35 results match your criteria: "a Institute of Physiology[Affiliation]"
Objectives: To determine and evaluate the time clinics needed to complete the sub-processes involved in the first-fitting and follow-up fitting of people with a cochlear implant.
Methods: Eight HEARRING clinics completed a questionnaire recording how long it took to complete the sub-processes involved in first-fitting and follow-up fitting cochlear implant recipients. The mean times of clinics and procedures were then compared.
Otol Neurotol
February 2016
*Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, New Hampshire †Department of Otolaryngology, Johns Hopkins Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A. ‡Institute of Physiology and Pathology of Hearing, Warsaw Medical University, Warsaw, Poland.
Only a small fraction of patients with profound sensorineural hearing loss have access to cochlear implantation with the majority of these affected people living in developing countries. Cost effectiveness analysis (CEA) is an important tool to demonstrate the value of this technology to healthcare policy makers. This approach requires that hearing healthcare professionals incorporate methods of assessing long-term benefits of cochlear implantation that include psychosocial, quality of life, and disability outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFErgonomics
September 2016
a Institute of Physiology and Anatomy , German Sport University Cologne, Cologne , Germany.
Objective: Objective and subjective methods have been used in the past to assess workplace fatigue, but little is known about correlations between them. We examine correlations between subjective and objective measures, including measures collected in a workplace scenario.
Methods: 15 young and 17 older participants were assessed before and after work with four types of fatigue measure: objective physical (posturography), objective mental (psychomotor vigilance task), subjective physical and mental (self-assessment), objective and subjective realistic (oculomotor behaviour, observer-rated facial expression, typing performance).
Mice remain the most studied animal model in pancreas research. Since the findings of this research are typically extrapolated to humans, it is important to understand both similarities and differences between the 2 species. Beside the apparent difference in size and macroscopic organization of the organ in the 2 species, there are a number of less evident and only recently described differences in organization of the acinar and ductal exocrine tissue, as well as in the distribution, composition, and architecture of the endocrine islets of Langerhans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mot Behav
April 2016
a Institute of Physiology and Anatomy, German Sport University Cologne.
A new 3-stage model based on neuroimaging evidence is proposed by Chein and Schneider (2012). Each stage is associated with different brain regions, and draws on cognitive abilities: the first stage on creativity, the second on selective attention, and the third on automatic processing. The purpose of the present study was to scrutinize the validity of this model for 1 popular learning paradigm, visuomotor adaptation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrep Biochem Biotechnol
October 2016
b Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried , Germany.
Deterioration of health is a problem in modern space flight business. In order to develop countermeasures, research has been done on human bodies and also on single cells. Relevant experiments on human cells in vitro are feasible when microgravity is simulated by devices such as the Random Positioning Machine or generated for a short time during parabolic flights.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe divalent metal transporter (DMT1) is well known for its roles in duodenal iron absorption across the apical enterocyte membrane, in iron efflux from the endosome during transferrin-dependent cellular iron acquisition, as well as in uptake of non-transferrin bound iron in many cells. Recently, using multiple approaches, we have obtained evidence that the mitochondrial outer membrane is another subcellular locale of DMT1 expression. While iron is of vital importance for mitochondrial energy metabolism, its delivery is likely to be tightly controlled due to iron's damaging redox properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Physiol Pharmacol
July 2014
a Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Videnska 1083, 142 20 Prague, Czech Republic.
Cardiac sensitivity to oxygen deprivation changes significantly during ontogenetic development. However, the mechanisms for the higher tolerance of the immature heart, possibilities of protection, and the potential impact of perinatal hypoxia on cardiac tolerance to oxygen deprivation in adults have not yet been satisfactorily clarified. The hypoxic tolerance of an isolated rat heart showed a triphasic pattern: significant decrease from postnatal day 1 to 7, followed by increase to the weaning period, and final decline to adulthood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Neurorehabil
June 2016
d Center of Neurodevelopmental Disorders (KIND) Pediatric Neuropsychiatry Unit Department of Women's and Children's Health Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Stockholm County Council , Sweden.
Pain
May 1985
Pain Research Center, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Department of Oral Medicine, Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 U.S.A. Institute of Physiology, Hamburg University/UKE, D-2000 Hamburg 20 F.R.G.
The McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ), supplemented with a German version, was administered to 10 healthy subjects to evaluate two laboratory pain models. Ischemia pain was induced as a tonic pain model and electrical intracutaneous stimuli were applied as a model of phasic pain. In addition, both pain models were employed simultaneously in order to evaluate their mutual influence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF