19 resultados para pre-medical
Resumo:
Ammonia is an important gas in many power plants and industrial processes so its detection is of extreme importance in environmental monitoring and process control due to its high toxicity. Ammonia’s threshold limit is 25 ppm and the exposure time limit is 8 h, however exposure to 35 ppm is only secure for 10 min. In this work a brief introduction to ammonia aspects are presented, like its physical and chemical properties, the dangers in its manipulation, its ways of production and its sources. The application areas in which ammonia gas detection is important and needed are also referred: environmental gas analysis (e.g. intense farming), automotive-, chemical- and medical industries. In order to monitor ammonia gas in these different areas there are some requirements that must be attended. These requirements determine the choice of sensor and, therefore, several types of sensors with different characteristics were developed, like metal oxides, surface acoustic wave-, catalytic-, and optical sensors, indirect gas analyzers, and conducting polymers. All the sensors types are described, but more attention will be given to polyaniline (PANI), particularly to its characteristics, syntheses, chemical doping processes, deposition methods, transduction modes, and its adhesion to inorganic materials. Besides this, short descriptions of PANI nanostructures, the use of electrospinning in the formation of nanofibers/microfibers, and graphene and its characteristics are included. The created sensor is an instrument that tries to achieve a goal of the medical community in the control of the breath’s ammonia levels being an easy and non-invasive method for diagnostic of kidney malfunction and/or gastric ulcers. For that the device should be capable to detect different levels of ammonia gas concentrations. So, in the present work an ammonia gas sensor was developed using a conductive polymer composite which was immobilized on a carbon transducer surface. The experiments were targeted to ammonia measurements at ppb level. Ammonia gas measurements were carried out in the concentration range from 1 ppb to 500 ppb. A commercial substrate was used; screen-printed carbon electrodes. After adequate surface pre-treatment of the substrate, its electrodes were covered by a nanofibrous polymeric composite. The conducting polyaniline doped with sulfuric acid (H2SO4) was blended with reduced graphene oxide (RGO) obtained by wet chemical synthesis. This composite formed the basis for the formation of nanofibers by electrospinning. Nanofibers will increase the sensitivity of the sensing material. The electrospun PANI-RGO fibers were placed on the substrate and then dried at ambient temperature. Amperometric measurements were performed at different ammonia gas concentrations (1 to 500 ppb). The I-V characteristics were registered and some interfering gases were studied (NO2, ethanol, and acetone). The gas samples were prepared in a custom setup and were diluted with dry nitrogen gas. Electrospun nanofibers of PANI-RGO composite demonstrated an enhancement in NH3 gas detection when comparing with only electrospun PANI nanofibers. Was visible higher range of resistance at concentrations from 1 to 500 ppb. It was also observed that the sensor had stable, reproducible and recoverable properties. Moreover, it had better response and recovery times. The new sensing material of the developed sensor demonstrated to be a good candidate for ammonia gas determination.
Resumo:
This article introduces schedulability analysis for global fixed priority scheduling with deferred preemption (gFPDS) for homogeneous multiprocessor systems. gFPDS is a superset of global fixed priority pre-emptive scheduling (gFPPS) and global fixed priority non-pre-emptive scheduling (gFPNS). We show how schedulability can be improved using gFPDS via appropriate choice of priority assignment and final non-pre-emptive region lengths, and provide algorithms which optimize schedulability in this way. Via an experimental evaluation we compare the performance of multiprocessor scheduling using global approaches: gFPDS, gFPPS, and gFPNS, and also partitioned approaches employing FPDS, FPPS, and FPNS on each processor.
Resumo:
The purpose of this study was to analyse differences between total physical activity (TPA) and moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) of pre-school children during daily school hours when they attended the physical education class (PED) and school days without PE class (NPED) and to assess the contribution of PE classes to TPA in school hours. The sample was composed of 193 pre-school healthy children (96 girls) aged from three to five years old and was conducted between February and December of 2008. Children wore accelerometers for at least four consecutive days during school hours. Data were analysed with specific software, age-specific counts-per-minute cut-off points and a 5 s epoch were used. Independent and general linear model repeated measures were used to assess differences between gender and differences between different days within each gender, respectively. Boys engaged more MVPA than girls (P < 0.05). During PED, pre-school children engaged significantly more in TPA and MVPA than during NPED (P < 0.05). PE class contributed, on average, 27.7% for the TPA and 32.8% of daily MVPA during PED in both gender. The results of this study suggest that structured PA such as a PE class increased the daily TPA and MVPA level of pre-school children.
Resumo:
Vivemos num mundo em constante mudança, onde a evolução tecnológica está cada vez mais presente no nosso quotidiano e as suas influências são inúmeras nas nossas vidas. Por outro lado, a vida humana é algo extremamente valioso e único pelo que a sociedade, também nessa área, tem procurado evoluir e dotar-se de novos meios e mecanismos de atuação, que possibilitem um socorro rápido e adequado em situações que possam em algum momento pôr em perigo a vida do ser humano. Pretendemos com o presente estudo, correlacionar estas duas vertentes, a do socorro á vítima para apoio á vida humana e a tecnologia no sentido de contribuir para uma formação mais distribuída mas ao mesmo tempo capaz de transmitir conhecimentos necessários á formação dos que socorrem. Para o efeito, planeamos o desenvolvimento de um Objeto de Aprendizagem (OA) denominado CiTAT (Curso Interativo de Tripulante de Ambulância de Transporte) que tem como objetivo acrescentar valor a todos os que são obrigados a frequentar o curso em regime presencial de Tripulante de Ambulância de Transporte (TAT). Após uma fase de análise do estado da arte relacionada com este tipo de formação, e após termos percebido como funciona e que tipos de recursos utilizam, analisámos temas relacionados com este tipo de formação como o “Sistema Integrado de Emergência Médica” o “Exame á Vítima”, o “Suporte Básico de Vida” e as “Emergências de Trauma”. Percebemos que a mudança de paradigma de formação das pessoas passou a ter novas formas de distribuir conhecimento em formato digital e que proporciona aos formandos um ensino distribuído em formatos de e-learning ou de b-learning. Os Objetos de Aprendizagem (OA) parecem assumir um relevo especial no ensino da área da saúde, abordando áreas temáticas e proporcionando aos seus utilizadores mecanismos de autoavaliação após a visualização dos conteúdos pedagógicos. Após o desenho do modelo concetual do CiTAT, avançamos para a produção de recursos necessários para a sua integração no OA. Após uma fase de testes e ajustes, avançamos para a sua avaliação final por parte dos utilizadores e preparamos um questionário para aferir o potencial de utilização deste tipo de soluções no ensino de TAT, atendendo ao facto de ser uma formação obrigatória e cuja recertificação é feita de três em três anos. O passo final foi a sua distribuição ao nível global, sendo o CiTAT catalogado com metadados e colocado no repositório MERLOT.