نتایج جستجو برای: core temperature

تعداد نتایج: 655195  

Journal: :Biopolymers 2004
Jaclyn C LaMarque Thuc-Vy L Le Stephen C Harvey

DNA packaging in bacteriophage P4 has been examined using a molecular mechanics model with a reduced representation containing one pseudoatom per turn of the double helix. The model is a discretized version of an elastic continuum model. The DNA is inserted piecewise into the model capsid, with the structure being reoptimized after each piece is inserted. Various optimization protocols were inv...

Journal: :The journal of extra-corporeal technology 2013
Matthew D M Pawley Paul Martinsen Simon J Mitchell James F Cheeseman Alan F Merry Timothy Willcox Robert Grieve Parma Nand Elaine Davies Guy R Warman

There is potential for heat loss and hypothermia during anesthesia and also for hyperthermia if heat conservation and active warming measures are not accurately titrated. Accurate temperature monitoring is particularly important in procedures in which the patient is actively cooled and then rewarmed such as during cardiopulmonary bypass surgery (CPB). We simultaneously measured core, nasopharyn...

Journal: :international journal of mining and geo-engineering 0
soghra salehi student mohammad noaparast phd seyed ziaodin shafaie phd

in this research work, the dissolution of chalcopyrite was investigated under atmospheric pressure, with sulfate media at low temperatures, in 30°c to 50°c. in the galvanic interaction between chalcopyrite and pyrite, pyrite is used as a leaching catalyst. effects of different parameters such as temperature, stirring speed, pyrite to chalcopyrite ratio, particle size, and solution potential wer...

2006
Melissa M. Thomas Stephen S. Cheung Geoff C. Elder Gordon G. Sleivert

Thomas, Melissa M., Stephen S. Cheung, Geoff C. Elder, and Gordon G. Sleivert. Voluntary muscle activation is impaired by core temperature rather than local muscle temperature. J Appl Physiol 100: 1361–1369, 2006. First published December 8, 2005; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00945.2005.—Fatigue during hyperthermia may be due in part to a failure of the central nervous system to fully activate the ...

Journal: :The American journal of physiology 1976
R W Hubbard W T Matthew J D Linduska F C Curtis W D Bowers I Leav M Mager

To assess the lethal effects of work-induced hyperthermia on exercising animals, untrained rats were run to exhaustion at 5 and 20-26 degrees C or restrained at 41.5 degrees C. An exercise-induced core temperature of 40.4 degrees C represented a base line above which mortalities occurred. With increasing core temperature at exhaustion (between 40.4 and 43 degrees C), mortality increased within ...

2008
Adi Nusser Joseph Silk

The presence of dilute hot cavities in the intracluster medium (ICM) at the cores of clusters of galaxies changes the relation between gas temperature and its X-ray emission properties. Using the hydrostatic equations of a porous medium we solve for the ICM density for a given temperature as a function of the filling factor of dilute bubbles. We find that at a given temperature, the core X-ray ...

Journal: :Anesthesia and analgesia 1996
S P Nebbia B Bissonnette D I Sessler

Intraoperative hypothermia results largely from anesthetic-induced inhibition of tonic thermoregulatory vasoconstriction. Sufficient hypothermia, however, triggers peripheral vasoconstriction, which usually prevents further decrease in core temperature. The thermoregulatory effects of all volatile anesthetics have been tested in adults and/or children, but different anesthetics have not been di...

Journal: :Journal of medical engineering & technology 2011
L P J Teunissen H A M Daanen

Several studies suggest that the temperature of the inner canthus of the eye (T(ca)), determined with infrared thermal imaging, is an appropriate method for core temperature estimation in mass screening of fever. However, these studies used the error prone tympanic temperature as a reference. Therefore, we compared T(ca) to oesophageal temperature (T(es)) as gold standard in 10 subjects during ...

Journal: :Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1997
Daniel I Sessler

Core body temperature is normally tightly regulated to within a few tenths of a degree. The major thermoregulatory defences in humans are sweating, arteriovenous shunt vasoconstriction, and shivering. The core temperature triggering each response defines its activation threshold. General anaesthetics greatly impair thermoregulation, synchronously reducing the thresholds for vasoconstriction and...

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