428 research outputs found

    The Children of the Reformation: Childhood Palaeoepidemiology in Britain, ad 1000–1700

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    CHILDHOOD IS A TIME of rapid biological growth and development, and a stage of the life course during which bodies are particularly sensitive to social and environmental stressors. As a consequence, events which may impact upon a child’s care and treatment can become physically embodied within their bones and teeth. The skeletal remains of children have been neglected within archaeological discourse until recently, but they are, in fact, a particularly important demographic for understanding the impact of social processes on past population health. This research examines the prevalence of skeletal disease in children (≀16 years) in Britain (England, Wales and Scotland) between ad 1000 and 1700. Data for a total of 4,626 children from 95 sites were collated from published and unpublished skeletal reports and analysed for evidence of skeletal changes reflecting disease. A biocultural approach was adopted in which the evidence was interpreted in relation to ecological, social, economic and environmental conditions. It was observed that childhood levels of skeletal stress did increase significantly after 1540. It was noted that during the Reformation sociocultural and economic factors added to stressors in the ecology of the medieval child. The effects of the Reformation were found to be the greatest aggravator in the rise of morbidity prevalence over seven centuries. Differences in morbidity patterns between non-adult age categories indicated that a state of ‘childhood’ existed until at least eleven years of age, after which there appears to have been a gradual transition into adolescence and adulthood

    Cine MRI assessment of motility in the unprepared small bowel in the fasting and fed state: beyond the breath-hold

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    BackgroundThe symptoms of functional bowel disorders are common in postprandial but investigations are generally undertaken in the fasted state using invasive procedures. MRI provides a noninvasive tool to study the gastrointestinal tract in an unperturbed, fed state. The aim of this study was to develop a technique to assess small bowel motility from cine MRI data in the unprepared bowel in fasting and fed states.MethodsFifteen healthy volunteers underwent a baseline MRI scan after which they consumed a 400 g soup. Subjects then underwent a postprandial scan followed by further scans at regular intervals. Small bowel motility was assessed using single‐slice bTFE cine MRI. An optimized processing technique was used to generate motility data based on power spectrum analysis of voxel‐signal changes with time. Interobserver variability (n = 15) and intra‐observer (n = 6) variability were assessed. Changes in the motility index were compared between fasted and immediate postprandial state.Key ResultsExcellent agreement between observers was seen across the range of motility measurements acquired, with intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of 0.979 (P [less than] 0.0001) and Bland‐Altman limits of agreement 95% CI: −28.9 to 45.9 au. Intra‐observer variability was low with ICC of 0.992 and 0.960 (2 observers, P [less than] 0.0001). Changes from the fasted to immediately postprandial state showed an average increase of 122.4% ± 98.7% (n = 15).Conclusions & InferencesThis optimized technique showed excellent inter and intra observer agreement. It was sensitive to changes in motility induced feeding. This technique will be useful to study contractile activity and regional patterns along the gastrointestinal tract under physiological conditions

    Probing the myelin water compartment with a saturation‐recovery, multi‐echo gradient‐recalled echo sequence

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    PurposeTo investigate the effect of varying levels of urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0001‐weighting on the evolution of the complex signal from white matter in a multi‐echo gradient‐recalled echo (mGRE) saturation‐recovery sequence.Theory and MethodsAnalysis of the complex signal evolution in an mGRE sequence allows the contributions from short‐ and long‐urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0002 components to be separated, thus providing a measure of the relative strength of signals from the myelin water, and the external and intra‐axonal compartments. Here we evaluated the effect of different levels of urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0003‐weighting on these signals, expecting that the previously reported, short urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0004 of the myelin water would lead to a relative enhancement of the myelin water signal in the presence of signal saturation. Complex, saturation‐recovery mGRE data from the splenium of the corpus callosum from 5 healthy volunteers were preprocessed using a frequency difference mapping (FDM) approach and analyzed using the 3‐pool model of complex signal evolution in white matter.ResultsAn increase in the apparent urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0005 as a function of echo time was demonstrated, but this increase was an order of magnitude smaller than that expected from previously reported myelin water urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0006‐values. This suggests the presence of magnetization transfer and exchange effects which counteract the urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0007‐weighting.ConclusionVariation of the urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0008 amplitude in a saturation‐recovery mGRE sequence can be used to modulate the relative strength of signals from the different compartments in white matter, but the modulation is less than predicted from previously reported urn:x-wiley:07403194:media:mrm28695:mrm28695-math-0009‐values

    Imaging gray matter with concomitant null point imaging from the phase sensitive inversion recovery sequence

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    Purpose To present an improved three-dimensional (3D) interleaved phase sensitive inversion recovery (PSIR) sequence including a concomitantly acquired new contrast, null point imaging (NPI), to help detect and classify abnormalities in cortical gray matter. Methods The 3D gradient echo PSIR images were acquired at 0.6 mm isotropic resolution on 11 multiple sclerosis (MS) patients and 9 controls subjects using a 7 Tesla (T) MRI scanner, and 2 MS patients at 3T. Cortical abnormalities were delineated on the NPI/PSIR data and later classified according to position in the cortex. Results The NPI helped detect cortical lesions within the cortical ribbon with increased, positive contrast compared with the PSIR. It also provided improved intrinsic delineation of the ribbon, increasing confidence in classifying the lesions' locations. Conclusion The proposed PSIR facilitates the classification of cortical lesions by providing two T1-weighted 3D datasets with isotropic resolution, including the NPI showing cortical lesions with clear delineation of the gray/white matter boundary and minimal partial volume effects. Magn Reson Med 76:1512–1516, 2016. © 2015 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited

    Magnetic resonance imaging biomarkers of gastrointestinal motor function and fluid distribution

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    Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a well established technique that has revolutionized diagnostic radiology. Until recently, the impact that MRI has had in the assessment of gastrointestinal motor function and bowel fluid distribution in health and in disease has been more limited, despite the novel insights that MRI can provide along the entire gastrointestinal tract. MRI biomarkers include intestinal motility indices, small bowel water content and whole gut transit time. The present review discusses new developments and applications of MRI in the upper gastrointestinal tract, the small bowel and the colon reported in the literature in the last 5 years
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