Academic literature on the topic 'Yorkshire Life'

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Journal articles on the topic "Yorkshire Life"

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Smith, Nathan E. C. "Provincial mycology and the legacy of Henry Thomas Soppitt (1858–1899) (W. T. Stearn Prize 2019)." Archives of Natural History 47, no. 2 (October 2020): 219–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2020.0650.

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The essay explores the life and legacy of Henry Thomas Soppitt, focusing on his elucidation of the life cycle of the rust fungus Puccinia bistortae (F. Strauss) DC. It focuses on the impact this discovery had on the Yorkshire mycological community during a period of threat to its standing caused by the professionalization of science and subsequent degradation of the amateur. It goes on to explores how two Yorkshire mycologists and participants in the discovery, Charles Crossland and James Needham, used accounts of Soppitt's discovery to ensure his legacy and, later, to attempt to ensure the legacy of their community. It shows how these accounts were varied in their content and medium and analyses the relative value of collections to printed text to Yorkshire mycologists through the differences in their accounts.
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Slater, Michael J. "Cross-Correlation of Numbers of Baptisms and Burials in Sixteenth-Century Parish Registers: an Exploratory Analysis." Roger Schofield, 1937-2019, no. 105 (December 31, 2020): 120–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.35488/lps105.2020.120.

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In order to estimate life expectancy at birth for a single parish the statistical technique of cross-correlation has been applied to parish register data. Two adjacent ancient parishes of Giggleswick and Horton in Ribblesdale, both now in North Yorkshire, and five other parishes for comparison, have been studied, mainly for the period of Elizabeth I. Estimates of life expectancy may further be used to estimate population sizes. Life expectancy in Giggleswick was in the low 30s and for Horton parish was 20 to 30 years. Populations of about 1400 and 400 to 700 respectively are calculated. Credible results are also found for Colyton (Devon), Odiham (Hampshire), Oswaldkirk (North Yorkshire), Shepshed (Leicestershire) and Southill (Bedfordshire) for which parish registers from 1538 and 1541 are available and for which other studies have been made.
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Chase, Malcolm. "Life in Georgian Richmond, North Yorkshire: a diary and its secrets." Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 91, no. 1 (January 1, 2019): 187–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00844276.2019.1637560.

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Cross, Claire. "The Religious Life of Women in Sixteenth-century Yorkshire (Presidential Address)." Studies in Church History 27 (1990): 307–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400012134.

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On 17 September 1523 a very wealthy widow, Dame Joan Thurscross, made her will in Hull. Her benefactions included £30 for new vestments to her parish church of St Mary’s, £35 to hire a priest for seven years to sing for her soul, the souls of her three husbands, of her parents, and of her son, £4 to the building works at the White Friars’, £12 for a priest to perform an obit in St Leonard’s convent in Grimsby, where she had been born, small presents to her god-daughter and other nuns at Sixhills, £20 for mending the causeway between Beverley and Anlaby, thirteen white gowns for thirteen poor women, and silver masers or standing pieces for Sixhills Nunnery, Kirkstall Abbey, and the Charterhouse of Hull. It is impossible to read this very individual will and not recognize the bequests, however conventional in themselves, as being the carefully thought out intentions of the testatrix. With its emphasis upon Masses for the dead and stress on die necessity of good works it furnishes a poignant example of late medieval piety.
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Vidovic, V., J. Krnjaic, D. Lukac, V. Visnjic, and M. Stupar. "Growth intensity of the fertile breed gilts in the nucleus pig farm." Biotehnologija u stocarstvu 28, no. 4 (2012): 787–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/bah1204787v.

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Production in the farm directly depends on the quality of gilts. For this reason it would be necessary to replace non-productive sows. By monitoring and control of the growth intensity in the performance test make possibility to provide selection effect and get gilts adequate age and weight at insemination. The present paper analyses of growth traits from birth until the end of the performance test. The investigations included 205 gilts, of which 104 Landrace and 101 Yorkshire, which were obtained from 7 sires (4 of Landrace and 3 of Yorkshire breed). The gilts that had a smaller weight at birth, showed a smaller daily gain and body weight realized at the end of the test. Lactation duration of 32 days, weight at weaning was not less than 7 kg. During the test of 85 days, the realized average weight was 76 kg, with a gain of 0.90 kg for Landrace gilts, while Yorkshire had smaller one (71 kg) and so smaller daily gain (0.84 kg). With an average age of gilts of 160 days, Landrace gilts reached weight 108 kg, with an average life gain of 0.67 kg, while the Yorkshire gilts reached weight of 101 kg, with an average life gain of 0.62 kg. Tests of significance showed that the sire, breed and weight at birth have a highly significant impact on most of the observed traits and represent a significant source of phenotypic variability in growth traits of tested gilts.
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Mason, Samantha J., Amy Downing, Penny Wright, Sarah E. Bottomley, Andrew Winterbottom, Adam W. Glaser, and James W. F. Catto. "Life and bladder cancer: protocol for a longitudinal and cross-sectional patient-reported outcomes study of Yorkshire (UK) patients." BMJ Open 9, no. 6 (June 17, 2019): e030850. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030850.

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IntroductionLittle is known about the impact of bladder cancer (BC) and its treatments on health-related quality of life (HRQL). To date, most work has been small in scale or restricted to subsets of patients. Life and bladder cancer is a cross-sectional and longitudinal study collecting patient-reported outcomes within two distinct cohorts.Methods and analysisA longitudinal study will collect patient-reported outcomes at 3-monthly intervals from newly diagnosed patients. Eligible cases will be identified by recruiting hospitals and surveyed at baseline, 6, 9 and 12 months postdiagnosis to explore changes in outcomes over time. A separate cross-sectional cohort of patients diagnosed within the last 10 years across Yorkshire will be identified through cancer registration systems and surveyed once to explore longer-term HRQL in BC survivors. A comprehensive patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) has been developed using generic, cancer-specific and BC-specific instruments. The study will provide evidence about how useful these PROMs are in measuring BC patient HRQL. The outcome data will be linked with administrative health data (eg, treatment information from hospital data).Ethics and disseminationThe study has received the following approvals: Yorkshire and the Humber—South Yorkshire Research Ethics Committee (17/YH/0095), Health Research Authority Confidentiality Advisory Group (17/CAG/0054). Results will be made available to patients, funders, NHS Trusts, Clinical Commissioning Groups, Strategic Clinical Networks and other researchers.
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Supple, Jennifer F. "The Role of the Catholic Laity in Yorkshire, 1850–1900." Recusant History 18, no. 3 (May 1987): 304–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0268419500020638.

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THE ROLE of the laity in the Church is a topic of great interest today. Since the second Vatican Council the part which the people could, and should, play in the Church has been discussed at length, and the shortage of priests has led to demands for the laity to become more actively involved in spiritual affairs. Some, however, still maintain that spiritual tasks must be left to the ordained, but would like to see the laity take a much more active role, as Catholics, in the secular sphere, representing and defending Catholic values in public life. In the light of the current debate, it is interesting to look at the role of the laity in the Catholic Church in Yorkshire during the last century. At that time, too, there was a shortage of priests, while the role of Catholics in public life did not always fulfil the desires of Church leaders.
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Biller, Peter. "William of Newburgh and the Cathar Mission to England." Studies in Church History. Subsidia 12 (1999): 11–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0143045900002428.

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Born at Bridlington in 1136, William of Newburgh was educated at Newburgh, an Augustinian priory a few miles north of York, where he became a canon. William probably lived at Newburgh for the rest of his life, for the only instance of him travelling outside Yorkshire is one visit he paid to Fínchale. He died between summer 1199 and autumn 1201, leaving three extant writings. This outline of his life is based on John Gorman’s introduction to the only writing by William which has received a modern critical edition, his commentary on the Song of Songs. William’s other writings are sermons, and the Historia rerum Anglicarum (hereafter History). Yorkshire Cistercian patronage envelopes two of the works. The commentary on the Song of Songs is dedicated to Roger, Abbot of Byland, while the History is prefaced by a dedicatory letter to Ernald, Abbot of Rievaulx (1189-99), which states that Ernald had requested the work.
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Snow, Stephanie J. "John Snow MD (1813–1858). Part I: A Yorkshire Childhood and Family Life." Journal of Medical Biography 8, no. 1 (February 2000): 27–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/096777200000800106.

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Orme, Nicholas. "Jonathan Hughes, Pastors and Visionaries: Religion and Secular Life in Late Medieval Yorkshire." Nottingham Medieval Studies 34 (January 1990): 181–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/j.nms.3.188.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Yorkshire Life"

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Macdonald, A. C. "Women and the monastic life in late medieval Yorkshire." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.390367.

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Caunce, Stephen Andrew. "Farming with horses in the East Riding of Yorkshire : some aspects of recent agricultural history." Thesis, University of Leeds, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.328699.

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Alberti, Samuel John Matthew Mayer. "Field, lab and museum : the practice and place of life science in Yorkshire, 1870-1904." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 2001. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/3512/.

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Later Victorian Yorkshire was home to a vigorous community of life science practitioners. In studying them, I reassess three dichotomies familiar to the contextualist historian of Victorian science: field and laboratory, science and society, and amateur and professional. I outline the refashioning of amateur and professional roles in life science, and I provide a revised historiography for the relationship between amateurs and professionals in this area and era. While exploring these issues, I examine the complex net of cultural and educational institutions where the sites for the practice of life science emerged and existed. Natural history practices shaded imperceptibly into other facets of civic culture. I present natural history as a leisure activity and as a resource utilised by the maturing provincial middle classes, one of a range of cultural activities within a network of voluntary associations. This thesis is arranged by institution: philosophical society, museum, civic college and field club. Each of these corresponds, loosely, to a site for science: respectively, lecture hall, museum, laboratory and field. The traditional `field versus lab' historiography ignores the many and varied sites for life science in this era, and conceals how far field-based natural history endured alongside the laboratory as it emerged as the hegemonic site for life science. I explore these and other issues by using the career of Louis C. Miall (1842-1921) as a narrative thread. Despite his activities as a lecturer, curator, field club president and laboratory biologist, Mall sought to construct a professional identity based solely on the authority of the laboratory, in contrast to that of the amateur naturalist. To take his partisan rhetoric at face value, however, is to ignore the variety and vitality of life science practices in Victorian Yorkshire.
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Bloy, Marjorie. "Rockingham and Yorkshire : the political, economic and social role of Charles Watson-Wentworth, the second Marquis of Rockingham." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 1986. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/3012/.

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Charles Watson-Wentworth, second Marquis of Rockingham, is, perhaps, the most overlooked Prime Minister of the eighteenth century. The aim of this thesis is to re-examine the current assessments of the marquis, that he was immature, inept and unfit for high office, and to revise them as necessary. It also aims to indicate the areas where he may have been misjudged. The marquis primarily is placed in his local context of Yorkshire. His upbringing is studied to give same insight into his background and then his roles of landowner and local magnate are examined. His duties of Lord Lieutenant are dealt with by looking at four specific episodes in which he was involved. His political career is investigated at local level both as leader of the Rockingham party and particularly in his ability to influence Yorkshire politics between 1753 and 1782. The udder interests and concerns of Rockingham in Ireland and America are also studied. Rockingham showed great promise as a child although he suffered from a debilitating illness which recurred throughout his life and probably caused his sudden and early death. Far from being incompetent and immature, he was an active estate developer and improver and was a key figure in the social, economic and political life of the neighbourhood of Wentworth Woodhouse. He virtually controlled Yorkshire politics for twenty years and led the largest and best-organized opposition party in parliament during that time. His views on the problems of Ireland and America have been under-valued and his personal qualities both for attracting loyalty and friendship and for his active leadership of his party have not been given sufficient recognition. In spite of his faults Rockingham was far more capable and a far more complex person than has been realised.
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Dunn, Karen. "Working class culture and co-operation : a case study of schooling and social life in a Yorkshire mining community." Thesis, University of Sheffield, 1991. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.307901.

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Martin, Claire Pauline Lucie. "Bodies of knowledge : science, popular culture, and working-class women's experience of the life cycle in Yorkshire, c.1900-1940." Thesis, University of Leeds, 2018. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21490/.

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The production and diffusion of knowledge are heavily classed and gendered practices. This thesis examines some of the processes and power relations at the heart of the creation and diffusion of knowledge on sexuality and female physiology in the period 1900-1940. More specifically, it explores the tensions inherent to these processes along the lines of gender and class, by focussing on scientific discourse, popular culture, and the experience of Yorkshire working-class women in relation to menstruation, sex, pregnancy, and menopause. Spanning four decades marked by significant social, political, scientific, and cultural changes, this thesis reflects on the complex and ambivalent relationships between working-class women’s knowledge and experience, scientific or otherwise ‘expert’ knowledge, and cultural understandings and representations of women and their bodies in this period. By deliberately focussing on women’s voices and active contribution to these shifts and competing discourses, this thesis seeks to foreground their agency, and raises questions about what constitutes knowledge and expertise, the power relations which sustain those definitions, and how they are reproduced in the historical record. Through its regional focus, this thesis also engages with recent developments in the history of health and medicine and in the history of sexuality, and contributes to a more nuanced understanding of the lived experience of working-class sexuality in the past. Region, as well as class and gender, determined the material, social, and cultural conditions which shaped working-class women’s experience of sexuality and the life cycle, as well as their access and relationship to various forms and sources of knowledge.
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Books on the topic "Yorkshire Life"

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Gerrard, David. Yorkshire memories. Stroud, Glocestershire: Sutton Pub., 1998.

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Yorkshire encounters. Edinburgh: Mainstream, 2003.

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Hartley, Marie. Life and tradition in West Yorkshire. Otley: Smith Settle, 1990.

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Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), ed. The Yorkshire Lady. New York, N.Y: Signet, 2001.

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A Yorkshire boyhood. London: Pan in association with Chatto & Windus, 1990.

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A Yorkshire boyhood. Anstey: F. A. Thorpe, 1991.

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Hattersley, Roy. A Yorkshire boyhood. London: Chatto & Windus, 1989.

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Arthur, Godfrey. Tales of the Yorkshire coast. Skipton, [England]: Dalesman, 2001.

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My life as a trainee nurse in 1950s Yorkshire: My life as a trainee nurse in 1950s Yorkshire. [Place of publication not identified]: Ebury Press., 2015.

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First finds: A Yorkshire childhood. London: Janus, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "Yorkshire Life"

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Blythe, Helen Lucy. "“Looking Yonderly”: Mary Taylor’s Miss Miles or a Tale of Yorkshire Life 60 Years Ago (1890)." In The Victorian Colonial Romance with the Antipodes, 55–86. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137397836_3.

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"A Yorkshire Background." In Phil May: His Life and Work 1864-1903, 13–22. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315184753-9.

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Richardson, Catherine. "A Yorkshire Tragedy." In Domestic life and domestic tragedy in early modern England. Manchester University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.7765/9781847791870.00013.

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Richardson, Catherine. "A Yorkshire Tragedy." In Domestic Life and Domestic Tragedy in Early Modern England, 175–91. Manchester University Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9780719065446.003.0007.

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Robinson, Annabel. "Origins: Yorkshire and Cheltenham 1850–1874." In The Life and Work of Jane Ellen Harrison, 13–33. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199242337.003.0002.

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Wilson, Pete. "Discussion." In Life, Death and Rubbish Disposal in Roman Norton, North Yorkshire, 260–67. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1gn3srk.21.

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Wilson, Pete. "Introduction." In Life, Death and Rubbish Disposal in Roman Norton, North Yorkshire, 1–7. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1gn3srk.6.

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Carter, Spencer. "Chipped stone lithics." In Life, Death and Rubbish Disposal in Roman Norton, North Yorkshire, 214–23. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1gn3srk.15.

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Cumberpatch, C. G. "The post-Roman Pottery." In Life, Death and Rubbish Disposal in Roman Norton, North Yorkshire, 143–47. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1gn3srk.10.

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Cool, H. E. M., and S. J. Greep. "7a – The small finds and vessel glass." In Life, Death and Rubbish Disposal in Roman Norton, North Yorkshire, 156–99. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1gn3srk.12.

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Conference papers on the topic "Yorkshire Life"

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Crowther, Jaqueline, Sarah Shaw, Julie Allen, and Rachel Guest. "P-84 Improving end of life care for people and families living with dementia in kirklees, west yorkshire." In Transforming Palliative Care, Hospice UK 2018 National Conference, 27–28 November 2018, Telford. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2018-hospiceabs.109.

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Taylor, Vanessa, Grace Jeffrey, and June Toovey. "P-231 Developing end of life care learning outcomes for the workforce across yorkshire and the humber: a strategic approach." In People, Partnerships and Potential, 16 – 18 November 2016, Liverpool. British Medical Journal Publishing Group, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2016-001245.252.

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Hughes, Jenny, Angela Hope, Caren Reid, Paul Knight, and Andrew Baker. "OP02 End of life communication and organ donation simulation. Developing a multi-disciplinary faculty and course in order to share and improve practice across hospital trusts." In Abstracts from the HEE Yorkshire and the Humber Clinical Skills and Simulation Conference, Leeds, UK, 10th July 2019. The Association for Simulated Practice in Healthcare, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjstel-2019-heeconf.2.

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Hensman, G. "What do the distribution network operators need from lightning protection policies? - How Yorkshire Electricity approaches the issue." In IEE Seminar Lightning Protection for Overhead Line Systems. IEE, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/ic:20000641.

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Peelukhana, Srikara V., Kranthi K. Kolli, William Gottliebson, Massoud Leesar, Tarek Helmy, Mohamed Effat, Imran Arif, Eric W. Schneeberger, Paul Succop, and Rupak K. Banerjee. "Influence of Heart Rate and Epicardial Stenosis Severity on Cardiac Contractility Under Concomitant Microvascular Disease in a Porcine Model." In ASME 2011 Summer Bioengineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/sbc2011-53512.

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Invasive guide wire methods to assess functional severity of coronary stenosis are affected by dynamic variables like heart rate (HR), contractility, epicardial stenosis (AS) and blood pressure. The interdependence of these factors is also influenced by the presence of concomitant microvascular disease (CMVD). The purpose of this study is to assess the variation in contractility under varying HR and AS in the presence of CMVD. In vivo experiments were performed on seven Yorkshire pigs. It was found that, in the presence of concomitant microvascular disease (CMVD), for lower AS (<50%) contractility increases for HR<120 bpm while it marginally decreases for HR>120 bpm. However, for higher AS (>50%), contractility decreases for both HR<120 bpm and HR>120 bpm.
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Motta, Nicollas tomas de Aquino, Valeria Bentes Ferreira, Edgleidson Silva Dos Santos, Rodrigo Antonio Torres Matos, Fabricia Duarte Omena, and Francielly Gomes Vilas Boas. "ETIOLOGIA DAS INFECÇÕES DO TRATO URINÁRIO (ITU) DE CÃES E GATOS." In I Congresso On-line Nacional de Clínica Veterinária de Pequenos Animais. Revista Multidisciplinar em Saúde, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51161/rems/1863.

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Introdução: As infecções bacterianas são de grande importância sendo verificada com maior ocorrência a infecção urinária. Objetivo: Objetivou-se com presente trabalho identificar os principais organismos isolados de amostras clinicas de cães e gatos com infecção urinaria atendidos em clinicas veterinárias nos municípios de Arapiraca e Maceió-AL. Material e métodos: No período de março a junho de 2021, realizou-se um levantamento das fichas e laudos de cães e gatos dos casos de infecções urinárias, obtidos no Centro de Diagnostico Veterinário (VETLAB). A partir das analises dos arquivos, obteve-se dados como raça, sexo e idade. Além disso, foi possível identificar os micro-organismos isolados por meio de amostras colhidas. Resultados: Os atendimentos realizados foram em 15 animais, sendo doze cães 80% (12/15), estes possuindo idades entre um a dezesseis anos, com predominância de animais das raças Shih-Tzu 58,33% (7/12), seguindo das raças Pug 25% (3/12), Yorkshire 8,33% (1/12) e SRD 8,33% (1/12). E três felinos 20% (3/15), com idade entre dois a dezessete anos; raça SRD que tiveram predominância de 100%. Destes 15 animais, foram colhidas amostras do trato urinário para avaliação de predominância bacteriana. Nesse ponto, houve maior ocorrência de Staphylococcus sp. 40% (6/15), Proteus sp. 20% (3/15), Bacillus sp. 13,33% (2/15) e Streptococcus + proteus sp. 6,67% (1/15) . Em apenas três amostras não houve o crescimento bacteriano. Conclusão: Diante dos resultados, observou-se que as bactérias do gênero Staphylococcus sp. e Proteus sp., foram as mais prevalentes nas afecções urinárias. Devido ao aumento das infeções bacterianas, ressalta-se a importância de realizar a urinálise, além disso, cultura e antibiograma com intuito de instituir o tratamento mais adequado.
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Cosham, Andrew, David G. Jones, Keith Armstrong, Daniel Allason, and Julian Barnett. "Analysis of a Dense Phase Carbon Dioxide Full-Scale Fracture Propagation Test in 24 Inch Diameter Pipe." In 2016 11th International Pipeline Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipc2016-64456.

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A third full-scale fracture propagation test has been conducted using a dense phase carbon dioxide (CO2)-rich mixture (approximately 10 mole percent of non-condensables), at the DNV GL Spadeadam Test & Research Centre, Cumbria, UK, on behalf of National Grid, UK. The first and second tests, in 914 mm (36 inch) outside diameter pipe, also conducted at the Spadeadam Test & Research Centre, showed that predictions made using the Two Curve Model and the (notionally conservative) Wilkowski et al., 1977 correction factor were incorrect and non-conservative. An additional correction was required in order to conservatively predict the results of the two tests. A third full-scale test was necessary to evaluate the fracture arrest capability of the line pipe for the proposed 610 mm (24 inch) outside diameter Yorkshire and Humber CCS Cross-Country Pipeline, because the predictions of the first and second tests were non-conservative, and it was unclear if and how the results of these tests could be extrapolated to a different diameter and wall thickness. The third test was designed to be representative of the proposed cross-country pipeline, both in terms of the grade and geometry of the pipe, and the operating conditions. The test section consisted of seven lengths of pipe: an initiation pipe and then, on either side of the initiation pipe, one transition pipe and two production pipes. The (in total) four production pipes are representative of the type of line pipe that would be used in the proposed cross-country pipeline. A running ductile fracture was successfully initiated; it propagated through the transition pipes on both sides, and then rapidly arrested in the production pipes. The result of the test demonstrates that a running ductile fracture would arrest in the proposed Yorkshire and Humber CCS Cross-Country Pipeline. The main experimental data, including the layout of the test section, and the decompression and timing wire data, are summarised and discussed. Furthermore, the implications of the three tests, in two different pipe geometries, for setting toughness requirements for pipelines transporting CO2-rich mixtures in the dense phase are considered.
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Mesquita, Fernanda Fernandes de, Mergareth Balbi, Juliana Lopes De Castro, and Ramon Da Luz Bezerra. "PERFIL EPIDEMIOLOGICO DOS CÃES COM PIODERMA ATENDIDOS NA POLICLINICA VETERINÁRIA DA UNESA – VARGEM PEQUENA, NO PERÍODO DE OUTUBRO DE 2018 A ABRIL DE 2021." In I Congresso On-line Nacional de Clínica Veterinária de Pequenos Animais. Revista Multidisciplinar em Saúde, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51161/rems/1816.

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Introdução: A piodermite é uma infecção bacteriana piogênica da pele, que envolve a epiderme e os folículos pilosos, podendo atingir derme e hipoderme nos quadros profundos. Quase sempre é secundária a uma causa base, sendo uma das dermatopatias mais comuns em cães. Classifica-se o pioderma em externo, superficial ou profundo. A principal bactéria envolvida é o Staphylococcus pseudintermedius. Acomete cães de qualquer idade, raça e sexo. O diagnóstico é clínico baseado nas lesões, sendo no pioderma superficial a pústula e o colarete epidérmico. A terapêutica baseia-se exclusivamente em antimicrobianos tópicos ou em uso conjunto com antibióticos sistêmicos. Objetivos: O presente trabalho levantou o perfil epidemiológico (idade, sexo e raça) dos cães com pioderma, atendidos na Policlínica Veterinária UNESA, no campus de Vargem Pequena, Rio de Janeiro, RJ. Além de classificar se o pioderma era externo, superficial ou profundo e se cursava com prurido. Material e Métodos: Levantou-se as fichas de cães que passaram por atendimento dermatológico da Policlínica entre outubro 2018 a abril 2021, destacando-se aquelas com diagnóstico de pioderma. Em seguida, coletou-se dados referentes a idades, sexos e raças. Na anamnese investigou-se prurido e no exame físico qual a classificação do pioderma e evolução aguda ou crônica. Resultados: Das 110 fichas de dermatopatias, 40 (36,3%) foram identificados com pioderma, sendo 21 (52,5%) fêmeas e 19 (47,5%) machos. Principais raças: 11 (27,5%) sem raça definida, 8 (20%) yorkshire e 5 (12,5%) Bulldog Francês. As idades variaram de 9 meses a 10 anos, predominando a idade 5 anos (8 cães, 20%). O prurido foi relatado em 33 (82%) casos. O pioderma superficial em 39 (97,5%) casos e 1 (2,5%) profundo. Já os casos crônicos (32 cães, 80%) agudos (8 cães, 20%). Conclusão: O pioderma superficial destacou-se nas dermatopatias, sem predisposição etária ou sexual, logo o conhecimento das lesões faz-se fundamental para seu diagnóstico. O prurido foi um sinal constante nesta dermatopatia e o seu controle está relacionado com o diagnóstico e terapêutica apropriada para o pioderma.
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9

Motosugue, Andressa, Isabella Ribeiro Santoro, Mariana Lopes Di Berardini, and Michelle Oliveira Kage. "BLOQUEIO INTERCOSTAL EM CADELA SUBMETIDA À CIRURGIA DE CORREÇÃO DE PERSISTÊNCIA DO DUCTO ARTERIOSO – RELATO DE CASO." In I Congresso On-line Nacional de Clínica Veterinária de Pequenos Animais. Revista Multidisciplinar em Saúde, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51161/rems/1925.

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Introdução: O ducto arterioso é um vaso comunicante entre a pequena e grande circulação na fase fetal, quando os pulmões ainda não têm funcionalidade. Ao nascimento, o ducto é induzido ao fechamento e se transforma em um ligamento. A persistência do ducto arterioso (PDA) é uma anormalidade congênita em consequência da falha no fechamento do ducto após o nascimento. O tratamento indicado para forma clássica normalmente é a correção cirúrgica ou fechamento do ducto por meio de cateterismo e o anestesista deve ter acesso a todos os exames realizados, bem como ao histórico do animal, para que o planejamento anestésico seja compatível com a necessidade, considerando todos os riscos. O bloqueio regional é realizado para garantir analgesia trans e pós operatória, uma vez que a toracotomia é um dos procedimentos cirúrgicos que possui maior potencial álgico. Para realização do bloqueio anestésico dos nervos intercostais, é necessário introduzir a agulha no espaço intercostal no sentido dorso-ventral até que encoste na borda caudal da costela, e então o anestésico local deve ser injetado, tal procedimento deve ser realizado de dois a três espaços intercostais craniais e caudais da região de incisão. Objetivos: Tem-se como objetivo orientar estudantes e profissionais da área quanto aos benefícios da anestesia locorregional e relatar o caso de uma cadela, castrada, raça yorkshire, 2 anos, comportamento dócil, a qual apresentou episódios de cianose, dispnéia, tosse e hipertermia, principalmente em momentos de excitabilidade, com suspeita de persistência de ducto arterioso (PDA). Material e Métodos: O material foi desenvolvido a partir de revisões bibliográficas e descrição de caso clínico, baseando-se no estudo do tipo observacional descritivo. Resultados: Paciente encaminhada ao cardiologista, solicitado ecodopplercardiograma e instituído um tratamento farmacológico temporário. Em laudo ecocardiográfico constou aumento de ventrículo esquerdo, escape de valva mitral sem repercussão hemodinâmica, e outros aspectos compatíveis com canal arterial do tipo small size. Indicada cirurgia para correção do PDA, adotando-se a técnica de anestesia parcial intravenosa associada ao bloqueio intercostal. Conclusão: A abordagem anestésica no caso relatado garantiu controle analgésico transoperatório e conforto no pós operatório para paciente em questão, portanto, conclui-se que foi adequada.
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10

Santos, Edgleidson Silva dos, Valeria Bentes Ferreira, Nicollas Tomás De Aquino Motta, Fabricia Duarte Omena, Cintia Da Silva Luiz, and Rodrigo Antonio Torres Matos. "ETIOLOGIA DAS INFECÇÕES FÚNGICAS DE CÃES E GATOS." In I Congresso On-line Nacional de Clínica Veterinária de Pequenos Animais. Revista Multidisciplinar em Saúde, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.51161/rems/1864.

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Introdução: As infecções fúngicas ocorrem com grande frequência na rotina clínica de pequenos animais, devido a fatores como resposta imune do hospedeiro e ampla distribuição do agente no ambiente. Estas infecções são conhecidas como micoses, sendo classificadas como superficiais, subcutâneas e sistêmicas. Objetivo: Objetivou-se com presente trabalho identificar os fungos isolados de amostras clínicas de cães e gatos com infecções fúngicas. Material e métodos: No período de setembro/2020 a março/2021, realizou-se o levantamento das fichas e laudos dos animais relacionados aos casos de infecções fúngicas, obtidos no Centro de Diagnostico Veterinário (VETLAB). A partir das análises dos arquivos, obteve-se dados como raça, sexo e idade. Além disso, foi possível identificar os micro-organismos isolados por meio de amostras colhidas. Resultados: Foram avaliados 52 animais, sendo 57,6% (30/52) cães e 42,4% (22/52) felinos. Os cães possuíam idades entre três meses a 15 anos e os felinos de um mês a oito anos. Em relação aos cães os de maiores incidências no período foram das raças Yorkshire e SRD com 16,66% (5/30), Spitz e Pug com 13% ( 4/30), Pinscher e Chiuahua 6,6% ( 2/30) e os da raça Pastor Maremano, Bulldog Francês, Jack Russell Terrier, Branco, Maltês, Lulu da pomerânia, Dachshund e Bulldog Inglês com 3,33% (1/30) cada. Tiveram predominância nos felinos, SRD com 86,37% (19/22) e Persa com 13,63% (3/22). Destes 52 animais, foram colhidas amostras de pele, pelo e conduto auditivo. Houve maior ocorrência de Penicillium sp. 23,07% (12/52), Microsporum sp. 13,4% (7/52), Microsporum canis sp. 11,5% (6/52), Aspergillus niger 7,69% (4/52), Dermatófito e Malassezia sp. com 5,76% (3/52), Aspergillus sp. 3,84% (2/52), Trichophyton sp. 1,92% (1/52) e em 25% (13/52) das amostras não houve o crescimento fúngico. Conclusão: Diante dos resultados, observou-se que os fungos do gênero Penicillium sp. e Microsporum sp., foram mais prevalentes nas afecções fúngicas. Devido ao aumento das infeções, ressalta-se a importância da realização de cultura fúngicas e o antifungigrama, permitindo um melhor diagnóstico e adequação da alternativa terapêutica.
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