966 resultados para 730115 Urogenital system and disorders
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This ethnographic case study of serege-commons, communal pasture and forest in Muhur, Ethiopia, demonstrates the socially complex nature of the common property resource (CPR) system, including the factors behind its resilience and sustained operation. It reveals the multifaceted and interacting local processes that maintain the commons in the face of political economic processes that challenge common property management. The study shows how CPR use, crop cultivation, alternative livelihood strategies, out-migration, collective herding practices, management practices, and alternative sources of compliance interact, and these interacting processes reinforce each other and maintain a resilient CPR system. This study argues that there is not one single cause for sustainable CPR regimes. Instead, the resilience and sustained operation of the CPR system are due to a mix of interdependent elements and inter-reinforcing linkages related to CPR operations, and their interactions within complex social-ecological systems.
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One of the main features of the Greek currency are the big differences between emissions of the polis, which did not match either in their iconographic message types, not even in the met-rical pattern of their values. These differences were reflected in exchange systems ruled by the main sanctuaries that shrines stipu-lated thus giving official status to change.
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The ecophysiological effects of stress in female Persian sturgeon, Acipenser persicus brood fishes during catch, transport and their confinement in the Kurenski ponds at the Shahid Dr. Beheshti Fish Propagation and Rearing Center were studied. The brood fishes under study were caught at three catch stations located at the Sefidrud River, Sefidrud River estuary and Gorganrud River estuary and were held in ponds at the Shahid Marjani Fish Propagation and Rearing Center.
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This paper focuses on teaching boys, male teachers and the question of gendered pedagogies in neoliberal and postfeminist times of the proliferation of new forms of capitalism, multi-mediated technologies and the influence of globalization. It illustrates how a politics of re-masculinization and its reconstitution needs to be understood as set against changing economic and social conditions in which gender equity comes to be re-focused on boys as the ‚new disadvantaged‘. This re-framing of gender equity, it is argued, has been fuelled by both a media-inspired backlash discourse about ‚failing boys‘ and a neo-positivist emphasis on numbers derived primarily from standardized testing regimes at both global and national levels. A media-focused analysis of the proliferation of discourses about ‚failing boys‘ vis-a-vis the problem of encroaching feminization in the school system is provided to illuminate how certain truths about the influence of male teachers come to define how the terms of ensuring gender equity are delimited and reduced to a question of gendered pedagogies as grounded in sexed bodies. Historical accounts of the feminization of teaching in the North American context are also provided as a basis for building a more informed understanding of the present, particularly as it relates to the contextualization of policy articulation and enactment regarding the problem of teaching boys. In light of such historically informed and critical media analysis, it is argued that what is needed is a more informed, evidenced based policy articulation of the problem of teaching boys and a more gender sensitive reflection on the politics of masculinities in postfeminist times. (DIPF/Orig.)
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W HILE Hyderabad State developed from the Mughal subah, or province, of the Deccan, it did not represent a mere continuation of the Mughal provincial administration. By the end of the eighteenth century, Hyderabad represented a new political system, with a whole new set of participants. This article investigates the development of this political system and the constitution of its ruling class.
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Covers Manhattan Island south of 166th Street.
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Numerous components of the Arctic freshwater system (atmosphere, ocean, cryosphere, terrestrial hydrology) have experienced large changes over the past few decades, and these changes are projected to amplify further in the future. Observations are particularly sparse, both in time and space, in the Polar Regions. Hence, modeling systems have been widely used and are a powerful tool to gain understanding on the functioning of the Arctic freshwater system and its integration within the global Earth system and climate. Here, we present a review of modeling studies addressing some aspect of the Arctic freshwater system. Through illustrative examples, we point out the value of using a hierarchy of models with increasing complexity and component interactions, in order to dismantle the important processes at play for the variability and changes of the different components of the Arctic freshwater system and the interplay between them. We discuss past and projected changes for the Arctic freshwater system and explore the sources of uncertainty associated with these model results. We further elaborate on some missing processes that should be included in future generations of Earth system models and highlight the importance of better quantification and understanding of natural variability, amongst other factors, for improved predictions of Arctic freshwater system change.
Effect of restorative system and thermal cycling on the tooth-restoration interface - OCT evaluation
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Tese de dout., Faculdade de Ciências do Mar e Ambiente, Univ. do Algarve, 2003
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The enteric nervous system (ENS) modulates a number of digestive functions including well known ones, i.e. motility, secretion, absorption and blood flow, along with other critically relevant processes, i.e. immune responses of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, gut microbiota and epithelial barrier . The characterization of the anatomical aspects of the ENS in large mammals and the identification of differences and similarities existing between species may represent a fundamental basis to decipher several digestive GI diseases in humans and animals. In this perspective, the aim of the present thesis is to highlight the ENS anatomical basis and pathological aspects in different mammalian species, such as horses, dogs and humans. Firstly, I designed two anatomical studies in horses: “Excitatory and inhibitory enteric innervation of horse lower esophageal sphincter”. “Localization of 5-hydroxytryptamine 4 receptor (5-HT4R) in the equine enteric nervous system”. Then I focused on the enteric dysfunctions, including: A primary enteric aganglionosis in horses: “Extrinsic innervation of the ileum and pelvic flexure of foals with ileocolonic aganglionosis”. A diabetic enteric neuropathy in dogs: “Quantification of nitrergic neurons in the myenteric plexus of gastric antrum and ileum of healthy and diabetic dogs”. An enteric neuropathy in human neurological patients: “Functional and neurochemical abnormalities in patients with Parkinson's disease and chronic constipation”. The physiology of the GI tract is characterized by a high complexity and it is mainly dependent on the control of the intrinsic nervous system. ENS is critical to preserve body homeostasis as reflect by its derangement occurring in pathological conditions that can be lethal or seriously disabling to humans and animals. The knowledge of the anatomy and the pathology of the ENS represents a new important and fascinating topic, which deserves more attention in the veterinary medicine field.
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The catechol (1,2-dihydroxybenzene) is a privileged structural motif among natural antioxidants like flavonoids, owing to its reactivity with alkylperoxyl radicals due to the stability of the semiquinone radical. The exploration of the relevance and mechanism of this non-conventional antioxidant chemistry in heterogenous biomimetic systems (aqueous micelles and unilamellar liposomes) is explored for the first time in Chapter 1. Results show antioxidant behaviour that surpasses that of nature’s premiere antioxidant α-tocopherol and relies on the cross-dismutation of alkylperoxyl and hydroperoxyl radicals at the water-lipid interface with regeneration of the catechol function from the oxidized quinone. The design and synthesis of new biomimetic catechol-type antioxidants by conjugation of thiols (e.g. cysteine) with quinones highlighted an unusual 1,6-type regioselectivity, which had been previously reported but never fully rationalized. Owing to its importance both in nature and in the development of new antioxidants, we investigated it in detail in Chapter 2. We could prove the onsetting of a radical-chain mechanism intermediated by thiyl and thiosemiquinone radicals at the basis of the “anomalous nucleophilic addition” of thiols to ortho-quinones, which paves the way to better understanding of the chemistry of such systems. The oxidation of catechols to the corresponding quinones is also a key reaction in the biosynthesis of melanins, mediated by enzyme Tyrosinase.
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Pathogenic aberrations in homologous recombination DNA repair (HRR) genes occur in approximately 1 to 4 men with advanced prostate cancer (PCa). Treatment with PARP inhibitors (PARPi) has recently been introduced for metastatic castration-resistant PCa patients, increasing clinicians' interest in the molecular characterization of all PCa patients. The limitations of using old, low-quality tumor tissue for genetic analysis, which is very common for PCa, can be overcome by using liquid biopsy as an alternative biomarker source. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the detection of molecular alterations in HRR genes on liquid biopsy compared with tumor tissue from PCa patients. Secondarily, we explored the genomic instability score (GIS), and a broader range of gene alterations for in-depth characterization of the PCa cohort. Plasma samples were collected from 63 patients with PCa. Sophia Homologous Recombination Solution (targeting 16 HRR genes) and shallow whole genome sequencing (sWGS) were used for genomic analysis of tissue DNA and circulating tumor DNA (ct). A total of 33 alterations (mainly on TP53, ATM, CHEK2, CDK12, and BRCA1/2) were identified in 28,5% of PCa plasma patients. By integrating the mutational and sWGS data, the HRR status of PCa patients was determined and a concordance agreement of 85,7% was identified with tumor tissue. A median GIS of 15 was obtained, reaching a score of 63 in 2 samples with double alterations, BRCA1 and TP53. We explored the PCa mutation landscape, and the most significant enriched pathways identified were the sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) receptor signaling and the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway. HRR analysis on FFPE and liquid biopsy samples show high concordance, demonstrating that the noninvasive ctDNA-enriched plasma can be an optimal alternative source for molecular SNV and CNV analysis. In addition, the evaluation of GIS and pathway interaction should be considered for more comprehensive molecular characterization in PCa patients.