In the last years there has been an increase on the research of the activated sludge processes, and mainly on the solid-liquid separation stage, considered of critical importance, due to the different problems that may arise affecting the compaction and the settling of the sludge. Furthermore, image analysis procedures are, nowadays considered to be an adequate method to characterize both aggregated and filamentous bacteria, and increasingly used to monitor bulking events in pilot plants. As a result of that, in this work, image analysis routines were developed in Matlab environment, allowing the identification and characterization of microbial aggregates and protruding filaments. Moreover, the large amount of activated sludge data collected with the image analysis implementation can be subsequently treated by multivariate statistical procedures such as PLS. In the current work the implementation of image analysis and PLS techniques has shown to provide important information for better understanding the behavior of activated sludge processes, and to predict, at some extent, the sludge volume index. As a matter of fact, the obtained results allowed explaining the strong relationships between the sludge settling properties and the free filamentous bacteria contents, aggregates size and aggregates morphology, establishing relevant relationships between macroscopic and microscopic properties of the biological system.
Signs of overuse after intense muscular exertion are well described in adults, while little research has been conducted in children. The aim of the study was to investigate some indirect markers of muscle damage in 13 years old boys following two different protocols of one-leg stepping exercise to exhaustion. This stepping exercise was performed by two experimental groups with different contributions of concentric and eccentric contractions in a 1:1 vs 1:2 ratio of timing. Subjective soreness perception and maximum voluntary isometric force of the knee extensor muscles were measured immediately prior to and immediately following the exercise, and at 1, 3, 24, 48, 72, 96 hours post exercise. Metabolic markers of exercise stress were taken at similar time intervals and included plasma glutathione concentrations as a marker for oxidative stress, circulating leukocyte numbers, and plasma creatine kinase (CK) activity. All parameters studied demonstrated a higher level of muscular exertion, with more evident signs of overuse in the group with the more eccentric contribution. Complete recovery was achieved between 72 and 96 hours after exertion. However, in this group of boys, the CK activity did not show the typical adult-like increase. Therefore the wide use of CK as an indicator of intense muscle exertion was not supported in this group of children. It can be concluded that children, like adults, experience similar degrees of muscle disturbances following intense exercise and that they may recover more quickly from such exercise.
SummaryDuring body cooling, a progressive thrombocytopenia is observed, with platelet sequestration mainly in the liver. Platelets return progressively to the circulation during re warming. In this work the presence of platelet clumps is demonstrated by electron microscopy inside the hepatic sinusoids of dogs cooled to 20° C by immersion in iced water. Such clumps were not found either before cooling or after body rewarming. Similar platelet clumps in the hepatic microcirculation were found in two other groups of dogs cooled and rewarmed as before, but previously treated with the antiaggregants sulphinpyrazone or ticlopidine. Another group of dogs was cooled and rewarmed by intra-abdominal circulation of physiological saline respectively at 4° C and 40° C. In these animals a similar decrease of circulating platelets was observed. However, just after re warming was started, with the body temperature still at 22° C, sequestered platelets came back abruptly to circulation. We conclude that hepatic platelet sequestration induced by hypothermia appears mainly due to local haemodynamic conditions.
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