Search results for "HOE"

showing 10 items of 397 documents

Ski jumping boots limit effective take-off in ski jumping

2002

In this study, we measured the vertical and horizontal take-off forces, plantar pressures and activation patterns of four muscles (vastus lateralis, gluteus maximus, tibialis anterior, gastrocnemius) in 10 ski jumpers in simulated laboratory conditions when wearing either training shoes or ski jumping boots. We found significant differences in vertical (P < 0.001), horizontal (P < 0.05) and resultant (P < 0.001) take-off velocities and vertical force impulse (P < 0.01). We found no significant differences in the jumpers' initial take-off positions; however, the jumping boots condition resulted in a smaller displacement in the final position of the following joint angles: ankle angle (P < 0.…

AdultHeelPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationElectromyographymedicine.disease_causeSki jumpingJumpingSkiingTask Performance and AnalysisPressuremedicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineMuscle SkeletalMathematicsOrthodonticsmedicine.diagnostic_testElectromyographyFootAnkle angleForefootBiomechanicsBody movementAnatomymusculoskeletal systemBiomechanical PhenomenaShoesbody regionsmedicine.anatomical_structurehuman activitiesJournal of Sports Sciences
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Transcranial Doppler ultrasound study of the effects of nitrous oxide on cerebral autoregulation during neurosurgical anesthesia: a randomized contro…

2003

Object. Nitrous oxide has an adverse effect on cerebrovascular hemodynamics. Increased intracranial pressure, cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral metabolic rate of O2 (CMRO2), and reduced autoregulation indices have been reported, but their magnitudes are still being debated. This study was designed to evaluate the effect of N2O on CBF and autoregulatory indexes during N2O—sevoflurane anesthesia in a prospective randomized controlled series of patients. Methods. Two groups of 20 patients were studied on the basis of the use of N2O in the anesthetic gas mixture. The transient hyperemic response test, which relies on transcranial Doppler ultrasound techniques, was used to assess cerebral hemo…

AdultMaleDuplex ultrasonographyAdolescentUltrasonography Doppler TranscranialNitrous OxideHemodynamicsTranscranial Doppler cerebral autoregulation neurosurgical patientsAnesthesia GeneralCerebral autoregulationNeurosurgical ProceduresmedicineHomeostasisHumansAutoregulationIntracranial pressurebusiness.industrySettore MED/27 - NeurochirurgiaBrainMiddle AgedEchoencephalographyTranscranial DopplerCerebral blood flowAnesthesiaAnestheticFemalebusinessBlood Flow Velocitymedicine.drugJournal of neurosurgery
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An emergent infectious disease: Clostridioides difficile infection hospitalizations, 10-year trend in Sicily

2021

Abstract Background Clostridioides difficile is the most common cause of healthcare-associated diarrhoea worldwide and C. difficile infection is an emerging infectious disease. In the US, its rates are monitored trough an active surveillance system, but many European Union member states still lack this, and in Italy no epidemiological data on C. difficile infection are available except for a few single-centre data. Aim To provide data on the C. difficile infection incidence in Sicily (the biggest and 5th most populous region of Italy) during a 10-year period. Methods We revised all the regional standardized discharge forms between 2009 and June 2019 using the code ICD-9 00845 of the Interna…

AdultMaleMicrobiology (medical)medicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsHealth care-associated diarrhoeaDiseaseCommunicable DiseasesClostridioidesEpidemiologyCase fatality ratemedicineHumansmedia_common.cataloged_instanceEuropean unionSicilyAgedmedia_commonCross InfectionOriginal PaperClostridioides difficilebusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)CorrectionGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseHospitalizationPneumoniaSurveillance of C. difficile.Infectious DiseasesClostridioides difficile infectionInfectious disease (medical specialty)Clostridium InfectionsEmerging infectious diseaseFemaleSurveillance of C. difficilebusinessInfection
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Treadmill versus overground and barefoot versus shod comparisons of triceps surae fascicle behaviour in human walking and running

2013

Studies of human locomotion are commonly performed on a treadmill or overground, as well as with or without footwear. These testing modalities have been suggested to influence kinematics, kinetics and/or spatio-temporal variables differently. However, it is unclear whether they influence contractile behaviour at the level of the muscle fascicles. This has major relevance because results from studies performed with different combinations of the testing modalities are often compared. The present study used ultrasound to examine fascicle behaviour of the medial gastrocnemius (MG) and soleus muscles of ten young, healthy males during walking and running on a treadmill and overground, as well as…

AdultMaleMuscle fasciclemedicine.medical_specialtyLower velocityBiophysicsWalkingRunningBarefootGait (human)medicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineTreadmillMuscle Skeletalta315Human locomotionUltrasonographybusiness.industryRehabilitationFascicleBiomechanical PhenomenaShoesKineticsmedicine.anatomical_structureExercise TestPhysical therapymedicine.symptombusinessMuscle ContractionMuscle contractionGait &amp; Posture
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Hyperechogenicity of the substantia nigra in healthy controls is related to MRI changes and to neuronal loss as determined by F-Dopa PET

2009

Abstract Transcranial ultrasound (TCS) has been shown to reveal hyperechogenicity of the substantia nigra (SN) in Parkinsonian patients and in about 10% of healthy controls. It is hypothesized that SN hyperechogenicity in healthy subjects is a vulnerability marker for idiopathic Parkinson's disease (IPD). Although there is strong evidence that the echomarker results from increased local iron content, the exact pathophysiological mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Thus, prognostic impact can only be estimated. We examined 14 subjects with SN hyperechogenicity (SN+) (7 IPD patients and 7 controls) and 7 healthy controls without the echomarker (SN−) by a magnetic resonance imaging meth…

AdultMalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCognitive NeuroscienceSubstantia nigraReference ValuesmedicineHumansNeuronsmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryTissue inhomogeneityHealthy subjectsParkinson DiseaseMagnetic resonance imagingMiddle AgedEchoencephalographyMagnetic Resonance ImagingPathophysiologyDihydroxyphenylalanineTranscranial DopplerSubstantia NigraNeurologyPositron-Emission TomographyT2 relaxationIron contentFemaleRadiopharmaceuticalsbusinessNeuroImage
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HLA Class I and Class II Polymorphism in Three Sicilian Populations

2007

Two human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I loci (HLA-A and HLA-B) and one class II locus (HLA-DR) were typed at the DNA level in the Sicilian population. Study participants were of Sicilian origin (183 for class I loci and 260 for class II loci) and live in three towns, chosen on the basis of geographic position and different historical events. These towns are Sciacca (southwest Sicily, located at sea level, conquered by Arabs in a.d. 814), Piana degli Albanesi (northwest Sicily, 720 m above sea level, has maintained religious, cultural, and linguistic peculiarities traced to Albanian settlement in 1488), and Troina (northeast Sicily, 1,120 m above sea level, known as the first settlement of…

AdultMalePopulationLocus (genetics)Human leukocyte antigenLinkage DisequilibriumGene FrequencyGeneticsHumansAlleleeducationSicilyAllele frequencyAllelesGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studyPolymorphism GeneticHLA-A AntigensGenetic VariationHLA-DR Antigenslanguage.human_languageGenetics PopulationHaplotypesHLA-B AntigensChild PreschoolGenetic structurelanguageEthnologyFemalePhoenicianDNA typing haplotype frequency HLA polymorphism sicilian populationSicilianHLA-DRB1 ChainsDemographyHuman Biology
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Do all people with schizophrenia receive the same benefit from different family intervention programs?

2005

The study evaluated baseline characteristics that could be used to predict the outcome of family intervention in schizophrenia and focussed on identifying the subgroups of patients who were more likely to respond to one therapeutic modality than another. We conducted a controlled trial in which participants were assigned at random to either a Behavioral Family Intervention Group or a Relatives' Group. Patients in one catchment area, having suffered one psychotic relapse within the previous year and living with their families, were assessed by an independent evaluator at baseline and 12 months later. Some clinical and family factors such as the duration of illness, number of hospital admissi…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentIntervention grouplaw.inventionRandomized controlled trialBehavior TherapyRecurrencelawIntervention (counseling)medicinePsychoeducationHumansPsychiatryBiological PsychiatryDemographyPsychological distressmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthSchizophreniaBaseline characteristicsSchizophreniaFamily TherapyFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyPsychiatry Research
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Regression of Severe Tungiasis-Associated Morbidity after Prevention of Re-Infestation: A Case Series from Rural Madagascar

2013

Tungiasis (sand flea disease) is a neglected tropical disease. Heavy infestation results in mutilation of the feet and difficulty in walking. We identified eight individuals with extremely severe tungiasis in rural Madagascar. To prevent reinfestation, four individuals received solid shoes and four received a daily application of an herbal repellent effective against Tunga penetrans. Over a period of 10 weeks the feet were examined and the severity of tungiasis- associated morbidity was measured. Within this period, the severity score for acute tungiasis decreased 41% in the shoe group and 89% in the repellent group. The four major inflammation-related symptoms disappeared in the four patie…

AdultMaleRural Populationmusculoskeletal diseasesmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentTunga penetransmedicine.disease_causeVirologyInfestationMadagascarSecondary PreventionmedicineAnimalsHumansTungaChildPovertyAgedSecondary preventionbiologyFootbusiness.industryTropical diseaseArticlesMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationDermatologyShoesSurgerybody regionsInfectious DiseasesInsect RepellentsTungiasisFemaleParasitologyTungiasisbusinessRural populationFoot (unit)The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
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Tumor in the Horseshoe Kidney: Clinical Implications and Review of Embryogenesis

1992

We report on 3 patients with tumor in a horseshoe kidney, 1 of whom had bilateral tumor (renal cell cancer on the right side and urothelial cancer on the left side). Tumors that arise predominantly in the bridge of a horseshoe kidney can mimic the symptoms of an intra-abdominal disease process. Besides routine diagnostic procedures, angiography is essential to plan the surgical approach, which in principle should be organ-sparing. The literature of the embryology of the horseshoe kidney was reviewed for a relationship between the abnormal renal development and the site of tumorigenesis, and for development of a key for the wide variation of blood supply. Recently reported data suggest that …

AdultMaleUrologyKidneymedicine.disease_causeNeoplasms Multiple PrimaryParenchymaCarcinomamedicineHumansCarcinoma Renal CellAgedHorseshoe (symbol)Carcinoma Transitional Cellmedicine.diagnostic_testurogenital systembusiness.industryHorseshoe kidneyAnatomyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseKidney NeoplasmsBridge (graph theory)EmbryologyAngiographyFemalebusinessCarcinogenesisJournal of Urology
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Gastrointestinal symptoms in infancy: A population-based prospective study

2005

Abstract Background. During the first months of life, infants can suffer from many ‘minor’ gastroenterological disturbances. However, little is known about the frequency of these problems and the factors which predispose or facilitate their onset. Aims. (a) To ascertain the frequency of the most common gastrointestinal symptoms in infants during the first 6 months after birth; (b) to evaluate the influence of some variables on the onset of the symptoms. Study design and patients. Each of the 150 paediatricians distributed throughout Italy followed 20 consecutive infants from birth to 6 months. 2879 infants (1422 f, 1457 m) concluded the study. The presence of the following symptoms was eval…

AdultMalecolic; constipation; diarrhoea; epidemiology; failure to thrive; feeding; infancy; regurgitation; vomitingPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtyInfancySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaConstipationColicEpidemiologyVomitingGestational AgemedicineHumansProspective StudiesProspective cohort studyHepatologybusiness.industryCryingFeedingInfant NewbornGastroenterologyInfantGestational ageFailure to thriveRegurgitationInfant Low Birth WeightInfant FormulaDiarrhoeaHospitalizationLow birth weightDiarrheaBreast FeedingItalyDiarrhea InfantileFailure to thriveGastroesophageal RefluxVomitingFemalemedicine.symptombusinessConstipationFollow-Up StudiesDigestive and Liver Disease
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