The purpose of this study is to determine if patients with chronic patellar tendinopathy will improve clinically after the inoculation of bone marrow mononuclear cells (BM-MNCs). Eight patients with chronic patellar tendinopathy were included. Patients averaged 24 years old (range 14–35). All patients were refractory to conservative treatment for at least 6 months before the procedure. BM-MNCs were harvested from the iliac bone crest and inoculated under ultrasound guide in the patellar tendon lesion. Improvement was assessed through established clinical scores and ultrasound. At 5-year followup, statistically significant improvement was seen for most clinical scores. Seven of eight patients said they would have the procedure again if they had the same problem in the opposite knee and were completely satisfied with the procedure. Seven of 8 patients thought that the results of the procedure were excellent. According to our results, inoculation of BM-MNCs could be considered as a potential therapy for those patients with chronic patellar tendinopathy refractory to nonoperative treatments.
Questions: Two hypotheses were tested: (1) physical features, such as wetland surface area and habitat diversity, together with water chemistry, are important determinants of species richness and composition of macrophyte assemblages and (2) species richness and composition of macrophyte assemblages differ between wetlands of different types (i.e., palustrine versus lacustrine) and between wetlands of different hydrologies (i.e. permanent versus intermittent). Location: A subtropical coastal plain segment (2500 km2) of southern Brazil. Methods: Quarterly collections were carried out in 15 wetlands (2004–2005) in southern Brazil. Differences in richness over time were tested using repeated measures ANOVA. Stepwise multiple regression was performed to investigate relationships between total richness and environmental variables. Significance of differences between wetland types and hydroperiods on species composition was verified by MRPP (Multi‐Response Permutation Procedure). The influence of the environmental variables on species composition was assessed using CCA (Canonical Correspondence Analysis). Results: Macrophyte species richness changed with time, was not significantly different between wetland types, but was higher in permanent wetlands than in intermittent ones. Area, habitat diversity and soluble reactive phosphorus concentration explained 76% of the variation in species richness. Species composition was different between permanent and intermittent wetlands, although it was not significantly different between wetland types. Area, habitat diversity and water chemistry explained 50.1% of species composition. Conclusions: Species richness and composition of wetland macrophytes were mainly determined by area, habitat diversity and hydroperiod. These results can be used for the development of conservation and management programs in southern Brazil.
The main goal of this study was to determine how much variation in macrophyte richness and composition is explained by wetland area, altitude, water conductivity, and nitrate and total phosphorus concentrations in wetlands in southern Brazil, and to compare these variations in two wetland subsystems (palustrine and lacustrine). A total of 126 wetlands were sampled distributed in two subsystems: 87 palustrine and 39 lacustrine wetlands. A total of 153 species of aquatic macrophytes was found in wetlands of southern Brazil and the mean number of macrophyte species per site was 8.7 (range 1-23). From the variables tested, the altitude and area were the only predictor of macrophyte richness and explained 23.1% of variation in richness. The two first axes generated by CCA explained only 4.4% of the variation in the aquatic macrophytes distribution. The macrophyte richness was similar across lacustrine and palustrine subsystems. While altitude, area and conductivity explained 33.2% of variation in macrophyte richness in the palustrine subsystem, none of the variables were associated with macrophyte richness in the studied lacustrine wetlands.
Effects of hydrological variation on the aquatic plant community in a fl oodplain palustrine wetland of southern Brazil Abstract This study analyzed macrophyte richness, biomass, and composition under fl ooding of brief duration (less than 3 days) and drawdown events over an annual cycle in a fl oodplain palustrine wetland in the south of Brazil. The study was carried out to test the hypothesis that fl oods of brief and very brief duration are not long enough to compromise the richness and the biomass of aquatic macrophytes and that the alternation between wet and drawdown phases may cause variations in the macrophyte richness and composition. A total of 26 aquatic macrophyte species were observed from April 2003 to May 2004: 13 species were observed during the wet phase, and 24 during the drawdown phase. The mean richness was higher during the drawdown phase than during the wet phase, however, the mean biomass was similar in both phases. Although macrophyte richness was not modifi ed after the three fl ooding events, mean biomass was modifi ed after two events. The number of macrophyte species of which the biomass was modifi ed after the fi rst fl ooding event increased with subsequent fl oods. These results illustrate the importance of the dynamics between brief fl oods and drawdown events to the aquatic plant community in fl oodplain wetlands in southern Brazil.
Annual fishes, which inhabit temporary pools with extremely limited habitat complexity and niche availability, display remarkable sexual dimorphism, rapid growth, and enormous investment into reproduction, all traits associated with high energy requirement. This study tests three hypotheses for two syntopic annual fishes (Austrolebias minuano and Cynopoecilus fulgens) found in six wetlands of southern Brazil: (i) considerable morphological differences result in low dietary overlap, (ii) sexual dimorphism in both species leads to intraspecific diet segregation, and (iii) dietary richness increases during ontogenetic development, and is narrower in C. fulgens than A. minuano due to morphological limitations imposed by reduced size. The diet of 82 A. minuano and 211 C. fulgens individuals was analyzed over two annual cycles. The morphology was characterized by 26 measurements covering the entire body of both species. There was no evidence of morphological specialization related to food competition and the diet of A. minuano and C. fulgens showed high overlap. High food availability, high predator abundance, and high connectivity of adjacent wetlands are likely the main mechanisms allowing coexistence of both species. Within species, sexual dimorphism did not result in a decrease in dietary overlap, which reinforces the idea that morphological differences between the sexes did not evolve as a mechanism to decrease food competition. Large A. minuano did not have a more diverse diet than the smaller C. fulgens; however, increase in body size allowed both species to ingest larger prey. Morphological variability in both species was mainly related to ontogenetic development and reproduction.
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