7 research outputs found
Sensitivity to changes in interaural time difference and interaural correlation in the inferior colliculus
Fibronectin in the ascitic fluid of cirrhotic patients: correlation with biochemical risk factors for the development of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
Cirrhotic patients (23 with alcoholic cirrhosis, 5 with posthepatitic cirrhosis and 2 with cryptogenic cirrhosis) with ascites and portal hypertension were studied and divided into two groups corresponding to high or low risk to develop spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) related to the concentration of total protein in the ascitic fluid (A-TP): group I (high risk): A-TP<FONT FACE="Symbol">£</font>1.5 g/dl and group II (low risk): A-TP>1.5 g/dl. Fibronectin (FN), C3 and C4 concentrations were measured by radial immunodiffusion while total protein was measured by the biuret method. The mean values (group I vs group II) of C3 (12.59 ± 4.72 vs 24.53 ± 15.58 mg/dl), C4 (4.26 ± 3.87 vs 7.26 ± 4.14 mg/dl) and FN (50.47 ± 12.49 vs 75.89 ± 24.70 mg/dl) in the ascitic fluid were significantly lower (P<0.05) in the group considered to be at high risk for SBP. No significant difference was observed in the plasma/ascites fibronectin ratio (3.91 ± 1.21 vs 3.80 ± 1.26) or gradient (131.46 ± 64.01 vs 196.96 ± 57.38) between groups. Fibronectin in ascites was significantly correlated to C3 (r = 0.76), C4 (r = 0.58), total protein (r = 0.73) and plasma FN (r = 0.58) (P<0.05). The data suggest that the FN concentration in ascites is related to the opsonic capacity of this fluid, and that its concentration in the ascitic fluid may be a biochemical risk factor indicator for the development of spontaneous bacterial peritoniti
Brain Stem Potentials Evoked by Binaural Click Stimuli with Differences in Interaural Time and Intensity
Learning to discriminate interaural time differences at low and high frequencies
This study investigated learning, in normal-hearing
adults, associated with training (i.e. repeated practice)
on the discrimination of ongoing interaural time difference
(ITD). Specifically, the study addressed an apparent
disparity in the conclusions of previous studies, which
reported training-induced learning at high frequencies
but not at low frequencies. Twenty normal-hearing adults
were trained with either low- or high-frequency stimuli,
associated with comparable asymptotic thresholds, or
served as untrained controls. Overall, trained listeners
learnt more than controls and over multiple sessions. The
magnitudes and time-courses of learning with the lowand
high-frequency stimuli were similar. While this is
inconsistent with the conclusion of a previous study with
low-frequency ITD, this previous conclusion may not be
justified by the results reported. Generalization of learning
across frequency was found, although more detailed
investigations of stimulus-specific learning are warranted.
Overall, the results are consistent with the notion that
ongoing ITD processing is functionally uniform across
frequency. These results may have implications for clinical
populations, such as users of bilateral cochlear implants
