The need for top management involvement in the exploitation of IT is a recurring theme of information management Previous research has suggested that this involvement is linked with a two way relationship between CEO and CIO. This paper reports on an exploratory research study which set out to identify the determinants of a successful two way relationship. CEOs and CIOs were interviewed in-depth in fourteen large organizations based in the UK. The paper describes an explanatory framework which links the quality of the CEO/CIO relationship to identify. attributes of each of the parties, and of their host organization.
Despite the apparent absence of vasopressin (ADH), Brattleboro homozygotes [diabetes insipidus (DI) rats] can concentrate their urine when deprived of drinking water. Since other investigators have shown that reducing glomerular filtration rate (GFR) improves the concentrating ability of water-loaded dogs, the present studies were undertaken to quantify the magnitude and time course of changes in GFR during dehydration. Clearance experiments were performed in 10 conscious DI rats before and following 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, and 24 h of dehydration. Urine osmolality increased from 155.0 +/- 12.6 (SE) to 696.7 +/- 8.4 mosmol/kg H2O after 24 h. GFR averaged 984.3 +/- 79.6 microliters . min-1 . 100 g body wt-1 in the control phase, fell to about 80% of this value over the first 12 h of dehydration, and then declined to 27% at 24 h. The rats lost 20% of their body weight over the 24 h. The osmolality of the papillary tip averaged 896 +/- 44 mosmol/kg H2O at 24 h compared to a control value of 493 +/- 28. The lack of osmotic equilibration between urine and papillary interstitium suggests that dehydration did not appreciably increase the water permeability of the distal nephron. These experiments clearly show a progressive decline in GFR as urine becomes concentrated during dehydration in the absence of ADH; these events may or may not be causally related.
Despite the absence of vasopressin, Brattleboro homozygous (DI) rats concentrate their urine to hypertonic levels when deprived of drinking water for 24 h. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) falls concurrently and might contribute to the increased concentrating ability. The present studies concerned the time course of the changes in concentrating ability and GFR during the early hours of dehydration. Experiments were performed in 10 chronically catheterized conscious DI rats in the normally hydrated control state and during 3 h of fluid deprivation. Urine osmolality (Uosmol) increased from 97 +/- 6 (SE) to 325 +/- 11 mosmol/kg H2O at 3 h. Averaged over the 3 h, neither GFR nor effective renal blood flow changed significantly (103 +/- 2 and 106 +/- 4% of control, respectively). Fractional excretion of sodium (FENa) rose markedly from 0.3 +/- 0.1 to 1.3 +/- 0.1% at its peak. Clearly, a fall in GFR cannot explain the rise in Uosmol during the first 3 h. Plasma oxytocin (OT) increased from 5.6 +/- 0.8 to 36.4 +/- 4.5 pg/ml after 3 h of dehydration. In additional experiments, d(CH2)5-D-Phe-VAVP, an antidiuretic antagonist (anti-ADH), was administered to eight DI rats after 3-h dehydration. Control, 3-h dehydration, and post-anti-ADH values were, respectively: for Uosmol, 102 +/- 7, 347 +/- 14, 145 +/- 11 mosmol/kg H2O; for GFR, 1,003 +/- 43, 1,042 +/- 59, 866 +/- 54 microliter X min-1 X 100 g body wt-1; for FENa, 0.4 +/- 0.1, 1.4 +/- 0.1, 0.5 +/- 0.1%. The decreases following anti-ADH were all statistically significant. We conclude that OT is released during the early hours of dehydration in the DI rat and has at least three renal effects. It causes a natriuresis, it maintains renal hemodynamics and GFR during the volume contraction, and it elicits a weak antidiuretic response.
SummaryScreening tests for bacteriuria based on two different principles were evaluated in 1582 schoolgirls aged 5-11 years, and in 26 girls aged 3-16 years attending hospital with symptomatic urinary tract infection. Tests for hypoglucosuria, performed by a semi-automated fluorometric method and with Uriglox strips on early-morning urine samples voided after overnight fasting, gave unacceptably high false-negative rates (16.70o and 20.8°O respectively).Oxoid and Uricult dipslides were immersed in fresh midstream specimens of urine obtained at school and read after overnight incubation at 37 C. Both gave comparable results, with low false-positive rates and no false-negative responses. The higher cost of screening by dipslides was halved by using the "dipstream" technique, which also gave no false-negative results. Its falsepositive rate of 13.5"O could be reduced to 1.8"(, by disregarding colony counts of 108 non-faecal organisms and over per litre, which appear unimportant in schoolchildren.Bacteriuria was found in 2.3%) of the schoolgirls; 39( of them had symptoms, compared with 7.2U, of the healthy girls, and 25) showed vesicoureteric reflux, which in 17") was associated with renal scarring. Since the natural history of covert bacteriuria and its relationChildren's Hospital, Birmingham B16 8ET
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