomy decreased the incremental serum gastrin response to peptone broth (66.6 +/- 16.9 preop vs 18.9 +/- 11.7 postop). Luminal gastrin concentration was not significantly affected by pyloromyotomy. When the pre- and postoperative serum gastrin increments for water and peptone were plotted against the fasting gastrin levels, an inverse relationship was apparent which was statistically significant by regression analysis. Seen in this way, intragastric water and peptone have a dual effect on serum gastrin; a rise if the fasting serum gastrin concentration is low; a fall or lesser rise if the fasting serum gastrin concentration is high. The data suggest that the direction and magnitude of serum gastrin response to intragastric water or peptone is set by the fasting level, and is independent of pyloromyotomy.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/23236/1/0000169.pd

    Gastroesophageal reflux in children: Is there a place for the upper gastrointestinal study?

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    Objective tests for gastroesophageal reflux in children have shown only fair correlation with clinical symptoms. Thirty-four children referred to the pediatric surgery service for evaluation of gastroesophageal reflux had both 24-hour pH probe monitoring and standardized upper gastrointestinal examinations. A total of 16 children (47%) had documented significant or pathologic gastroesophageal reflux, 11 on pH monitors and 9 on contrast examinations. There were 4 in whom both tests were positive. None of the pH monitoring criteria correlated with the radiographic studies. The patient population documented by contrast study did not differ from the general testpositive population by age or associated clinical findings. The 2 studies probably measure different aspects of significant gastroesophageal reflux, are confirmatory and complementary, and must be correlated with the clinical symptoms.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/48130/1/261_2005_Article_BF02035106.pd

    Evenness drives consistent diversity effects in intensive grassland systems across 28 European sites

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    Ecological and agronomic research suggests that increased crop diversity in species-poor intensive systems may improve their provision of ecosystem services. Such general predictions can have critical importance for worldwide food production and agricultural practice but are largely untested at higher levels of diversity. 2We propose new methodology for the design and analysis of experiments to quantify diversity-function relationships. Our methodology can quantify the relative strength of inter-specific interactions that contribute to a functional response, and can disentangle the separate contributions of species richness and relative abundance. 3Applying our methodology to data from a common experiment at 28 European sites, we show that the above-ground biomass of four-species mixtures (two legumes and two grasses) in intensive grassland systems was consistently greater than that expected from monoculture performance, even at high productivity levels. The magnitude of this effect generally resulted in transgressive overyielding. 4A combined analysis of first-year results across sites showed that the additional performance of mixtures was driven by the number and strength of pairwise inter-specific interactions and the evenness of the community. In general, all pairwise interactions contributed equally to the additional performance of mixtures; the grass-grass and legume-legume interactions were as strong as those between grasses and legumes. 5The combined analysis across geographical and temporal scales in our study provides a generality of interpretation of our results that would not have been possible from individual site analyses or experimentation at a single site. 6Our four-species agricultural grassland communities have proved a simple yet relevant model system for experimentation and development of methodology in diversity-function research. Our study establishes that principles derived from biodiversity research in extensive, semi-natural grassland systems are applicable in intensively managed grasslands with agricultural plant species

    Evenness drives consistent diversity effects in intensive grassland systems across 28 European sites

    Get PDF
    1 Ecological and agronomic research suggests that increased crop diversity in species-poor intensive systems may improve their provision of ecosystem services. Such general predictions can have critical importance for worldwide food production and agricultural practice but are largely untested at higher levels of diversity. 2 We propose new methodology for the design and analysis of experiments to quantify diversity-function relationships. Our methodology can quantify the relative strength of inter-specific interactions that contribute to a functional response, and can disentangle the separate contributions of species richness and relative abundance. 3 Applying our methodology to data from a common experiment at 28 European sites, we show that the above-ground biomass of four-species mixtures (two legumes and two grasses) in intensive grassland systems was consistently greater than that expected from monoculture performance, even at high productivity levels. The magnitude of this effect generally resulted in transgressive overyielding. 4 A combined analysis of first-year results across sites showed that the additional performance of mixtures was driven by the number and strength of pairwise inter-specific interactions and the evenness of the community. In general, all pairwise interactions contributed equally to the additional performance of mixtures; the grass-grass and legume-legume interactions were as strong as those between grasses and legumes. 5 The combined analysis across geographical and temporal scales in our study provides a generality of interpretation of our results that would not have been possible from individual site analyses or experimentation at a single site. 6 Our four-species agricultural grassland communities have proved a simple yet relevant model system for experimentation and development of methodology in diversity-function research. Our study establishes that principles derived from biodiversity research in extensive, semi-natural grassland systems are applicable in intensively managed grasslands with agricultural plant species
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