keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37875220/shark-fin-sign
#21
Ryohei Ono, Togo Iwahana, Hirotoshi Kato, Kaoruko Aoki, Yoshio Kobayashi
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
October 22, 2023: American Journal of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37830029/tail-shape-and-the-swimming-speed-of-sharks
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony S Iliou, Wade Vanderwright, Lucy Harding, David M P Jacoby, Nicholas L Payne, Nicholas K Dulvy
Trait-based ecology is a rapidly growing approach for developing insights and predictions for data-poor species. Caudal tail fin shape has the potential to reveal much about the energetics, activity and ecology of fishes and can be rapidly measured from field guides, which is particularly helpful for data-sparse species. One outstanding question is whether swimming speed in sharks is related to two morphological traits: caudal fin aspect ratio (CFAR, height2 /tail area) and caudal lobe asymmetry ratio (CLAR)...
October 2023: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37817610/dexmedetomidine-and-midazolam-intramuscular-sedation-in-brownbanded-bamboo-sharks-chiloscyllium-punctatum
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ri K Chang, Brittany Stevens, Eva Marie Quijano Cardé, Lance M Adams
Bamboo sharks are some of the most common elasmobranch species in zoos and aquaria and are frequently sedated for medical exams, treatments, and research. This study investigated the use of an IM sedation protocol of a single dose of dexmedetomidine (0.05 mg/kg) and midazolam (2.0 mg/kg) in brownbanded bamboo sharks ( Chiloscyllium punctatum ). Sharks were serially monitored every 5 min for heart rate, branchial beats, righting reflex, coelomic response, cloacal response, pelvic fin reflex, response to noxious stimulus, voluntary movement, and ability to swim...
October 2023: Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine: Official Publication of the American Association of Zoo Veterinarians
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37794094/skeletal-convergence-in-thunniform-sharks-ichthyosaurs-whales-and-tunas-and-its-possible-ecological-links-through-the-marine-ecosystem-evolution
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryosuke Motani, Kenshu Shimada
Tunas, lamnid sharks, modern whales, and derived ichthyosaurs converged on the thunniform body plan, with a fusiform body, lunate caudal fin, compressed peduncle, and peduncle joint. This evolutionary convergence has been studied for a long time but little is known about whether all four clades share any skeletal characteristics. Comparisons of vertebral centrum dimensions along the body reveal that the four clades indeed share three skeletal characteristics (e.g., thick vertebral column for its length), while an additional feature is shared by cetaceans, lamnid sharks, and ichthyosaurs and two more by lamnid sharks and ichthyosaurs alone...
October 4, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37726231/spatial-and-temporal-analysis-of-juvenile-blacktip-reef-sharks-carcharhinus-melanopterus-demographics-identifies-critical-habitats
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kim B Eustache, Emiel van Loon, Jodie L Rummer, Serge Planes, Isabel Smallegange
Reef shark species have undergone sharp declines in recent decades, as they inhabit coastal areas, making them an easy target in fisheries (i.e., sharks are exploited globally for their fins, meat, and liver oil) and exposes them to other threats (e.g., being part of bycatch, pollution, and climate change). Reef sharks play a critical role in coral reef ecosystems, where they control populations of smaller predators and herbivorous fishes either directly via predation or indirectly via behavior, thus protecting biodiversity and preventing potential overgrazing of corals...
September 19, 2023: Journal of Fish Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37689802/genetic-evidence-for-plastic-reproductive-philopatry-and-matrotrophy-in-blacktip-reef-sharks-carcharhinus-melanopterus-of-the-moorea-island-french-polynesia
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kim B Eustache, Émilie Boissin, Céline Tardy, Ian A Bouyoucos, Jodie L Rummer, Serge Planes
The exploitation of sharks and the degradation of their habitats elevate the urgency to understand the factors that influence offspring survival and ultimately shark reproductive success. We monitored and sampled blacktip reef sharks (Carcharhinus melanopterus) in nursery habitats of Moorea Island (French Polynesia), to improve knowledge on shark reproductive behavior and biology. We sampled fin clips and morphometrics from 230 young-of-the-year sharks and used microsatellite DNA markers to process parentage analysis to study the reproductive philopatric behavior in female sharks and the matrotrophy within litters...
September 9, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37647775/clinical-outcomes-of-st-elevation-myocardial-infarction-patients-who-present-special-forms-of-st-segment-elevation
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Toshiharu Fujii, Yuji Ikari
BACKGROUND: There are several patterns of special ST-segment elevation morphology in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), but their effect on prognosis is unclear. We, therefore, investigated the mortality of patients with these patterns by comparing them to patients with typical ST-segment morphologies. METHODS: This observational study assessed 1277 consecutive patients with STEMI. Their initial electrocardiograms were analyzed quantitatively and divided into four categories: typical (n = 1138), Tombstone (n = 62), Triangular (n = 39), and Lambda patterns (n = 38)...
2023: Journal of Electrocardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37627034/ontogenetic-shifts-in-body-morphology-of-demersal-sharks-species-order-squaliformes-inhabiting-the-western-central-mediterranean-sea-with-implications-for-their-bio-ecological-role
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrea Bellodi, Antonello Mulas, Louise Daniel, Alessandro Cau, Cristina Porcu, Pierluigi Carbonara, Maria Cristina Follesa
Several elasmobranch species undergo shifts in body proportions during their ontogenetic growth. Such morphological changes could reflect variation in diet, locomotion, or, more broadly, in the species' interactions with their environment. However, to date, only a few studies have been conducted on this topic, and most of them focused on particular body regions. In the present study, the ontogenetic growth of five different demersal shark species was investigated by using both traditional linear morphometry of the entire body and shape analysis of the caudal fin...
August 19, 2023: Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37583082/genealogical-diversity-of-endogenous-retrovirus-in-the-jawless-fish-genome
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Song Jing, Wei Jie, Ma Yongping, Sun Yan, Li Zhi
Retroviral integration into ancient vertebrate genomes left traces that can shed light on the early history of viruses. This study aimed to explore the early evolution of retroviruses. Nine Spuma endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) and one Epsilon ERV were isolated from the genomes of Agnatha and Chondrichthyes. Phylogenetic analysis of protein sequences revealed a striking pattern of co-evolution between jawless fish ERV and their host, while shark ERV underwent ancient cross-class viral transmission with jawless fish, ray-finned fish and amphibians...
July 28, 2023: Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37582282/analysis-of-toxic-metals-found-in-shark-fins-collected-from-a-global-trade-hub
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kiat Hwa Chan, Jasmine Anya Putri Gowidjaja, Mariana Quesada Urera, Benjamin J Wainwright
As human activities release increasingly more fossil fuel-derived emissions directly into the atmosphere, terrestrial, aquatic, or marine ecosystems, the biomagnification and bioaccumulation of toxic metals in seafood is an ever more pressing concern. As apex predators, sharks are particularly susceptible to biomagnification and bioaccumulation. The consumption of shark fin is frequent throughout Asia, and their ingestion represents a pathway through which human exposure to potentially unsafe levels of toxic metals can occur...
August 15, 2023: Environmental Science & Technology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37580059/systematic-revision-of-the-fish-blood-flukes-with-diagnoses-of-chimaerohemecidae-yamaguti-1971-acipensericolidae-n-fam-sanguinicolidae-poche-1926-elopicolidae-n-fam-and-aporocotylidae-odhner-1912
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Micah B Warren, Stephen A Bullard
We herein morphologically diagnose the 5 natural groups of fish blood flukes and name them. Species of Chimaerohemecidae Yamaguti, 1971 infect chimeras, sharks, and rays (Chondrichthyes) and have C-shaped lateral tegumental spines and a non-sinusoidal testis or lack spines and have a sinusoidal testis. Species of Acipensericolidae n. fam. infect sturgeons and paddlefish (Acipenseriformes) and have a robust, bowl-shaped, pedunculate anterior sucker, lateral tegumental spines that are spike-like (not C shaped), an inverse U-shaped intestine (anterior ceca absent) with posterior ceca terminating near the excretory bladder, 6 testes (inter-cecal ovoid or oblong, lacking deep lobes; including 1 post-ovarian testis), a Laurer's canal, and a dextral common genital pore...
August 1, 2023: Journal of Parasitology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37562525/do-marine-protected-areas-influence-mercury-exposure-insights-from-a-shark-community-in-the-tropical-northeast-pacific
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gaël Le Croizier, Anne Lorrain, Mauricio Hoyos-Padilla, James T Ketchum, Felipe Amezcua-Martínez, François Le Loc'h, Jean-Marie Munaron, Gauthier Schaal, David Point
Biomass depletion caused by overfishing is likely to alter the structure of food webs and impact mercury transfer to marine predators. Although marine protected areas (MPAs) are spared from fishing pressure, their influence on biota mercury levels is poorly understood. Here, we used carbon and nitrogen stable isotope compositions as well as mercury concentrations in fin clips to characterize foraging habitat and mercury exposure of a shark community composed of migratory and resident species of the Revillagigedo archipelago, an offshore MPA in the Northeast Pacific off Mexico...
August 8, 2023: Environmental Pollution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37458085/ontogenetic-morphometry-of-the-brown-smoothhound-shark-mustelus-henlei-with-implications-for-ecology-and-evolution
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joel H Gayford, Hana Godfrey, Darren A Whitehead
The central tenet of ecomorphology links ecological and morphological variation through the process of selection. Traditionally used to rationalise morphological differences between taxa, an ecomorphological approach is increasingly being utilised to study morphological differences expressed through ontogeny. Elasmobranchii (sharks, rays and skates) is one clade in which such ontogenetic shifts in body form have been reported. Such studies are limited to a relatively small proportion of total elasmobranch ecological and morphological diversity, and questions remain regarding the extent to which ecological selection are driving observed morphometric trends...
August 2023: Journal of Morphology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37363049/dna-based-species-identification-of-shark-fins-traded-in-thai-markets
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wanlada Klangnurak, Sirachai Arunrugstichai, Petch Manopawitr, Tassapon Krajangdara
UNLABELLED: Shark fins are among the most highly prized seafood products in the world with massive consumption in Asia over the past several decades. The demand for shark fins is a major driver of the enormous population declines of elasmobranchs that are generally vulnerable to overexploitation. This study aims to better understand the species composition of shark fin products in Thailand and their conservation statuses by using DNA-based species identification. Various types and sizes of shark fins were collected from 4 locations in Thailand...
April 15, 2023: Conservation Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37351358/pseudo-infarction-electrocardiographic-changes-in-delayed-onset-hypoparathyroidism-a-case-report
#35
Han Bing Chow, Caryn Tsujean Lim, Yik Hon Ho, Yee Ling Cham, Alan Yean Yip Fong, Asri Said, Tiong Kiam Ong
KEY CLINICAL MESSAGE: The high-risk "Shark Fin" electrocardiogram (ECG) pattern has been associated with transmural ischemia but can also result from electrolyte anomalies. Therefore, the decision for invasive coronary catheterization requires a detailed history and dedicated biochemical tests. ABSTRACT: Pseudo-infarction ECG pattern resembling "Shark Fin" was demonstrated in a 76-year-old lady with a previous total thyroidectomy who presented with unspecific symptoms...
June 2023: Clinical Case Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37292562/shark-fin-occlusive-myocardial-infarction-ecg-pattern-post-cardiac-arrest-misinterpreted-as-ventricular-tachycardia
#36
Jose Escabi-Mendoza, Porfirio E Diaz-Rodriguez, Richard D Silva-Cantillo
In addition to the well-known convex ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) pattern associated with acute occlusive myocardial infarction (OMI), there are other cases that are recognized as OMI without fulfilling the established characteristic STEMI criteria. Over one-fourth of the patients initially classified as having non-STEMI can be re-classified as having OMI by recognizing other STEMI equivalent patterns. We report a case of a 79-year-old man with multiple comorbidities who was brought to the ED by paramedics with a two-hour history of ongoing chest pain...
May 2023: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37236093/microplastic-occurrence-and-phthalate-ester-levels-in-neuston-samples-and-skin-biopsies-of-filter-feeding-megafauna-from-la-paz-bay-mexico
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matteo Galli, Tabata Olavarrieta Garcia, Matteo Baini, Jorge Urbán R, Deni Ramírez-Macías, Lorena Viloria-Gómora, Cristina Panti, Tania Martellini, Alessandra Cincinelli, Maria Cristina Fossi
The impacts of microplastics on filter feeders megafauna have recently received increased attention. These organisms are potentially exposed to plastic ingestion and the release of added/sorbed contaminants during feeding activities. An assessment of microplastic abundance and the chemical impact of Phthalates esters (PAEs) were performed in neustonic samples and skin biopsies of Balaenoptera physalus and Rhincodon typus inhabiting the Gulf of California (Mexico). Sixty-eight percent of the net tows contained plastics with a maximum of 0...
May 24, 2023: Marine Pollution Bulletin
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37226259/observations-of-fin-injury-closure-in-great-hammerheads-and-implications-for-the-use-of-fin-mounted-geolocators
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vital Heim, R Dean Grubbs, Matthew J Smukall, Bryan S Frazier, John K Carlson, Tristan L Guttridge
OBJECTIVE: Sharks face a high risk of injuries throughout all life stages and are therefore expected to show a good wound closure capacity. METHODS: Here, the wound closure of one major injury and one minor injury to the first dorsal fins of two free-ranging, mature female Great Hammerheads Sphyrna mokarran is described macroscopically. RESULT: The sharks showed complete wound closure of single, clean-cut lacerations measuring 24.2 and 11...
May 24, 2023: Journal of Aquatic Animal Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37091476/monitoring-the-resolution-of-acute-exacerbation-of-airway-bronchoconstriction-in-an-asthma-attack-using-capnogram-waveforms
#39
Mio Shikama, Miyuki Yamamoto, Itsuki Osawa, Takuya Sato, Ichiro Hirayama, Naoki Hayase, Takehiro Matsubara, Kent Doi
UNLABELLED: Patients with acute bronchospasm can show a distinct slope of the capnogram ("shark fin") as a result of asynchronous alveolar excretion. Although the slope of the upward alveolar plateau (phase III) in the capnogram waveforms of non-intubated patients is known to help monitor the therapeutic response to acute bronchospasm, little is known about the significance of its slope among intubated patients. Therefore, we quantified the phase III slope of an intubated patient with acute asthma to investigate whether capnogram waveforms could be useful for identifying the response to antibronchospasm treatment in real time...
April 2023: Critical care explorations
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37090273/shark-fin-electrocardiogram-a-deadly-electrocardiogram-pattern-in-takotsubo-cardiomyopathy-during-15-years-of-follow-up
#40
Atheer M Almutairi, Wed S Alotaibi, Alanoud H Almuhana, Ihab Suliman
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TTC) or stress-induced cardiomyopathy is characterized by transient left ventricular apical ballooning in the absence of coronary occlusion. Although the underlying mechanism is still unknown, exaggerated sympathetic nervous system and catecholamine cardiotoxicity, followed by metabolic disturbance, and multi-vessel epicardial coronary artery vasospasm, are thought to be responsible for the development of this condition. TTC accounts for 1-2% of patients presenting with the acute coronary syndrome (ACS) with the majority of patients being postmenopausal women...
March 2023: Curēus
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