895 resultados para Kontrollierte radikalische Polymerisation, stabile Radikale, Triazolinyl, Block Copolymer
Resumo:
The objective of this study was to evaluate the clinical usefulness, in terms of analgesic efficacy and safety, of ultrasound-guided pudendal nerve block performed with bupivacaine in cats undergoing perineal urethrostomy. Eighteen client-owned male cats scheduled for perineal urethrostomy were enrolled in the study and assigned to one of two treatment groups. The pudendal nerve block was performed under general anaesthesia as described elsewhere, with 0.3 ml/kg of either saline (group C) or 0.5% bupivacaine (group B) - the total injection volume being split equally on the two sites of injection (left and right). Intra-operatively, assessment of nociception was based on the rescue analgesics requirement, as well as on the evaluation of changes in physiological parameters in comparison with the baseline values. Post-operative pain assessment was performed using three different pain scales at recovery and then 1, 2 and 3 h after recovery. Cats in group B showed lower heart rates and required fewer analgesics during surgery than group C. Post-operatively, group B had lower pain scores and needed less rescue buprenorphine than group C. Iatrogenic block-related complications were not observed. In conclusion, the ultrasound-guided pudendal nerve block can be considered clinically useful in feline medicine as it provides reliable analgesia in cats undergoing perineal urethrostomy.
Resumo:
Experiments using different types of antigen-adjuvant preparations were conducted in outbred sheep to compare effects of adjuvants on immune responses. Trinitrophenyl-ovalbumin (TNP-ovalbumin) incorporated in a preparation with nonionic block copolymers elicited high antibody titers to both ovalbumin and TNP. Different humoral immune responses were observed when Pasteurella haemolytica lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was added to the preparations. Responses to ovalbumin and TNP were reduced when Pasteurella haemolytica LPS was added to copolymer L121. The antibody titers to ovalbumin or TNP were not affected by the addition of LPS to the preparation containing copolymer L180.5. Lymphocyte proliferation assays demonstrated high stimulation indices at day 17 to ovalbumin by lymphocytes from lambs receiving preparations containing copolymers without Pasteurella haemolytica LPS.
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Block bootstrap has been introduced in the literature for resampling dependent data, i.e. stationary processes. One of the main assumptions in block bootstrapping is that the blocks of observations are exchangeable, i.e. their joint distribution is immune to permutations. In this paper we propose a new Bayesian approach to block bootstrapping, starting from the construction of exchangeable blocks. Our sampling mechanism is based on a particular class of reinforced urn processes
Resumo:
This article traces the networks in the Russian revolutionary underground from the 1860s untill 1917 and subsumes them under the term radical milieu. Though there existed ideological differences all Russian radicals shared a common identity as „anti-society“ against the tsarist regime. In the radical milieu with its own values the participants tried to create their own reality, where all members regardless of their social origin or sex were seen as equal. The radical milieu was backed by a sphere of sympathisers that constituted the main source of material support and the main recruiting field. But the radicals were very careful when selecting new members for their underground world. Applicants had to fulfil defined criteria. The radical milieu in Russia was in a permanent danger to be infiltrated by the secret police. This situation between fear and hope was the background where ideas of solidarity but also visions of violence and revenge against the “traitors” were ripening and then became realised.
Resumo:
In der zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts treten in Russland vermehrt Frauen und Männer in die Öffentlichkeit, die durch radikale Veränderungen einen „neuen Menschen“ und mit ihm eine neue Gesellschaft schaffen wollen. Vera Figner und Vera Zasulič, die beiden Protagonistinnen der vorliegenden Untersuchung, sind herausragende Vertreterinnen der radikalen Bewegung im ausgehenden Zarenreich. Während Vera Zasulič mit ihrem Attentat auf den St. Petersburger Stadtkommandanten Fëdor Trepov 1878 am Beginn der ersten terroristischen Welle in Russland steht, ist Vera Figner bei ihrer Verhaftung 1883 das letzte führende Mitglied der Terrororganisation Narodnaja Volja (Volkswille), die am 1./13. März 1881 einen tödlichen Anschlag auf Zar Aleksandr II. verübt. Die beiden Frauen verbindet zwar kein engerer persönlicher Kontakt, dafür aber die Zugehörigkeit zum selben Milieu. Beeinflusst von der progressiven Debatte in der Intelligencija der 1860er Jahre entschlossen sie sich bereits in ihrer Jugend, sich von traditionellen Standes- und Geschlechterrollen zu lösen, ihr Schicksal „in die eigenen Hände zu nehmen“ und sich einer „Sache“ zu verschreiben. Zusammen mit anderen Radikalen gerieten sie dadurch in einen immer heftigeren Konflikt mit der autokratischen Staatsmacht, der sich schließlich zu einem Kampf mit terroristischen Mitteln steigerte. Stephan Rindlisbacher nutzt die Biographien dieser beiden radikalen Frauen als „Scheinwerfer“, um das radikale Milieu mit seinen Merkmalen, Funktionsmechanismen und Handlungsspielräumen auszuleuchten. Aus zwei voneinander unabhängigen aber vergleichbaren Blickwinkeln zeichnet er ein eindrucksvolles Bild nicht nur der radikalen Netzwerkstrukturen, Symbole, Praktiken und Identitätsnarrativen, sondern auch der beteiligten Menschen mit ihren Wünschen, Hoffnungen und Ängsten.
Resumo:
INTRODUCTION Rhythm disturbances in children with structurally normal hearts are usually associated with abnormalities in cardiac ion channels. The phenotypic expression of these abnormalities ("channelopathies") includes: long and short QT syndromes, Brugada syndrome, congenital sick sinus syndrome, catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia, Lènegre-Lev disease, and/or different degrees of cardiac conduction disease. METHODS The study group consisted of three male patients with sick sinus syndrome, intraventricular conduction disease, and monomorphic sustained ventricular tachycardia. Clinical data and results of electrocardiography, Holter monitoring, electrophysiology, and echocardiography are described. RESULTS In all patients, the ECG during sinus rhythm showed right bundle branch block and long QT intervals. First-degree AV block was documented in two subjects, and J point elevation in one. A pacemaker was implanted in all cases due to symptomatic bradycardia (sick sinus syndrome). Atrial tachyarryhthmias were observed in two patients. The common characteristic ventricular arrhythmia was a monomorphic sustained ventricular tachycardia, inducible with ventricular stimulation and sensitive to lidocaine. In one patient, radiofrequency catheter ablation was successfully performed. No structural abnormalities were found in echocardiography in the study group. CONCLUSION Common clinical and ECG features suggest a common pathophysiology in this group of patients with congenital severe electrical disease.