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  • 1
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    Beverly Hills, Calif. : Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
    Environment and behavior. 3:2 (1971:June) 179 
    ISSN: 0013-9165
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering , Psychology
    Notes: Environmental Quality
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1471-0528
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Objective To define the normal ranges of umbilical cord blood oxygen saturation (SaO2) and acid-base status at birth and to evaluate the effect of gestational age on cord blood values in vigorous newborn infants following spontaneous vaginal birth from a vertex position.Design Prospective study.Setting Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Graz, Austria.Sample Cord blood samples from 1281 vigorous newborn infants.Methods Cord blood sampling was performed following on newborn infants following spontaneous vaginal birth in a vertex position. SaO2 was measured directly by a spectrophotometer and pH, base excess, pCO2 and pO2 by a pH/blood-gas analyser. Infants with a 5-minute Apgar score ≥ 7 were considered vigorous. Subgroups were classified according to the gestational age: preterm, term and postterm (〈 37, 37–42 and 〉 42 weeks, respectively).Results The median umbilical artery SaO2 was 24.3% and the 2.5th centile was as low as 2.7%. The median umbilical artery values were pH = 7.25, base excess =−4.3 mmol/L and pO2= 16 mmHg. The 2.5th centiles were 7.08, −11.1 mmol/L and 5 mmHg, respectively. The median umbilical artery pCO2 was 50 mmHg and the 97.5th centile was 75 mmHg. The mean umbilical artery and vein SaO2 values were not significantly influenced by gestational age. The umbilical artery SaO2 and base excess values were strongly skewed. The mean umbilical artery pH values in preterm infants were higher than in other subgroups. The mean umbilical artery and vein base excess values were lower in post-term newborn infants than in other subgroups.Conclusions The physiological range of oxygen saturation in umbilical cord of vigorous newborn infants at birth is wide and skewed. In contrast to pH and base excess, umbilical cord blood oxygen saturation is not influenced significantly by gestational age at birth.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Keywords: Key words Structural units ; Structure evolution ; Periadriatic Lineament ; Pannonian Basin ; Hungary ; Slovenia ; Croatia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Due to the political boundaries between the Central European countries, on one hand, and the thick Tertiary cover in the Pannonian Basin, on the other, the eastward continuation of the Alpine and Dinaridic units has been ambiguous and poorly documented. Based on comparative analyses, the aim of the present paper is to define the pre-Tertiary structural units in the junction area of the Alpine, Dinaridic, and Pannonian regions, in the SW part of the Pannonian Basin, and to draw conclusions on the continuation of the Alpine and Dinaridic units. According to diagnostic characteristics of the Periadriatic Lineament system, the Balaton Lineament system may be considered as its direct eastern continuation. North of the Periadriatic–Balaton Lineament system, the Transdanubian Range Unit, due to its pre-Tertiary paleogeographic setting, shows mainly South Alpine facies relations; however, its present structural position is identical to that of the Upper Austroalpine nappes. Between the Periadriatic–Balaton and Zagreb–Zemplin Lineament systems heterogeneous structural units are juxtaposed, forming the Sava Composite Unit. In the northern part of this composite unit non-metamorphosed nappes occur which can be considered the eastern continuation of the South Alpine units. These nappes are overthrust onto Internal Dinaridic units in the Tertiary. The Zagreb–Zemplin (Mid-Hungarian) Lineament separates the Sava Unit from the Tisza Unit showing close affinity to the Tethyan margin of the Eurasian plate during the early stage of the Alpine evolution.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Neuroradiology 42 (2000), S. 368-370 
    ISSN: 1432-1920
    Keywords: Key words Decompression illness ; Caisson disease ; Spinal cord ; Magnetic resonance imaging
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We report a case of decompression illness in which the patient developed paraparesis during scuba diving after rapid ascent. MRI of the spine revealed a focal intramedullary lesion consistent with the symptoms. The pathophysiological and radiological aspects of spinal decompression illness are discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Herzschrittmachertherapie & Elektrophysiologie 11 (2000), S. 102-109 
    ISSN: 1435-1544
    Keywords: Key words Heart rate variability – myocardial infarction –¶risk stratification – sudden cardiac death ; Schlüsselwörter Herzfrequenzvaraiabiltät – Myokardinfarkt –¶Risikostratifizierung – plötzlicher Herztod
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung Hintergrund: In der Risikostratifizierung für einen PHT bzw. das Auftreten eines arrhythmogenen Ereignisses nach AMI wurden bisher eine hohe Spezifität und ein hoher negativ prädiktiver Wert durch Kombination mehrerer Methoden erreicht. Sensitivität und positive Prädiktion sind jedoch weiterhin nicht ausreichend. Eine dieser Methoden ist die Messung der HRV, die als unabhängiger Prädiktor eines solchen Ereignisses gilt. Sie wird genutzt, um einen schnellen Überblick über den Zustand des autonomen Nervensystems zu bekommen, wird jedoch insbesondere in der Kardiologie bisher nur aus dem 24-Stunden-Langzeit-EKG bestimmt.¶   Studienziel: Die Kurzzeitmessung der HRV bei Postinfarktpatienten als ergänzende Methode zur Risikostratifizierung soll untersucht werden.¶   Methode: Wir führten bei 158 Patienten 11±5 Tage nach AMI eine 5-minütige EKG-Messung in Ruhe und unter parasympathischer Stimulation mittels eines getackteten Atemmanövers durch. Die Messungen wurden unmittelbar und nach einer Woche wiederholt. 87 Patienten erhielten zusätzlich ein 24-Stunden-Langzeit-EKG.¶   Ergebnisse: Der Vergleich zweier aufeinanderfolgender Messungen eines Patienten zeigte Pearsons-Korrelationskoeffizienten zwischen 0,87 und 0,95. Im Vergleich Kurzzeit-/Langzeitmessung ergaben sich lediglich für die Ruheparameter befriedigende bis gute Korrelationen, nicht jedoch für die den Parasympathikus repräsentierenden Parameter. Keine Korrelation fand sich zwischen HRV und Alter, ebensowenig für die Messung unter parasympathischer Stimulation für die HRV und dem Vorliegen eines Diabetes mellitus.¶   Schlussfolgerungen: Die Kurzzeitmessung der HRV liefert bei exzellenter Reproduzierbarkeit zuverlässige Aussagen über die Balance des autonomen Nervensystems. Nach Definierung von Grenzbereichen und Evaluierung an einem Hochrisikokollektiv steht eine schnelle und einfache Methode als weiterer Baustein zur Risikostratifizierung nach Infarkt zur Verfügung und ermöglicht auch die Beurteilbarkeit von Diabetikern.
    Notes: Summary Background: High specifity and high positive prediction have been reached in risk stratification for SCD after AMI by combining multiple methods. However, sensitivity and positive prediction are still not satisfying. One of these methods is the measurement of HRV, established as an independent predictor for SCD. Actually, HRV is used in cardiology, diabetology and neonatology to obtain quick assessment of the present state of the autonomic nervous system.¶   Aim of the study: We studied the short-term measurement of HRV in patients after AMI as an additional method for risk stratification.¶   Method: We performed one measurement over 5 minutes at rest and one with parasympathetic stimulation by regularized breathing in 158 patients 11±5 days after AMI. The measurement was repeated immediately and after one week. 87 patients had an additional Holter ECG.¶   Results: Correlation of two consecutive measurements showed a Pearson‘s correlation coefficient between 0.87 and 0.95. Comparing short- and long-term measurement, only the parameters obtained at rest showed satisfying correlations, but not the parameters representing parasympathetic activity. There was no correlation between HRV and age and, for measurement with parasympathetic stimulation, between HRV and diabetes.¶   Conclusions: Short-term measurement of HRV has an excellent reproducibility and provides reliable information about the balance of the autonomic nervous system. After defining cut-off values and evaluating the method with patients at high risk for SCD, it seems to be a simple and quick method for risk stratification after AMI. Finally, it can also be used for evaluation of patients with diabetes.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Documenta ophthalmologica 31 (1972), S. 251-399 
    ISSN: 1573-2622
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary To establish the diagnosis in cases of an acute affection of the optic nerve, the investigator must rely on functional examinations such as determination of visual acuity and of the visual field. Only when the process is localized at the optic disc abnormalities become apparent with the aid of the ophthalmoscope. Affections of longer standing may lead to atrophy of nerve fibres, and this may become visible in the fundus in that the disc is pale of appearance. However, not in all cases is the so-called disc atrophy associated with poor visual acuity: in these cases the functional findings seem to contradict the fundoscopic findings. Another example is the choked disc, which produces highly pathological fundoscopic features even though visual acuity and visual field are quite intact. The opposite situation is that of the acute stage of retrobulbar neuritis, in which the optic disc may present an entirely normal appearance whereas visual acuity and visual field are severely disturbed. Findings such as the above mentioned evoke the wish for an extended examination which includes methods supplying some information on the manner in which, under pathological circumstances, the optic nerve does or does not conduct. Recording visually evoked responses provides a possibility in this respect. Visually evoked responses are known to be largely determined by photic stimulation of the central retina (Vav Hof1960; Copenhaver & Perry 1964). However, stimulation of the peripheral retina likewise makes a contribution be it much smaller - in illiciting the VER. This means that intactness of the central fovea, the maculopapillary fibre bundle in the optic nerve, and the projection of the fovea in the optic cortex, is a prerequisite for recording VERs. On the other hand, the development of sophisticated recording techniques (e.g. with the aid of the computer) which make it possible to identify the VER amidst the ever-present background activity (the EEG), has enabled the investigator to record an ERG from a very small retinal area, e.g. the local photopic ERG of the central fovea (FERG). Simultaneous recording of FERG and VER makes it possible to examine the function of, exclusively, that part of the optic system that encompasses the fovea, the maculopapillary fibre bundle and the projection of the fovea in the optic cortex. Visual acuity is determined by this part of the optic system. It is the diminished visual acuity (and a central scotoma in the visual field) that, in many cases, characterizes an affection of the optic nerve. If, under these pathological conditions, one can nevertheless record VERs after local (foveal) stimulation, and recognize pathological changes in the recordings, then it should be ascertained that these VERs have indeed been obtained by stimulation of the fovea. This can be achieved by recording the FERG, for which normal values are given in chapter VI. Chapters II and III discuss the development of methods to record VER and FERG. The method used in our study is described in detail in chapter IV. Chapter V presents a description of the protocol of examination to which our patients were submitted, and lists the number of patients examined. Chapter VII describes the electro-ophthalmological findings obtained in patients with optic neuritis. In the acute stage of optic neuritis (diminished visual acuity and a central scotoma in the visual field), no VER can be recorded after local (foveal) stimulation of the retina. The impairment of conduction, thus objectively demonstrated, may result from the development of an inflammatory-like oedema which impairs the capillary blood circulation in the optic nerve; one of the consequences of this situation is a pathological metabolism of the nerve tissue and release of toxins (e.g. Bonamour 1968). If in such cases it is possible to identify a VER in the recordings after full field stimulation of the retina, then we are dealing, we believe, with the contribution of the peripheral retina to the generation of the VER. In this context it is to be noted that, in the acute stage of optic neuritis, it is often surprising to see how well the patient can fix the (small) photic stimulus in spite of the poor visual acuity and the central scotoma in the visual field. If visual acuity and visual field fail to recover after the acute stage, then the VER after local (foveal) stimulation remains absent. This is a result of demyelination and atrophy of nerve fibres, particularly those of the maculopapillary bundle. In this stage examination does become more difficult because the patient's ability to fix the stimulus diminishes as poor visual acuity is of longer standing. Upon partial recovery from optic neuritis (e.g. visual acuity 0.6–0.7 and a relative central scotoma in the visual field), we have observed that the VER after local (foveal) stimulation can nevertheless remain absent. We believe that in these cases there has been demyelination of the fibres in the maculopapillary bundle, but that yet the majority of these fibres does still conduct, even over the segment of demyelination. The mode of conduction in the demyelinated segment differs from normal and may well resemble that in naturally unmyelinated fibres in the peripheral nervous system. A consequence of this might be that the conduction velocity diminishes. As a result, the conduction time of the nerve fibres can come to show interdifferences due to which depolarization of the projection of the fovea in the optic cortex takes place only gradually so that at no time a potential occurs of sufficient amplitude to permit our apparatus to record it. In the case of complete recovery from optic neuritis, one can observe a return of the VER after local (foveal) stimulation to the extent that there is no longer a significant difference between the VER recorded after stimulation of the one (unaffected) eye and that recorded after stimulation of the other (affected) eye. We believe that electro-ophthalmological examination demonstrates in these cases that no demyelination as a result of the optic neuritis has occurred, or that, as a result of remyelination, a restitutio ad integrim has occurred. Chapter VIII presents the results of an examination of twelve patients with Leber's hereditary optic atrophy. The majority had regained fair-to-good visual acuity in at least one eye. In only one patient of this group were VERs identifiable in the responses after local (foveal) stimulation. We observed that in a few cases of Leber's optic atrophy a visual acuity of 1.0 could be attained. In these cases a central scotoma in the visual field had in its exact centre an intact sparing corresponding to ≤ 1 ° subtended visual angle. The absence of the VER after local (foveal) stimulation is ascribed to the fact that only a small number of fibres in the maculopapillary bundle is still intact; impulses conducted by these few fibres, effect depolarization of so small a part of the projection of the central fovea in the optic cortex that a potential of sufficient amplitude to be recorded, is never produced. In patients with traumatic optic atrophy, it was difficult to record ERG and VER after local (foveal) stimulation because all were examined long after the accident, so that visual acuity had long been poor. However, in one case (visual acuity 0.6 in the eye, of which the optic nerve was affected) a disturbance of conduction in the maculopapillary bundle could be demonstrated because the VER after local (foveal) stimulation of this eye was absent (chapter IX). Simple glaucoma (chapter X) was not systematically studied. Two patients are discussed. The results of their examinations do not warrant the expectation that a more comprehensive examination by the techniques we used will reveal many new points of view on the disturbance of conduction of the nerve fibres in this condition. A patient with toxic opticoneuropathy due to ethambutol medication and one with juxtapapillary retinitis (J
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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