977 resultados para post space preparation
Resumo:
The use of multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mp-MRI) for prostate cancer has increased over recent years, mainly for detection, staging, and active surveillance. However, suspicion of recurrence in the set of biochemical failure is becoming a significant reason for clinicians to request mp-MRI. Radiologists should be able to recognize the normal post-treatment MRI findings. Fibrosis and atrophic remnant seminal vesicles after prostatectomy are often found and must be differentiated from local relapse. Moreover, brachytherapy, external beam radiotherapy, cryosurgery, and hormonal therapy tend to diffusely decrease the signal intensity of the peripheral zone on T2-weighted images (T2WI) due to the loss of water content, consequently mimicking tumor and hemorrhage. The combination of T2WI and functional studies like diffusion-weighted imaging and dynamic contrast-enhanced improves the identification of local relapse. Tumor recurrence tends to restrict on diffusion images and avidly enhances after contrast administration either within or outside the gland. The authors provide a pictorial review of the normal findings and the signs of local tumor relapse after radical prostatectomy, external beam radiotherapy, brachytherapy, cryosurgery, and hormonal therapy.
Resumo:
A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Economics from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
Resumo:
A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
Resumo:
A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Finance from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
Resumo:
A fim de obter metodologias que permitam estabelecer, com segurança, o diagnóstico "post-mortem " da infecção chagásica, adaptou-se o xenodiagnóstico artificial a necropsiados com diferentes tempos de óbito. O testefoi positivo em três (30%) de dez chagásicos autopsiados. O tempo decorrido entre o êxito letal e o início do repasto pelos triatomineos destes chagásicos foi de duas horas, duas horas e quinze minutos e sete horas, respectivamente. Discutem-se os fatores que podem explicara sobrevivência do Trypanosoma cruzi no hospedeiro morto bem como as aplicações práticas do achado.
Resumo:
Realizou-se o teste imunoenzimático ELISA, paralelamente à reação de imunofluorescência, para a detecção de anticorpos antí-Trypanosoma cruzi, em 137 amostras de líquidos pericárdicos humanos, colhidos na necropsia. Os resultados foram cotejados com os achados anatomopatológicos. Observou-se que: (1) os dois testes foram positivos em 30 casos e negativos em 105; (2) o teste ELISA foipositivo em 2 casos nos quais a immofluorescència revelou-se negativa; num desses casos, havia sinais morfológicos de doença de Chagas; (3) a média geométrica dos títulos obtidos com o teste ELISA foi significativamente maior que a da imunofluorescência; (4) o índice de concordância entre os dois testes apresentou o valor de 0,985. O presente relato parece-nos inédito quanto ao uso do teste imunoenzimático no líquidoperícárdicopara o diagnóstico post- mortem da doença de Chagas.
Resumo:
Dissertation to obtain the Doctoral degree in Physics Engineering
Resumo:
The paper presented herein proposes a reliability-based framework for quantifying the structural robustness considering the occurrence of a major earthquake (mainshock) and subsequent cascading hazard events, such as aftershocks that are triggered by the mainshock. These events can significantly increase the probability of failure of buildings, especially for structures that are damaged during the mainshock. The application of the proposed framework is exemplified through three numerical case studies. The case studies correspond to three SAC steel moment frame buildings of 3-, 9-, and 20- stories, which were designed to pre-Northridge codes and standards. Twodimensional nonlinear finite element models of the buildings are developed using the Open System for Earthquake Engineering Simulation framework (OpenSees), using a finite-length plastic hinge beam model and a bilinear constitutive law with deterioration, and are subjected to multiple mainshock-aftershock seismic sequences. For the three buildings analyzed herein, it is shown that the structural reliability under a single seismic event can be significantly different from that under a sequence of seismic events. The reliability-based robustness indicator used shows that the structural robustness is influenced by the extent by which a structure can distribute damage.
Resumo:
Dissertação para a obtenção do grau de doutor em Biologia pelo Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica. Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Resumo:
Dissertation presented to Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia, Universidade Nova de Lisboa for obtaining the master degree in Membrane Engineering
Resumo:
Dissertação apresentada para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Mestre em Ciência Política e Relações Internacionais (especialização em Relações Internacionais)
Resumo:
The influence of time and temperature on the storage of an alkaline antigen of L.major-like and L.(V.) braziliensis promastigotes added or not of a proteases inhibitor (PMSF) was evaluted by means of an IgG-ELISA. Antibodies in assays using L. major-like antigen stored at -20oC for 6 monsths had a statistically lower geometric mean titer (GMT) and different 95% confidence interval limits (CL) than antigens stored otherwise, as assessed by the "t" statistic. The PMSF L. major-like antigen after storage for 6 months at a temperature of 4oC had the same GMT and 95% CL displayed at time zero as well as when storage for 4 and 6 months at -20oC. Significant diferences were not found when L.(V.) braziliensis antigens were stored at times and temperatures mentioned; the PMSF antigen stored for 2 months at -70oC resulted in a lower serum GMT and 95% CL than any other, as assessed by the "t" statistic. Antigen performance did not show any statistical difference associated to the addition of PMSF within the same species; the largest difference between antigens was that between PMSF-L. (V.) braziliensis and L. major-like without PMSF.
Resumo:
This article proposes a methodology to address the urban evolutionary process, demonstrating how it is reflected in literature. It focuses on “literary space,” presented as a territory defined by the period setting or as evoked by the characters, which can be georeferenced and drawn on a map. It identifies the different locations of literary space in relation to urban development and the economic, political, and social context of the city. We suggest a new approach for mapping a relatively comprehensive body of literature by combining literary criticism, urban history, and geographic information systems (GIS). The home-range concept, used in animal ecology, has been adapted to reveal the size and location of literary space. This interdisciplinary methodology is applied in a case study to nineteenth- and twentieth-century novels involving the city of Lisbon. The developing concepts of cumulative literary space and common literary space introduce size calculations in addition to location and structure, previously developed by other researchers. Sequential and overlapping analyses of literary space throughout time have the advantage of presenting comparable and repeatable results for other researchers using a different body of literary works or studying another city. Results show how city changes shaped perceptions of the urban space as it was lived and experienced. A small core area, correspondent to a part of the city center, persists as literary space in all the novels analyzed. Furthermore, the literary space does not match the urban evolution. There is a time lag for embedding new urbanized areas in the imagined literary scenario.
Resumo:
RESUMO: As Análises Clínicas são um precioso elemento entre os meios complementares de diagnóstico e terapêutica permitindo uma enorme panóplia de informações sobre o estado de saúde de determinado utente. O objetivo do laboratório é fornecer informação analítica sobre as amostras biológicas, sendo esta caracterizada pela sua fiabilidade, relevância e facultada em tempo útil. Assim, tratando-se de saúde, e mediante o propósito do laboratório, é notória a sua importância, bem como, a dos fatores associados para o cumprimento do mesmo. O bom desenrolar do ciclo laboratorial, compreendido pelas fases pré-analítica, analítica e pós-analítica é crucial para que o objetivo do laboratório seja cumprido com rigor e rapidez. O presente trabalho “O Erro na Fase Pré-Analítica: Amostras Não Conformes versus Procedimentos”, enquadrado no mestrado de Qualidade e Organização no Laboratório de Análises Clínicas, pretendeu enfatizar a importância da fase pré- analítica, sendo ela apontada como a primordial em erros que acabam por atrasar a saída de resultados ou por permitir que os mesmos não sejam fidedignos como se deseja, podendo acarretar falsos diagnósticos e decisões clínicas erradas. Esta fase, iniciada no pedido médico e finalizada com a chegada das amostras biológicas ao laboratório está entregue a uma diversidade de procedimentos que acarretam, por si só, uma grande diversidade de intervenientes, para além de uma variabilidade de factores que influenciam a amostra e seus resultados. Estes fatores, que podem alterar de algum modo a “veracidade” dos resultados analíticos, devem ser identificados e tidos em consideração para que estejamos convitos que os resultados auxiliam diagnósticos precisos e uma avaliação correta do estado do utente. As colheitas que por quaisquer divergências não originam amostras que cumpram o objectivo da sua recolha, não estando por isso em conformidade com o pretendido, constituem uma importante fonte de erro para esta fase pré-analítica. Neste estudo foram consultados os dados relativos a amostras de sangue e urina não conformes detetadas no laboratório, em estudo, durante o 1º trimestre de 2012, para permitir conhecer o tipo de falhas que acontecem e a sua frequência. Aos Técnicos de Análises Clínicas, colaboradores do laboratório, foi-lhes pedido que respondessem a um questionário sobre os seus procedimentos quotidianos e constituíssem, assim, a população desta 2ª parte do projeto. Preenchido e devolvido de forma anónima, este questionário pretendeu conhecer os procedimentos na tarefa de executar colheitas e, hipoteticamente, confrontá-los com as amostras não conformes verificadas. No 1ºsemestre de 2012 e num total de 25319 utentes registaram-se 146 colheitas que necessitaram de repetição por se verificarem não conformes. A “amostra não colhida” foi a não conformidade mais frequente (50%) versus a “má identificação” que registou somente 1 acontecimento. Houve ainda não conformidades que não se registaram como “preparação inadequada” e “amostra mal acondicionada”. Os técnicos revelaram-se profissionais competentes, conhecedores das tarefas a desempenhar e preocupados em executá-las com qualidade. Eliminar o erro não estará, seguramente, ao nosso alcance porém admitir a sua presença, detetá-lo e avaliar a sua frequência fará com que possamos diminuir a sua existência e melhorar a qualidade na fase pré-analítica, atribuindo-lhe a relevância que desempenha no processo laboratorial.-----------ABSTRACT:Clinical analyses are a precious element among diagnostic and therapeutic tests as they allow an enormous variety of information on the state of health of a user. The aim of the laboratory is to supply reliable, relevant and timely analytical information on biological samples. In health-related matters, in accordance with the objective of the laboratory, their importance is vital, as is the assurance that all the tools are in place for the fulfillment of its purpose. A good laboratory cycle, which includes the pre-analytical, analytical and post-analytical phases, is crucial in fulfilling the laboratory’s mission rapidly and efficiently. The present work - "Error in the pre-analytical phase: non-compliant samples versus procedures”, as part of the Master’s in Quality and Organization in the Clinical Analyses Laboratory, wishes to emphasize the importance of the pre-analytical phase, as the phase containing most errors which eventually lead to delays in the issue of results, or the one which enables those results not to be as reliable as desired, which can lead to false diagnosis and wrong clinical decisions. This phase, which starts with the medical request and ends with the arrival of the biological samples to the laboratory, entails a variety of procedures, which require the intervention of different players, not to mention a great number of factors, which influence the sample and the results. These factors, capable of somehow altering the “truth” of the analytical results, must be identified and taken into consideration so that we may ensure that the results help to make precise diagnoses and a correct evaluation of the user’s condition. Those collections which, due to any type of differences, do not originate samples capable of fulfilling their purpose, and are therefore not compliant with the objective, constitute an important source of error in this pre-analytical phase. In the present study, we consulted data from non-compliant blood and urine samples, detected at the laboratory during the 1st quarter of 2012, to find out the type of faults that happen and their frequency. The clinical analysis technicians working at the laboratory were asked to fill out a questionnaire regarding their daily procedures, forming in this way the population for this second part of the project. Completed and returned anonymously, this questionnaire intended to investigate the procedures for collections and, hypothetically, confront them with the verified non-compliant samples. In the first semester of 2012, and out of a total of 25319 users, 146 collections had to be repeated due to non-compliance. The “uncollected sample” was the most frequent non-compliance (>50%) versus “incorrect identification” which had only one occurrence. There were also unregistered non-compliance issues such as “inadequate preparation” and “inappropriately packaged sample”. The technicians proved to be competent professionals, with knowledge of the tasks they have to perform and eager to carry them out efficiently. We will certainly not be able to eliminate error, but recognizing its presence, detecting it and evaluating its frequency will help to decrease its occurrence and improve quality in the pre-analytical phase, giving it the relevance it has within the laboratory process.
Resumo:
The long march of modernization of the Western societies tends to be presented as following a regular sequence: societies and institutions were pre-modern, and then they were modernized, eventually becoming post-modern. Such teleology may provide an incomplete or distorted narrative of societal evolution in many parts of the world, even in the ‘post-modern heartland’ of Western Europe, with Portugal being a case in point. The concept of archaic post-modernity has been developed by a philosopher, José Gil, to show how Portuguese institutions and organizations combine elements of pre-modernity and post-modernity. The notion of an archaic post-modernity is advanced in order to provide an alternative account of the modernization process, which enriches discussion of the varieties of capitalism. Differences in historical experiences create singularities that may be considered in the analysis of culture, management and organization.