keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35397482/soil-heating-in-fire-shefire-a-model-and-measurement-method-for-estimating-soil-heating-and-effects-during-wildland-fires
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mary K Brady, Matthew B Dickinson, Jessica R Miesel, Carissa L Wonkka, Kathleen L Kavanagh, Alexandra G Lodge, William E Rogers, Heath D Starns, Doug R Tolleson, Morgan L Treadwell, Dirac Twidwell, Erin J Hanan
Fire has transformative effects on soil biological, chemical, and physical properties in terrestrial ecosystems around the world. While methods for estimating fire characteristics and associated effects aboveground have progressed in recent decades, there remain major challenges in characterizing soil heating and associated effects belowground. Overcoming these challenges is crucial for understanding how fire influences soil carbon storage, biogeochemical cycling, and ecosystem recovery. In this paper, we present a novel framework for characterizing belowground heating and effects...
April 9, 2022: Ecological Applications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35397335/adolescent-circadian-patterns-link-with-psychiatric-problems-a-multimodal-approach
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liisa Kuula, Risto Halonen, Jari Lipsanen, Anu-Katriina Pesonen
Circadian rhythms orchestrate brain function and mental wellbeing. We compared circadian patterns derived from continuous measurements of body temperature, sleep actigraphy and self-reported circadian preference in relation to different psychiatric disorders. 342 adolescents (70% females) aged 17.4y underwent M.I.N.I. psychiatric interviews, wore Ibutton 1922L skin temperature loggers (n = 281; 3 days), completed one-week GeneActiv Original actigraphy measurements (n = 306) and responded to Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ; n = 330)...
June 2022: Journal of Psychiatric Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34994703/continuous-monitoring-of-vital-signs-with-wearable-sensors-during-daily-life-activities-validation-study
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marjolein E Haveman, Mathilde C van Rossum, Roswita M E Vaseur, Claire van der Riet, Richte C L Schuurmann, Hermie J Hermens, Jean-Paul P M de Vries, Monique Tabak
BACKGROUND: Continuous telemonitoring of vital signs in a clinical or home setting may lead to improved knowledge of patients' baseline vital signs and earlier detection of patient deterioration, and it may also facilitate the migration of care toward home. Little is known about the performance of available wearable sensors, especially during daily life activities, although accurate technology is critical for clinical decision-making. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to assess the data availability, accuracy, and concurrent validity of vital sign data measured with wearable sensors in volunteers during various daily life activities in a simulated free-living environment...
January 7, 2022: JMIR Formative Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34877382/dataset-on-microclimate-and-drone-based-thermal-patterns-within-an-oil-palm-agroforestry-system
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura Somenguem Donfack, Alexander Röll, Florian Ellsäßer, Martin Ehbrecht, Bambang Irawan, Dirk Hölscher, Alexander Knohl, Holger Kreft, Eduard J Siahaan, Leti Sundawati, Christian Stiegler, Clara Delphine Zemp
Microclimate and Land Surface Temperature (LST) are important analytical variables used to understand complex oil palm agroforestry systems and their effects on biodiversity and ecosystem functions. In order to examine experimental effects of tree species richness (0, 1, 2, 3 or 6), plot size (25 m2 , 100 m2 , 400 m2 , 1600 m2 ) and stand structural complexity on microclimate and Land Surface Temperature, related data were collected following a strict design. The experiment was carried out in the Jambi province, in Sumatra (Indonesia), as part of the collaborative project EFForTS [Ecological and Socioeconomic Functions of Tropical Lowland Rainforest Transformation Systems]...
December 2021: Data in Brief
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34640406/circadian-characteristics-in-patients-under-treatment-for-substance-use-disorders-and-severe-mental-illness-schizophrenia-major-depression-and-bipolar-disorder
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ana Belén Serrano-Serrano, Julia E Marquez-Arrico, José Francisco Navarro, Antonio Martinez-Nicolas, Ana Adan
Dual disorders (substance use and mental illness comorbidity) are a condition that has been strongly associated with severe symptomatology and clinical complications. The study of circadian characteristics in patients with Severe Mental Illness or Substance Use Disorder (SUD) has shown that such variables are related with mood symptoms and worse recovery. In absence of studies about circadian characteristics in patients with dual disorders we examined a sample of 114 male participants with SUD and comorbid Schizophrenia (SZ+; n = 38), Bipolar Disorder (BD+; n = 36) and Major Depressive Disorder (MDD+; n = 40)...
September 25, 2021: Journal of Clinical Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34538276/determinants-of-aedes-mosquito-density-as-an-indicator-of-arbovirus-transmission-risk-in-three-sites-affected-by-co-circulation-of-globally-spreading-arboviruses-in-colombia-ecuador-and-argentina
#26
MULTICENTER STUDY
Benoit Talbot, Beate Sander, Varsovia Cevallos, Camila González, Denisse Benítez, Claudio Carissimo, María C Carrasquilla Ferro, Neris Gauto, Sergio Litwiñiuk, Karen López, Mario I Ortiz, Patricio Ponce, Stephany D Villota, Fabian Zelaya, Mauricio Espinel, Jianhong Wu, Marcos Miretti, Manisha A Kulkarni
BACKGROUND: The global impact of Zika virus in Latin America has drawn renewed attention to circulating mosquito-borne viruses in this region, such as dengue and chikungunya. Our objective was to assess socio-ecological factors associated with Aedes mosquito vector density as a measure of arbovirus transmission risk in three cities of potentially recent Zika virus introduction: Ibagué, Colombia; Manta, Ecuador; and Posadas, Argentina, in order to inform disease mitigation strategies...
September 19, 2021: Parasites & Vectors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34423012/narrative-review-of-the-objective-analysis-of-long-term-outcome-of-the-ponseti-technique-experience-from-dallas
#27
REVIEW
B Stephens Richards
In 2001, Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children (TSRH) prospectively began a clubfoot database that included all of our patients with clubfeet who were willing to enroll. Nonoperative treatment, primarily the Ponseti method, was utilized. This article summarizes the experience from Dallas treating idiopathic clubfeet using the Ponseti technique, and is based on previously published studies utilizing information from the database. Patient clinical outcomes were defined as " good " (plantigrade foot achieved either with or without a percutaneous heel-cord tenotomy), " fair " (a plantigrade foot that required a limited procedure, such as tibialis anterior tendon transfer or posterior release), or " poor " (a plantigrade foot that required posteromedial release)...
July 2021: Annals of Translational Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34415686/body-temperatures-of-manis-pentadactyla-and-manis-javanica
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yishuang Yu, Shibao Wu, Wenhua Wang, Amna Mahmood, Fuhua Zhang
Body temperature is an important parameter for assessing animal health and physiological function. An iButton thermometer was used to measure the body temperatures of three Chinese pangolins (Manis pentadacyla) and three Sunda pangolins (M. javanica). The body temperature of Chinese pangolins was 33.2 ± 0.95°C (30.6-34.2°C, n = 3) and that of Sunda pangolins was 32.8 ± 0.48°C (31.7-34.2°C, n = 3). The daily variation in body temperature was 1.0-2.9°C in three Chinese pangolins and 1.2-1.9°C in three Sunda pangolins...
August 20, 2021: Veterinary Medicine and Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34343176/environmental-impacts-on-diapause-and-survival-of-the-alfalfa-leafcutting-bee-megachile-rotundata
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elisabeth S Wilson, Claire E Murphy, Covey Wong, Joseph P Rinehart, George D Yocum, Julia H Bowsher
Megachile rotundata exhibits a facultative prepupal diapause but the cues regulating diapause initiation are not well understood. Possible cues include daylength and temperature. Megachile rotundata females experience changing daylengths over the nesting season that may influence diapause incidence in their offspring through a maternal effect. Juvenile M. rotundata spend their developmental period confined in a nesting cavity, potentially subjected to stressful temperatures that may affect diapause incidence and survival...
2021: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34188813/nocturnal-incubation-recess-and-flushing-behavior-by-duck-hens
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca Croston, Sarah H Peterson, C Alex Hartman, Mark P Herzog, Cliff L Feldheim, Michael L Casazza, Joshua T Ackerman
Incubating birds must balance the needs of their developing embryos with their own physiological needs, and many birds accomplish this by taking periodic breaks from incubation. Mallard ( Anas platyrhynchos ) and gadwall ( Mareca strepera ) hens typically take incubation recesses in the early morning and late afternoon, but recesses can also take place at night. We examined nocturnal incubation recess behavior for mallard and gadwall hens nesting in Suisun Marsh, California, USA, using iButton temperature dataloggers and continuous video monitoring at nests...
June 2021: Ecology and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33863439/impact-of-an-intermittent-and-localized-cooling-intervention-on-skin-temperature-sleep-quality-and-energy-expenditure-in-free-living-young-healthy-adults
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Huiwen Xu, Antonio Martinez-Nicolas, Wendy D Martinez-Avila, Juan M A Alcantara, Juan Corral-Perez, David Jimenez-Pavon, Francisco M Acosta, Jonatan R Ruiz, Borja Martinez-Tellez
Where people live and work together it is not always possible to modify the ambient temperature; ways must therefore be found that allow individuals to feel thermally comfortable in such settings. The Embr Wave® is a wrist-worn device marketed as a 'personal thermostat' that can apply a local cooling stimulus to the skin. The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of an intermittent mild cold stimulus of 25 °C for 15-20 s every 5 min over 3.5 days under free-living conditions on 1) skin temperature, 2) perception of skin temperature, 3) sleep quality and 4) resting energy expenditure (REE) in young, healthy adults...
April 2021: Journal of Thermal Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33767842/interrupted-incubation-how-dabbling-ducks-respond-when-flushed-from-the-nest
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca Croston, C Alex Hartman, Mark P Herzog, Sarah H Peterson, Jeffrey D Kohl, Cory T Overton, Cliff L Feldheim, Michael L Casazza, Joshua T Ackerman
Nesting birds must provide a thermal environment sufficient for egg development while also meeting self-maintenance needs. Many birds, particularly those with uniparental incubation, achieve this balance through periodic incubation recesses, during which foraging and other self-maintenance activities can occur. However, incubating birds may experience disturbances such as predator or human activity which interrupt natural incubation patterns by compelling them to leave the nest. We characterized incubating mallard Anas platyrhynchos and gadwall Mareca strepera hens' responses when flushed by predators and investigators in Suisun Marsh, California, USA...
March 2021: Ecology and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33717454/hibernacula-microclimate-and-declines-in-overwintering-bats-during-an-outbreak-of-white-nose-syndrome-near-the-northern-range-limit-of-infection-in-north-america
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karen J Vanderwolf, Donald F McAlpine
We document white-nose syndrome (WNS), a lethal disease of bats caused by the fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans ( Pd ), and hibernacula microclimate in New Brunswick, Canada. Our study area represents a more northern region than is common for hibernacula microclimate investigations, providing insight as to how WNS may impact bats at higher latitudes. To determine the impact of the March 2011 arrival of Pd in New Brunswick and the role of hibernacula microclimate on overwintering bat mortality, we surveyed bat numbers at hibernacula twice a year from 2009 to 2015...
March 2021: Ecology and Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33413328/a-refined-method-to-monitor-arousal-from-hibernation-in-the-european-hamster
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fredrik A F Markussen, Vebjørn J Melum, Béatrice Bothorel, David G Hazlerigg, Valérie Simonneaux, Shona H Wood
BACKGROUND: Hibernation is a physiological and behavioural adaptation that permits survival during periods of reduced food availability and extreme environmental temperatures. This is achieved through cycles of metabolic depression and reduced body temperature (torpor) and rewarming (arousal). Rewarming from torpor is achieved through the activation of brown adipose tissue (BAT) associated with a rapid increase in ventilation frequency. Here, we studied the rate of rewarming in the European hamster (Cricetus cricetus) by measuring both BAT temperature, core body temperature and ventilation frequency...
January 7, 2021: BMC Veterinary Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33267815/separate-and-combined-effects-of-cold-dialysis-and-intradialytic-exercise-on-the-thermoregulatory-responses-of-hemodialysis-patients-a-randomized-cross-over-study
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Argyro A Krase, Andreas D Flouris, Christina Karatzaferi, Christoforos D Giannaki, Ioannis Stefanidis, Giorgos K Sakkas
BACKGROUND: The separate and combined effects of intradialytic exercise training (IET) and cold dialysis (CD) on patient thermoregulation remain unknown. This study assessed the thermoregulatory responses of hemodialysis patients under four different hemodialysis protocols: a) one typical dialysis (TD) protocol (dialysate temperature at 37 °C), b) one cold dialysis (CD) protocol (dialysate temperature at 35 °C), c) one typical dialysis protocol which included a single exercise bout (TD + E), d) one cold dialysis protocol which included a single exercise bout (CD + E)...
December 2, 2020: BMC Nephrology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33109390/understanding-the-reactogenicity-of-4cmenb-vaccine-comparison-of-a-novel-and-conventional-method-of-assessing-post-immunisation-fever-and-correlation-with-pre-release-in-vitro-pyrogen-testing
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marta Valente Pinto, Kimberly Davis, Nick Andrews, David Goldblatt, Ray Borrow, Jo Southern, Ida Karin Nordgren, Caroline Vipond, Emma Plested, Elizabeth Miller, Matthew D Snape
BACKGROUND: Better understanding of vaccine reactogenicity is crucial given its potential impact upon vaccine safety and acceptance. Here we report a comparison between conventional and novel (continuous) methods of monitoring temperature and evaluate any association between reactogenicity and the monocyte activation test (MAT) employed for testing four-component capsular group B meningococcal vaccine (4CMenB) batches prior to release for clinical use in Europe. METHODS: Healthy 7-12-week-old infants were randomised in two groups: group PCV13 2 + 1 (received pneumococcal conjugate vaccine 13 valent (PCV13) at 2, 4 and 12 months) and group PCV13 1 + 1 (received reduced schedule at 3 and 12 months)...
October 24, 2020: Vaccine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32490302/methods-for-estimating-wet-bulb-globe-temperature-from-remote-and-low-cost-data-a-comparative-study-in-central-alabama
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anabel W Carter, Benjamin F Zaitchik, Julia M Gohlke, Suwei Wang, Molly B Richardson
Heat stress is a significant health concern that can lead to illness, injury, and mortality. The wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT) index is one method for monitoring environmental heat risk. Generally, WBGT is estimated using a heat stress monitor that includes sensors capable of measuring ambient, wet bulb, and black globe temperature, and these measurements are combined to calculate WBGT. However, this method can be expensive, time consuming, and requires careful attention to ensure accurate and repeatable data...
May 2020: GeoHealth
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32479400/core-and-peripheral-site-measurement-of-body-temperature-in-short-wool-sheep
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tellisa R Kearton, Amanda K Doughty, Christine L Morton, Geoff N Hinch, Ian R Godwin, Frances C Cowley
Understanding circadian rhythms of body temperature is important for the interpretation of single body temperature measurements and the assessment of the physiological state of an animal. The ability to measure body temperature at peripheral locations may also be important in the development of minimally invasive tools for remote temperature measurement in livestock. This study aimed to investigate how well body temperature measured at peripheral sites reflected a commonly used core measurement (vaginal temperature) and the circadian rhythmicity of the body temperature of sheep with a view to practical application in extensive sheep production systems...
May 2020: Journal of Thermal Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32278552/sampling-strategy-and-measurement-device-affect-vaginal-temperature-outcomes-in-lactating-dairy-cattle
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Grazyne Tresoldi, Karin E Schütz, Cassandra B Tucker
Body temperature (BT) is widely used to evaluate health and heat load status in cattle. Despite its importance, studies vary in how BT is measured and in the biological interpretation of the results. Costs, practicality, labor, and welfare concerns can affect how BT is measured, including frequency of measurement and the type of device used. Inaccurate BT outcomes may have implications for cattle welfare; for example, animals may only receive treatment when fever is identified. Our objectives were (1) to compare measurement of vaginal temperature (VT) using relatively small, inexpensive, and low-accuracy loggers (±0...
April 8, 2020: Journal of Dairy Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32274890/comparison-of-two-skin-temperature-assessment-methods-after-the-application-of-topical-revulsive-products-conductive-ibutton-data-logger-system-vs-contact-free-infrared-thermometry
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rahel Stoop, Erich Hohenauer, Dirk Aerenhouts, André O Barel, Tom Deliens, Ron Clijsen, Peter Clarys
BACKGROUND: Skin temperature assessments comprise conductive and contact-free techniques. Comparison between conductive data loggers and contact-free thermometry after the application of revulsive products is scarce. This study aimed to compare iButton data loggers with an infrared thermometer after the application of two revulsive products. Secondly, the relation between skin temperature kinetics with skin's perfusion of microcirculation was investigated. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Healthy females (n = 25) were randomly allocated to two groups, representing the products A and B...
April 9, 2020: Skin Research and Technology
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