14 results on '"Scola S"'
Search Results
2. Orthodontic treatment needs of 12-15 year old children attending special schools in Fiji: OS095
- Author
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LAL, S., KUMAR, N. N., and SCOLA, S.
- Published
- 2014
3. Orthodontic treatment needs of 12-15 year old children attending special schools in Fiji: OS095
- Author
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LAL, S., KUMAR, N. N., and SCOLA, S.
- Published
- 2005
4. Reference-Free Displacements for Condition Assessment of Timber Railroad Bridges.
- Author
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Moreu, F., Li, J., Jo, H., Kim, R. E., Scola, S., Spencer, Jr., B. F., and LaFave, J. M.
- Subjects
RAILROAD bridge design & construction ,BRIDGE testing ,BRIDGE defects ,BRIDGE operations ,STRENGTH of materials - Abstract
Current railroad bridge inspection and rating practices include observing bridge movement under live loads to help assess bridge conditions. Recent research has shown that transverse displacements of timber trestle bridges can capture critical changes in bridge serviceability (the ability to safely carry out railroad operations) as a function of railroad loading, speed, and direction. Measuring bridge movement under trains in the field is difficult and expensive because a fixed reference point is not normally available, thus creating the need to erect independent scaffolding to create good reference points near a timber bridge. This research demonstrates the potential of using reference-free accelerations collected with wireless smart sensors to estimate railroad bridge transverse displacements under live train loads. Focus is placed on timber trestle bridges, which comprise approximately 24% of the total inventory length of railroad bridges in the United States. The results show that wireless smart sensors can estimate transverse displacements of timber railroad trestles and could become an effective tool for campaign monitoring of railroad bridges (with applications toward helping overall bridge assessment). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Dynamic Assessment of Timber Railroad Bridges Using Displacements.
- Author
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Moreu, F., Jo, H., Li, J., Kim, R. E., Cho, S., Kimmle, A., Scola, S., Le, H., Spencer Jr., B. F., and LaFave, J. M.
- Subjects
BRIDGE operations ,BRIDGE defects ,RAILROAD bridges ,BEARING capacity (Bridges) ,RAILROADS - Abstract
Infrastructure spending is such a large component of a railroad budget that it must be prioritized to meet the concurrent safety and line capacity requirements. Current bridge inspection and rating practices recommend observing bridge movements under a live load to help assess bridge conditions. However, measuring bridge movements under trains in the field is a challenging task. Even when they are measured, the relationships between bridge displacements and different loads/speeds are generally unknown. The research reported herein shows the effects of known train loadings, speeds, and traffic directions on the magnitude and frequency of displacements as measured on timber pile bents of a Class I railroad bridge. Researchers collected both vertical and transverse (lateral) displacements under revenue service traffic and work trains using LVDTs with a sampling frequency of 100 Hz. To investigate the effect of traffic on timber railroad bridges, displacements were measured under crossing events at different speeds and directions of a test train of known speed and weight provided by the railroad for the field experiment. The results indicate that bridge transverse displacements could help to capture critical changes in timber railroad bridge serviceability (i.e., ability to safely carry out railroad operations) as a function of railroad loading, speed, and direction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Behaviour of axially loaded tubular V-joints
- Author
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Scola, S., Redwood, R.G., and Mitri, H.S.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Can Occurrence and Distribution of Ground Beetles (Carabidae) Be Influenced by the Coffee Farming System in the Mount Elgon Region of Uganda?
- Author
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Ijala AR, Kyamanywa S, Cherukut S, Sebatta C, Hilger T, and Karungi J
- Subjects
- Animals, Farms, Uganda, Agriculture, Coffea, Coleoptera classification
- Abstract
The Mount Elgon region of Uganda has coffee farmlands distributed along the slopes of the mountain, in a mosaic of differing crop combinations, and semi-natural vegetation. Thus, there are parcels of varying microclimate that create disparities in occurrence of key insect functional groups. The study quantified the occurrence of Carabidae in 72 coffee farmlands categorized by altitude: low (1400-1499 m.a.s.l), mid (1500-1679 m.a.s.l), and high (1680-2100 m.a.s.l); and farming system: coffee monocrop, coffee+annual crops, coffee+banana, and coffee+banana+shade trees. The results revealed highly significant effects of altitude, farming systems, and the interaction of the two on occurrence of three Carabidae genera (Anisodactylus, Chlaenius, and Harpalus.). The abundance of Harpalus spp. was higher at lower altitudes in coffee monocropped farming systems; Anisodactylus spp. were more abundant at higher altitudes in coffee+annual crop systems; and Chlaenius spp. were highest in the coffee+banana+shade tree system at mid altitudes. The belowground microclimate parameters of soil moisture, pH, EC; and the aboveground diversity of semi-natural vegetation explained some of the differences in occurrence of the different Carabidae genera. This distinctiveness in preference of different genera in the same family hinders collective recommendations but looks to a more pragmatic strategy in nurturing diversity on a holistic scale., (© 2021. Sociedade Entomológica do Brasil.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. "Nanosize effect" in the metal-handling strategy of the bivalve Scrobicularia plana exposed to CuO nanoparticles and copper ions in whole-sediment toxicity tests.
- Author
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Scola S, Blasco J, and Campana O
- Subjects
- Animals, Copper toxicity, Ions, Toxicity Tests, Bivalvia, Metal Nanoparticles toxicity, Nanoparticles toxicity, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity
- Abstract
To date, the occurrence, fate and toxicity of metal-based NPs in the environment is under investigated. Their unique physicochemical, biological and optical properties, responsible for their advantageous application, make them intrinsically different from their bulk counterpart, raising the issue of their potential toxic specificity or "nanosize effect". The aim of this study was to investigate copper bioaccumulation, subcellular distribution and toxic effect in the marine benthic species Scrobicularia plana exposed to two forms of sediment-associated copper, as nanoparticles (CuO NPs) and as soluble ions (CuCl
2 ). Results showed that the exposure to different copper forms activated specific organism's metal handling strategies. Clams bioaccumulated soluble copper at higher concentrations than those exposed to sediment spiked with CuO NPs. Moreover, CuO NPs exposure elicited a stronger detoxification response mediated by a prompt mobilization of CuO NPs to metal-containing granules as well as a delayed induction of MT-like proteins, which conversely, sequestered soluble copper since the beginning of the exposure at levels significantly different from the control. Eventually, exposure to high concentrations of either copper form led to the same acute toxic effect (100% mortality) but the outcome was delayed in bivalves exposed to CuO NPs suggesting that the mechanisms underlying toxicity were copper form-specific. Indeed, while most of soluble copper was associated to the mitochondrial fraction suggesting an impairment of the ATP synthesis capacity at mitochondrial level, CuO NPs toxicity was most likely caused by the oxidative stress mediated by their bioaccumulation in the enzymatic and mitochondrial metabolically available fractions., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Calibration of a high spectral resolution lidar using a Michelson interferometer, with data examples from ORACLES.
- Author
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Burton SP, Hostetler CA, Cook AL, Hair JW, Seaman ST, Scola S, Harper DB, Smith JA, Fenn MA, Ferrare RA, Saide PE, Chemyakin EV, and Müller D
- Abstract
The NASA Langley airborne second-generation High Spectral Resolution Lidar (HSRL-2) uses a density-tuned field-widened Michelson interferometer to implement the HSRL technique at 355 nm. The Michelson interferometer optically separates the received backscattered light between two channels, one of which is dominated by molecular backscattering, while the other contains most of the light backscattered by particles. This interferometer achieves high and stable contrast ratio, defined as the ratio of particulate backscatter signal received by the two channels. We show that a high and stable contrast ratio is critical for precise and accurate backscatter and extinction retrievals. Here, we present retrieval equations that take into account the incomplete separation of particulate and molecular backscatter in the measurement channels. We also show how the accuracy of the contrast ratio assessment propagates to error in the optical properties. For both backscattering and extinction, larger errors are produced by underestimates of the contrast ratio (compared to overestimates), more extreme aerosol loading, and-most critically-smaller true contrast ratios. We show example results from HSRL-2 aboard the NASA ER-2 aircraft from the 2016 ORACLES field campaign in the southeast Atlantic, off the coast of Africa, during the biomass burning season. We include a case study where smoke aerosol in two adjacent altitude layers showed opposite differences in extinction- and backscatter-related Ångström exponents and a reversal of the lidar ratio spectral dependence, signatures which are shown to be consistent with a relatively modest difference in smoke particle size.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Bioengineering dermo-epidermal skin grafts with blood and lymphatic capillaries.
- Author
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Marino D, Luginbühl J, Scola S, Meuli M, and Reichmann E
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers metabolism, Capillaries drug effects, Cell Lineage drug effects, Cell Separation, Dermis drug effects, Endothelial Cells cytology, Endothelial Cells drug effects, Epithelial Cells cytology, Epithelial Cells drug effects, Fibrin pharmacology, Humans, Hydrogels pharmacology, Lymphangiogenesis drug effects, Lymphatic Vessels drug effects, Male, Rats, Rats, Nude, Bioengineering methods, Capillaries physiology, Dermis transplantation, Epidermis transplantation, Lymphatic Vessels physiology, Skin Transplantation
- Abstract
The first bioengineered, autologous, dermo-epidermal skin grafts are presently undergoing clinical trials; hence, it is reasonable to envisage the next clinical step at the forefront of plastic and burn surgery, which is the generation of autologous skin grafts that contain vascular plexuses, preformed in vitro. As the importance of the blood, and particularly the lymphatic vascular system, is increasingly recognized, it is attractive to engineer both human blood and lymphatic vessels in one tissue or organ graft. We show here that functional lymphatic capillaries can be generated using three-dimensional hydrogels. Like normal lymphatics, these capillaries branch, form lumen, and take up fluid in vitro and in vivo after transplantation onto immunocompromised rodents. Formation of lymphatic capillaries could be modulated by both lymphangiogenic and anti-lymphangiogenic stimuli, demonstrating the potential usefulness of this system for in vitro testing. Blood and lymphatic endothelial cells never intermixed during vessel development, nor did blood and lymphatic capillaries anastomose under the described circumstances. After transplantation of the engineered grafts, the human lymphatic capillaries anastomosed to the nude rat's lymphatic plexus and supported fluid drainage. Successful preclinical results suggest that these skin grafts could be applied on patients suffering from severe skin defects.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The P-loop domain of yeast Clp1 mediates interactions between CF IA and CPF factors in pre-mRNA 3' end formation.
- Author
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Holbein S, Scola S, Loll B, Dichtl BS, Hübner W, Meinhart A, and Dichtl B
- Subjects
- Adenosine Triphosphate metabolism, Mutation, Protein Binding, Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins chemistry, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins genetics, Transcription, Genetic, mRNA Cleavage and Polyadenylation Factors chemistry, mRNA Cleavage and Polyadenylation Factors genetics, mRNA Cleavage and Polyadenylation Factors physiology, RNA, Fungal metabolism, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins physiology, mRNA Cleavage and Polyadenylation Factors metabolism
- Abstract
Cleavage factor IA (CF IA), cleavage and polyadenylation factor (CPF), constitute major protein complexes required for pre-mRNA 3' end formation in yeast. The Clp1 protein associates with Pcf11, Rna15 and Rna14 in CF IA but its functional role remained unclear. Clp1 carries an evolutionarily conserved P-loop motif that was previously shown to bind ATP. Interestingly, human and archaean Clp1 homologues, but not the yeast protein, carry 5' RNA kinase activity. We show that depletion of Clp1 in yeast promoted defective 3' end formation and RNA polymerase II termination; however, cells expressing Clp1 with mutant P-loops displayed only minor defects in gene expression. Similarly, purified and reconstituted mutant CF IA factors that interfered with ATP binding complemented CF IA depleted extracts in coupled in vitro transcription/3' end processing reactions. We found that Clp1 was required to assemble recombinant CF IA and that certain P-loop mutants failed to interact with the CF IA subunit Pcf11. In contrast, mutations in Clp1 enhanced binding to the 3' endonuclease Ysh1 that is a component of CPF. Our results support a structural role for the Clp1 P-loop motif. ATP binding by Clp1 likely contributes to CF IA formation and cross-factor interactions during the dynamic process of 3' end formation., (© 2011 Holbein et al.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Double diagnostic meaning of serum transferrin receptor in hemodialysis patients: two case reports.
- Author
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Passanante S, Diquattro M, Greco V, Li Cavoli G, Bono L, Palma B, Scola S, Faraci C, Rotolo U, and Menozzi I
- Subjects
- Adult, Anemia, Hypochromic blood, Anemia, Hypochromic diagnosis, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency therapy, Biomarkers blood, Erythropoiesis physiology, Female, Hemoglobins analysis, Humans, Predictive Value of Tests, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency blood, Anemia, Iron-Deficiency diagnosis, Iron blood, Iron Deficiencies, Receptors, Transferrin blood, Renal Dialysis
- Abstract
Hemodialysis patients on maintenance erythropoietin need an adequate supply of iron to optimize therapy and achieve and maintain target levels of hemoglobin. Evaluation of iron stores and early detection of iron deficiency are essential for management of erythropoiesis in chronic renal failure, but there is still no single biochemical or hematological parameter that is sensitive or specific enough to completely describe the distribution of iron in the body. Serum transferrin receptor (sTfR) is a marker of iron that is available for erythropoiesis. We selected 2 clinical cases in which hemodialysis patients were receiving maintenance erythropoietin. To suggest how sTfR can be used in its double diagnostic meaning according to the clinical context of the patient, sTfR was evaluated in one case as a marker of iron deficiency and in the other as a marker of erythropoiesis. The association of sTfR with hematological parameters of iron-deficient erythropoiesis (reticulocyte hemoglobin content, percentage of hypochromic erythrocytes, ratio of reticulocyte hemoglobin content to hemoglobin content) and parameters of stimulated erythropoiesis (absolute reticulocyte count, immature reticulocyte fraction) increases the accuracy of sTfR in its double diagnostic power.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Bronchial reactivity and intracellular magnesium: a possible mechanism for the bronchodilating effects of magnesium in asthma.
- Author
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Dominguez LJ, Barbagallo M, Di Lorenzo G, Drago A, Scola S, Morici G, and Caruso C
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Bronchial Provocation Tests, Bronchoconstrictor Agents, Erythrocytes chemistry, Female, Humans, Hypersensitivity, Immediate metabolism, Hypersensitivity, Immediate physiopathology, Intracellular Fluid chemistry, Magnesium blood, Male, Methacholine Chloride, Pollen, Asthma metabolism, Asthma physiopathology, Bronchial Hyperreactivity metabolism, Intracellular Fluid metabolism, Magnesium metabolism
- Abstract
1. Increased bronchial smooth muscle contractility with consequent bronchial hyperreactivity are characteristic physiopathological events of asthma. Since magnesium intervenes in calcium transport mechanisms and intracellular phosphorylation reactions, it constitutes an important determinant of the contraction/relaxation state of bronchial smooth muscle. In the present study we investigated the relationship between bronchial reactivity, assessed by methacholine-provocation test, and magnesium concentrations both at extracellular and intracellular levels measured by spectrophotometry. Twenty-two patients with mild-to-moderate asthma and 38 non-asthmatic subjects with allergic rhinitis (24 allergic to Parietaria pollen and 14 allergic to Grass pollen) were recruited to the study. Exclusion criteria included renal failure, hepatic diseases, heart failure and arterial hypertension. 2. The salient finding of our study is that there is a strong positive correlation between bronchial reactivity and the level of intracellular magnesium (r=0.72, P<0.0001), both when the groups are analysed separately or together. Intracellular magnesium concentrations in the group of patients with asthma were significantly lower (1.8+/-0. 01 mmol/l; n=22) when compared with levels in rhinitis subjects allergic to Parietaria (1.9+/-0.01 mmol/l; n=24, P<0.05), and with levels in rhinitis subjects allergic to Grass pollen (2.0+/-0.03 mmol/l; n=14, P<0.05). Serum levels of the ion were similar in all groups. 3. We conclude that the level of intracellular magnesium may be an important determinant of bronchial hyperreactivity, as supported by the significant positive correlation between these two parameters in allergic patients with known bronchial hyperresponsiveness. This finding, in addition to reports of the bronchodilating effects of magnesium administration in patients with asthma, confirms the proposed role of this ion in the pathogenesis and treatment of asthma.
- Published
- 1998
14. Dentinal dysplasia type I. A subclassification.
- Author
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Scola SM and Watts PG
- Subjects
- Child, Dentin Dysplasia genetics, Female, Humans, Male, Pedigree, Tooth, Deciduous abnormalities, Dentin Dysplasia classification, Tooth Root abnormalities
- Abstract
Dentinal Dysplasia Type I is a rare condition affecting the deciduous and permanent dentitions, in which the teeth present with short roots and considerably reduced or obliterated pulp spaces. These features were observed on the radiographs of a patient referred for orthodontic assessment, and an investigation of other members of the family revealed that the father and two siblings were also affected. There were variations in the lengths of the roots in those affected, and thus a subclassification of the dysplasia is proposed.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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