Search results for "Movement"

showing 10 items of 2021 documents

Critical role of dipeptidyl peptidase IV in neuropeptide Y-mediated endothelial cell migration in response to wounding

2001

Recently, we have discovered that neuropeptide Y (NPY), a sympathetic neurotransmitter, is also present in human umbilical endothelial cells (HUVECs), and is potently chemotactic and angiogenic by acting on one or several of Y1-Y5 receptors. In HUVECs, NPY is co-localized with dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV) which cleaves Tyr(1)-Pro(2) from NPY(1-36) to form NPY(3-36) resulting in the formation of a non-Y1 receptor agonist, which remains angiogenic. Presently we studied the effects of DPPIV's blockade using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) on migration of HUVECs in response to NPY(1-36) or NPY(3-36) following cell wounding. Both peptides caused similar dose-dependent increases in cell migration…

medicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsEndotheliumPhysiologyDipeptidyl Peptidase 4Blotting WesternImmunoblottingBiologyBiochemistryDipeptidyl peptidaseUmbilical CordCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceEndocrinologyWestern blotCell MovementInternal medicinemental disordersmedicineHumansNeuropeptide YReceptormedicine.diagnostic_testChemotaxisNeuropeptide Y receptorhumanitiesCell biologyBlotEndothelial stem cellEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureWounds and InjuriesEndothelium VascularPeptides
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<title>Eye movements during silent and oral reading with stabilized versus free head movement and different eye-trackers</title>

2008

Eye movement research of reading has been done on a battery of eye-tracking setups during last decades. We compared reading data of the same group of six students, their eyes were tracked by a video-based helmet-mounted system with the data sampling frequency of 50 Hz and a setup with a chin-rest at 240 Hz. We found that not only the number of fixations may decrease after reading practice, but so does also the mean duration of fixations. In spite of the short duration of saccades, their distributions and changes in them are similarly reported in the two experimental conditions. Lack of significant correlation in the HED data testifies to the result variability due to measurement technique. …

medicine.medical_specialtyVideo-oculographyHead (linguistics)BitTorrent trackerbusiness.industryMovement (music)media_common.quotation_subjectEye movementAudiologyDuration (music)Reading (process)medicineEye trackingComputer visionsense organsArtificial intelligencePsychologybusinessmedia_commonSPIE Proceedings
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Time-Course of Grammatical Processing in Deaf Readers: An Eye-Movement Study.

2019

Abstract Twenty participants who were deaf and 20 chronological age-matched participants with typical hearing (TH) (mean age: 12 years) were asked to judge the correctness of written sentences with or without a grammatically incongruent word while their eye movements were registered. TH participants outperformed deaf participants in grammaticality judgment accuracy. For both groups, First Pass and Total Fixation Times of target words in correct trials were significantly longer in the incongruent condition than in the congruent one. However, whereas TH students showed longer First Pass in the target area than deaf students across congruity conditions, deaf students made more fixations than t…

medicine.medical_specialtyVocabularyEye Movementsmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationAudiologyDeafnessVocabulary050105 experimental psychologySentence processingEducation030507 speech-language pathology & audiology03 medical and health sciencesSpeech and Hearingotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_commonLanguage05 social sciencesEye movementFixation (psychology)SyntaxVocabulary developmentReadingTask analysisGrammaticality0305 other medical sciencePsychologyJournal of deaf studies and deaf education
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Resumption of Ventilation at the End of Obstructive Sleep Apneas is not Determined by Diaphragmatic Fatigue

1988

In patients affected by obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) a progressive increase of the force developed by the respiratory muscles is usually observed during the occlusive phase before upper airway patency is resumed (Onal and Lopata, 1986).

medicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryDiaphragmatic breathingmedicine.diseaseSleep in non-human animalsNon-rapid eye movement sleeprespiratory tract diseasesObstructive sleep apneaInternal medicineBreathingRespiratory muscleCardiologyMedicineIn patientRespiratory systembusiness
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The effect of conventional movement training and trampoline training on balance and gait in chronic hemiplegic patients

1991

The postural sway of subjects during standing both with their eyes open and closed together with maximum velocity of walking were analysed in six male chronic hemiplegic patients before, during and after an intensive movement training programme lasting 8 weeks. The movement training programme was carried out on the basis of Bobath's principles. Three of the subjects carried out their training on a trampoline, with the particular purpose of enhancing the stimulation of the mechanisms responsible for the control of balance. During the follow-up, maximal walking velocity remained at previous levels and no systematic changes were observed in the control of postural sway. Although the use of the…

medicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryMovement (music)05 social sciencesTraining (meteorology)050401 social sciences methodsPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationGait03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhysical medicine and rehabilitation0504 sociologyWalking velocityPhysical therapyMedicineTrampolinebusinesshuman activitiesEyes openTraining programme030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBalance (ability)Physiotherapy Theory and Practice
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Physical Activity, Sedentary Behavior, and Time in Bed Among Finnish Adults Measured 24/7 by Triaxial Accelerometry

2021

Background: Studies measuring physical activity (PA) and sedentary behavior on a 24/7 basis are scarce. The present study assessed the feasibility of using an accelerometer at the hip while awake and at the wrist while sleeping to describe 24/7 patterns of physical behavior in working-aged adults by age, sex, and fitness. Methods: The study was based on the FinFit 2017 study where the physical behavior of 20- to 69-year-old Finns was assessed 24/7 by triaxial accelerometer (UKKRM42; UKK Terveyspalvelut Oy, Tampere, Finland). During waking hours, the accelerometer was kept at the right hip and, during time in bed, at the nondominant wrist. PA variables were based on 1-min exponential moving …

medicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrydevice-basedPhysical activity030229 sport sciencesSedentary behaviorAccelerometerseisominenuni (lepotila)istuminen03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePhysical medicine and rehabilitationmittauslaitteetTime in bedmedicine030212 general & internal medicinemovementsleepstandingbusinessfyysinen aktiivisuusaikuisetJournal for the Measurement of Physical Behaviour
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Effects of rectilinear acceleration and optokinetic and caloric stimulations in space.

1984

During the flight of Spacelab 1 the crew performed a number of experiments to explore changes in vestibular function and visual-vestibular interactions on exposure to microgravity. Measurements were made on the threshold for detection of linear oscillation, vestibulo-ocular reflexes elicited by angular and linear movements, oculomotor and posture responses to optokinetic stimulations, and responses to caloric stimulation. Tests were also conducted on the ground, during the 4 months before and on days 1 to 6 after flight. The most significant result was that caloric mystagmus of the same direction as on the earth could also be evoked in the weightless environment.

medicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresEye MovementsMovementAccelerationCrewMotion PerceptionNystagmusAudiologyOpticsNystagmus PhysiologicWeightlessmedicineCaloric TestsHumansVestibular systemPhysicsMultidisciplinarymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryWeightlessnessWeightlessnessCaloric theoryOptokinetic reflexElectrooculographySpace FlightVestibular Function TestsElectrooculographyVisual Perceptionsense organsVestibule Labyrinthmedicine.symptombusinessHeadScience (New York, N.Y.)
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Slowed abduction saccades in bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia

1992

Horizontal eye movements were investigated in 65 patients with bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia utilizing direct current electro-oculography. Abduction saccades were slowed in 35 patients (53.8%), being hypermetric in 65.7% of them. Slowing of abduction saccades is attributed to impaired inhibition of the tonic resting activity of the antagonistic medial rectus muscle. Experimental data indicate that this slowing results from a lesion of an uncrossed connection between the pontine reticular formation and the oculomotor nucleus. The prevalence of hypermetric abduction saccades increased with increasing severity of adduction paresis on the opposite eye. This confirms the view that media…

medicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresbusiness.industryInternuclear ophthalmoplegiaMedial rectus muscleLateral rectus muscleEye movementParamedian pontine reticular formationAnatomyAudiologymedicine.diseaseeye diseasesTonic (physiology)Oculomotor nucleusbody regionsOphthalmologymedicine.anatomical_structureMedicinesense organsNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessParesisNeuro-Ophthalmology
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The so-called one-and-a-half syndrome, type II: a new syndrome?

1999

Objective: The term one-and-a-half syndrome, type II, was recently coined and has been applied to two somewhat different eye movement disorders: the loss of voluntary horizontal eye movements except for adduction in one eye (one patient with two lesions, one in the cerebral hemisphere and the other in the cavernous sinus) and the loss of all voluntary horizontal eye movements with adduction nystagmus in the right eye on attempted gaze to the left and preserved abduction in both eyes with the doll’s head maneuver (one patient with infarction of the midbrain). The justification of the term ‘one-and-a-half syndrome, type II’ is questioned. Design: Retrospective analysis of 9000 consecutive ele…

medicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresmedicine.diagnostic_testEye movementPhysical examinationNystagmusmedicine.diseaseGazeeye diseasesSurgeryMidbrainOphthalmologyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationCavernous sinusCerebral hemispheremedicinesense organsNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomOne and a half syndromePsychologyNeuro-Ophthalmology
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Abduction saccades in unilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia

1990

Horizontal eye movements were investigated in 60 consecutive patients with unilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia utilizing direct current electrooculography. In nine patients additional conjugated slowing of ipsiversive saccades indicated the diagnosis of a one-and-a-half syndrome. Slowing of abduction saccades was bilateral in two patients and unilateral in 20 (ipsilateral to the MLF lesion in 17 patients and contralateral in three). Slowing of abduction saccades was attributed to impaired inhibition of the tonic resting activity of the antagonistic medial rectus muscle. On the eye contralateral to the lesion 70% of the patients had abduction nystagmus and 66.7% hy permetric abduction sa…

medicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMedial rectus muscleInternuclear ophthalmoplegiaEye movementLateral rectus muscleElectrooculographyAnatomyNystagmusmedicine.diseaseeye diseasesbody regionsLesionOphthalmologyOphthalmologymedicineNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessParesisNeuro-Ophthalmology
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