Objective: To assess the inter-and intraexaminer reliability of a measurement method for evaluation of eruption angles and position of palatal displaced canines (PDCs) with cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) images and to test the validity of the measured angles on a dry skull. Materials and Methods: Twenty patients (eight boys, 12 girls; age 11.4 6 1.2 years) were randomly chosen among 67 patients from a study evaluating the interceptive effect of extracting the deciduous canine in children with PDCs. In total, 60 images were analyzed, because each patient had three CBCT examinations (baseline, 6-month control, and endpoint). Two observers assessed the following measurements twice: mesioangular and sagittal angle, vertical position, canine cusp tip, and canine apex to dental arch. The validity of the angular measurements was tested against angular measurements on a dry skull using mathematical formulations. Results: The inter-and intraexaminer mean differences for angular and linear measurements were all low and statistically insignificant (P . .05). The mean differences between the physical and 3D measurements were 0.5 6 0.39 mm for the sagittal angle and 0.22 6 0.19 mm for the mesioangular angle. Conclusions: Linear and angular measurements on CBCT images are accurate and precise and can be used to assess the precise position of a PDC. (Angle Orthod. 2014;84:459-466.)
The regulatory effect of ghrelin on growth hormone (GH) is limited in describing ghrelin response to acute submaximal exercise intensities in elite athletes. We investigated the effects of a single sculling exercise performed above and below the individual anaerobic threshold (IAT) on total ghrelin concentration in highly trained male rowers. Nine elite male rowers (20.1 +/- 3.7 years; 190.0 +/- 5.2 cm; 89.6 +/- 4.6 kg; %body fat: 9.9 +/- 2.5%) volunteered for this study. Single scull rowing was performed below and above IAT using a mean of 5 bpm above and below the heart rate of the IAT during graded exercise test. Ghrelin, leptin, GH, insulin, and glucose were measured before, immediately after, and after 30 min of recovery. Plasma ghrelin concentration did not increase significantly in either exercise but was approaching significance after 30 min of recovery (P = 0.051) when the constant load sculling was performed at the intensity above the IAT. There were no changes in plasma leptin levels. GH increased significantly immediately after exercise and remained elevated during the 30 min of recovery in both exercise conditions, while insulin decreased significantly immediately after exercise and remained significantly lower after the 30 min of recovery in both exercise intensities. Baseline ghrelin was not correlated with the body composition, physical performance, or blood biochemical data. There was no significant relationship between plasma ghrelin and other blood variables immediately after the 30 min of recovery in both exercise tests and changes in ghrelin were not related to blood biochemical variables after the exercise tests. The acute constant load sculling exercise above or below IAT that increased GH concentrations did not significantly increase the circulating plasma ghrelin levels.
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