Background: MyDispense is a free online virtual simulation software developed by Monash University. The software facilitates students to practise, apply and hone the skills of a pharmacist in a realistic environment without the potentially life-threatening consequences of a real-life error. Although the focus of MyDispense was initially on exposure to community pharmacy practice scenarios, its modular build and customizability, indicate that there are a wide range of applications that could be incorporated into pharmacy education.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis review identifies frequent design and analysis errors in aging and senescence research and discusses best practices in study design, statistical methods, analyses, and interpretation. Recommendations are offered for how to avoid these problems. The following issues are addressed: (a) errors in randomization, (b) errors related to testing within-group instead of between-group differences, (c) failing to account for clustering, (d) failing to consider interference effects, (e) standardizing metrics of effect size, (f) maximum life-span testing, (g) testing for effects beyond the mean, (h) tests for power and sample size, (i) compression of morbidity versus survival curve squaring, and (j) other hot topics, including modeling high-dimensional data and complex relationships and assessing model assumptions and biases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiofouling is the accumulation of organisms on surfaces immersed in water. It is of particular concern to the international shipping industry because it increases fuel costs and presents a biosecurity risk by providing a pathway for non-indigenous marine species to establish in new areas. There is growing interest within jurisdictions to strengthen biofouling risk-management regulations, but it is expensive to conduct in-water inspections and assess the collected data to determine the biofouling state of vessel hulls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The careful selection of patients for hernia repair in ambulatory surgery centres is critical to prevent unanticipated inpatient admissions. The aim of this study was to evaluate risk factors associated with inpatient admission.
Methods: A multivariable logistic regression was performed utilising the ACS NSQIP database from 2007 to 2016.
Background: The impact of metopic craniosynostosis on intracranial volume (ICV) and ICV growth is unclear. In addition, the relationship between head circumference (HC) and ICV in these patients is not previously described.
Methods: A retrospective review of 72 patients with metopic craniosynostosis was performed.
It is often thought that the ability to control reaction rates with an applied electrical potential gradient is unique to redox systems. However, recent theoretical studies suggest that oriented electric fields could affect the outcomes of a range of chemical reactions, regardless of whether a redox system is involved. This possibility arises because many formally covalent species can be stabilized via minor charge-separated resonance contributors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDue to their colloidal nature, all protein aggregates scatter light in the visible wavelength region when formed in aqueous solution. This phenomenon makes solution turbidity, a quantity proportional to the relative loss in forward intensity of scattered light, a convenient method for monitoring protein aggregation in biochemical assays. Although turbidity is often taken to be a linear descriptor of the progress of aggregation reactions, this assumption is usually made without performing the necessary checks to provide it with a firm underlying basis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLeaders frequently form stronger relationships with certain subordinates moreso than others, creating an inner circle of close friendships and an outer circle of more distant relationships. Three studies examine the effects of inner-circle membership on group dynamics and interpersonal influence in hierarchical teams. Study 1 finds that, compared to outer-circle members, inner-circle members feel safer and participate in the group discussion more, and leaders recognize them as making a greater contribution and allocate a larger bonus to them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article explores the linkages between strategies for managing different types of conflict and group performance and satisfaction. Results from a qualitative study of 57 autonomous teams suggest that groups that improve or maintain top performance over time share 3 conflict resolution tendencies: (a) focusing on the content of interpersonal interactions rather than delivery style, (b) explicitly discussing reasons behind any decisions reached in accepting and distributing work assignments, and (c) assigning work to members who have the relevant task expertise rather than assigning by other common means such as volunteering, default, or convenience. The authors' results also suggest that teams that are successful over time are likely to be both proactive in anticipating the need for conflict resolution and pluralistic in developing conflict resolution strategies that apply to all group members.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Sci Public Interest
October 2005
-As the workplace has become increasingly diverse, there has been a tension between the promise and the reality of diversity in team process and performance. The optimistic view holds that diversity will lead to an increase in the variety of perspectives and approaches brought to a problem and to opportunities for knowledge sharing, and hence lead to greater creativity and quality of team performance. However, the preponderance of the evidence favors a more pessimistic view: that diversity creates social divisions, which in turn create negative performance outcomes for the group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Adult athletes have a higher prevalence (11%-50%) of exercise-induced bronchoconstriction (EIB) and airways hyperresponsiveness (AHR) than the population at large (7%-11%): reports describing EIB/AHR in adolescent athletes are scant.
Hypotheses: 1) a minimum AHR prevalence of 20% would be revealed in a group of high school athletes; 2) demographic data would predict AHR; 3) AHR-positive athletes would preferentially choose low ventilation sports. Eucapnic voluntary hyperpnea (EVH) was used to test for AHR in 23% of all athletes (79 of 343) of a midwestern high school.
Athletes have a high prevalence (11-50%) of exercise-induced asthma, which may be caused by the hyperventilation accompanying repetitive bouts of strenuous exercise. We hypothesized that recreational exercisers would display a similar trend. Eucapnic voluntary hyperventilation (EVH) bronchoprovocation (breathing 21% O2, 5% CO2, and 74% N2 at 60% of MVV for 5 minutes) was performed to determine the prevalence of airways hyperresponsiveness (AHR) in adults (n=212, 146 males, mean +/- standard deviation, age 32 +/- 10 years) who exercised regularly (10 +/- 10 years, 31 +/- 28% of their lives): none had a previous diagnosis of asthma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFederal law prohibits pre-employment physical examination of firefighter recruits, but these workers must perform intense exercise in arduous environments. Components of physical fitness of rookie firefighters (n = 115; 104 men, mean +/- SD: age = 28.3 +/- 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMalnutrition is common among individuals suffering from hypoxemic chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), advanced HIV disease, and in patients with chronic, severe congestive heart failure. Although increased morbidity and mortality has been associated with weight loss in these conditions, the pathophysiology of malnutrition remains somewhat unclear for each. In COPD, the primary postulated mechanism is hypermetabolism resulting in elevated total caloric expenditure arising from increased airway resistance, increased O2 cost of ventilation, increased dietary induced thermogenesis, inefficient substrate use and perhaps, increased levels of proinflammatory cytokines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Objectives: Thirty to 50% of all COPD patients experience tissue wasting that may be caused by hypermetabolism, but the cause of the perturbed metabolic state is unclear. We hypothesized that the elevated O2 cost of ventilation (O2 COV) may be a contributing factor. All of the data are presented as means (+/-SEM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Studies documenting the increased incidence of exercise-induced bronchospasm (EIB) in figure skaters have employed a method that incorporates on-ice exercise with rink-side spirometry. The literature suggests that bronchial provocation challenge testing is better than exercise testing for identifying EIB. To test this hypothesis in figure skaters, a unique athletic population that trains and competes in cold air, we compared these two methods in the same individuals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is a well recognized tool for the functional assessment of patients with cardiovascular and pulmonary disorders. The exercise response of asthmatics has been well characterized but the exercise response of patients with occupational asthma is less well understood. In this report we describe the clinical utility of CPET by characterizing the cardiovascular and pulmonary responses to exercise in patients with occupational asthma (OA) and a closely related entity, reactive airways dysfunction syndrome (RADS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudies in healthy human subjects subjected to lower body positive pressure (LBPP) have failed to elucidate many of the physiologic effects of this maneuver. In 7 healthy, well-hydrated men we studied the following responses to LBPP (35 mm Hg, 1 hour, supine position): systemic and renal hemodynamics; urine volume (UV), urine osmolality (Uosm), and urine sodium level (UNaV); free water (CH20) and osmolar (Cosm) clearances; plasma renin activity (PRA); levels of aldosterone (PA), cortisol (CORT), norepinephrine (NE), atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), and vasopressin (AVP); osmolality (Posm); and serum sodium level. Subjects were restudied on a control day with zero trouser pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sports Med Phys Fitness
September 1996
Hypotheses: 1) figure skaters possess average aerobic power; 2) on-ice training would not improve aerobic power of supramaximal endurance; 3) off-ice training plus on-ice training would improve aerobic power and supramaximal endurance.
Experimental Design: This was a prospective, controlled study in which we monitored ice skaters before, during and after two different 10 week training programs.
Setting: Athletes training for competition sanctioned by the United States Figure Skating Association.
Many highly trained athletes experience exercise-induced bronchospasm (EIB): studies describing EIB in figure skaters, who may be at increased risk of EIB due to rink temperatures (7 to 10 degrees C), have not been published. We studied professionally coached figure skaters (n = 124) for EIB by spirometry at rinkside immediately before a simulated long program and at 0 to 1, 5, 10, and 15 min postexercise. Postexercise spirometry revealed the presence of EIB (a decrease from baseline in FEV1 of at least 10%) in 43 skaters, while the remainder (n = 81, control group) remained relatively stable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe evaluated the effect of supplemental O2 on energy metabolism of hypoxemic humans by measuring O2 uptake (VO2) kinetics and other cardiorespiratory parameters in nine male chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients and seven age-matched control subjects (on air and on 30% O2) at rest and during moderate cycle ergometer exercise. Heart rate, ventilation, VO2, CO2 output, respiratory exchange ratio, O2 cost of work, and work efficiency were measured with a computerized metabolic cart; O2 deficit and VO2 time courses were calculated. In COPD patients, 30% O2 breathing resulted in 1) reduction of O2 deficit (from 488 +/- 34 ml in air to 398 +/- 27 ml in O2; P < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
June 1995
Inadequate O2 supply may impair intramuscular oxidative metabolism and O2 availability may modulate ATP production within exercising muscle. Therefore, we studied ATP flux from anaerobic glycolysis, the creatine kinase reaction, and oxidative phosphorylation using 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy kinetic data collected during exercise. We examined six chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients with severe hypoxemia (group 1), seven COPD patients with mild hypoxemia (group 2), and seven healthy control subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
November 1993
Inspiratory muscle fatigue, a common event in patients in the intensive care unit, is under multifactorial control. To test the hypothesis that systemic oxygenation is a factor in this event, we subjected five healthy males (age 42 +/- 3 yr) to continuous inspiratory pressure (75% of maximal inspiratory pressure, -95 +/- 5 cmH2O) with the use of a controlled breathing pattern while they breathed normoxic (21% O2), hyperoxic (30% O2), and hypoxic (13% O2) mixtures. Inspiratory muscle endurance (IME; time that pressure could be maintained) and other cardiorespiratory parameters were monitored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the influence of a right shift of the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve on tissue oxygenation in two groups of anesthetized rabbits subjected to short periods of graded hypoxia: Group 1 (n = 5) with elevated P50 due to increased RBC 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and adenosine triphosphate and Group 2 (n = 5) with normal P50. Hemoglobin fell progressively in all animals due to blood letting for necessary measurements. During 16% inspired O2 (FIO2), both groups remained stable.
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