Background: Although preterm birth is associated with deficits in both motor and cognitive functioning, the association between early motor skills and cognitive outcomes at a later age remains underexplored.
Aim: To evaluate associations between motor skills at age 5.5 and cognitive functioning at age 8.
Daylength (i.e., photoperiod) provides essential information for seasonal adaptations of organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext: Insulin sensitivity and secretion indices can be useful tools in understanding insulin homeostasis in children at risk for diabetes. There have been few studies examining the reproducibility of these measures in pediatrics.
Objective: To determine whether fasting or oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT)-derived insulin measures would be more reproducible and whether there would be differences based on weight, sex, race, and pubertal status.
In both diurnal and nocturnal species, the neurons in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) generate a daily pattern in which the impulse frequency peaks at midday and is lowest during the night. This pattern, common to both day-active and night-active species, has led to the long-standing notion that their functional difference relies merely on a sign reversal in SCN output. However, recent evidence shows that the response of the SCN to the animal's physical activity is opposite in nocturnal and diurnal animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To improve the identification of anaerobic bacteria, the identity of clinical isolates which could not be identified using MALDI-TOF MS was assessed using whole genome sequencing (WGS) and in-house made main spectral profiles (MSPs) were created. Four novel Anaerococcus species, each represented by at least two isolates, were encountered.
Methods: The novelty of the isolates was confirmed by comparing the 16S rRNA gene sequences and the WGS with their closest relatives.